Helps
in sentence
1431 examples of Helps in a sentence
So practicing throwing things has been shown to stimulate the frontal and parietal lobes, which have to do with visual acuity, 3D understanding, and structural problem solving, so it
helps
develop their visualization skills and their predictive ability.
This market is large, which
helps
give entrepreneurs more users, more revenue, more investment, but most importantly, it gives the entrepreneurs a chance to collect a huge amount of data which becomes rocket fuel for the AI engine.
And it's in this way that reason
helps
us create a better world.
I'm provided specific suggested language that
helps
me communicate to Laura how the photo makes me feel.
A lot of it comes down to the prefrontal cortex, that front part of our brain that sits over our eyes and usually
helps
us focus in positive ways.
And what I discovered is that I do believe they can suffer from mental illness, and actually looking and trying to identify mental illness in them often
helps
us be better friends to them and also can help us better understand ourselves.
The thing, though, I believe, that
helps
the most, particularly with social animals, is time with other social animals.
Meditation
helps.
Be ironic — it
helps.
You need to understand that everyone who
helps
you on your journey is playing a huge role in getting you to your goals.
If you want to change the world, it
helps
to have a good cross-section of society on your side.
It's going to be people in their 40s and 60s and 80s who find they prefer a little marijuana to that drink in the evening or the sleeping pill or that it
helps
with their arthritis or diabetes or maybe
helps
spice up a long-term marriage.
Research has shown us that openness also
helps
doctors, that having open medical records, being willing to talk about medical errors, will increase patient trust, improve health outcomes, and reduce malpractice.
But we have to clarify and make sense of what it is that we see, and it's our mind that
helps
us fill in that gap.
Part of the reason I'm showing you these is that it sort of
helps
illustrate this process I go through of trying to figure out what it is I feel about Rome and why I feel it.
Look at them directly in their faces and memorize them, because when we look at awesome folks who are black, it
helps
to dissociate the association that happens automatically in our brain.
And I believe it does something else that might be even more important, that the simplicity of the technology can merge objectivity and subjectivity in a very political way, as I see it, because it really
helps
the audience, the citizen, to see the world through somebody else's eye, so it
helps
the citizen to put him- or herself in other people's place.
And what's fascinating is that this analysis
helps
us to better understand many cases of lasting conflict and international intervention failures, in Africa and elsewhere.
So recently, we heard a lot about how social media
helps
empower protest, and that's true, but after more than a decade of studying and participating in multiple social movements, I've come to realize that the way technology empowers social movements can also paradoxically help weaken them.
Some years ago, I stumbled across a simple design exercise that
helps
people understand and solve complex problems, and like many of these design exercises, it kind of seems trivial at first, but under deep inspection, it turns out that it reveals unexpected truths about the way that we collaborate and make sense of things.
First, drawing
helps
us understand the situations as systems with nodes and their relationships.
So the seemingly trivial design exercise of drawing toast
helps
us get clear, engaged and aligned.
And in doing that, it
helps
us avoid the pitfalls of this painful world we live in.
But online, showing empathy to others benefits us all and
helps
create a safer and better world.
Often what I have found is that when there are resources that have not been made available to certain under-resourced cities or neighborhoods or communities, that sometimes culture is the thing that
helps
to ignite, and that I can't do everything, but I think that there's a way in which if you can start with culture and get people kind of reinvested in their place, other kinds of adjacent amenities start to grow, and then people can make a demand that's a poetic demand, and the political demands that are necessary to wake up our cities, they also become very poetic.
The app is a digital facilitator that walks you through the StoryCorps interview process,
helps
you pick questions, and gives you all the tips you need to record a meaningful StoryCorps interview, and then with one tap upload it to our archive at the Library of Congress.
Together, this
helps
us understand whether these planets are small and rocky, like the terrestrial planets in our own Solar System, and also how much light they receive from their parent sun.
She says she wants to do all she can to help other people with orphan diseases get medicines, and today, she's our project leader for all telepresence activities, where she
helps
digitally unite the entire company to work together to find cures for pulmonary hypertension.
Oxytocin
helps
a human mother's brain zoom in, pulling her attention in, so that the baby is now at the center of her world.
"Why can't we just do what we want to do?" (Laughter) They ask, and I answer each question honestly, and this exchange in listening
helps
to clear up any misconceptions.
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