Humans
in sentence
2119 examples of Humans in a sentence
Then modern
humans
emerged somewhere in Africa, came out of Africa, presumably in the Middle East.
Does this then mean that there is after all some absolute difference between people outside Africa and inside Africa in that people outside Africa have this old component in their genome from these extinct forms of humans, whereas Africans do not?
Presumably, modern
humans
emerged somewhere in Africa.
They spread across Africa also, of course, and there were older, earlier forms of
humans
there.
And since we mixed elsewhere, I'm pretty sure that one day, when we will perhaps have a genome of also these earlier forms in Africa, we will find that they have also mixed with early modern
humans
in Africa.
So to sum up, what have we learned from studying genomes of present day
humans
and extinct
humans?
We mixed with these earlier forms of humans, wherever we met them, and we mixed with each other ever since.
So I'm specifically interested in how we, as humans, relate to ourselves, each other and the world around us. (Laughter) So just to give you a bit of context, as June said, I'm an artist, a technologist and an educator.
Now speaking of evolution, from basic biology, you probably remember that the animal kingdom, including humans, have four basic primal instincts.
As humans, what's important to remember is that we've developed, we've evolved over time to temper, or tame, these basic animal instincts.
Animals, just like humans, sometimes get strange tumors.
But if this can happen in Tasmanian devils, why hasn't it happened in other animals or even
humans?
[Margaret Gould Stewart on the Hyperlink] A hyperlink is an interface element, and what I mean by that is, when you're using software on your phone or your computer, there's a lot of code behind the interface that's giving all the instructions for the computer on how to manage it, but that interface is the thing that
humans
interact with: when we press on this, then something happens.
He was working for the US government, and one of the ideas that he put forth was, "Wow,
humans
are creating so much information, and we can't keep track of all the books that we've read or the connections between important ideas."
So it's very easy for either
humans
or machines to separate these metals from one another and from other materials.
And yet I think it's this perspective of us as
humans
to look at our world through the lens of normal is one of the forces that stops us developing real solutions.
And what ends up happening is that as participants we start to learn the level of detail that we need in order to manage expectations from both
humans
and machines.
Could we take this precious and rare cancerous material from this chest tube and drive it across town and put it into mice and try to do a clinical trial at a stage that with a prototype drug, well, that would be, of course, impossible and, rightly, illegal to do in
humans.
But in humans, it was only known to facilitate birth and breastfeeding in women, and is released by both sexes during sex.
But we can look at how well we're doing by thinking about how well we're doing building machines which can do what
humans
can do.
So in my group, what we try to do is reverse engineer how
humans
control movement.
Now we, as humans, we store our information as DNA in our genomes and we pass this information on to our offspring.
And they hear like
humans
do, or real creatures do.
This is one these magical abilities that we
humans
have.
So because of this ability, we
humans
are able to transmit our ideas across vast reaches of space and time.
They stay oriented better than we used to think
humans
could.
We used to think that
humans
were worse than other creatures because of some biological excuse: "Oh, we don't have magnets in our beaks or in our scales."
There are
humans
around the world who stay oriented really well.
That excludes almost all
humans.
So those are hints suggesting that
humans
are susceptible to the effects of the hormones for aging.
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