Information
in sentence
6149 examples of Information in a sentence
The point is to gather random words, not
information
from the category you're thinking for.
For everyone else, variables like stressful events or happy occasions or even day of the week are more powerful predictors of mood than time of the month, and this is the
information
the scientific community has had since the 1990s.
The questions is, why hasn't this
information
trickled down to the public?
Reputable Internet sources of medical
information
like WebMD or the Mayo Clinic list PMS as a known disorder.
Whatever
information
comes in, it just figures out what to do with it.
And that refers to feeding
information
into the brain via unusual sensory channels, and the brain just figures out what to do with it.
We live in a world of
information
now, and there is a difference between accessing big data and experiencing it.
And when we look around at things like braille, for example, people are getting
information
through bumps on their fingers.
That meant we could access all the
information
we wanted, when we wanted it, anytime, anywhere.
As it turned out, the wealth of
information
provided by ImageNet was a perfect match to a particular class of machine learning algorithms called convolutional neural network, pioneered by Kunihiko Fukushima, Geoff Hinton, and Yann LeCun back in the 1970s and '80s.
Those are flashes of sound that go out and reflect from surfaces all around me, just like a bat's sonar, and return to me with patterns, with pieces of information, much as light does for you.
And my brain, thanks to my parents, has been activated to form images in my visual cortex, which we now call the imaging system, from those patterns of information, much as your brain does.
We've got cell phones to get
information
from the public and get
information
out to them.
So, I'm going to show you a demo of a virtual reality film: a full-screen version of all the
information
that we capture when we shoot virtual reality.
DNA, or any
information
carrier, is going to tell you about adaptation, about evolution, about survival, about planetary changes and about the transfer of
information.
But the really interesting
information
came from the rest of the skeleton.
What we do know is that the ultimate limit to
information
processing in a machine substrate lies far outside the limits in biological tissue.
How can we get so much
information
out of so little motion?
So that's it: just five seconds of regular video, while we bang on this surface, and we're going to use the vibrations in that video to learn about the structural and material properties of our object, and we're going to use that
information
to create something new and interactive.
And ironically, we're kind of used to having this kind of interactivity when it comes to virtual objects, when it comes to video games and 3D models, but to be able to capture this
information
from real objects in the real world using just simple, regular video, is something new that has a lot of potential.
MR: What this graph means, and it comes from Ray Kurzweil, is that the rate of development in computer processing hardware, firmware and software, has been advancing along a curve such that by the 2020s, as we saw in earlier presentations today, there will be
information
technology that processes
information
and the world around us at the same rate as a human mind.
MR: Well, Chris, what we're working on is creating a situation where people can create a mind file, and a mind file is the collection of their mannerisms, personality, recollection, feelings, beliefs, attitudes and values, everything that we've poured today into Google, into Amazon, into Facebook, and all of this
information
stored there will be able, in the next couple decades, once software is able to recapitulate consciousness, be able to revive the consciousness which is imminent in our mind file.
And this was our first attempt, starting with the digital
information
of the genome of phi X174.
Design is critical, and if you're starting with digital
information
in the computer, that digital
information
has to be really accurate.
There is no other typographic
information
or visual
information
on the front, and the name of the book is "Only What's Necessary."
Part of the problem here is that they've compartmentalized the
information
in a way they think is helpful, and frankly, I don't think it is at all.
It's like, how can you give them just enough
information
so they know what it is but giving them the credit for the knowledge that they already have about this thing?
And in the course of four hours, I watched my brain completely deteriorate in its ability to process all
information.
Because they process
information
differently, each of our hemispheres think about different things, they care about different things, and, dare I say, they have very different personalities.
Information, in the form of energy, streams in simultaneously through all of our sensory systems and then it explodes into this enormous collage of what this present moment looks like, what this present moment smells like and tastes like, what it feels like and what it sounds like.
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