Information
in sentence
6149 examples of Information in a sentence
But of all these unknowns, the biggest unknown is L, so perhaps the most useful version of the Drake equation is simply to say that N is approximately equal to L. The
information
in this equation is very clear.
Moving up to the second rung, we filter in specific
information
and details from our experience.
This is where we start to interpret what our
information
is telling us.
At this point, my body receives this information, and my lungs start relaxing.
The same
information
can be expressed in a different way by calculating the wave's frequency.
Your eyes, and then your brain, are collecting all sorts of
information
about the pencil: its size, color, shape, distance, and more.
Some Greek philosophers, including Plato and Pythagoras, thought that light originated in our eyes and that vision happened when little, invisible probes were sent to gather
information
about far-away objects.
With all this information, OkCupid can figure out how well two people will get along.
I could even search for any
information
by myself.
One reason matrices are so cool is that we can pack so much
information
into them and then turn a huge series of different problems into one single problem.
They're able to calculate probabilities of having a specific trait or getting a genetic disease according to the
information
from the parents and the family history.
It represents an amount of digital information, which is uncomfortable to store, transport, or analyze.
To make this
information
sharing easy, we created the web in the early 1990's.
Physicists no longer needed to know where the
information
was stored in order to find it and access it on the web, an idea which caught on across the world and has transformed the way we communicate in our daily lives.
The fact that we can derive more knowledge by joining related
information
together and spotting correlations can inform and enrich numerous aspects of everyday life, either in real time, such as traffic or financial conditions, in short-term evolutions, such as medical or meteorological, or in predictive situations, such as business, crime, or disease trends.
Virtually every field is turning to gathering big data, with mobile sensor networks spanning the globe, cameras on the ground and in the air, archives storing
information
published on the web, and loggers capturing the activities of Internet citizens the world over.
We don't remember every single detail of our past because our brains have a limited capacity and we replace useless memories, like middle school locker combinations, with relevant
information.
When you click the button on your mouse, it sends a message to the computer with
information
about its position.
But human programs take up a lot of space and contain a lot of unnecessary
information
to a computer, so they are compiled and made smaller and stored in bits of ones and zeros in memory.
That said, we can change our impressions in light of new
information.
On one hand, learning very negative, highly immoral
information
about someone typically has a stronger impact than learning very positive, highly moral
information.
It's actually the positive
information
that gets weighted more heavily.
Using fMRI, or functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging, researchers have identified an extended network of brain regions that respond to new
information
that's inconsistent with initial impressions.
As the scene unfolds, your brain's hemispheres process a flurry of information: the waiter's flailing arms, his cry for help, the smell of pasta.
Within milliseconds, this
information
zips through pathways and is processed into a single moment.
The difference in arrival times causes the brain to interpret the late
information
as a separate event.
And taking the digital counteroffensive because governments couldn't even understand what was going on or act, Anonymous, a group we might not associate as the most positive force in the world, took action, not in cyber attacks, but threatening
information
to be free.
On social media, they said, "We will release
information
that ties prosecutors and governors to corrupt drug deals with the cartel."
And escalating that conflict, Los Zetas said, "We will kill 10 people for every bit of
information
you release."
What are the lessons that come from the tens of thousands of pages of
information
that we've generated on these lives?
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