Pattern
in sentence
1302 examples of Pattern in a sentence
It's all the
pattern
recognition.
What we do is have the patient go all the way open and think, "What hand grasp
pattern
do I want?"
One other thing you can do with such a thing is you can, because it's a
pattern
matching exercise, because there's unique fingerprint, we can actually scan through the entire genome and find other proteins that show a similar fingerprint.
Does it resemble the basic
pattern
of a video game to you in any way?
The "Flynn effect," for those of you who don't know, is the
pattern
that human intelligence is actually rising over time.
The trend that underlies this whole
pattern
is called "gamification."
And depending on how you create the
pattern
of lighting or not lighting, the digital elements, or, for that matter, the neurons in the sheet, you're going to be able to construct a map.
They are exquisitely topographic and they are exquisitely interconnected in a recursive
pattern.
Like this
pattern
of pulses here actually means "baby's face," and so when the brain gets this
pattern
of pulses, it knows that what was out there was a baby's face, and if it got a different
pattern
it would know that what was out there was, say, a dog, or another
pattern
would be a house.
But today, in 2011, if you go and buy a color laser printer from any major laser printer manufacturer and print a page, that page will end up having slight yellow dots printed on every single page, in a
pattern
which makes the page unique to you and to your printer.
These look like a random
pattern
of dots, but they're not.
Here's a
pattern
here.
If we think about random music as being just random notes here, and over here, somehow, Beethoven's Fifth in some kind of pattern, if we wrote completely pattern-free music, it would be way out on the tail.
And at the end of that, their brain starts to retain a
pattern
of scanning the world not for the negative, but for the positive first.
It's as if you remember where the flag was by storing the
pattern
of firing across all of your place cells at that location, and then you can get back to that location by moving around so that you best match the current
pattern
of firing of your place cells with that stored
pattern.
And he can return to the location where he parked by moving so as to find where it is that best matches the firing
pattern
of the place cells in his brain currently with the stored
pattern
where he parked his car.
So beyond spatial memory, if we look for this grid-like firing
pattern
throughout the whole brain, we see it in a whole series of locations which are always active when we do all kinds of autobiographical memory tasks, like remembering the last time you went to a wedding, for example.
And this
pattern
continues today.
And it showed that, in fact, today, the human
pattern
recognition machinery is better at folding proteins than the best computers.
We created this lace
pattern
that lends itself well to 3D printing.
Now Edward de Bono argued that our brains are
pattern
matching machines.
But this kind of fishbone
pattern
of deforestation is something we notice a lot of around the tropics, especially in this part of the world.
Because the theory predicts that the Big Bang would have been so intense that as space rapidly expanded, tiny quantum jitters from the micro world would have been stretched out to the macro world, yielding a distinctive fingerprint, a
pattern
of slightly hotter spots and slightly colder spots, across space, which powerful telescopes have now observed.
And if our universe got hit by another, that collision would generate an additional subtle
pattern
of temperature variations across space that we might one day be able to detect.
It adds together the interference
pattern
from two raindrops that land near each other.
And you might say, "Surely, Rueben, if you took even just the slightest step back, the cycles of hunger and eating, waking and sleeping, laughing and crying would emerge as pattern."
So Erez and I followed the fate of over 100 irregular verbs through 12 centuries of English language, and we saw that there's actually a very simple mathematical
pattern
that captures this complex historical change, namely, if a verb is 100 times more frequent than another, it regularizes 10 times slower.
And so that explains this
pattern
that we've seen before.
So here mathematics is able to link a well-known feature of the individual mind with a long-term historical
pattern
that unfolds over centuries and across continents.
But if we look, it can't be, because the layer is deep during the day, it rises up at night and the
pattern
repeats day after day.
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