Patterns
in sentence
1058 examples of Patterns in a sentence
The next year, he was given excellent hemoglobin crystals and soon produced the best X-ray diffraction
patterns
to date.
But the faith remained that detailed information about protein structure could be obtained from the X-ray
patterns
in some way, if only it could be discovered.
Progress in AI relies on the availability and analysis of large sets of data on human activity, online and offline, to distinguish
patterns
of behavior that can be used to guide machine behavior and cognition.
Germany and Italy increasingly show Japanese
patterns
of decline in their working-age populations, and are thus likely to grow very little as well.
The differences in the two countries’ growth
patterns
are striking, and raise significant questions for development economists.
Despite being a low-income region, India and other South Asian countries have adopted the growth
patterns
of middle- to high-income countries.
Their growth
patterns
more closely resemble those of Ireland and Israel than those of China and Malaysia.
Simply put, a technocratic focus on upgrading skills and operational capability, in the absence of improved governance of the security services, can be easily subverted by anti-reform coalitions, resulting in the continuation of regressive
patterns
of behavior.
Now countries at all stages of development are pursuing new
patterns
of economic growth that take climate into account.
Nothing stands in the way of change except the unwillingness to change old
patterns.
But the problem is global, with similar
patterns
in parts of countries such as Colombia, Myanmar, and Afghanistan.
Still, in time, the primary determinant of GDP growth – and the inclusivity of growth
patterns
– will be gains in productivity.
There are several important items missing from the policy mix that cast a shadow over the realization of both full-scale productivity growth and a shift to more inclusive growth
patterns.
In other words, the package ignores the very ingredients needed to lay the groundwork for balanced and sustainable future growth patterns, characterized by high economic and social productivity trajectories supported by both the supply side and the demand side (including investment).
The discussion has so far followed easily predictable national patterns: Creditor countries do not object to deflation, because it increases the real value of their investment, whereas debtor countries’ repayment burdens would grow heavier.
Our statistical analysis of the entry and exit
patterns
of entrepreneurs in the Brazilian ethanol industry shows that the more efficient acquired the less efficient.
These shifts will accompany rapid industrialization and advances in science and technology (especially information and communications technology), and will transform dietary habits and consumption
patterns.
As a result, water-consumption
patterns
will change considerably, including indirectly, through shifts in agriculture, energy, and land use.
Coming in second – one might even say a distant second – was generating vigorous, sustainable, and inclusive national growth
patterns.
For 30 years or so, the distributional aspects of the global growth
patterns
that these efforts underpinned were positive, both for individual countries and for the world as a whole.
Changing weather
patterns
are already affecting the lives of millions of Africans by reducing food security, facilitating the spread of diseases like malaria, and prompting mass migration.
Although the shifting structure of the global economy is best described as a journey taken only once, growth in developing countries does exhibit repeating
patterns.
But the planet’s rising surface temperature will increase the probability and severity of such weather patterns, and 2015 – the warmest year on record – confirmed that human greenhouse-gas emissions are driving significant climate change.
Taken to the extreme, it means that data about our preferences, incomes, and spending
patterns
could soon be used to determine an individually calibrated price for all transactions.
This, together with the systematic “extraction” of consumer surplus, will have far-reaching macroeconomic implications, particularly through changes in private consumption
patterns.
The revision of data for household spending
patterns
lends support to the economic outlook.
With mobile phones, farmers can quickly find information ranging from seed prices to weather patterns, and have immediate access to the funds they need to complete transactions.
This mobile-enabled information leads to better decision-making, saving the farmers money and boosting their resilience to extreme-weather
patterns
and droughts.
But the absence of a secondary breakdown of such data, like the UK-style, four-fold class analysis (plus examination of
patterns
of unemployment by ethnicity or religion), makes it hard for social workers, public heath officials, and economic planners to diagnose new problems.
Shifts in rainfall
patterns
will certainly affect crops, particularly rice.
Back
Next
Related words
Growth
Their
Change
Which
About
There
Global
Countries
Consumption
Would
Could
Other
Economic
World
Weather
People
Climate
Different
Changing
Brain