Patterns
in sentence
1058 examples of Patterns in a sentence
So the viewer can play it by eliciting quite complex and varied, nuanced musical or sound patterns, but cannot really provoke the audience into any particular kind of response.
What it doesn't help them do is to learn word
patterns.
It means it becomes possible to put together half of the world's knowledge in order to see patterns, an entirely new thing.
Now, if the number of connections that we can make is proportional to the number of pairs of data points, a hundredfold multiplication in the quantity of data is a ten-thousandfold multiplication in the number of
patterns
that we can see in that data, this just in the last 10 or 11 years.
Scientists would gather some representative people, and they would see patterns, and they would try and make generalizations about human nature and disease from the abstract
patterns
they find from these particular selected individuals.
Think what happens when we collect all of that data and we can put it together in order to find
patterns
we wouldn't see before.
There's some new technology breakthroughs in nanoscience when applied to magnetic structures that have created a whole new class of magnets, and with these magnets, we can lay down very fine detailed magnetic field
patterns
throughout the brain, and using those, we can actually create holographic-like interference structures to get precision control over many patterns, as is shown here by shifting things.
Let's also, instead of a uniform magnetic field, put down structured magnetic
patterns
in addition to the F.M. radio frequencies.
So by combining the magnetics
patterns
with the
patterns
in the F.M. radio frequencies processing which can massively increase the information that we can extract in a single scan.
I used kente cloth, I used camouflage, spandex, burlap, silks, satins and different
patterns.
It had some regular
patterns
to it.
We're looking for little
patterns
of behavior that, when you detect them among millions of people, lets us find out all kinds of things.
Aren't these scaling
patterns
just universal to all indigenous architecture?
Well, you see self-organizing
patterns
that spontaneously occur in this board game.
And the folks in Ghana knew about these self-organizing
patterns
and would use them strategically.
Science starts with observation, but the trick is to identify the
patterns
and signatures that we might otherwise dismiss as myth or coincidence, isolate them, and test them with scientific rigor.
So biologically, there are plenty of species that display banding or patterns, warning patterns, to either be cryptical in the water or warn against being attacked, not the least of which is the pilot fish which spends a big slab of its life around the business end of a shark.
So I called up Nathan, a little bit sheepishly, actually, about this idea that maybe we could use these
patterns
and shapes to produce a wetsuit to try and mitigate the risk of shark attack, and fortunately, he thought that was a good idea.
And from there, we were able to pinpoint two key characteristics: what
patterns
and shapes would present the wearer as hidden or hard to make out in the water, cryptic, and what
patterns
and shapes might provide the greatest contrast but provide the greatest breakup of profile so that that person wasn't confused for shark prey or shark food.
But the acid test is always going to be, how would sharks really behave in the context of these
patterns
and shapes.
We live in a very complex environment: complexity and dynamism and
patterns
of evidence from satellite photographs, from videos.
It's endlessly complex, but somehow familiar, but the
patterns
kind of repeat, but they never repeat exactly.
The
patterns
that you see are there at all of the different scales, but you can't chop it into one little bit and say, "Oh, well let me just make a smaller climate."
The different scales that give you these kinds of
patterns
range over an enormous range of magnitude, roughly 14 orders of magnitude, from the small microscopic particles that seed clouds to the size of the planet itself, from 10 to the minus six to 10 to the eight, 14 orders of spatial magnitude.
You get a beautiful representation of what's going on in the climate system, where each and every one of those emergent
patterns
that you can see, the swirls in the Southern Ocean, the tropical cyclone in the Gulf of Mexico, and there's two more that are going to pop up in the Pacific at any point now, those rivers of atmospheric water, all of those are emergent properties that come from the interactions of all of those small-scale processes I mentioned.
The models are skillful, not just in the global mean, but also in the regional
patterns.
How do organic aerosols from biomass burning, which you can see in the red dots, intersect with clouds and rainfall
patterns?
They're going to start to look more similar, and by the time you get to the 2000s, you're already seeing the
patterns
of global warming, both in the observations and in the model.
We know that we're headed for climate change, which is going to change rainfall patterns, making some areas drier, as you can see in orange, and others wetter, in blue, causing droughts in our breadbaskets, in places like the Midwest and Central Europe, and floods in others.
The greek word poem, it just means "a made thing," and poetry is a set of techniques, ways of making
patterns
that put emotions into words.
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