Patterns
in sentence
1058 examples of Patterns in a sentence
The more techniques you know, the more things you can make, and the more
patterns
you can recognize in things you might already like or love.
It's furnished at least three science fiction titles, I think because it says poems can brings us news from the future or the past or across the world, because their
patterns
can seem to tell you what's in somebody's heart.
Poems, the
patterns
in poems, show us not just what somebody thought or what someone did or what happened but what it was like to be a person like that, to be so anxious, so lonely, so inquisitive, so goofy, so preposterous, so brave.
For example, we were stuck for a year trying to understand the intricate biochemical networks inside our cells, and we said, "We are deeply in the cloud," and we had a playful conversation where my student Shai Shen Orr said, "Let's just draw this on a piece of paper, this network," and instead of saying, "But we've done that so many times and it doesn't work," I said, "Yes, and let's use a very big piece of paper," and then Ron Milo said, "Let's use a gigantic architect's blueprint kind of paper, and I know where to print it," and we printed out the network and looked at it, and that's where we made our most important discovery, that this complicated network is just made of a handful of simple, repeating interaction
patterns
like motifs in a stained glass window.
In one UCLA study, newborns still in the hospital were shown patterns,
patterns
like this: circle, cross, circle, cross.
And he created this physical model in order to demonstrate that you could, in fact, create
patterns
in rocks, or at least, in this case, in mud, that looked a lot like mountains if you compressed them from the side.
So if we could find a way to translate these binary
patterns
to visual signals, we could really unlock the power of our brains to process this stuff.
We can instantly see all of the
patterns
here.
It takes me seconds to pick out
patterns
here, but hours, days, to pick them out in ones and zeros.
It takes minutes for anybody to learn what these
patterns
represent here, but years of experience in cyber to learn what those same
patterns
represent in ones and zeros.
It would take me weeks just to figure out what I was looking at from raw ones and zeros, but because our brains can instantly pick up and recognize these subtle
patterns
inside of these visual abstractions, we can unconsciously apply those in new situations.
Our brains can pick up on these
patterns
in ways that we never could have from looking at raw ones and zeros.
Things that would take us weeks, months to find in ones and zeroes, are immediately apparent in some sort of visual abstraction, and as we continue to go through this and throw more and more information at it, what we find is that we're capable of processing billions of ones and zeros in a matter of seconds just by using our brain's built-in ability to analyze
patterns.
So at this point, based on visual patterns, I can find the code on the phone.
It can find all the detailed patterns, all the important pieces, for us.
By doing so, that's how we can separate the two ridge
patterns.
The work of the criminologist draws on the expert recognition of behavioral
patterns
that have been observed before to belong to a certain type, to a certain profile.
This research inspired my work in many different ways, things like movement or different light
patterns.
These branching
patterns
that we see we see across all forms, scales of nature, from river deltas to lightning strikes, from our own blood vessels to neural networks.
Some of the colors are designed to hypnotize, these lovely
patterns.
This is the work of Dr. Roger Hanlon at the Marine Biological Lab, and it's just fascinating how cephalopods can, with their incredible eyes, sense their surroundings, look at light, look at
patterns.
But look at the
patterns
that they can do with their skin.
We know that physical laws are actually generalized descriptions of
patterns
and regularities in the world.
Let's see if we can discover some
patterns
in our data about our patients' lives and see if we can identify an upstream cause, and then, as importantly, can we align the resources to be able to address them?
It would lead to changing deserts, changing rivers, changing
patterns
of hurricanes, changing sea levels, hundreds of millions of people, perhaps billions of people who would have to move, and if we've learned anything from history, that means severe and extended conflict.
In fact, there are three
patterns
I have observed in all these cases.
Another important thing to consider is that no two cancers are the same, but at the microRNA level, there are
patterns.
Then, if we take this specific pattern of microRNA of this person's samples and compare it with existing scientific documentation that correlates microRNA
patterns
with a specific presence of a disease, this is how pancreatic cancer looks like.
Since we're looking for the microRNA
patterns
in your blood at any given time, you don't need to know which cancer you're looking for.
They get involved in different worlds than their worlds so they're trusted and they can see those patterns, and they communicate to connect around sweet spots of shared interest.
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