Predict
in sentence
1013 examples of Predict in a sentence
Groups have shown that changes in the statistics of our language paired with machine learning can
predict
the likelihood someone will develop psychosis.
How can you
predict
the future?
And you can
predict
the new trajectory.
We can
predict
the accident and we can
predict
who, which cars, are in the best position to move out of the way to calculate the safest route for everyone.
I can
predict
school scores.
We tried to
predict
which cadets would stay in military training and which would drop out.
We went to the National Spelling Bee and tried to
predict
which children would advance farthest in competition.
It continues to try to
predict
what I need based on some past characterization of who I am, of what I've already done.
Possibly research could help us not only to
predict
the path of asteroids that might collide with us, but actually to deflect them.
More interestingly, there are outliers, there are exceptions which are above this red line, occur 100 times more frequently, at least, than the extrapolation would
predict
them to occur based on the calibration of the 99 percent remaining peak-to-valleys.
Using acoustic emission, you know, this little noise that you hear a structure emit, sing to you when they are stressed, and reveal the damage going on, there's a collective phenomenon of positive feedback, the more damage gives the more damage, so you can actually predict, within, of course, a probability band, when the rupture will occur.
We're trying to code the information that's coming out of her EEG in real time and
predict
what it is that her eyes are looking at.
It's hard to start them on fire, and when they do, they actually burn extraordinarily predictably, and we can use fire science in order to
predict
and make these buildings as safe as concrete and as safe as steel.
And no, we can't
predict
the next egg that will hatch, but we can create a city that acts like an incubator.
There really is no telling what city could be defined by a certain scene or a certain song in the next decade, but as much as we absolutely cannot
predict
that, what we absolutely can
predict
is what happens when we treat music as necessary and we work to build a music city.
We cannot
predict
the future.
I'm already beyond the lifespan of most hunter-gatherers, and the outcome of a mortal combat between me myopically stumbling around with a stone-tipped spear and an enraged giant aurochs isn't very hard to
predict.
I make things like neural networks that
predict
the results of elections based on weather reports, because I'm intrigued about what the actual possibilities of these weird new technologies are.
However, more often than not, animal models fail to
predict
what will happen in humans when they're treated with a particular drug.
It's self-learning and able to
predict
issues that a human operator would miss.
And with this tool, we can
predict
three things.
Second, for the first time, and I think this is incredibly important, we can
predict
whether someone will commit an act of violence if they're released.
And third, we can
predict
whether someone will come back to court.
Does it
predict
human-level intelligence?
Does it
predict
artificial intelligence?
It is hard to say what shape this intensification will take, because it largely depends on social and technical innovations, which are by definition difficult to
predict.
Artificial intelligence is being used to
predict
crime and terrorism in Xinjiang province, where the Muslim minority is already under constant surveillance.
The beginning is now only a handful of years away, and I
predict
that autonomous vehicles will permanently change our world over the next several decades.
And as a computer scientist, what this means is that I've been able to build models that can
predict
all sorts of hidden attributes for all of you that you don't even know you're sharing information about.
So in my lab and with colleagues, we've developed mechanisms where we can quite accurately
predict
things like your political preference, your personality score, gender, sexual orientation, religion, age, intelligence, along with things like how much you trust the people you know and how strong those relationships are.
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