Resonance
in sentence
133 examples of Resonance in a sentence
One of the opportunities I had was one person was working on a really interesting micromagnetic
resonance
imaging machine with the NIH.
One is the focused ultrasound, and the other one is the vision-enabled magnetic
resonance
imaging.
So my child's death, my baby's death, really brought home the
resonance
of what I was trying to make in this film.
And this explains the extraordinary
resonance
of this simple metaphor conjured up nearly 400 years ago.
So this is cardiac magnetic
resonance
imaging.
We started by organizing image acquisition from magnetic
resonance
and CT imaging machines, from which to make a model of the patient's aorta.
As a scientist, I always wanted to measure that resonance, that sense of the other that happens so quickly, in the blink of an eye.
Well, now we know that autism is this disruption, the disruption of this
resonance
that I am telling you about.
There are those individuals that if you observe them in their school, you see them running the periphery fence all the school day if you let them, to those individuals who cannot stop coming to you and trying to engage you repeatedly, relentlessly, but often in an awkward fashion, without that immediate
resonance.
How do we enter that feeling of resonance, how do we enter another person's being?
In the past decade or so, mainly due to advances in brain imaging technology such as magnetic
resonance
imaging, or MRI, neuroscientists have started to look inside the living human brain of all ages, and to track changes in brain structure and brain function, so we use structural MRI if you'd like to take a snapshot, a photograph, at really high resolution of the inside of the living human brain, and we can ask questions like, how much gray matter does the brain contain, and how does that change with age?
Without needles and radioactivity, without any kind of clinical reason, we can go down the street and record from your friends' and neighbors' brains while they do a variety of cognitive tasks, and we use a method called functional magnetic
resonance
imaging.
And we built software that'll link functional magnetic
resonance
imaging devices up over the Internet.
It's a very powerful word, jihad, if you look at it in that respect, and there's a certain almost mystical
resonance
to it.
Epinephrine is so small we will never see it, not through any microscope ever, but we know what it looks like, because it shows itself through some sophisticated machines with fancy names like "nuclear magnetic
resonance
spectrometers."
This is their kind of
resonance
for the conversation around the environment.
I used magnetic
resonance
imaging to capture the actual shape of the patient's anatomy, then use finite element modeling to better predict the internal stresses and strains on the normal forces, and then create a prosthetic socket for manufacture.
My research team and I have tried to understand where this fear of math comes from, and we've actually peered inside the brains using functional magnetic
resonance
imaging, of people who are worried about math.
So here, we're going to play a note that's in the
resonance
frequency of that glass through a loudspeaker that's next to it.
Now, empathy is the affective
resonance
or cognitive
resonance
that tells you, this person is joyful, this person suffers.
Neuroimaging studies using fMRI, functional magnetic
resonance
imaging, show us that when we seem someone yawn or even hear their yawn, a specific area of the brain housing these mirror neurons tends to light up, which, in turn, causes us to respond with the same action: a yawn!
Understanding how this dependable inner pump works gives new
resonance
to the feeling you get when you run a race, drink too much caffeine or catch the eye of the one you love.
Now, new treatments that directly stimulate or block certain pain-sensing attention or modulation networks are being developed, along with ways to tailor them to individual patients, using tools like magnetic
resonance
imaging to map brain pathways.
I'm Rich Baraniuk and what I'd like to talk a little bit about today are some ideas that I think have just tremendous
resonance
with all the things that have been talked about the last two days.
So many different points of
resonance
that it's going to be difficult to bring them all up, but I'll try to do my best.
Music makes everything have more emotional
resonance.
So, it's a brief experience that has emotional
resonance
and meaning.
And viewed in that light, it takes on a whole other
resonance.
Using functional magnetic
resonance
imaging, scientists have discovered that the brain's pruning ability is disrupted in people with bipolar disorder.
This ranges from imaging techniques such as radiography or magnetic
resonance
imaging to the analysis of blood or tissue.
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