Responses
in sentence
856 examples of Responses in a sentence
In the poor world, we have to integrate the
responses
to poverty with the solutions to the climate crisis.
But
responses
can actually make a huge difference in the poor countries.
When the immune system is under serious attack, it secretes more cytokines, which trigger two
responses.
These natural hormones, which control pain and pleasure
responses
in the cental nervous system, can lead to feelings of euphoria, or, what's often called, a runner's high.
We simultaneously gathered data on over 100 antibody
responses.
And as you can see, in this particular brain area, the
responses
are going up and down as the story is unfolding.
Now we can take these
responses
and compare them to the
responses
in other listeners in the same brain area.
And we can ask: How similar are the
responses
across all listeners?
As you can see, the brain area is going up and down in each one of them, but the
responses
are very different, and not in sync.
Didn't she only know about him through me?" UH: Now you can see that the
responses
in all the language areas that process the incoming language become aligned or similar across all listeners.
However, only when we use the full, engaging, coherent story do the
responses
spread deeper into the brain into higher-order areas, which include the frontal cortex and the parietal cortex, and make all of them respond very similarly.
And we believe that these
responses
in higher-order areas are induced or become similar across listeners because of the meaning conveyed by the speaker, and not by words or sound.
And if we are right, there's a strong prediction over here if I tell you the exact same ideas using two very different sets of words, your brain
responses
will still be similar.
And you play the English story to the English listeners and the Russian story to the Russian listeners, and we can compare their
responses
across the groups.
And when we did that, we didn't see
responses
that are similar in auditory cortices in language, because the language and sound are very different.
However, you can see that the
responses
in high-order areas were still similar across these two groups.
To look in the speaker's brain, we asked the speaker to go into the scanner, we scan his brain and then compare his brain
responses
to the brain
responses
of the listeners listening to the story.
So I know that if you are completely confused now, and I do hope that this is not the case, your brain
responses
are very different than mine.
This one sentence before the story started was enough to make the brain
responses
of all the people that believed the wife was having an affair be very similar in these high-order areas and different than the other group.
We've had complicated experiences and complicated
responses
to those experiences.
We were calling out our names, a little bit like a roll call, waiting for
responses.
That it elicits these
responses
at all is due to our intimate and often changing relationship with it.
Returning to my analogy of getting back on our trains, another main concern I have about this noise that escalates from our online
responses
to injustice is that it can very easily slip into portraying us as the affected party, which can lead to a sense of defeatism, a kind of mental barrier to seeing any opportunity for positivity or change after a negative situation.
Because we might be angry, upset and energized by injustice, but let's consider our
responses.
Most of the
responses
were negative.
Before sending the letter, I prepared myself for all kinds of negative responses, or what I found likeliest: no response whatsoever.
But they learn that mistakes are undesirable inadvertently when teachers or parents are eager to hear just correct answers and reject mistakes rather than welcome and examine them to learn from them, or when we look for narrow
responses
rather than encourage more exploratory thinking that we can all learn from.
Their questions gave me room to speak, but they also gave me permission to ask them questions and to truly hear their
responses.
All of this shows that elephant memory goes beyond
responses
to stimuli.
And the way that we use ready-made phrases and
responses
gleaned from media reports or copied from the Internet makes it easy to get away with not thinking too deeply or questioning your assumptions.
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