Scientist
in sentence
1068 examples of Scientist in a sentence
As a data scientist, I did a lot of analyses, mostly of facilities, industrial facilities around the world.
For a data
scientist
that just happened to go to space camp as a kid, it just doesn't get much better than that.
As a speech scientist, I'm fascinated by how the voice is produced, and I have an idea for how it can be engineered.
And as a scientist, I'm so excited to take this work out of the laboratory and finally into the real world so it can have real-world impact.
But I think the even more significant breakthrough for the purposes of our discussion today was made in 2006 by a Japanese
scientist
called Yamanaka.
["I believe he has ideas about becoming a scientist; on his present showing this is quite ridiculous."]
And so a young
scientist
that I was working with at the time, Rob Olson, was able to take this thing apart, put it on a ship, put it back together and take it off to sea.
One Japanese
scientist
called Takuya Sato found that in one stream, these things drive so many crickets and grasshoppers into the water that the drowned insects make up some 60 percent of the diet of local trout.
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.
And I say, absolutely, and for me, that's success, because as a scientist, my goal is not to infer information about users, it's to improve the way people interact online.
I mean, come on, as a
scientist
looking for a job, doing cutting-edge research, it doesn't get any better than this.
Because of the robustness of these technologies, we found that we could readily automate the processes and move the laboratory workflows out of the
scientist'
s hands and onto a machine.
And later in life, I became a
scientist.
To give you a sense of how much it is, I want to share with you a demonstration conceived by sports
scientist
Ross Tucker.
As a scientist, and also as a human being, I've been trying to make myself susceptible to wonder.
My co-lead, a brilliant scientist, Eric Schadt at the Icahn Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, and his team, locked in that decoder key ring, and we began looking for samples, because what we realized is, maybe we could just go and look at some existing samples to get some sense of feasibility.
I'm a contract computer
scientist
by trade, but I'm the founder of something called the Tinkering School.
I felt unworthy of stepping across the gates of the university, because I wasn't like Einstein or Newton or any other
scientist
whose results I had learned about, because in science, we just learn about the results, not the process.
And so obviously, I couldn't be a
scientist.
So my vision is that, just like every
scientist
knows the word "atom," that matter is made out of atoms, every
scientist
would know the words like "the cloud," saying "Yes, and," and science will become much more creative, make many, many more unexpected discoveries for the benefit of us all, and would also be much more playful.
He just knew that he wanted to have a career as a
scientist
and he started to collect data.
And I'd like to finish with a quote from a great
scientist
called Peter Medawar.
So this is driving us to new technologies and new telescopes, telescopes that can go faint to look at the distant universe but also telescopes that can go wide to capture the sky as rapidly as possible, telescopes like the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, or the LSST, possibly the most boring name ever for one of the most fascinating experiments in the history of astronomy, in fact proof, if you should need it, that you should never allow a
scientist
or an engineer to name anything, not even your children.
So we wrote a 25-page instruction book, with which any
scientist
could build their own Drop-seq system from scratch.
We wrote software that any
scientist
could use to analyze the data from Drop-seq experiments, and that software is also free, and it's been downloaded from our website 30,000 times in the past two years.
A
scientist
in my lab developed a new way to analyze DNA with computers, and he discovered something very surprising.
And if you don't like taking your epigrams from a philosopher, try a
scientist.
In fact, a few years ago, there was a
scientist
in my lab who became quite convinced that he'd found a brain region for detecting food, and it responded really strongly in the scanner when people looked at images like this.
I can't move my body to the beat, and after a
scientist
who became a philosopher, I have to talk about hard science.
In the 1950s, a computer
scientist
at IBM named Arthur Samuel liked to play checkers, so he wrote a computer program so he could play against the computer.
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