Scientists
in sentence
2432 examples of Scientists in a sentence
There is only one option, I'll repeat to you, only one option left to climatologists and scientists, and that is to do the unthinkable, and to use livestock, bunched and moving, as a proxy for former herds and predators, and mimic nature.
When I first realized that we had no option as
scientists
but to use much-vilified livestock to address climate change and desertification, I was faced with a real dilemma.
I was one of the three
scientists
on this expedition that took place last summer off Japan.
Oh my God! Are you kidding me?Other scientists: Oh ho ho! That's just hanging there.
Narrator: (Speaking in Japanese) Scientists: Ooh.
The third result of the Boston meeting was the realization that there are
scientists
all over the world working on various forms of de-extinction, but they'd never met each other.
And 35 scientists, they were conservation biologists and molecular biologists, basically meeting to see if they had work to do together.
Two
scientists
at University of Illinois understood this when they published a paper on a simpler method for making conductive ink.
Back then, computers were these large mainframes only
scientists
cared about, and no one dreamed of even having one at home.
What were
scientists
called before?
After this, they were scientists, professionals with a particular scientific method, goals, societies and funding.
Once
scientists
became members of a professional group, they were slowly walled off from the rest of us.
Darwin knew what we seem to have forgotten, that science is not only for
scientists.
That's okay, because there's a team of research
scientists
in Canada who have now created a stool sample, a fake stool sample which is called RePOOPulate.
It involves the work of engineers, of imaging scientists, of basic scientists, of neurologists, psychiatrists, neurosurgeons, and certainly at the interface of these multiple disciplines that there's the excitement.
For the last two years, I have been asking really fun questions, mind-boggling questions, and approaching them as sincerely as I can, celebrating scientific concepts and
scientists.
The answer was Team Cyborg, a team of surgeons,
scientists
and engineers assembled at MIT to rebuild Jim back to his former climbing prowess.
The failure to account for vulture scavenging can result in forensic
scientists
inaccurately estimating how long someone has been dead and then searching through the wrong missing person's files.
Therefore, the goal is to get forensic
scientists
to focus on vulture evidence and to get law enforcement to consider vulture scavenging and a possible recent death when skeletal remains are found.
Now thankfully, some of the world's best material
scientists
are looking to replace coal with sustainable resources like these, and this is both fantastic and essential.
Now,
scientists
have used keyboard interfaces to try to bridge the gap with species including chimpanzees and dolphins.
This process is called memory consolidation, and it's the memory consolidation theory that has
scientists
wondering if we can enhance certain memories over others.
This is the part of sleep where
scientists
believe that memory consolidation can happen.
Now, most political
scientists
will tell us that a one-party system is inherently incapable of self-correction.
And everyone agrees: Politicians and
scientists
are in agreement that we are headed for a phosphorus crisis.
So I went over to UCSF and I talked to all the heavy-duty neurobiologists there, and they showed some impatience, as
scientists
often do when you ask them embarrassing questions.
And it won't surprise any of you that, of course, as scientists, we don't have a consensus.
In the process, however, I became part of a disturbing trend in America where
scientists
are being sued for simply speaking out on matters of great public controversy.
All of these questions that philosophers have been studying for millennia, we
scientists
can begin to explore by doing brain imaging, and by studying patients and asking the right questions.
Because Charles Bonnet Syndrome only occurs in people who had normal vision and then lost their sight, not those who were born blind,
scientists
think the brain uses remembered images to compensate for the lack of new visual input.
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