Score
in sentence
1768 examples of Score in a sentence
LP: The amazing thing about this is this is, I mean, obviously, these are old games, but the system just sees what you see, the pixels, and it has the controls and it has the score, and it's learned to play all of these games, same program.
But there's some evidence that those people who are carriers
score
slightly differently on personality questionnaires than other people, that they have a slightly higher risk of car accidents, and there's some evidence that people with schizophrenia are more likely to be infected.
It turns out that they have the purchase history for hundreds of thousands of customers and they compute what they call a pregnancy score, which is not just whether or not a woman's pregnant, but what her due date is.
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.
In 1988, she won the gold in the heptathlon and set a record of 7,291 points, a
score
that no athlete has come very close to since.
I can now tell you that the only thing worse than getting a terrible night's sleep is to have your smart bed tell you the next day that you "missed your goal and got a low sleep score."
"Jeopardy" is a very broad natural language game, and Watson got a higher
score
than the best two players combined.
But I and others in the effective altruism community have converged on three moral issues that we believe are unusually important,
score
unusually well in this framework.
The only reason why it's below Ireland is because its lowest
score
is lower than Ireland's lowest
score.
So already the pilots reveal this, that so many in the public
score
worse than random, so we have to think about preconceived ideas, and one of the main preconceived ideas is about world income distribution.
And then we poll the public and see where they
score
worst.
Basically meaning, we don't hire people who
score
like chimpanzees.
That will help you
score
better on our tests.
So he wrote a small sub-program alongside it operating in the background, and all it did was
score
the probability that a given board configuration would likely lead to a winning board versus a losing board after every move.
Maybe we should use the fact that they're unemployed or not, their credit score, their web-surfing behavior, whether they're up late at night.
And when it comes to exams, if you don't think you look good enough, specifically if you don't think you are thin enough, you will
score
a lower grade point average than your peers who are not concerned with this.
Now, if we compare this score, the average score, to how many messages a selection of people receive, you can begin to get a sense of how attractiveness links to popularity on an online dating website.
But the question arises then of what is it about people up here who are so much more popular than people down here, even though they have the same
score
of attractiveness?
Now, I think that if you ask people how attractive they thought Jessica Parker or Portia de Rossi were, and you ask them to give them a
score
between one and five I reckon that they'd average out to have roughly the same
score.
Their biggest goal is getting the next A, or the next test
score?
So moving on from trying to
score
with a partner to trying to
score
in basketball or football or whatever your sport is.
So here's what one
score
looks like to the algorithm in a matrix-like representation.
And to do that, we show to the algorithm over 30 different category labels for each
score
in our database.
For every yes, you would get a point on your ACE
score.
The second thing that they found was that there was a dose-response relationship between ACEs and health outcomes: the higher your ACE score, the worse your health outcomes.
For a person with an ACE
score
of four or more, their relative risk of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease was two and a half times that of someone with an ACE
score
of zero.
A person with an ACE
score
of seven or more had triple the lifetime risk of lung cancer and three and a half times the risk of ischemic heart disease, the number one killer in the United States of America.
We started simply with routine screening of every one of our kids at their regular physical, because I know that if my patient has an ACE
score
of 4, she's two and a half times as likely to develop hepatitis or COPD, she's four and half times as likely to become depressed, and she's 12 times as likely to attempt to take her own life as my patient with zero ACEs.
Today, we are beginning to understand how to interrupt the progression from early adversity to disease and early death, and 30 years from now, the child who has a high ACE
score
and whose behavioral symptoms go unrecognized, whose asthma management is not connected, and who goes on to develop high blood pressure and early heart disease or cancer will be just as anomalous as a six-month mortality from HIV/AIDS.
And each performer got three minutes to perform and then random audience members would hold up scorecards, and they would end up with a numerical score, and what this meant is, it kind of broke down the barrier between performer and audience and encouraged the kind of connection with the listener.
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