Sensitive
in sentence
942 examples of Sensitive in a sentence
Compare that with the device released just months ago that's now packaged into something the size of a key fob, and if you take a look at the state of the art for a complete GPS receiver, which is only a centimeter on a side and more
sensitive
than ever, you realize that the GPS dot will soon move from fiction to nonfiction.
Now, "snowflake" is a put-down for people who are
sensitive
and believe themselves to be unique, and I'm a millennial and an only child, so, duh! (Laughter) But my favorite, favorite, favorite is "cuck."
He showed 148, they showed it's dangerous for the
sensitive
group.
It's so hard to post some
sensitive
words on the Chinese Weibo.
If you had told me that this smart, funny,
sensitive
man who adored me would one day dictate whether or not I wore makeup, how short my skirts were, where I lived, what jobs I took, who my friends were and where I spent Christmas, I would have laughed at you, because there was not a hint of violence or control or anger in Conor at the beginning.
They're not responding to payoffs as closely, and also if you study their learning in the game, they aren't as
sensitive
to previous rewards.
The New Yorker is rather a
sensitive
environment, very easy for people to get their nose out of joint.
Now I'm going to show you cartoons The New Yorker did right after 9/11, a very, very
sensitive
area when humor could be used.
The sensor would have to be: inexpensive, rapid, simple, sensitive, selective, and minimally invasive.
This makes it 168 times faster, over 26,000 times less expensive, and over 400 times more
sensitive
than our current standard for pancreatic cancer detection.
This clock, or circadian rhythm, is also
sensitive
to light, so avoid bright lights at night to help tell your body that it’s time for sleep.
There are neurons there that are
sensitive
to faces.
We start with an observation which, in my mind, has become clearer and clearer in the past few years, that any personal information can become
sensitive
information.
We started from social media data, we combined it statistically with data from U.S. government social security, and we ended up predicting social security numbers, which in the United States are extremely
sensitive
information.
So if you combine the two studies together, then the question becomes, can you start from a face and, using facial recognition, find a name and publicly available information about that name and that person, and from that publicly available information infer non-publicly available information, much more
sensitive
ones which you link back to the face?
[27% of subjects' first 5 SSN digits identified (with 4 attempts)] But in fact, we even decided to develop an iPhone app which uses the phone's internal camera to take a shot of a subject and then upload it to a cloud and then do what I just described to you in real time: looking for a match, finding public information, trying to infer
sensitive
information, and then sending back to the phone so that it is overlaid on the face of the subject, an example of augmented reality, probably a creepy example of augmented reality.
So in yet another experiment, this one with students, we asked them to provide information about their campus behavior, including pretty
sensitive
questions, such as this one.
I know it's a
sensitive
issue for many of you, and there are no easy answers with this.
We will need a robust cybersecurity approach that protects
sensitive
information and intellectual property and safeguards critical infrastructure from cyberattacks.
In one, I used NASA supercomputers to design next-generation spacecraft, and in the other I was a data scientist looking for potential smugglers of
sensitive
nuclear technologies.
However, our brains are also exquisitely
sensitive
to stress in our environment.
Temperatures this low give scientists a window into the inner workings of matter, and allow engineers to build incredibly
sensitive
instruments that tell us more about everything from our exact position on the planet to what’s happening in the farthest reaches of the universe.
With so little energy, they’re incredibly
sensitive
to fluctuations in the environment.
In part because society believed that tuberculosis made people more
sensitive
and creative and empathetic.
So it means that you have to be able to deal with very weak signals, and that means that your device has to be very
sensitive.
The first thing is radiotechnologies have evolved a lot, and over the last decade, radio technology became much more powerful, so we were able to build very
sensitive
radios that can sense weak and minute RF signals.
Why would we let
sensitive
things be with a relatively young person?
So I reached out to the company, and I said, "Why are you collecting this really
sensitive
data?"
Here's another problem: we've conquered darkness, but in the process, we spill so much extra light out into the night that it disrupts the lives of other creatures, and fireflies are especially
sensitive
to light pollution because it obscures the signals that they use to find their mates.
They've hacked popes and politicians, and I think their effect is larger than simple denial of service attacks that take down websites or even leak
sensitive
documents.
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