Sequence
in sentence
1351 examples of Sequence in a sentence
And since they're used so often, a lot of times the
sequence
of random characters shown to the user is not so fortunate.
This is the kind of
sequence
that I love looking at day and night.
You can also see that there's a lot of short
sequence
motifs that repeat over and over and over again, so for example there's a lot of what we call polyalanines, or iterated A's, AAAAA.
And on the bottom, this is the repeat
sequence
for the egg case, or tubuliform silk protein, for the exact same spider.
They also differ in
sequence.
I love when I'm in the laboratory, a new spider silk
sequence
comes in.
As cell division begins the nucleus disintegrates, the chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell and those special proteins undergo a three-dimensional
sequence
whereby they attach and they literally click into place end-on-end to form chains.
So, it looks like you've just learned to draw one cartoon, but you've actually learned more than that; you've learned a
sequence
that would enable you to draw hundreds and thousands of different cartoons, because we're just going to do little variations on that
sequence.
And this is a game where individuals can actually take a
sequence
of amino acids and figure out how the protein is going to fold.
CA: I'm curious, you started your beautiful
sequence
on flight with a plane kind of trying to flap its wings and failing horribly, and there haven't been that many planes built since that flap wings.
We connect events and emotions and instinctively transform them into a
sequence
that can be easily understood.
And that
sequence
was especially difficult.
We will
sequence
DNA from the environment in a kind of forensic analysis to figure out which species are there and what they are eating.
So we record all these examples, the data, and then go through a
sequence
of steps.
We then execute that on the robot, we observe what happens, then we adjust the controls, using a
sequence
of techniques called iterative learning.
The cost of doing a DNA
sequence
is going to be trivial.
And that's what I've been doing for 20 years, using DNA sequencing, collecting samples from various places, including the human body, reading the DNA
sequence
and then using that DNA sequencing to tell us about the microbes that are in a particular place.
And I'd like to submit to you that we have sequenced the human genome, we know everything about the
sequence
of the gene, the language of the gene, the alphabet of the gene, But we know nothing, but nothing, about the language and alphabet of form.
By the end of this year, we'll be able to
sequence
the three million bits of information in your genome in less than a day and for less than 1,000 euros.
It's a study at Harvard where, at the end of the study, they're going to take my entire genomic sequence, all of my medical information, and my identity, and they're going to post it online for everyone to see.
The one I liked the best is, someone could download my sequence, go back to the lab, synthesize some fake Ellen DNA, and plant it at a crime scene.
And then, following this advice, we start with this lowly, humble NAND gate, and we walk our students through an elaborate
sequence
of projects in which they gradually build a chip set, a hardware platform, an assembler, a virtual machine, a basic operating system and a compiler for a simple, Java-like language that we call "JACK."
Now since the new advancements in modern molecular technologies, it is now possible for us to
sequence
our own genome in a very rapid time and at a very, very reduced cost.
So therefore, if we were to do this, what we'd need to do is
sequence
that region in all these different mammals and ascertain if it's the same or if it's different.
And so I want to show you a high-speed video
sequence
of a fly shot at 7,000 frames per second in infrared lighting, and to the right, off-screen, is an electronic looming predator that is going to go at the fly.
Now I have carefully cropped this
sequence
to be exactly the duration of a human eye blink, so in the time that it would take you to blink your eye, the fly has seen this looming predator, estimated its position, initiated a motor pattern to fly it away, beating its wings at 220 times a second as it does so.
So for example, I'm going to show you a sequence, and I have to say, some of my funding comes from the military, so I'm showing this classified
sequence
and you cannot discuss it outside of this room.
So let me show you a little tiny
sequence
of this.
It was a
sequence
taken from another post-doc in the lab, Bettina Schnell.
The
sequence
of events: he'll put together the genomes of the band-tailed pigeon and the passenger pigeon, he'll take the techniques of George Church and get passenger pigeon DNA, the techniques of Robert Lanza and Michael McGrew, get that DNA into chicken gonads, and out of the chicken gonads get passenger pigeon eggs, squabs, and now you're getting a population of passenger pigeons.
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