Sequences
in sentence
1020 examples of Sequences in a sentence
So, digging more deeply into this, a few years ago I began working on helping computers to generate human-like stories from
sequences
of images.
It has the chemical
sequences
of amino acids which says, "This is how to build the structure.
Well, it has a simple DNA structure that you can go in and cut and paste additional DNA
sequences
into it, and by doing that, it allows the virus to express random protein
sequences.
Here's a graph that plots the entropies of a whole bunch of
sequences.
So we have no way of validating these particular readings, but if more and more of these readings start making sense, and if longer and longer
sequences
appear to be correct, then we know that we are on the right track.
And we can then see the result of such mutations when we compare DNA
sequences
among us here in the room, for example.
The two human DNA
sequences
go back to a common ancestor quite recently.
Moreover, almost all these genetic variants we see outside Africa have closely related DNA
sequences
that you find inside Africa.
And we can begin to say how much variance do we find, how many letters that vary in at least one of those individual
sequences.
And we found that this individual shared a common origin for his DNA
sequences
with Neanderthals around 640,000 years ago.
It's also memory of sequences: you cannot learn or recall anything outside of a sequence.
And these
sequences
are auto-associatively recalled, so if I see something, I hear something, it reminds me of it, and it plays back automatically.
Currently, we construct encryption keys from
sequences
of random numbers generated from software, so-called pseudo-random numbers.
Those
sequences
were shot over the last three years in various moments of your activities.
Silks made by the same spider can have dramatically different repeat
sequences.
What silk biologists do is we try to relate these sequences, these amino acid sequences, to the mechanical properties of the silk fibers.
But we're taking something very complicated, turning it into sound,
sequences
of sounds, and producing something very complicated in your brain.
So for example, in the most extreme cases, we can actually evolve a program by starting out with random
sequences
of instructions.
Say, "Computer, would you please make a hundred million random
sequences
of instructions.
Now would you please run all of those random
sequences
of instructions, run all of those programs, and pick out the ones that came closest to doing what I wanted."
So of course, random
sequences
of instructions are very unlikely to sort numbers, so none of them will really do it.
And I say, "Computer, would you please now take the 10 percent of those random
sequences
that did the best job.
When this device
sequences
an RNA or DNA virus that it doesn't recognize, it calls the CDC and prevents the pandemic from happening in the first place.
So what started out as an idea, is now being implemented to churn out millions of
sequences
that we can use to investigate the long-term evolutionary history of human health and disease, right down to the genetic code of individual pathogens.
From the dust, we pulled out bacterial cells, broke them open, and compared their gene
sequences.
And every kilogram of bush meat contained hundreds of thousands of novel viruses that have never been charted, the genomic
sequences
of which we don't know.
The discovery of that prime is similar to the work people are doing in unraveling RNA sequences, in searching through data from SETI and other astronomical projects.
This program takes a shape and spits out 250 DNA
sequences.
These short DNA
sequences
are what are going to fold the long strand into this shape that we want to make.
So you send an e-mail with these
sequences
in it to a company, and the company pronounces them on a DNA synthesizer, a machine about the size of a photocopier.
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