Shown
in sentence
3604 examples of Shown in a sentence
We have made a lot of discoveries, we have
shown
that extracellular matrix talks to chromatin.
We have
shown
that there's little pieces of DNA on the specific genes of the mammary gland that actually respond to extracellular matrix.
He was a very wealthy man, and a sort of, part of the aristocracy of Britain, and on a Saturday night in Marylebone, were you part of the intelligentsia of that period, you would have been invited round to his house for a soiree — and he invited everybody: kings, the Duke of Wellington, many, many famous people — and he would have
shown
you one of his mechanical machines.
I've
shown
one simple process that was inspired by nature; there's countless other ones.
A tabulation of positive and negative emotion words in news stories has
shown
that during the decades in which humanity has gotten healthier, wealthier, wiser, safer and happier, the "New York Times" has become increasingly morose and the world's broadcasts too have gotten steadily glummer.
Now let me first show you how the unity is
shown
in chimpanzees.
And it doesn't even get tired of grading the same work multiple times, we've seen that in many of the examples that I've
shown
you.
And even personalization is something that we're starting to see the beginnings of, whether it's via the personalized trajectory through the curriculum or some of the personalized feedback that we've
shown
you.
Together, we've
shown
how powerful our public spaces can be if we're given the opportunity to have a voice, and share more with one another.
To do this, I designed a multilayer optical material
shown
here in a microscope image.
To do this, we've built fluid cooling panels, like the ones
shown
right here.
Our start-up, SkyCool Systems, has recently completed a field trial in Davis, California,
shown
right here.
As a first step towards that, my colleagues at Stanford and I have
shown
that you could actually maintain something more than 42 degrees Celsius below the air temperature with better engineering.
And what's
shown
there is one possible arrangement.
But perhaps most heartbreaking of all are the stories of the abuse of even the most basic human rights, such as the young woman
shown
in this image here that are played out every day, sadly, even in the very institutions that were built to care for people with mental illnesses, the mental hospitals.
It seems to me that there are five key lessons that I've
shown
on this slide that are critically important for effective task shifting.
In the investigation that followed before the actual trial, each of the other five teenagers was
shown
photographs, the same photo array.
The picture that we best can determine was probably the one that they were
shown
in the photo array is in your bottom left hand corner of these mug shots.
We know from the sequencing of the human genome that it's
shown
us all of the A's, C's, G's and T's that make up our genetic code, but that code, by itself, our DNA, is like looking at the ones and zeroes of the computer code without having a computer that can read it.
So MRI studies looking at the development of this region have
shown
that it really undergoes dramatic development during the period of adolescence.
So in my lab, we bring adolescents and adults into the lab to have a brain scan, we give them some kind of task that involves thinking about other people, their minds, their mental states, their emotions, and one of the findings that we've found several times now, as have other labs around the world, is part of the prefrontal cortex called medial prefrontal cortex, which is
shown
in blue on the slide, and it's right in the middle of prefrontal cortex in the midline of your head.
So brain research has
shown
that the adolescent brain undergoes really quite profound development, and this has implications for education, for rehabilitation, and intervention.
So office sound is a huge area, and incidentally, noise in offices has been
shown
to make people less helpful, less enjoy their teamwork, and less productive at work.
Even more dramatic, Alex Todorov at Princeton has
shown
us that judgments of political candidates' faces in just one second predict 70 percent of U.S. Senate and gubernatorial race outcomes, and even, let's go digital, emoticons used well in online negotiations can lead you to claim more value from that negotiation.
Let me show you something I haven't
shown
anywhere, actually.
Research has
shown
that giving employees more control over their work makes them happier and more productive.
Those probably made a lot of you in the audience feel very, very disgusted, but if you didn't look, I can tell you about some of the other things that have been
shown
sort of across the world to make people disgusted, things like feces, urine, blood, rotten flesh.
So this is whether you use a foul odor, a bad taste, from film clips, from post-hypnotic suggestions of disgust, images like the ones I've
shown
you, even just reminding people that disease is prevalent and they should be wary of it and wash up, right, to keep clean, these all have similar effects on judgment.
So I've been talking about this, suggesting, perhaps, that mind-wandering causes unhappiness, but all I've really
shown
you is that these two things are correlated.
Recent studies have
shown
that in areas where there are no vultures, carcasses take up to three to four times to decompose, and this has huge ramifications for the spread of diseases.
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