Spectrum
in sentence
511 examples of Spectrum in a sentence
And I think this speaks to a
spectrum
that goes from complete self-absorption, to noticing, to empathy and to compassion.
Rives: It shows the
spectrum.
And on the other side of the political spectrum, George H.W. Bush, number 41, the father, he has agreed to participate, and Nick Kroll, the comedian, and Dr. Oz, and many more to come.
So this is what I've dedicated my life to, to building an organization and a movement of people who believe we need to turn our backs on the failed prohibitions of the past and embrace new drug policies grounded in science, compassion, health and human rights, where people who come from across the political
spectrum
and every other
spectrum
as well, where people who love our drugs, people who hate drugs, and people who don't give a damn about drugs, but every one of us believes that this War on Drugs, this backward, heartless, disastrous War on Drugs, has got to end.
On the one hand, you do have the media, politics and news lobe that tends to exist in Baltimore and other cities, but you also have this very predominant group of geeks and techies that are sort of taking over the top half of the network, and there's even a group that's so distinct and clear that we can identify it as Twitter employees, next to the geeks, in between the gamers and the geeks, at the opposite end of the hip-hop
spectrum.
We can see across the entire
spectrum
of light, revealing worlds that had previously been invisible.
Fred Jansen: You mentioned halfway through that the technology to actually look at the
spectrum
of an exoplanet like Earth is not there yet.
We have to look past our unconscious bias, find someone to mentor who's at the opposite end of your
spectrum
because structural change takes time, and I don't have that level of patience.
Emotion-enabled wearable glasses can help individuals who are visually impaired read the faces of others, and it can help individuals on the autism
spectrum
interpret emotion, something that they really struggle with.
What's at the other end of that
spectrum?
Over the next several years, they quietly worked with the American Psychiatric Association to broaden the criteria for diagnosis to reflect the diversity of what they called "the autism spectrum."
If the CDC's current estimate, that one in 68 kids in America are on the spectrum, is correct, autistics are one of the largest minority groups in the world.
Far beyond definition as single right or wrong decisions, our experiences can exist on a
spectrum.
This technology could play an integral role in helping people with autistic
spectrum
disorder, or ASD.
The same holds true on the other end of the economic
spectrum.
You've got the whole
spectrum.
LD: At the opposite end of the
spectrum
is Argentina.
So we would open up a
spectrum
between the collective and the individual.
Well, we're at the very bottom end of the
spectrum.
In between all the other frequencies form a continuous band of color, called the visible
spectrum.
Neurodiversity emphasizes this
spectrum
of brain function in all humans and suggests that to better understand the perspectives of those around us, we should try not only to see the world through their eyes but understand it through their brains.
As it turns out, that's how you live your life all the time because your eyes can only see a minuscule part of the full
spectrum
of light.
Our universe gives off the full
spectrum
of light, too.
When you think of the night sky, you probably think of being able to see the stars shining with your own eyes, but that's just visible light, which you now know is only a tiny part of the full
spectrum.
To see the universe in its full spectrum, we need to have the right eyes, and that means using special telescopes that can help us see beyond visible light.
But you might not know that there are 20 space telescopes in orbit, missions that can each see part of the full
spectrum
of light.
Knowing just a little bit about the natural world can help you perceive the full
spectrum
around you all the time.
Just like real life, fictional worlds operate consistently within a
spectrum
of physical and societal rules.
Before reaching our eyes, different gases absorbed those specific parts of the
spectrum.
The light that our eyes can see, including all of the colors of the rainbow, is just a small part of the larger
spectrum
of electromagnetic radiation, which includes radio waves, microwaves, infrared, ultraviolet, x-rays, and gamma rays.
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