Subjects
in sentence
713 examples of Subjects in a sentence
Certain
subjects
came up over and over: how much money they made, what kind of husband they hoped to marry, whether they should jump to another factory or stay where they were.
Other
subjects
came up almost never, including living conditions that to me looked close to prison life: 10 or 15 workers in one room, 50 people sharing a single bathroom, days and nights ruled by the factory clock.
What they showed is that, initially, you know,
subjects
perform where they are expected to perform given their age.
So they concluded that because they saw activation in the insula, this meant the
subjects
loved their iPhones.
So we put patients with these
subjects
under the UV, and their NO levels do go up, and their blood pressure goes down.
One of the
subjects
here was my mother-in-law, and clearly I do not know her age.
And that got me into a discussion with some other people, other scientists, about maybe some other subjects, and one of the guys I talked to, who was a neuroscientist, said, "You know, I think there are a lot of solutions to the problems you brought up," and reminds me of Michael's talk yesterday and his mother saying you can't have a solution if you don't have a problem.
This is one of my favorite
subjects.
I started experimenting with other subjects, among them, for example, pronunciation.
So this is the other group of
subjects
who often disagree.
All right, so let's take four
subjects
that obviously go together: big data, tattoos, immortality and the Greeks.
In my continued exploration of
subjects
in nature that have the ability to illustrate the interconnection of all life, I started storm chasing in 2008 after my daughter said, "Mom, you should do that."
What I'd like to do today is talk about one of my favorite subjects, and that is the neuroscience of sleep.
There's a very concerning trend that whilst many people coming out of schools now are much more technology-savvy, they know how to use technology, fewer and fewer people are following the feeder
subjects
to know how that technology works under the covers.
The
subjects
in this study were members of the U.S. military who were undergoing a harrowing training exercise to teach them what it's going to be like for them if they are ever captured as prisoners of war.
And we succeeded in planting this memory in the minds of about a quarter of our
subjects.
And in a study done in Canada, researchers planted the false memory that when you were a kid, something as awful as being attacked by a vicious animal happened to you, succeeding with about half of their
subjects.
I do want to add that it might seem like we are traumatizing these experimental
subjects
in the name of science, but our studies have gone through thorough evaluation by research ethics boards that have made the decision that the temporary discomfort that some of these
subjects
might experience in these studies is outweighed by the importance of this problem for understanding memory processes and the abuse of memory that is going on in some places in the world.
Dr. James Levine at, in this case, the aptly-named Mayo Clinic put his test
subjects
in electronic underwear, held their diet steady, and then started pumping the calories in.
Expecting some metabolic or DNA factor at work, they were shocked to learn that the only difference between the
subjects
that they could figure out was the amount they were moving, and that in fact those who gained weight were sitting, on average, two hours more per day than those who didn't.
By the time the subject reached the last page on the survey, the page had been dynamically updated with the 10 best matching photos which the recognizer had found, and we asked the
subjects
to indicate whether he or she found themselves in the photo.
Well, the computer did, and in fact did so for one out of three
subjects.
[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.
In another experiment, we presented to our
subjects
information about a potential job candidate.
Now interestingly, among our subjects, some had posted comparable information, and some had not.
Now to one group of subjects, we told them, "Only other students will see your answers."
To another group of subjects, we told them, "Students and faculty will see your answers."
And sure enough, this worked, in the sense that the first group of
subjects
were much more likely to disclose than the second.
We repeated the experiment with the same two groups, this time adding a delay between the time we told
subjects
how we would use their data and the time we actually started answering the questions.
Of course, these technologies imply a shifting of cost and revenues between data holders and data subjects, which is why, perhaps, you don't hear more about them.
Back
Next
Related words
Their
Which
Other
About
There
People
Would
Should
Human
Being
While
Research
Students
Rather
World
Great
Study
Often
Found
First