Trial
in sentence
1250 examples of Trial in a sentence
That was all a preliminary hearing judge had to listen to, to bind Mr. Carrillo over to stand
trial
for a first-degree murder.
In the investigation that followed before the actual trial, each of the other five teenagers was shown photographs, the same photo array.
So at the actual trial, all six of the teenagers testified, and indicated the identifications they had made in the photo array.
Straightforward, fair trial, full investigation.
First of all, we have all the statistical analyses from the Innocence Project work, where we know that we have, what, 250, 280 documented cases now where people have been wrongfully convicted and subsequently exonerated, some from death row, on the basis of later DNA analysis, and you know that over three quarters of all of those cases of exoneration involved only eyewitness identification testimony during the
trial
that convicted them.
All the teenagers testified during the
trial
that they could see very well.
Now believe it or not, normal, healthy, intelligent adults like you make errors about 50 percent of the time on that kind of
trial.
So instead, you can experiment with these different tools here by some process of guided
trial
and error, and at some point you will discover that one thing that you can do among several legitimate transformations is the following one.
So after some guided
trial
and error, the child will discover, with or without help, that he or she can duplicate the original figure and then take the result, transpose it, glue it to the original and then proceed [with] what we did before: cut, rearrange, paste — oops— paste and glue, and tile.
Early on its development, they did a very small trial, just under a hundred patients.
So they rightly regarded this drug as a failure, and its commercial development was stopped, and because its commercial development was stopped, this
trial
was never published.
There are academic journals like "Trials," the open access journal, which will publish any
trial
conducted in humans regardless of whether it has a positive or a negative result.
And then finally, the FDA Amendment Act was passed a couple of years ago saying that everybody who conducts a
trial
must post the results of that
trial
within one year.
It was my first audition, and after three days of playing behind a screen in a
trial
week, I was offered the position.
And so if you think about it, the depressing thing is that Facebook would never make a change to something as important as an advertising algorithm with a sample size as small as a Phase III clinical
trial.
So because we tested it with wheelchair users, with wheelchair manufacturers, we got that feedback from them, not just articulating their problems, but articulating their solutions, and worked together to go back to the drawing board and make a new design, which we brought back to East Africa in '09 that worked a lot better than a normal wheelchair on rough terrain, but it still didn't work well indoors because it was too big, it was heavy, it was hard to move around, so again with that user feedback, we went back to the drawing board, came up with a better design, 20 pounds lighter, as narrow as a regular wheelchair, tested that in a field
trial
in Guatemala, and that advanced the product to the point where we have now that it's going into production.
Now also being engineering scientists, we were able to quantify the performance benefits of the Leveraged Freedom Chair, so here are some shots of our
trial
in Guatemala where we tested the LFC on village terrain, and tested people's biomechanical outputs, their oxygen consumption, how fast they go, how much power they're putting out, both in their regular wheelchairs and using the LFC, and we found that the LFC is about 80 percent faster going on these terrains than a normal wheelchair.
And this picture was taken in India in our last field trial, where we had a 90-percent adoption rate where people switched to using our Leveraged Freedom Chair over their normal wheelchair, and this picture specifically is of Ashok, and Ashok had a spinal injury when he fell out of a tree, and he had been working at a tailor, but once he was injured he wasn't able to transport himself from his house over a kilometer to his shop in his normal wheelchair.
Well, the thing is that, the congestion charges, they were introduced first as a trial, so they were introduced in January and then abolished again at the end of July, followed by a referendum, and then they were reintroduced again in 2007, which of course was a wonderful scientific opportunity.
It would be like having a clinical
trial
on a chip.
We don't consider that a couple of hundred years ago, they may have been burned at the stake for criticizing the king after a
trial
that lasted 10 minutes, and indeed, that that would have been repeated over and over again.
Trial
or no trial, these claims are front and center on their label right next to a picture of a brain.
Six years ago, at the time of her HIV diagnosis, she was recruited to participate in the clinical
trial
which was running in her health district at the time.
She told me that she stopped coming to the clinic when the
trial
ended because she had no money for the bus fare and was too ill to walk the 35-kilometer distance.
Now during the clinical trial, she'd been given all her antiretroviral drugs free of charge, and her transportation costs had been covered by the research funds.
All of these ended once the
trial
was completed, leaving Celine with no alternatives.
She was unable to tell me the names of the drugs she'd received during the trial, or even what the
trial
had been about.
I didn't bother to ask her what the results of the
trial
were because it seemed obvious to me that she would have no clue.
Yet what puzzled me most was Celine had given her informed consent to be a part of this trial, yet she clearly did not understand the implications of being a participant or what would happen to her once the
trial
had been completed.
Now, I have shared this story with you as an example of what can happen to participants in the clinical
trial
when it is poorly conducted.
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