Yet the environmental effects of human
behavior are ubiquitous.
Opportunities for sedentary
behaviors are ubiquitous and are likely to increase with further innovations in technologies.
Not exact matches
Keeping score (leader boards, result tabulations, rankings, etc.) and comparing ourselves to others
is natural human
behavior that social media and the
ubiquitous connectivity of the web have exploded to dimensions we never anticipated.
The periodic table
is now
ubiquitous within the academic discipline of chemistry, providing an extremely useful framework to classify, systematize and compare all the many different forms of chemical
behavior.
Says Sawaoka: «In general, we think there
is great potential in better understanding how the
behavior of individual organization members reflects on the image of organizations, and vice versa, especially at a time when
ubiquitous online social networks, fast news cycles, and the blurring of privacy norms increasingly puts individual
behavior on display.»
The difference between these
behaviors in the Middle Paleolithic (and its African equivalent, the Middle Stone Age) and the Upper Paleolithic
is that in the former these traditions
are relatively rare and fleeting, in the latter they
are ubiquitous and sustained.
«Although the scale of the violence after the fission may
be unusual, inter-community violence and killings
are a
ubiquitous feature of chimpanzee social
behavior, so the post-fission violence
is not unique,» lead author Joseph Feldblum of Duke University's department of evolutionary anthropology told Seeker.
She also says making a Woody Allen movie
is the biggest regret of her career in an industry where inappropriate sexual
behavior is «
ubiquitous.»
The exhibition features work by artists who address how our vision,
behavior, and beliefs
are shaped by the
ubiquitous nature of screens.
If knowledge
were equivalent to
behavior, then Dunkin Donuts and the Cheesecake Factory would not
be ubiquitous.