Sentences with phrase «by human observers»

Then their algorithm goes to work, looking at both the transcript and the audio files (which have markers for intonation, tempo, and more) to match codes provided by human observers.
These data are made by a human observer subjectively classifying cloud cover into a decimal or octal scale.

Not exact matches

Yang was invited to speak at the meeting by UN-accredited advocacy group UN Watch but China's interventions bared China's sensitivity on human rights, say observers.
-- Human rights observers were denied access at least five times that year to Kandahar facilities run by the notorious National Directorate of Security
The openhearted observer of Islam in the West can discern the shape of hope in the increasing willingness of people of the two faiths to come together for dialogue and consultation on the mutual problems they face; in the reevaluation of Islam forced upon Muslims by their minority status in many places; and in the development of the concept of international law and universal human rights.
Many careful observers believe that human economic activity is already at an unsustainable level in many parts of the world and even globally, as indicated by global warming.
With all due respect if these are the things you learned by observing Osteen you aren't a very astute observer of human nature.
«There would, however, be a method by which, if the orangutan and others were of the human species, the crudest observers could assure themselves of it even by demonstration; but since a single generation would not suffice for this experiment, it must be considered impracticable, because it would be necessary for what is only an hypothesis to be already proved true before the experiment that was to prove it true could be tried innocently.»
But he does not provide reason here for rejecting Ford's alternative reading that the concrete experience in question is that of the human observer and that the events in nature are constituted by their internal relations to all the others.
Its beauty as found in the enjoyment of a human observer, for example, results from the patterns adopted by societies of individuals none of which can enjoy that particular form of beauty.
So, by that, compounded with problems such as Heisenberg's principle of uncertainty, the observer's effect, and the like — the modern day human lacks sufficient qualification to ascertain a good part of their knowledge as being absolute.
We expect that human observers will be able to continue to perform this task for a few years to come, but eventually we will have to refine existing techniques and develop new computational methods that can detect fine - grained image details that may not be identifiable by the human visual system.»
With just half the available cues, Categorisation By Elimination correctly predicted two - thirds of the intentions — similar to the success rate of a trained human observer.
We are referring to voiceprinting, or spectrogram matching, in which a human observer compares the spectrograms of a word pronounced by the suspect with the same word pronounced by an intercepted speaker.
The photon is then detected by a detector (top right) or by the eye of the human observer (bottom right).
Just like the insight that lead Einstein to the Special Theory of Relativity, viz. «all laws of Physics remain the same for all inertial observers,» one must expect all scientific results to be reproduced identically (to a certain level of precision) by independent experimenters, thereby removing instrumental, environmental and human bias.
Here's a question I've raised before, only this time expressed in two new ways: * Whatever the errors of Crichton and Will, to what extent, if any, should nonscientist observers of human culture treat science uniquely — that is, in a way they treat no other aspect of culture — by abstaining from writing about it?
When faced with a spewing volcano, people today share many of the same feelings volcano - observers have had throughout human history: We are in awe of the destructive power of nature, and we are unsettled by the thought that a peaceful mountain can suddenly become an unstoppable destructive force!
Because the light being collected is invisible, the human observer is replaced by an infrared detector at the mirror's focal point.
Smart, intelligent, talented, passionate, sexual, observer, thinker who studies humans» mind without emotional side and understands the situations by rational thinking.
Directed by the versatile Leo McCarey, a master of improvisation and slapstick as well as a keen and sympathetic observer of human folly, «The Awful Truth» is a warm but unsparing comedy about two people whose flaws only make them more irresistible.
Aside from a bird's eye view of Manhattan at night in the film's opening moments, Greengrass permits himself to shoot only from camera positions that can be justified by the conceivable presence of a human observer — we never see the exterior of the plane once it's airborne, and the devastation of the Twin Towers is seen only from the remove of the Newark Airport control tower and the television screens in the various control rooms.
That there may be few if any human observers by that time (80 meters) does not render it an uninteresting question.
Adopting the Anthropocene may reverse this trend by asserting that humans are not passive observers of Earth's functioning.
Consider the multiple possibilities of unfair coins, unexpected externalities that could affect outcomes, skilled coin toss experts and their chaotic human whims, social engineering of observers by dishonest actors and their chaotic whims, observational errors and the whims of observers, one would have to call actual coin tosses a spatial - temporal chaos model, in particular if one decides beforehand to do what one can to generate that outcome.
Furthermore, the climate is controlled by the sun and not the humans, we are just mere observers of the temps changes and not contributors.
There is a bottom - up factor, meaning that almost all the new students who go into climate studies these days are motivated by a desire to «save the world» from evil humans rather than to be critical, skeptical or uncommitted observers.
Here's a question I've raised before, only this time expressed in two new ways: * Whatever the errors of Crichton and Will, to what extent, if any, should nonscientist observers of human culture treat science uniquely — that is, in a way they treat no other aspect of culture — by abstaining from writing about it?
Auto - industry insiders and observers alike argued that the company was putting the public at risk by introducing a self - driving system that tempted drivers to relax behind the wheel even though it was not yet advanced enough to function safely without human oversight.
These rapid changes have left some observers feeling that the ethical and legal implications of human genome research have not been taken seriously by those who undertake and benefit from such work.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z