Sentences with phrase «certain kind of intelligence»

The founder of the innovative architectural firm metaxy, he imagines «genetic architects» creating buildings and other objects that can build themselves, that are endowed with a certain kind of intelligence, and that make up a massive «self - aware» built ecosystem.
Size seems to matter — for certain kinds of intelligence — according to a new study by Sandra Witelson, professor of psychiatry and behavioral neuroscience at McMaster University in Ontario.

Not exact matches

When listening to music, it can help us tolerate high levels of pain and certain types of music can even boost specific kinds of intelligence.
Zimmer: Well there are a lot of different ways of testing intelligence, and you can find them on IQ tests and other kinds of tests; and they tend to correlate together and so that people who score a certain way on one intelligence test will test similarly in another test and so these scores, kind of, hang together.
He lamented both the death of movie intelligence inside the major studios and the death of a certain kind of midbudget adult movie.
Sure the story's essentially the same and the special effects budget has obviously been spent, but the tone here is also a more menacing one than Robert Wise's 1951 film, which points to a certain intelligence to which we're not typically accustomed in these kinds of projects.
In a democratic society people are free to be as conservative or liberal as their intelligence and conscience lead, but institutions built to nurture and sustain such a society are not, nor are their programs.Whether we wish to admit it or not, every education system tries to produce a certain kind of human being, attempts to develop in people dispositions to think, feel, and act in certain ways.
The kind of pattern recognition valued in certain of the sciences may also draw upon naturalist intelligence
«Intelligence» doesn't mean much, really; all way can say for sure is that border collies test extremely highly on a certain kind of obedience test.
Sharon D. Nelson: Well, interesting, you kind of answered my next question, so I think I'm going to reshape it a little bit because I do think a lot of lawyers are worried about Artificial Intelligence replacing their jobs, and from my own perspective, I think a certain amount of that fear is justified, but I do understand what you're saying and I've watched with considerable admiration as you've kind of turned your ship a little bit into a different harbor because originally it was called ROSS: The Super-Intelligent Attorney, and now, you have more shaped ROSS from the point of view of the lawyer as somebody that allows the lawyer to be more efficient, serve the client better, and to focus on something other than what you might call «the goat work» of the legal world, which we really don't want to do, and so how did you come to the realization that that was something that needed to be done?
«Substantially related» positions include executive or managerial jobs that involve the direction of a business unit or responsibility for financial operations of certain kinds, or involve contracts with federal agencies including defense, intelligence, national security, or space.
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