Roger Haut (left), a University Distinguished Professor in biomechanics, and Todd Fenton (right), a forensic anthropologist, have discovered that skull fractures leave
certain signature patterns that can help investigators better determine what caused the injury.
Not exact matches
Sure enough, salmon with a
certain pattern of gene expression in their gill tissue were 13.5 times more likely to die than those that didn't carry the «you've not got long to live»
signature, as co-author and University of British Columbia (U.B.C.) fish physiologist Tony Farrell puts it.
Such brain
patterns, Barrett says, are just statistical summaries, not unique
signatures that exist only when someone has a
certain experience.
Wang added, «With this type of machine learning, we are trying to identify a
certain pattern or correlation of
patterns that is a unique
signature of the equation of state.»