Sentences with phrase «focusing the lens of»

The eye is seen as the focusing lens of the body (but only of the body).
The presence of myopia, or nearsightedness, significantly affects the muscles used in focusing the lens of the eye — a finding with important implications for the development of «accommodating» implanted intraocular lenses (IOLs) that can adjust to different visual distances, reports a study in the January issue of Optometry and Vision Science, official journal of the American Academy of Optometry.
(p. 346) For this study, we chose the focusing lenses of classroom management, which preservice teachers traditionally list as their top concern (Emmer & Hickman, 1991), and student questioning, which is foundational to student - centered teaching and which has been the focus of other video annotation studies (e.g., Calandra et al., 2008).
Carbon 13 presents newly commissioned work by eight international artists who have focused the lens of their creativity to interrogate the reality of climate change.
«With Carbon 13 and the Marfa Dialogues, Ballroom Marfa continues its mission of presenting art as a transforming media capable of addressing the most pressing issues of our time: The exhibition consists of newly commissioned work by eight international artists who have focused the lens of their creativity to interrogate the reality of climate change.
The exhibit is comprised of a new series of large - scale, watercolor paintings in which Ford depicts California through his singular, animal - focused lens of myths, literature and folklores.

Not exact matches

When it comes to young people and technology, it's vital to widen the lens - away from a close focus on time spent, to the reality of people's lives.
Looking at the healthcare debate, and the broader activities of the Trump administration, through a systems science lens helps us take perhaps a more dispassionate view — to focus less on trying to predict where each moment will lead, and more on observing the interaction of factors that will, ultimately, determine outcomes.
That includes a relentless focus on doing what's right for ALL of our stakeholders by operating our business through the lens of our Foundation Principles and a commitment to conscious leadership,» Reiff told me over email.
The lenses support the eye's effort in focusing at ultra - near distances that are typical of handheld devices by filtering out «harmful blue - violet light emitted by digital screens.»
While the new 4 - in - One's 10X lens suffers from the same key issue as before — the challenge of stabilization for a roughly postage stamp - sized focus area at a several - inch distance — the results we achieved were superior in contrast and apparently a little sharper, as well.
Through various initiatives and a keen focus on managing the business through a Lean / Six Sigma lens, Checkpoint experienced a significant rise in profitability in 2 years which ultimately led to the successful sale of the company.
Rene not only drove complex healthcare strategies for client partners and supported business development, but focused deliverables on insight generation through the lens of behavioural economics, providing a unique approach to healthcare market research.
In other parts of the world, they face much worse — including the beheader's knife and the kidnapper's harem — but Eberstadt's lens is usefully focused on us.
Just what is meant by «focusing through the lens of questions about congregations» has not been explained yet.
Our first sideways step was to refine our thesis by making it more concrete: The overarching end is to try to understand God more truly by focusing on study through the lens of questions about Christian congregations.
The relation between the two, however, and in particular the meaning of the proposal that a theological school's study be focused through the lens of questions about Christian congregations, will not be developed until the next two chapters.
Clearly, if a theological school is going to focus its study through the lens of questions about congregations as the way to truer understanding of God, it is dependent on there being congregations to study and refer to.
Clearly, the proposal that a theological school's study be focused through the lens of questions about congregations does not mean that somehow congregations become the sole or even the central subject of disciplined inquiry.
The proposal that study of various subject matters be focused through the lens of questions about congregations introduces pluralism into the heart of the course of study.
That will allow us to explain more exactly how a theological school's study can be focused «through the lens» or «within the horizon» of questions about congregations.
I am writing another book which focuses only on how to read the Bible through the lens of Jesus Christ crucified.
A way to make this point is to exploit two metaphors: We could think of questions about the communal identities and common life of diverse Christian congregations as the lens through which inquiry about all the various subject matters studied in a theological school could be focused and unified.
Then building on these two chapters side by side, in the next two chapters I will draw out what happens when theological schooling is focused through the lens or within the horizon of questions about congregations.
What Calvin likes to call the historia evangelica (the «gospel story») functions as a lens that focuses a picture: in it the true image of God is presented, and through it God can be recognized everywhere else.
Wiman's focus on reality» seeing life through the lens of life» reflects an important Christian truth.
«Focus study of all of the above through the lens of questions about Christian congregations in all their diversity and often appalling ambiguity.»
That is the reason for urging that study of all the subject matters to which theological schools attend, in the hope of understanding God more truly, be focused through the lens of questions about particular Christian congregations.
I don't think the week at Quillasascut changed any of my viewpoints on food necessarily, but through it I was able to move away from hyper - focusing on what any one food was doing to me individually and instead look at it from a broader lens, taking into consideration the communal and ecological connections to what I was eating.
I have a 50 mm lens and I usually hand hold... if you look on my food blog you can see that my DOF is always kinda narrow and sometimes the front of the frame is out of focus, which bugs me.
Using the lens of Interpersonal Neurobiology, our highly trained Therapeutic Companions focus on helping children feel safe and secure in the classroom, teaching strategies to manage emotions and behavioral impulses.
Purpose of the Best Practice Examples: The following CSH best practice examples were developed to support health sector partners in working through a CSH lens using a particular health area as a focus for collaborative action in the school setting.
We focused on «parenting through the lens of fatherhood.»
The few good books about babies tend to be highly focused: they look at babies through the lens of a cognitive scientist, say, or a developmental psychologist.
A 25 mm objective lens lends crystal clear quality to the optics, and a 416 - foot field of view brings everything into sharp focus.
The fast - focus eyepiece and fully multi-coated lenses mean nothing will stand in the way of you and your target.
The eyes of cephalopods, fish, amphibians, and snakes usually have fixed lens shapes, and focusing vision is achieved by telescoping the lens - similar to how a camera focuses.
Collapsible zoom lenses provide magnification as an added viewing feature and a flip - out scope allows kids to focus on objects of interest.
Hyperopia, also known as hypermetropia or colloquially as farsightedness or longsightedness, is a defect of vision caused by an imperfection in the eye (often when the eyeball is too short or when the lens can not become round enough), causing inability to focus on near objects, and in extreme cases causing a sufferer to be unable to focus on objects at any distance.
From the polishing of lustrous metals for mirrors to the recognition that glass could be worked to focus images to give us lenses and spectacles and the possibility of corrective vision, that fascination has had a practical bent.
Telescopes that rely on glass lenses, such as Galileo's designs, focus the light of various colors differently, creating a blurred image.
The new imaging system is the first to demonstrate the imaging capabilities of some of these unusual focusing techniques by replacing conventional, solid lenses with the combination of a malleable lens and a liquid iris - like component.
It consists of muscles that deform a stretchable lens to change the focal length, the distance between the lens and the point at which rays of light are brought to a focus.
For hundreds of years, optical devices like telescopes and microscopes have relied on solid lenses that slide up and down to magnify and to focus.
That's why we made telescopes, which use lenses or mirrors to gather and focus light, revealing the details of faraway planets, stars and galaxies.
Each dome is adjustable, so that as fluid is pumped into and out of the lens, different parts of it expand and contract to change the overall shape — and thus, the direction and focusof the lens.
A lens invented at The Ohio State University combines the focusing ability of a human eye with the wide - angle view of an insect eye to capture images with depth.
But such lenses don't offer a sense of depth: they show all objects — both near and far — in focus at all times.
That is to say, the lens shows a wide view, but still offers a sense of human - like depth perception: as close objects come into focus, far away objects look blurry.
Along the way, the whale's clicks pass through the «junk» — lens - shaped pockets of fat (yellow stripes) that focus the sound down to an intense beam.
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