Sentences with phrase «human intervention often»

This type of human intervention often results in a worsening of the aggression, especially when it ends up decreasing the distance between the dogs.

Not exact matches

Elephants in the wild also normally give birth at night, human mamas without interventions, too, will often give birth overnight (as a doula, I can attest to this reality as so many births happen during the calm and privacy of nighttime).
For example, the structural integrity of tiny blood vessels, the physical limits of synthetic tubing, the complex molecular exchange between fetus and placenta, and the often - poor outcomes of premature infants (despite receiving today's most cutting - edge interventions) all speak to the immeasurably complex science attending fetal viability outside the human womb.
Intervention studies often use specific fiber supplements such as pectin, psyllium, and guar gum, which would, by the above definition, be considered Functional Fibers if their role in human health is documented.
In natural disasters, puppy mill busts, animal fighting interventions, and hoarding cases, law enforcement and emergency management agencies often rely on specially - trained response teams to rescue animals and mitigate the associated risks to humans.
Because mother cats often become stressed in a shelter setting, which reduces their ability to care for their kittens, human intervention, which includes constant monitoring, is necessary to ensure survival.
Some dogs may work it out without owner intervention, but most often, they need human intervention and control.
Serra uses material to investigate weight, balance and the relationship with space, often dividing environments as interventions with the human form, the artist's work often reflects the temporal nature of art via the patina of rust adding a fourth dimension; that of time, the temporal aspects of object and body.
(4) Often I hear that the aims of the Paris Climate Agreement are absurd, because humans can not stabilize the global temperature — after all, our climate changes even without human intervention.
«But a sober look at our world shows that the degree of human intervention, often in the service of business interests and consumerism, is actually making our earth less rich and beautiful, ever more limited and grey, even as technological advances and consumer goods continue to abound limitlessly.
A smart contract these days is generally considered a contract the performance of whose terms is judged by technological means, and often whose execution or enforcement is carried out through such means, without human intervention.
Progress is also being made with smart contracts, where human intervention is often no longer required.
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