Sentences with phrase «really big brain»

«There was a strong belief for a long time,» Roche says, that for true collaborative hunting «you must need a really big brain to process complex information.»
You also have a really big brain.

Not exact matches

My Fortune colleague Erika Fry (also my partner - in - crime for our April cover story on big data, biology, and digital health, which I really hope you'll take some time to read) reports on some ways to look out for your brain.
Bill, I feel sorry for you, you being a scientist and yet unable to create anything close to a human, or a constellation system, or a brain to think really logically with is amazing to me... if you want to believe that there was a big explosion somewhere in the universe beyond this world and that is how you came to be you can keep that theory but don't tell parents what to do with there children.
In the midfield, (including RWB & LWB) we have a whole bunch of tweeners... none offer the full package, none make sense in our manager's current favourite formation, except for Sead on the left and Ox on the right, and all of them have never shown any consistency for more than a heartbeat... Sead, who I'm including in this category because of our present formation, looks like a positive addition, minus his occasional brain farts, but I would rather see what he could do in a back 4 before making my mind up... Ox, who has never played better, which isn't saying much considering his largely underwhelming play in previous seasons, seems to have found a home in this new formation; unfortunately, can we really expect this oft - injured player to handle the taxing duties that come with said position over the long haul, not to mention, it looks like he has no intention of staying... Ramsey has relied on the empathy that stems from his gruesome injury years ago and the excitement that was generated a few years back when he finally seemed to put in altogether, but on the whole he has been a big disappointment (neither he nor the Ox have scored enough to warrant a regular spot)... Wiltshire should be put on a weekly contract then played until he suffers his first injury, if and when that occurs he should be shipped - out and no one should very be allowed to say his name on club grounds ever again... Elnehy & Coq are average players who couldn't make any of the top 7 teams currently in the EPL... both have showed some great energy on the pitch, but neither are top quality and no good team can afford to have that many average players on their bench playing the same position, especially with Coq's injury history / discipline concerns and Elheny's headless chicken tendencies... as for Xhaka, his tenure here so far has been incredibly underwhelming... we know he has some skills to provide the long ball but his defensive work is piss poor and he gives the ball away too cheaply and far too often... finally, the enigma himself, Ozil, so much skill with his left foot but his presence has been more frustrating than uplifting... in many respects his failure has been directly related to the failure of this club to provide him with the necessary players up front, minus Sanchez of course, and unless something drastic happens very soon his legacy will be largely a negative one (much like Wenger's)
But I think I took a couple of things away: One was really that in infancy... attachment - promoting behavior — that helping him manage stress the way that those mother rats helped their pups manage stress — was a hugely important thing, and that was going to make a big difference in terms of how his brain develops, how his stress response system develops, and that that was going to help him a lot going forward.
Our big - brained babies have to come out after 9 months gestation, however, in many ways, they could really use a few more months of the stimulation of the uterus.
«Their little brains might be trying to figure out what they're seeing — the colors, the faces, the sounds — but whether they're really absorbing it in a way that can be called learning, that's the big question,» says Guernsey.
«We have all this stuff - new brain imaging technologies, big data samples, etc. — why are we not making really fast progress?»
But mapping a few neurons does not give Seung enough data to go after the really big questions about the brain.
This study is really the first of its kind and provides a big step forwards in our understanding of how training can alter the functioning of brain networks.
«This is really a big step forward in imaging brain tumors and other issues in young patients,» said Journal of Medical Imaging associate editor Christoph Hoeschen of Otto - von - Guericke Universität.
But there really isn't such a debate: Most anthropologists agree that the big - brained Neandertals had some hefty cognitive capabilities.
«It carries a really big wallop to the thinking part of the brain, which has to argue for or against it,» Brizendine says.
Because there is a theory — that is mostly Hanson's theory, but I guess other people subscribe to this — that the limiting factor holding back a capitalistic economy is brain power; at this point nothing else really holds it back, well resources holds it back, but brain power is a big one; and a [the] more advanced an economy becomes, the more brainpower becomes a bottleneck.
«It really highlights that just a small difference in the regulatory regions of human DNA — even ones that don't really make a gene, per se, but help to control genes — can have a big impact on how the brain is built, and ultimately how it functions,» she said.
The brain has often been seen as a very difficult research domain in which the technology to get really big, impactful insights is not there.
That's such a big number our human brains can't really comprehend it.
Marna Thall: And so a big piece of what I do is around rewiring their brain to really think differently --
You could have a perfect diet and a good supplement program, but if you just come home from work and you're just completely tanked and then you go straight to more emails at home or straight to TV or some other distraction and you're not really actively resting, your brain is still stuck in that Fight or Flight sympathetic, I feel like that's gonna be the biggest roadblock that's gonna make you or break you, it's the nervous system.
For a bigger punch on a really big day, add in a few drops of Brain Power Essential Oil blend.
Now he's a big fan because he's a chiropractic neurologist that a lot of gut issues really emanate from the brain.
The biggest problem with bacterial meningitis is that it is hard for antibiotics to penetrate the blood / brain barrier so it is sometimes necessary to use antibiotics for a really long time in order to control these infections.
It's a change that makes sense in terms of button layout and brain response but when you're sitting really close to a big TV it screws you up.
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