Sentences with phrase «sufficient numbers of human»

Using a non-human primate model, researchers demonstrate that sufficient numbers of human ESC - derived cardiomyocytes can be produced, stored, and transplanted, leading to good levels of engraftment and electrical coupling

Not exact matches

They may have been few in number but they offered sufficient proof that everything can be taken away from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms — to choose one's attitude in any circumstances, to choose one's own way.»
For Holmes, the ruling majority based its claim to rule not on any principle affirming the rightness of ruling human beings with their consent and free elections; rather, the majority found its sufficient claim to rule in the brute fact that the majority, by force of numbers, could overpower the minority.
«Before this study, it was not known if it is possible to produce sufficient numbers of these cells and successfully use them to remuscularize damaged hearts in a large animal whose heart size and physiology is similar to that of the human heart,» said Dr. Charles Murry, UW professor of pathology and bioengineering, who led the research team that conducted the experiment.
For now, the technical limiting factor is the availability of a sufficient number of ripe human eggs.
The constellation's formation matches a number of others indexed across ancient human civilization, constituting sufficient evidence to justify aging zillionaire Peter Weylan (Guy Pearce, heavily augmented by prosthetics, and likely some CGI) sending a team of scientists to the far reaches of the galaxy, trailing the origins of human life on a hunch.
Silicon Knights has been embroiled in a multi-million dollar legal battle with Epic Games for a number of years, after the Too Human developer originally sought $ 58 million in damages after it claimed Epic did not provide sufficient support in its use of Unreal Engine 3, which it said affected subsequent sales.
But, as I explained to Gell - Mann then, I don't see better communication, on its own, being remotely sufficient to set the world on a course to shift swiftly from the fuels of convenience — coal and oil — even as human numbers and resource appetites crest.
Clearly, the loss of biodiversity (estimated at thousands of times the natural backgroud rate), the number of well known species that are threatened (10 - 40 % depending on taxonomic group), the loss of 10,000 - 30,000 genetically distinct populations per day (see Hughes et al., 1997) massive declines of groundwater, soil productivity and fertility, etc. as well as the fact that human activities now impact biogeochemical cycles over huge spatial scales is sufficient evidence that our species is living off of natural capital, rather than income.
50 transactions per day per human appears sufficient to cover all human - driven activities; and only a healthy machine - to - machine market would require an even greater number of transactions.
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