Sentences with phrase «upon human interaction»

Ideally, the heating, ventilation or air - conditioning systems should have humidity monitoring and automatic controls, so that the eradication of excessive humidity - which will be the most likely cause of problems - is not reliant upon human interaction with the controls.

Not exact matches

Then based upon your false choice which I will indulge, there is no need for funerals, hugs, sympathy letters or cards or any other human action or interaction which brings true consolation.
Humans are looked upon as survivors of a prehistoric «fall» — a fall from grace and a fall from undistorted human communication and interaction.
If it is true that, bound by the collective interaction of its liberties, the human social group can not escape from certain irreversible laws of evolution, does this mean that, observed along its axis of «greatest complexity» (i.e. increasing liberty) the World is coiling upon itself with as much sureness as it is in other respects radiating outwards and explosively expanding?
Five impressively researched sections frame our Anthropocene impacts (with considerable focus on climate change); discuss the innovations that might ameliorate those impacts; enumerate man's interaction with (read: manipulation of) and influence upon nature; outline the intersection of our technological advances and nature; and explore our mind - boggling tinkering with the human body and psyche.
Rather than trying to remove human interaction, they believe in a high level of service, where employees are encouraged to have conversations with shoppers, answer questions and be available to tell a product's story upon request.
Whilst a single game relies upon human - human interaction for its conflict, and often for its sense of camaraderie, a single - player game must build these things artificially.
These works showcase how Oiticica insisted upon the power and potential of human autonomy and social interaction.
Elevating the audience interaction to maximum heights, these semi-utilitarian sculptures reach their full existence only human upon participation.
Janet Culbertson's art is inspired by and reveals the dramatic environmental changes brought about by human interaction upon the earth.
Humour, sadness, elation, depression; pathos, ebullience, turbulence; love, hate, attraction, revulsion; pointing, pushing, pulling, cavorting; turning, tossing, tumbling, twisting; rock and roll, victory and defeat; all the elements, in fact, of intense human interaction and drama that were once the province of figurative art, particularly figurative painting — where they formed the pretext upon which was built a profound diversity of imaginative visual constructs — are seemingly no longer at the behest of figurative art, which languishes in states of mock - academia or faux - avant - gardism, by turns bathetic, mundane or grotesque... all that human content is now, surprisingly but necessarily, the prerogative of the abstract artist.
The event season is upon us, providing us with a deluge of human interactions.
Two major reasons for this view are (1) the strong similarities between monkeys and humans in social behavior, endocrine function, brain structure, and degree and duration of mother - infant nurturance (Harlow and Zimmerman 1959; Kalin and Shelton 2003; Mendoza and Mason 1997), or, in the unique case of titi monkeys, the extent of biparental care (Hennessy 1997); and (2) the extent to which monkeys fulfill Ainsworth's criteria of attachment (Ainsworth 1972), namely, unequivocal distress upon complete separation from the attachment figure and alleviation of this distress (both behavioral and physiological) upon reunion / interaction with the attachment figure (Mendoza and Mason 1997).
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