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Discover LudwigThe phrase "artificially extracted from" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a process where a substance or component is obtained through artificial means rather than natural methods.
Example: "The essential oils in this product are artificially extracted from various plants to enhance their potency."
Alternatives: "synthetically derived from" or "man-made extraction from".
Exact(3)
But this data point is artificially extracted from that person's whole organic life process.
The controversy lies with soy isolate, proteins artificially extracted from the soybean.
For performance evaluation purposes, we have used synthetic datasets, artificially extracted from the reference genome.
Similar(57)
Obviously, cells artificially extracted and isolated from their tissue context trigger the activation of processes to reestablish this context.
DNA was also extracted from artificially inoculated salads samples, after homogenization in the enrichment broth, after 0, 2, 4, 6, and 24 hours, respectively.
Preliminary dilution experiments with DNA extracted from artificially produced Guthrie cards with cloned DNA did not give results different from experiments with cloned DNA diluted in water and salmon sperm (data not shown).
Therefore to observe more clear mechanisms governing their water and mechanical stability, we studied aggregates artificially formed from silt fraction extracted from a loessial soil with various additions of organic matter, iron oxides, alumina and silica.
The analytical sensitivity of the PCR was evaluated using serial dilutions of genomic DNA extracted from individual and artificially mixed canine blood samples infected by B. canis (3 × 102 infected erythrocytes/ml, ie/ml) and B. vogeli (2.1 × 101 ie/ml).
If marijuana has particular properties that can do this, those chemicals should indeed be extracted from the plant or artificially manufactured and then dispensed by proper prescription.
Their corpus consisted of data which were artificially created from a set of multiple public places and gunshot sound events extracted from the national French public radio.
Given the enormous expense of manufacturing drugs artificially, transgenic animals offered a brilliant way to make dirt-cheap drugs; $50,000 worth of proteins could be extracted from a few buckets of milk at a cost of about $12 of hay!
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com