Sentence examples for been created to explain from inspiring English sources

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All sorts of nifty maps have been created to explain just how Mitt Romney managed to lose the election, despite winning a crushing majority of American counties (nearly 80% of them).A clever 3D image (on the right) from Robert Vanderbei of Princeton University uses columns of differing heights to show the relative populations of each county.

Furthermore, a theoretical model has recently been created to explain the mechanisms that are responsible for the resistivity-temperature relationship (F Lacy, unpublished work) [25].

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At the beginning of the cold war, the United States Information Agency was created to explain and promote American policies.

In this paper models are created to explain this behavior.

In short, the measurement problem is this: Quantum theory implies that measurements typically fail to have outcomes of the sort the theory was created to explain.

Along with experiments employing different mechanical and chemical manipulations, numerous models were created to explain and predict the complex variety of cellular behavior.

Although the concept was created to explain GM injury, especially during stroke, it is also highly relevant to WM (Ransom and Baltan, 2009), where receptor-mediated glutamate toxicity is clearly involved in certain pathological conditions.

For example, in criminology, a model of how individuals navigate an urban space was created to explain the locations of crimes (outcome) given offenders' home locations and the locations of major venues such as shopping malls [ 8, 9].

A model was created to explain the different responses of the two genotypes to various redox agents and osmotica, based on differences in EGSH/GSSG values, gene expression, freezing tolerance and the initial development of flower primordia, and on correlations between these parameters.

Many of these hypotheses were created to explain various "domain-specific" results, including number, space and time (Dehaene et al. 2003; Walsh 2003); semantic representation (Geschwind 1972; Binder et al. 2009; Binder and Desai 2011); or episodic recollection (Wagner et al. 2005; Vilberg and Rugg 2008; Shimamura 2011).

A troubled visiting "worldling" in search of good luck, he suggests, "Might stop before this favoured scene, / At Nature's call, nor blush to lean /Upon the Wishing Gate …" To pinpoint these Wordsworthian "spots in time" an online guide has been created to map and explain the landmarks and vantage points that shaped some of the best-known verses in the English language.

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