Sentence examples for call projections from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

Using this construct, we produced indirect assessments of growth rates of leaves that we call projections, which can be easily obtained in terms of allometric parameters and proxy values for leaf area, expressed as the product of leaf length and width.

Similar(59)

Finding pretexts to take them to the attractive vet, Dr Clare, Jonathan is worried that living in an asphalt jungle is making the dogs despondent, although she clearly suspects he is prone to what psychiatrists call projection.

Fear and hatred of others demonstrates what psychologists call projection: not just a movie industry operation but a psychological one too in which we place our own darkness onto convenient targets.

Here we study in detail the computational algorithm to reduce EFM based on the degree of correlation of EFM weighting factors with measured envirome factors, which we call projection to latent pathways (PLP).

In the 50s and 60s, Feldman developed a kind of graphic notation, allowing the performers to choose the pitches and rhythms in pieces called Projections and Intersections.

But it was the Jenny Holzer installation called "Projections," which occupies a gallery the size of a football field, that was the show-stopper for our children.

"There's a process called projection in psychology," Mr. Giuliani said at a City Hall news briefing.

Enlarger, also called projection printer, in photography, device for producing a photographic print or negative larger than the original negative or transparency.

When Mrs. Clinton accused the mayor of racially polarizing New York City, Mr. Giuliani curiously responded with more psychiatric analysis: Mrs. Clinton, he said, was engaged in "a process called projection in psychology," which "means accusing someone of what you're doing".

For our leading exponent of the he-who-smelt-it-dealt-it disorder called projection, psychologists tend to cite the unnamed vicar who reports little Johnny to his mother for swearing in Sunday school.

According to behavioral economists, the reason is that people are prone to something called "projection bias," in which they tend to assume that their preferences in the future will be fairly similar to what they are right now.

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