Sentence examples for confer us from inspiring English sources

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We argue that the middle temporal (MT) cortical region does not confer us the full phenomenic depth of motion perception, although it may represent a precursor stage in building our subjective sense of visual motion.

In sum, among the mosaic of visual areas activated by global motion in humans [64], only those supporting temporal integration properties compatible with the slow buildup of perceptual awareness would candidate as a specific neural correlate of consciousness, sufficient to confer us the full phenomenic depth of motion perception.

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The shampoo people used to be content to show us a pseudo scientific representation of how the goodness of their product would travel down a strand of hair into the bulbous bit at the bottom – ie through your scalp and inside your head — but now they say it can actually confer on us a gold medal-winning mindset.

You know what it means, the possibility of reaching thousands of people, and trying to make them think and feel in the way we believe right to think and feel... Then the socialist party wishes to confer with us, to try to make a connection between policy and philosophy.

It seems clear that the IoT will become a definite part of our lives in the future, with all the benefits it can confer on us – as well as the risks.

Of course, ants presumably lack empathy yet manage to organize their own version of civilization, but the degree of freedom our brains and hands confer on us requires a much stronger kind of social glue.

That does not confer on us a freedom to ignore the knowledge that we already have, or to postpone the action that it appears to demand at a given time" [92].

That does not confer upon us freedom to ignore the knowledge we already have, or to postpone action that it appears to demand at a given time.

Bradford Hill also said that incomplete evidence "does not confer upon us the freedom to ignore the knowledge we already have, or to postpone the action that it appears to demand at the given time" [ 4].

That does not confer upon us a freedom to ignore the knowledge we already have, or to postpone the action that it appears to demand at a given time.

In his 1965 address to the Royal Society of Medicine, Sir Austin Bradford Hill, the statistician who pioneered the RCT, admonished his audience that while science is always incomplete and subject to change, [it] does not confer upon us a freedom to ignore the knowledge we already have, or to postpone the action that it appears to demand at a given time.

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