Sentence examples for consciously identify from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

And so, even they couldn't consciously identify them, their brains responded to the faces, magnifying the pain they way they'd been trained to do.

Participants requested to hear each stimulus an average of 4.03±0.96 times before providing a description (ranging from 2.60±1.07 times to 7.10±3.69 for particular stimuli), indicating that the stimuli were not easy to consciously identify with speech sounds.

Similar(58)

And this is at a time when more and more people are consciously identifying as English.

And so in "None but the Lonely Heart," in the role that was closest to Grant's own buried feelings — the only character he ever played that he is known to have consciously identified with — he seemed somewhat miscast.

As you read the words in this text, you are not consciously identifying each letter, joining them together in your head, and matching the collection to a memory of what it means, it just seems to happen automatically when you see each one.

One of the main driving forces of human information behavior is information need that is recognition of one's knowledge inadequacy to satisfy a particular goal [62], or "consciously identified gap" in one's knowledge [26].

This result is consistent with the assumption that knowledge gained in artificial grammar learning can be partly consciously identified, even when explicit instructions are missing (e.g., De Jong, 2005; Pothos, 2007; Van den Bos & Poletiek, 2010).

It was the first time I consciously identified what I'd been running from all these years.

We don't think about how Mick Jagger applies his degree from the London School of Economics toward running the Rolling Stones or how Alice Cooper consciously identified a niche, the villain, filling a gap in a music scene dominated by heroes.

Napoleon III, in the mid-19th century, consciously identified with the Roman emperor Augustus and accorded great respect to Roman antiquities; his patronage of the bridge's restoration in the 1850s was essential to its survival.

The authors gave a number of reasons why this might be so: maybe smokers react to price increases without consciously identifying them as a motivation to quit; or maybe tax increases discourage younger individuals from starting to smoke.

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