Sentence examples for evolution characterised by from inspiring English sources

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Before amorphisation the graphite structure undergoes three stages of evolution characterised by (i) an increase in point defects; (ii) a wrinkling of graphene layers pinned by small amorphous pockets; and (iii) a full amorphisation of the structure via percolation of the small amorphous pockets.

Huxley shared Suttie's conviction that the human species had escaped biological determinism, believing instead that it had entered an accelerated state of 'psychosocial evolution' characterised by the ever increasing frequency of cultural change (Huxley, 1942).

Moreover, our results emphasize the profound effects of cancer cell GD, resulting in accelerated cancer genome evolution, characterised by a tolerance of CIN and propagation of aneuploid progeny [ 15].

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The interpretation of the concept of evolution is characterised by wide links between very different research fields (Ayala 2008).

The mid-Holocene environmental evolution is characterised by a transition from an earlier set of spatially varied landscapes dominated by swampy marshland, to better-drained, more uniform floodplain environments.

A traditional lifestyle, as experienced throughout most of human evolution, was characterised by continuous exposure to environmental microbiota that induced and strengthened the adaptive immune system.

These data, together with an appreciation that early vertebrate evolution was characterised by extensive genetic, developmental and morphological innovation facilitated by multiple whole genome duplications [ 124, 125] will better enable us to reconstruct pancreas evolution.

For single cells, dorsal closure evolution is characterised by an attenuation in the amplitude of apical area oscillations and an increase in the average dominant oscillation frequency over time [ 19, 25].

However, even then the expected damage evolution can be characterised by using high tensile multi-axiality for damage acceleration.

In tandemly repeated gene families, in which all members share a common function, there is a tendency for concerted evolution that is characterised by homogenisation of gene sequences [ 1].

We make a distinction amongst evolutions that are characterised by either a migration of an entity towards another entity type, generation or deletion of an entity, or change of value of an entity attribute.

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