Sentence examples similar to has deciphered that from inspiring English sources

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By reverse-engineering the modified amplitude-phase retrieval-based attack that has deciphered the phase-truncated double random phase encoding scheme, we proposed a new cryptosystem to encode a target image into a preselected fake image using a modified phase retrieval algorithm under the framework of phase-truncated double random phase encoding.

We present here a proteomic approach that has deciphered an anti-angiogenesis response in vivo by the combined administration of vitamin E, selenium and lycopene (E/S/L) in a spontaneous mouse model of adenocarcinoma of the prostate.

Reeve has a dogged intelligence, and in the past eight years he has developed a nuanced understanding of the biology of spinal-cord injury; he has learned how the scientific establishment sets priorities and conducts its research; and he has deciphered the ways that different branches of the government permit or bar innovative medical treatments.

His interest grows more and more when he finds Clark constantly in the caves, and later with a piece of paper that appears to indicate that Clark has deciphered the language on the cave walls — although, Clark denies being able to read the language.

Lindsey (1997) suggests that this time of great knowledge is now, and through careful study of the Bible's clues, Lindsey believes that he has deciphered the hints of the fate of mankind and the fate of the earth.

That's followed-up today by a commenter, tenthings, who has deciphered the code Apple uses to reject apps.

An international team using THEMIS data, recorded during a substorm on 26 February of this year, reports online today in Science that they have deciphered for the first time how substorms form.

She said she had "deciphered from [Ms Cooper's] bluster" that Labour supported what the government was doing and said Ms Cooper should be more frank about her party's record on alcohol.

Meanwhile, those teams that had deciphered the cemetery puzzle were led to Doyers Street in Chinatown, nicknamed Bloody Angle for the early-20th-century gang fights that took place there.

Now, scientists report that they have deciphered a set of rules that govern when these shifts occur, and they have used those rules to program proteins to change their solubility on demand.

Now researchers have taken a small step in that direction: They've deciphered a genetic "signature" that, in several tumor samples, appears to predict whether a cancer will spread.

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