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The phrase "it infers" is grammatically correct and commonly used in written English.
You can use it whenever you want to indicate that something is being implied or suggested by something else. For example: - The author's use of vivid imagery in the poem infers a sense of longing and melancholy. - The data collected from the survey infers that the majority of people prefer to shop online. - The politician's statement infers that there may be changes coming to the healthcare system.
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The STDP-based copying algorithm we describe shares the above features with human causal inference; it infers a dynamical causal model from a set of spike trains that arise from an underlying and invisible causal graph (another neuronal network).
The beauty is that you don't need to give the product feedback, it infers what your feedback is all on its own.
It infers the miRNA function by functionally analyzing the context of its transcription factors in a protein-protein interaction network.
By detecting minute changes in pressure at a spigot, it infers how much water the toilet or dishwasher is consuming.
It will not go into detail, other than to say that it infers core body temperature from other readings.
It points out that United States trade has grown significantly since 1992, and it infers that, as a result, the size of our largest banks should also grow.
But giving such a high-profile media platform to the conspiracy theorists and letting them go unchallenged is a very dangerous move; it infers undeserved credibility to their claims, meaning more people take them seriously.
If a local polling firm diverges substantially from the consensus, it infers that the results show a strong "house effect," rather than providing any particular insight about the state.
But the supplements industry rejected the claims made by Which?. "This new report regarding health claims on food supplements is inaccurate as it infers that manufacturers are misleading their customers, which is simply not true", said Graham Keen, executive director of the Health Food Manufacturers Associationn.
Last week, Whedon announced that he hates the word "feminist" because he doesn't like how it sounds ("Tonally, it's like watching a time-lapse video of fresh bread in an oven being burned!") and because it infers that to believe in equality is not a natural state.
But if cuckoos are so clever, it infers their hosts are a little stupid.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com