Sentence examples for knowledge embodied from inspiring English sources

Exact(14)

An evolutionary perspective was used to measure innovation capabilities using knowledge embodied in machinery, training, processes and products.

The goal of this paper is to show how it is possible to support design decisions with two different tools relying on two kinds of knowledge: case-based reasoning operating with contextual knowledge embodied in past cases and constraint filtering that operates with general knowledge formalized using constraints.

Henceforth, memory interaction with the spatial knowledge embodied the formation of hubs in the left-hemisphere.

The new skills and knowledge (embodied cultural capital) held by the PLD officials can be regarded as an informal academic or educational qualification [4], p. 242] that can be converted into economic capital in the form of salary.

The proposed index has been shown to be more rigorous because it uses quality thresholds from the Quebec IQBP index (reputed to be very stringent), but yet it conserves the expert knowledge embodied in the Moroccan IMBP index.

Sagoff (2002) challenges Eisenberg's analysis; according to Sagoff, when an invention is patented, the patentee gains rights to the knowledge embodied in the object, whether that object is a Gillette safety razor or a gene, and hence, molecules and information cannot be separated in the way Eisenberg suggests.

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This medal is awarded from time to time for discovery or research adding to the sum of human knowledge, embodying substantial elements of leadership and unusual skill or perfection of workmanship.

They consider how subjective knowledge becomes embodied in a social stock of knowledge and how the latter influences the former.

In a long process, the concept of knowledge has changed and broadened: from scientific knowledge, to technology (including issues of ownership and how technological knowledge is embodied in products and services), to the capacities to increase opportunities for innovation (social and economic value creation through new goods, services and systems).

Quine's response is thus to sketch an austerely naturalistic account of how our knowledge, and the cognitive language in which that knowledge is embodied, arises, or might arise.

Second, we might think that the notion of inaccuracy is precise, but that we have only limited knowledge about it, and that the sum total of our knowledge is embodied in the conditions.

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