Exact(9)
As the psychologist Larry Rosen has pointed out, if you hurt someone's feelings but cannot see their reaction, you'll lack sufficient cues to understand, apologise or take otherwise compensatory action.
Jamie's prowess is a product of his comparatively violent and lawless culture; in modern environments, being in decent shape and knowing basic self-defense are probably sufficient cues of ability to protect.
In contrast, in experiments 1B and 2B, we presented stimuli that are interocularly completing each other, thereby providing only binocular mechanisms with sufficient cues.
Experiments have shown that spectral changes caused by overlapping gestures are sufficient cues for the identification of the vowel, thus establishing a link between production and perception (see Introduction).
Few of the deer killed by mountain lions were recorded as noticeably ill by field observers prior to their deaths, suggesting that relatively subtle changes in behavior or condition may have been sufficient cues to draw a predator's attention to infected individuals or increase their vulnerability to attack.
However, even if these actions did contain sufficient cues for infants to interpret them as goal-directed, there are still reasons to question the assumption that predictive eye movements reflect a goal prediction achieved by a motor process.
Similar(51)
This is a sufficient cue for S3 to infer he died.
Acoustic evidence shows that colloquial /CrV/ forms differ from reading pronunciation forms in terms of VOT, f0, and spectral balance measures, while a pair of perceptual studies demonstrate that f0 is a sufficient cue for listeners to distinguish underlying /CrV/-initial from /CV/-initial forms, but that F1 is not.
In this case, direct gaze alone is not a sufficient cue for newborns' identification of others in the absence of speech.
Nonetheless, it seems that in interactive situations, such as those presented in Coulon et al.'s study [36], direct gaze alone (without verbal interaction) is not a sufficient cue in guiding newborns' identification of previously unfamiliar faces: newborns prefer looking at a woman who previously looked at them and interacted with them verbally, but not a woman who looked at them without speaking.
It has been suggested that any environmental feature can cue habit given sufficient cue-behaviour pairings (Verplanken, 2005), and so BFCS measures may perhaps be enhanced by focusing on cues preliminarily elicited from participants (e.g., Judah, Gardner, & Aunger, 2013).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
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