Sentence examples for whereby errors from inspiring English sources

Exact(3)

Studies have shown that the following movements are highly integrated and must involve a continuous feedback system whereby errors are used to modify the performance.

Furthermore, it has been reported that Illumina machines have a sequence specific error profile whereby errors occur more frequently around certain motifs such as GGC and GGX [ 26- 28].

Orgel [ 22] in turn hypothesized that aging arises from the positive feedback of errors in the translation machinery, whereby errors in the synthesis of the components of that machinery, such as amino acyl tRNA synthetases, lead to still further errors in the synthesis of those same components.

Similar(57)

These analyses, as well as the ceiling effects apparent in participants' response accuracy whereby few errors were made (<7% overall error rate), meant error data were not pursued in further analyses.

Diversity across the members of ensemble classifiers is known to have a strong influence on classification performance - whereby classifier errors are uncorrelated and more uniformly distributed across ensemble members.

When a field is in the critical prerevolutionary/prepathological phase, a principle I will call the Second Law of Parodynamics comes into effect: The more drastic the departure from an established paradigm, the greater the chance of either a revolutionary or a pathological outcome--and the more urgent the need for awareness of the mechanisms whereby cognitive errors tend to arise.

Targeting companies that run or develop business critical software systems — think banks, e-commerce sites, and product development companies — its technology aims to solve the problem whereby programming errors invisible to the eye cause performance problems on live servers.

6. Krakauer and Sasaki (2002) demonstrated a "negative Baldwin effect" whereby developmental errors could amplify mildly deleterious mutations in finite populations, thereby leading to their effective purging.

Aziz Sancar, (born September 8, 1946, Savur, Mardin, Turkey), Turkish-American biochemist who discovered a cellular process known as nucleotide excision repair, whereby cells correct errors in DNA that arise as a result of exposure to ultraviolet (UV) light or certain mutation-inducing chemicals.

The aim is to improve medical safety in hospital by preventing errors whereby patients are given the wrong medicine or the wrong dosage of the right medicine — either of which can obviously have extremely serious consequences.

The aim is to improve medical safety in hospital by preventing errors whereby patients are given the wrong medicine or the wrong dosage of the right medicine — either of which can obviously have extremely serious consequences.

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