More applicably, altitude-induced hypoxia may have an independent influence on redox-sensitive adaptive responses to exercise. |
|
With this data they can program the adaptive optic system to deform the mirror to correct aberrations in the high-energy beam. |
|
In order to properly phase the two telescopes, adaptive optics on both telescopes removed the distortion caused by the Earth's atmosphere. |
|
Studies have shown that long-term acclimations can be superimposed upon fast adaptive adjustment of the thermal stability. |
|
One prominent adaptive mechanism to this temperature stress is known as cold hardening or acclimation. |
|
The process of adaptation is sometimes visualized as populations walking throughout an adaptive landscape. |
|
The adaptive skills are those daily living skills needed to live, work and play in the community. |
|
These people tend to have adaptive skills and social and environmental resources. |
|
The human immune system is a remarkably flexible and adaptive piece of technology. |
|
It also features adaptive headlights that swivel with the direction of travel to illuminate the road ahead. |
|
Over the long-term, appearance of new species may result from speciation and adaptive radiation. |
|
Natural selection is an agency of adaptive change which operates between generations. |
|
Expecting any commander who is overly supervised in garrison to suddenly become an agile, adaptive leader in a field environment is unrealistic. |
|
Their adaptive radiation occurred in the Eocene when palms, figs, lipid-rich laurels, and other extant families were prominent. |
|
They have leapfrogged the competition through adaptive strategies and ever-better product quality. |
|
The difficult job of retrofitting the historic library for adaptive reuse as a museum went to Gaetana Aulenti of Milan. |
|
Both approaches will shed light on the adaptive significance and functional morphology of asteroids. |
|
Some people prefer adaptive bikes because they look more like normal bikes and are less expensive. |
|
Even games of strategy may mix in elements of luck, as in backgammon, to keep the results unpredictable and sharpen players' adaptive abilities. |
|
The latter study led to the adaptive optics that now enable terrestrial telescopes to produce ultra-sharp images of distant celestial objects. |
|
|
They are an incredibly valuable resource to a transforming Army that has desired and sought adaptive capacity in its leaders. |
|
Autonomic responses are among the richest sources of adaptive behavioral patterns. |
|
Blm-mfo will closely monitor the plantings of toothwort as part of a long-term adaptive management plan. |
|
Most of those characteristics probably originated early in its evolutionary history, and without much subsequent adaptive modulation. |
|
An adaptive building must allow slippage between each layer, or the slow layers block flow of quick, and quick layers tear up the slow. |
|
We note that the myrmecophily of the two species has the same adaptive rationale. |
|
He says that adaptive fitness, produced by natural selection, is not necessarily related to survival value. |
|
Among early codiacrinids adaptive forms evolved initially through both neoteny and progenesis. |
|
The charm and niftiness of her cooking is that it has coped with 20 years in Europe, America and Jamaica and been impressively adaptive. |
|
Cosmetic use is conceptualized as an adaptive, nonabusive approach to life. |
|
In contrast, people and other jawed vertebrates brandish adaptive immune systems. |
|
Instead the molecules that orchestrate adaptive immunity are found in the jawed vertebrates and nowhere else. |
|
Two-day-old larvae were placed into vials containing medium rehydrated with the adaptive dose of the compounds to be tested. |
|
The Galapagos finches remain a marvelous example of the principle of adaptive radiation. |
|
The rear lights have adaptive infrared control which adjusts the brightness of the LED diodes to match visibility and weather conditions. |
|
We investigate the adaptive value of cannibalism in this orb-web spider, where 60 percent of males do not survive copulation. |
|
For some, but not all, of these thermally sensitive traits acclimatization leads to adaptive shifts in thermal optima and limits. |
|
The Army needs competent, confident, adaptive thinkers to exercise battle command. |
|
Previous studies have revealed that adaptive changes in the osseous anatomy of the humerus occur in throwing athletes. |
|
To defeat adaptive enemies, we must out-think them in order to out-fight them. |
|
|
Naturally, the role of the adaptive arm was initially subservient to the defensive functions of the pre-existing innate arm. |
|
Barons or lesser feudal chieftains replicated this structure, which was not a flexible or adaptive one. |
|
Our goal is to provide a framework for studying these adaptive and pathologic changes. |
|
In contrast, adaptive perfectionists strive only to reach their own goals, not the goals set for them by other people. |
|
There is an interesting but short section on the local adaptive value of cultural rules including dialects and cognate words. |
|
In each of the adaptive notch filters, the beam outputs are split into two paths and in one path are applied directly to a signal combiner. |
|
Based on the models, an adaptive temperature compensative control method for a clutch working process was put forward. |
|
These are strong arguments for an adaptive origin of coiling in the cephalopod conch. |
|
The ordinary adaptive process of institutionalization has become extraordinarily prolonged and intense. |
|
Genotypic selection was measured on plastic traits in each environment to test whether the observed direction of plasticity was adaptive. |
|
Alternatively, the similarity in adaptive response is a matter of convergence. |
|
This points to adaptive design as a strategy potentially running across most of what we do. |
|
All corporals and above should be considered leaders and should be prepared as adaptive, self-aware leaders. |
|
Thus, if there were no adaptive value in maintaining these correspondences, then they could diverge during evolution. |
|
On the motorway I check out the adaptive cruise control which is a fantastic boon. |
|
An adaptive fuzzy control system prioritizes files for broadcast delivery or acquisition. |
|
It has an adaptive suspension with different settings, based on a system of independently controlled damping at all four corners of the car. |
|
They also relied more on impulse than exact precision, which meant they were highly adaptive. |
|
To suckle the young of another species is hardly what Darwinians call an adaptive trait. |
|
Can revulsion be classified as an adaptive mechanism that prevents us from coming into contact with contaminants? |
|
|
A test proctoring program allows students to use adaptive equipment and take exams in a monitored environment free from distraction. |
|
Greater insights can be gleaned on how collective action is central to adaptive capacity at various scales by case-specific research. |
|
It is not only our senses, but our very intuitive faculties that cease to provide us with the necessary adaptive knowledge. |
|
In the accommodations many of the women made there is a great-heartedness and an adaptive quality far ahead of their times. |
|
All evolutionists agree that genetic drift can't explain adaptive evolution. |
|
For example, ethologists generally agree that play in young animals is not escapist, but adaptive. |
|
Like the V8 it mates to a five-speed automatic with adaptive shift control and a manual mode that matches engine revs on downshifts. |
|
Ecosystem restoration is needed on many of our national forests to re-establish healthy, fire adaptive forestlands and to increase water resources. |
|
The adaptive value of intersexual variation in morphology would require more detailed measurements of wing shape, body size, and flight energetics. |
|
In an insular environment a plant family may undergo adaptive radiation with new taxa adapted to and occupying different and sometimes narrow habitats. |
|
Military returnees face several psychological challenges, including the shift away from an adaptive, continuous, combat-ready, hypervigilant state. |
|
One of the most significant advances in the understanding of non-stoichiometric compounds was Andersen's concept of infinitely adaptive structures. |
|
Thus, nowadays, these four species represent progressive stages of late speciation and constitute an excellent example of ecological speciation and adaptive radiation. |
|
Under the ecological theory of adaptive radiation, adaptation and reproductive isolation are thought to evolve as a result of divergent natural selection. |
|
You can even make the case that it is an evolutionary adaptive behaviour. |
|
The diagnosis of Glades through synapomorphy becomes the starting point for the investigation of functional, temporal, adaptive and biogeographic questions. |
|
The adaptive significance of solar tracking in snow buttercups is mediated through the impact of flower heliotropism on paternal and maternal floral environments. |
|
In this category fall some of the adaptive activities of psychotics, autists, pariahs, outcasts, vagrants, vagabonds, tramps, chronic drunkards and drug addicts. |
|
Furthermore, laboratory studies of the uptake of exogenous chromosomal DNA in bacteria have also demonstrated that recombination can mediate the process of adaptive evolution. |
|
Monocytes are crucially involved in adaptive immune responses. |
|
|
In addition to adaptive front airbags, the new E-Class is now equipped with two stage belt force limiters and automatic weight classification for the front passenger. |
|
This suggests that the adverse effects of early life events can be offset by the adaptive capability of the mind and the affirmative influences of the adoptive family. |
|
Genes producing desired characteristics in crops could confer adaptive advantages to weedy species, causing problems in valuable wild plant habitats. |
|
Some 450 million years ago, both jawed and jawless vertebrates began relying on cells called lymphocytes to support the burgeoning adaptive immune system. |
|
They are typically invasive, highly adaptive, parasitic and adept at mimicking more benign plants. |
|
Variation and selection is the royal road to adaptive fitness. |
|
Proud Host Family in Support of the Rockaway adaptive Water Sports Festival. |
|
To see the adaptive benefits of depression, it helps to consider certain cruel but illuminating studies. |
|
Although the selective agent is unknown, the adaptive evolution of this gene may have resulted in increased effectiveness of pollinator attraction or herbivore repellence. |
|
This contrasts the traditional Darwinistic view that they are the result of natural selection in favour of adaptive mutations. |
|
The mountain lion may well be the planet's most adaptive felid, at one time boasting the broadest range of any land carnivore. |
|
How to think disruptively about opportunities and how to respond quickly by creating more adaptive, innovative organizations. |
|
There is mounting evidence that moderate exercise raises white blood cell count and can improve one's adaptive immune system. |
|
One is the floor rheostat control, for which an adaptive handpiece is required. |
|
Finally, the adaptive decisions today tend to rigidify and become aspects of the structure of tomorrow. |
|
The thermal lethality models most often utilized by the meat industry do not account for any adaptive response during slow-cooking processes. |
|
Scintera's first products in this family, RFPAL, provide adaptive pre-distortion for linearizing RF power amplifiers. |
|
Multilocus resolution of phylogeny and timescale in the extant adaptive radiation of Hawaiian honeycreepers. |
|
Fully adaptive electronic control of all shifting makes shifts very smooth. |
|
Scientists, like Mattson, hypothesize that low-dose stressors activate beneficial adaptive responses, a process that they call hormesis. |
|
|
The multi-platform, adaptive designed microsite gives a new face to the partnership between GE and The Economist Group. |
|
More concretely, we need to move from climate-friendly policies to the implementation of mitigatory and adaptive interventions wherever possible. |
|
Thus, it could be assumed that this species exhibits some adaptive mechanisms to cope with hypercapnic exposure. |
|
Transient Eulerian multiphase flow simulations are also accelerated thanks to adaptive time-stepping support. |
|
While recovering from the accident, she started skiing using a piece of adaptive equipment called a monoski. |
|
Proximate control and adaptive potential of protandrous migration in birds. |
|
Dee Hock, its founder, coined the term chaordic to refer to any complex, self-organizing, self-governing, adaptive, nonlinear system. |
|
It features an adaptive speed limiter, a lane-keeping assistance function and a larger infotainment screen. |
|
Mutators, population size, adaptive landscape and the adaptation of asexual populations of bacteria. |
|
The products are transitionally adaptive throughout the different phases of childhood and adolescence. |
|
Acute effects of adaptive servo-ventilation therapy on neurohormones and CheyneStokes respiration in the patients with heart failure. |
|
Comtech Systems will be supplying its adaptive digital modem, troposcatter radio system and high-power amplifiers, as well as antennas. |
|
What is adaptive or optimal in one situation may not be adaptive or optimal in others. |
|
Those with tonic muscle overactivity producing sustained abnormal posturing were found to be most at risk of adaptive shortening. |
|
And people who were adaptive copers early in life are likely to cope successfully with the losses that they encounter late in life. |
|
The adaptive optical systems in modern astronomical telescopes compensate for atmospheric distortion by using deformable mirrors. |
|
Like all physiological systems, respiratory system is adaptive and functions in homeokinetic statuses. |
|
Because of the autonomous actions of rational interacting agents, the economy is a complex adaptive system. |
|
Thus, we believe this work can serve as a mathematical basis for the development of a new generation of adaptive microfounded economic models. |
|
While genotypes can slowly change by random genetic drift, natural selection remains the primary explanation for adaptive evolution. |
|
|
The method is evaluated in conjunction with the multidelay block frequency domain adaptive filter. |
|
Mass extinctions are often followed by adaptive radiations as existing clades expand to occupy the ecospace emptied by the extinction. |
|
Since green sea turtles migrate long distances during breeding seasons, they have special adaptive systems in order to navigate. |
|
Some of the early, primitive dinosaurs also became extinct, but more adaptive ones survived to evolve into the Jurassic. |
|
This plant is highly adaptive in sand, which can withstand burial for more than one year. |
|
Indeed, the adaptive immune system as a whole evolved in an ancestor of all jawed vertebrate. |
|
A further wave of adaptive radiation occurred after one or more colonizations of Australia some 2 to 3 million years later. |
|
Mammalian hosts react to infections with an innate response, often involving inflammation, followed by an adaptive response. |
|
Common ostriches employ adaptive features to manage the dry heat and solar radiation in their habitat. |
|
What adaptive technology has been the most useful or important for you? |
|
But like the organization he now runs, he is agile and adaptive. |
|
Moreover, the regular use of logic would make subjects predictable, thus unlogic decision behavior might be more adaptive in specific situation. |
|
A combination of herbs known as adaptogens can be used effectively to resensitize the hypothalamus and restore the adaptive homeostat. |
|
We use backpropagation techniques with an adaptive learning rate algorithm to train the model to specified level of convergence. |
|
Our second line of defence is made up of the cells and antibodies of our adaptive immune system. |
|
In normal circumstances the innate response would abate as the adaptive immune system takes over. |
|
One is called the adaptive immune system and the other is the innate immune system. |
|
The radial basis function neural network robust adaptive control for wind generator system is studied in particular in this work. |
|
The indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase pathway is essential for human plasmacytoid dendritic cell-induced adaptive t regulatory cell generation. |
|
A quartic kernel function using an adaptive bandwidth with a sample size of 15 burglaries and a cell size of 500m were selected. |
|
|
Photo plethysmographic signal processing using adaptive sum comb filter for pulse delay measurement. |
|
Such patterns of niche complementarity imply adaptive responses to interspecific competition, either past or present. |
|
All types of unstructured and adaptive mesh techniques were developed, including tetrahedral, hexahedra, prisms, and hybrid mesh generation. |
|
The plant is adaptive to environmental changes. But the built-in control systems keep going wrong. |
|
This is a normal adaptive physiologic response, called ketosis, which has historically enabled humans to survive periods of famine. |
|
Molecular mechanism activating Nrf2-Keap1 pathway in regulation of adaptive response to electrophiles. |
|
Assistive technology is an umbrella term that includes assistive, adaptive and rehabilitative devices for people with disabilities. |
|
The second challenge consists in developing an adaptive multiscale numerical method for diffusion in inhomogeneous media. |
|
Piloerection causes one's body hair follicles to become erect and has been linked to adaptive thermoregulation. |
|
The real affinities of all organic beings, in contradistinction to their adaptive resemblances, are due to inheritance or community of descent. |
|
The echo canceler is basically an adaptive tapped delay-line filter with near and far-end sections. |
|
Interesting in their own right, this suite of adaptive physiologies provides many model systems for both comparative vertebrate and human physiologists. |
|
The book is sown through with a vocabulary of adaptive organisms, fitness, punctuated equilibrium, replication and other concepts from evolutionary science. |
|
Adaptive Digital uses a proprietary fast converging adaptive filter and non-linear processor to deliver robust double talk performance even in harsh conditions. |
|
Standard equipment on the Astra VXR includes FlexRide adaptive damping, DAB, USB, Bluetooth and LED tail lights, plus a whole raft of visual and interior power dressing. |
|
That variation of germinal origin is a fact in organic nature is admitted on all hands, and that some variations are adaptive is also unquestioned. |
|
The reutilization of former industrial sites for non-industrial uses is carried out in two different ways, which can be described as adaptive reuse and urban renewed. |
|
Intrinsically motivated religious people have been found to manage and integrate their experiences in more adaptive ways than extrinsically motivated individuals. |
|
And there are also modifications to the ESP software for more precise handling and control of understeer plus upgrades to the FlexRide adaptive damping system. |
|
Adopting the adaptational model of malingering in assessment can reframe the deception and misrepresentation as possibly an adaptive way to meet basic needs. |
|
|
This makes the virus almost invisible to the adaptive immune system, which explains why all attempts to develop an anti-HCV vaccine or therapy have failed. |
|
Wellington is famous for his adaptive defensive style of warfare, resulting in several victories against numerically superior forces while minimising his own losses. |
|
The presence of nonself HLA molecules activate the recipient's T cells, causing an adaptive immune response that results in elimination of donor tissue and graft rejection. |
|
An individual's functioning can be conceptualized on a continuum, with one end being more adaptive and healthy and the other end being more maladaptive and less healthy. |
|
But there is also a nine-speed gearbox option, city braking technology, a new infotainment set-up and a bafflingly smart adaptive cruise control system. |
|
The 'Intelligent Island' is a term used to describe Singapore in the 1990s, in reference to the island nation's early adaptive relationship with the internet. |
|
Compulsiveness is a highly adaptive trait that makes for diagnostic rigor. |
|
While dCellVax operates at the level of the innate immune system, the NR2F6 program aims at directly stimulating the adaptive immune system at killing cancer. |
|
Even though the retired staff sergeant was interested in adaptive scuba diving, one obstacle was in the way, and it wasn't his amputated right leg. |
|
To help educators make informed decisions, the report attempts to clarify the levels and types of adaptivity currently available in adaptive learning programs. |
|
As a result, the framework of REH is much more appealing than other expectation formation mechanisms such as extrapolative or adaptive expectations. |
|
A novel adaptive foot system to enhance the required stability of lower extremity exoskeletons as an add-on device was proposed by Jungwon Yoon et al. |
|
Examples of relictual and autochthonous endemism among island taxa will be described and adaptive radiation among successful island colonizers will be emphasized. |
|
There are several methods used to deal with singular integrands, and all are deterministic, adaptive strategies that will speed the convergence and integration process. |
|
This suggests that the very deep ocean has fostered adaptive radiations. |
|
Due to the adaptive possibilities of the pedipulators to obstacles, the robot can adjust the working position of the demining sensors while searching landmines. |
|
Moreover, synthesizing our results in the context of biological networks will provide the opportunity to decipher how epistasis and pleiotropy impacted adaptive trajectories. |
|
As the inventor of mistyping correction, mixed language input, adaptive learning and sentence-based gesture input, TouchPal has over 50 issued or pending patents. |
|
The earliest civil and criminal courts established from the beginnings of the colony of New South Wales were rudimentary, adaptive and military in character. |
|
Mintera's MI 40000 has some unique adaptive technology which allows straight forward use on a variety of existing infrastructures with little or no re-engineering. |
|
|
Boston Micromachines award winning deformable mirrors are the standard for wavefront correction in ophthalmic adaptive optics systems around the world. |
|
For Hamachek, a normal or more adaptive perfectionist was someone who pursued very high standards but whose self-esteem remained intact when those standards were not attained. |
|
Other species-rich paramo taxa, such as Valeriana, Gentianella, and Lupinus, are equally fascinating examples of adaptive radiation in the northern Andes. |
|
The eyes of tuco-tucos are almost level with the top of the head, which is adaptive for surveying the horizon from their shelter without exposing themselves to predators. |
|