Clothing and decoration provide important cues to aid interpersonal and intrapersonal communication. |
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While she was testifying, Ms. Azar watched Mr. Jalakh carefully, trying to pick up his verbal and non-verbal cues. |
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But very sensitive hearing is necessary to hear all the acoustic cues in speech sounds. |
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On Wednesday, cues were racked up for the last time at Metropool on the Lower Main. |
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Every language has its subconscious cues, such as rank and forms of address, which are often reflective of the social order that speaks it. |
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We used the hints of Monterey style shown in the exposed rafters, porch posts, and white stucco walls as cues for our design. |
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Lines were ragged, several dancers shuffled into place and many seemed unsure of cues. |
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Visual cues alone allow for the expression of a preference for familiars in guppies and rainbowfish. |
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Suddenly, you begin to hear quite clearly where Sonic Youth and others took their cues from. |
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I took my cricketing cues from a television documentary on Ian Botham on Sunday night which held a whole pub in rapt attention. |
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The more you look for details, cues and fakes, the more you add to the realism of the situation. |
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We soaked the shells of both in acetone prior to their reattachment in order to remove potential chemical cues. |
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To achieve this aim in oral discourse, speakers use visual cues provided by paralanguage, kinesics and synchrony to complement verbal language. |
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Body language, expressions, and environmental cues can deepen emotional bonds. |
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Audio cues such as engine noise, traffic ship whistle and sea sound add to the ambience. |
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This species can sense electric cues in their environment with ampullae and use this information for prey capture. |
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Protect your furniture and your cues with this beautiful Luxury Leather Cue Rest with moveable arms and protective feet. |
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The rest of us remained silent, watching Devin and Jonas and waiting for their cues. |
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Kamen is fairly interesting to watch as he cues in and rides herd on the Symphony throughout the track. |
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In lizards, actively foraging insectivores identify animal prey using lingually sampled chemical cues, but ambush foragers do not. |
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A previous study suggested that male and female sexuals of the Argentine ant Linepithema humile may use genetic cues to avoid inbreeding. |
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This is most clear in rosaceous fruit trees that go dormant in preparation for winter, and not in response to environmental cues. |
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Urine-borne chemical cues influence the progression and outcome of agonistic encounters in lobsters and crayfish. |
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When astronauts go into microgravity they lose their sense of place and have to rely on visual and auditory cues. |
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Such moments of choice, Alexander found, come only when one is willing to deeply attend to or notice subtle body cues. |
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It may be caused by lack of concentration, poor hearing, confusion of auditory and visual cues, etc. |
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Our ability to make sense of subtle auditory feedback cues will be a huge area of growth over the next few years. |
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This study suggests that macrolepidoptera may be using specific needle terpenes, or groups of terpenes, as egg-laying cues. |
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The Sound Mixer would control the various sound sources, whilst a Production Assistant cues in items on videotape and telecine. |
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Practically speaking, the artists had little choice but to use visual cues to signal nighttime in the sculptured panels. |
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In addition, compensation for wind drift based on visual cues on the ground becomes more difficult with increasing altitude. |
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Gabel cues with care but without ostentation, he addresses sections of the orchestra and he stays with them. |
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In fact, the recursive aspect of confirming predictions and orchestrating multiple cues is a common thread throughout this article. |
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Their memory for both items and the associated remember or forget cues was then tested with recall and recognition. |
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These will later become cues, especially the bearing rein, for the horse to take a particular lead. |
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Alternatively, competent larvae of many sessile invertebrate species do not progress toward metamorphosis if stimulatory cues are absent. |
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Those cues continue inside, right up to the exposed roof trusses on the topmost floor. |
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Cardiff had to light up to eight rooms at a time, with electricians following a tortuously complex series of lighting cues. |
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If someone is very touchy-feely and enjoys displays of affection, they'll look for those specific cues because that's how they express love. |
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These give shape to the impressions of other travel writers on India such as William Dalrymple, from whom Johnson takes his first cues. |
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Magnetic cues, which help many bird species migrate, appear to be particularly important to Bobolinks. |
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An irrelevant sight may distract them so they fail to notice important cues, such as brake lights or traffic signs. |
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As such, taking many cues from Transcendentalism I don't think any oaths are necessary. |
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Fewer spoken words start with vowels, which provide more subtle acoustic cues than the more explosive consonant sounds. |
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The cues may be unconscious nonverbal cues, such as muscular tension or gestures. |
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A skeuomorph is a derivative object which retains ornamental design cues to a structure that was necessary in the original. |
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Perhaps it will give some of those billionaires their cues to skiddoo instead of whining about their inability to compete. |
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Trench coats, slouch hats and Tommy guns were dusted off and called into service again, at least until new cues could be established. |
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Interestingly, pyrazines can interact with visual cues in non-experienced predators to induce or enhance unlearned responses. |
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Prey-derived cues stimulate the tail movements of death adders and these snakes may more often attempt to lure lizards of a particular body size. |
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Our results show that geomagnetic cues are involved in the early morning orientation of nocturnally migrating birds. |
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It is true that people take their cues from what they see and experience in daily life. |
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He uses sonic cues and sudden bursts of noise to suggest and confirm the nature of the story. |
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To be sure, the subscript vowel points used as vowel cues in modern Hebrew were not used by the ancients. |
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The non-verbal cues given during a face-to-face meeting will not come across in an electronic survey. |
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The new finding by Wikelski and colleagues suggests that the songbirds' magnetic compass is calibrated, perhaps on a daily basis, by visual cues. |
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Without any chemical cues, the cells spontaneously differentiated into neurons and other brain cells called oligodendrocytes. |
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Most hawkmoths feed while hovering in front of flowers and use visual cues to control hovering flight. |
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Even in dim starlight, however, nocturnal hawkmoths use chromatic cues rather than achromatic cues to recognize rewarding flowers. |
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Darkness and haze can obscure the visual cues we need to maintain orientation. |
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His 12.5-inch Combat Axe melds Medieval styling with modern-day design cues, bringing the art of chopping up to a new level. |
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Yearling snakes can use maternal scent cues to seek out their first hibernation den. |
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Her outros to reports on the show have often been heavy with superfluous emotional cues for viewers. |
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From a practical standpoint, it is impossible to capture nonverbal and paralinguistic cues from early presidents' speeches. |
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Here, we examine male species recognition via odor cues in the swordtail fish. |
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Furthermore, unlike many film composers, he thought of at least some of his movie music as symphonic and arranged his cues into symphonic suites. |
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On Passion Sunday I will try to take my cues instead from the nameless woman. |
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They investigated this preference further and demonstrated that these two cues provide peahens with information about male health. |
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These cues varied systematically in their perceptual salience relative to the primary task in which it was embedded. |
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The implicit appraisal of facially expressed emotional cues can take place with 2 milliseconds which is outside conscious awareness. |
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While watching TV, turn on a few peripheral lights to give your eyes additional focusing cues. |
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Thus, females that attempted to avoid courtship might be able to do so by selecting sites with fewer pheromonal cues from males. |
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Many extant tetrapods communicate intraspecifically via a mixture of pheromonal and non-pheromonal cues. |
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Urine signals, excreted through nephropores located near the base of the antennae, are a likely source of pheromonal cues in decapods. |
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Studies on information scent also appear limited to textual cues for vision and do not seem to consider other senses or modalities such as sound. |
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Both female field crickets and the larviparous parasitoid flies Ormia ochracea rely on acoustic cues to detect and find singing male crickets. |
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And maybe familiar cues are simply the means by which people navigate through a confusing world. |
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In one condition the cues were arrows presented in the centre of a visual display, indicating the likely location of an impending target object. |
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Without the visual cues we get in face-to-face conversation, flame wars could erupt. |
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Guidance of the pollen tube down the style involves mechanical, chemical and physical cues that are not yet fully understood. |
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English-speaking children very soon catch on to the correlation between the conceptual distinction and the distributional cues for it. |
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In nature, the gene cues a jellyfish to make a bright-green fluorescent protein. |
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The actors flurry about backstage, hissing, thumping and gesticulating wildly between cues. |
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The use of these colors was counterbalanced across tanks and provided cues to assist training of the fish. |
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While these cues are sombre, they do have a foot-tapping ambience, if only slow foot-tapping! |
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Having the orchestra play straight through these groups of cues keeps their performance really sharp and also saves time overall. |
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The colors and moods combine with the actors' performances and haunting musical cues to create a slightly surreal atmosphere. |
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During a performance, musical cues and sung instructions are given by the leaders, requiring constant attention from the others. |
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Actors miss their cues, the dubbing is just out of synch, the sound effects are too loud and don't match up with the action on-screen. |
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There is a generous amount of sound cues but no speech in any form, since the developers have elected to remove things like unit acknowledgement. |
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He needs a more subtle way of looking for his musical cues from the monitor at the front of the stage. |
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This fosters a kind of sensitivity toward the body language of the actors and the musical cues in the narrative. |
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Time passes slowly as the cast expend most of their energy on dodgy accents, very little on the performances and none at all on picking up cues. |
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Safety cues or performance references must be stated positively if you expect your class to improve their skills and continue attending. |
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Clinic visits may serve as important cues to action that serve as a basis for behavior change. |
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Be advised that each species responds to specific environmental cues to begin migration and may take flight ahead of schedule. |
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Religious ideas and practices will not form part of social identification in the absence of cues and memories. |
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The prospective memory cues occurred in 12 trials out of the total 112 trials. |
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The results of this study also demonstrate that gestures can be external retrieval cues for a memory event. |
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However, we provided no cues during recall in the experiments in the present study. |
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In this study, the use of language specific retrieval cues did not yield language-specific recall. |
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Retrieval cues do not bring about a complete memory of some events because most of the event was not encoded. |
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The use of empirically based cues to mistaken memories was similar for both inaccurate and accurate judges. |
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In the absence of explicit retrieval cues, pair recall will be facilitated by factors that promote unitization of each pair. |
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Another experiment examined uncertainty about memory rather than sensory cues. |
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The battle hits all of Hollywood's cues for what warfare is supposed to look and sound like, including tracers, shushing, exploding shells and gore. |
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Although we understand many of these cues during natural development, we need to learn how to utilize them to tissue engineer mandibular condyles. |
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Like an ageing actor he muddled his lines and and missed his cues. |
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A diet high in fat, low in fiber and high in fluid calories rather than solid calories doesn't provide effective cues to regulate hunger and satiety. |
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A transcript was used rather than an audiotaped conversation so as to provide no paralinguistic or vocalic cues regarding the nature of the ambiguous evaluative comments. |
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By depriving people of light and other external time cues, scientists have learned that most people's biological clocks work on a 25-hour cycle rather than a 24-hour one. |
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Of all potential sensory modalities capable of conveying such information regarding local predation risk, visual and chemical cues have been the most widely studied. |
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One issue with the exterior design is a seeming lack of individuality, as it appears to combine design cues from a number of other cars and look a bit generic. |
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Previous studies had also traced the monkeys' ability to associate the visual cues with the reward to the rhinal cortex, which is rich in dopamine. |
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Department stores, cinemas, factories and service stations all took cues from American sources, although they were usually grafted onto earlier styles. |
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However these ratings were achieved with families performing a uniform task that served to anchor the interaction and provide cues for rater judgment. |
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The action of the amygdala in the limbic system functions as an alarm system, eliciting responses to cues in the present as if they were the original danger. |
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Cochran et al. have shown that Catharus thrushes calibrate their magnetic compass on a daily basis using twilight cues, apparently just the reverse of what homing pigeons do. |
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Insensitivity to social cues may produce maladaptive interpersonal styles characterized by low levels of prosocial behavior and high levels of aggressive behavior. |
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Any cinema studies student will be able to go into great detail about all the cues put into cinema to make us understand that something not actually represented is going on. |
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Despite all the visual cues which might suggest otherwise, Manning was adamant that he was not trying to promote himself. |
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For both human and animal there are cues in the environment that help us judge whether to continue foraging in the same location or to forage elsewhere. |
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I only had three hours of tech rehearsal, and that's usually a full load getting the sound and light cues up to speed for one show, much less four. |
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This led the researchers to conclude that the thrushes used cues from the setting sun to update their internal magnetic compass and get back on the right track. |
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Minaj further mystifies her motives by layering these terrifying, offensive visual cues with her own totally incongruous lyrics. |
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The female sexual brain is like an AND gate and requires many more cues for arousal to be triggered. |
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When snakes flick their tongues in and out, they pick up chemical cues from the air, which they transfer to a sensory organ in the roof of the mouth. |
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Children don't understand many of the common cues in a live performance. |
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She said the drug bridge drew the predictable sensationalism from a press throng that took its drug use cues from tamer festivals. |
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The occupance of flaming is attributed to the absence of cues to social hierarchical position, to the formality or informality of the communication. |
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When we did it in the dress rehearsal one of the music cues was late and we both flubbed a rap line. |
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However, in response to the combined cues from both predators, mussels expressed neither inducible defense and had significantly reduced tissue growth. |
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The Reuters Building does not strive to be a perfect whole but is a fuzzy, indeterminate figure that blends into a context from which it takes its cues. |
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Both the morphological analysis and the suffix deletion tasks assessed morphemic manipulation in the absence of contextual cues that may facilitate lexical retrieval. |
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The boat-tailed design of the original car had to be massaged to fit over the production unibody, but designers managed to keep most of the intricate design cues. |
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The FDA is now apparently taking policy cues from The End, a 1978 comedy starring Burt Reynolds and dom DeLuise. |
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As far as sartorial social cues go, the platform shoe is not highly ranked. |
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Variety maximises the number of retrieval cues for recall of information. |
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Understimulation resulting from absence of cues about the time of day and the situation should be avoided, but overstimulation should also be avoided. |
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Palatalization inhibited across phrase boundaries, and palatalization at word boundaries provides syntactic boundary cues to speakers of American English. |
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Of course, the pictures also provided additional cues for recall. |
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Instead, they pay attention to signals and cues about what matters most to a president. |
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This week, the market is expected to look for cues from the dollar supply and demand levels to determine the kwacha's direction, which could go either way. |
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The new season cues off this Thursday and if the commitment of the players and organisers are anywhere near as good as last season then we are in for a belter! |
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When the show begins, the set and costumes haven't arrived, lines are flubbed, actors go missing, sound and light cues are mixed up and props break. |
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Performers who play together on a regular basis always time their entry cues precisely and instinctively, shaping and moulding their tempi and rubati accordingly. |
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Developing such cognitive networks provides more cues for recall and makes the connections more stable and durable over time, making them easier to remember. |
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Both technical aspects were designed effectively, although unfortunately on this opening night both sound and lighting had missed cues and glitches. |
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Thus removal of cues for natural enemies is likely to have been an important selective force in the evolution of frass ejection behavior in shelter-dwelling larvae. |
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With a few cues, reminders or partial fragments in mind, we can select, interpret, and integrate one thing with another so as to make use of what we learn and remember. |
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Prior to commencing the experiment flicker photometry was used to adjust the energy of the green and blue-green cues to be approximately isoluminant with the grey frames. |
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They stock every conceivable type of ball, as well as darts, boxing gloves, punchbags, headguards, snooker cues, goggles, running spikes and karate suits. |
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These studies suggest that vipers are more responsive to chemical stimuli from envenomated mammalian tissue than they are to chemical cues produced by the prey itself. |
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All the visual cues suggest a formative attachment by the artist to best shlock horror the eighties had to offer. |
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Children's understanding of completion entailments in the absence of agency cues. |
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Detection of the spider predator, Hololena nedra by naive juvenile field crickets using indirect cues. |
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Swordtail fry attend to chemical and visual cues in detecting predators and conspecifics. |
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Many OEMs are already taking option and marketing cues From the success of the Mini and incorporating them into their Future vehicle launches. |
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Influences of item organizability and semantic retrieval cues on word recall in very old age. |
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Dance games, where the player dances on a pad in time with on-screen cues, are a popular form of exergaming. |
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She's easy to be with, provided you don't mind the constant chatter, the non-sequitur song cues, or her total lack of an indoor voice. |
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The play contains more musical cues than any other play in the canon as well as a significant use of sound effects. |
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This can yield stiff and lifeless performances in slower more expressive cues. |
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After a transitional period where only the better players would use cues, the cue came to be the first choice of equipment. |
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They even made women continue to use maces after cues were invented, for fear that they would rip the cloth with the sharper cues. |
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High quality cues are generally two pieces and are made of a hardwood, generally maple for billiards and ash for snooker. |
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These are developments from cue sports that dispense with the cues, and are played with the hands directly. |
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The design was later revised to reflect the more rounded lines of the brand's new styling cues. |
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In the 18th and early 19th centuries, American art and literature took most of its cues from Europe. |
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He was buried with his snooker cues, some very good burgundy, chocolates, HB pencils and a power saw. |
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He also used a computerised setup that let him punch in and program lighting cues at will and synchronise them to a soundtrack of the music. |
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In fact, Berkeley argued that the same cues that evoke distance also evoke size, and that we do not first see size and then calculate distance. |
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These cues make the message clearer and give the listener an indication of what way the information should be received. |
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Advertisement vocalizations by males appear to serve as cues by which females recognize their kin. |
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Migrating birds navigate using celestial cues from the sun and stars, the earth's magnetic field, and probably also mental maps. |
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This kin recognition is by olfactory cues from urine, feces and glandular secretions. |
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Toads seem to use visual cues for feeding and can see their prey at very low light intensities where humans are unable to discern anything. |
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Marks was able to achieve 100 per cent accuracy without visiting any of the sites himself but by using cues. |
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Hildegard of Bingen was an example of a medieval medical practitioner who took her cues from this folk medical tradition. |
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Each neuron of the SCN contains the molecular components to generate rhythmicity in the absence of external cues. |
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It is not clear whether they are doing so or are responding to subtle visual or tactile cues from the humans around them. |
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More recently, authors have begun focusing on grammatical cues, and even the use of certain rhetorical strategies. |
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Instead, the writers had to rely on visual cues and ambiance. |
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It looks to us that XR-NTX can help people remain abstinent by reducing the importance of these cues so they are less likely to relapse. |
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Taking his cues from favorite authors like Douglas Adams and Kurt Vonnegut, Dunphy chases after absurdism. |
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In a visucentric world, spatial awareness comes from cues that are subtle and may go unnoticed to the hearing. |
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The unit can be configured per aircraft performance specifications to cover an airspeed awareness band highlighting VNE and VMO cues. |
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Taking your cues from Koons is like singing inside a balloon. |
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Two stimuli from the Wingdings font were used as contextual cues for Same and Opposite, respectively. |
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Representing configurations of cues could, for instance, include the use of logical rules to amalgamate two cues into a new, compound cue. |
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Borg suggests that human communication consists of 93 percent body language and paralinguistic cues. |
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When patients were then exposed to their obsessional cues again, the urge to ritualize had decreased as compared to the previous trial. |
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Prey specificity and the importance of close-range chemical cues in prey recognition in the Digger Wasp, Liris niger. |
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Even though dipoles create the most diffuse surround soundfields, they also provide good directional cues as well. |
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But elephants are probably using other cues such as breathiness, McComb says. |
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It's straightforward and sexy without any dramatic buildup or any cues to the audience that they are seeing something shocking or unusual. |
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Other dangerous items confiscated after kids used or threatened to use them included pen knives, stones, pool cues, a hack saw and a tree branch. |
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The same applies to other visual cues that tend to go unremarked. |
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We examined if Physa snails' activity changes in the presence of the crayfish chemical cues in specific ways. |
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The burrows they hibernate in, called hibernacula, cut off most cues to the world above. |
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Under the new policy, billiard cues, ski poles, and lacrosse and hockey sticks will also be allowed in planes cabins in carry-on luggage. |
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An intentional concealment of NE can serve to mask sexual cues or thwart misattributions of sexual intent. |
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Cell-phone conversations sapped the attention required to discern important driving cues, Strayer holds. |
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Taking cues from seagulls, a bird-size prototype aircraft morphs its wings to navigate cluttered environments. |
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The classically styled camera recalls design cues such as a recognizable pentaprism and top cover, which is now constructed of durable, lightweight magnesium alloy. |
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As a result, you could say that the Arab lutist and Portuguese vocalist invert and challenge tradition, taking their cues from a borderless spirit of jazz improvisation. |
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Although cattle can discriminate between humans by their faces alone, they also use other cues such as the color of clothes when these are available. |
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The Romans too read these cues, so that they cultivated their Berber alliances and, subsequently, favored the Berbers who advanced their interests following the Roman victory. |
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They find their way to these mainly by using olfactory and magnetic cues. |
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Chemical cues or pheromones are also important in communication. |
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Honeydew flicking by treehoppers provides cues to potential tending ants. |
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Vibrations can provide cues to conspecifics about specific behaviors being performed, predator warning and avoidance, herd or group maintenance, and courtship. |
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The ability of birds to navigate during migrations cannot be fully explained by endogenous programming, even with the help of responses to environmental cues. |
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They found that both semantic and phonological characteristics helped to organize the nouns into classes, though the semantic cues were more highly predictive. |
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It is widely assumed that there is a functional relationship in squamates between extrusion of the tongue and delivery of chemical cues to the vomeronasal system. |
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The following year he scored Stargate and Last of the Dogmen, with excerpts from the former ranking third in the most commonly used soundtrack cues for film trailers. |
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Among the sporting goods to be allowed as carry-on baggage will be billiard cues, ski poles, hockey sticks, lacrosse sticks and up to two golf clubs, Pistole said. |
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In other words, the subject learned to preprogram intrasaccadic and postsaccadic disconjugate movements independent of any immediate disparity cues. |
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Students with intellectual disabilities, such as reading or developmental disabilities, may be given picture cues of certain emotions to match with nature. |
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Bioassay data for short-range cues were analyzed by Kruskall Wallis ANOVA by ranks test, and the multiple comparisons between treatments were made by Sprent procedure. |
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Thus, vireos used only visual cues for egg discrimination in eight ejections, whereas in one ejection both visual and tactile cues were available for egg discrimination. |
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Graphology and graphological deviation are likely to be very significant in a mode that lacks non-textual social cues, such as paralanguage, prosody and gesture. |
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Segmental and suprasegmental cues for lexical access in Spanish. |
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Auvi-Q is the first-and-only compact epinephrine auto-injector with audio and visual cues that guide patients and caregivers step-by-step through the injection process. |
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Although our squadron has been flying glass cockpit for almost a year, with the PFD dimmed, it does not provide the same peripheral scan cues as steam gauges. |
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People who were more reactant responded more strongly to the subliminal cues and showed greater variation in their performance than individuals who were less reactant. |
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Gastropods may use odor-guided rheotaxis and move upstream after detection of attractive chemical cues until they are able to detect and follow a concentration gradient. |
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The research, published in the journal Nature Communications, shows that monarchs use an internal compass that relies on both ultraviolet light and geomagnetic cues. |
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Activated by various biochemical cues from within or outside of the cell, caspases commence a cascade of molecular steps that steer the cell to a clean, quiet, orderly death. |
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Taking cues from the rider and the terrain, a special computer chip measures how fast the cyclist is pedaling, how fast the wheels are going, and how taut the chain is. |
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They take cues from the early Who and garage bands, mix in some up-front guitars, combining those with stage moves straight out of the MC5 school of rocking out. |
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As one girl crouched on the floor scribbling out lines on cue cards, three students simultaneously operated the station's three cameras, taking cues from the control room. |
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They can also be used to refinish cues that have been worn over the years. |
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However, auditory cues remain to distinguish between voiced and voiceless sounds, such as what has been described above, like the length of the preceding vowel. |
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People may still understand words they were not exposed to before using cues such as tone, gestures, the topic of discussion and the social context of the conversation. |
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Visual cues in design can be accomplished at low price points as well. |
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