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computer models

n. (computer model English)

Usage examples of "computer models".

There's a whole swathe of philosophers and any number of psychologists and artificial intelligencers working with computer models ready to insist that nothing one might discover about the biochemical and cellular processes going on in the brain is of any interest to theories of memory.

The computer models vary by 400 percent, de facto proof that nobody knows.

Each new section was ten times the complexity of the section that had been laid before, since now they could study for real what had heretofore only existed in computer models and simulations and discover how right or wrong they were and whether they had remembered everything.

OUR COMPUTER MODELS CONSISTENTLY UNDERESTIMATE YOUR FERAL CLEVERNESS.

Outside the make-believe world of computer models, there's actually more evidence over the longer term for cooling rather than warming, and as a number of scientists have remarked, the warm periods between glacials seem to last about 11,000 years, and we're 10,800 years into the current one.

Paul-or the flesh-and-blood man whose memories he'd inherited-had traced the history of Copies back to the turn of the century, when researchers had begun to fine-tune the generic computer models used for surgical training and pharmacology, transforming them into customized versions able to predict the needs and problems of individual patients.

Paulor the flesh-and-blood man whose memories he'd inheritedhad traced the history of Copies back to the turn of the century, when researchers had begun to fine-tune the generic computer models used for surgical training and pharmacology, transforming them into customized versions able to predict the needs and problems of individual patients.

Maria had watched Mitch work hours and days perfecting computer models of his findings, 3-D rotatable graphics of the sub-oceanic landscape, with animated demonstrations of the seismic and geological stages in that landscape's evolution: the fractures, trenches, plains, seamounts and guyots.

In our computer models in Chapter 3, we deliberately built into the computer the basic ingredients of cumulative selection.