generative processの例文
- It's meant to be explored as a generative process-in other words you create the visuals by wandering throughout.
- Downbursts larger than in extent are sometimes called "'macrobursts "'. but the generative process is somewhat different from that of most downbursts.
- The gestures, such as those of touching, brushing along other bodies, dancing, stretching and falling, provided the impetus for the generative processes in TGarden.
- Her interest in distillation, repetition, modularity and generative processes provides, says Professor Carol Shepheard, an understanding of how history, society and culture impact the human condition.
- When time series are observed as a discrete sequence of N observations, the implicit sampling is treated as part of the generative process, where ( using Taylor's theorem)
- A vastly undervalued part of the Alexander canon, " A New Theory " is important in understanding the generative processes which give rise to the shanty towns latterly championed by Stewart Brand, Robert Neuwirth, and the Prince of Wales.
- Whereas the loss function measures the error that is incurred when predicting f ( \ mathbf { x } ) in place of y, the likelihood function measures how likely the observations are from the model that was assumed to be true in the generative process.
- He proposed landmark theoretical formulations of neural activity and generative processes that influenced diverse fields such as cognitive sciences and psychology, philosophy, neurosciences, computer science, artificial neural networks, cybernetics and artificial intelligence, together with what has come to be known as the generative sciences.
- Therefore We base Our words on the first principles of a human and Christian doctrine of marriage when We are obliged once more to declare that the direct interruption of the generative process already begun and, above all, all direct abortion, even for therapeutic reasons, are to be absolutely excluded as lawful means of regulating the number of children.
- :So yes, technically I can conceive of it being feasible for such an advanced science to create a living homo sapien sapiens, as we know it today, from completely engineered components, but here's the aside : by the point it would be possible to accomplish this with biological printing, it would almost certainly have long before become feasible to create an identical person using accelerated generative processes that none-the-less do not depend on conventional gestation.