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Jun 7, 2017
06/17
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CNBC
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could intuitive surgical be next?'ll see if it's a cut above the rest in the space and rapid fire in tonight's edition of the lightning round. so stick with cramer. ♪ we're drowning in information. where, in all of this, is the stuff that matters? the stakes are so high, your finances, your future. how do you solve this? you don't. you partner with a firm that advises governments and the fortune 500, and, can deliver insight person to person, on what matters to you. morgan stanley. thithis is the new new york.e? think again. we are building new airports all across the state. new roads and bridges. new mass transit. new business friendly environment. new lower taxes. and new university partnerships to grow the businesses of tomorrow today. learn more at esd.ny.gov >> in this very strong market we talk about a stock that's been particularly hot of late. i'm referring to intuit. software is loved by individuals and small businesses including mine. here's the stock that rallied nearly 25% year to date on top of a 19% run
could intuitive surgical be next?'ll see if it's a cut above the rest in the space and rapid fire in tonight's edition of the lightning round. so stick with cramer. ♪ we're drowning in information. where, in all of this, is the stuff that matters? the stakes are so high, your finances, your future. how do you solve this? you don't. you partner with a firm that advises governments and the fortune 500, and, can deliver insight person to person, on what matters to you. morgan stanley. thithis is...
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Jun 3, 2017
06/17
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BLOOMBERG
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. -- of balance sheet is economic intuition. are saying is these are not always well adhered to. >> i am glad you chose value as an example. it is called overvalued when you make things look really good. no matter what metric you choose, but the sales, anything will make the value factor worker with cat -- by you factor work. work.ue factor cap, itnge the market does not work. which means it is not robust. i picked up on something random. oliver: bilingual remixes and collaborations with justin bieber. those are the ingredients of the song of the summer. >> tell me the most popular song in the world. it is by two puerto rican pop stars. they have been around for some time but they have never had anything like this. it was already a pretty big hit on its own and then justin bieber discovered it and did a re/max that has some crooning -- did a remix that has some crooning. that number one anywhere has a music chart. it is already clearly the front runner for song of the summer. oliver: this was a popular song before. it is about t
. -- of balance sheet is economic intuition. are saying is these are not always well adhered to. >> i am glad you chose value as an example. it is called overvalued when you make things look really good. no matter what metric you choose, but the sales, anything will make the value factor worker with cat -- by you factor work. work.ue factor cap, itnge the market does not work. which means it is not robust. i picked up on something random. oliver: bilingual remixes and collaborations with...
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Jun 3, 2017
06/17
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BLOOMBERG
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what you are -- of balance sheet is economic intuition.saying is these are not always well adhered to. that's where breaks down little bit. >> i am glad you chose value as an example. it illustrates another thing. it's called over fitting would you go back in time and tweak a bunch of things to make you look really good. value, no matter what metric you 3value no matter what metric you choose, anything that is valuey will make the value factor work. i change it to a different market, if i change the capitalization, the market factor of the companies, it does not work. which means it is not robust. i picked up on something random. oliver: bilingual remixes and collaborations with justin bieber. those are the ingredients of the song of the summer. >> tell me the most popular song in the world. >> it is by two puerto rican pop stars. they have been around for some time but they have never had anything like this. the song has just taken off. it was already a pretty big hit on its own and then justin bieber discovered it and did a remix that ha
what you are -- of balance sheet is economic intuition.saying is these are not always well adhered to. that's where breaks down little bit. >> i am glad you chose value as an example. it illustrates another thing. it's called over fitting would you go back in time and tweak a bunch of things to make you look really good. value, no matter what metric you 3value no matter what metric you choose, anything that is valuey will make the value factor work. i change it to a different market, if i...
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Jun 19, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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present a new era scientific explanation that there were swayed by feelings and fax and also has an intuitive theory that does not only against a popular understanding of traditional research emotions do not arrive rather reconstruct them on the flight furthermore they're not universal or located in specific bear the -- brain regions the results from girl that works "scientific american" calls the of book remarkable in the wall street journal calls a fascinating. and another star reviewed touse day the selfie of the brain is brilliant please help me to welcome lisa feldman barrett. [applause] >> it is very special for me to be here to talk about the home bookstore we have been coming here and then we have friends and family here as well but what i will do is read a couple of selections from the book then open to questions. so i will start with the passage about a birthday party i true for my daughter when she was 12 years old with the theme of gross foods so i ate -- i made pizza to make it look like it was moldy like fuzzy cheese and vomit jell-o i used peach jell-o with chopped up pieces of
present a new era scientific explanation that there were swayed by feelings and fax and also has an intuitive theory that does not only against a popular understanding of traditional research emotions do not arrive rather reconstruct them on the flight furthermore they're not universal or located in specific bear the -- brain regions the results from girl that works "scientific american" calls the of book remarkable in the wall street journal calls a fascinating. and another star...
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Jun 4, 2017
06/17
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BLOOMBERG
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my rationale, my economic intuition was people love cats. they are on the internet.people love cats. i built a trading model that buys companies with cat in that order. size.s. companies, any i ran a five-year back test on it and it returned 800,000%. you are looking at a newly minted billionaire. >> how do you explain that? it sounds random. >> i talked to quants, and they said, it really doesn't work. i knew that it was a little ludicrous. to explain the crazy returns, what happened was, i picked up a bunch of micro caps. there was one company that went from trading less than a penny to two cents. they were micro caps, but it is nothing you can actually invest in. i basically picked up on random noise that just so happened companies with cat in them was nothing you could actually invest in. oliver: it is putting it under the microscope, which can be illuminating on the flaws involved in methodology. what are those sort of cracks within the methodology you guys want to exploit and bring to light? >> the first one is the idea of economic intuition. there is supposed
my rationale, my economic intuition was people love cats. they are on the internet.people love cats. i built a trading model that buys companies with cat in that order. size.s. companies, any i ran a five-year back test on it and it returned 800,000%. you are looking at a newly minted billionaire. >> how do you explain that? it sounds random. >> i talked to quants, and they said, it really doesn't work. i knew that it was a little ludicrous. to explain the crazy returns, what...
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kennedy: he's intuitive. charles: guys aren't intuitive.at's why they don't have bad days. intuition is the mechanism that bogs you down. he was also asked if he would shower in a subject a reason next to a gayman. he said he knows judo so he would be fine doing that. charles: i take it to mean he knows how to use his hands. tom: why did they have to make it a submarine? improve the setting. on like a princess cruise, maybe. kennedy: your ideal scene. a princess cruise. kennedy: the buffet terward would be. and free, you already paid for it. kat last word on showering. kat: they just called it a sailing ship. kennedy: i loved he moment of it. i will love it even more when you think all the things you can do on a submarine or cruise ship. only here. thank you so much. tom, kat. i'm see trauma little later. he will be back to tell us about his new book. president trump's aides are pleading to with him to stop tweeting and change the tone. but can he resist the urge to live tweet in i hope not. do it, man. how many times has donald trump tweet
kennedy: he's intuitive. charles: guys aren't intuitive.at's why they don't have bad days. intuition is the mechanism that bogs you down. he was also asked if he would shower in a subject a reason next to a gayman. he said he knows judo so he would be fine doing that. charles: i take it to mean he knows how to use his hands. tom: why did they have to make it a submarine? improve the setting. on like a princess cruise, maybe. kennedy: your ideal scene. a princess cruise. kennedy: the buffet...
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Jun 8, 2017
06/17
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KNTV
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. >> and a lot of what he talked about was intuition. the bodily language. one thing that struck me is you recall the president said he better hope there are no tapes. that came up and james comey owe said "lordy, i hope there are tastes." essentially he's saying bring it on, oh, there are tapes of our conversations? now we have the president and comey saying if there are tapes let's air them out. it's interesting. it was never going to be comey's job to say i believe a crime has been committed, it's obstruction of justice. that was not his role today. his role was to describe the conduct and he made clear he believes it's up to somebody else, the special counsel, bob mueller to the determine if the fact he is alleges amount to obstruction of justice. >> ultimately we'll see another hearing when this is done, this is a expect of it. mueller is going to present this evidence and it will be a fascinating question he'll be asked. if this was a private citizen could you bring a case of obstruction of justice? and how he answers that question, that will have a bi
. >> and a lot of what he talked about was intuition. the bodily language. one thing that struck me is you recall the president said he better hope there are no tapes. that came up and james comey owe said "lordy, i hope there are tastes." essentially he's saying bring it on, oh, there are tapes of our conversations? now we have the president and comey saying if there are tapes let's air them out. it's interesting. it was never going to be comey's job to say i believe a crime...
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Jun 25, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN3
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that he had an intuition that he knew where the japanese would be and he took the squadron. people had said later it was as if he had a lead line attached to the japanese carrier flagship and he flew straight from hornet almost to the carrier. it is very strange because the bulk of his squad was sent off on a mission almost like a mystery, the course they took. the best is that they seemed to be that like at carl sea, there were two japanese carrier forces rather than one bunch together. it's unclear. john lindstrom's name's been mentioned, he's an expert on it and in his book he discusses it extensively. but it basically amounts to the hornets dive bombers and fighters, they go off on the course. he ignores it. he breaks away and follows his intuition and the squadron is the first to attack, shot down by the japanese in air fire. not one plane survives. but gay in the sea survives the sinking of his plane and he's afloat to watch what happens later. right after torpedo 8, torpedo 6 comes in from enterprise. you're talking barely two minutes apart. i mean, the japanese recor
that he had an intuition that he knew where the japanese would be and he took the squadron. people had said later it was as if he had a lead line attached to the japanese carrier flagship and he flew straight from hornet almost to the carrier. it is very strange because the bulk of his squad was sent off on a mission almost like a mystery, the course they took. the best is that they seemed to be that like at carl sea, there were two japanese carrier forces rather than one bunch together. it's...
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Jun 21, 2017
06/17
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WTTG
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women's intuition is real.rent people to look at different photographs of people's eyes and person's mood was. women consistently out performed men but the study raised questions, scientists say they still don't understand why women are better at it. and we're never going to tell you. never going to give away our secret >> i'm not going to say anything. >> that's probably best. zip it. thanks for being with us at 5:00. >> news at 6:00 starts now. ♪ ♪. >>> this is fox 5 local news at 6 6:00. >>> a community mourns the loss of a beloved teen killed on her way home from a mosque. >>> not an act of terror. the latest on that ambush in the infield in an update on the condition of congressman steve scalise. tropical storm cindy is still hovering in the gulf mexico. the news at 6:00 starts now. >>> but we begin tonight with a fox 5 exclusive. of nearly two dozen people may have been exposed to routine procedures at a medical facility. >>> lauren demarco is live tonight in largo maryland with the exclusive details. lau
women's intuition is real.rent people to look at different photographs of people's eyes and person's mood was. women consistently out performed men but the study raised questions, scientists say they still don't understand why women are better at it. and we're never going to tell you. never going to give away our secret >> i'm not going to say anything. >> that's probably best. zip it. thanks for being with us at 5:00. >> news at 6:00 starts now. ♪ ♪. >>> this is...
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146
Jun 29, 2017
06/17
by
WUSA
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eye 146
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your intuition tells you pretty much the same thing should lap.l land in a band on the left. and those that go through the right will land in a wand band on the right. but the amazing thing discovered in 1927 is that is not what happens. this is an experiment that actually happened, in some sense, by accident. there were two physicists out at billion labs, davidson and germ athey're doing an experiment, it explodes. they fix it by the nickel crystal they were firing electrons on got tarnished. they heated it up, and when they heated it, they unwittingly changedly the experiment into what we're going to look at right here. and what they found is when you fire want electrons and the don't just get two bands. you get more bands. and that simple change, going from ou expectation of two bando in this case five bands, that represents the single greatest upheaval in our understanding of reality that the species has ever encountered. >> stephen: why does that happen. ( cheers and applause ) okay. okay. why does-- why does that happen? that is the question
your intuition tells you pretty much the same thing should lap.l land in a band on the left. and those that go through the right will land in a wand band on the right. but the amazing thing discovered in 1927 is that is not what happens. this is an experiment that actually happened, in some sense, by accident. there were two physicists out at billion labs, davidson and germ athey're doing an experiment, it explodes. they fix it by the nickel crystal they were firing electrons on got tarnished....
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Jun 4, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 63
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can get you into trouble and probably most of all, every ideologue in history has had a brilliant intuitive feeling for how the insular cortex works which is if you can get your minions to the point that when you talk about them, then living in the next valley, then who think differently than you, who pray differently, who love differently, if you can get your followers to the point that when you invoke them, the insular cortex activates the cause there's something just disgusting about them, your 90 percent of the way toward pulling off your successful genocide. a key to every good genocidal movement is taking them and turning them into being such infestations and malignancies and whatever's that they hardly even count as human anymore. >> watch this and other programs online at booktv.org. >> c-span: where history unfolds daily. in 1979, c-span was created as a public service by america's cable television companies. and is brought to you today by your cable or satellite provider. >> next on after words, msnbc host chris hayes discusses his book o'connell colony and the nation. it examines
can get you into trouble and probably most of all, every ideologue in history has had a brilliant intuitive feeling for how the insular cortex works which is if you can get your minions to the point that when you talk about them, then living in the next valley, then who think differently than you, who pray differently, who love differently, if you can get your followers to the point that when you invoke them, the insular cortex activates the cause there's something just disgusting about them,...
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143
Jun 21, 2017
06/17
by
KYW
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eye 143
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3:30 in the morning get out of your bedroom, they will look at me like i'm crazy but do i think intuitivelydoes make sense. >> admitly first few nights of doing this will be terrible. >> reporter: doctor stephen fineville director of lennox hill sleep center recommend this therapy. he said once patients are out of bed they should try simply reading, in tv, no electronics , no food, no alcohol. >> it seems very backward, it seems counter intuitive that we ask people to sleepless when trying to get sleep better. >> reporter: idea to quiet mine, staying calm as patient wait toss get tired again. finesilver add it can take several weeks how to relearn to sleep. >> that is a very simple idea but it really works and works neatly. >> every night i love going to bed. it is greatest feeling i get in my bed, cozy and ready to go, it makes a world of a difference. >> that was christine johnson reporting. if only they can figure out how to help us since we get up at 1:30 in morning. >> no sleep. >> 6:51a lot coming up on cbs morning. >> gayle king joins us live from new york with the preview , good mor
3:30 in the morning get out of your bedroom, they will look at me like i'm crazy but do i think intuitivelydoes make sense. >> admitly first few nights of doing this will be terrible. >> reporter: doctor stephen fineville director of lennox hill sleep center recommend this therapy. he said once patients are out of bed they should try simply reading, in tv, no electronics , no food, no alcohol. >> it seems very backward, it seems counter intuitive that we ask people to...
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113
Jun 25, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 113
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and in addition, it also explains why the theory of constructed emotion is so counter intuitive. how emotions are made also uses the science of emotion as a convenient flash lay to illuminate all sorts of issues are emotions are important like in the relationship between physical and mental health. in the law, in communicating across cultures, in rearing your children, and even addressing whether animals have emotions like human emotions. the book takes on one of my favorite topics which is how this new science of emotions changes our understanding of what it means to be human. what i would like to do now is take your questions or listen to your comments and thoughts. and encourage you to have a close look at the book. >> how is this information about how the brain is working been found? through an mri? >> there are a number of scientific literatures. one thing we know for example is from an anatomical perspective we can see the brain is wired were prediction. we can see the brain is wired to use your past experience to make guesses about what is going to happen next and it is so
and in addition, it also explains why the theory of constructed emotion is so counter intuitive. how emotions are made also uses the science of emotion as a convenient flash lay to illuminate all sorts of issues are emotions are important like in the relationship between physical and mental health. in the law, in communicating across cultures, in rearing your children, and even addressing whether animals have emotions like human emotions. the book takes on one of my favorite topics which is how...
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Jun 22, 2017
06/17
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KCSM
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. >> many surveys show that the intuition and situation can't predict anymore.would be to start smoothly and slowly with introducing the new technologies. brent: who is going to decide how slowly, how smartly we progress? >> there are some who think they could decide alone. those who think in this direction are mostly sitting at businesses of companies. it is on us as citizens and as societies to keep our responsibility and to stick these companies to ethical considerations, which should take place within our society. brent: before we wrap this up, are you convinced that our creations, our machines are not a threat to the human moral compass? >> in general, they could, but it is on us to take as much measures as possible that this won't happen. brent: do you think humans are the biggest threat to themselves? >> i think so as humans are programming the machines. brent: thank you very much, fascinating discussion. we will be talking a lot about this in the future. >> thank you. brent: it is the end of the road for uber's ceo. helen is standing now. you will not dr
. >> many surveys show that the intuition and situation can't predict anymore.would be to start smoothly and slowly with introducing the new technologies. brent: who is going to decide how slowly, how smartly we progress? >> there are some who think they could decide alone. those who think in this direction are mostly sitting at businesses of companies. it is on us as citizens and as societies to keep our responsibility and to stick these companies to ethical considerations, which...
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27
Jun 8, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN
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eye 27
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it occurred to me that there was something intuitive to americans, regardless of where you are in the political spectrum. we know we have something pretty significant. this is no utopian society, to be sure. but you have this farseeing vision, they have the ability to foresee certain things that are important to us today. i think this book helps reconnect people with the story. figuresd one of those shown in hamilton, aaron burr, is much more complicated than what you have seen if you have the opportunity to watch it. sen. lee: that's right. with ehrenberg, the problem is burr, the with aaron problem is that he was a fool who shot hamilton. but he was also thomas jefferson's vice president. he conducted the trials of some lyricals jefferson's enemy -- political enemies. .e was a very impartial person he also won a certain amount of resentment from thomas jefferson, who, during his second term when burr was no longer his vice president, had urr prosecuted -- b prosecuted. reminder that even thomas jefferson, who many of us is oned revere and who of the office of the declaration of inde
it occurred to me that there was something intuitive to americans, regardless of where you are in the political spectrum. we know we have something pretty significant. this is no utopian society, to be sure. but you have this farseeing vision, they have the ability to foresee certain things that are important to us today. i think this book helps reconnect people with the story. figuresd one of those shown in hamilton, aaron burr, is much more complicated than what you have seen if you have the...
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144
Jun 11, 2017
06/17
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KQEH
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president, don't ask me why intuitively i started calling him mr. president. i'd always called him senator, or leader. mr. president i'm here if you need me, bill moyers. a few minutes later the secret service agent came back and called me up the steps and there i was on air force one. - [don] what was going through your mind? - no awesome, my god, look at this, it was very practical, how do i help him? what's he going to do now? 'cause he had never expected to be president, wasn't ready for it, wasn't really prepared for it. i was a practical guy. i mean in the campaign of '60, organizing the peace corps, those were administrative and managerial jobs. and i had never even been in the white house and i was standing at the back of that plane, saying, "how can i be helpful?" and when he went back into the bedroom of air force one security had closed all the portholes, but he had opened the one in that inner office, inner bedroom, inner sanctum and he was looking out. quietly, very calmly, and i said, "mr. president what are you thinking?" and he said, "are the m
president, don't ask me why intuitively i started calling him mr. president. i'd always called him senator, or leader. mr. president i'm here if you need me, bill moyers. a few minutes later the secret service agent came back and called me up the steps and there i was on air force one. - [don] what was going through your mind? - no awesome, my god, look at this, it was very practical, how do i help him? what's he going to do now? 'cause he had never expected to be president, wasn't ready for...
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48
Jun 28, 2017
06/17
by
KCSM
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eye 48
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i guess thats also sort of the intuitive feeling. we have also had to pre it from dominance come a special responsibility to be extra -- you compete on the merits. this is the starting point where we start looking into maps, travel, images, the other google services where people are mplaining that things are not right. reporter: finally, we all know president trump's the use on your, particularly the european union. what sort of reaction to you expect from washington? >> it can be difficult to have precise expectations, but what i know from my counterparts is the respect of the rule of law, of evidence, of facts. this is what i see when i see my u.s. colleagues doing their work. of course i think that is the most important expectation that you can have. what we have in common is we build on the rule of law. reporter: no competition war against brussels in washington hopefully? >> this is nothing to do with any of that. this is casework, this is antitrust. what we have found is illegal behavior. illegal behavior reaching european legi
i guess thats also sort of the intuitive feeling. we have also had to pre it from dominance come a special responsibility to be extra -- you compete on the merits. this is the starting point where we start looking into maps, travel, images, the other google services where people are mplaining that things are not right. reporter: finally, we all know president trump's the use on your, particularly the european union. what sort of reaction to you expect from washington? >> it can be...
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99
Jun 22, 2017
06/17
by
KYW
tv
eye 99
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get out of your bed and bedroom, they will will look at me like i'm crazy at first but rationally intuitivelydoes make sense. >> admitly the first few nights will be terrible. >> reporter: once patients are out of bed they should try simply reading, no tv or electronics, no food or alcohol. >> it seems very backward, kind of counter intuitive that we ask people to be sleeping less when we try to get them to sleep better. >> reporter: idea to quiet the mine, staying calm as they wait to get tired again. doctors say it can take several weeks to relearn how to sleep. >> eventually you will sleep and that is a very simple idea , but it really works, works neatly. >> every night i'm loving going to bed. it is greatest feeling. i get in in my bed, i'm cozy, ready to go. it makes a world of difference >> reporter: doctors say people experience marked improvement in the quality of sleep after about a week of restricted time, in bed. i'm stephanie stahl for cbs-3 "eyewitness news". >>> everybody was quiet in studio, check ago this out. >> interesting taking pointers >> well, weather was perfect today
get out of your bed and bedroom, they will will look at me like i'm crazy at first but rationally intuitivelydoes make sense. >> admitly the first few nights will be terrible. >> reporter: once patients are out of bed they should try simply reading, no tv or electronics, no food or alcohol. >> it seems very backward, kind of counter intuitive that we ask people to be sleeping less when we try to get them to sleep better. >> reporter: idea to quiet the mine, staying calm...
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152
Jun 25, 2017
06/17
by
WUSA
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eye 152
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so, this is why the doctors usually say, "i have an intuition about something."s because they might notice it subconsciously but not consciously. >> rose: but you're teaching the computer to read the doctor's... >> pantic: doctor or patient. >> rose: or patient. >> pantic: patient is really important. >> rose: i mean, it's an essential component of the full development of artificial intelligence. >> pantic: that's what we believe, yes. if you want to have an artificial intelligence, it's not just being able to process the data, but it's also being able to understand humans. so, yes. >> rose: the ultimate goal for some scientists is a.i. that's closer to human intelligence and even more versatile. that's called artificial general intelligence, and, if ever achieved, it may be able to perform any task a human can. googou deepmind which is at the forefront. they demonstrated a.i. that mastered the world's most difficult boardgame called "go." the real progress is less in what they did than how they did it. the technology taught itself and learned through experience
so, this is why the doctors usually say, "i have an intuition about something."s because they might notice it subconsciously but not consciously. >> rose: but you're teaching the computer to read the doctor's... >> pantic: doctor or patient. >> rose: or patient. >> pantic: patient is really important. >> rose: i mean, it's an essential component of the full development of artificial intelligence. >> pantic: that's what we believe, yes. if you want...
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79
Jun 24, 2017
06/17
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CNNW
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so actually that's a great question, because the answer is counter intuitive. what most people think when they're talking about stem cell social security that we're going to create a cell and replace a cell in the nervous system. we're not repair or replacing motor neuron, we're trying to have them heal and grow back. >> does that mean that if you're protecting them that the patient won't get worse? >> that's exactly right. >> stem cells are located throughout our bodies, our reserve army of regeneration or repair. when we're injured or sick, stem cells will divide and create new cells. depending on where theells are in the body they adapt becoming specialized blood cells, muscle cells or brain cells for example. >> it was almost as if the cells were guided missiles that could actually detect where there's a problem and go there. >> for this trial neurofetal stem cells were transplanted into the patients with the hope they could become functioning cells in t cells spinal cord. he even developed a special device for the procedure, it stabilizes and controls the
so actually that's a great question, because the answer is counter intuitive. what most people think when they're talking about stem cell social security that we're going to create a cell and replace a cell in the nervous system. we're not repair or replacing motor neuron, we're trying to have them heal and grow back. >> does that mean that if you're protecting them that the patient won't get worse? >> that's exactly right. >> stem cells are located throughout our bodies, our...
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Jun 25, 2017
06/17
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KNTV
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eye 138
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revellers aware of surrounding who trust their intuition and report anything out of ordinary. >> to me it kind of hurts like myself just to kind of listen to that and having to know we have to really be aware. >> and because it is pride weekend dozens of volunteers got up early to install the pink triangle on the peak. they pounded in stakes to make sure the symbol stays in place no matter the weather. 80 years ago the nazi's made people wear pink triangles. they reclaimed the symbol during the weekend. the pink triangle cofounder people didn't know what it wassed stood for. >> they thought it was an abstract symbol. like the rainbow flag waist which is entirely wonderful. but the triangle has a history. part of acknowledging where we are for 2017 is remembering where we've been. >> now they hold a special ceremony every year to remind people about the tragic history of the pink triangle visible from 15 miles away. >> show us your pride. viewers have been sending in photos all day gordon mack did in showing the theater all lit up in pride colors. we want to thank michael from sfis took
revellers aware of surrounding who trust their intuition and report anything out of ordinary. >> to me it kind of hurts like myself just to kind of listen to that and having to know we have to really be aware. >> and because it is pride weekend dozens of volunteers got up early to install the pink triangle on the peak. they pounded in stakes to make sure the symbol stays in place no matter the weather. 80 years ago the nazi's made people wear pink triangles. they reclaimed the...
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my grandfather was of the generation of canadians who intuitively understood the connection between their life and those of the people they had never met. whose speech they could not comprehend, who live on a continent so far away as to constitute back then another world. that generation of canadians, the greatest generation has survived the great depression. they were born in the aftermath of the first world war. they appreciated that a world without borders or rules was a world of strife and poverty. they sought to prevent that from ever happening again. that is why they risked their lives and gave them to fight in the european war. that is why when they came home, they cheerfully contributed to the great rojects of rebuilding europe and creating a postwar world order. that is why they counted themselves lucky to be able to do so. they were our parents, our grandparents and our great-grandparents. the challenge we face today is significant. to be sure. ut it pales next to the task they face and met, our job today is to recognize their achievements and build on it. to use the multilatera
my grandfather was of the generation of canadians who intuitively understood the connection between their life and those of the people they had never met. whose speech they could not comprehend, who live on a continent so far away as to constitute back then another world. that generation of canadians, the greatest generation has survived the great depression. they were born in the aftermath of the first world war. they appreciated that a world without borders or rules was a world of strife and...
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Jun 12, 2017
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my grandfather was of the generation of canadians who intuitively understood the connection between their life and those of the people they had never met. there is a speech they could not comprehend, the lives so far away. that generation was the greatest generation. recall the not for good reason. they have survived the great depression. they were born in the aftermath of the first world war. they appreciated that a world without exporters for most of the global economy was a world of poverty.they sought to prevent that from ever happening again. that is why they risked their lives and gave them to fight in the european war. that is why, when they came home they cheerfully contributed to the great project of rebuilding europe and creating a postwar world order. that is why they counted themselves lucky to be able to do so. for our parents, our grandparents and great grandparents.but it paled in comparison with - to use the multilateral structures they created as the foundation for global accord and institution fit for the new reality of our century. they rose to their generations great c
my grandfather was of the generation of canadians who intuitively understood the connection between their life and those of the people they had never met. there is a speech they could not comprehend, the lives so far away. that generation was the greatest generation. recall the not for good reason. they have survived the great depression. they were born in the aftermath of the first world war. they appreciated that a world without exporters for most of the global economy was a world of...
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Jun 24, 2017
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they want you to call police and be vigilant and use your intuition and trust it.year maybe more than ever before san francisco police department and the fbi are concerned about the real threat of a terror attack at a large event during pride week. >> recent
they want you to call police and be vigilant and use your intuition and trust it.year maybe more than ever before san francisco police department and the fbi are concerned about the real threat of a terror attack at a large event during pride week. >> recent