Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adverb In an
informational manner. - adverb With regard to
information .
Etymologies
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Instead, we have gradual adaptation resulting in an irreducibly complex structure. johnnyb: So, it seems that the full account of evidence favors an informationally-directed system, rather than natural selection.
A New Book 2010
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So, it seems that the full account of evidence favors an informationally-directed system, rather than natural selection.
A New Book 2010
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The same thing goes for the immune system (progressive improvement of binding), but somatic hypermutation is an informationally-driven process, with selection (and, in the case of SMH, it is an artificial selection) accounting for only a small part of the innovation.
A New Book 2010
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But, wait, The Enquirer at least touts itself as a tabloid for the informationally challenged and easily fooled.
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You get a sense of the place in some ways quicker than if you see a whole high angle master shot that informationally shared this space.
Extended Film Discussion With Hue Rhodes, Director of St. John of Las Vegas | /Film 2010
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If we lived in a world where everyone kept their own private beliefs to themselves, it would be a very informationally poor world.
Speaking of what we do not know James F. McGrath 2009
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The property of being bad doesn't seem to be the kind of property that can be informationally detected or transduced.
Pain Aydede, Murat 2009
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A cognitive system is informationally encapsulated to the extent that in the course of processing a given set of inputs it cannot access information stored elsewhere; all it has to go on is the information contained in those inputs plus whatever information might be stored within the system itself, for example, in a proprietary database.
Modularity of Mind Robbins, Philip 2009
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Behavioral economists assert that markets are often "informationally inefficient," with much of the inefficiency stemming from patterns of irrational behavior that cognitive psychology can document and measure.
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Hurwicz L. (1972): "On informationally decentralized systems", in Radner and McGuire, Decision and Organization, North-Holland.
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