Using a computerized paradigm, they found that computers were able to beat the odds when asked to choose the correct name for 94,000 different faces.
His memory was enshrined in the political ethos of the Imperial age as a paradigm of the good emperor.
But he said, "The NTP report linking radiofrequency radiation (RFR) to two types of cancer marks a paradigm shift in our understanding of radiation and cancer risk.
In a finding hailed as a 'paradigm shift' for the understanding of relationships, researchers found that like-minded people will be drawn together but keep their distance from those who do not adhere to their beliefs.
We need a paradigm shift in thinking about how the economy and policy works.
Bringing in ideas from other domains keeps people awake and interested, and it's actually how paradigm shifts are born.
The study, which was published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, found a "paradigm shift" in how we view our relationships.
He initiated the new paradigm of "social anatomy novel" since the May Fourth Movement.
"Telecoms itself could be a mature business but the industry's paradigm will completely change when telecoms networks and platforms converge with other industries," he says.
Gould and Lewontin refer to this habit as the Panglossian paradigm, a reference to Voltaire's "Candide," in which the foolish Professor Pangloss keeps insisting, in the face of death and disaster, that we live in "the best of all possible worlds.
The Europeans, no: the Europeans of that time, which was a time of struggle, were so convinced that the heaven of the stars was immutable, was in fact the paradigm and kingdom of immutability, that they considered it pointless and blasphemous to notice changes.