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One and hallmarks
One of the hallmarks of Palestrina's music is that dissonances are typically relegated to the " weak " beats in a measure.
One of the hallmarks of leet is its unique approach to orthography, using substitutions of other characters, letters or otherwise, to represent a letter or letters in a word.
One of the classic hallmarks of false urban legends is a lack of specific information regarding the incident, such as names, dates, locations, or similar information.
" ( Tyler, A History of Amherst College ) One of the hallmarks of the new college was its Charity Fund, an early form of financial aid that paid the tuition of poorer students.
One of the hallmarks of McDowell's later work is his denial that there is any philosophical use for an idea that our experience contains representations that are not conceptually structured, so-called " non-conceptual content ".
One of the hallmarks of the faculty is their faith.
Two years later they " set aside the hallmarks " for a " three-week, no-nonsense tour against college teams " from men's Division One.
" One of the hallmarks of the period's anti-war movement was its stated support for the troops in the field and the affiliation of many returning veterans with it.
One of the hallmarks of his sound is the use of alternate tunings on the guitar.
One of the greatest hallmarks of Gottfried's style is his skillful use of irony, to both humorous and tragic effects.
One of the programme's hallmarks was its willingness to embrace popular culture, at a time when its competitors preferred a more highbrow approach.
One of the hallmarks of a Hartwick education is faculty-student collaboration on research.
( One of her most notable hallmarks was her writing of the number one: When she voted for number one, it was written with a Roman numeral I.
One of the distinctive hallmarks of Geylang architecture is the preservation of its shophouses used by the clan ( kinship ) associations, set up as a ( first ) point of contact for newcomers in the migrant wave between 1840 and 1940 for the purpose of integrating the newcomers into the ways and customs of locals.
One of the hallmarks of arterial claudication is that it occurs intermittently.
In The Times, John Higgins wrote, " One of the hallmarks of the Davis regime was the flood of international conductors who suddenly arrived at Covent Garden.
One of the hallmarks of The Hill School academic program is the star-studded Classics Department, which currently employs three PhD holders to teach interested students the languages of Latin and Ancient Greek.
One of Daffney's hallmarks was a high piercing scream when she was lurking at ringside.
" One of his hallmarks was integrity and self-reliance.
One of the hallmarks of Knowledge building is a sense of we superseding the sense of I, a feeling that the group is operating collectively, and not just as an assemblage of individuals.
One of the hallmarks of Spence's music is its intangible familiarity.
One of the hallmarks of the positive youth development movement is that it is built on a foundation of scientific research.

One and evolutionary
One view, especially held in evolutionary psychology, is that the presence of venomous spiders led to the evolution of a fear of spiders or made acquisition of a fear of spiders especially easy.
One argument claims that this is an instance of " devolution " -- showing an evolutionary trend of decreasing complexity.
One meaning often given is that of " old songs, with no known composers ", another is that of music that has been submitted to an evolutionary " process of oral transmission .... the fashioning and re-fashioning of the music by the community that give it its folk character.
One of his many critics is the evolutionary biologist Joseph L. Graves, who has done extensive testing of the r / K selection theory with species of drosophila flies.
One of the greatest evolutionary innovations of the Carboniferous was the amniote egg, which allowed for the further exploitation of the land by certain tetrapods.
One example of the use of prime numbers in nature is as an evolutionary strategy used by cicadas of the genus Magicicada.
One of the evolutionary paths of lithography has been the use of shorter wavelengths.
One recent theory sees evolution as an " adventure quest " in which species develop complexity and novelty by acquiring modular capabilities through chance encounters in an evolutionary game.
One of Michael Faraday's significant works was The Chemical History of a Candle, where he gives an in-depth analysis of the evolutionary development, workings and science of candles.
One may readily observe the evolutionary progression of Justice as portrayed in the plays of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.
* The intelligibility of the universe: One would anticipate that evolutionary selection would produce hominid minds apt for coping with everyday experience, but that these minds should also be able to understand the subatomic world and general relativity goes far beyond anything of relevance to survival fitness.
One problem with this test is that there are also others subspecies, the first Americas naturalized Apis mellifera iberiensis with shorter wings too, is having from ancient hybridated haplotypes that presents six different lineages, five of them correspond to evolutionary lineages from Africa.
One of the major contributions to the emerging field of evolutionary economics has been the publication of ' An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change ' by Richard Nelson and Sidney Winter.
One possible explanation of the origin of jealousy in evolutionary psychology is that the emotion evolved in order to maximize the success of our genes: it is a biologically based emotion ( Prinz after Buss and Larsen, 2004, p. 120 ) selected to foster the certainty about the paternity of one ’ s own offspring.
One model of coevolution was Leigh Van Valen's Red Queen's Hypothesis, which states that " for an evolutionary system, continuing development is needed just in order to maintain its fitness relative to the systems it is co-evolving with ".
One theme of research in evolutionary developmental biology (“ evo-devo ”) is investigating the role of enhancers and other cis-regulatory elements in producing morphological changes via developmental differences between species.
One method to building molecular assemblers is to mimic evolutionary processes employed by biological systems.
One evolutionary hypothesis is based on a theory that aspects of cognition are retained in one ’ s genes.
One supporter of Wenner's theories, Julian O ' Dea, has proposed an evolutionary explanation for the " waggle dance " that does not involve communication from one bee to another, by claiming it may be a simple idiothetic movement that conveys no information.
One of these rare evolutionary events, about two billion years before the present, made it possible for certain eukaryotes and energy-producing prokaryotes to coexist and mutually benefit from their symbiosis.
One challenge in studying genetic architecture is that the classical population genetics that catalyzed the modern evolutionary synthesis needs to be updated to take into account modern molecular knowledge.
One study conducted in 2009 examined the evolutionary mechanism behind the aversion associated with the uncanny valley.
One of the two competitors will always overcome the other, leading to either the extinction of this competitor or an evolutionary or behavioral shift towards a different ecological niche.
One difficulty with non-human studies of ToM is the lack of sufficient numbers of naturalistic observation, giving insight into what the evolutionary pressures might be on a species ' development of theory of mind.
" One understanding of motion sickness is that nausea is a pro-survival evolutionary adaptation, because the sensory stimulation of a maladapted high acceleration environment that the body is not accustomed to is recognized by the brain as being similar to the sensory conflict from eating a poisonous plant, in which case vomiting is a helpful reaction.

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