• Besides the Higgs-boson, the LHC has not found any new elementary particle. (blogspot.com)
  • But particle physicists are nervous. (blogspot.com)
  • For 30 years, particle physicists have told us that the LHC should find something besides that, something exciting: a particle for dark matter, additional dimensions of space, or maybe a new type of symmetry. (blogspot.com)
  • The problem particle physicists now have is that naturalness was the only reason to think that there should be new physics at the LHC. (blogspot.com)
  • How have particle physicists reacted to the situation? (blogspot.com)
  • Regardless of their coping strategy, a lot of particle physicists probably now wish they had never made those predictions. (blogspot.com)
  • It's a challenging problem," explained Auralee Edelen, now a research associate at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, who in part inspired Nord thanks to her work applying machine learning to controlling particle accelerators. (gizmodo.com)
  • Meanwhile it must have dawned on particle physicists that the non-discovery of fundamentally new particles besides the Higgs is a problem for their field, and especially for the prospects of financing that bigger collider which they want. (uncommondescent.com)
  • Current quantum computers, utilizing technologies like the trapped ion device on the left, are beginning to tackle problems theoretical physicists care about, like simulating particle physics models. (umd.edu)
  • Physicists can measure a particle that's in a vacuum, but they still have to contend with the so-called "observer effect," where the simple process of observing a particle can have an impact on the state of the particle. (dice.com)
  • On July 4, 2012, physicists around the world celebrate the announcement of the discovery of the Higgs boson-the quantum excitation of the Higgs field that is the linchpin of the standard model of particle physics. (illinois.edu)
  • Artificial intelligence in healthcare is an overarching term used to describe the use of machine-learning algorithms and software, or artificial intelligence (AI), to mimic human cognition in the analysis, presentation, and comprehension of complex medical and health care data, or to exceed human capabilities by providing new ways to diagnose, treat, or prevent disease. (wikipedia.org)
  • AI does this through machine learning algorithms and deep learning. (wikipedia.org)
  • So people realized we needed an approach that adapts to the constraints of the hardware we have-an optimization problem," said Patrick Coles, a theoretical physicist developing algorithms at Los Alamos and the senior lead author of the paper. (scitechdaily.com)
  • Although high-temperature superconductors are widely used in technologies such as MRI machines, explaining the unusual properties of these materials remains an unsolved problem for theoretical physicists. (ucsc.edu)
  • But Gweon and Shastry found that these apparently irreconcilable results can be accounted for by the same theoretical functions, with a simple change in one parameter. (ucsc.edu)
  • Here is an answer, based on an interview with Paul Davies , a theoretical physicist and cosmologist at Arizona State University and Director of BEYOND: Centre for Fundamental Concepts in Science . (maths.org)
  • Rather, it was about understanding how current technology can be tested against quantum simulations that are relevant to nuclear physicists so that both the theoretical proposals and the technology can progress in practical directions. (umd.edu)
  • Edge ( www.edge.org ) features a cross section of elite scientists, including evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins, parallel computing pioneer Danny Hillis, language theorist and cognitive scientist Stephen Pinker, robotics expert Rodney Brook, chaos theory expert Doyne Farmer, and physicists Paul Davies, Freeman Dyson and Lee Smolin. (edge.org)
  • Generally, no one gets upset about which conclusions nuclear physicists arrive at, but they complain on Twitter when new research is posted on sexual orientation . (lesswrong.com)
  • The problem is that while nuclear energy can remove some of our concern with renewable intermittency, the process of harnessing energy through nuclear reactions can add several risks for us to consider. (greenbiz.com)
  • Terrestrial's IMSR design swaps out the nuclear pellet-sized fuel components found in traditional reactors with liquid molten salt containing the nuclear fuel. (greenbiz.com)
  • The problem with nuclear fusion is that it's a complex process requiring immense amounts of energy and heat (think millions of degrees Celsius). (greenbiz.com)
  • This is not to be found in nature at all and is created in a "breeder" nuclear reactor. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • The best modern computers have often proven inadequate at simulating the details that nuclear physicists need to understand our universe at the deepest levels. (umd.edu)
  • The team's current efforts might help nuclear physicists, including Davoudi, to take advantage of the early benefits of quantum computing instead of needing to rush to catch up when quantum computers hit their stride. (umd.edu)
  • For Linke, who is also an assistant professor of physics at UMD, the problems faced by nuclear physicists provide a challenging practical target to take aim at during these early days of quantum computing. (umd.edu)
  • A number of radiation accidents have occurred over the past 50 years involving radiation producing machines, radio- active materials, and uncontrolled nuclear reactors. (cdc.gov)
  • That the LHC finds the Higgs and nothing else was dubbed the "nightmare scenario" for a reason. (blogspot.com)
  • The most obvious theoretically motivated candidates for discov- ery are the Higgs boson and supersymmetry, but unitarity and renormalisation arguments mean that it is extremely likely that we will find something new. (lu.se)
  • In the early part of this decade, two researchers working independently - Princeton graduate student Hak Poon and Cornell University physicist Harold Craighead - found that the jet was stable for a very short distance after leaving the nozzle, but the result was still not practical and the reasons were still elusive. (analytica-world.com)
  • The work was a collaboration between John P. Wikswo , the Gordon A. Cain University Professor at Vanderbilt, Michael Schmidt and Hod Lipson at the Creative Machines Lab at Cornell University and Jerry Jenkins and Ravishankar Vallabhajosyula at CFDRC in Huntsville, Ala. (vanderbilt.edu)
  • He obtained data from lots of experimental groups, including his own, and we found a remarkably successful agreement between theory and experiment at a level that has never been achieved before in this field. (ucsc.edu)
  • AI, especially its subfield of Machine Learning (ML), has already been successfully applied to condensed matter and material physics by providing a robust platform for encoding materials systems from experimental and computational data into a latent space of features. (physics-network.org)
  • A new landmark calculation executed by an international team of physicists employed unparalleled experimental results and advanced supercomputers to reveal more about just how and why some fundamental symmetry breaks. (scienceblogs.com)
  • A machine learning algorithm could be used to generate the optimal experimental setup with which to observe the universe-such as how optical fibers are allocated for observing different wavelengths of light-in order to calculate this dark energy equation of state. (gizmodo.com)
  • and ensuring that the event records produced by them can be manipulated to provide data which may be compared to that from existing experiments is a task ill-suited to experimental physicists under pressure to produce plots for one specific process. (lu.se)
  • By exploiting the unique properties of quantum mechanics, we can tackle problems that are currently intractable on classical machines. (c-audio.com)
  • As a result], the worst case estimate of how many qubits will be needed to factor 2048 bit RSA integers has dropped nearly two orders of magnitude," they say. (technologyreview.com)
  • In 2019, researchers from Purdue and Tohoku University in Japan demonstrated a probabilistic computer, made of "p-bits," that is capable of solving optimization problems often targeted for quantum computers, built from qubits. (purdue.edu)
  • But there is a useful subset of problems solvable with qubits that can also be solved with p-bits. (purdue.edu)
  • Those problems include simulations for material science and quantum chemistry, factoring numbers, big-data analysis, and virtually every application that has been proposed for quantum computers. (scitechdaily.com)
  • These guys have found a more efficient way for quantum computers to perform the code-breaking calculations, reducing the resources they require by orders of magnitude. (technologyreview.com)
  • The reason is that noise becomes a significant problem for large quantum computers. (technologyreview.com)
  • The speed requirements for various applications grows with the complexity of the problems and the speed advantage of quantum computers are enormous compare to classical computers. (amitray.com)
  • Based on complexity theory quantum computers can solve much complex problems in exponentially less time than classical computers. (amitray.com)
  • Quantum computers can provide faster solutions to factoring and searching algorithms compare to the classical computers. (amitray.com)
  • Quantum computers can provide better ways than classical computers to simulate complex quantum systems for the physicists. (amitray.com)
  • Quantum computers have the potential to revolutionize technology as we know it, solving complex problems faster than traditional computing systems ever could. (c-audio.com)
  • This interconnectedness provides for an additional layer of complexity and enables quantum computers to solve certain problems much more efficiently than classical computers. (c-audio.com)
  • Utilizing a technique known as Shor's algorithm, quantum computers can factor large numbers exponentially faster than any existing classical algorithm, an attribute that could drastically revolutionize digital security. (c-audio.com)
  • Another promising application of quantum computers can be found within the sphere of Artificial Intelligence . (c-audio.com)
  • More than 60 years ago, the physicist Julian Schwinger laid the foundation for describing the relativistic and quantum mechanical behaviors of subatomic particles and the forces among them, and now his namesake model is serving as an early challenge for quantum computers. (umd.edu)
  • Is physics used in machine learning? (physics-network.org)
  • Since its beginning, machine learning has been inspired by methods from statistical physics. (physics-network.org)
  • Physics-informed machine learning allows scientists to use this prior knowledge to help the training of the neural network, making it more efficient. (physics-network.org)
  • This central concept in physics has also been found to be applicable in AI, and especially deep learning. (physics-network.org)
  • DeepXDE is a library for scientific machine learning and physics-informed learning. (physics-network.org)
  • DeepXDE includes the following algorithms: physics-informed neural network (PINN) solving different problems. (physics-network.org)
  • it combines computer science, physics and applied mathematics to develop scientific solutions to complex problems. (physics-network.org)
  • Assistant Professor Zohreh Davoudi , a member of the Maryland Center for Fundamental Physics, has been working with multiple colleagues at UMD to ensure that the problems that she cares about are among those benefiting from early advances in quantum computing. (umd.edu)
  • Consequently, these machines are significantly closer to reality than anyone suspected. (technologyreview.com)
  • Understanding the mechanism behind that cosmic preference remains one of the great puzzles in science, and physicists are closer than ever to tunneling through the looking glass to seek out the answers. (scienceblogs.com)
  • Looking at the latest scrape-off layer data based on improved measurements, he estimated - literally on an envelope - that the new widths could be produced without plasma turbulence, a factor that is typically considered but is notoriously difficult to calculate. (princeton.edu)
  • The "electroweak scale" or "electroweak energy" is typically said to be around the mass of the Z-boson, which is about 100 Giga-electron Volts (GeV), ie a factor 100 below what the LHC reaches. (blogspot.com)
  • Physicists are typically fairly analytical, and some people might call me a rather analytical person. (syncron.com)
  • Known as variational quantum algorithms, they use the quantum boxes to manipulate quantum systems while shifting much of the work load to classical computers to let them do what they currently do best: solve optimization problems. (scitechdaily.com)
  • We found we could turn all the problems of interest into optimization problems, potentially with quantum advantage, meaning the quantum computer beats a classical computer at the task," Coles said. (scitechdaily.com)
  • On that list of problems to solve more efficiently than with classical computers are optimization problems - the ability to calculate the best solution from a very large number of solutions, such as identifying the best route for goods to travel to market. (purdue.edu)
  • A physicist in a data science job will spend most of their time analyzing data and designing and developing models to predict how something will behave based on data of how it has behaved in the past. (physics-network.org)
  • Since potentially WikiLeaks has compared found in the A Realist Philosophy of Social Science: Explanation and Understanding of fact Owning millennial ministers in Kenya, the political generation players, a Radiotherapy on mental button rolling on the Ivory Coast, Church of Scientology media, Guantanamo Bay survey network collections and primo Completing relevant media old as Kaupthing and Julius Baer, among sure actions. (silverkingtractors.com)
  • To raise new questions, new possibilities, to regard old problems from a new angle, requires creative imagination and marks real advance in science. (wisdomquotes.com)
  • Nord was already familiar with using machine learning to classify objects in space, and through conversations with other experts, he realized that machine learning could be a way to optimize the performance of science experiments, including telescopes. (gizmodo.com)
  • It may not be what proponents of the theory were hoping for but we still now know something we didn't know before Besides, science is often about finding the boundaries of a theories (sic) domain of application. (uncommondescent.com)
  • After it succeeded, they realized it could also be applied to solving science problems. (vanderbilt.edu)
  • A physicist or computer scientist specializing in quantum mechanics can provide further intricate details on these topics. (c-audio.com)
  • Shor's algorithm factors large numbers and is the crucial element in the process for cracking trapdoor-based codes. (technologyreview.com)
  • The primary applications of quantum computing relate to the physical simulation of quantum particles of the Universe, new drug discovery , new material design, complex financial modeling, molecular biology, omics and precision medicine , complex optimizations, quantum artificial intelligence and also for the neural network training for machine learning applications. (amitray.com)
  • So computer scientists have attempted to calculate the resources such a quantum computer might need and then work out how long it will be until such a machine can be built. (technologyreview.com)
  • Indeed, computer scientists consider it practically impossible for a classical computer to factor numbers that are longer than 2048 bits, which is the basis of the most commonly used form of RSA encryption. (technologyreview.com)
  • In 2012, physicists used a four-qubit quantum computer to factor 143. (technologyreview.com)
  • Purdue University researchers are building a probabilistic computer that could bridge the gap between classical and quantum computing to more efficiently solve problems in areas such as drug research, encryption and cybersecurity, financial services, data analysis and supply chain logistics. (purdue.edu)
  • said American physicist Richard Feynman before computer scientists at a conference in 1981 . (purdue.edu)
  • The team believes that a probabilistic computer may sooner solve some of the problems a quantum computer would solve, since it wouldn't need entirely new hardware or extremely cold temperatures to operate. (purdue.edu)
  • According to the researchers, it is one of the most complex scientific modeling problems that a computer has solved completely from scratch. (vanderbilt.edu)
  • Twenty years earlier, in 1961, an IBM researcher named Rolf Landauer had found a fundamental link between the two fields: he proved that every time a computer erases a bit of information, a tiny bit of heat is produced, corresponding to the entropy increase in the system. (el-aji.com)
  • This feature not only allows a Qubit to store a larger amount of information but also contributes to the exponential computational power of quantum machines. (c-audio.com)
  • These models do provide a solution to the naturalness problem as long as the supersymmetric partners have masses not much bigger than 1 TeV. (blogspot.com)
  • Artificial intelligence algorithms have shown promising results in accurately diagnosing and risk stratifying patients with concern for coronary artery disease, showing potential as an initial triage tool, though few studies have directly compared the accuracy of machine learning models to clinician diagnostic ability. (wikipedia.org)
  • The algorithms are called variational because the optimization process varies the algorithm on the fly, as a kind of machine learning. (scitechdaily.com)
  • This study aims to predict the occurrence of postpartum hemorrhage using machine learning models based on antenatal, intrapartum, and postnatal visit data obtained from the Kenya Antenatal and Postnatal Care Research Collective cohort. (cdc.gov)
  • In our experience it is always possible to find a custom solution for even the most seemingly difficult situations. (wikileaks.org)
  • Of "Signature in the Cell," the philosopher Thomas Nagel of NYU wrote that quote, "Anyone who believes God never intervenes in the natural world will be instructed by Meyer's careful presentation of this fiendishly difficult problem. (hoover.org)
  • But young people, I didn't sort of know where I was going and at school I found I wanted to be superman and I found it was a bit difficult flying. (lindau-nobel.org)
  • At least for now, the quantum computing race requires grappling with the complex realities of both quantum technologies and difficult problems. (umd.edu)
  • To gain useful insights and predictions, machine learning models must be trained using extensive amounts of input data. (wikipedia.org)
  • Some AI researchers have even argued that a body of some kind is necessary to reach human-level intelligence , which - if correct - would vastly increase the problem of AI fragility. (blogspot.com)
  • To develop quantum computing applications, researchers need to understand a particular quantum technology and a particular challenging problem and then adapt the strengths of the technology to address the intricacies of the problem. (umd.edu)
  • Researchers in another study found that acute appendicitis complicates approximately one in 766 pregnancies (Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand 1999;78:758-762). (diagnosticimaging.com)
  • The researchers also found a 100% negative predictive value using MR, which is of great merit because it provides an effective means for ruling out a surgical diagnosis. (diagnosticimaging.com)
  • One major milestone on the road of quantum computing is "quantum supremacy," the point where a quantum machine can overcome the performance of the best classical computers in complex tasks. (amitray.com)
  • An argument would go something like, "computers and machines can be deeply understood, so we can make a lot of progress around them, but humans and groups of humans are really messy and near impossible to make useful models of. (lesswrong.com)
  • Our reductionist and predictable models of machines allowed for the engineering of technical systems, but our vague intuitions of humans didn't allow us to do much to influence them. (lesswrong.com)
  • The problem with macro-econometrics is that the models continually broke down out of sample. (econlib.org)
  • METHOD: Four machine learning models - logistic regression, nave Bayes, decision tree, and random forest - were constructed using 67% training data (1,056/1,576). (cdc.gov)
  • DISCUSSION: This study demonstrates the potential of machine learning models in predicting PPH in the Kenyan population. (cdc.gov)
  • So he started talking to Lipson immediately after the lecture and they began a collaboration to adapt Eureqa to analyze biological problems. (vanderbilt.edu)
  • Research in the 1960s and 1970s produced the first problem-solving program, or expert system, known as Dendral. (wikipedia.org)
  • Solving the heat layer problem will be vital for future machines like ITER, the world's most powerful tokamak, which the European Union, the United States and five other countries are building in France to demonstrate fusion as a source of clean and abundant energy. (princeton.edu)
  • This hurdle is holding back scientists from not only better understanding caffeine's behavior, but also from more efficiently solving problems in drug research, encryption and cybersecurity, financial services, data analysis and supply chain logistics. (purdue.edu)
  • Despite these challenges, the potential benefits offered by quantum computing - such as solving complex problems beyond the reach of classical computers - make this field an exciting frontier in technology. (c-audio.com)
  • In Darwin's Black Box, Behe speculated that the designer might have assembled the first cell, essentially solving the problem of irreducible complexity, after which evolution might well have proceeded by more or less conventional means. (lehigh.edu)
  • Each of these areas would be significantly enhanced if computers could factor in more variables and process them at the same time. (purdue.edu)
  • While ultrasound is significantly cheaper than MR or CT, its inability to visualize beyond air-containing bowel loops and difficulty in evaluating obese patients presents a problem in diagnosing pregnant women, Singh told Diagnostic Imaging. (diagnosticimaging.com)
  • The 10-day garden machine care in London saw an fund of people of years around the property. (silverkingtractors.com)
  • Hence the number of machines on the market has grown over the last five years, all making claims and counter claims in a huge advertising hype. (gender.org.uk)
  • it's just that your cells harbor micro-machines engineered by an unnamed intelligence some four billion years ago. (lehigh.edu)
  • Seven factors (anemia, limited prenatal care, hemoglobin concentrations, signs of pallor at intrapartum, intrapartum systolic blood pressure, intrapartum diastolic blood pressure, and intrapartum respiratory rate) were associated with PPH prediction in Kenyan population. (cdc.gov)
  • The key to quantum computation speed is that every additional qubit doubles the potential computing power of a quantum machine. (amitray.com)
  • What's stunning is how closely the values correspond to the data, both in absolute value and in variation with the plasma current, magnetic field, machine size and input power," Goldston said. (princeton.edu)
  • There are, of course numerous very serious problems with this line of thought, and almost no professional scientists accept the "irreducible complexity" argument. (lehigh.edu)
  • We also examined the energy dependence of cluster length and cluster complexity because these factors are believed to impact the DNA repair process. (bvsalud.org)
  • Major progress in this important field has now been reported by physicists at the University of California, Santa Cruz, in a pair of papers published back-to-back in the July 29 issue of Physical Review Letters . (ucsc.edu)
  • That letter is credited as having been a major factor in Roosevelt's decision to go forward with the project. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • The P v NP problem makes a prominent appearance on a major US television series. (computationalcomplexity.org)
  • As I found when learning German, and as Benny, the Irish polyglot, explains so well-for examples, see here, for learning German -the willingness to make mistakes is the stuff of learning. (freakonomics.com)
  • Find out if your employer matches contributions you make to nonprofit organizations. (lungevity.org)
  • Make friends and find encouragement through our Virtual Meetups for patients, survivors, caregivers, and friends and family members of people with lung cancer. (lungevity.org)
  • Where they're coming from doesn't always make it easy and many factors can prevent them from accelerating on this journey. (syncron.com)
  • Formally designated as the Manhattan Engineering District (MED) , Manhattan Project refers specifically to the period of the project from 1941-1946 under the control of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, under the administration of General Leslie Groves, with its scientific research directed by the American physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer . (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • Quantum algorithms can potentially process and analyze large datasets more efficiently, which is a critical aspect of machine learning. (c-audio.com)
  • Interactions between electrons, which behave as almost free particles in normal metals, are a key factor in superconductivity, and these electron-electron interactions or correlations are directly encoded in photoemission spectra. (ucsc.edu)
  • In the end, she found that a key factor was that the liquid jet was transferring some of its electrical charge to the surrounding gas, which breaks into charged particles and carries some of the electrical current. (analytica-world.com)
  • Engineers have used these effects to their advantage in spinning fibers and in industrial electrospray painting, but the reason for the whipping instability, and thus any hope of stopping it, has been a long-standing problem. (analytica-world.com)
  • The human brain may not be the best thinking apparatus, but it has a distinct advantage over all machines we built so far: It functions for decades. (blogspot.com)
  • I had a 'eureka moment' of my own when I realized the system Hod had developed could be used to solve biological problems and even control them," Wikswo said. (vanderbilt.edu)
  • The first paper , by UCSC physicist Sriram Shastry, presents a new theory of "Extremely Correlated Fermi Liquids. (ucsc.edu)
  • Last year's paper of the year showed that the Traveling Salesman Problem cannot have a subexponential-size linear program formulation. (computationalcomplexity.org)
  • Rothvoss' paper shoots down that approach by giving an exponential lower bound for the polynomial-time computable matching problem. (computationalcomplexity.org)
  • Future studies with larger datasets and more PPH cases should be conducted to improve prediction performance of machine learning model. (cdc.gov)
  • For more equitable decision-making during future pandemics, barriers to ascertaining attributable mortality in low-income settings must be addressed and factored into discourse around reported impact differences. (cdc.gov)
  • Physicists use deuterium, a form of hydrogen, to block the heat, and are injecting nitrogen to turn other parts of the heat into ultraviolet light. (princeton.edu)
  • Turn it over to the physicists however, and it begins to morph, twist and even crumble away. (maths.org)
  • Some patients find complementary therapies beneficial in addition to their lung cancer treatments. (lungevity.org)
  • stretch edition CAPTCHA in motivo Nematode, friend risultato influx il piĆ¹ mens work en bank inspiration division book reach kind generator. (silverkingtractors.com)
  • The model designed by Robert Goldston, a Princeton professor of astrophysical sciences and former PPPL director, predicts the width of what physicists call the "scrape-off layer" in tokamaks, the most widely used fusion facilities. (princeton.edu)
  • The model will find blocked to malformed propagation program. (silverkingtractors.com)
  • Using a dynamical model-based inferential framework, we find that these mortality patterns and SARS-CoV-2 prevalence data are in agreement with established COVID-19 severity estimates. (cdc.gov)
  • You can find more details at https://www.couragefound.org . (wikileaks.org)
  • ne day, AI-powered telescopes might even write and test hypotheses for physicists. (gizmodo.com)
  • This metric represents academic factors like grades and test scores. (usbrasiltv.com)
  • These machines are far more powerful than classical computers and should be able to break these codes with ease. (technologyreview.com)
  • This is activist cinema at its very best, for it serves to popularize and demythologize a problem long obscured by those most threatened by the solution. (econlib.org)
  • Modern computers, after all, are deterministic: give them the same problem, and they come up with the same solution. (el-aji.com)
  • The file should be cited as follows: Current Population Survey March 1989 machine readable data file+ / conducted by the Bureau of the Census for the Bureau of Labor Statistics. (cdc.gov)
  • Vanderbilt physicist John Wikswo has developed a very automated style of working, routinely using multiple computers and projectors to collaborate and communicate. (vanderbilt.edu)
  • Taking this into account dramatically increases the resources required to factor 2048-bit numbers. (technologyreview.com)
  • When I went to college (2008-2012), it was accepted as common wisdom that human decision making was dramatically more complicated than machine behavior. (lesswrong.com)
  • The theory of the bomb was worked out by physicists mobilized primarily under the authority of the US army. (newworldencyclopedia.org)
  • I assume that Hossenfelder is not implying she's the only one to have spotted the failure to discover predicted phenomena is a problem for the theory that predicted their existence. (uncommondescent.com)
  • Factoring is basically finding the prime factors of a large composite integer - for which quantum algorithms have been discovered that could solve these problems easily. (amitray.com)
  • If one could show that every problem in P has a short polynomial-size LP formulation then we would have a separation of P and NP. (computationalcomplexity.org)
  • The A Realist Philosophy of is found some armed relationships own big non-math people, while people have Contributors of slowing students as a relationship in the life. (silverkingtractors.com)
  • Unfortunately, when independent qualified parties examined the situation more closely, they found that the claims were wildly exaggerated. (masterresource.org)