2.Nonsensical speech due to insult or trauma to the brain. [Fr. gibberish] Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012 jargon 1.Technical or specialized language used in an inappropriate context to display status or exclusiveness. ...
Unlike expressive dysphasia, the patient can speak fluently and articulately, but will utilize meaningless words, nonsensical grammar, and unnecessary phrases to the point of becoming incomprehensible. However, they will be completely unaware of their mistakes. Additionally, the patient will find it ...
At the same time, the attention mechanism and CNN model are inserted, and the dropout layer [29] is added to the structure of BiGRU, which is mainly to prevent the disappearance of the long-term memory built in the GRU’s unit and to avoid overfitting of the model. It can perform ...
— It has a nonsensical title: “Fact Check: The British Medical Journal Did NOT Reveal Disqualifying And Ignored Reports Of Flaws In Pfizer COVID-19 Vaccine Trials” — The first paragraph inaccurately labels The BMJ a “news blog” — It contains a screenshot of our article wi...
In step204, the received data is analyzed to generate information about the manufacturing process. In some embodiments, the data may be populated into a database (e.g., database126in FIG. 1) and may be checked for nonsensical characters, as well as valid specifications (i.e., uncorrupted...
There are also occasional, mostly nonsensical, references to neurotransmitters such as dopamine and norepinephrine. The neuroscience content seems to be there purely to put a new, modern gloss on some very old ideas from 1970s psychology. This is not to say that it is necessarily bad advice....