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1 tion growth will undermine protection of the natural world.
2 rom fear conditioning studies operate in the natural world.
3 ge of intensities and contrasts found in the natural world.
4 y, as one of the most complex objects in the natural world.
5 extensively on colour vision to adapt to the natural world.
6  secondary structure that is not seen in the natural world.
7 ons stimulate ecological interactions in the natural world.
8 tionary principle to decisions affecting the natural world.
9 us fibre composites that have evolved in the natural world.
10 by taking into account the statistics of the natural world.
11 w to tackle a range of challenges facing the natural world.
12 ers as we seek a better understanding of the natural world.
13 l activity can be related to behavior in the natural world.
14 ate change is having profound impacts on the natural world.
15 derivatives occur in a physical model of the natural world.
16 ellectual gifts and aesthetic marvels of the natural world.
17  animal ecology is to observe species in the natural world.
18 elf-assembly processes are ubiquitous in the natural world.
19 nique among the communication systems of the natural world.
20 tch the highly informative components of the natural world.
21 rating that aptamers also are present in the natural world.
22 amental renewal of humans' connection to the natural world.
23 mplexity and connectedness of species in the natural world?
24                                       In the natural world, a 30 millisecond delay could have real co
25 information about the basic structure of the natural world and continue to assimilate information abo
26 ther, is a fundamental building block of the natural world and human society.
27 ery of protective mechanisms relevant in the natural world and improve the modeling of complex diseas
28 of the red, orange, and yellow colors in the natural world and, at least for most animals, these mole
29 y temporal characteristics of stimuli in the natural world, and this temporal capacity is a character
30 s quantitative approach to understanding the natural world arguably marks the beginning of modern sci
31 iration is increasingly being taken from the natural world because the biological mineralization of s
32 that observers handle the uncertainty of the natural world by proactively allocating gaze on the basi
33                                          The natural world constantly inundates our senses with an ab
34                                          The natural world contains a rich and ever-changing landscap
35 riety of timescales underlying events in the natural world, determining the temporal characteristics
36                        Observations from the natural world, from patterns of disease in human populat
37 f exploiting the statistical patterns in the natural world, infants would face an insurmountable comp
38 rates, strengthening the hypothesis that the natural world is experiencing the sixth major extinction
39                       My curiosity about the natural world is innate, but fate has variously gifted m
40                                       In the natural world, monkeys and humans judge the economic val
41                                       In the natural world, objects are simultaneously characterized
42 d information to facilitate the study of the natural world on a global scale.
43 rocessing corresponds to an asymmetry in the natural world, one produced by the Poisson nature of pho
44 late physiological phenomena relevant in the natural world outside the laboratory.
45                               Objects in the natural world possess different visual attributes, inclu
46 s, an exhilarating reminder that much of the natural world remains to be explored at the molecular le
47 lish the value that society derives from the natural world such that the true cost of proposed develo
48                                       In the natural world, the statistics of sensory stimuli fluctua
49         Understanding of the capacity of the natural world to produce secondary metabolites is import
50 at the heart of the plankton paradox: in the natural world we observe many species sharing few resour
51  would not expect to find populations in the natural world where both stressed and unstressed individ
52  is frequently seen as the antithesis of the natural world, where the problem is framed as one of min
53  environmental change has effects across the natural world, with consequences for organismal physiolo

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