Sigmoidal in a sentence as an adjective

If/when that is the case, each new region will start its own sigmoidal worth.

Or use splines or sigmoidal functions, which saturate to a flat line or linear trend.

The fires will follow a sigmoidal curve just like epidemics.

It is usually, exponential, when it's not sigmoidal.

"All this means that on the scale of hundreds of years our population growth may actually look like a very steep sigmoidal curve.

"And as Saul noted a few moments later, most of these curves aren't even sigmoidal, they are sinusoidal.

Damn near everything in the biological world winds up looking sigmoidal.

As long as your sigmoidal transfer functions are biased such that they have no multiplying effect your output would be an addition of the inputs.

One very important thing to note is that the Oxygen - Hemoglobin dissociation curve has a sigmoidal shape.

Empirically, they tend to display linear or sigmoidal improvement.”Moore's Law. Use computers to make better computers.

The compromise neurons make is a "smoothed threshold" or sigmoidal curve which is differentiable but still very nonlinear.

Empirically, they tend to display linear or sigmoidal improvement.> Falsified by a graph of world GDP on almost any timescale.

Artificial neural nets usually use local or sigmoidal basis functions, potentially in a more complicated way.

There’s a roughly sigmoidal relationship between vote share and win probability, with win probability increasing rapidly in the region around 50% vote share.

Empirically, they tend to display linear or sigmoidal improvement.”But evolution and societies doesn't work in a "recursively self-improving" manner.

I wouldn't call smoothstep an approximation to a sinusoid - both are sigmoidal, but that's about it. This smoothstep in particular is just a natural cubic spline interpolator, arguably the simplest sigmoidal interpolating function.

Empirically, they tend to display linear or sigmoidal improvement.”“Recursive intelligence expansion is already happening — at the level of our civilization.

Sigmoidal definitions

adjective

of or relating to the sigmoid flexure in the large intestine

See also: sigmoid