How to Use discriminator in a Sentence

discriminator

noun
  • The other, called the discriminator, says yes or no after each guess.
    Bryn Nelson /, NBC News, 1 Mar. 2018
  • Once the discriminator tool could no longer distinguish if the portrait was man-made or not, the image was complete.
    Shirin Ghaffary, Recode, 25 Sep. 2018
  • Outside the law-school classroom, discriminators rarely wear their ugly hearts on their sleeves.
    Aziz Huq, Fortune, 5 June 2018
  • This turned out to be a very reliable discriminator for both authors’ styles.
    Theresa MacHemer, Smithsonian, 28 Nov. 2019
  • As a rule, people are terrible discriminators of what care is needed and what’s not.
    Aaron E. Carroll and Austin Frakt, New York Times, 12 July 2017
  • Countrywide was part of Bank of America and a known predatory lender and discriminator before Evans took the case.
    Jason Johnson, The Root, 9 May 2018
  • The discriminator network then reviews the first AI's levels.
    Laura Yan, Popular Mechanics, 13 May 2018
  • The discriminator's answers are used to train the generator.
    Timothy B. Lee, Ars Technica, 19 Nov. 2020
  • Ultimately, the discriminator was unable to distinguish a real face from a fake one.
    Emily Willingham, Scientific American, 14 Feb. 2022
  • One is a generator that concocts images, the other a discriminator that tries to spot any flaws that would give away the manipulation, forcing the generator to get better.
    Science News Staff, Science | AAAS, 5 July 2017
  • In some cases, the training algorithm provides the same input information to both the generator and the discriminator.
    Timothy B. Lee, Ars Technica, 19 Nov. 2020
  • Another system, the discriminator, determines if the data passes as real or fake.
    Elizabeth Gamillo, Smithsonian Magazine, 9 Mar. 2021
  • The generator learns the channel distribution jointly with a discriminator that teaches the generator to capture the most relevant wireless features in the model.
    Karl Freund, Forbes, 21 June 2022
  • Every time the discriminator wins the battle, the generator is forced to examine its own internal logic, creating and hopefully refining into a better system.
    David Grossman, Popular Mechanics, 17 June 2019
  • This could be a critical discriminator for the Army, because Oshkosh is so highly regarded for its technical and manufacturing capability.
    Loren Thompson, Forbes, 4 May 2021
  • Becker argued that discrimination against women or ethnic minorities costs the discriminator money; in fully competitive markets, it would be competed away.
    The Economist, 8 June 2019
  • Relevance to Lockheed military markets is the core discriminator in determining where bets are placed, but the innovations receiving venture capital typically involve dual-use technologies.
    Loren Thompson, Forbes, 10 Nov. 2022
  • Exploratory quantum resonance spectrometer as a discriminator for psychiatric affective disorders.
    Neuroskeptic, Discover Magazine, 20 Apr. 2014

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'discriminator.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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