Example sentences of "lead to [art] development " in BNC.

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1 These changes in the international competitiveness of UK exports and imports are likely to lead to the development of a UK balance of payments deficit .
2 Proposals likely to lead to the development of ideas or resources of use to others will be given priority .
3 This system is extremely basic but the results are convincing enough to lead to the development of a large scale recogniser .
4 It was Virchow in the middle of the nineteenth century who first put forward the concept of arterial wall injury leading to the development of the atheromatous plaque .
5 Media Training leading to the development of media talent in the advertising industry remains a high priority for Express in 1992 .
6 Serge Mallet ( 1969 ) , writing in the context of developments in political theory in France , and hence particularly concerned with issues of class consciousness and conflict , took a view directly contrary to Woodward , arguing that new technology was leading to the development of new forms of class conflict that would threaten fundamentally the stability of the existing structure of the capitalist enterprise .
7 Investment grants up to £15,000 are payable after the purchase of plant machinery and buildings for companies with fewer than 25 employees , while innovation grants pay up to half eligible costs , to a maximum of £25,000 , for projects leading to the development and introduction of products and processes for companies with fewer than 50 employees .
8 The exhibition examines the close political links between the art of nineteenth-century Italy and the changing political situation throughout that period , with particular reference to four periods : 1797 to 1814 , the years of Napoleon ; the restoration of the monarchy until mid-century ; the triumph of Realism in tandem with the move towards Unification , 1849 to 1870 ; and the period from 1870 to the end of century when Realism was influenced by European art , leading to the development of Italian Symbolism and Divisionism .
9 More explicitly he sees psychodynamic theories as the orthodoxy against which others have railed , either from a positivist and empirical critique ( leading to the development of behavioural social work ) ; or a radical analysis ( based upon a rejection of the individualization of problems and the location of disadvantage at the societal level and the consequent development of radical social work ) .
10 And , thirdly , he presented the notion that this increasing state intervention and action at the local urban level inevitably ‘ politicizes ’ the provision of collective consumption and leads to the development of political activity expressed as ‘ urban social movements ’ .
11 More and more we are beginning to suspect that a similar situation may also occur with other conditions and that the suppression of symptoms with palliative therapy leads to the development , perhaps even years later , of more serious complaints .
12 the fraction of those planets where life leads to the development of intelligence
13 It is the combination of different characteristics , strengths and weaknesses that leads to the development of the pupil 's unique personality , and in common with other children , those with visual handicaps will show a range of character , ability and adjustment .
14 By preventing segregation of chromosomes in the first mitotic division , diploidy is restored , which leads to the development of a parthenogenetic female .
15 Loss of one sense leads to the development of others .
16 In rats , longterm PBD leads to the development of hyperplastic acinar cell nodules and adenoma in the pancreas .
17 Both factors may be part of a complex cascade of events that ultimately leads to the development of duodenal ulceration .
18 A single dose of 18 Gy of 250 kV x rays induces an ulcer tendency that leads to the development of ulcers in the proximal duodenum in around 45% of animals by day 9 .
19 In this case flexing of the lithosphere leads to the development of a forebulge at some distance from the ice margin which experiences an increase in surface elevation .
20 The report rejects , however , the contention that economic growth in itself is unsustainable , insisting that it leads to the development of cleaner , more efficient technologies which cut pollution .
21 David Edward Hughes , whose experiments with the ‘ printing telegraph ’ led to the development of an efficient microphone during the 1870's , has been honoured with a plaque at his former lodgings .
22 Exactly how long Hughes lived at 94 Portland Street , London , is uncertain but the first experiments which led to the development of the microphone were conducted here during 1878–80 .
23 here , the pressure of population growth within the confines of a small island of only 29 square miles led to the development of an innovatory , intensive system based on very effective soil conservation techniques — including the integration of fodder and arable crops and livestock .
24 Improved knowledge of the basic mechanisms of gastric secretion led to the development of synthetic drugs such as cimetidine and ranitidine which block the action of histamine , by occupying the histamine receptors in the parietal cell ( H2receptors ) .
25 This led to the development officer having to assume such a role herself , and occasionally this involved her in more work than she felt she could easily provide .
26 In social research , perhaps the most famous example is that of Elton Mayo 's study of American girls in a factory , where his observations of the importance of the creation of social groups led to the development of a whole school of thought in social psychology .
27 A hunt for energy-efficient lighting , for unglamourous places such as offices and waiting rooms , led to the development in the late 1970s of stable fluorescent powders highly resistant to strong ultraviolet light .
28 These are the words of Hans Bethe , leader of the Theoretical Division at Los Alamos in 1943–45 ( the period that led to the development of the first atomic bombs ) in an article written in 1954 but published in 1982 ( ’ Comments on the history of the H-bomb ’ , Los Alamos Science , fall edition 1982 ) .
29 It was this criticism of the adaptive expectations hypothesis that led to the development of the rational expectations hypothesis .
30 It is argued that specific policies implemented at the outset of British rule led to the development of a judicial system which did not coincide with either British or indigenous notions of justice but which was none the less compatible with local culture .
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