0 to control a group of people, a country, or a situation: --
I've asked Gemma to lead the discussion.
I think we've chosen the right person to lead the expedition.
1 (especially in sports or other competitions) to be in front, to be first, or to be winning: --
The Lions are leading the Hawks 28–9.
After 30 minutes the challengers were leading by two goals.
2 to cause someone to do something, especially something bad: --
3 to show the way to a group of people, animals, vehicles, etc. by going in front of them: --
The company has been leading the way in network applications for several years.
You've been there before - why don't you lead the way?
She led them down the hall.
A large black hearse led the funeral procession.
4 (especially of roads, paths, doors, signs, information, etc.) to go in a particular direction or have a particular result, or to allow or cause this: --
5 to live a particular type of life: --
On the outskirts of the bazaar, livestock dealers lead their swarming herds along narrow village paths lined by millet-stalk fences.
In other words, backward-reconstruct paths of zeros that lead to the output of the computation.
Indeed, patients were often reluctant to be prescribed a detoxification drug which had not led to them successfully achieving abstinence in the past.
Facts that have such consequences are, so to speak, ' embedded ' in the world's past, as part of the causal processes leading up to the present.
All of these characteristics lead to constant renewal as forms are continually replaced with newly coined expressions that can effectively intensify existing expressions.
This would lead to the formation of rich representations including not only our body and the world, but the interaction between them.
Thus, changes in known lexical representations may lead to changes in homonym learning but not novel word learning.
The second part returns to the idea that an excess of privatisation has led to a 'tragedy of the anti-commons'.