(a.) Of the nature of a holograph; pertaining to holographs.
Example Sentences:
(1) Displacement of the surface of the cornea of bovine eyes after disruption of intact structures was investigated by means of holographic interferometry.
(2) The use of a new ultraviolet laser combined with a holographic grating spectrograph promises to increase the number of fluorescing species that can be detected simultaneously.
(3) The acoustic impedances of various kinds of urinary stones were measured by the original graphical method using holographic interferrometry.
(4) Although data interpretation is complex and holographic production is costly and time-consuming, the technique holds promise for biomechanical applications as well as other biomedical disciplines.
(5) From then on, different features were added over the years, including more use of colour, watermark portraits of the queen, highly detailed machine engravings, reflective foil patches and holographic strips.
(6) Sclerosis of auditory ossicle was experimentally induced by fixation of the stapes, and its effect on the tympanic membrane vibration was examined using fresh 10 canine temporal bones by means of holographic interferometry.
(7) The density range and number of gray-tone levels is found to be limited by random scattering in the holographic medium.
(8) The comparative analysis of different methods enabled the authors to recommened for practical use the method of obtaining holograms in three-dimensional media for documentation of anatomical investigation and storage of information, holographic method of obtaining contour maps of the surface for quantitative characteristics of individual properties of the object and the method of double exposure for studying static and dynamic deformities.
(9) The holographic wall will alternate between showing graphics including "Flo", the three-way swingometer, a 3D House of Commons, a battleground of key seats, and a special "hung parliament" graphic.
(10) Originally announced in May, but attracting surprisingly little attention at the time, one aspect of the bid has returned to prominence as the selection process reaches its climax – the proposal to film all the games in 3D and then beam them holographically on to 400 pitches around the world in real time.
(11) Holographic interferometry was used to study strained deformed status of bridge dentures.
(12) Optical reconstruction of the holographic image provided tomographic gamma images of the heart.
(13) This allows for a very general algorithm of parallel information processing (holographic thesis), perhaps constructing the properties we are used to.
(14) ITV is upping the technology ante in its general election night coverage on 6 May with an "interactive holographic wall" featuring a three-way swingometer.
(15) The computer-aided holographic interferometer was tested using disk-shaped acrylic resin materials.
(16) A description of our interferometrical and holographical experiments on the phase shift at steps on (111)Au and (111)Pt single crystal surfaces is given and a straight forward interpretation of the results in terms of refraction will be discussed.
(17) The holographic paradigm is a recently constructed model of consciousness derived from neuropsychology and quantum physics.
(18) He added: "If you are familiar with a holographic sight, it's built up in such a way that you could have given it to your grandmother and she would have been a super marksman.
(19) We also find that focus control of the scanning spot should be achievable using a technique involving a holographic grating.
(20) A dynamical parallel is drawn between Anderson localization induced by an isotopic disorder and holographic mental processing interpretable as self-focusing of mental patterns and spontaneous creativity.
Homographic
Definition:
(a.) Employing a single and separate character to represent each sound; -- said of certain methods of spelling words.
(a.) Possessing the property of homography.
Example Sentences:
(1) These results are discussed within both an attentional and a connectionist account of homograph disambiguation.
(2) This patient was treated with an induction chemotherapy protocol of vinblastine sulfate, bleomycin, and cisplatin and has remained free of disease through June 1985, without loss of his renal homograph.
(3) When the primes were homophonic homographs, semantic relationship facilitated lexical decision of targets at all SOAs regardless of the dominance of the meaning to which the targets were related.
(4) In experiment 2, the disambiguating words had a significant effect on meaning interpretation of the homographs that was independent of visual field of presentation.
(5) These data can be accounted for by assuming multiple lexical entries for heterophonic homographs, single lexical entries for homophonic homographs, and phonological mediation of accessing meanings.
(6) Experiment 3 converged on context-sensitive activation following a 50-ms exposure of the sentence-final homograph.
(7) Homographs and ambiguous words were biased according to the prime toward their low or high imageable meanings and unilaterally presented in the visual field.
(8) An experiment using homographs verified the general conclusion from previous studies.
(9) Studies in which homographs were used to produce a change in meaning were reviewed with the conclusion that when appropriate controls are used the effects are too small to support meaning as a major factor underlying recognition.
(10) Disambiguation of heterophonic and homophonic homographs was investigated in Hebrew using semantic priming.
(11) Experiment 2 demonstrated that only the more able retarded subjects, but not the less able ones, used sentence context in a normal way in order to pronounce homographs.
(12) Lexical decision for targets related to the dominant phonological alternatives of heterophonic homographs were facilitated at all SOAs.
(13) Experiment 2 examined the effects of unrecognized, disambiguating flank words on verbal responses to a centrally presented homograph.
(14) Conclusions are (a) initial meaning activation can be sensitive to context, (b) when a homograph is instantiated, it is congruent with a broad scope of targets, and (c) less-salient targets receive less activation over the time course.
(15) Less-salient targets, although initially activated, were no longer activated 300 ms following the homograph.
(16) Since June 1979, the authors have had the opportunity to treat a renal homograph recipient who developed primary embryonal cell testicular carcinoma with retroperitoneal and pulmonary metastases.