Results 301 to 310 of about 1,880,046 (331)
Decoding covert visual attention of electroencephalography signals using continuous wavelet transform and deep learning approach. [PDF]
Hazrati H, Daliri MR.
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The modularity of high-level colour processing : evidence from brain damage
Katarzyna Siuda-Krzywicka
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Bridging the Gap: A Pre- and Post-evaluation of an Online Skin of Colour Dermatology Lecture Series for Medical Students. [PDF]
Suntharan V +5 more
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Covert colour processing in colour agnosia
Neuropsychologia, 2006Patients with colour agnosia can perceive colours and are able to match coloured patches on hue, but are unable to identify or categorise colours. It is a rare condition and there is as yet no agreement on the clinical definition or a generally accepted explanation.
Nijboer, T.C.W. +2 more
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Annals of Anatomy - Anatomischer Anzeiger, 2006
To obtain coloured plastinates by colouring anatomical structures in e.g. red, blue and yellow we used different types of chemical reagents. The colours remained stable during dehydration, degreasing and impregnation of specimen with silicone resin. The colours, which penetrated into the specimen, appeared to be included in the plastination process. To
Hanno, Steinke +1 more
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To obtain coloured plastinates by colouring anatomical structures in e.g. red, blue and yellow we used different types of chemical reagents. The colours remained stable during dehydration, degreasing and impregnation of specimen with silicone resin. The colours, which penetrated into the specimen, appeared to be included in the plastination process. To
Hanno, Steinke +1 more
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The Mathematical Gazette, 1948
I wonder why problems about map-colourings are so fascinating? I know several people who have made more or less serious attempts to prove the Four-Colour Theorem, and I suppose many more have made collections of maps in the hope of hitting upon a counter-example. I like P. G.
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I wonder why problems about map-colourings are so fascinating? I know several people who have made more or less serious attempts to prove the Four-Colour Theorem, and I suppose many more have made collections of maps in the hope of hitting upon a counter-example. I like P. G.
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1971
In Chapter 4 we saw that fluorescent materials as employed in fluorescent lamps are capable of emitting light of widely divergent colours. Calcium silicate, for instance, when activated with lead and manganese, gives an orange; zinc silicate, activated with manganese (willemite) a green, and calcium tungstate a blue-violet emission. Some of the colours
A. A. Kruithof, J. L. Ouweltjes
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In Chapter 4 we saw that fluorescent materials as employed in fluorescent lamps are capable of emitting light of widely divergent colours. Calcium silicate, for instance, when activated with lead and manganese, gives an orange; zinc silicate, activated with manganese (willemite) a green, and calcium tungstate a blue-violet emission. Some of the colours
A. A. Kruithof, J. L. Ouweltjes
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Public Health, 1998
The physiology of colour vision is discussed; as is the way in which the human eye can detect various combinations of red, green and blue. Red-green colour blindness, with X-linked inheritance, is the most common, but other types are also considered. Methods of testing relating to the age of the child are reviewed.
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The physiology of colour vision is discussed; as is the way in which the human eye can detect various combinations of red, green and blue. Red-green colour blindness, with X-linked inheritance, is the most common, but other types are also considered. Methods of testing relating to the age of the child are reviewed.
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Journal of Linguistics, 1972
The continuous gradation of colour which exists in nature is represented in language by a series of discrete categories. Athough there is no such thing as a natural division of the spectrum, every language has colour words by which its speakers categorize and structure the colour continuum.
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The continuous gradation of colour which exists in nature is represented in language by a series of discrete categories. Athough there is no such thing as a natural division of the spectrum, every language has colour words by which its speakers categorize and structure the colour continuum.
openaire +1 more source

