artifacts

listen to the pronunciation of artifacts
التركية - التركية

تعريف artifacts في التركية التركية القاموس.

artifact
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الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Any object made, modified, or used by man
Institutional items, such as organizational charts, policies and procedures, reports, memos, agendas and mission statements that communicate culture, business practices and internal standards
(Artifacting), Misinterpreted or extraneous digital information resulting from the technical limitations of an imaging system Artifacts alter pixel values, and are the results of flare, motion, compression, dust, scratches, and so on Artifacts create color faults or line faults that visibly impact the image negatively
Visual digital effects introduced into an image by electrical noise during the capture process or over-compression that do not correspond to the original image being scanned Artifacts might include pixellation, dotted or straight lines, regularly repeated patterns, moiré, etc
Imperfections often seen in Jpeg and other lossy compression schemes
false features in the image produced by the imaging process
Templates, outlines, and samples that can be used to create and review the work products manipulated by the migration activities
plural of artifact
Visual effects (usually thought of as defects) introduced into a digital image in the course of scanning or compression that do not correspond to the image scanned
A visible indication (defect) in an image, caused by limitations in the reproduction process (hardware or software)
Products that illustrate what one has learned
Image imperfections caused by compression
The most powerful magical items They include weapons of massive power and suits of armor that can make the wearer withstand nearly any physical or magical attacks
Visual digital effects introduced into an image during scanning that do not correspond to the original image being scanned Artifacts might include pixellation, dotted or straight lines, regularly repeated patterns, moire, etc
Visual effects introduced into a digital image in the course of scanning or compression that do not correspond to the image scanned
an object produced or shaped by a human, especially a tool, a weapon, or an ornament of archaeological or historical interest
A distortion in a signal whether video or audio is known as an artifact
Artifacts are features in an image produced by the imaging technique or instrument rather than by the imaged object itself
Undesirable elements or defects in a video picture These may occur naturally in the video process and must be eliminated in order to achieve a high-quality picture Most common are cross color and cross luminanc tifacts can also occur when transfering film to digital data and back to film again
Products, articles and goods that humans create and used, often serving to help interpret their behaviors, values or beliefs
Undesirable elements or defects in a video picture Most common in digital are macroblocks, which resemble pixelation of the video image, and pops and clicks in audio
Term used to describe the individual works in a student portfolio
Objects that are generated by the learning/teaching process become useful indicators of what may or may not be going on in our classrooms The important thing here is that artifacts can serve as one form of evidence of the kind of teaching and learning that is going on--at the classroom and/or whole school level(s)
artifact
An object made or shaped by some agent or intelligence, not necessarily of direct human origin
artifact
Something viewed as a product of human conception or agency rather than an inherent element
artifact
An object made or shaped by human hand
artifact
An object, such as a tool, weapon or ornament, of archaeological or historical interest, especially such an object found at an archaeological excavation

The dig produced many Roman artifacts.

artifact
An unintended, unwanted visual aberration in a video image
artifact
Any object manufactured or modified by human beings
artifact
An abstract representation of some aspect of an existing or to-be-built system, component, or view Examples of individual artifacts are a graphical model, structured model, tabular data, and structured or unstructured narrative Individual artifacts may be aggregated [Treasury Enterprise Architecture Framework]
artifact
An old, authentic object used, crafted or manufactured by the application of human workmanship or activity, especially one of prehistoric origin that may have archaeological significance especially if found in an undisturbed context Common examples include projectile points, tools, utensils, art, food remains, and other products of human activity
artifact
any object manufactured or modified by humans (e g , pottery, bottle, clothing, mound, building)
artifact
any object made, modified, or used by people
artifact
A structure or finding in an experiment or investigation that is not a true feature of the object under observation, but is a result of external action, the test arrangement, or an experimental error
artifact
(1) a product developed by the teacher or another individual Examples include a sample lesson plan based on a designated chapter in a book, or a letter to parents from the teacher regarding a upcoming change in homework policy (2) an artificial statistical phenomenon or result (e g , test ceiling and floor, lack of reliability, limited sampling of teaching performance) (3) that which is artificial, contrived, or fictitious
artifact
A human-made object belonging to a past culture
artifact
human-made or modified objects, often applied to portable objects
artifact
Any object modified from its naturally occurring state by human action Common archaeological artifacts from the prehistoric period include flaked stone, pottery, fire-cracked rock, fractured animal bone, and burned seeds An artifact can also apply to unmodified objects that have been transported from their natural setting, such as a clamshell located in an upland archaeological site
artifact
A notation of the mind: one of the visual symbols or patterns, verbal constructions (words, phrases, sentences), quotations, facts or figures, rules or formulas, snippets of advice, musical phrases, colors or smells, that are the more or less formed and established items in our awareness
artifact
(1) A piece of information that (1) is produced, modified, or used by a process, (2) defines an area of responsibility, and (3) is subject to version control An artifact can be a model, a model element, or a document A document can enclose other documents
artifact
A structure or appearance in protoplasm due to death or the use of reagents and not present during life
artifact
Any manually portable product of human workmanship In its broadest sense includes tools, weapons, ceremonial items, art objects, all industrial waste, and all floral and faunal remains modified by human activity
artifact
Any object made or used by humans
artifact
to the simpler products of aboriginal art as distinguished from natural objects
artifact
a man-made object taken as a whole
artifact
{i} tool; object; man made object (often referring to primitive tools)
artifact
Any object manufactured, used or modified by humans Common examples include tools, utensils, art, food remains, and other products of human activity They can be classified into types These types reflect function or use, styles from a particular time period, or specific groups of people ASSEMBLAGE: A group of artifacts related to each other based upon some recovery from a common archaeological context Assemblage examples are artifacts from a site or feature
artifact
a peculiar test or experimental result which is due to some unusual detail in the procedure which invalidates the usual interpretation of the test or experiment Example: our blood sugar appears to be lethally low on the glucose oxidase blood sugar test and lethally high on the orthotoluidine blood sugar test Both of these results are artifacts because the high levels of antioxidants in our blood interfere with the chemical reactions in these test procedures (Our blood sugar levels are normal when measured by the hexokinase test, in which high antioxidant levels in the blood do not interfere )
artifact
(1) (n ) A visible error or oddity in a displayed image Aliasing, for instance, is an artifact resulting from producing images on a raster grid (2) (n ) An audible error or oddity in a reproduced sound resulting from the digital sampling or compression of the sound
artifact
An object, such as a tool, weapon or ornament, of archaeological or historical interest, esp. such an object found at an archaeological excavation
artifact
A feature which appears in an NMR spectrum of a molecule which should not be present based on the chemical structure and pulse sequence used [Chapter 7]
artifact
an object produced by human workmanship
artifact
see artefact. another spelling of artefact
artifact
An object made by human hand or shaped by it
artifact
is an object, made by humans for a practical purpose, remaining from a particular period
artifact
A visible defect in an image, usually caused by limitations in the input or output process (hardware or software)
artifact
Any physical object made or clearly used by humans, including tools, food remains, etc
artifact
A product of human workmanship; applied esp
artifact
A human-made object
artifact
An object that was made, used, and/or transported by humans that provides information about human behavior in the past Examples include things like pottery, stone tools, bones with cut marks, coins, etc
artifacts
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