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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
visual
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
the visual appearance
▪ Intensive farming changed the visual appearance of the countryside.
visual acuity
▪ A motorist needs good visual acuity.
visual aid
visual arts
visual display unit
visual imagery
▪ Their dreams commonly involved complex stories with visual imagery.
visual memory (=your ability to remember things you have seen)
▪ Poor spellers often have a weak visual memory.
visual/audio/audio-visual aids (=recorded sounds, pictures, film etc, used to help describe or explain something)
▪ No scientific lecture is ever given without slides or other visual aids.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
acuity
▪ Contact lenses sometimes give better visual acuity in these cases and the field of vision is nearly always improved.
▪ The simplified scale in Figure 1 gives an indication of the range of vision as described in terminology based on visual acuity.
▪ The amount of pigmentation tends to increase slightly with age up to adolescence and brings with it a gradual improvement in visual acuity.
▪ Such vision would be recorded as 6/60 and would indicate severely reduced visual acuity.
▪ In measuring visual acuity in this way, a figure which looks like a fraction is recorded.
▪ Here, visual acuity is not so sharp, nor is our ability to judge distances so good.
aid
▪ Full use should be made of visual aids and internal specialist advice should be taken.
▪ No scientific lecture is ever given without slides or other visual aids, especially if chemical structures are to be shown.
▪ Time-charts and time-lines should become important visual aids.
▪ Without benefit of notes, visual aids, gestures or humor she spoke for ninety oddly mesmerizing minutes.
▪ Any visual aid should be carefully selected and planned to add clarity to the presentation. 2.
▪ As a visual aid to anatomical familiarity, a reference book such as this has undoubted value.
▪ In general, all visual aids were used for a purpose.
▪ By making the most of new visual aid technology.
aids
▪ Full use should be made of visual aids and internal specialist advice should be taken.
▪ No scientific lecture is ever given without slides or other visual aids, especially if chemical structures are to be shown.
▪ Time-charts and time-lines should become important visual aids.
▪ Without benefit of notes, visual aids, gestures or humor she spoke for ninety oddly mesmerizing minutes.
▪ You have to force yourself not to talk to the visual aids and to synchronize your gestures with your main messages.
▪ In general, all visual aids were used for a purpose.
▪ In 1971, the General Nursing Council convened a committee to look into the the use of visual aids in training schools.
▪ Is there a selection of visual aids and recruitment material available for use by staff?
appeal
▪ Most diamonds are brown or yellow with little visual appeal and are fit only for industrial use.
▪ What counts is the emotive visual appeal to feelings or fears and not the logical appeal to abstract rigorous thought.
art
▪ He also argues that, in its turn, the Scientific Revolution had some effect on the visual arts.
▪ For five years he had been a professor of visual arts at the University of California at San Diego.
▪ In these senses this show contributes to contemporary radical perspectives within the visual arts, especially as contextualised within the gallery.
▪ Last year was the first real attempt to recognise the new energy around in the visual arts.
▪ Around 5,000 art historians, museum curators, critics and other visual arts professionals are expected to attend.
▪ It was a wonderful meeting of the performing and visual arts in stunning surroundings.
▪ Perhaps the most surprising absentee from most general discussions of colour is its use in the visual arts.
artist
▪ Roma Ryan tells me she was a visual artist - she specialised in batik before she met Nicholas and produced a family.
▪ Kirstein was an artistic matchmaker in the manner of Diaghilev, bringing together choreographers, composers and visual artists.
▪ Sometimes the frontier is crossed by musicians and writers, sometimes by visual artists.
contact
▪ Therefore, with a half to 1 minute still to run we should be able to establish visual contact.
▪ The flight proceeded uneventfully, in visual contact with the ground, until the aircraft approached Keswick.
▪ In fact you will not descend below your decision height until visual contact is established.
▪ The missed approach is commenced immediately on reaching decision height, if visual contact has not been made at this point.
▪ On making visual contact with the field. 3.
cortex
▪ When applied to the newly discovered cytochrome oxidase blobs in the visual cortex of primates the correlational approach is quite revealing.
▪ In the case of the visual cortex, no one knows yet.
▪ You find that cells in adjacent parts of the visual cortex are activated by stimulation in adjacent parts of the visual field.
▪ But for the visual cortex, light flashes work pretty well.
▪ It can also influence learned and voluntary reactions to visual stimuli when the visual cortex is absent.
▪ Yet back in the primary visual cortex, the fourth layer is the most impressive of all.
▪ Indeed, it is extremely difficult to distinguish between the primary visual cortex and surrounding areas in this species.
▪ What is their relationship to the visual cortex?
cue
▪ Body language is probably the most important visual cue.
▪ We are responding to the visual cues.
▪ Nor are women so fixated by visual cues, so obsessed with physical rivalry.
▪ It is communicated both by auditory and visual cues.
▪ Nevertheless, rats can be trained to carry out visual discrimination tasks and will use visual cues to guide their natural behaviour.
display
▪ There are many illustrations throughout which offer a visual display of the technique or design which the text is referring to.
▪ Is the visual display area adequate? 6.
▪ Rostov checked the visual display again.
▪ Once there it may appear on editor's data bank visual display unit as a single-line headline.
▪ There are integrated visual display units attached. 3.
▪ The same response was then produced withholding the visual display.
▪ The contents of any message stored in the teleprinter's memory can be viewed on the visual display unit. 8.
▪ The pod began to shudder and Rostov quickly checked the visual display.
effect
▪ Philips's interest is in the stunning visual effect.
▪ This plant grows abundantly over the whole aquarium and produces fine visual effects with an underwater light source.
▪ Geometric perspective Perspective, the visual effect of distance, was first expressed in cave drawings.
▪ Warner Digital Studios is one of a handful of studio in-house operations that have entered the increasingly competitive visual effects business.
▪ Narrative portions describe action, and evoke visual effects reminiscent of the theatre.
▪ The result is a digitized display of flora, fauna and visual effects.
▪ This doctrine strove above all else for visual effect.
▪ It has won two Emmys for special visual effects and makeup.
evidence
▪ The visual evidence accumulates in the courtroom without argument: maps, video footage, satellite imagery and photographs.
▪ The abundance of visual evidence in the King case produced a crisis of interpretation.
▪ For this reason, arguments for the existence of the monster based upon visual evidence have met with a good deal of scepticism.
▪ Himmelwright brings his argument into line with the visual evidence.
▪ A presenter, after all, knows that a viewer has the visual evidence to check on what is being said.
▪ Nordenfalk's book includes the scrupulous examination of visual evidence always welcome and often found in writing by a museum curator.
▪ Much of the visual evidence was contradictory.
▪ What visual evidence is there of the quality of children's work?
experience
▪ They can help the reader to develop the appreciation and enjoyment of pictorial material by offering a range of rich visual experiences.
▪ She overreacted to certain types of touch, visual experiences, and sounds.
▪ I stop at the traffic light when I have a visual experience which others would describe as seeing a green light.
▪ The parietal lobes are probably what keep our visual experiences from looking like an amateur videotape, jerking from here to there.
▪ The poem which leads you on to too many different visual experiences is very hard to illustrate.
▪ It is better to use a poem which elaborates one visual experience and not a whole series of visual pictures.
▪ Let us begin with the proposition that our visual experience does somehow involve a judgement.
▪ But with art nowadays the eyes do not always have it: texts, contexts and theories often jostle visual experience aside.
form
▪ This is why the letter detectors are referred to as abstract: they do not provide information about specific visual form.
▪ The laboratory had some elegant computer-controlled apparatus for teaching the monkeys to discriminate between visual forms such as letters.
▪ There were numerous illustrated broadsides and woodcuts which carried their message in visual form.
▪ They give a good general impression of the size of the figures involved in a clear visual form.
▪ That is significant because dyslexia is essentially an inability to deal with linguistic information in visual form.
handicap
▪ Hemianopia Damage to one side of the brain can cause visual handicap.
▪ Taped sources can be effective, especially for pupils with reading difficulties or visual handicap.
▪ For example, teachers may pose the following questions: Why don't all children with visual handicap wear glasses?
▪ Even those few with more severe visual handicaps will operate as sighted people.
▪ These different conditions can arise from over-protection or lack of understanding of visual handicap.
image
▪ Remember the importance of the visual image and try to keep your theme unified and simple.
▪ They sometimes react to just part of a visual image, rather than the entire image.
▪ This function will tend to concentrate on the visual image and publications resources.
▪ They quickly detect changes in the visual image and tend to exaggerate them.
▪ The more usual version of this theme is simply that one has a visual image of the part of the body touched.
▪ The verbal judgement would seem to be thought of, rather, as an adjunct to the visual image.
▪ Or they might discuss the juxtaposition of certain symbols, or certain strong visual images.
▪ Certainly in both Flame in the Streets and Sapphire, the visual images neutralise White liberalism.
imagery
▪ The first is that it consists in visual imagery.
▪ Soon, Louisa was using her strong capacity for visual imagery to compensate for her difficulty in remembering words and sentences.
▪ Empirical work will be carried out to develop and standardise a new research technique using visual imagery to probe beliefs about pain.
▪ Others who joined in sponsoring the law said it could help curb pinups and other visual imagery that demeans women.
▪ If Jarman comes dangerously close in the last to propagating the politics of ennui, his visual imagery is anything but predictable.
▪ The album is filled with folky, pop-inflected tunes, characterized by visual imagery, hope and passion.
impact
▪ The visual impact is deeply inspiring.
▪ Tuggener's work aims to create not so much a strong visual impact as a symphony of forms.
▪ The plan had previously blocked because the inspector concluded that the visual impact would be too great.
▪ Otherwise the powerful visual impact of television would distort and trivialise.
▪ However, these criticisms are outweighed by the visual impact which pie charts have.
▪ It is often effective to draw the bars in three dimensions as this lengthens the visual impact.
▪ Whilst the hillside location creates a strong visual impact it also provides practical uses.
impairment
▪ An artist who has a visual impairment, working with and not against its limitations.
▪ Nausea, visual impairment, or headache occasionally occur.
▪ Five years after his illness began the patient complained of progressive visual impairment.
▪ However, visual impairment does seem to be related to both anxiety and depression.
▪ An additional 5 % to 10 % of all children have significant visual impairment that could be corrected if glasses were available.
▪ These activities capitalise on the strengths of pupils, whether they have visual impairment, severe learning difficulties or other special needs.
information
▪ Focus on visual information may be sharpened, when pupils are not trying to follow a sound commentary at the same time.
▪ Less color, brightness, and texture may help with visual information.
▪ But a bat uses its sound information for very much the same kind of purpose as we use our visual information.
▪ Newborns also can process visual information, remember what they have seen, and use that information.
▪ Analysis of these eye fixations during reading provides insight into the visual information being processed.
▪ Analysis of the eye fixations that people make when reading provides some insight into what visual information is being processed.
▪ When we talk to each other we usually take in this kind of visual information subconsciously.
▪ This is the first region of the cortex to which visual information is transferred.
inspection
▪ The services are not tested but a visual inspection is made and advice is offered if further specialists' tests are needed.
▪ Usually the procedures will include a visual inspection of the equipment, reagents and instruments used, and a check of calculations.
▪ Protein alignment was by visual inspection.
▪ This involves a combination of visual inspection and electrical testing.
▪ The child seems unable to explore all aspects of the stimulus, or decenter the visual inspection.
▪ Next stage is a thorough clean-again associated with a careful visual inspection.
▪ At this point a visual inspection took place to ensure that there were no leaks.
language
▪ All painters use a visual language.
▪ Popular art not only borrowed visual languages from Hollywood and Madison Avenue, it echoed its stereotypes.
material
▪ They encompass all kinds of visual material and account for both the aesthetic and non-aesthetic response.
▪ Like Watson, Carr has assembled generous visual material on the best-known artists of abstract expressionism, especially Pollock and de Kooning.
▪ The drinks industry circulates briefing packs consisting of audio and visual material to its target groups.
▪ Others claimed that the restrictions on the transmission of visual material in particular were excessive.
▪ The visual material generated an enormous amount of interest and critical comment.
▪ Adair complains that ` John Madden is a perfectly competent organiser of visual material and an effective director of actors.
▪ What I have in mind is a small selection of visual material with a minimum of caption text.
▪ Proximity to the eye is one effective way of magnifying visual material.
memory
▪ Babies prefer complexity, diversity, and movement, and they have visual memory.
▪ The visual memory is being worked hard here; the child has to carry strings of words, related by meaning.
▪ The difficulty he has confirms his likely weakness of visual memory.
▪ You're an artist; use your visual memory.
▪ People have good visual memories, though.
▪ This suggests again a poor visual memory.
▪ If no - has he a weak visual memory?
perception
▪ Firstly, that there is a change in visual perception.
▪ Conversely a child who is weak in visual perceptions can be helped to use auditory and verbal skills to comprehend other children.
▪ Theories of visual perception have altered significantly in the twentieth century.
▪ The question is whether this system contributes to visual perception in the normal brain.
▪ Let me illustrate this point by introducing some recent work on the topic of visual perception.
▪ Two-year-olds also have to learn how visual perception works.
▪ Any workable theory of visual perception must incorporate this discovery.
▪ Adaptation was expected to be the result of a change in visual perception or the proprioceptive sense of the arm.
problem
▪ However, teachers may encounter children at school who still have visual problems although cataracts have been removed.
▪ A child with cerebral palsy may have additional disabilities such as visual problems, language delay or coordination difficulties.
▪ In the early stages of a child's development the visual problem can be masked.
recognition
▪ An obvious candidate is a visual recognition system.
▪ There are mazes, obstacle courses, visual recognition games, trial-and-error experiments, arcade-style shooting games.
▪ The only way in which visual recognition of a word can be primed is by previously seeing the word.
▪ The priming experiments can tell us something more specific about the visual recognition system used for identifying words.
▪ Obviously, being transparent makes visual recognition by both predators and prey more difficult.
reference
▪ The visual references in the two magazines are as much from photos of the artist as from her work.
▪ The procedure is exactly the same when you fly on instruments; but without the external visual references.
▪ This is another reason to start off any flying training by emphasising visual references instead of the instruments.
▪ Experiments with blindfolded pigeons have shown that birds are no more able to fly without a visual reference than are human pilots.
representation
▪ Although in theory Postscript could be viewed as a general purpose programming language, it is strongly biassed towards visual representation.
▪ Figure 8. 1 attempts to provide a visual representation of the relationship among these related concepts.
▪ Not only visual representation, but the written word, too, is not free of imperialism.
▪ They provide a visual representation of how performance is changing over time.
▪ Planning of the lesson sequence is important: what visual representations are required and what needs to be included on each transparency?
stimulus
▪ It can also influence learned and voluntary reactions to visual stimuli when the visual cortex is absent.
▪ The eye must be correctly connected to a brain, within a complex organism which is able to react to visual stimuli.
▪ They can be trained to run simple mazes or to associate food with colours or other visual stimuli.
▪ There are lots of ceramics books, postcards and other visual stimuli around the shop, too, to help the hesitant.
▪ For example, most infants smile to visual stimuli at about 5 weeks of age.
▪ A child presented with a visual stimulus tends to center or fix attention on a limited perceptual aspect of the stimulus.
▪ Another response to a visual stimulus was Thomson's series of musical portraits of people such as Picasso and Aaron Copland.
▪ There are now less visual stimuli, but it is still far too loud.
system
▪ The location of edges has to be reconstructed by the visual system.
▪ For example, our visual system maps visual space on to the surface of our visual cortex.
▪ We need additional, converging, evidence to show that the subcortical visual system contributes to normal vision.
▪ These other sites are often referred to as the subcortical visual system.
▪ Unfortunately, your visual system can not do this.
▪ It may turn out that the somatosensory and visual systems are not organized in exactly the same ways.
▪ Deficits in visual function following subcortical visual system lesions have been reported many times but it is difficult to interpret them.
▪ At present computational models of the visual system are running ahead of our neurophysiological understanding.
world
▪ It is out of such events that the visual field, indeed the visual world, is composed.
▪ The right brain winds up with what is seen by both eyes of the left side of the visual world.
▪ Basil was above all a seeing person of sensibility and perception, responding spontaneously to every aspect of the visual world.
▪ Some patients with right-brain strokes tend to ignore anything on the left side of their visual world.
▪ Clearly they are able to switch mentally between auditory and visual worlds.
▪ Our visual world is an immediately present one of colours and flat two-dimensional shapes.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
mental/visual/cognitive/hearing etc impairment
▪ An artist who has a visual impairment, working with and not against its limitations.
▪ Five years after his illness began the patient complained of progressive visual impairment.
▪ Hearing checks are essential as conductive hearing impairment is very frequent in young children.
▪ However, visual impairment does seem to be related to both anxiety and depression.
▪ Nausea, visual impairment, or headache occasionally occur.
▪ The authors recognise the many methodological problems in studying disabilities that may result from hearing impairment.
▪ The complete lack of cognitive improvements leads them to suggest that cognitive impairment is intrinsically associated with long-term morbidity in schizophrenia.
▪ This is one reason why hearing impairment in childhood is totally different from hearing loss in adult life.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ a powerful visual impact
▪ Children learn to read by interpreting visual symbols.
▪ Teachers have been using visual aids in the classroom for decades.
▪ The movie is greatly enhanced by its stunning visual effects.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A presenter, after all, knows that a viewer has the visual evidence to check on what is being said.
▪ Although in theory Postscript could be viewed as a general purpose programming language, it is strongly biassed towards visual representation.
▪ Indeed, the portrait must be considered one of the outstanding Roman contributions to the visual arts.
▪ The close association between the visual and the cultural may explain the reluctance of some teachers to give it much attention.
▪ The effects are simply terrific and create a visual extravaganza rare for television.
▪ The trilogy will include previously unreleased footage as well as new visual effects and an enhanced soundtrack.
▪ They sometimes react to just part of a visual image, rather than the entire image.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Visual

Visual \Vis"u*al\, a. [L. visualis, from visus a seeing, sight: cf. F. visuel. See Vision.]

  1. Of or pertaining to sight; used in sight; serving as the instrument of seeing; as, the visual nerve.

    The air, Nowhere so clear, sharpened his visual ray.
    --Milton.

  2. That can be seen; visible. [R.]

    Visual angle. (Opt.) See under Angle.

    Visual cone (Persp.), a cone whose vertex is at the point of sight, or the eye.

    Visual plane, any plane passing through the point of sight.

    Visual point, the point at which the visual rays unite; the position of the eye.

    Visual purple (Physiol.), a photochemical substance, of a purplish red color, contained in the retina of human eyes and in the eyes of most animals. It is quickly bleached by light, passing through the colors, red, orange, and yellow, and then disappearing. Also called rhodopsin, and vision purple. See Optography.

    Visual ray, a line from the eye, or point of sight.

    Visual white (Physiol.), the final product in the action of light on visual purple. It is reconverted into visual purple by the regenerating action of the choroidal epithelium.

    Visual yellow (Physiol.), a product intermediate between visual purple and visual white, formed in the photochemical action of light on visual purple.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
visual

early 15c., "pertaining to the faculty of sight;" also "coming from the eye or sight" (as a beam of light was thought to do), from Late Latin visualis "of sight," from Latin visus "a sight, a looking; power of sight; things seen, appearance," from visus, past participle of videre "to see" (see vision). Meaning "perceptible by sight" is from late 15c; sense of "relating to vision" is first attested c.1600. The noun meaning "photographic film or other visual display" is first recorded 1944.

Wiktionary
visual

a. Related to or affecting the vision. n. 1 Any element of something that depends on sight. 2 An image; a picture; a graphic. 3 (context in the plural English) All the visual elements of a multi-media presentation or entertainment, usually in contrast with normal text or audio. 4 (context advertising English) A preliminary sketch.

WordNet
visual
  1. adj. relating to or using sight; "ocular inspection"; "an optical illusion"; "visual powers"; "visual navigation" [syn: ocular, optic, optical]

  2. able to be seen; "be sure of it; give me the ocular proof"- Shakespeare; "a visual presentation"; "a visual image" [syn: ocular]

Wikipedia
Visual (album)

Visual is the third studio album produced by the Dominican based electronic rock band Tabu Tek. This second production was released on the year 2003 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The fourth song of the album, Compadre Pedro Juan, is a rock tribute to Luis Alberti, father of merengue music. The song was previously set to be released in the merengue tribute Rockero Hasta La Tambora made by Dominican rock bands. The album is distinguished by the more rock based sound with less of the electronica aspect found in their previous production Girar. Nevertheless, it was well received and played in rock stations around the country.

Usage examples of "visual".

Once Burl had gotten used to the odd visual effect, which was like gazing into the twisting heat rays rising from an overheated oven, he saw that there was a small flat region between the mountains.

Barlow scowling in a grim Wyoming snowscape, with long black coat, dark hat, a Macintosh SE30 propped on a fencepost and an awesome frontier rifle tucked under one arm, will be the single most striking visual image of the Hacker Crackdown.

Her visual wiles might not have gotten much notice from the Medusan, but other signals were coming through loud and clear.

Cowboy turns his own radar off to discourage homing missiles and navigates on his visual sensors alone, his mind making lightning decisions, neurotransmitters clattering against his headswitches like hail, the interface encompassing the whole flashing universe, the panzer and its systems, the corn thundering under the armored skirts, the blithering chaff, the two hostile privateers burning out of the night.

At this point, the presence of phosphenes is more important than their placement in the visual field.

Extent Of The Region Of Occipital Cortex That When Stimulated Gives Phosphenes Fixed In The Visual Field.

The more sensitive a photoreceptor can be made the better, and one method of increasing the sensitivity is to increase the amount of light falling upon the visual pigment.

The pictures of the Great White Way of New York, Piccadilly Circus, the Grands Boulevards of Paris and so forth, with their polychromatic visual clamour, still strike us as distractingly picturesque.

Reporters were out interviewing the protesters, feeding the hungry broadband predigested opinion and some visuals.

Then progressively the lights were turned down again and that visual clamour died away.

Satisfied with this decisive management action, he checked the time display hovering at the edge of his visual field and started his preparations for a game of racquetball at noon with Rupert Lindsay, the deputy director of NASA.

A visual reconnoissance of the ground immediately in front of me to the south showed, within reach, the stump of a sapling.

His long, glaring look of disbelief and pure hatred delivered and redelivered a series of visual slaps on my face.

Sometimes to resupply the hills leading to Khe Sanh, we would actually slide over the side of the mountain and just start sliding up through the fog, trying to get up to the top of the mountain to the outposts to resupply them and then, in turn, pick up medevacs and slide back down the side of the mountain till we had visual flight again.

My visual sense of this was too powerful for an instant I saw the homely interior of the VW choked with a struggling profusion of foliage, and I gagged on the spermy odor of sap and I snatched my hand away from the top of the car.