recognition | designation by the chair granting a person the right to speak in a deliberative body, he was unable to make his motion because he couldn't get recognition by the chairman |
face recognition | the visual perception of familiar faces |
object recognition | the visual perception of familiar objects |
recognition identification | the process of recognizing something or someone by remembering, a politician whose recall of names was as remarkable as his recognition of faces, experimental psychologists measure the elapsed time from the onset of the stimulus to its recognition by the observer |
realization realisation recognition | coming to understand something clearly and distinctly, a growing realization of the risk involved, a sudden recognition of the problem he faced, increasing recognition that diabetes frequently coexists with other chronic diseases |
recognition | an acceptance (as of a claim) as true and valid, the recognition of the Rio Grande as a boundary between Mexico and the United States |
face recognition facial recognition automatic face recognition | biometric identification by scanning a person's face and matching it against a library of known faces, they used face recognition to spot known terrorists |
signature recognition | biometric identification by automatically scanning a person's signature and matching it electronically against a library of known signatures |
recognition credit | approval, give her recognition for trying, he was given credit for his work, give her credit for trying |
recognition | the explicit and formal acknowledgement of a government or of the national independence of a country, territorial disputes were resolved in Guatemala's recognition of Belize in |
craving | an intense desire for some particular thing |
recognition | (biology) the ability of one molecule to attach to another molecule that has a complementary shape, molecular recognition drives all of biology, for instance, hormone and receptor or antibody-antigen interactions or the organization of molecules into larger biologically active entities |
pathologic process pathological process | an organic process occurring as a consequence of disease |
pathological state | a physical condition that is caused by disease |
recognition acknowledgment acknowledgement | the state or quality of being recognized or acknowledged, the partners were delighted with the recognition of their work, she seems to avoid much in the way of recognition or acknowledgement of feminist work prior to her own |
diseased morbid pathologic pathological | caused by or altered by or manifesting disease or pathology, diseased tonsils, a morbid growth, pathologic tissue, pathological bodily processes |
pathological | caused by or evidencing a mentally disturbed condition, a pathological liar, a pathological urge to succeed |
pathological pathologic | of or relating to the practice of pathology, pathological laboratory |