adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
ability
▪
This suggests that verbal ability is dominant in the left hemisphere and spatial ability is dominant in the right hemisphere.
▪
This supports the hypothesis that there is a right field advantage for verbal ability over spatial ability.
analysis
▪
However, this is offset by the demands that are made on spatial analysis and modelling methodology.
data
▪
Chapter 2 contains a discussion of alternative data structures for spatial data.
▪
One, as we have noted several times in this chapter, is the availability of spatial data in computer-readable format.
▪
It follows, therefore, that no map-related spatial data exist which are wholly error-free.
▪
First of all, more spatial data are becoming available in digital or computer-readable form.
▪
The production of block diagrams and other representations of spatial data in graphical form is also part of automated cartography.
dimension
▪
Writers in this tradition do touch on some spatial dimensions but they are not central.
▪
Therefore the spatial dimensions of accessibility and mobility have complex but very important social overtones.
distribution
▪
In the second we are describing the spatial distribution of people, not one person: this is the Euler method.
▪
The relationship between these factors in determining the spatial distribution of the elderly is unknown and probably varies historically.
▪
Firstly, it influences the quality and spatial distribution of litter.
▪
The concern here, however, is not so much that of the level of such benefits but their spatial distribution .
division
▪
It is also argued that a new spatial division of labour is being established.
entity
▪
The second kind of data consists of the attributes or properties of the spatial entities shown on the maps.
▪
One type of query refers solely to the absolute or relative locational properties of the spatial entities .
location
▪
Emergency vehicles can be supplied with computers that track their spatial location .
▪
In applications for statistical or topological modeling, for example, inputs could be frequencies, spatial locations , and so on.
▪
They are used to indicate the spatial location and separation of events which are integral parts of the same process.
▪
Place deixis concerns the encoding of spatial locations relative to the location of the participants in the speech event.
organization
▪
Changes within capitalism generate new forms of spatial organization at the same time as they create new forms of social organization.
▪
The demonstrative determiners combine with non-deictic terms for spatial organization to yield complex deictic descriptions of location.
▪
The difference between us and chimpanzees lies in the spatial organization of the cells.
▪
In addition to this temporal patterning, each spike often displays a recurring spatial organization .
▪
Rather, the differences must be sought in the regulatory genes and proteins that control spatial organization .
▪
These are really questions about the organization of the spatial organization of cellular activities.
pattern
▪
The collection of historical data on natural hazards is important since it is clear that their spatial pattern varies through time.
▪
There was a case of two brothers who both had seizures triggered by spatial patterns .
▪
The space-economy for example is simply the spatial pattern of organization created by the industrial economy; it is not an independent variable.
▪
The problem is one of relating the spatial pattern with the spatial process.
▪
These can modify their operation to detect temporal and spatial patterns of inputs.
relationship
▪
All the creatures in Biomorph Land have a definite spatial relationship one to another.
▪
Seems to be a problem here with spatial relationships .
▪
In other words, information about features, landmarks and spatial relationships of the environment is stored in their brain.
▪
It asks whether there is any clear spatial relationship between need and public investment.
▪
But geometry is about spatial relationships , and an appreciation of space and form is of considerable practical value.
resolution
▪
Plain radiography, with its superior spatial resolution , remains a key investigation in the initial diagnosis of a primary bone tumour.
▪
The spatial resolution of the antenna was 74.
▪
Good spatial resolution means that they tend to respond to high spatial frequencies.
▪
Unfortunately, the spatial resolution of the best radar images so far obtained is too poor to have revealed such tell-tale signs.
structure
▪
The appearance of this pattern in some places and not in others presumably relates to the detailed spatial structure in two dimensions.
▪
Such measurements distinguish temporal events from spatial structure , but suffer from lower resolution.
task
▪
The view that women are on average better on language tasks and men on spatial tasks continues to receive serious attention.
▪
Boys who were exposed to female hormones are worse at spatial tasks .
▪
As I mentioned before, you see deficits for verbal material after left removals, for spatial tasks after right removals.
▪
And the same thing is true for the spatial task .
▪
Girls who were exposed to male hormones in the womb are better at spatial tasks .
variation
▪
For most experimental purposes spatial variations occur in only one dimension so that the stimuli appear as light and dark stripes.
▪
Group 2 errors include positional accuracy, attribute uncertainty, and generalization arising from data classification and spatial variations in map quality.
▪
Dynamic fluxes depend on motions which in turn depend on spatial variations in heating.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
Girls who were exposed to male hormones in the womb are better at spatial tasks.
▪
In particular, the spatial irregularity apparent in Fig. 22.8 reflects irregular fluctuations in time.
▪
Of these spatial concentrations of modernized industry, Chirton Industrial Estate is the oldest.
▪
Spatialization is the invention of a spatial world as the map upon which we plot experience.
▪
The problem is one of relating the spatial pattern with the spatial process.
▪
The result is that their high social mobility does not entail high levels of long distance spatial mobility.
▪
The space-economy for example is simply the spatial pattern of organization created by the industrial economy; it is not an independent variable.
▪
What many such individuals have done is to use their superior spatial abilities to buttress their weaker verbal pattern comprehension abilities.