| 释义 | 
		Definition of discriminable in English: discriminableadjective dɪˈskrɪmɪnəb(ə)ldəˈskrimənəb(ə)l Able to be discriminated; distinguishable. 可区别的;可辨别的  the target contours will not be discriminable from their background 目标的轮廓和背景无法分辨开来。 Example sentencesExamples -  Hence, as in other frogs, the fundamental frequency of advertisement calls is a reliable and discriminable signal of male body size in bullfrogs.
 -  A second more critical problem is that the dimensions of spatial position and colour may not have been equally discriminable.
 -  This sensory ability is analogous to color vision, whereby reflectances of similar brightness in a scene are discriminable because their spectral features differ, so we call it polarization vision by analogy to color vision.
 -  Psychological absorption is closely related to fantasy proneness and indeed, the two constructs might not be truly discriminable.
 -  That occurs because a reduction in shock intensity is immediately discriminable provided that it exceeds some threshold change, but a decrease in shock duration is discriminable only when the briefer shock is terminated.
 -  Myths may be grouped in three discriminable cycles reflecting three different periods of time at various removes from the present.
 -  When the stimulus dimensions are highly discriminable, participants take advantage of the informativeness of the dimensions and achieve greater search efficiency by flexibly searching through the smaller subset.
 -  If so, impressions that arise in the specified conditions, though true, will be indistinguishable from false impressions - as far as any intrinsic discriminable character is concerned.
 -  In addition, these compliance subtypes were negatively correlated with each other, suggesting that they are indeed discriminable aspects of compliance.
 -  This inhibitory effect is most strongly observed for alternating tasks, resulting in an alternating-switch cost that is discriminable from switch cost per se.
 -  Do these differences correlate with the length of the list of discriminable behavior states?
 -  In the high-discriminability condition, a pair of highly discriminable shapes, X versus O, was used.
 -  He concluded that the term culture-bound syndrome ‘still has currency but little discriminable content’.
 -  However, the minimum discriminable difference, was calculated, and was of sufficient magnitude to have been detected by our apparatus.
 -  Tests of internal and external validity indicate that there are indeed discriminable response styles of child noncompliance toward teachers.
 -  Greater saccadic selectivity towards those distractors sharing shape with the target was observed when more discriminable shapes were employed.
 -  The primary goal of this analysis phase was to test whether there were discriminable noncompliance responses between skill levels across domains of behavior.
 -  In particular, the far distracters may have been more discriminable from targets in the window-present condition as compared to the window-absent condition.
 -  However, inactive agents are a poor placebo for an easily discriminable drug such as nicotine.
 
 
 Derivativesnoun dɪskrɪmɪnəˈbɪlɪti  Particular, instantiated features are more strongly associated with their categories: they have great discriminability. Example sentencesExamples -  The blank interval separating successive stimuli was set to 100 ms to allow sufficient discriminability.
 -  Thus, the current analysis indicates that the distractor-ratio effect was strongly influenced by the discriminability of stimulus dimensions.
 -  Construct validity is assessed by convergence and by discriminability.
 -  Analog magnitude representations follow Weber's law, according to which the discriminability of two values is a function of their ratio.
 
 
 adverb  Practically, the encoding guarantees that different input words are discriminably represented and that the reverse operation can be easily performed. Example sentencesExamples -  The study attempts to estimate the distance at which songs become discriminably different from local songs.
 -  The world consists of a virtually infinite number of discriminably different stimuli.
 -  We can identify a category by noting that people give the same response to discriminably different stimuli.
 -  However, to the human eye, they are also discriminably different from the original object because the organization of the components is different.
 
 
 
 OriginMid 18th century: from discriminate, on the pattern of the pair separate, separable.    Definition of discriminable in US English: discriminableadjectivedəˈskrimənəb(ə)l Able to be discriminated; distinguishable. 可区别的;可辨别的  the target contours will not be discriminable from their background 目标的轮廓和背景无法分辨开来。 Example sentencesExamples -  He concluded that the term culture-bound syndrome ‘still has currency but little discriminable content’.
 -  Hence, as in other frogs, the fundamental frequency of advertisement calls is a reliable and discriminable signal of male body size in bullfrogs.
 -  In particular, the far distracters may have been more discriminable from targets in the window-present condition as compared to the window-absent condition.
 -  That occurs because a reduction in shock intensity is immediately discriminable provided that it exceeds some threshold change, but a decrease in shock duration is discriminable only when the briefer shock is terminated.
 -  If so, impressions that arise in the specified conditions, though true, will be indistinguishable from false impressions - as far as any intrinsic discriminable character is concerned.
 -  A second more critical problem is that the dimensions of spatial position and colour may not have been equally discriminable.
 -  When the stimulus dimensions are highly discriminable, participants take advantage of the informativeness of the dimensions and achieve greater search efficiency by flexibly searching through the smaller subset.
 -  Tests of internal and external validity indicate that there are indeed discriminable response styles of child noncompliance toward teachers.
 -  This inhibitory effect is most strongly observed for alternating tasks, resulting in an alternating-switch cost that is discriminable from switch cost per se.
 -  Psychological absorption is closely related to fantasy proneness and indeed, the two constructs might not be truly discriminable.
 -  Do these differences correlate with the length of the list of discriminable behavior states?
 -  However, inactive agents are a poor placebo for an easily discriminable drug such as nicotine.
 -  Greater saccadic selectivity towards those distractors sharing shape with the target was observed when more discriminable shapes were employed.
 -  In the high-discriminability condition, a pair of highly discriminable shapes, X versus O, was used.
 -  However, the minimum discriminable difference, was calculated, and was of sufficient magnitude to have been detected by our apparatus.
 -  Myths may be grouped in three discriminable cycles reflecting three different periods of time at various removes from the present.
 -  In addition, these compliance subtypes were negatively correlated with each other, suggesting that they are indeed discriminable aspects of compliance.
 -  This sensory ability is analogous to color vision, whereby reflectances of similar brightness in a scene are discriminable because their spectral features differ, so we call it polarization vision by analogy to color vision.
 -  The primary goal of this analysis phase was to test whether there were discriminable noncompliance responses between skill levels across domains of behavior.
 
 
 OriginMid 18th century: from discriminate, on the pattern of the pair separate, separable.     |