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artifactRelationships Broader Term: material Related Term: noise object realia Distinguish From: specimen (also artefact), n. ~ 1. A man-made, physical object. - 2. An anomaly in data that results from the [..]
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artifactArtifacts refer to distortions within an image as a result of image compression or interpolation. Artifacts can be seen as light halos around dark areas of an image or as a “blocky” quality in an imag [..]
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artifactIn radiology, something artificial that appears on a medical image but is not a part of the living tissue being examined. The image distortion could be due to an obstruction, such as a surgical metal [..]
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artifact1821, artefact, "anything made by human art," from Italian artefatto, from Latin arte "by skill" (ablative of ars "art;" see art (n.)) + factum "thing made," fr [..]
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artifactOrnament or possession that communicates information about a person. [SB]
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artifactmaterial remains of a culture, such as tools, clothing, or food.
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artifactA piece of information that: Is produced, modified, or used by a process Defines an area of responsibility, and Is subject to version control. An artifact can be a model, a model element, or a documen [..]
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artifactGeneral term to describe a broad range of undesirable flaws or distortions in digital reproductions produced during capture or data processing. Some common forms of image artifacts include noise, chro [..]
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artifactA portable object manfactured, modified, or used by humans.
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artifactA tangible by-product produced during product development. The product backlog, sprint backlog, and potentially shippable product increment are examples of Scrum artifacts. See also practice.
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artifactIn facsimile or television, a defect or distortion of the image, introduced along the sequence from origination and image capture to final display. Note 1: Artifacts may arise from the overload of channel capacity by excess signal bandwidth. Note 2: In general, artifacts may result from (a) sampling effects in temporal, spatial, or frequency domain [..]
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artifactAny object manufactured, used or modified by humans. Common examples include tools, utensils, art, food remains, and other products of human activity. (National Park Service, U.S. Dept. of the Interior, 2006. http://www.cr.nps.gov/seac/terms.htm
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artifactSonic material that is accidental or unwanted, resulting from the editing of another sound.
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artifactn. 1. an error caused by improper statistical manipulation of experimental data or a logical flaw in experimental design that causes the changes that are not related to the experimental manipulation. [..]
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artifactAn object. In terms of family history research, an artifact is an item that provides information about an ancestor’s life, such as tools, books, or jewelry.
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artifactIvy and Maven use this misleading terminology for the deliverable program file which is the end result of programming effort. In ordinary English, artefact (British spelling) means an object made by a [..]
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artifact(n) a man-made object taken as a whole
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artifactIn nondestructive inspection, and indication that may be interpreted.
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artifactAWS CodePipeline: A copy of the files or changes that will be worked upon by the pipeline.
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artifactsee audio artifact
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artifactA side effect in video or audio caused by signal processing. In video, artifact is usually a term describing a defect or flaw in the image.
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artifactArtifacts refer to distortions within the image as a result of image compression or interpolation. Artifacts can be seen as light halos around dark areas of an image or as a "blocky" quality in the highlight area of an image. Forms of artifacts include blooming, chromatic aberrations, jaggies, moiré, noise and halation.
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artifactany object made, modified, or used by people.
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artifactAny 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.
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artifactSomething made or modified by humans. Artifacts can be as simple as a stone tool chipped out of a pebble or as sophisticated as a city with all its buildings, roads, and infrastructure. A collection o [..]
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artifactany object made, modified, or used by humans
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artifactAny visible result of a procedure which is caused by the procedure itself and not by the entity being analyzed. Common examples include histological structures introduced by Tissue processing, radiogr [..]
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artifactAny object that has been made, modified or used by humans.
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artifactAn artifact is an item made or used by humans in the past. In California, archaeological artifacts include both historic and Native American items that are more than 50 years old.
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artifactAny product of human cultural activity; more specifically, any tools, artwork, or objects found in an archaeological context. Assemblage
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artifactAny object manufactured, used, moved or otherwise modified by human beings, including all waste materials and by-products of these processes.
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artifactany object made, modified or used by humans
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artifactA man-made object which gives information about the culture of its creator and users.
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artifactany information not present in the original object or image, inadvertently introduced by image capture, processing, compressions, transmission, display and printing.
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artifactA physical object in a library, archive, or museum.
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artifactsomething that is not typical of the actual substance, but a result from a process like cytological processing, crystal formation, etc. Example: Some crystal structures show dimerization of the protei [..]
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artifactAn object; an item of material culture.
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artifactAnything that assists in the discovery and use of a service such an XML WSDL or a schema document
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artifactAn object made or used by a human being.
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artifactAn 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 [..]
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artifactAn object made or used by humans that provides information about human behavior in the past
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artifactAny object made, used or modified by humans Archaeologically, artifacts are often implements made of stone or bone (e.g., a projectile point), but can include non-portable features (such as fire pits) and animal remains used by people.
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artifactA manufactured object.
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artifactAnything made or modified by humans. Spear points, ceramics, clothing, and machinery are all examples of artifacts. Also see the definition for feature.
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artifactany object made or used by humans
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artifactany object made, modified, or used by people.
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artifactAny concrete by-product formed during the development cycle. Example of artifacts includes the Product Backlog and the Sprint Backlog.
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artifact
An object made or shaped by human hand.
(archaeology) An object, such as a tool, weapon or ornament, of archaeological or historical interest, especially such an object found at an archaeological [..]
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artifactAn object produced or shaped by human craft, especially a rudimentary art form or object, as in the products of prehistoric workmanship.
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