noun A spoon; in the orthodox Greek and other Oriental churches, the eucharistic spoon in which the consecrated elements are administered together to communicants. Also called labis. See intinction, spoon, colatorium, and labis.
noun An ancient Roman and Greek medicinal measure, equal to a spoonful.
In anatomy, of or relating to the cochlea in any way: as, the cochlear nerve, cochlear canal, etc.
Spoon-shaped: specifically, in botany, applied to a form of imbricative estivation in which one piece is exterior, larger than the others, and bowl-shaped, as in the aconite.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
adjective (Anat.) Of or pertaining to the cochlea.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
adjective anatomy Of or pertaining to the cochlea.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
adjective of or relating to the cochlea of the ear
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Examples
In his hearing and speech lab at UCI, Zeng has made advances in cochlear implant development, discovering that enhancing the detection of frequency modulation (FM) significantly boosts the performance of many hearing aids devices by increasing tonal recognition, which is essential to hearing music and understanding certain spoken languages like Mandarin.
In children left deaf by the disease, the cochlea tends to harden into bone over time, making it difficult to install an electronic hearing device known as a cochlear implant, Tan and Young explained.
Ghahramani said those working in the area of neural prosthetics are encouraged by the success of technology such as cochlear implants, which help the hearing impaired by applying electrical stimulation in the auditory system.
They add that the mingling biological components in electronic circuits could enhance biosensing and diagnostic tools, advance neural prosthetics such as cochlear implants, and could even increase the efficiency of future computers.
Ghahramani said those working in the area of neural prosthetics are encouraged by the success of technology such as cochlear implants, which help the hearing impaired by applying electrical stimulation in the auditory system.
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