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The phrase "absolute recognition" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts where you want to express complete acknowledgment or validation of something or someone.
Example: "The artist sought absolute recognition for her work, believing it deserved to be celebrated by the art community."
Alternatives: "complete acknowledgment" or "total validation."
Exact(3)
The roars were not only of approval and enjoyment but of absolute recognition.
But, then, in memory's narrow eye comes a fixifying certainty, an absolute recognition — a sighting.
Results of the experiments conducted under various conditions showed that the sparse coding method outperforms the PCA in absolute recognition accuracy and the NMF in terms of relative improvement due to the knowledge extracted from the unlabeled data.
Similar(57)
The experiments show that the proposed methods not only increase the absolute word recognition accuracy but also make the entire process few times faster than the original sparse imputation approach.
These differential findings may have arisen because the functional difference between F19 and H19 has more to do with relative affinity rather than absolute site recognition.
Nevertheless, to explore this possibility, we correlated absolute emotional recognition memory performance for items studied at the 15-min session (rather than the subtracted difference between 15-min and 4-h performance) with sleep measures; an analysis which, according to the above alternative hypothesis, would predict negative relationships.
This paper describes a method for absolute localization and environment recognition for an autonomous, sonar-equipped robot.
Friedrich Schleiermacher, for example, saw religion as the feeling of absolute dependence or the recognition of contingency, while G.W.F.
The second provided for a military alliance against Great Britain and also required recognition of absolute independence for the United States as a condition of peace.
(a) Although there is no blanket recognition of absolute immunity for all federal executive officials from liability for civil damages resulting from constitutional violations, certain officials -- such as judges and prosecutors -- because of the special nature of their responsibilities, require absolute exemption from liability.
For them the scope of the defense varied in proportion to the nature of their official functions and the range of decisions that conceivably might be taken in "good faith". This "functional" approach also defined a second tier, however, at which the especially sensitive duties of certain officials -- notably judges and prosecutors -- required the continued recognition of absolute immunity.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com