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Discover LudwigThe phrase "fine detailed" is not correct in standard written English.
The correct expression is "finely detailed," which can be used to describe something that has a lot of intricate details or is very precise in its description.
Example: "The artist created a finely detailed painting that captured every nuance of the landscape."
Alternatives: "highly detailed" or "intricately detailed.".
Exact(1)
Whereas, if we invoke a feedforward/feedback model of visual processing, then impairments in cognitively demanding ventral processing would also be expected if dyslexia is associated with the outcomes of a 'magnocellular disadvantage', meaning that the magnocellular contributions do not retroinject back intoV1 in time for the more fine detailed parvicellular processing through the ventral stream.
Similar(59)
"Freedom Summer" bristles with fine details.
(Audubon preferred trumpeter-swan quills for drawing fine detail).
It offers, they believe, both broad coverage and fine detail.
Lead casts well, preserving fine detail from the mold.
"It's all down to fine details," Smalling added.
That makes fine details in photos less crisp.
And again all the fine detail was there.
The fine details of legislation seemed too mundane, aides said.
Where Rockwell painted fine detail punctiliously, Hopper's eye erased detail, a kind of painterly reductio.
Electronics had to see the world around them in fine detail through tiny digital cameras.
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