receptive spot - перевод на русский
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receptive spot - перевод на русский

DELIMITED MEDIUM WHERE SOME STIMULI CAN EVOKE NEURONAL RESPONSES
Receptive fields; Receptor field; Receptive Field
  • Neurons of a convolutional layer (blue), connected to their receptive field (red)
  • CNN layers arranged in three dimensions

receptive spot      

общая лексика

воспринимающий бугорок (яйца)

projection welding         
ELECTRICAL RESISTANCE WELDING PROCESS THAT APPLIES CURRENT ACROSS TWO POINTS ON A SHEET METAL SURFACE
Resistance spot welding; Resistance Spot Welding; Spot weld; Spot welder; Spotweld; Projection welding; Projection weld

общая лексика

рельефная сварка

spot welder         
ELECTRICAL RESISTANCE WELDING PROCESS THAT APPLIES CURRENT ACROSS TWO POINTS ON A SHEET METAL SURFACE
Resistance spot welding; Resistance Spot Welding; Spot weld; Spot welder; Spotweld; Projection welding; Projection weld
машина для точечной сварки

Определение

G-spot
¦ noun a sensitive area of the anterior wall of the vagina believed by some to be highly erogenous.
Origin
1944 (as Grafenberg spot): G from the American gynaecologists E. Grafenberg and R. L. Dickinson, who first described it.

Википедия

Receptive field

The receptive field, or sensory space, is a delimited medium where some physiological stimuli can evoke a sensory neuronal response in specific organisms.

Complexity of the receptive field ranges from the unidimensional chemical structure of odorants to the multidimensional spacetime of human visual field, through the bidimensional skin surface, being a receptive field for touch perception. Receptive fields can positively or negatively alter the membrane potential with or without affecting the rate of action potentials.

A sensory space can be dependent of an animal's location. For a particular sound wave traveling in an appropriate transmission medium, by means of sound localization, an auditory space would amount to a reference system that continuously shifts as the animal moves (taking into consideration the space inside the ears as well). Conversely, receptive fields can be largely independent of the animal's location, as in the case of place cells. A sensory space can also map into a particular region on an animal's body. For example, it could be a hair in the cochlea or a piece of skin, retina, or tongue or other part of an animal's body. Receptive fields have been identified for neurons of the auditory system, the somatosensory system, and the visual system.

The term receptive field was first used by Sherrington in 1906 to describe the area of skin from which a scratch reflex could be elicited in a dog. In 1938, Hartline started to apply the term to single neurons, this time from the frog retina.

This concept of receptive fields can be extended further up the nervous system. If many sensory receptors all form synapses with a single cell further up, they collectively form the receptive field of that cell. For example, the receptive field of a ganglion cell in the retina of the eye is composed of input from all of the photoreceptors which synapse with it, and a group of ganglion cells in turn forms the receptive field for a cell in the brain. This process is called convergence.

Receptive fields have been used in modern artificial deep neural networks that work with local operations.