Auditory in a sentence as an adjective

TV shows are visual and auditory, so much more like the real world.

It comes attached with the idea that it makes sense to bucket students into "auditory learners," "visual learners," and so on.

[0] Previously it was called ADD, and before that it was oftentimes classified as auditory processing disorders, etc.

*We know that various layers in the visual and auditory systems basically just compute ICA, and we know that the brain is incredibly plastic.

So, while getting a good pair of headphones is great for those who like having some auditory stimulation while they work, it just doesn't compare to having a quiet office if that's how you work best.

The visual/auditory hallucinations usually only kick in when working 50+ hours a week for extended periods and worried about personal things.

In studies on ferrets scientists have discovered that the second auditory cortex, A2, tends to collect sonic motifsthings like a quickly rising pitch beginning near middle C, or any kind of warbling, or clear, constant tones at various pitches.

I excelled in college and am just about to finish my PhD in evolutionary biology, largely because I stopped attending lectures and decided to learn everything on my own. After listening to this illusion I decided to search for auditory dyslexia and sure enough there are disorders like this and I definitely fit the definition, especially central auditory processing disorder.

Even the visual and auditory carnage of MySpace was preferable to the cookie-cutter sameness of Facebook, helpfully tracking your every single move before you even think to make it, and broadcasting the mundane minutiae of everyday existence to all your "friends".I used to love Google when it first came out, it beat the pants off Alta Vista and it was a fantastic way to extract cool links from the vastness of the 'net.

"A Beautiful Mind" is the worst I've ever seen: - Most characters didn't exist, they are *inspired* by real persons\n - He never had visual hallucinations, only auditory\n - The hallucinations started *after* college\n - He and his wife divorced in 1963, they only remarried in 2001.\n - The pen laying and the Nobel ceremony never happened\n - Near the end of the movie, he say he's taking "new meds" while in real life, \n he stopped taking them after the mid 70's and he's vocal about it.

Auditory definitions

adjective

of or relating to the process of hearing; "auditory processing"; "an audile person"

See also: audile auditive