At the A1 level, the word 'artifact' is very difficult because it is usually a technical word. However, we can think of it in a very simple way. Imagine you take a photo with a very old phone. The photo looks bad. It has strange squares or weird colors that were not there in real life. Those strange squares are 'artifacts.' As a verb, 'to artifact' means that the phone or the computer is making those bad squares. For example, 'The old phone artifacts the picture.' This means the phone makes the picture look messy with digital errors. A1 learners should know that this word is about computers making mistakes in pictures or videos. It is not about a person making a mistake; it is about the machine making a mistake. You might see this word if you are looking at settings on a camera or a video app. If a video is 'artifacting,' it means the video is breaking into little pieces on the screen. It is like a puzzle that is put together the wrong way by the computer. You do not need to use this word often at A1, but knowing it helps you understand why some videos look 'blocky' or 'glitchy.' Just remember: Machine + Mistake in Picture = Artifact.
At the A2 level, you can start to use 'artifact' to describe problems with technology. When we use 'artifact' as a verb, we are talking about how a process changes a file in a bad way. For example, if you send a video through a messaging app, the app often makes the video smaller to send it faster. This process can 'artifact' the video. This means the video will have strange lines or blurry spots when your friend watches it. You can say, 'The app artifacted my video.' This is more specific than saying 'The app made my video bad.' It tells people exactly what happened: the digital process added things that shouldn't be there. You might also hear this when talking about sound. If you record your voice and the file is very small, the computer might 'artifact' the sound, making it sound like a robot. A2 learners should understand that 'to artifact' is a technical action. It happens during 'compression' (making things smaller) or 'transmission' (sending things over the internet). If you see a digital image that looks like it is made of many little blocks, you can say, 'The compression artifacted this image.' It is a useful word for describing common problems we all have with our phones and computers every day.
At the B1 level, you should understand that 'to artifact' is a transitive verb used in digital and scientific contexts. It describes the introduction of unintended features into data. For instance, in a business presentation, if your slides have images that look pixelated or have strange 'halos' around the text, you could say that the conversion process artifacted the graphics. This level of vocabulary shows that you understand the difference between a simple blur and a digital error. You will also encounter the word in passive forms: 'The data was artifacted by the sensor.' This means the sensor itself created the errors. B1 learners should be able to use the word when discussing media quality. For example, when talking about streaming services like Netflix or YouTube, you might notice that when the internet is slow, the video quality drops and the image starts to 'artifact.' This is a more professional way to describe 'glitchy' video. It shows you have a grasp of technical English. You can also use it to describe scientific experiments where the equipment might interfere with the results. If a microscope is not calibrated, it might 'artifact' the slide, showing spots that aren't actually there. Using 'artifact' as a verb at this level helps you communicate more clearly with IT professionals or technical staff.
At the B2 level, 'artifact' as a verb becomes a precise tool for technical description and analysis. You should be comfortable using it to describe the limitations of various algorithms and hardware. For example, in a discussion about photography, you might explain that 'aggressive noise reduction algorithms often artifact the fine details of a landscape, making grass look like a smudge.' Here, the verb describes a specific trade-off in technology. B2 learners should also recognize the term in professional fields like medicine or engineering. In medicine, one might say that 'the patient's metallic heart valve artifacted the CT scan, obscuring the surrounding tissue.' This usage is critical because it explains why a piece of data might be unreliable. You can also use the term when discussing data integrity in social sciences or statistics. If a survey's design forces people to answer in a certain way, the design might 'artifact' the results, creating a pattern that doesn't exist in the real population. This 'systematic error' is exactly what the verb 'artifact' captures. At this level, you should be able to distinguish between 'artifacting' (structured digital errors) and 'noise' (random interference). Using the verb correctly in a report or a presentation shows a high degree of technical literacy and an ability to discuss complex systems and their failures accurately.
At the C1 level, 'artifact' as a verb is used with nuance to describe the subtle ways in which processing affects data across multiple disciplines. You should understand its implications in signal processing, where to 'artifact' a signal means to introduce aliasing or quantization errors. For example, 'The downsampling process artifacted the audio signal, introducing audible fold-back frequencies.' This level of precision is expected in academic and professional environments. You should also be able to use the word metaphorically or in advanced data science contexts. In machine learning, a model might 'artifact' its output based on biases in the training data, creating 'hallucinations' that are technically artifacts of the neural network's architecture. A C1 learner can discuss the 'artifacting' of historical data, where the methods of preservation themselves might artifact our understanding of the past by emphasizing certain details while distorting others. The verb form highlights the 'artificiality' of the result. You should also be aware of the word's use in forensic contexts, where investigators look for how a file was artifacted to prove it was tampered with. Whether you are discussing the 'artifacting' of a digital twin in engineering or the 'artifacting' of a biological sample in a lab, the word serves to denote a loss of fidelity caused by the medium of observation or processing itself.
At the C2 level, you possess a masterly command of the verb 'artifact,' using it to describe complex phenomena where the boundary between reality and representation is blurred by the process of observation. You might use it in a philosophical or highly technical discourse, such as: 'The very act of quantizing continuous physical phenomena into discrete digital packets inevitably artifacts the underlying reality, a limitation inherent in the Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem.' Here, the verb is used to discuss the fundamental nature of information theory. You should be able to use it to critique sophisticated systems, such as how 'advanced compression codecs like HEVC, while efficient, may artifact subtle textures in a way that is psychoacoustically acceptable but scientifically problematic.' In C2 level writing, the verb 'artifact' is often used to describe the 'observer effect' in high-level data analysis, where the tools of measurement artifact the state of the system being measured. You can also apply it to the study of artificial intelligence, noting how 'large language models may artifact cultural biases into their generated narratives, producing a sanitized or skewed version of human discourse.' At this level, the word is not just a technical term for a glitch; it is a conceptual tool for analyzing how any medium—be it digital, biological, or social—introduces its own structural logic into the information it carries, thereby 'artifacting' the final output. Your usage should reflect an understanding that artifacting is often an unavoidable byproduct of any transformative process.

artifact 30秒で

  • To artifact is a verb used in technology to describe the creation of digital errors, like blocks in a video or noise in a scan.
  • It happens when a computer or algorithm fails to process data perfectly, adding artificial features that weren't in the original source.
  • Common in video streaming, medical imaging, and AI, it refers to the systematic introduction of false patterns or distortions into a medium.
  • Unlike random noise, to artifact implies a structured error caused by the specific way a system handles, compresses, or transmits information.

To artifact as a verb is a specialized technical term primarily used in the fields of digital imaging, signal processing, data science, and medical diagnostics. While the noun form 'artifact' usually refers to a historical object or a byproduct, the verb form describes the specific action of a system, algorithm, or process introducing unintended and false data into a medium. When a digital process artifacts a file, it creates visual or auditory glitches that were never part of the original source. This happens because the system is struggling to interpret or compress data, leading to a 'guess' that results in a visible or audible error. In the modern era of high-definition streaming and artificial intelligence, understanding how systems artifact data is crucial for quality control and forensic analysis. It is not just about a 'mistake'; it is about the systematic generation of false information by the processing tool itself.

Digital Compression
The most common scenario where a system will artifact a file is during heavy compression. If you save a JPEG image at a very low quality setting, the algorithm will artifact the smooth gradients of the sky, turning them into blocky, discolored squares. Here, the verb describes the algorithm's failure to maintain fidelity.
Medical Imaging
In radiology, if a patient moves during an MRI scan, the motion will artifact the resulting image. This means the movement causes the machine to render 'ghost' images or streaks that could be mistaken for biological structures but are actually just data errors.
AI and Neural Networks
When generative AI creates an image of a human with six fingers, we say the model has artifacted the hand. The verb highlights that the model's internal logic has produced a structural anomaly during the synthesis process.

The low-bitrate stream began to artifact heavily during the high-motion action scenes, making the video almost unwatchable.

Example of artifacting in video broadcasting.

Professionals use this verb to distinguish between 'noise' (random interference) and 'artifacts' (systematic errors). If a camera sensor is hot, it might add noise; if the camera's internal software tries to sharpen that noise, it might artifact the edges of objects. Using the verb 'to artifact' implies a level of agency on the part of the processing equipment. It suggests that the tool is actively modifying the reality of the data in a way that is detrimental to its accuracy. In scientific research, to artifact data is a serious concern, as it can lead to false positives where a researcher thinks they have discovered a new phenomenon that is actually just a byproduct of their microscope's settings.

Be careful not to over-process the audio, or you will artifact the high frequencies and create a metallic 'chirping' sound.

In summary, 'to artifact' is the process of polluting data with the 'fingerprints' of the technology used to handle it. Whether it is a satellite artifacting a map with sensor streaks or a voice recorder artifacting a speech with digital clipping, the verb always points toward the introduction of artificial, unwanted elements that obscure the truth of the original signal.

Using 'artifact' as a verb requires a technical context to sound natural. It is almost exclusively used in transitive or passive forms. You describe how a process (the subject) artifacts a piece of data (the object), or how the data (the subject) was artifacted by the process. It is rare to see this word used in casual conversation about physical objects; you wouldn't say a potter 'artifacted' a vase unless you meant they deliberately introduced digital-looking errors into it.

Transitive Usage
When the software artifacts the image, it creates a grid-like pattern over the shadows. Here, the software is the active agent causing the error.
Passive Voice
The recording was heavily artifacted due to the poor quality of the microphone preamp. This is the most common way to describe the result of a technical failure.

If you push the ISO too high on this camera, the sensor will artifact the dark areas with magenta noise.

It is also frequently used in its present participle form, 'artifacting,' to describe an ongoing state or a recurring problem. For example, 'The GPU is artifacting' is a common phrase among PC gamers to indicate that their graphics card is failing and producing strange visual glitches on the screen. In this sense, it becomes an intransitive verb describing the behavior of a device.

The researcher noted that the staining process might artifact the cell samples, leading to incorrect observations of the membrane structure.

In scientific writing, the verb is often used to express caution. Scientists must ensure that their methods do not artifact the results. If a centrifuge is set too high, it might artifact the blood sample by lysing cells that were healthy, creating 'artifacts' in the data that don't reflect the patient's actual condition. Note how the verb 'artifact' describes the action of the centrifuge, while the noun describes the resulting false data.

You will most likely encounter 'artifact' as a verb in environments where data integrity is paramount. This includes software engineering firms, movie post-production houses, medical imaging departments, and scientific research laboratories. In the world of video games, 'artifacting' is a dreaded term that signals a hardware failure. If you hear a technician say, 'The video is artifacting,' they are pointing out specific digital errors like screen tearing, blocky pixels, or flickering colors.

Silicon Valley & Tech
Engineers working on video codecs (like H.264 or AV1) constantly discuss how their algorithms artifact the video at different bitrates. They strive to minimize how much the compression artifacts the final product.
Hollywood Post-Production
Colorists and visual effects artists use the term when a digital filter is applied too aggressively. 'That sharpen filter is artifacting the edges of the actor's face,' a director might say during a review session.

During the live broadcast, the satellite link began to artifact the signal, causing the reporter's face to break into pixels.

Another common place to hear this is in the discussion of Artificial Intelligence. As AI generates more content, the 'hallucinations' it produces are often described as artifacting. If an AI music generator adds a strange metallic hum to a piano track, the developers will say the model is artifacting the audio. In this context, it is a way to describe the 'unnatural' qualities of machine-generated content.

The MRI technician warned that the metal dental implants might artifact the scan of the patient's jaw.

Lastly, in the realm of digital forensics, experts look for how a file has been artifacted to determine its history. If a photo has been edited and re-saved many times, the way the software artifacts the pixels can tell a forensic investigator which tools were used to manipulate the image. Here, the verb describes the tell-tale signs of tampering or repeated processing.

The most frequent mistake people make with 'artifact' as a verb is using it in a non-technical context where 'create' or 'make' would be more appropriate. Because 'artifact' (noun) is so common in archaeology and history, learners often think the verb form means 'to make a historical object' or 'to document history.' This is incorrect. You do not 'artifact' a vase; you 'excavate' or 'catalog' it. The verb form is strictly about the introduction of errors or artificial features into data or media.

Confusion with 'Artifice'
Do not confuse 'to artifact' with 'to use artifice.' Artifice refers to clever or cunning devices used to deceive. While artifacting can be deceptive (like a false positive in a scan), the verb 'to artifact' is about the technical process, not the human intent to lie.
Incorrect Physical Usage
Avoid saying: 'The carpenter artifacted the table with a beautiful finish.' Correct usage would be: 'The digital camera artifacted the photo of the table due to low light.'

Wrong: The historian artifacted the ancient coins.
Right: The low-resolution scan artifacted the image of the ancient coins.

Another mistake is using 'artifact' when you simply mean 'noise.' Noise is random (like static on a radio), whereas artifacting is structured (like the squares in a low-quality JPEG). If you tell a technician that a signal has noise when it is actually artifacting, you might lead them to the wrong solution. Noise usually requires better hardware; artifacting usually requires better software settings or higher bitrates.

The engineer realized that over-sampling the data would artifact the final statistics, leading to a skewed conclusion.

Finally, ensure you don't use it as a synonym for 'ruin' in a general sense. While artifacting often ruins a file, the word specifically describes *how* it was ruined—by the addition of artificial, non-existent elements. If you spill coffee on a laptop, you haven't artifacted it; you've damaged it. If the damaged laptop starts showing weird lines on the screen, *then* the hardware is artifacting the display.

Because 'to artifact' is so specific, there are few direct synonyms that capture the exact same meaning. However, depending on the context, several other verbs might be more appropriate for a general audience. Understanding the nuances between these words will help you choose the most precise term for your writing.

Distort
Distort is the most common alternative. It means to change the natural or original shape or sound of something. While all artifacting is a form of distortion, not all distortion is artifacting. Distortion can be a simple stretching or warping, whereas artifacting involves the creation of new, false patterns.
Glitch
'Glitch' is more informal. It refers to a sudden, temporary malfunction. While 'to artifact' describes the process of creating errors, 'to glitch' describes the failure of the system itself. You might say 'the screen glitched and began artifacting.'
Corrupt
To corrupt a file means to damage the underlying data so that it cannot be opened or read correctly. Artifacting usually leaves the file readable but visually or audibly flawed. Corruption is often fatal to a file; artifacting is just a quality issue.

Comparison:
1. The mirror distorts my reflection. (General change)
2. The software artifacts the video. (Adds false digital blocks)

In the context of data analysis, you might use 'bias' or 'skew.' If a methodology artifacts the results, it means the results are not true. However, 'bias' implies a directional error (e.g., making all numbers higher), while 'artifacting' implies the addition of structured errors that don't belong there at all.

The low sampling rate will alias the audio, effectively artifacting the recording with ghost frequencies.

Other technical terms include 'quantize' (which can lead to quantization artifacts) and 'interpolate' (which can artifact an image during upscaling). If you are writing a technical paper, using these more specific verbs can show a higher level of expertise than simply using 'artifact' for everything.

How Formal Is It?

豆知識

The verb usage is quite modern, emerging in the mid-20th century with the rise of signal processing and electronic microscopy.

発音ガイド

UK /ˈɑː.tɪ.fækt/
US /ˈɑːr.tɪ.fækt/
Primary stress is on the first syllable (AR-ti-fact).
韻が合う語
abstract impact compact subtract extract contract retract intact
よくある間違い
  • Pronouncing the 'i' as a long 'ee' sound (ar-TEE-fact).
  • Placing the stress on the last syllable (ar-ti-FACT).
  • Confusing the pronunciation with 'artifice' (ar-ti-fiss).
  • Omitting the 't' in the middle (ar-i-fact).
  • Merging the first two syllables (art-fact).

難易度

読解 4/5

Requires understanding of technical or scientific context to grasp the verb usage.

ライティング 5/5

Difficult to use correctly without sounding overly technical or confusing it with the noun.

スピーキング 4/5

Used mostly in professional or tech-circles; rare in everyday speech.

リスニング 4/5

Can be confused with 'artifice' or the noun 'artifact' if not heard clearly.

次に学ぶべきこと

前提知識

distortion digital process data error

次に学ぶ

aliasing quantization fidelity interpolation codec

上級

spurious anomaly hallucination (AI) noise floor signal-to-noise ratio

知っておくべき文法

Transitive Verbs

The software (Subject) artifacts (Verb) the image (Object).

Passive Voice for Technical Processes

The signal was artifacted by atmospheric noise.

Present Participle as Adjective

We need to fix the artifacting issues.

Gerund as Subject

Artifacting the data can lead to false conclusions.

Infinitive of Purpose

We used a filter to avoid artifacting the sound.

レベル別の例文

1

The old TV artifacts the movie.

La vieille télé crée des parasites sur le film.

Simple present tense with a singular subject.

2

Does the camera artifact the photo?

Est-ce que l'appareil photo crée des défauts sur la photo ?

Question form using 'does'.

3

The app will artifact your video.

L'application va créer des défauts sur votre vidéo.

Future tense with 'will'.

4

It artifacts the image in the dark.

Cela crée des défauts sur l'image dans l'obscurité.

Third person singular 's' ending.

5

Stop! You are artifacting the file.

Arrête ! Tu es en train de créer des erreurs dans le fichier.

Present continuous tense.

6

The small file artifacted the song.

Le petit fichier a créé des défauts sur la chanson.

Simple past tense.

7

Bad internet artifacts the stream.

Une mauvaise connexion internet crée des défauts sur le flux.

Subject-verb agreement.

8

The computer artifacts every picture.

L'ordinateur crée des défauts sur chaque image.

Use of 'every' with a singular noun.

1

The low quality setting artifacts the zoom call.

Le réglage de basse qualité crée des défauts sur l'appel Zoom.

Compound subject 'low quality setting'.

2

If you save it now, it will artifact the colors.

Si tu l'enregistres maintenant, cela va altérer les couleurs.

First conditional structure.

3

The scanner artifacted the document because it was dusty.

Le scanner a créé des défauts sur le document parce qu'il était poussiéreux.

Past tense with a reason clause starting with 'because'.

4

Is the software artifacting the background?

Est-ce que le logiciel crée des défauts sur l'arrière-plan ?

Present continuous question.

5

The video was artifacted by the slow connection.

La vidéo a été altérée par la connexion lente.

Passive voice 'was artifacted'.

6

Don't compress it too much, or you'll artifact the text.

Ne le compresse pas trop, sinon tu vas altérer le texte.

Imperative followed by 'or' for consequences.

7

The old sensor artifacts every night photo.

Le vieux capteur crée des défauts sur chaque photo de nuit.

Frequency word 'every'.

8

The printer artifacted the image with weird lines.

L'imprimante a créé des défauts sur l'image avec des lignes bizarres.

Prepositional phrase 'with weird lines'.

1

The technician noticed that the cable was artifacting the signal.

Le technicien a remarqué que le câble créait des parasites sur le signal.

Past continuous in a subordinate clause.

2

Heavy compression will inevitably artifact the high-frequency sounds.

Une forte compression va inévitablement altérer les sons à haute fréquence.

Use of the adverb 'inevitably'.

3

The image has been artifacted so much that it's unrecognizable.

L'image a été tellement altérée qu'elle est méconnaissable.

Present perfect passive with 'so... that' result clause.

4

We need to avoid any process that might artifact the raw data.

Nous devons éviter tout processus qui pourrait altérer les données brutes.

Relative clause starting with 'that'.

5

Does this filter artifact the edges of the objects?

Est-ce que ce filtre crée des défauts sur les bords des objets ?

Specific object 'the edges of the objects'.

6

The satellite link artifacted the live broadcast during the storm.

La liaison satellite a altéré la diffusion en direct pendant la tempête.

Temporal phrase 'during the storm'.

7

If you upscale the video, the software will artifact the faces.

Si vous augmentez la résolution de la vidéo, le logiciel va altérer les visages.

Conditional type 1.

8

The recording was artifacted by the digital clipping.

L'enregistrement a été altéré par l'écrêtage numérique.

Passive voice with an agent 'by the digital clipping'.

1

The MRI was artifacted by the patient's movement, requiring a second scan.

L'IRM a été altérée par le mouvement du patient, nécessitant un deuxième examen.

Participle phrase 'requiring a second scan'.

2

Over-sharpening an image can artifact the textures, making them look artificial.

Un excès de netteté sur une image peut altérer les textures, les rendant artificielles.

Gerund 'Over-sharpening' as a subject.

3

The encoder tends to artifact dark scenes more than bright ones.

L'encodeur a tendance à altérer les scènes sombres plus que les scènes claires.

Comparison 'more than'.

4

Scientists must ensure their staining methods don't artifact the tissue samples.

Les scientifiques doivent s'assurer que leurs méthodes de coloration n'altèrent pas les échantillons de tissus.

Modal verb 'must' for necessity.

5

The GPU began artifacting just before the computer crashed completely.

Le processeur graphique a commencé à créer des défauts juste avant que l'ordinateur ne tombe complètement en panne.

Past continuous followed by 'just before'.

6

The algorithm artifacted the audio by trying to remove the background noise.

L'algorithme a altéré l'audio en essayant de supprimer le bruit de fond.

Instrumental 'by' + gerund.

7

You can see where the AI artifacted the hand, adding an extra finger.

On peut voir où l'IA a altéré la main, en ajoutant un doigt supplémentaire.

Noun clause 'where the AI artifacted the hand'.

8

The data was artifacted during the conversion from analog to digital.

Les données ont été altérées lors de la conversion de l'analogique au numérique.

Passive voice with a complex prepositional phrase.

1

The low bitrate of the stream frequently artifacts the fast-moving water in the scene.

Le faible débit binaire du flux altère fréquemment l'eau en mouvement rapide dans la scène.

Adverb 'frequently' modifying the verb.

2

If the sampling rate is too low, it will artifact the signal through aliasing.

Si le taux d'échantillonnage est trop bas, cela altérera le signal par repliement.

Technical prepositional phrase 'through aliasing'.

3

The researcher argued that the preparation process might artifact the observed cell behavior.

Le chercheur a soutenu que le processus de préparation pourrait altérer le comportement cellulaire observé.

Reported speech with 'argued that'.

4

Digital forensics can identify how a software suite artifacts metadata.

La criminalistique numérique peut identifier comment une suite logicielle altère les métadonnées.

Complex object 'how a software suite artifacts metadata'.

5

The neural network artifacted the generated landscape with repetitive patterns.

Le réseau neuronal a altéré le paysage généré avec des motifs répétitifs.

Transitive usage with a specific 'with' phrase.

6

Medical professionals must distinguish between pathology and data that has been artifacted.

Les professionnels de la santé doivent distinguer la pathologie des données qui ont été altérées.

Present perfect passive in a relative clause.

7

The codec is designed to prioritize motion, even if it artifacts the static background.

Le codec est conçu pour donner la priorité au mouvement, même s'il altère l'arrière-plan statique.

Concessive clause starting with 'even if'.

8

The lossy format will inevitably artifact any recording of a complex orchestra.

Le format avec perte altérera inévitablement tout enregistrement d'un orchestre complexe.

Future tense with 'will inevitably'.

1

The quantization of the analog signal inevitably artifacts the resulting digital representation, however subtly.

La quantification du signal analogique altère inévitablement la représentation numérique résultante, aussi subtilement que ce soit.

Adverbial phrase 'however subtly' for emphasis.

2

It is a fundamental challenge to ensure that deep learning models do not artifact bias into their predictive outputs.

C'est un défi fondamental de s'assurer que les modèles d'apprentissage profond n'introduisent pas de biais par altération dans leurs résultats prédictifs.

Infinitive phrase as a subject 'to ensure that...'.

3

The astronomical data was artifacted by atmospheric interference, masking the distant star's luminosity.

Les données astronomiques ont été altérées par l'interférence atmosphérique, masquant la luminosité de l'étoile lointaine.

Passive voice with a present participle result clause.

4

The critic noted that the digital restoration process had artifacted the film's original grain structure.

Le critique a noté que le processus de restauration numérique avait altéré la structure du grain original du film.

Past perfect 'had artifacted' indicating an action before the 'noting'.

5

One must be wary of how post-processing filters can artifact a sense of hyper-reality that never existed.

Il faut se méfier de la manière dont les filtres de post-traitement peuvent altérer et créer un sentiment d'hyper-réalité qui n'a jamais existé.

Complex noun clause with 'how'.

6

The software artifacts the 3D render if the lighting calculations are oversimplified.

Le logiciel altère le rendu 3D si les calculs d'éclairage sont trop simplifiés.

Zero conditional for general truths.

7

The archival audio was so heavily artifacted that the speaker's identity remained in question.

L'audio d'archive était si lourdement altéré que l'identité de l'orateur restait incertaine.

Degree adverb 'so' + adjective + 'that' result clause.

8

The sensor's heat began to artifact the long-exposure shot, creating 'hot pixels' across the frame.

La chaleur du capteur a commencé à altérer la prise de vue à exposition longue, créant des 'pixels chauds' sur toute l'image.

Infinitive 'to artifact' after 'began'.

類義語

distort glitch warp corrupt interfere blur

反対語

よく使う組み合わせ

heavily artifacted
artifact the image
artifact the signal
tendency to artifact
artifact the results
digitally artifacted
artifact the data
artifact the scan
visually artifacted
artifact the recording

よく使うフレーズ

stop artifacting

— A command to stop a process that is introducing errors.

We need to fix the settings to stop artifacting the stream.

prone to artifacting

— Likely to produce digital errors.

This old software is prone to artifacting large files.

artifacting issues

— Problems related to digital distortions.

The new update fixed the artifacting issues in the game.

artifacted beyond repair

— So many errors were added that the file is useless.

The corrupted video was artifacted beyond repair.

minimal artifacting

— Very few digital errors are present.

The high bitrate ensures minimal artifacting.

artifacting the output

— The final product has errors introduced by the process.

The filter is artifacting the output of the render.

artifacting effects

— The visual or auditory signs of artifacting.

The artifacting effects were visible in the dark areas.

avoid artifacting

— To take steps to prevent digital errors.

Use a higher quality setting to avoid artifacting.

artifacting the signal

— The transmission process is adding errors.

The storm is artifacting the satellite signal.

noticeable artifacting

— Errors that are easy to see or hear.

There was noticeable artifacting in the audio track.

よく混同される語

artifact vs artifice

Artifice means trickery; artifacting is a technical error.

artifact vs architect

Architect means to design; artifact means to distort or add errors.

artifact vs artifact (noun)

The noun is a thing; the verb is the action of creating that thing (usually an error).

慣用句と表現

"artifact of the process"

— Something that exists only because of how it was made, not because it is real.

That trend in the data is just an artifact of the process.

academic
"artifacting reality"

— Distorting the truth through the way it is presented.

The media's focus on one detail is artifacting reality.

metaphorical
"digital artifacting"

— The specific type of error found in computers.

I can't stand the digital artifacting in this stream.

neutral
"to artifact a win"

— To get a victory through a technicality or error (rare/slang).

They artifacted a win because the referee missed the call.

slang
"ghost artifacting"

— When a previous frame or image remains visible.

The monitor is showing heavy ghost artifacting.

technical
"compression artifacting"

— Errors caused by making a file smaller.

This JPEG has too much compression artifacting.

technical
"artifacting the narrative"

— Changing a story by the way it is told or edited.

The documentary artifacted the narrative to make it more exciting.

metaphorical
"artifacting the sample"

— Ruining a scientific sample during preparation.

Be careful not to artifact the sample with the chemical wash.

academic
"visual artifacting"

— Seeing things that aren't there due to eye or brain errors (rare).

Fatigue can cause visual artifacting in your field of vision.

medical
"artifacting the future"

— Creating problems now that will appear as errors later.

Our current policies are artifacting the future of the economy.

metaphorical

間違えやすい

artifact vs noise

Both represent unwanted data.

Noise is random; artifacting is structured and caused by the processing method.

Static on a radio is noise; blocks in a YouTube video are artifacting.

artifact vs distortion

Both involve changing the original signal.

Distortion is a general change; artifacting specifically adds new, artificial elements.

A lens flare is a distortion; a digital glitch is artifacting.

artifact vs aliasing

It is a type of artifacting.

Aliasing is a specific mathematical error in sampling; artifacting is a broader term.

The 'jagged edges' on a diagonal line are aliasing artifacts.

artifact vs ghosting

It is a visual error.

Ghosting is a specific delay artifact where old frames stay visible.

The cheap monitor artifacted the game with heavy ghosting.

artifact vs banding

It is a visual error in gradients.

Banding is a specific artifact caused by low color depth.

The 8-bit image artifacted the sky with visible color banding.

文型パターン

B1

The [Noun] artifacts the [Noun].

The camera artifacts the photo.

B2

The [Noun] was artifacted by [Noun].

The video was artifacted by the compression.

C1

Due to [Noun], the [Noun] tends to artifact [Noun].

Due to low bitrate, the encoder tends to artifact dark scenes.

C2

The act of [Gerund] inevitably artifacts the [Noun].

The act of upscaling inevitably artifacts the image quality.

B1

Stop [Gerund] the [Noun]!

Stop artifacting the audio!

B2

It is [Adjective] to artifact the [Noun].

It is easy to artifact the data if you are not careful.

C1

[Gerund] the [Noun] will [Verb] the [Noun].

Artifacting the signal will ruin the recording.

C2

Should the [Noun] artifact, we must [Verb].

Should the sensor artifact, we must recalibrate the system.

語族

名詞

artifact (the error or the object)
artifacting (the process)
artifactuality (the state of being an artifact)

動詞

artifact (to introduce errors)

形容詞

artifacted (containing errors)
artifactual (relating to artifacts)

関連

artifice
artificial
factitious
facsimile
glitch

使い方

frequency

Rare in general English, but high frequency in IT, Engineering, and Science.

よくある間違い
  • The archaeologist artifacted the site. The archaeologist excavated the site.

    You don't 'artifact' a physical place; you find artifacts there. The verb is for data/media errors.

  • The artist artifacted a beautiful painting. The artist created a beautiful painting.

    Unless the artist is making digital 'glitch art,' artifacting usually implies making something worse or adding errors.

  • My phone is artifacting because the battery is low. My phone is lagging because the battery is low.

    Lagging is about speed; artifacting is about visual/audio errors on the screen.

  • The book was artifacted with many typos. The book was full of typos.

    Typos are human mistakes; artifacting is a machine/process error.

  • He artifacted his speech with lies. He peppered his speech with lies.

    Artifacting is not a synonym for lying or adding false statements in speech.

ヒント

Verb vs. Noun

Remember that the noun 'artifact' is the result, and the verb 'artifact' is the action. 'The compression (subject) artifacts (verb) the image, creating artifacts (noun).'

Bitrate Matters

If you are presenting a video and it starts to artifact, the first thing to check is your internet connection or the file's bitrate.

Lab Safety

In a lab, always run a 'control' to make sure your preparation methods aren't artifacting your samples and giving you false results.

US vs UK

Use 'artifact' for US audiences and 'artefact' for UK audiences, but the verb forms (artifacting/artefacting) are both understood.

Don't Use Casually

Avoid saying 'I artifacted my homework' when you mean you made a mistake. Use it only for technical or data-related errors.

GPU Health

If your game starts artifacting (showing weird shapes), check your GPU temperature immediately; it might be overheating.

AI Hallucinations

When an AI image generator gives a person three arms, you can say the model artifacted the anatomy.

Audio Clipping

If you record audio too loudly, the 'clipping' will artifact the sound, making it sound distorted and harsh.

ISO Settings

High ISO settings increase noise, which the camera's noise reduction software might then artifact into 'smudgy' textures.

Precision

Using the verb 'artifact' in a technical report shows you understand the systematic nature of the error, rather than just calling it a 'bug'.

暗記しよう

記憶術

Think of an 'ARTificial FACT'—it's a 'fact' (a piece of data) that is 'ARTificial' (not real). When a machine 'artifacts,' it makes artificial facts.

視覚的連想

Imagine a beautiful photo of a sunset that suddenly has blocky, ugly squares appearing on it. The squares are the 'artifacts' being 'artifacted' by the computer.

Word Web

Compression Glitch Data Imaging Distortion Systematic Unintended Processing

チャレンジ

Try to use 'artifact' as a verb to describe the last time you had a bad video call. Write three sentences using 'artifacted,' 'artifacting,' and 'to artifact.'

語源

Derived from the Latin 'arte' (by skill/art) and 'factum' (something made). Originally used as a noun for man-made objects.

元の意味: Something made by human skill, particularly an object of archaeological interest.

Indo-European (Latin branch).

文化的な背景

No major sensitivities; however, in medical contexts, be careful not to confuse patients by using overly technical terms like 'artifacting' when 'error' or 'blurry' might be clearer.

Commonly used in gaming, tech support, and professional media production in the US and UK.

The 'Matrix' movie series often uses visual artifacting to show when the simulation is failing. Radiohead's album art often features 'artifacted' digital landscapes. The Voyager 1 'Pale Blue Dot' photo has artifacts from the camera's sensor.

実生活で練習する

実際の使用場面

Video Editing

  • check for artifacting
  • the filter artifacted the edges
  • reduce compression artifacts
  • artifacting in the shadows

Scientific Research

  • artifacted data
  • ensure the method doesn't artifact
  • identify potential artifacts
  • artifacting the sample

Medical Imaging

  • motion artifacting
  • metal artifacting
  • the scan was artifacted
  • remove artifacting from the image

Gaming/Hardware

  • GPU artifacting
  • screen artifacting
  • artifacting under load
  • fix visual artifacting

Data Science

  • artifacting the model
  • spurious artifacting
  • artifacted results
  • bias artifacting the output

会話のきっかけ

"Have you noticed how much the new update artifacts the graphics in this game?"

"Do you think AI is starting to artifact human culture in a weird way?"

"Why does the video always artifact when the internet gets slightly slow?"

"How can we prevent the staining process from artifacting our lab samples?"

"Is it better to have a blurry image or one that is heavily artifacted?"

日記のテーマ

Describe a time when a technical error (artifacting) changed your perception of a photo or video.

Reflect on how modern technology might be 'artifacting' our memories of events through digital filters.

Write about the importance of 'raw' data and why we must be careful not to artifact it during analysis.

If you were a digital artist, how would you use intentional artifacting to express a message?

Discuss the ethical implications of AI artifacting bias into its decision-making processes.

よくある質問

10 問

Yes, in 'glitch art,' an artist might intentionally artifact an image to create a specific aesthetic. However, in most professional contexts, it is an accidental byproduct of technology.

Generally, yes, because it represents a loss of accuracy. However, in some cases, slight artifacting is tolerated to save file space or transmission speed, such as in streaming video.

The spelling is often 'artefact' in British English (with an 'e'), but the verb meaning remains the same. 'Artifact' is more common in technical standards globally.

Usually, you need to increase the bitrate, change the codec, or fix the hardware (like a failing GPU) that is doing the artifacting.

Absolutely. Audio artifacting often sounds like metallic chirping, echoes, or robotic 'cracks' in the sound, especially in low-quality MP3s.

It is an error created when the subject moves while being scanned or photographed, causing the system to artifact the image with blurs or 'ghosts.'

Not exactly. Pixelation is seeing the square pixels due to low resolution. Artifacting includes pixelation but also includes weird colors, lines, and patterns caused by compression.

In low light, the camera's sensor has a low signal-to-noise ratio. The camera's software tries to fix this and, in the process, artifacts the dark areas with noise and blocks.

Yes. When an AI produces strange, repetitive, or nonsensical phrases, researchers sometimes say it is artifacting the language based on patterns in its training data.

It means the data or image is perfectly clean and has no errors introduced by processing or compression.

自分をテスト 200 問

writing

Explain how a low bitrate can artifact a video stream.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Describe a situation where a medical professional might see an artifacted scan.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Write a sentence using 'artifact' as a verb in a scientific context.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Compare 'noise' and 'artifacting' in your own words.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

How does heavy JPEG compression artifact an image?

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Write a short dialogue between two IT technicians discussing a GPU that is artifacting.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Discuss why scientists must be careful not to artifact their samples.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Explain the term 'motion artifact' to a non-technical person.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

How can digital forensics use artifacting to solve a crime?

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Describe the visual appearance of an artifacted video.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Write a sentence using 'artifacted' in the passive voice.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Why is 'to artifact' considered a transitive verb?

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Describe an AI-generated image that has been artifacted.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

What are the consequences of artifacting in a professional business presentation?

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Reflect on how artifacting affects our trust in digital media.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Write a technical warning for a software manual about avoiding artifacting.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Give an example of audio artifacting.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

How does the verb 'artifact' differ from the verb 'distort'?

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Explain why upscaling an old video might artifact the faces of people.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
writing

Write a sentence using 'artifacting' as a gerund subject.

Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Discuss the impact of artifacting on the quality of online education videos.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Describe a time your computer started artifacting and how you felt.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Explain to a teammate why we shouldn't compress our project files too much.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

How would you describe an artifacted image to someone over the phone?

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Discuss the ethical concerns of AI artifacting bias into its results.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Explain the difference between noise and artifacting to a student.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Why do you think high-definition video is so important to avoid artifacting?

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Talk about the role of artifacting in digital forensic investigations.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Describe the visual effects of a failing graphics card.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

How does artifacting change the way we experience a movie?

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Discuss whether 'glitch art' makes good use of artifacting.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Explain how an MRI can be artifacted by a patient's movement.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

What would you do if you noticed your scientific data was being artifacted?

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Describe the sound of an artifacted MP3 file.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Is artifacting more of a hardware or a software problem?

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

How can we improve technology to stop artifacting completely?

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Discuss the concept of 'artifacting reality' in social media.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Tell a story about a 'ghost artifact' you once saw.

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

How does low internet speed artifact a video call?

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
speaking

Why is artifacting a problem for self-driving car sensors?

Read this aloud:

正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen for the word 'artifacted' in a sentence about a hospital scan.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Identify if the speaker is talking about a noun or a verb when they say 'artifact'.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen to a description of a glitched video and identify the cause.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen for the phrase 'prone to artifacting' in a technical review.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Identify the context (Science, Tech, or Art) from a clip using the word 'artifacting'.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen for the difference between 'distorted' and 'artifacted' in a sound engineer's talk.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen for the stress on the first syllable of 'artifacting'.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen to a news report about a satellite signal and identify the verb used.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen for 'motion artifact' in a doctor's explanation.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Identify the problem being discussed in a tech support call.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen for the passive voice 'was artifacted' in an academic lecture.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen for the word 'artifact' used as a verb in a tutorial about Photoshop.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Identify if the speaker is happy or unhappy with the 'artifacting'.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen for the word 'inevitably' before 'artifacts'.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
listening

Listen to a gamer complaining about their hardware.

正解! おしい! 正解:
正解! おしい! 正解:
error correction

The archaeologist artifacted the ancient ruins.

正解! おしい! 正解: The archaeologist excavated the ancient ruins.
error correction

The computer is artifacting the speed of the internet.

正解! おしい! 正解: The computer is lagging due to the speed of the internet.
error correction

He artifacted his room with new furniture.

正解! おしい! 正解: He furnished his room with new furniture.
error correction

The video was artifacted by the high quality settings.

正解! おしい! 正解: The video was artifacted by the low quality settings.
error correction

Stop artifacting the truth and tell me what happened.

正解! おしい! 正解: Stop distorting the truth and tell me what happened.
error correction

The picture was artifacted because the lens was clean.

正解! おしい! 正解: The picture was artifacted because the lens was dirty.
error correction

I artifacted my coffee on the rug.

正解! おしい! 正解: I spilled my coffee on the rug.
error correction

The GPU is artifacting the frame rate from 60 to 30.

正解! おしい! 正解: The GPU is dropping the frame rate from 60 to 30.
error correction

The scientist artifacted the discovery of a new planet.

正解! おしい! 正解: The scientist announced the discovery of a new planet.
error correction

Artifacting the data usually makes it more accurate.

正解! おしい! 正解: Artifacting the data usually makes it less accurate.

/ 200 correct

Perfect score!

関連コンテンツ

Scienceの関連語

abbioly

C1

abbioly(アビオリ)は、無生物のシステムにおいて生命のようなパターンを直感的に認識することを指す専門用語です。言語テストで語彙力を測るためによく使われます。

abcapal

C1

アブカパルは、実験室で使用される特殊な保護膜またはシーラントであり、敏感なサンプルを大気汚染や酸化から保護します。

abheredcy

C1

接続を維持しようとしながら、所定の基準や経路から微妙に逸脱すること。

abhydrible

C1

このabhydribleなコーティングは、内部の回路を湿気から守ります。

ablabive

C1

物質の除去または破壊に関するもので、特に融解、蒸発、または外科的切除によるものを指します。

abphobency

C1

アブフォベンシー(abphobency)とは、表面が水や油などの物質をはじく性質のことです。

abphotoion

C1

光イオン除去する: 濃縮された光エネルギーまたは放射線を使用して、分子構造からイオンを除去または変位させること。これは、光子相互作用による粒子の正確な分離を説明するための専門的な科学用語です。 研究者は、分析のために特定の分子イオンを光イオン除去します。

abpulssion

C1

安全弁のabpulssion(強制的な放出)は過度の圧力によって引き起こされました。

absorption

B2

吸収とは、スポンジが水を吸い込むように、ある物質が別の物質を取り込むプロセス、または活動に完全に没頭している状態を指します。(吸収とは、スポンジが水を吸い込むように、ある物質が別の物質を取り込むプロセス、または活動に完全に没頭している状態を指します。)

abvincfy

C1

複雑なシステムから特定の構成要素を体系的に分離し、独立して研究すること。

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