0 the quality of having a lot of something that is valuable or interesting:
1 the quality of looking, sounding, smelling, or tasting strong in a pleasing or attractive way:
2 the fact that a food contains a large amount of butter, oil, eggs, or cream:
The richness of interpretation shown here is a model for other urban studies.
Authenticity arguably has a further dimension, beyond the information and autonomy requirements, namely richness.
Meanwhile, future modeling work should fully exploit the richness of reading eye movements and be wary of the limitations of aggregated data.
The values of parasite species richness for sister taxa in different categories were compared using paired t-tests.
In the flight-interception-trapping, species richness and abundance were significantly higher in the forests than in the plantations in both sampling periods.
The pursuit of rigorous complexity (surface) solicits a ludic richness (depth) for the purposes of understanding and illumination.
The mean helminth richness per infected host was 1.4 ^ 0.6 (range 1 - 4; n 1⁄4 128).
If she wishes, she can agree with mainstream process thinkers that value is proportionate to the richness and complexity of experience.