Abstract
Given a complex algebraic variety X, we define a natural number called the motivic dimension which measures the amount of transcendental (co)homology of X. It is zero precisely when all the (co)homolgy is spanned by algebraic cycles. Most of this paper is concerned with giving estimates on this number, along with examples where it is small. As an application, we check or recheck the Hodge conjectue in a number of examples: uniruled fourfolds, rationally connected fivefolds, fourfolds fibred by surfaces with p_g=0, Hilbert schemes of a small number points on surfaces with p_g=0, and generic hypersurfaces.
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