0 present participle of fuse
2 to (cause to) melt (together) especially at a high temperature:
3 When an electrical device or piece of machinery fuses, or when someone or something fuses it, it stops working because the electric current is too high:
The global pose tracking problem has been widely investigated by fusing various external sensors and odometric measurements.
Fusing temporal information recursively is crucial to many applications, such as navigation, robotics, target identification, and multi-target tracking.
The notion of blossoming is analogous to the process of 'fusing' the two flat images of a stereoscopic pair into a virtual three-dimensional volume.
Once again, however, the actual nature of this fusing is left vague.
One retina was obtained after per fusing the animal with 4% paraformaldehyde followed by an additional fixation by immersion in 4% paraformaldehyde for several hours.
Finally, both oocyte cell membranes were perforated using a piezo-pulse and the fusing pipette was pulled out gently.
The mental fusing of the two slightly different views weaves an expanded stereoscopic veil.
By fusing world view and ethos, symbols give to a set of social values an appearance of objectivity and make them more believable.