0 present participle of modulate
1 to change the style, loudness, etc. of something such as your voice in order to achieve an effect or express an emotion:
2 to change something, such as an action or a process, to make it more suitable for its situation:
3 to mix an electrical signal that represents sounds or pictures with a radio signal so that it can be broadcast
This problem is intellectually enormously interesting, since solving it would provide ways of modulating the activities of proteins in vivo.
Influence of frequency modulating jitter on higher order moments of sound residual with applications to synthesis and classification.
However, the relative amounts of each component are important in modulating physiologic and pathophysiologic behavior of tissue.
However, if the magnitude of the group selection factor modulating the virulence of these viral populations is large enough, no significant change would be expected.
Apparently, the first jet has excited this wave, which is acting back on the jet, modulating its velocity spectrum.
Dendritic spines: role of active membrane in modulating synaptic efficacy.
Additional evidence that gap junctions are involved in modulating cell adhesion derives from studies using transformed cell lines.
As such, cannabinoids may play a role in modulating the temporal aspects of signaling in the retina.