0 present participle of reverberate
1 If a loud, deep sound reverberates, it continues to be heard around an area, so that the area seems to shake:
2 If an event or idea reverberates somewhere, it has an effect on everyone or everything in a place or group:
Suspended in the aural imagination, this single sonic event seems charged with resonant energy, its musical attributes reverberating into the distant close of the piece.
This selection process serves to develop assemblies of reciprocally coupled neurons that allow for the organization of a reverberating circuit.
In practice, the sample is loaded by a magnetically driven impactor or by a sequence of reverberating shock waves in a multi-step compression process.
Because there are no loops, there is no possibility of a "reverberating memory," and thus, after a suitable propagation delay, each input pattern yields a unique output pattern.
Now in the simpler societies of mammals other than monkeys, a similar sequence of social inequalities, social tension and reverberating quarrels can also be seen under crowding.
The repeated circulation of impulses in reverberating circuits between the cortex and thalamus, may lead to synaptic modifications in target structures, which favor alterations required for memory processes.
By the end of the number he's shaking his guitar, turning a sustained power chord through reverberating changes for a minute or more of rock rapture.
Severe, recurrent psychiatric disorders - notably schizophrenia and bipolar disorder- have substantial, reverberating effects on the life of the individual, his or her family, and the larger social system.