0 past participle, past simple of fine-tune --
1 to make very small changes to something in order to make it work as well as possible: --
Such unpacking may well lead to more fine-tuned empirical predictions.
In contrast, when aural perception and general awareness of other colleagues in an ensemble were fine-tuned, breathing was also likely to be free and easy.
In plan, the type is fine-tuned and the doubleloaded corridor accesses glazed office units to the south-east and secondary spaces to the north-west.
But what would learners actually do with this fine-tuned pragmatic information?
X in this particular case can be defined as 'fine-tuned catastrophism'.
On the contrary, we should acknowledge it as a fundamental requisite of the sort of fine-tuned self-organization that is characteristic of - indeed, necessary for - life.
Such a system allows muscle phenotype to be 'fine-tuned' according to the varying demands placed upon it.
If mutual-determination is a reasonable model, we should expect to find perceptual mechanisms that are fine-tuned to process frequently occurring environmental sounds.