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 --
The possibility of modulating raft homeostasis, using statins and synthetic sphingolipid analogues, offers new approaches for therapeutic interventions in raft-associated diseases.
Their evidence suggested that the white noise had a modulating effect on the somatosensoryevoked potentials in these very young infants.
Modulating the orienting of visual attention may ameliorate imaginal neglect.
The dynamic (or often called thermal) disorder, due to its rapidly modulating nature requires a conceptually different and technically extremely difficult treatment.
At the cognitive level, all made reference to systems modulating fear behavior however few articulated the specifics of these systems in detail.
The movements were mapped into software by processing the incoming signal and modulating it with other video.
Rather, light acts indirectly by modulating the output of the circadian clock.
As such, cannabinoids may play a role in modulating the temporal aspects of signaling in the retina.