0 past simple and past participle of propagate --
2 to spread opinions, lies, or beliefs among a lot of people: --
3 to send out or spread light or sound waves, movement, etc., or to be sent out or spread: --
The change propagation phase should ensure that all induced changes will be propagated to the interested parties.
Most organisms (99% or more) propagated in this manner at the logarithmic growth phase morphologically resembled long, slender bloodstream forms.
With the work-list approach, only one array is created, and individual set elements are propagated to nodes in the graph only where necessary.
In a few cases, the implementation led, with changes propagated back into the definition afterwards.
Before starting the initial propagation, the upper bound constraint and the ordering constraints from the fragment are propagated.
Every time a scheduling decision is made, it is propagated through the constraint network to decide if it entails any inconsistency.
Given this assignment, the values can be propagated in order to determine the value of the factor of interest.
Furthermore, a transmission policy is used to describe how a query with a target meta-document should be propagated in the network.