0 something that is produced as a result of making something else, or something unexpected that happens as a result of something else:
The deep depression he fell into was a byproduct of his disease.
In conclusion, symbolic appeals in bioethics are natural byproducts of our human makeup.
This formula is a byproduct of the labelling of the vertices in forming the dual of a partition.
In our model, indeterminacy and multiple equilibria are the byproducts of an economy with money and capital.
This is a useful byproduct of our optical setup which already exhibits a good long-term mechanical stability.
It also drew a rather fascinating byproduct of the cultural world of eighteenth-century mathematics known as "geometric flowers" (fig. 5).
Such response-produced cues could come, for instance, from immediate proprioceptive byproducts of the response as well as its more remote effects.
The theory is based on the assumption that the radiation is purely a byproduct of the turbulence.
Toxicity could also be a byproduct of proteins occuring in a novel environment and recognition of host targets, a chance event.