0 past simple and past participle of cascade
2 to pass on information by giving it to just a few people, who then give it to more people; to be passed on in this way:
Guest information is cascaded through employee shift briefings.
Communication cascades down the organization until the information has been communicated through each level, to the front lines.
Usually, these linear effects are lumped and simulated with a few filters which are cascaded with the delay lines.
A cascaded method for anaphor and pronoun generation is proposed for handling pro-drop and discourse constraints on pronominalization.
Two stage decisions, such as pronominalization then dropping, and conflicting demands on the pronominalizations require a cascaded treatment of reference generation.
Linear circuits, such as our cascaded filter model, cannot-by definition-generate harmonics in response to purely sinusoidal stimuli.
How does speech perception lead to cascaded priming across linguistic levels?
The style of operation is both cascaded and interactive so that analysis or synthesis at one stage need not be completed before the next stage is initiated.
The secondorder cascaded process is characterized by the fact that, in a nonstationary condition, it becomes impossible to achieve a pure phase modulation on the propagating pulse.
However, even among production models that assume that there is cascaded processing, there is typically an assumption that planning ends at the point where articulation begins.