0 present 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.
Thus, the direct impact of the two trematode species on their cockle hosts has cascading effects extending to the entire intertidal community.
Some of these electrons will be accelerated, cascading toward the anode.
The associated wave cascading processes will occur in the direction in wave vector space where the coupling is strongest.
These give more insight into the physics of the nonlinear evolution of these modes cascading to lower azimuthal mode numbers.
This indicates that violation of rules has a cascading effect.
This paper presented a divide-and-conquer method by dividing the manipulator into virtual segments and cascading the corresponding workspace densities.
This process usually involved traversing at a slow pace along the platforms as they investigated the sensations cascading through their bodies.
Too great a change in the system will cause a cascading effect of ever-increasing values that will deny the simulation of chemical oscillation.