0 present participle of fine-tune
1 to make very small changes to something in order to make it work as well as possible:
Perceptual fine-tuning of such stimuli and the formation of representations of social stimuli are impeded.
In finer detail, rationing, as a ' social technology', involved fine-tuning the subjectivity of the recipient (and, by extension, their relations with the provider) as individuals.
Consider also that datum which currently is most often offered in support of the design argument : the fine-tuning of the cosmic parameters.
The kinematic calibration thus becomes a procedure of fine-tuning the locations and orientations of the local frames.
Alternatively it might require additional, yetto-be-elucidated, laws or principles, possibly themselves requiring an element of fine-tuning.
The policy issues were at the polar opposite of fine-tuning.
For now, fine-tuning of the parameters is done by the user (or the programmer) depending on the desired result.
Depending on the particular action and the environmental conditions, such knowledge may not be necessary for the mentioned fine-tuning via sensorimotor channels.