0 past simple and past participle of pace
1 to get someone to run a race at a particular speed, for example by running with them
2 to walk with regular steps in one direction and then back again, usually because you are worried or nervous:
The introduction is paced well, and there are many examples.
Such a contingency makes external occasions for emotion valuable, and these occasions seem especially well paced by the apparent experience of other people.
The experiment was individually paced; immediately after participants had made a decision, the next printed string was presented on the screen.
Rather than deficits they find more rapid responses, which may lead to errors in self paced rather than externally paced attentional tasks.
The mean follow-up of the 14 patients paced was 12 years.