0 past simple and past participle of yoke
1 to put a yoke on animals, especially cattle, so that they are fastened together and to a connected vehicle or load:
This score is then yoked to a previously learned text.
These orders were then yoked across groups to ensure that any conceivable effect of order or pairings would be constant across all three conditions.
A scene camera, yoked with the view of the tracked eye, provided an image of the participant's field of view.
Nature and education were thus sometimes paired as antagonists in eighteenthcentury writings, but they were also sometimes yoked together.
Using the ' yoked control ' condition, we could analyse thinking time and motor speed separately.
These narratives, always imbricated by urban geography and local politics, compellingly yoked the crime to collective preoccupations.
For each planning trial a ' yoked control ' condition was employed.
Discourse and practice become firmly yoked to each other, for example, in the use of metaphors and methods of prediction and control.