0 present participle of redirect
1 to change the direction of something, especially to send a letter to a new address:
Often, the air flow rate is enhanced by catching and redirecting the prevailing wind.
Without redirecting the focus of economic evaluation research, choosing in health care bears the risk to remain penny-wise but pound-foolish.
The authors suggested that redirecting attention may tax the information processing demands of infants.
Without redirecting the focus of this research, choosing in health-care bears the risk to remain penny-wise but poundfoolish.
However, maintaining was more likely than chance to follow redirecting.
It will also certainly involve redirecting the single-minded pursuit of abstraction promoted by the academy.
For example, directives are coded within their social context, so directives following a child's attentional focus are distinguished from directives redirecting the child's attention.
However, redirecting attention was followed by maintaining attention.