0 past simple and past participle of mediate --
1 to talk to two separate people or groups involved in a disagreement to try to help them to agree or find a solution to their problems: --
Symptoms might differ, however, because they were culturally mediated expressions of all veterans' underlying, shared distress.
We postulate that such changes are mediated by adaptations of the mix of cognitive, perceptual, and action operations to the demands of the task environment.
In particular, the link between insight and depression was not just mediated by low self-esteem.
Neither relationship was mediated by self-esteem, although there was a weak association of lower self-esteem with greater depression and better insight.
In particular, trading regimes where valued money coexists with "mediated" exchange are also possible, and there may be multiple equilibria.
Reactions are, therefore, non-adiabatic and the essential electronic interaction between redox cofactors must be mediated by the polypeptide matrix.
The eighteenth-century state system was neither parasitic nor a proto bourgeois government in the sense that all social forms were mediated by the market.
Unlike pollution, the effects of development are not in principle measurable by scientific standards; they are always mediated by culture.