0 a phenomenon (= something that exists and can be seen, felt, etc.) that exists at the same time as another one but is not related to it -- 副现象,偶发现象
But this will not make the immune system a biological epiphenomenon since it is an evolved adaptation in origin.
The second objection is that, despite the fact that lexical positioning accounts well for the data, it is an epiphenomenon of more abstract structural representations.
To him, nationalism is an independent cultural construct and not just an epiphenomenon in the process of capitalist development.
Though epiphenomenon, inattention is a valuable clinical index of delirium.
Although exports are in this sense an epiphenomenon, they are the most measurable of the two.
That is, the duration of the priming is an epiphenomenon of the genre being considered.
Bates views language as spilling into gesture, which is a by-product or an epiphenomenon.
The intuition of preservation under negation, then, is modelled as a cognitive epiphenomenon of an underlying logic of (revised) presupposition.