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corresponds

vb. (en-third-person singular of: correspond)

Usage examples of "corresponds".

This invariance corresponds to the observation that notes separated by multiples of an octave have a similar subjective quality.

Decomposition into sine waves corresponds very closely to how the human ear itself perceives and analyses sound.

For example, a musical note at 200Hz will have harmonics at 400Hz and 600Hz, and the ratio between these is 2:3, which corresponds to the harmonic interval that would exist between two notes with fundamental frequencies of 400Hz and 600Hz.

The Harmonic Heptagon provides a compact visualisation of all the consonant relationships between notes in the diatonic scale, and a trip once around the heptagon corresponds to one syntonic comma.

Every aspect of music corresponds in some way to an aspect of speech perception, although the nature of this correspondence may not always be obvious.

The unnaturalness of artificial speech corresponds to various aspects missing from it.

In musical terminology this corresponds to transposition into a different key.

Chords are accompanied by a bass line where the dominant bass note for each bar corresponds to the root note of the chord.

We can use this concept to model how the brain processes sequences of values such as notes in a melody: the state corresponds to the state of activity in a cortical map, and the events correspond to the information coming into the cortical map about each musical note.

This secondary check corresponds to our subjective experience of conscious judgement.

The eye is aware of darkness as a base capable of receiving any colour not yet seen against it: so the Mind, putting aside all attributes perceptible to sense--all that corresponds to light--comes upon a residuum which it cannot bring under determination: it is thus in the state of the eye which, when directed towards darkness, has become in some way identical with the object of its spurious vision.

French Huguenots, the Old Americans considered here are mostly of British ancestry, and their head form corresponds rather closely to that of the English of the present day.

Old Americans corresponds closely to the average of the English, there is a great deal of variation in both countries.

Each of his glances apprehends a part of reality, though only so far as this part corresponds to his own vision.

Similarly, less energy corresponds to a smaller amplitude and a lower volume of sound.