Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1949, back-formation from transducer. Related: Transduced; transducing.
Wiktionary
vb. 1 (context transitive English) To convert energy from one form to another 2 (context transitive biology English) To transfer genetic material from one bacterial cell to another
WordNet
v. cause transduction (of energy forms)
Usage examples of "transduce".
The effect, transduced and filtered by buried chips, sent electromagnetic ringings into the fine, thin air.
There was rather only a set of odors, secreted from his signal glands, picked up by the translator and transduced into mechanically reproduced Gorean words, each spoken separately, none with emotion.
The flute played by itself, maneuvered by no fingers, but moved by distant energy, transduced through the still immature lobes of Fallom’s brain.
The flute played by itself, maneuvered by no fingers, but moved by distant energy, transduced through the still immature lobes of Fallom's brain.