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channel |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal, Financial, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.06 sec. |
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channel /chan·nel/ (chan´ĕl) that through which anything flows; a cut or groove. gated channel a protein channel that opens and closes in response to signals, such as binding of a ligand (ligand-gated c.) or changes in the electric potential across the cell membrane (voltage-gated c.) . potassium channel a voltage-gated protein channel selective for the passage of potassium ions. protein channel a watery pathway through the interstices of a protein molecule by which ions and small molecules can cross a membrane into or out of a cell by diffusion. sodium channel a voltage-gated protein channel selective for the passage of sodium ions.
channel Etymology: L, canalis, pipe 1 a passageway or groove that conveys fluid, such as the central channels that connect the arterioles with the venules. 2 membrane-bound globular proteins that allow diffusion of specific ions and molecules across a cell membrane. channel, n a definite furrow, groove, or tubelike passage. channel, vascular,
n a blood or lymph vessel through which inflammatory infiltrate and periodontitis proceed from a localized superficial area to involve the deeper structures of the periodontium. channel in biophysical terms these are the 'pores' in semipermeable membranes through which specific physicochemical units, e.g. cations, calcium ions, can pass; the rate of passage of some channels may be much slower than others, hence there is an expansive nomenclature, e.g. slow calcium channel, fast calcium channel.
channel A concept relating to the evidence that information about a particular feature of an image is transmitted and processed in the visual pathway approximately independently of information about other domains. The evidence was obtained from various experiments: matching, threshold elevation, after-effect, etc. Examples: the three channels of colour vision theory; the spatial frequency channels. See waterfall after-effect. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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Soothsayers predict 1998 will be a big year for channelers, numerologists, cultists and doom-mongers. Because the editors and most of the contributors failed to differentiate between queer and gay erotics (despite the title of the collection), they remain blind to these facts: even if it were possible for Capote to "dehomosexualize" himself, Warhol's (or anyone else's) adoring gaze quickly requeers him; and many dehomosexualized homosexuals would still be exemplars of queerness if only as contrary channelers of inspiration, thrill, and motivation, not to mention abjection and refusal. She said in three years Frankel cut costs, focused attention on promising lines such as internetworking products and de-emphasized less-promising products like controllers, which are channelers of data to disks, screens or other peripheral activities. |
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