| sample |
A digital recording of a sound. Most electronic keyboards and digital pianos store numerous samples of different instruments and sounds on memory chips inside the keyboard and play them back when you depress a key. The process of obtaining these samples is called sampling.
Ãâó: emusician.com/mag/emusic_glossary_terms/
|
|---|---|
| sampling |
The taking of readings from a single data source. In basic CCD imaging theory, for delivered optical system information not to be lost, the resolution of imaging CCD pixels must be at least twice as precise as the delivered resolution of the optical system (eg, for appropriate sampling, a telescope delivering a PSF with an FWHM of 2 arcseconds calls for a CCD with pixels having a one-arcsecond FOV.) Less than this level of precision is termed undersampling. ...
Ãâó: www.ghg.net/akelly/glossary.htm
|
| sample |
Material collected from a source other than an animal or man for laboratory analysis (such as water sample or soil sample).
Ãâó: www.vnh.org/FM8284/Glossary/Glossary-Sec2.html
|
| sample |
A subset of the population. Elements are selected intentionally as a representation of the population being studied.
Ãâó: www.jrsa.org/jjec/resources/definitions.html
|
| sampling |
Consists of digitally recording acoustic, synthesized, or previously recorded sounds for the purpose of electronically manipulating them (eg, changing pitch, changing timbre, looping them, etc.); in acid jazz, entire musical phrases from old albums are often sampled then resynthesized as the basis for new recordings.
Ãâó: www.jazzinamerica.org/l_glossary.asp
|