Citations:recording

English citations of recording

Continuous data edit

  • 1972, R. A. Sommerfeld, F. Wolfe (Jr.), A centrifugal tensile tester for snow[1]:
    A recording of the tachometer output provides an accurate and permanent record of the acceleration of the spin rate.
  • 1982, C. D. Binnie, A. J. Rowan, T. H. Gutter, A Manual of Electroencephalographic Technology[2], page 1:
    The electroencephalogram (EEG) is a recording of the electrical activity of the brain.
  • 2010, Patrick Smallwood, Davin K. Quinn, Theodore A. Stern, “Patients with Disordered Sleep”, in Theodore A. Stern, editor, Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of General Hospital Psychiatry[3], page 289:
    Electrocardiogram (ECG): A recording of heart rhythm. • Electromyogram (EMG): A recording of the activity of the left and right tibialis anterior muscles and the submental (chin) muscles.
  • 2012, John C. Mallinson, The Foundations of Magnetic Recording[4], 2nd edition, page 198:
    a recording of the 7.7 MHz ac bias waveform can be detected easily on a spectrum analyzer at tape speeds as low as 30 ips
  • 2012, Gerald Reed, Yeast technology[5], page 332:
    Figure 7-12 shows such a recording of six doughs containing 0%, 1%, 2%, 3%, 5%, and 10% yeast, respectively. Other instruments that permit automatic recording of gas evolution have been available for some time

Static image edit

  • 1997, Yasuki Nakayama, Yoshimichi Tanida, Atlas of Visualization[6], volume 3, page 69:
    In the auto correlation mode, a recording of two or more instantaneous image patterns created by the seeds is recorded in the same frame.
  • 2003, Chung J. Kuo, Meng Hua Tsai, Three-Dimensional Holographic Imaging[7], page 1:
    A holograph is a recording of the interference patterns formed between two beams of coherent light coming from a laser on a light-sensitive media such as a photographic film.

Narrative edit

  • 2014, George Demetrion, In Quest of a Vital Protestant Center[8], page 98:
    It is Geschichte—focusing on the divine intrusion into historical events—rather than Historie—a recording of events as they appear to an objective observer.