Reverberation  

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-#A [[violent]] [[oscillation]] or [[vibration]]+'''Reverberation''', in [[psychoacoustics]] and [[acoustics]], is the persistence of [[sound]] after a sound is produced. A reverberation, or '''reverb''', is created when a sound or signal is reflected causing a large number of reflections to build up and then decay as the sound is absorbed by the surfaces of objects in the space – which could include furniture, people, and air. This is most noticeable when the sound source stops but the [[reflection (physics)|reflections]] continue, decreasing in [[amplitude]], until they reach zero amplitude.
-#:The [[discomfort]] caused by the bat's '''reverberation''' surprised Tommy.+ 
-#An echo, or a [[series]] of [[overlap]]ping [[echo]]s+
-#:The '''reverberation''' [[that]] [[follow]]ed Marylin's [[shout]] [[filled]] the [[cavern]].+
-#An evolving [[series]] of [[effect]]s [[result]]ing from a [[particular]] [[event]]; a [[repercussion]]+
-#:'''Reverberations''' from the [[Vietnam]] [[war]] [[affect]] [[our]] [[society]] to [[this]] [[day]].+
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Ars Memoriae: The Theatre (1619) - Robert Fludd  “In the illusory babels of language, an artist might advance specifically to get lost, and to intoxicate himself in dizzying syntaxes, seeking odd intersections of meaning, strange corridors of history, unexpected echoes, unknown humors, or voids of knowledge… but this quest is risky, full of bottomless fictions and endless architectures and counter-architectures… at the end, if there is an end, are perhaps only meaningless reverberations.” --Robert Smithson
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Ars Memoriae: The Theatre (1619) - Robert Fludd
“In the illusory babels of language, an artist might advance specifically to get lost, and to intoxicate himself in dizzying syntaxes, seeking odd intersections of meaning, strange corridors of history, unexpected echoes, unknown humors, or voids of knowledge… but this quest is risky, full of bottomless fictions and endless architectures and counter-architectures… at the end, if there is an end, are perhaps only meaningless reverberations.” --Robert Smithson

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Reverberation, in psychoacoustics and acoustics, is the persistence of sound after a sound is produced. A reverberation, or reverb, is created when a sound or signal is reflected causing a large number of reflections to build up and then decay as the sound is absorbed by the surfaces of objects in the space – which could include furniture, people, and air. This is most noticeable when the sound source stops but the reflections continue, decreasing in amplitude, until they reach zero amplitude.




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