Idiom
Fine tuning.
Small adjustments to improve something or to get it working are called fine tuning.
Exact(2)
These mitochondrial clusters may constitute subcellular microdomains for fine tune of energy production and delivery, and organisation of antioxidant defense, as discussed by [23].
This study also supports the concept that abundantly expressed microRNAs are well suited for fine tune regulation of genes translated from plentiful transcripts such as collagens and other extracellular matrix constituents.
Similar(58)
Mr. McCall did much of the writing for "This Land," with Mr. Letterman providing ideas, edits and suggestions for fine tuning.
Asked recently for more detail, a Bosch spokesman, Udo Rügheimer, cited a need for "fine tuning" critical components, including brakes and hydraulic units, but declined to comment further.
Step 2: iterative code selection for fine tuning 2-a.
Three further opportunities for fine tuning are available in the last week before arriving at Mars.
"But it's smart recruiting to allow for fine tuning your message.
Drum rotation rate has potential as a control parameter for fine tuning of the breakage behavior.
For fine tuning we introduce the detection margin as a direction sensitive criterion against inhomogeneous interference.
The manually annotated ground truths are used for fine tuning the candidate extraction method and also training the SVM classifiers.
The aluminum rod allowed for fine tuning of the positioning of the sample between the two cores.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com