释义 |
con·vo·lu·tion I. \ˌkänvəˈlüshən\ noun (-s) Etymology: Latin convolutus + English -ion 1. a. : a tortuous or sinuous winding, fold or design (as of something rolled or folded upon itself) : coil, whorl, fold, sinuosity < the convolutions of the intestines > b. : one of the irregular ridges upon the surface of the brain, especially of the cerebrum, of some animals : gyrus c. : twisting, winding : a complication or intricacy of form, design, or structure < as a lover, as a writer, as a soldier, as an aesthete, and as a public official his life was of an almost inconceivable convolution — Times Literary Supplement > 2. : the act or action of convoluting or of following a convoluted course < o'er the sea in convolutions swift, the feathered eddy floats — James Thomson †1748 > II. noun : a function h(y) that for two given functions f and g is given by h(y) = ∫abf(y -x) g(x) dx where in various applications (as in finding the probability density function of the sum of two independent and continuous random variables) the lower limit of integration is taken as - ∞ or 0 and the upper limit is taken as + ∞ or the variable y — called also convolution integral |