channel-to-channel crosstalk
1Crosstalk (electronics) — For other uses, see Crosstalk (disambiguation). Not to be confused with Spill (audio). In electronics, crosstalk (XT) is any phenomenon by which a signal transmitted on one circuit or channel of a transmission system creates an undesired effect… …
2Crosstalk (biology) — Biological crosstalk refers to instances in which one or more components of a signal transduction pathway affect a different pathway. This can be achieved through a number of ways with the most common form being crosstalk between proteins of… …
3Crosstalk measurement — is made on audio systems to determine the amount of signal leaking across from one channel to another. Interchannel crosstalk applies between the two channels of a stereo system, and is usually not very important on modern systems, though it was… …
4crosstalk — In communications, any interference from a physically adjacent channel that corrupts the signal and causes transmission errors. See also far end crosstalk; near end crosstalk …
5Crosstalk — F/A/V In stereo, this is the breakthrough between channels measured as separation (in decibels) between the wanted sounds of the desired channel and the unwanted sounds from the second channel. (Sound) A&V • Undesired transmission of signals from …
6crosstalk — F/A/V any phenomenon by which a signal transmitted on one circuit or channel of a transmission system creates an undesired effect in another circuit or channel …
7Crosstalk — The interference of one channel of a data communications network by data from another …
8Co-channel interference — or CCI is crosstalk from two different radio transmitters using the same frequency. There can be several causes of co channel radio interference; four examples are listed here. Cellular Mobile Networks: In cellular mobile communication (GSM LTE… …
9Signal-to-crosstalk ratio — The signal to crosstalk ratio at a specified point in a circuit is the ratio of the power of the wanted signal to the power of the unwanted signal from another channel. Note 1: The signals are adjusted in each channel so that they are of equal… …
10Adjacent-channel interference — or ACI is interference caused by extraneous power from a signal in an adjacent channel. Note 1: Adjacent channel interference may be caused by inadequate filtering, such as incomplete filtering of unwanted modulation products in frequency… …