
In signal processing and related disciplines, aliasing is an effect that causes different signals to become indistinguishable (or aliases of one another) when sampled. It also refers to the distortion or artifact that results when the signal reconstructed from samples is different from the original continuous signal. Aliasing can occur in signals ...
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aliasing
[computing] In computing, aliasing describes a situation in which a data location in memory can be accessed through different symbolic names in the program. Thus, modifying the data through one name implicitly modifies the values associated with all aliased names, which may not be expected by the programmer. As a result, aliasing makes it p...
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aliasing_(computing)

introduction of errors into the frequency spectrum of a sampled signal when components with frequencies too great to be analysed with the sampling interval being used contribute to the amplitude of lower frequency components
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the distortion caused by sampling a signal at an inappropriate rate and which results in the overlapping of the sidebands around the harmonics of the sampling frequency in the spectrum of the sample signal
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a picture impairment arising because the number of display elements is insufficient to correctly represent the desired image
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Visibly jagged steps along angled lines or object edges, due to sharp tonal contrasts between pixels.
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A sampler mis-recognizing a signal sent to it that is at a frequency higher than the Nyquist Frequency. Upon playback, the system will provide a signal at an incorrect frequency (called an alias frequency). Aliasing is a kind of distortion.
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(Digital cameras and photo printers) Pixel-shaped curves on the diagonal edges of objects. This can sometimes occur since all graphics consist of individual pixels. Anti-aliasing reduces this unwelcome effect by recalculating the contrast values of the neighbouring pixels and matching them up with each other.
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Unwanted frequencies produced when harmonic components in the audio signal being sampled by a digital recording device or generated within a digital sound source are above the Nyquist frequency. Aliasing is also sometimes referred to as fold-over. See Nyquist Frequency
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<microscopy> A pattern of image sampling error in digital systems. Aliasing forces spatial frequency components higher than a critical value (the Nyquist frequency) to be displayed at progressively lower frequencies. Aliasing introduces an undesirable moire pattern when the spatial frequency of the signal exceeds the sampling rate in a digiti...
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Undesired frequencies that are produced when harmonic components within the audio signal being sampled by a digital recording device or generated within a digital sound source lie above the Nyquist frequency. Aliasing differs from some other types of noise in that its pitch changes radically when the pitch of the intended sound changes. See Nyquist...
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An undesirable distortion component that can arise in any digitally encoded information (sound or picture).
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http://www.filmland.com/glossary/Dictionary.html#A

In audio engineering, aliasing is a form of distortion which can occur during the conversion of analog signals into digital. If the input signal is more than one half the sampling rate, only portions of the signal will be present when the system samples the waveform. A false image of the waveform based on the components that were actually sampled, ...
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When a line or any shape (curve, circle or font text character) is painted, and its edges are not perfectly horizontal or vertical, some pixels are only partially covered. The resulting jagged-edged lines are said to be aliased. Aliasing gives lines a 'stair-step' or 'jaggy' appearance. The greater the number of dots or pixels on your display, the ...
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http://www.rodsmith.org.uk/photographic%20glossary/rods%20photographic%20gl

When sampling an analogue signal, the sampling frequency must be at least twice that of the highest frequency component of the analogue signal (Niquist Frequency). If not, the sampling process is inaccurate because there are insufficient points to describe each cycle of the waveform. This results in the addition of enharmonic frequencies to the aud...
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http://www.songstuff.com/glossary/A

a type of distortion that occurs when digitally recording high frequencies with a low sample rate. A visual analogy can be found in video, when a car's wheels appear to slowly spin backwards while the car is quickly moving forward. Similarly when you try to record a frequency greater than one half of the sampling rate (Nyquist Frequency), instead o...
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http://www.traditionalmusic.co.uk/music%20tech%20glossary/Music%20Tech%20Gl

A distortion (artifact) in the reproduction of digital audio or video that results when the signal frequency is more than twice the sampling frequency. The resolution is insufficient to distinguish between alternate reconstructions of the waveform, thus admitting additional noise that was not present in the original signal.
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http://www.videohelp.com/glossary?A

An occurrence of interference where an analogue signal has been digitised. This can occur in images from a CCD chip camera where it is looking at a lots of vertical lies spaced closely together (high frequency), it is also known as Moiré patterning.
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The erroneous interpretation of high-frequency signals as lower-frequency signals. Such misinterpretations are an expected result of making discrete measurements with sampling devices such as analog-to-digital (A/D) converters.In motion sequences temporal aliasing is the effect that occurs when the frame rate is not high enough for the sampling rat...
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20687

In a sampled data system, the analog input must be sampled at a rate of at least twice the bandwidth of the signal in order to avoid loss of data (Nyquist Theorem). Adhering to the Nyquist Theorem prevents in-band 'alias' signals, which are beat frequencies between the analog signal and the sampling clock that inherently occur.
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This is an effect caused by sampling an image at to low a rate. It causes rapid change (high texture) areas of an image to appear as a slow change in the sample image. Once this has happened, it is extremely difficult to reproduce the original image from the sample.
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https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/22122
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