Detempering
In regular temperament theory, detempering is the process of taking a tempered pitch system and replacing each of its pitches with one or more JI pitches that the pitch represents (called a transversal). Specifically, a detempered scale or a detemperament has each pitch of a tempered scale (according to a fixed regular temperament) replaced with some set of JI interpretations of the pitch under the temperament map. If exactly one JI interpretation is used for each pitch, then the detempering is called a one-to-one detempering. Ideally the resultant JI pitch system will have a compact lattice.
A higher rank temperament is also called a detempering of a lower-rank temperament if the lower-rank temperament results from tempering out one or more commas in the higher-rank temperament. For example, meantone is a detempering of 12edo.
The term detempering is often also used in a JI-agnostic way to refer to a scale which, when some subset of its step sizes are equated, "tempers" to a given simpler scale structure (with fewer step sizes). In this sense, diasem (LMLSLMLSL) is a detempering of semiquartal (LSLSLSLSL) which "detempers" the S step of semiquartal into two steps sizes M and S. (Here the "temperaments" are JI-agnostic, being generated by abstract scale steps with the constraint that a certain combination of them sums to the period.)
It is a distinct concept from a quasi-equal rational tuning, or neji, the main difference being that a neji replaces an equal temperament's pitches with pitches from a single harmonic series.