I edited and added definitions for the tags; I now realize that possibly debouncing is not only a JavaScript concept.
In a JavaScript context, debouncing means executing a handler only every so often, as the browser will fire any event as often as it happens. We have no control over that in userland.
From a lower level perspective, I have absolutely no idea however. Possibly, for driver-writers, debouncing means literally not firing an event as often as the hardware is able to.
Should we strive to cover both these situations in the tags?
If yes, then the current description for debouncing:
Debouncing ensures that exactly one signal is sent for an event that may be happening several times.
doesn't apply to it, and should not be used in that context, as there is no way for JavaScript code to control how often an event is fired, only how often we react to it.