Precision and accuracy do not mean the same thing in science.
Precision refers to how well experimental data and values agree with each other in multiple tests.
Accuracy refers to the correctness of a single measurement. It is determined by comparing the measurement against the true or accepted value.
Accuracy is how close you are to your expected value and precision is how close together your experimental values are.
Both accuracy and precision are important to scientific measurement. I'll try to explain the difference with a couple of illustrations. I should start by saying, sometimes the words are used interchangeably but they shouldn't be. I consider precision to mean resolution. That is how fine/small a reading you can get.Assume an electronic thermometer (digital display) can display answers to the nearest one hundredth of a degree. But, the thermometer isn't able to measure with that accurately. Maybe it's only accurate to the nearest whole degree. In this case the precision is greater than is supported by the accuracy of the device.Now take the opposite case where the thermometer is able to measure temperature accurately to one hundredth of a degree but the instrument can only display whole degrees. In this case the precision does not support the accuracy.Ideally the accuracy and precision of an instrument are the same but often that's not the case.
In a scientific measurement, accuracy refers to the closeness of your measurement to the 'true value'. The true value is the result to which a large number of independent experiments, carefully conducted, tends.
What does Stirring mean in science The same thing it means in cooking...stick in a stirrer and move the product around.
If you are trying to ask "what does precision in science mean" then I can begin to answer your question. Precision in measurement is a way of deciding how accurate a measurement is. If I were to measure my height with a ruler stick and a pencil against a wall I would expect the measurement to be accurate to a few millimetres. This is usually expressed in scientific terms as "plus or minus" so many millimetres. It is considered unscientific and unfair to describe measurements you may make in scientific work to a greater precision than you can actually make. I am about 5.9 metres (+- 1 cm) but it would be inaccurate and unscientific to say that I was 5.9354 metres tall. JCF
Accuracy and precision are synonyms. They both mean without error, they are exactly right, No more and no less.
Poor precision. Precision refers to the consistency of repeated measurements, while accuracy refers to how close a measurement is to the true value. If a speedometer consistently shows a speed that is off by a fixed amount from the actual speed (e.g., always reads 5 mph higher), it has poor accuracy. If it fluctuates widely even for the same speed, it has poor precision.
Accuracy is how close you are to your expected value and precision is how close together your experimental values are.
Accuracy in science is how close something to an accepted answer. Accuracy and precision are often confused. Precision is how exact an answer is, but it does not necessarily mean an answer is correct if something is exactly 1 meter long, someone who says that object is 0.9 meters long would be more accurate than someone who says it is 0.85, because .9 is closer to 1 than .85, however, .85 is a more precise answer because it is more exact, even though it is less accurate
Words that mean "exact" include "precise" and "accurate." The corresponding nouns are precision and accuracy.
So accuracy is how close the mean is to the true value. Precision is how close all your values are to each other. If you have repeatable results you will see this straight away. Spiking samples with known amounts is a great way to find out if you have as much as you think you have i.e. checking the accuracy
Precision means about the same thing as accuracy. It defines the possible or actual deviation from the exact answer. For example, the precision of a numerical value depends on how many significant digits are used, and the possible deviation in measurement from the smallest value given.
Precision is what level of detail you're talking about. Accuracy is how close you are to what you're talking about. I am 2m tall vs I am 2.01m tall. The second is more precise. If it's closer to my actual height, then it's also more accurate.
-- None of those words relates to "precise". -- "Accuracy" relates to "reliable". -- "Precision" and "accuracy" are two different things. -- "Precise" does not mean "reliable".
In term of Science : Accuracy is how close a numerical measure is to its actual value. In term of mathematics : the number of significant figures given in a number
Both accuracy and precision are important to scientific measurement. I'll try to explain the difference with a couple of illustrations. I should start by saying, sometimes the words are used interchangeably but they shouldn't be. I consider precision to mean resolution. That is how fine/small a reading you can get.Assume an electronic thermometer (digital display) can display answers to the nearest one hundredth of a degree. But, the thermometer isn't able to measure with that accurately. Maybe it's only accurate to the nearest whole degree. In this case the precision is greater than is supported by the accuracy of the device.Now take the opposite case where the thermometer is able to measure temperature accurately to one hundredth of a degree but the instrument can only display whole degrees. In this case the precision does not support the accuracy.Ideally the accuracy and precision of an instrument are the same but often that's not the case.
science in sports is determining the speed of the ball with your power. sports are not about hitting as hard as you can, its also about hitting it with perfect combination of accuracy and strength.