An article will reflect bias on the author part if it only reflects a certain opinion by the author. Such an article will entail only positive or negative details about the subject and is not all-inclusive.
"bias" is a noun.
Vivien Foster has written: 'Elicitation format and part-whole bias'
The author's memory of events may have been incorrect,The author may know only part of the truth,The author may have a bias.
Bias is one sided and only shows part of the information or research.
Bias is a noun in that sentence.
When evaluating a source, you first need to know whether it would be considered as a potentially reliable source, meaning, what type of publication is it? If it is an Internet Blog post by an unknown writer, that would have less reliability than a book written by a top expert in the field. Generally speaking, a book published from a top publisher (SAGE, for example) ranks highest. An established professional journal ranks high as well. Then come general readership magazines. Then newspaper articles. Internet sources always rank lowest--unless you use an .edu website with writings from professors or others with credentials.As far as determining author bias, you often cannot decide the bias without first reading the article/work. However, if the Title or Publisher has a known or easily identifiable bias, you might know the "slant" before reading and analyzing a work. For example, if the article was published in a journal paid by the Klu Klux Klan, you can suppose part of the bias. In a magazine titled Sharks, written about sharks, you likely won't find articles about killing them--so the "bias" might be conservation. But if you find an article about sharks in a magazine called, High Powered Sport Reeling, you'd know it likely talks about catching sharks with some hook and reel fishing method-- the bias: that hunting and fishing is glorified as a sport.So always try to determine if the publication itself would be ranked high. Then look for clues about bias. But you may not know author bias without first skimming or reading the article.
the author may not remember events correctly, he/she may only know part of the truth,The author may be trying to advance a personal bias in his or her account of the event.
It means that more than one author wrote a book/article together.
A biased article will give you information on only part of the topic. If you want to understand the topic, you have to assume that there are other opinions and look for them, not just take whatever you find first as the truth.
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The byline is found either at the beginning or the end. It is the part of the article which tells you who the author is, and is so called since it starts with the word "by". For example, if the article was titled "The Future of Pork Rinds by Jason Smegtrousers" the phrase "by jason Smegtrousers" is the byline.
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