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A systematic error occurring in a chemical measurement that is inherent in the method itself or caused by some artifact in the system, such as a temperature effect.
In science, bias is an undesirable property, whose presence may not be recognized by the experimenter. A maladjusted measuring standard would produce such an error. In intellect tests, cultural bias may be very difficult for the experimenter to recognize.
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bias is not a characteristic of scientific method
Scientists who understand how science works will always be on guard against their own possible bias. And of course, there is always peer review. Scientists who do exhibit bias will eventually be challenged by other scientists.
Scientific method
The scientific system of gathering data with bias and error in measurement are reduced in psychology.
A systematic error occurring in a chemical measurement that is inherent in the method itself or caused by some artifact in the system, such as a temperature effect.
Bias is systematic error. Random error is not.
Sampling error leads to random error. Sampling bias leads to systematic error.
the strategy that will not help reduce selection bias is:
No, its not.
In stat the term bias is referred to a directional error in the estimator.
Alike:They are both an error that distort results in a particular way.Different: Emotional bias is distortion in cognition and decision making and expiremental bias is error that distorts results in a particular way.
I haven't been able to confirm the answer yet but here's what I believe: 'error and bias' in research terms questions the validity of the results you have found. If you are asked to relate error and bias to your research, they are asking you to share possible errors with the results and whether or not there could be any bias in the results collected.
Standard error is random error, represented by a standard deviation. Sampling error is systematic error, represented by a bias in the mean.
It must be either, otherwise it is systematic error or bias.