Want this question answered?
The word you're probably looking for is "confirmation". Technically, the result of an experiment is always "true", in that it represents what really happened. This may or may not be what you expected to happen. and there may be factors you're unaware of, but still, the result is truly what did happen.
If there is a factor that confuses the result of an experiment, I would call that a design flaw in the experiment. It might also be an uncontrolled variable.
true or false : in order to get the best results from an experiment, change as many variables as possible within the experiment?
Positively charged.
The answer you predict before starting the experiment is your hypothesis.
theory
Discrepant event, involves an experiment in which there is an unexpected result. Can therefore be used to confront learners with evidence that contradicts their wrong perceptions.
The result of a scientific experiment is the conclusion.
The result of an experiment is a conclusion.data..?
Probability determined as part of an experiment is called experimental probability. Probability determined by analysis of all of the possible and expected outcomes is called theoretical probability.
the answer to the experiment's question
The conclusion of the entire experiment. Complete data and all. "Final result."
The word you're probably looking for is "confirmation". Technically, the result of an experiment is always "true", in that it represents what really happened. This may or may not be what you expected to happen. and there may be factors you're unaware of, but still, the result is truly what did happen.
used as an experiment to show that the result of an experiment are a result of conduction being tested.
It is the result of the experiment. It is the value of the observation.
Select an experiment that has a random result rather than one that is deterministic. The result of the experiment is the outcome of the probabilistic experiment.
If there is a factor that confuses the result of an experiment, I would call that a design flaw in the experiment. It might also be an uncontrolled variable.