The act of explaining an observation involves interpreting and providing context for what has been observed, often through analysis and reasoning. This process seeks to clarify the significance of the observation, linking it to broader concepts or theories. It may involve drawing on prior knowledge, making inferences, and offering potential explanations or hypotheses to enhance understanding. Ultimately, this act transforms raw data into meaningful insights.
As a verb, "explaining behavior" is the act of using words to explain a behavior. As an adjective, "explaining behavior" is the observable behavior in which a person tends to explain her/himself.
An observation is the act of noting a recording something such as a phenomenon with instruments.
No, observation does not necessarily mean results. Observation refers to the act of watching or monitoring something, while results are the outcomes or conclusions drawn from data collected through observation or experimentation. Observations can lead to results, but they are not synonymous.
Non-participatory observations are 1) non-transparent to whomever is being "observed", 2) inequitable regarding the presence of the observed in the observation act 3) exclusive, regarding direct participation in all aspects of observation including the outcomes of observation.
quantitative ^-^ i actually got it right!
As a verb, "explaining behavior" is the act of using words to explain a behavior. As an adjective, "explaining behavior" is the observable behavior in which a person tends to explain her/himself.
No. One observation will normally get you onevalue, not a set of values. Also, to be precise, the observation is the act of observing; the value is the result of the observation, not the observation itself.
The spelling is presentation (the act of presenting, explaining, or awarding).
the act of expounding, setting forth, or explaining: the exposition of a point of view.
An observation is the act of noting a recording something such as a phenomenon with instruments.
That act is called observation. It involves closely watching and noting specific details about events or processes to gain a better understanding or gather information.
observation is observation! :)inference is inference! :)Assuming you meant "Differentiate observation from inference ?" !....Observation is the act of being able to physically see an object - inference is implying something is real without physical proof of its existence.Incidentally - why was this put into the category 'animal life' !
patrick henry
Patrick Henry
No, observation does not necessarily mean results. Observation refers to the act of watching or monitoring something, while results are the outcomes or conclusions drawn from data collected through observation or experimentation. Observations can lead to results, but they are not synonymous.
The words, observation and survey, each have several different meanings, but they also have a meaning that is similar. One definition of observation and survey is the act of observing, looking or seeing. Another definition for observation is the act of noticing something. Another definition for survey is the act of making an inspection.
Measuring is the act of recording an observation of a specific property of an object or system.