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Error |
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error, in law: see appeal appeal, in law, hearing by a superior court to consider correcting or reversing the judgment of an inferior court, because of errors allegedly committed by the inferior court. ..... Click the link for more information. . errorIn applied mathematics, the difference between a value and an estimate of that value. In statistics, a common example is the difference between the mean age of a given group of people (see mean, median, and mode) and that of a sample drawn from the group. In numerical analysis, an example of round-off error is the difference between the true value of pi and commonly substituted expressions like ²²⁄₇ and shorter versions like 3.14159. Truncation error results from using only the first few terms of an infinite series. Relative error is the ratio of the size of an error to the size of the quantity measured, and percentage error is relative error expressed as a percent. Error Breeches Bible, the the Geneva Bible, so dubbed because it stated that Adam and Eve made themselves breeches. [Br. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 101] alluded to in a poem by Keats, mistaken for Balboa, as discoverer of Pacific Ocean. [Br. Poetry: “On First Looking into Chapman’s Homer”] misprinted a commandment as “Thou shalt commit adultery.” [Br. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 102] Shakespearean setting in a land with no seacoast. [Br. Drama: Shakespeare The Winter’s Tale, III,iii]
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| The present method offers advantages in the reduction of systematic errors as discussed above. Because the ICC is more sensitive to random error than to systematic error, (20) the F ratio from the repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to assess the significance of differences between repeated scoring of the videotaped performances. The National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements (NCRP 1997) concluded that accounting for random and systematic errors in the LSS results in reduction in the cancer mortality risk coefficient by a factor of 0. |
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