| SAFTEE-GI | systematic assessment for treatment emergent events-general inquiry |
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| SAT | saliva alcohol test; satellite; serum antitrypsin; single-agent chemotherapy; slide agglutination te... |
| ALE | active life expectancy; allowable limits of error; amputated lower extremity |
| 'Greek letter alpha' | angular acceleration; first [carbon atom next to the carbon atom bearing the active group in organic... |
| beta [Greek letter beta] | an anomer of a carbohydrate; buffer capacity; carbon separated from a carboxyl by one other carbon i... |
| error, alpha | The statistical error (said to be of the first kind or type I) made in testing an hypothesis when it is concluded that a treatment or intervention is effective when it really is not. Sometimes referred to as a false positive. (12 Dec 1998) |
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| error, beta | The statistical error (said to be of the second kind or type II) made in testing an hypothesis when it is concluded that a treatment or intervention is not effective when it really is. Sometimes referred to as a false negative. (12 Dec 1998) |
| error of the first kind | See: Error, alpha. (12 Dec 1998) |
| error of the second kind | See: Error, beta. (12 Dec 1998) |
| error-prone repair | <molecular biology> A type of DNA repair which occurs when both nucleotides in a base pair are missing, such that it is not possible to maintain accuracy. In general, the repair proteins replace the missing nucleotides randomly. The idea is that bad DNA is better than no DNA at all. (06 Mar 1998) |
| type i error | The statistical error (said to be of the first kind or alpha error) made in testing an hypothesis when it is concluded that a treatment or intervention is effective when it really is not. Sometimes referred to as a false positive. (12 Dec 1998) |
| type II error | The statistical error (said to be of the second kind or beta error) made in testing an hypothesis when it is concluded that a treatment or intervention is not effective when it really is. Sometimes referred to as a false negative. (12 Dec 1998) |
| experimental error | The total error of measurement ascribed to the conduct of an empirical observation. It is commonly expressed as the standard deviation of replicated experiments. There may be many components, including those in the sampling procedure, the measurements, injudicious choice of a model, observer bias, etc. (05 Mar 2000) |
| systematic error |
The residual error after random error has been subtracted from total error. SEE: bias; proportional error .
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| systematic error |
A consistent error of the same size and sign produced in a measurement process due to the same recurring cause.
Ãâó: www.atlab.com/LIMS/glossaryp-t.html
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| systematic error |
Systematic errors are errors that produce a result that differs from the true value by a fixed amount. These errors result from biases introduced by instrumental method, or human factors. An example of an instrumental bias is an incorrectly calibrated pH meter that shows pH values 0.5 units lower than the true value. An example of a method error would be partial loss of a volatile analyte during the ashing step in graphite furnace atomic absorption (AA) spectroscopy. ...
Ãâó: www-analytik.chemie.uni-regensburg.de/Wolfbeis/tw/...
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| systematic error |
Reproducible measuring deviation, which can be compensated for by eg computation.
Ãâó: www.renco.com/106012.htm
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