| bias |
That quality of a measurement device that tends to result in a misrepresentation of what is being measured in a particular direction (Babbie, 2001)
Ãâó: healthlinks.washington.edu/howto/measurement/gloss...
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|---|---|
| bias |
A systematic error which contributes to the difference between a population mean of measurements or test results and an accepted reference value.
Ãâó: thequalityportal.com/glossary/b.htm
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| bias |
A situation that occurs in testing when items systematically measure differently for different ethnic, gender, or age groups. Test developers reduce bias by analyzing item data separately for each group, then identifying and discarding items that appear to be biased. http://www.k2kid.net/assessment/assessment_terms.html
Ãâó: www.uga.edu/studentaffairs/assess/glossary.shtml
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| bias |
Any Direction In The Fabric Which Does Not Exactly Flow In The Direction Of The Weft Yarn (vertical Yarns) Or Warp Yarns (horizontal Yarns) Of A Fabric. A True Bias Makes An Angle Of 45 Degree Across The Length And Width Of A Fabric, Fabric Cut On A Bias Has Maximum Stretch.
Ãâó: www.justsaywhen.com/Vintage-101-Glossary.htm
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| bias |
a definite offset from the true value. Consecutive single point measurements can be biased.
Ãâó: www.process-nmr.com/working_definitions.htm
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