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Related Concept Videos

Uncertainty in Measurement: Reading Instruments02:46

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Counting is the type of measurement that is free from uncertainty, provided the number of objects being counted does not change during the process. Such measurements result in exact numbers. By counting the eggs in a carton, for instance, one can determine exactly how many eggs are there in the carton. Similarly, the numbers of defined quantities are also exact. For example, 1 foot is exactly 12 inches, 1 inch is exactly 2.54 centimeters, and 1 gram is exactly 0.001 kilograms. Quantities...
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A complete procedure for testing a claim about a population proportion is provided here.
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Once data is collected from both the experimental and the control groups, a statistical analysis is conducted to find out if there are meaningful differences between the two groups. A statistical analysis determines how likely any difference found is due to chance (and thus not meaningful). In psychology, group differences are considered meaningful, or significant, if the odds that these differences occurred by chance alone are 5 percent or less. Stated another way, if we repeated this...
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Related Experiment Video

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Counting and Determining the Viability of Cultured Cells
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If it's not counted it didn't happen!

David H Wegman1, Christer Hogstedt2

  • 1Department of Work Environment, University of Massachusetts Lowell, 1 University Avenue, Lowell, Massachusetts, USA.

Occupational and Environmental Medicine
|May 13, 2014
PubMed
Summary

No abstract available in PubMed .

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