Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Related Concept Videos

Uncertainty in Measurement: Accuracy and Precision03:37

Uncertainty in Measurement: Accuracy and Precision

73.6K
Scientists typically make repeated measurements of a quantity to ensure the quality of their findings and to evaluate both the precision and the accuracy of their results. Measurements are said to be precise if they yield very similar results when repeated in the same manner. A measurement is considered accurate if it yields a result that is very close to the true or the accepted value. Precise values agree with each other; accurate values agree with a true value. 
73.6K
Uncertainty: Overview00:59

Uncertainty: Overview

535
In analytical chemistry, we often perform repetitive measurements to detect and minimize inaccuracies caused by both determinate and indeterminate errors. Despite the cares we take, the presence of random errors means that repeated measurements almost never have exactly the same magnitude. The collective difference between these measurements - observed values - and the estimated or expected value is called uncertainty. Uncertainty is conventionally written after the estimated or expected value.
535
Uncertainty: Confidence Intervals00:54

Uncertainty: Confidence Intervals

3.5K
The confidence interval is the range of values around the mean that contains the true mean. It is expressed as a probability percentage. The interpretation of a 95% confidence interval, for instance, is that the statistician is 95% confident that the true mean falls within the interval. The upper and lower limits of this range are known as confidence limits. The confidence limits for the true mean are estimated from the sample's mean, the standard deviation, and the statistical factor...
3.5K
Propagation of Uncertainty from Random Error00:59

Propagation of Uncertainty from Random Error

664
An experiment often consists of more than a single step. In this case, measurements at each step give rise to uncertainty. Because the measurements occur in successive steps, the uncertainty in one step necessarily contributes to that in the subsequent step. As we perform statistical analysis on these types of experiments, we must learn to account for the propagation of uncertainty from one step to the next. The propagation of uncertainty depends on the type of arithmetic operation performed on...
664
Accuracy and Precision01:52

Accuracy and Precision

8.8K
Scientists typically make repeated measurements of a quantity to ensure the quality of their findings and to evaluate both the precision and the accuracy of their results. Measurements are said to be precise if they yield very similar results when repeated in the same manner. A measurement is considered accurate if it yields a result that is very close to the true or the accepted value. Precise values agree with each other; accurate values agree with a true value.  Highly accurate...
8.8K
False Memories01:18

False Memories

83
False memories represent a cognitive distortion in which individuals recall events that did not happen, or remember them in an altered form. This phenomenon highlights the brain's constructive nature in processing and recalling memories, emphasizing that memory is not a perfect representation of past events but rather a dynamic reconstruction influenced by various factors.
One primary source of false memories is misattribution, where individuals incorrectly associate external information...
83

You might also read

Related Articles

Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

Sort by
Same author

Samagya Banskota: Using viruslike particles to deliver therapies safely and effectively.

Scientific American·2026
Same author

Visions of Grandeur: Binoculars and other far-range optics span a gamut of price points. Here's what separates top-tier from entry-level.

Scientific American·2026
Same author

Cow Tools: A cow named Veronika demonstrates sophisticated tool use.

Scientific American·2026
Same author

Contributors: Writers, artists, photographers and researchers share the stories behind the stories.

Scientific American·2025
Same author

Contributors: Writers, artists, photographers and researchers share the stories behind the stories.

Scientific American·2025
Same author

The Landslide in Your Backyard: As climate change brings more intense rain to the mountains, dangerous debris flows are on the rise.

Scientific American·2025
Same journal

50, 100 & 150 Years: Natural fission reactor uncovered; geometry of soap bubbles.

Scientific American·2026
Same journal

Academic Freedom in Decline: When scientists can't research what they want, innovation suffers.

Scientific American·2026
Same journal

Robots Can Now Fold Your Laundry: Home-helper tasks are becoming easier for robotic assistants.

Scientific American·2026
Same journal

Journey to Titan: Inside NASA's Dragonfly mission to Saturn's largest moon.

Scientific American·2026
Same journal

Getting Pesticides Off Fruits and Veggies: Using more than water to wash produce can clean pesticide residues.

Scientific American·2026
Same journal

How Probability Theory Got Its Start: Disagreement over how to divvy up the pot in an interrupted game of chance led early mathematicians to invent modern risk assessment.

Scientific American·2026
See all related articles

Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jun 21, 2025

Experimental Research Examining How People Can Cope with Uncertainty Through Soft Haptic Sensations
09:07

Experimental Research Examining How People Can Cope with Uncertainty Through Soft Haptic Sensations

Published on: September 16, 2015

9.0K

Truth, Lies & Uncertainty

Seth Fletcher, Kate Wong, Jen Schwartz

    Scientific American
    |July 16, 2024
    PubMed
    Summary

    No abstract available in PubMed .

    More Related Videos

    The Modified Temptation Resistance Task: A Paradigm to Elicit Children's Strategic Lie-telling
    06:51

    The Modified Temptation Resistance Task: A Paradigm to Elicit Children's Strategic Lie-telling

    Published on: April 6, 2018

    8.4K
    An Experimental Analysis of Children's Ability to Provide a False Report about a Crime
    07:36

    An Experimental Analysis of Children's Ability to Provide a False Report about a Crime

    Published on: May 3, 2016

    8.5K

    Related Experiment Videos

    Last Updated: Jun 21, 2025

    Experimental Research Examining How People Can Cope with Uncertainty Through Soft Haptic Sensations
    09:07

    Experimental Research Examining How People Can Cope with Uncertainty Through Soft Haptic Sensations

    Published on: September 16, 2015

    9.0K
    The Modified Temptation Resistance Task: A Paradigm to Elicit Children's Strategic Lie-telling
    06:51

    The Modified Temptation Resistance Task: A Paradigm to Elicit Children's Strategic Lie-telling

    Published on: April 6, 2018

    8.4K
    An Experimental Analysis of Children's Ability to Provide a False Report about a Crime
    07:36

    An Experimental Analysis of Children's Ability to Provide a False Report about a Crime

    Published on: May 3, 2016

    8.5K