948 B
948 B
(Chapter 6, STAT 1040)
Bias v. Chance Error
Bias
Bias affects all measurements the same way, making them all too large or too small. Bias is detected by comparing to an external standard.
Chance error
Chance errors change from measurement to measurement but average out over time. There is no way to remove all chance errors from a measuring process. An example of chance error would be starting a stopwatch then attempting to stop it at exactly 5 seconds, then repeating. The times will vary, but each measurement will vary in a different way.
- Chance error is how much an individual measurement varies from the exact value. It can be positive or negative.
- The standard deviation of repeated measurements gives us the expected size of a chance error
individual measurement = exact value + chance error
Terminology
Term | Definition |
---|---|
Best Guess | Average/Mean |
Off by how much | standard deviation |