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systematic error

American  

noun

Statistics.
  1. a persistent error that cannot be attributed to chance.


Etymology

Origin of systematic error

First recorded in 1890–95

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

This finding established that the correction term we measured was not some systematic error from our experiment that we had failed to understand but was indeed the thing we were looking for.

From Scientific American • Jan. 8, 2020

However, there is a larger overall systematic error that scales all measurements by the same amount.

From Nature • May 24, 2016

It would therefore be naive to believe that systematic error is a problem for biomedicine alone.

From Nature • May 9, 2012

Art McDonald of Queen's University in Kingston, Canada and the SNO says that people have to look carefully at the calculation, which may itself have a systematic error.

From Scientific American • Apr. 1, 2011

Directly, there is a systematic error in the co-ordination of employment policy and tax policy.

From Definition & Reality in the General Theory of Political Economy by Colignatus, Thomas

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