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Bias has several different meanings, most relating to an offset or prejudice of some sort.
A bias is a prejudice in a general or specific sense, usually in the sense for having a predilection to one particular point of view or ideology. One is said to be biased if one is influenced by one's biases. A bias could, for example, lead one to accept or non-accept the truth of a claim, not because of the strength of the claim itself, but because it does or does not correspond to one's own preconceived ideas.
For example, having an Americo-centric point of view (that is, the point of view of an American, in particular one from the US) is a bias, as is having a particular point of view of any other country.
A systematic bias is a bias resulting from some system.
In statistics, the word bias means that an estimator for some reason on average over- or under-estimates what is being estimated. It has at least two different senses, one referring to something considered very undesirable, the other referring to something that is occasionally desirable. Example include:
In philosophy of scienceThe philosophy of science is the branch of philosophy which studies the philosophical foundations, presumptions and implications of science both of the natural sciences like physics and biology and the social sciences such as psychology and economics. and design of experimentsThe first statistician to consider a methodology for the design of experiments was Sir Ronald A. He described how to test the hypothesis that a certain lady could distinguish by flavor alone whether the milk or the tea was first placed in the cup. While t, bias comprises psychologicalPsychology is the study of mind, thought, and behaviour. It is largely concerned with humans, although the behaviour and thought of animals is also studied; either as a subject in its own right (see animal cognition), or more controversially, as a way of factors which affect scientificFor the scientific journal named Science see Science (journal). Science is both a process of gaining knowledge, and the organized body of knowledge gained by this process. The scientific process is the systematic acquisition of new knowledge about a syste hypothesis testing. Widely recognised variants include: