Accuracy and precision

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Accuracy and precision are terms applied to individual measurements or methods of measurement. Accuracy refers to how closely a measurement agrees with the true value it is trying to measure, whereas precision refers to how close repeated measurements are (or would be) to each other. Precision may refer to the degree to which a measurement is rounded before being reported, but can also be an inherent characteristic of the method of measurement being used.

A system of measurement is called valid if it is both accurate and precise.

An example[edit]

In the context of weighing an apple, for example, a reported weight of 503.276 grams would be more precise than a reported weight of 500 grams, however neither measurement would be accurate if the apple actually weighs 452 grams. In this case, a reported weight of 460 grams would be more accurate than the 500-gram reported weight.

The scale itself in the preceding example (the method of measurement) would be considered accurate if repeated measurements of the weight of the apple were correct on the average (i.e., if their arithmetic mean matches the actual weight of the apple); the scale would be considered precise if repeated measurements agree with each other (i.e., if the standard deviation of the weights is small).

Systematic error and bias[edit]

If a method of measurement results in values that are consistently too large or too small, the method may be called biased. In this case, the method has some source of so-called systematic error. The bias of the method is the difference between its average (or mean) measurement and the true value of what was being measured; in the 452-gram apple example above, if the scale reports an average value of 500 grams when the apple is repeatedly weighed, the the bias of the scale would be 48 grams. A measurement method that gives a bias of zero is called unbiased.

Random error[edit]

A method of measurement would have the highest possible degree of precision if repeated measurements always result in the same value. Most methods of measurement in the real world, however, have some source of random error, which makes repeated measurements disagree with one another even if the method is unbiased. To overcome random error, taking repeated measurements and averaging them can greatly improve the precision of the final measurement, but this will not affect its accuracy.

Precision fallacy[edit]

Reporting measurements to an unrealistic degree of precision is a fallacy.