Dictionary
To inference
noun
The act or process of inferring by deduction or induction.
synonyms
Exact(60)
To inference gene regulatory networks from time course data has been one of the main challenges in systems biology.
Yogi's life and career, the author boldly writes, leaving nothing to inference, "transcend fashion, pointing to something indelibly good in the American character".
Dennis Lindley, who has died aged 90, was one of the modern founders of the "Bayesian" school of statistics, an approach to inference that has had a dramatic effect on how we analyse data.
The unknowns subject to inference have independent priors.
Bradley continues to criticize traditional logic when he turns from judgment to inference.
As to establishing the reliability of the verbal cognition, they appeal to inference.
Intuition is properly contrasted to inference, i.e., reasoning, whether inductive or deductive.
First, however, a brief note on how the causal model of knowledge is applied to inference.
A different kind of skepticism is broader in scope, not restricted to inference or other candidate sources.
Crime and place serves as a useful example to demonstrate the AIC approach to inference for two reasons.
For one thing, it fails to address the fraught question of reasoning's relation to inference (Harman 1986, Broome 2009).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com