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The phrase "account for errors in" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it when discussing the need to consider or explain mistakes or inaccuracies in a particular context, such as data analysis or reporting.
Example: "In our final report, we must account for errors in the data collection process to ensure accuracy."
Alternatives: "consider mistakes in" or "address inaccuracies in".
Exact(20)
"Effectively, every speed limit is actually five miles higher to account for errors in the reading equipment and the speedometers," he said.
Alternative methods to investigate and account for errors in this research are proposed.
Fits used weighted orthogonal distance regression [26] to account for errors in both variables, with weights set to the reciprocals of the variance of voxel values in the myocardium VOIs.
This condition was not intended to measure perceived self-motion per se, but rather to account for errors in the physical tracking measurement procedure and calculations.
In this sense the "best takes all" rule seems more appropriate, although it fails to account for errors in judgment, uncertainty, external factors, and other disturbances that may vitally affect how we evaluate and see our co-players.
We therefore investigated other factors that may account for errors in genotype calling.
Similar(40)
A more detailed approach would match auxiliary data values in a probabilistic sense similar to methods employed by [12], enabling the application of distributions to account for error in all measurements.
We recommend culturing 28 32 fe (equalized among brood pools) to account for error in fe estimation.
Bays, P.M. Noise in neural populations accounts for errors in visual working memory.
The proposed scheme is simple, effective, realistic, and accounts for errors in the forecasts.
According to Prof Li Shi, director of Beijing Normal University's institute of income distribution who works on Chip, that's mostly accounted for errors in targeting by the government.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com