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are unobservable
noun
Something that cannot be observed.
Exact(60)
Churchland concludes that the distinction between things that are unobserved but observable, and things that are unobservable, "is only very feebly principled and is wholly inadequate to bear the great weight that van Fraassen puts on it" (Churchland 1985, 40).
The problem with mental states, for writers as much as for psychologists, is that they are unobservable.
But since future products, and their related prices, are unobservable, those calculations are tricky.
States 0 and 1 are unobservable and represent the good and warning system states, respectively.
To many senior executives, these intricate webs of communication are unobservable and ungovernable and, therefore, not amenable to the tools of scientific management.
We then consider the case where both risk aversion and cost of the agent are unobservable to the principal.
Of particular concern are unobservable attacks where compromised measurements are not flagged as erroneous by bad data detection algorithms.
When a levered firm's profits are unobservable, a debt contract imposes the threat of nonrenewal to induce truthful revelation.
We also show that the degree to which these oscillations are unobservable depends on the sampling frequency of the sampler.
If the sample differs in ways that are unobservable to researchers, correcting for differences in observables fails to fully eliminate bias.
In this model both short and long-run factors are unobservable and are hence estimated as latent variables using the Kalman filter.
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