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Discover LudwigThe phrase "make a confusion" is correct and can be used in written English
It means to cause a misunderstanding or chaos. Example: The speaker's rapid changes in tone made a confusion among the audience.
Exact(2)
Belgium's ambassador to Australia, Jean-Luc Bodson, said the statement was "dangerous because it's precisely what Isis wants, that we would make a confusion between terrorism and migration and between terrorism and Islam".
It is therefore not possible to make a confusion matrix of the scenario; however, it is possible to have a good estimate of the performance of the classifier in real-world situations.
Similar(56)
For each of the replications of the experiment and the multiple-kernel models with differing numbers of splits per chromosome, we made a confusion matrix from the true classification of regions based on whether or not they contained an actual QTL and the classification based on whether the regions had zero or nonzero importance scores.
Therefore, although there is only one way to make a within-category confusion, there are six ways to make a between-category confusion.
The sum of these lower reverberation echoes sometimes makes a strong confusion with targets.
In Reid's day the theory of memory endorsed by proponents of the Theory of Ideas made a similar confusion, in his opinion, by claiming that memories are mental events in which a past idea is compared to a present idea.
So if it takes some unprecedented Washington gridlock and confusion to make a dent in curtailing the massive prohibitionist regime eh, we should take what we can get.
Getting to know my fellow non-executive and executive board directors contributes to building board cohesion and can make a real difference in avoiding confusion and misunderstandings in the heat of the board room.
What has really happened is that Damasio has made an elementary confusion, and that infects his entire discussion.
Businessmen made a bundle on the confusion, although Italians had expected to be so confused — you could say so exponentially confused, since they'd lost more zeros to the conversion than any other country — that Silvio Berlusconi, Italy's Prime Minister and a billionaire in any currency, mailed a little pocket converter to every family on the country's tax rolls.
As a result, staff and customers get confused, turned off, and the ensuing ball of confusion makes a bad situation worse.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com