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bias |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.03 sec. |
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A predisposition or a preconceived opinion that prevents a person from impartially evaluating facts that have been presented for determination; a prejudice. A judge who demonstrates bias in a hearing over which he or she presides has a mental attitude toward a party to the litigation that hinders the judge from supervising fairly the course of the trial, thereby depriving the party of the right to a fair trial. A judge may Recuse himself or herself to avoid the appearance of bias. If, during the Voir Dire, a prospective juror indicates bias toward either party in a lawsuit, the juror can be successfully challenged for cause and denied a seat on the jury. bias n. the predisposition of a judge, arbitrator, prospective juror, or anyone making a judicial decision, against or in favor of one of the parties or a class of persons. This can be shown by remarks, decisions contrary to fact, reason or law, or other unfair conduct. Bias can be toward an ethnic group, homosexuals, women or men, defendants or plaintiffs, large corporations, or local parties. Getting a "hometown" decision is a form of bias which is the bane of the out-of-town lawyer. There is also the subtle bias of some male judges in favor of pretty women. Obvious bias is a ground for reversal on appeal, but it is hard to prove, since judges are usually careful to display apparent fairness in their comments. The possibility of juror bias is explored in questioning at the beginning of trial in a questioning process called "voir dire." (See: voir dire, hometowned) bias noun bigotry, disinclination, disposition, foregone conclusion, inclinatio, inclination, jaundice, partiality, partisanism, partisanship, preapprehension, preconceived idea, preconception, predetermination, predilection, predisposition, preference, prejudgment, prejudication, prejudice, prenotion, proclivity, proneness, propensio animi, propensity, susceptibility, trend, undetachment Associated concepts: actual bias, bias of mind See also: bait, choice, discrimination, dispose, disposition, favor, favoritism, inclination, inequality, inequity, influence, injustice, intolerance, lure, nepotism, partiality, penchant, point of view, position, preconception, predetermination, predilection, predisposition, preference, prejudice, proclivity, propensity, slant, stand, tendency BIAS. A particular influential power which sways the judgment; the
inclination or propensity of the mind towards a particular object.
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This could have led to uncertainties in the exposure assessment, biasing the effect estimates toward null. For example, despite the fact that Wal-Mart employees are far more likely to be retired, secondary workers or teenage members of a family, and to work part time, the study assumed they had the same demographic composition as workers at other employers, thus biasing wage and other comparisons. Because the other two arms of this trial are continuing, the DSMB released the least amount of information necessary, to avoid any risk of biasing study results. |
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