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by felipemnoa 3137 days ago
>>Accuracy or precision

Do they have different meaning to you? They are the same thing unless there is some scientific meaning that makes them different of which I'm not aware. i.e. Theory in Science means a different thing than what it means to a layman person.

4 comments

Precision is how fine a measurement is (i.e. being able to measure temperature to thousandths of degrees versus tenths), whereas accuracy is a measure of how closely your results much the objective truth. So you may have a very precise thermometer that measures to thousandths of degrees but it may not be accurate because it's calibrated such that it always reads exactly two degrees higher than it should. Meanwhile a thermometer that can only measure to a tenth of a degree is more accurate and less precise than the one just mentioned if the shown figures reflect the true temperature.

In common usage, these words mean the same thing, but scientists often give words specific meanings in order to make their research and ideas less ambiguous.

Definitions are even more important in non-scientific fields such as philosophy or math where meaningful reasoning of abstract structures and ideas would be next to impossible without giving them concrete definitions and stating your assumptions.

Remember that definitions are arbitrary, so to understand an author's argument or idea, you must seek out the author's definitions.

Hopefully that clarifies some of the discussion going on in the comments here.

I get it, these are specific definitions within a given field. I looked at the definition of both precision [1] and accurate [2] and each would use the other as a synonym, which made it a bit confusing as to what he was talking about.

[1] pre·ci·sion: noun the quality, condition, or fact of being exact and accurate.

[2]ac·cu·rate (of information, measurements, statistics, etc.) correct in all details; exact. "accurate information about the illness is essential" synonyms: correct, precise, exact, right, error-free, perfect; More

Standard English dictionaries often don't have the precise definitions used in specific fields, which only leads to more confusion for laymen, but any good introductory Chemistry lab textbook should be able to get you up to speed on experimental science definitions.
After your watch battery dies, when you change the battery in your watch, it continues to have a 1 second precision.

But it's inaccurate by many hours because you haven't set it yet.

I admit I'm only skimming the discussion so I may be missing the point of your question, but a common analogy to the difference:

If you're target shooting, and all of your shots go through the same hole: that's precision.

If that hole is several inches away from the bullseye, it's precise but not accurate.