First, technological change has been biased towards higher skilled workers. |
|
This has given rise to the view that the legal code is biased against women and the poor. |
|
Academe is at it again, allowing a one-sided, biased article on the Israeli-Palestinian issue. |
|
Hence, the unbiased variance estimator may be negatively biased due to spatial autocorrelation. |
|
Do you feel like there are journalists who are biased against you and don't necessarily give you a fair shake? |
|
Examined from the learner's point of view, the standard approach is heavily biased against beginning students. |
|
Some of them might even be open to argument along these lines, but the overwhelming vast majority of them will be biased against your views. |
|
Landlords say the Residential Tenancy Act is biased against them and they run websites naming bad tenants and their sins. |
|
Overall the minster will not be accused of being biased towards business after yesterday's performance. |
|
Patients have often complained that relevant health bureaux are biased towards hospitals, as both are part of the same system. |
|
Despite the name, you really don't have to explain why you think the judge is potentially biased against you. |
|
And that's lucky for all of us, and unlucky for people who are biased against us. |
|
For citizens, especially the poor, this gives confidence that the system will not be biased against them. |
|
She was traumatised when her doctoral thesis was failed outright, apparently because one examiner was biased against her. |
|
Questions are already being asked about whether the lead researcher was inherently biased against the drug. |
|
He said the legislation was biased against the poor, who lived close together. |
|
Should such a system be introduced here, she suggests, it should be biased towards the least-skilled. |
|
He argued that the existing law is biased against the householder in favour of the burglar. |
|
I am biased towards mountain biking because I believe that the training effect is better. |
|
I thought on more than one occasion that perhaps he was biased towards satisfying his own goals. |
|
|
I am not biased against the authority as the writer offensively suggests, nor am I politically-motivated. |
|
What makes him really angry is the way he says the system is biased against him because he is a man. |
|
In Canada, although not alone, the CBC provides the most slanted and biased information, and routinely practices dishonest reporting. |
|
Police Officers were unanimously viewed as acting in a biased way towards male victims. |
|
The genetic programming example above yields large equations that become impractical or too biased to the past. |
|
Most studies of professions based on the process model have been biased towards Anglo-American experiences. |
|
The publisher blamed the losses on a lack of advertising, particularly among those Marshalltown merchants who were biased against Latinos. |
|
The decision to transfer such patients to neurosurgical care seems to be biased against older patients. |
|
These are culturally biased statements of opinion, not scientifically supportable propositions. |
|
The charge that its review process is biased against right-wing nominees is manifestly false. |
|
However, Frontier legislator Emily Lau feared opinions from the forum could be biased. |
|
At that point, the plaintiff moved that I declare a mistrial based on a reasonable apprehension that I am biased in favour of the defendant. |
|
Their horizontally biased edges, along with their blackness, tie them together and also relate them to the colored bands above and below. |
|
Like journalists, politicians selectively quote the facts, they only tell one side of the story, and they give unbalanced and biased opinions. |
|
School children will be given an unbalanced and biased view which you can be certain will paint unions in the best possible light. |
|
When biased and muddle-headed people disagree with you chances are their arguments are based on faulty thinking and misinformation. |
|
No-one is suggesting that all science funded by company money is skewed or biased or lacking independence. |
|
Other articles to date seem to be slanted one way and give a biased direction. |
|
In pieces of this nature, people constantly use biased, unfair information about Keane that is half true to have a go at him. |
|
The point here is to challenge the media's effort to turn Judge Jones into something he's not in order to defend a biased and sloppy ruling. |
|
|
I tend to view advice given to me by friends and family as biased or at least unobjective. |
|
Huxley, biased by physical science, took at one time the extreme necessarian view. |
|
Much higher values are obtained from the revised order method, but these are likely to be even more upwardly biased. |
|
The newsweeklies can hardly get their biased pieces onto news-stands nowadays before they're discredited. |
|
If it's subjective, biased, bad reporting people want, they can find that in buckets on the Net. |
|
What I would say, though, is that marijuana smoking is a victimless crime and the drug war has proven to be a very biased war. |
|
Although inane, that post-debate bull session was at least not strongly biased. |
|
Weissberg argues that most polls are systematically biased toward manufacturing a vox populi that clamors for an ever-growing welfare state. |
|
In the past our society imposed very strict codes of behavior, biased especially against women. |
|
Reports that oil has never been higher priced are true in a strict sense, but they are heavily biased and not really accurate. |
|
She blames negative experiences with white people and biased historical accounts of relations between whites and non-whites. |
|
Convenience samples are notoriously biased because the cases are self-selected rather than randomly selected. |
|
His is biased, obnoxious, and arrogant but we knew that about him before the book came out. |
|
If I were on trial and I got even so much as a hint that the judge might be biased against me, I'd certainly raise a stink about it. |
|
There is nothing biased or discriminatory or even vaguely xenophobic about this. |
|
I see your compliance to publishing this man's diary as completely inappropriate, not to say shamefully one-sided and deeply biased. |
|
They abandoned their former biased one-sided view which is of course an encouraging sign. |
|
An egotistic, biased and one-sided approach in Washington cannot yield lasting peace. |
|
This is going to be the most biased, one-sided, totally untrustworthy book review you'll ever read. |
|
It is actually much worse than an opinion poll because, unlike a well designed survey, its result is biased. |
|
|
Tidal floodplain populations in England are strongly biased towards deprived communities. |
|
The judge's incredible stuff-up was appearing to be biased against the defendant. |
|
Department officials have refused to justify their work or substantively defend their biased estimate. |
|
Taken together, our data strongly support the biased gene conversion hypothesis of GC-content evolution. |
|
Her act is still female biased but her appeal crosses the genders and her self-deprecation is acid sharp as ever. |
|
Second, sensory systems may be biased toward particular values of some signal parameters such as size, frequency, or chroma. |
|
The pictures show a country with a truly biased curriculum and a penchant for martyrdom. |
|
They now say that clinical trials are misused, abused, misleading, biased, and fallible. |
|
His petition to the Scottish parliament accuses government bodies meant to regulate the fish farming industry of being biased in its favour. |
|
They include issuing biased research on particular stocks to attract investment banking fees and giving shares in hot IPOs to favored clients. |
|
The superannuation system has been inequitably biased in favour of high income earners. |
|
Hence the report is biased by the opinion of the author, playing down the cons and talking up the pros. |
|
This type of screen is biased toward reversion events that result in a high percentage of flagellate cells. |
|
Strategic behavior of forecasters provides a theoretical explanation for biased consensus forecasts. |
|
Just for the record here, as most news sources operate on a for-profit basis they are biased because of it. |
|
And if shareholders believe a board is biased toward the interests of management, a buyout proposal can quickly founder. |
|
The law and the courts and the political elite are biased in favour of the criminal rather than the victim of crime. |
|
All of them were written down from Franconians and mirror mostly their point of view which is biased. |
|
I'll admit to being biased, being born and bred in South East London, but there are treasures galore south of the river. |
|
It indicates a biased approach and preferential treatment in favour of individuals and groups. |
|
|
More biased to on-road luxury, with no real sporting pretensions and limited off-road capability. |
|
Second, the direction of dispersal could have been biased by prevailing oceanographic configurations. |
|
She is a riveting Anne Boleyn in prison and a very funny 15-year-old Jane Austen as she pens her own gleefully biased English history. |
|
Our consciousness is biased to think that its own intentions and deliberate choices rule our lives. |
|
The tax system is demonstrably biased against genuinely productive investment. |
|
He sets out to disprove the notion purveyed by Republican sympathizers that the media is biased to the left. |
|
With its limited focus upon a day where a number of important issues came to a head, incomplete or biased coverage could quickly be discerned. |
|
So many people vowed to boycott sponsors of the biased docudrama that airing it on primetime TV became financially imprudent. |
|
The question of credibility raises the issue of whether the documentary source is biased. |
|
Nine other studies were not included because they were not randomized, double-blind trials, meaning that their results could be biased. |
|
They deliberately biased their sample by examining stream and river systems downstream from urban or intense agricultural areas. |
|
It is possible that this downwardly biased the genetic correlation estimates. |
|
It was the gallery's inaugural show so I have no qualms about being biased. |
|
Anyone regularly watching the various hospital dramas on television may have a slightly biased view of serious illness. |
|
The first thing in their favour is the fact they're a London band, not that we're biased towards Southern jessies. |
|
Personally, I think the article is shamefully biased as a piece of journalism. |
|
The novel is about an innocent white man on death row, railroaded because officials needed to prove that the death penalty isn't racially biased. |
|
So even if one starts with a random sample, the sample can end up being greatly biased by way of the limited response. |
|
I think that it is irresponsible of your newspaper to print the rantings of a woman who is merely interested in promoting her own biased views. |
|
He said he had not known at first whether or not to sign the petition, as people might think he was biased. |
|
|
Gay political groups have reacted with horror, attacking the lead researcher himself as biased. |
|
Some fanatical moron is wibbling on about something hopelessly biased, and hopelessly wrong. |
|
I am a great believer that if you pay your money you can say what you want within reason and our supporters are both very patient and biased! |
|
No doubt he thought that, if he was biased against supporters of a rival, recusal was appropriate and in the interests of those lawyers. |
|
I can only say that it ranks as the most biased, xenophobic and superficial article I have read on the subject in any newspaper. |
|
This result lines up well with previous studies that also find repeated instances of biased consensus forecasts. |
|
Constitutional law requires that jury pools must be a fair cross-section of the community and not systematically racially biased. |
|
The center-right is looking for voices who are experienced journalists, who aren't liberally biased. |
|
The sources the government prefers are likely to be seriously biased for several reasons. |
|
It was always going to be controversial but to adopt such an extreme, libertarian view is biased and is asking for trouble. |
|
A State's military ideology is also biased to the extent to which it expresses the views of a country's supreme ruling authority. |
|
To refuse to set aside the statutory demand in the circumstances was not biased or malicious. |
|
Complain about their bad grammar or poor choice of headlines or biased editorials. |
|
The opinions of tens of thousands of other scientists don't count, because they're all biased. |
|
The third electrode may be biased at the potential of the anode through a ballast resistor, and be located near the cathode. |
|
Finally, World Climate Report rips into the biased reporting that has bamboozled the world on this issue. |
|
All my children have been engaged in this right now, though they are biased about it being primitive, barbaric and a bit too demanding. |
|
Any words that strike you as important or meaningful, words that you feel are stressed, biased, repeated or isolated. |
|
In my biased view, as long as there is pecan pie, there will be a thriving pecan industry in the United States. |
|
Knowing that an author might be biased doesn't aid in determining the extent and nature of the bias. |
|
|
The expectations of both patients and evaluators may thus have biased the results. |
|
It thus seems unlikely that our results were biased by responses under the patients' control. |
|
We also have no indication that the topology of the phylogenetic trees is biased by the alignments or the tree-building algorithms. |
|
There are certain words and phrases that are offensive, derogatory, demeaning, racist, sexually biased, and, well, just plain nasty. |
|
The man followed him and continued to use sexually biased slurs and threw rocks at his residence. |
|
As it is officially under the State Secretariat, its content is often regarded as biased toward the government. |
|
A referendum is a blunt tool, and in many cases gives only a false sense of democracy, especially when the questions are worded poorly or in a biased manner. |
|
I might be just a little biased, but this album is an absolute corker, chocka full of great songs that brilliantly document Melissa's move from New York to rural Kansas. |
|
It seems more likely, however, that the biased ball is just an alternative solution to try to reduce the amount of space needed for the skittles game. |
|
Its account of events was piecemeal and its analysis was biased. |
|
It is easy to be biased by bilateral symmetry and assume that a centralized nervous system is necessary for any integrative nervous system function. |
|
When you do push it beyond the limit of grip into a sweeping bend or large roundabout the front end drifts wide, revealing that the chassis is biased towards mild understeer. |
|
The increasing confidence of the Irish labour force means that employees are less inclined to tolerate biased, arbitrary or capricious employer decisions. |
|
I won't say that this reporter is biased, but there is this problem of the innumeracy of the press, which has also exhibited itself elsewhere during this episode. |
|
Most of us like ourselves very much, and that suffices to explain self-assessments that are biased in a particular direction. |
|
Such analysis, performed in the same cell populations, was not biased by experimental or interindividual variations which flaw the majority of studies on this subject. |
|
Despite the predominance of suboscines in the Neotropics, our knowledge of bird song and its functions is biased heavily toward studies of oscines. |
|
Mick was adamant that the referee was totally biased against the player. |
|
Unlike Little et al, we are not worried that the artificial use of throat swabs and medication tray biased the recording of symptoms in the diary. |
|
They are also biased towards the depiction of planked ships. |
|
|
Regional comparisons between growth rates in temperate and tropical zones can be biased by the zoogeographical dominance of some families in certain regions. |
|
These estimates can be highly biased and produce a circular argument. |
|
This has led to frequent spats sometimes among themselves but usually involving media personnel, whom they accuse of being biased and untruthful in their reporting. |
|
To begin with, the First Amendment is flagrantly biased in favor of religion. |
|
We have now been subjected to three biased reports over the past three weeks and several self-righteous letters from family and supporters of these boys. |
|
I only object to the fact that your articles seem extremely biased. |
|
However, you have to trade this off against the effects on people who got false negatives if the test were not biased to produce every possible positive. |
|
Your coverage of the revolution was totally biased in favor of the mb, just like your Government. |
|
Read all this and decide if these are only biased rantings of pseudo-secularists, as the mini sardars and their leaders will have us believe, or is there more to it? |
|
It's a conceptual tool for trying to evaluate enormously complex situations in the midst of a gospel that is, so to speak, biased toward blessing peacemakers. |
|
Very young children are not yet as visually biased as adults. |
|
Conservatives, libertarians and Republicans often pride themselves as being more committed to the objective truth than the biased left-wing media. |
|
These samples are biased, stacking the deck in favor of a connection between mental disorder and violence. |
|
Maybe I'm biased, but I thought Paul was a stand-out, because he didn't seem to be pandering. |
|
I could be biased, since Ursula was plying me with Guinness as well as song, but she is a much better chanter than any of the young ladies performing at the MTV gig. |
|
I am bitterly concerned with this one-sided, biased, anti-Israel report. |
|
Most of these so called healthy weight indicators do not take many things into account and are biased towards a Eurocentric view of size and beauty. |
|
If the doctor is biased, he may still classify it as a disorder that can lead to legal repercussions. |
|
In doing so, Gretchen Hamel, a spokesperson for the Ernst campaign, said that the paper was biased. |
|
They are the ones who need to apologize for such biased and shoddy work. |
|
|
Both borders are patrolled by UN peacekeepers, missions that all parties disparage as weak and biased. |
|
As a blogger himself who has relied on many of the bloggers he writes about, Cole is certainly biased toward their influence. |
|
We used a low dose of the drug to prevent catastrophic depolymerization of actin and major morphological changes, which both would have biased our analysis. |
|
So what does the 26-page report say to reassure gun-shy men who fear they might be put through the ringer by biased child custody awards or draconian child support laws? |
|
That kind of unguarded remark also feeds perceptions that the mainstream media is biased against Romney. |
|
But don't take my very biased opinion as the gospel on this subject. |
|
Bennett is unashamedly biased toward those productions which attempt to recode the text for a wider audience. |
|
Considering the evaluativeness of morality, this self-report of moral decision-making may be especially prone to biased self-report. |
|
My thought process was similar to the theory, but when I realized it, I was hindsightly biased. |
|
Dio was less biased, but seems to have used Suetonius and Tacitus as sources. |
|
However, early accounts often gave contradictory or heavily biased versions of events and were subject to dispute. |
|
Biographies of George written during the nineteenth and first part of the twentieth century relied on these biased accounts. |
|
In an interview for the Sunday Herald, Alex Salmond said he believed the BBC had been unconsciously biased against independence. |
|
The Academy has often been alleged to be biased towards European, and in particular Swedish, authors. |
|
His works on Ireland although invaluable for their detail are obviously biased, and have been attacked by Irish writers such as Stephen White. |
|
Selection bias amongst researchers may contribute to biased empirical research for modern estimates of biodiversity. |
|
Brown rats exhibit cognitive bias, where information processing is biased by whether they are in a positive or negative affective state. |
|
Gene flow appears to be biased towards males, but overall populations are matrilineally structured. |
|
He asserts Timaeus' point of view is inaccurate, invalid, and biased in favor of Rome. |
|
Other historians agree Polybius' treatment of Crete is biased in a negative sense. |
|
|
For many literate cultures, such as Ancient Greece and Mesopotamia, their surviving records are often incomplete and biased to some extent. |
|
Other assertions are that maps are inherently biased and that we search for metaphor and rhetoric in maps. |
|
This is however a very biased account as Betanzos's wife, on whose testimony much of his chronicle is based, was previously married to Atahualpa. |
|
Nevertheless, he saw the need for a unified language among the Chinese community not biased in favor of any existing group. |
|
It is generally concluded that the trial was biased strongly against Raleigh, although the assessment of Coke varies. |
|
Often these inventions were based in some form of tradition, but were exaggerated, distorted, or biased toward a particular interpretation. |
|
A person is barred from deciding any case in which he or she may be, or may fairly be suspected to be, biased. |
|
This gives results which are practically relevant, but the method of generating the sample of simulated elections can still be arguably biased. |
|
Taoism views them as inherently biased and artificial, widely using paradoxes to sharpen the point. |
|
The First Amendment is also biased against religion in an unexpected way. |
|
Humans are primally and naturally biased in judgment, which manifests in appraisal reports. |
|
In this circuit when the diode is forward biased, the voltage across the diode remains fairly close to the diode's barrier potential. |
|
The study was biased toward routine custodial activities that had the potential to dislodge and resuspend asbestos fibers. |
|
We do not know if he was a misogynist or masculinist or simply a biased observer. |
|
Silversides and Scott reported that quality measurements based on the albumen height of fresh eggs are biased by the strain and age of the hens. |
|
The nutritional aspects of these foods were also greatly biased by the health halo effect. |
|
Unfortunately Sovietology, widely defined, was infested with biased statements. |
|
The judges of the talent show were biased toward musical acts. |
|
The pDR, like other nephelometers, is biased under high humidity conditions. |
|
This EPI has a long history of faulty and dishonest research, including the use of unscientifically small and nonrandom, biased samples. |
|
|
The scene argues that, within a theatrical perspective, action is interpreted by an often unsoundly biased perspective. |
|
Such questions are usually weighted with subtly biased terms and assume flawed premises, for example, that property rights are violable. |
|
Add the effective FOOTBRAKE and a reasonably biased steering feel and you have a car which is both agile in town and able at speed to communicate good directional feel. |
|
There was no inquiry as to whether a reasonable person would consider Lord Cottenham to be biased, or as to the circumstances which led Lord Cottenham to hear the case. |
|
However, much of his account has not yet been corroborated by archaeology, whilst his narrative must in wide parts be considered as biased and, in some points, unlikely. |
|
Some commentators believe the organization to be an important force for peace and human development, while others have called the organization ineffective, corrupt, or biased. |
|
I was extremely disappointed when I saw the STV documentary and the one-sided and biased manner in which they recounted the events surrounding the atrocity. |
|
If one wishes to present the most accurate data for the peaks, mean or interpolated prominence would be appropriate as the other measures give biased estimates. |
|
When found, the skeletons were the subject of dubious scientific theories on human evolution, partly fueled by biased reconstruction of the skulls by the scientists involved. |
|
Self-conscious maternalists like Eleanor Roosevelt and Frances Perkins ensured that New Deal programs were biased in favor of traditional two-parent families. |
|
I HAVE never read such a biased load of rubbish as the letter from Jonathan Goll without any concrete facts or gures to back up his various assumptions so let me list a few. |
|
But Myanmar's junta said Wednesday, ''The report is patently biased and it rehashes the unfounded allegations made by insurgents and opposition groups. |
|
Lending has been at non-economic rates and biased towards resource-rich farmers, wealthy traders, and other market intermediaries such as sugar mills and cotton ginneries. |
|
Therefore, the president of the bench's view of the case is not neutral and may be biased while conducting the trial after the reading of the dossier. |
|
In the case of documentaries, our thinking tends to be less warped and biased, if only because the auteurist sensibility has never been too comfortable outside of fiction. |
|