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Enhanced error‐related negativity on flanker errors: Error expectancy or error significance?
Psychophysiology, 2012AbstractThe present study investigated whether the error‐related negativity, an electrophysiological marker for performance monitoring, reflects (1) the expectancy of errors, or (2) the significance of errors for the current task goal. In the first case, a larger error‐related negativity is predicted for less expected errors, whereas in the second case,
Maier ME +2 more
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Clinical Obstetrics & Gynecology, 2008
Methods of analyzing errors and proactively preventing errors are discussed. A framework for using these concepts is presented.
Maureen A, Mulligan, Pat, Nechodom
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Methods of analyzing errors and proactively preventing errors are discussed. A framework for using these concepts is presented.
Maureen A, Mulligan, Pat, Nechodom
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Quantum error correction for quantum memories
Active quantum error correction using qubit stabilizer codes has emerged as a promising, but experimentally challenging, engineering program for building a universal quantum computer.
Terhal, Barbara M.
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Error Analysis (Error Calculation)
2021The quality of measured or observed values is described by the errors among those values, whereby a distinction is made between random and systematic errors. Random errors are dispersed, while systematic errors are essentially identifiable. Since random errors under identical measurement conditions differ in terms of value and sign (i.e., they are ...
Hartmut Schiefer, Felix Schiefer
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In entering a currency union without any political union European countries have taken a gamble: will the needs of the currency unions force a political integration (as anticipated by Monnet) or will the tensions create a backlash, as suggested by Kaldor, Friedman and many others? We try to answer this question by analyzing the cross sectional and time
Luigi Guiso +2 more
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Errors Today and Errors Tomorrow
New England Journal of Medicine, 2003If the Institute of Medicine is right, then at the very least, 100 patients will die in hospitals in the United States today because of injuries from their care, not from their diseases. How many will die tomorrow? Tom Nolan, one of the leading quality-improvement scholars of our time, identifies three essential preconditions for improvement: will ...
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