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2.4: Accuracy and Precision

  • Page ID
    494734
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    Learning Objectives
    • Define accuracy and precision
    • Distinguish exact and uncertain numbers

    Accuracy and Precision

    Scientists typically make repeated measurements of a quantity to ensure the quality of their findings and to know both the precision and the accuracy of their results. Measurements are said to be precise if they yield very similar results when repeated in the same manner. A measurement is considered accurate if it yields a result that is very close to the true or accepted value. Precise values agree with each other; accurate values agree with a true value. These characterizations can be extended to other contexts, such as the results of an archery competition (Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\)).

    Figures A through C each show targets with holes where the arrows hit. The archer in figure A was both accurate and precise as all 3 arrows are clustered in the center of the target. In figure B, the archer is precise but not accurate, as all 3 arrows are clustered together but to the upper right of the center of the target. In Figure C, the archer is neither accurate nor precise as the 3 holes are not close together and are located both to the upper right and right of the target.

    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): (a) These arrows are close to both the bull’s eye and one another, so they are both accurate and precise. (b) These arrows are close to one another but not on target, so they are precise but not accurate. (c) These arrows are neither on target nor close to one another, so they are neither accurate nor precise.

    Suppose a quality control chemist at a pharmaceutical company is tasked with checking the accuracy and precision of three different machines that are meant to dispense 10 ounces (296 mL) of cough syrup into storage bottles. She proceeds to use each machine to fill five bottles and then carefully determines the actual volume dispensed, obtaining the results tabulated in Table \(\PageIndex{2}\).

    Table \(\PageIndex{2}\): Volume (mL) of Cough Medicine Delivered by 10-oz (296 mL) Dispensers
    Dispenser #1 Dispenser #2 Dispenser #3
    283.3 298.3 296.1
    284.1 294.2 295.9
    283.9 296.0 296.1
    284.0 297.8 296.0
    284.1 293.9 296.1

    Considering these results, she will report that dispenser #1 is precise (values all close to one another, within a few tenths of a milliliter) but not accurate (none of the values are close to the target value of 296 mL, each being more than 10 mL too low). Results for dispenser #2 represent improved accuracy (each volume is less than 3 mL away from 296 mL) but worse precision (volumes vary by more than 4 mL). Finally, she can report that dispenser #3 is working well, dispensing cough syrup both accurately (all volumes within 0.1 mL of the target volume) and precisely (volumes differing from each other by no more than 0.2 mL).

    Video: What's the difference between accuracy and precision? - Matt Anticole

    Example

    The following archery targets show marks that represent the results of four sets of measurements.

    Target A: 2 marks together on middle ring, B: slightly scattered marks near center, C: marks close at center, D: marks scattered all over rings

    Which target shows

    1. a precise, but inaccurate set of measurements?
    2. a set of measurements that is both precise and accurate?
    3. a set of measurements that is neither precise nor accurate?

    Solution

    1. Set (a) is precise, but inaccurate.
    2. Set (c) is both precise and accurate.
    3. Set (d) is neither precise nor accurate.

    Summary

    • Accuracy is a measure of how close a measurement is to the correct or accepted value of the quantity being measured.
    • Precision is a measure of how close a series of measurements are to one another.

    This page titled 2.4: Accuracy and Precision is shared under a CK-12 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Alaka Pradhan.

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