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  2. Unreliable narrator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unreliable_narrator

    Sometimes the narrator's unreliability is made immediately evident. For instance, a story may open with the narrator making a plainly false or delusional claim or admitting to being severely mentally ill, or the story itself may have a frame in which the narrator appears as a character, with clues to the character's unreliability. A more ...

  3. Reliability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reliability

    Reliability (statistics), the overall consistency of a measure Reliability engineering, concerned with the ability of a system or component to perform its required functions under stated conditions for a specified time

  4. Failure rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Failure_rate

    Failure rate is the frequency with which any system or component fails, expressed in failures per unit of time. It thus depends on the system conditions, time interval, and total number of systems under study. [1]

  5. Reliability engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reliability_engineering

    Reliability engineering is a sub-discipline of systems engineering that emphasizes the ability of equipment to function without failure. Reliability is defined as the probability that a product, system, or service will perform its intended function adequately for a specified period of time, OR will operate in a defined environment without failure. [1]

  6. Reliability (computer networking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reliability_(computer...

    Reliability is a synonym for assurance, which is the term used by the ITU and ATM Forum, and leads to fault-tolerant messaging. Reliable protocols typically incur more overhead than unreliable protocols, and as a result, function more slowly and with less scalability.

  7. Reliability (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reliability_(statistics)

    Reliability does not imply validity.That is, a reliable measure that is measuring something consistently is not necessarily measuring what is supposed to be measured.

  8. Rashomon effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rashomon_effect

    The Rashomon effect is the phenomenon of the unreliability of eyewitnesses. The effect is named after Akira Kurosawa 's 1950 Japanese film Rashomon , in which a murder is described in four contradictory ways by four witnesses. [ 1 ]

  9. Survival analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survival_analysis

    Survival analysis is a branch of statistics for analyzing the expected duration of time until one event occurs, such as death in biological organisms and failure in mechanical systems.