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  2. Transparency report - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transparency_report

    A transparency report is a statement issued semesterly or annually by a company or government, which discloses a variety of statistics related to requests for user data, records, or content. Transparency reports generally disclose how frequently and under what authority governments have requested or demanded data or records over a certain ...

  3. Bradley effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley_effect

    Mayor Tom Bradley. The Bradley effect, less commonly known as the Wilder effect, [1] [2] is a theory concerning observed discrepancies between voter opinion polls and election outcomes in some United States government elections where a white and a non-white candidate run against each other.

  4. Credibility gap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credibility_gap

    Credibility gap is a term that came into wide use with journalism, political and public discourse in the United States during the 1960s and 1970s. At the time, it was most frequently used to describe public skepticism about the Lyndon B. Johnson administration's statements and policies on the Vietnam War. [1]

  5. Materiality (auditing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Materiality_(auditing)

    Moreover, the primary users of government financial statements are different: the citizenry and the parliament in the public sector versus investors in the private sector. It is important to identify the primary users since materiality reflects the auditor’s judgment of the needs of users in relation to the information in the financial ...

  6. National Income and Product Accounts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Income_and...

    National income (NI) is the sum of employees, proprietors, rental, corporate, interest, and government income less the subsidies government pays to any of those groups. Net national product (NNP) is National Income plus or minus the statistical discrepancy that accumulates when aggregating data from millions of individual reports.

  7. Discrepancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discrepancy

    Discrepancy of hypergraphs, an area of discrepancy theory; Discrepancy (algebraic geometry) Statistics. Discrepancy function in the context of structural equation ...

  8. United States Code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Code

    [41] [42] In 2008, the Heritage Foundation published a report that put the number at a minimum of 4,450. [42] When staff for a task force of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee asked the Congressional Research Service (CRS) to update its 2008 calculation of criminal offenses in the USC in 2013, the CRS responded that they lack the manpower and ...

  9. Discrepancy function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discrepancy_function

    Larger values of the discrepancy function indicate a poor fit of the model to data. In general, the parameter estimates for a given model are chosen so as to make the discrepancy function for that model as small as possible. Analogous concepts in statistics are known as goodness of fit or statistical distance, and include deviance and divergence.