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Experts in interaction design such as Alan Cooper [3] believe this concept puts blame in the wrong place, the user, instead of blaming the error-inducing design and its failure to take into account human limitations.
The term "use error" was first used in May 1995 in an MD+DI guest editorial, "The Issue Is 'Use,' Not 'User,' Error", by William Hyman. [1] Traditionally, human errors are considered as a special aspect of human factors. Accordingly, they are attributed to the human operator, or user. When taking this approach, we assume that the system design ...
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Адыгэбзэ; العربية; 閩南語 / Bân-lâm-gú; Беларуская; Беларуская (тарашкевіца) Brezhoneg; Чӑвашла
Adaptive bias is the idea that the human brain has evolved to reason adaptively, rather than truthfully or even rationally, [clarification needed] and that cognitive bias may have evolved as a mechanism to reduce the overall cost of cognitive errors as opposed to merely reducing the number of cognitive errors, when faced with making a decision under conditions of uncertainty.
The false positive rate (FPR) is the proportion of all negatives that still yield positive test outcomes, i.e., the conditional probability of a positive test result given an event that was not present.
"User error" has long been used to refer to a situation where the user of a system has made an incorrect input. There is certainly a slang usage where it is used in a way of insulting the user, but the most common usage, with a history of more than twenty years, is the one I gave.
Note that the number of sequences for distance d is just the binomial coefficient for L=3, and that each sequence can be visualized as the vertex of an L=3 dimensional cube, with each edge of the cube specifying a mutation path in which the change Hamming distance is either zero or ±1.