Calculating Reliability, Accuracy & Precision | Chemical Calculations | Chemistry | FuseSchool
How to Use Free Keywords in Experiments: Accuracy, Precision, and Reliability
Understanding Key Concepts through a Dart Game Analogy
- The video introduces three critical concepts in experiments: accuracy, precision, and reliability, using the analogy of a game of darts alongside a chemistry experiment measuring gas volume.
- In the first round of darts, all throws hit the bullseye. This scenario represents high accuracy as it aligns with the true value in an experiment.
- To enhance measurement accuracy in experiments, averaging multiple measurements is suggested. For instance, adding up gas volumes and dividing by three improves reliability.
- The second round shows darts landing away from the bullseye but still close together. This indicates that while results are precise (similar), they lack accuracy since they deviate from the true value.
Evaluating Reliability Across Rounds
- Despite consistent dart placements in round two indicating precision, overall accuracy is compromised due to deviation from the target.
- Reliability is assessed based on whether measurements can be repeated consistently by different individuals; both rounds demonstrate decreased reliability due to poorer performance.
Summary of Key Definitions
- Accuracy refers to how close a measurement is to the true value; it can be improved through averaging.
- Precision indicates how closely individual measurements cluster together; high precision does not guarantee accuracy.
- Reliability means that experimental results can be replicated consistently by others under similar conditions.