netice çıkarma, mana çıkarma; (mantık) çıkarsama; netice, sonuç

listen to the pronunciation of netice çıkarma, mana çıkarma; (mantık) çıkarsama; netice, sonuç
Turkish - English
inference
That which is inferred; a truth or proposition drawn from another which is admitted or supposed to be true; a conclusion; a deduction
An inference is a conclusion that you draw about something by using information that you already have about it. There were two inferences to be drawn from her letter. = conclusion
the process of reasoning whereby one statement (the conclusion) is derived from one or more other statements (the premises)
- Assumption based on an observation
a conclusion arrived at inductively or deductively
(1) This is an umbrella term referring to a final outcome of a study The outcome may consist of a conclusion about, an understanding of, or an explanation for an event, a behavior, a relationship, or a case (2) This is “a conclusion reached” where there is either (a) a “deduction from premises that are accepted as true” or (b) an induction by “deriving a conclusion from factual statements taken as evidence for the conclusion” (Angeles, 1981, p 133) See also deductive inference (in research cycle), deductive logic, inductive inference (in research cycle), inductive logic, meta-inference (or integrated mixed inference), and retroductive inference Back to the top
the process of reasoning from observations to interpretations/conclusions
a logical conclusion or judgment that is explicitly supported by data, evidence, and information gathered as part of the teacher evaluation process See Data, Evidence, High Inference, Information, Low Inference
A conclusion reached through reasoning Inference is used to reach conclusions when information is implied but not stated as a certainty
An explanation for an observation
The act or process of inferring by deduction or induction
the reasoning involved in drawing a conclusion or making a logical judgment on the basis of circumstantial evidence and prior conclusions rather than on the basis of direct observation
to draw a conclusion that is not explicit to the subject matter
An inference is reasoning based on observation and experience To infer is to arrive at a decision or opinion by reasoning from known facts For example, I can see that someone is smiling From this, I can infer from my experience that he is happy It is particularly easy to think that an inference is a fact It takes critical thinking to distinguish between the two In the example of the smiling student, I do not know that the student is happy He may be smiling for some other reason
{i} act of deriving, act of inferring; speculation; drawing of a conclusion
ideas or facts that are implied or suggested rather than stated outright; evidence is usually some "prior knowledge"
A conclusion based on a premise [DEC]
Inference is the process of automatically adding new facts to a knowledge base by applying rules of inference to the axioms and already-inferred facts of the knowledge base CYC® currently uses two rules of inference in its general theorem proving, modus ponens and modus tollens
The movement of thought to a conclusion or generalization from starting points of premises or particular observations Inferences are generally categorized as either deductive or inductive
netice çıkarma, mana çıkarma; (mantık) çıkarsama; netice, sonuç

    Hyphenation

    ne·ti·ce çı·kar·ma, ma·na çı·kar·ma; (man·tık) çı·kar·sa·ma; ne·ti·ce, so·nuç

    Pronunciation

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