Observation Articles from SENIORFITNESS.COM Free Article Directory


Subject Directory
Find your Specific Interest
in a Hurry
     Home      Submit Article      Trainer Registration      Contact Us      Our Mission      Disclaimer      Forums      Public Health Issues      Article Archive      Fitness Links      FEATURED EDITOR'S PICKSNew!      Synergy Performance HealthNew!
 

 
 

Search our Site:
Search Google:
This search box will exclusively search relevant sites that we respect.

( Observation) Observation is either an activity of a living being (such as a human), consisting of receiving knowledge of the outside world through the senses, or the recording of data using scientific instruments. The term may also refer to any datum collected during this activity.

The scientific method requires observations of nature to formulate and test hypotheses. It consists of these steps

Observation plays a role in the second and fifth steps. However the need for reproducibility requires that observations by different observers be comparable. Human sense impressions are subjective and qualitative making them difficult to record or compare. The idea of measurement evolved to allow recording and comparison of observations made at different times and places by different people. Measurement consists of using observation to compare the thing being measured to a standard; an artifact, process or definition which can be duplicated or shared by all observers, and counting how many of the standard units are comparable to the object. Measurement reduces an observation to a number which can be recorded, and two observations which result in the same number are equal within the resolution of the process.

Human senses are limited, and are subject to errors in perception such as optical illusions. Measuring instruments were developed to magnify human powers of observation, such as weighing scales, clocks, telescopes, microscopes, thermometers, cameras, and tape recorders, and also translate into perceptible form events that are unobservable by human senses, such as indicator dyes, voltmeters, spectrometers, oscilloscopes, interferometers, geiger counters, MRI machines, radio telescopes, and DNA sequencers.

Observation Subcategories

Observation Articles

Observations on morphologic changes in the aging and degenerating human disc: Secondary collagen alterations
Observations on morphologic changes in the aging and degenerating human disc: Secondary collagen alterations
Helen E Gruber and Edward N Hanley Jr

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Carolinas Medical Center, Charlotte, NC 2823...

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

 
 Forum Login 
Username:

Password:


Forgot your password?
Register for Forums

Enter your Email!
Sign up for our Senior Fitness Weekly Newletter.
Email:

Suggested Reading from Senior Fitness

Longevity & Fitness - Staying Young in Mind & Body.

Exercise focus for Seniors:

Gary Null, Ph.D. knows as much about aging powerfully as anyone on earth. His new book sums it all up.