Observation is sensing and assimilating the knowledge of a phenomenon into a framework of previous knowledge and ideas.
Observation may also refer to:
Clone or Clones or Cloning or Cloned or The Clone may refer to:
Lotus or LOTUS may refer to:
Script may refer to:
Sampling may refer to:
An observer is one who engages in observation or in watching an experiment.
In European tradition, a zephyr is a light wind or a west wind, named after Zephyrus, the Greek god or personification of the west wind.
Entropy, in thermodynamics, is a property originally introduced to explain the part of the internal energy of a thermodynamic system that is unavailable as a source for useful work.
Mythos is a worldview-based traditional story or body of mythology. Mythos may also refer to:
Venom is a class of animal toxins.
A legend is a historical narrative, a symbolic representation of folk belief.
Half-life is a mathematical and scientific description of exponential or gradual decay.
Randomness is the property of lacking any sensible predictability.
Supernatural typically refers to unexplained or non-natural forces and phenomena.
Shuffling is a procedure used to randomize a deck of playing cards.
Sans or SANS may refer to:
An emergency is a situation that poses an immediate risk to health, life, property, or environment.
Uh Oh or variants may refer to:
A fracture is the (local) separation of a body into two, or more, pieces under the action of stress.
Empirical may refer to:
Observational methods in psychological research entail the observation and description of a subject's behavior. Researchers utilizing the observational method can exert varying amounts of control over the environment in which the observation takes place. This makes observational research a sort of middle ground between the highly controlled method of experimental design and the less structured approach of conducting interviews.