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"misperceive" Definitions
  1. to perceive (something) wrongly or improperly

37 Sentences With "misperceive"

How to use misperceive in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "misperceive" and check conjugation/comparative form for "misperceive". Mastering all the usages of "misperceive" from sentence examples published by news publications.

At a basic level, such movements misperceive political and moral reality.
There's a version of a teenager's life that people constantly misperceive, in a way.
The individuals in intergroup conflict systematically tend to misperceive each other to accentuate differences.
The work showed not only how we perceive, but also how we can sometimes misperceive.
Cancers take such garden-variety criticism too personally, and they misperceive accountability as people hating them deeply.
"This is what the research shows; people will actually misperceive things because of their bias and feeling of threat," Professor Dovidio said.
They don't really misperceive economic realities, but respond to the questions in ways designed to boost their own party or denigrate the opposition.
People misperceive the composition of their own party somewhat less than the composition of the opposite party, which is about what you would expect.
The work also may lead to therapies for allodynia, a nerve condition that causes some people to misperceive something normally not-so-cold as painful.
Patients and physicians commonly misperceive mental illness, and it&aposs still not taken as seriously as other medical conditions during pregnancy, according to Dr. Ross.
She told BuzzFeed News she "completely understands" how people could misperceive it, but said the children volunteered to don the costumes and there was no racial element.
The Alzheimer's Association advises that locking up guns may not be enough, because people with dementia may "misperceive danger" and break into a gun cabinet to protect themselves.
What the authors of the piece show is that congressional aides grossly misperceive the views of their bosses' constituents; this is true in both parties, but more so of Republicans.
" Instead, Sizzler used "all you care to eat" because, as Kramp put it, "Sometimes guests misperceive these types of promotions and they take it as a challenge to potentially overconsume.
But a 2015 study indicated the number of children who "misperceive or reject their parents' political party affiliations" was much higher than previously thought — at more than half of all US children.
In an email, Iyengar wrote: identity politics makes Democrats and Republicans whose preferences on the issues are at odds with their party platform misperceive the party position so as to minimize dissonance.
In 1969, when North Korea shot down a United States Navy plane, killing 31, the Nixon administration chose not to respond, fearing that North Korea would misperceive any attack as the start of a war.
Even doctors might misjudge gun death frequency Another study published in Annals of Internal Medicine on Monday finds that many adults in the US -- including health care professionals -- misperceive the frequency of gun-related deaths.
Men often misperceive a woman's interest Men just aren't good at gauging the level of a woman's interest in him, says Alexandra Katehakis, founder and clinical director of the Center for Healthy Sex in Los Angeles.
That mistake is not uncommon: a person holding a gun is more likely to misperceive an object in another person's hand to be a gun, according to a 2012 study published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology .
"He's doing extremely well with independents, and if he can keep that going, he's in great shape because what I think a lot of people misperceive about independents, they are not necessarily moderate voters, they are Republicans and Democrats who both think that the parties have left them behind," O'Connell said.
I believe that because we are still at least a few weeks away from the peak of the novel coronavirus outbreak in the United States, most people misperceive their own risk to be what it is in the current moment, rather than what it will inevitably be in a matter of time.
A different explanation for the presence of both overperception and underperception in men is the male insensitivity bias. Evidence has shown that males lack perceptual sensitivity, so they are more likely to misperceive friendliness as sexual interest, but also more likely to misperceive sexual interest as friendliness, in comparison to females, something that explains the presence of both biases in males.
This could imply that men and women generally prefer different colors when purchasing items. Men and women also misperceive what colors the opposite gender views as fitting for them.
A more objective measure of difficulty is desirable, e.g., for environmental or energy policy, because people may misperceive the difficulty of behaviors, possibly because affected by mood or current circumstances.
This does not require any change in attitude regarding either the candidate or the issue on the part of the voter. Sherrod's (1971) research found the third option to occur with the greatest frequency: he found that voters most often selectively misperceive a candidate's position on an issue rather than either change one's own view or relegate the issue to a status of lesser importance.
For these reasons, there is an emerging body of research that suggests that internet addiction and unhealthy social media activity may be more prevalent in ADHD individuals. Another compounding piece of the social media puzzle is related to time management. Individuals with ADHD have trouble with awareness of time, procrastination, avoidant behaviors, and staying on task. Frank explains that ADHD individuals often misperceive time and have trouble thinking into the future; NOW is the dominant time zone.
But that is not because there is some other fact about my pain, > accessible only to me, which I consult in order to establish what I am > feeling. For if there were this inner private quality, I could misperceive > it; I could get it wrong, and I would have to find out whether I am in pain. > To describe my inner state, I would also have to invent a language, > intelligible only to me – and that, Wittgenstein plausibly argues, is > impossible.
Humans have a native tendency to exaggerate their own talents, so many executives believe they are above average in their endowment of positive traits and abilities. This is amplified by the tendency to misperceive causes of certain events. People tend to take credit for positive outcomes and attribute negative outcomes to external factors. A study of letters to shareholders in annual reports, for example, found that executives tend to attribute favourable outcomes to factors under their control, like corporate strategy or R&D; programmes.
Dreier, pp. 20–4 Like most models, the OODA Loop is not a technical description, but rather is a tool for illustrating important points for strategists. While litigation presents opportunities for information denial through the rules of privilege and work product, even more opportunities to shape the conduct of opposing counsel and hostile witnesses arise in the orientation phase.id. at 81–3 Psychology offers deep insights into how individuals perceive and misperceive information. Moreover, an individual’s perception of a situation affects how he frames his decisions.
The basic mechanism of the gateway belief model, i.e., aligning people's (mis)perception of the degree of group consensus with the factual degree of consensus parallels research in social psychology on leveraging norm-perception as a vehicle for social change. For example, early research showed that college students frequently misperceive the social consensus on campus binge drinking. Through a method known as "estimate and reveal", social psychologists have attempted to reveal the discrepancy between students' subjective perceptions of the drinking norm among their peers and the actual norm (which is typically much lower).
In an interview with ABC Changizi said, "Illusions occur when our brains attempt to perceive the future, and those perceptions don't match reality." For example, an illusion called the Hering illusion looks like bicycle spokes around a central point, with vertical lines on either side of this central, so-called vanishing point. The illusion tricks us into thinking we are looking at a perspective picture, and thus according to Changizi, switches on our future-seeing abilities. Since we aren't actually moving and the figure is static, we misperceive the straight lines as curved ones.
You can't just sit back and let things happen, and the great thing about this country is you can work for what you want. You can sit there and not do anything, and that's where you'll be for the rest of your life, or you can work hard and set a goal and achieve that. That's what this country is all about. That's the American Dream, and I think it's fantastic.” She also addressed how some people may misperceive the song based on the title. “I think people can form, maybe, a wrong opinion by the name of it.
Many Pakistanis in Japan run used car export businesses. This trend was believed to have begun in the late 1970s, when one Pakistani working in Japan sent a car back to his homeland. The potential for doing business in used cars also attracted more Pakistanis to come to Japan in the 1990s. Though many migrants come from a middle-class family background in Pakistan, because they often work at so-called Dirty, Dangerous and Demeaning (3D/3K) jobs and because of their portrayal in the Japanese media, even their co-workers tended to misperceive their background and level of education.
According to Sherrod (1971), there are three potential actions the voter may take to reduce dissonance in this situation. First, the voter may learn about the candidate's stand on the issue and then change either his or her opinion of the candidate or alter his or her own position on the issue in question to bring them in line. Second, the voter may still choose to disagree with the preferred candidate's position and instead will lessen the issue's personal importance. Last, the voter may engage in selective perception and actually misperceive the candidate's position to align better with the voter's own stand than it actually does.
The tau effect is a spatial perceptual illusion that arises when observers judge the distance between consecutive stimuli in a stimulus sequence. When the distance from one stimulus to the next is constant, and the time elapsed from one stimulus to the next is also constant, subjects tend to judge the distances, correctly, as equal. However, if the distance from one stimulus to the next is constant, but the time elapsed from one stimulus to the next is not constant, then subjects tend to misperceive the interval that has the shorter temporal interval as also having a shorter spatial interval. Thus, the tau effect reveals that stimulus timing affects the perception of stimulus spacing.
It is not that English speakers are physically incapable of perceiving the sound in question; rather, the phonetic system of English cannot accommodate the perceived sound. Although Boas was making a very specific contribution to the methods of descriptive linguistics, his ultimate point is far reaching: observer bias need not be personal, it can be cultural. In other words, the perceptual categories of Western researchers may systematically cause a Westerner to misperceive or to fail to perceive entirely a meaningful element in another culture. As in his critique of Otis Mason's museum displays, Boas demonstrated that what appeared to be evidence of cultural evolution was really the consequence of unscientific methods and a reflection of Westerners' beliefs about their own cultural superiority.

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