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"overgeneralize" Definitions
  1. to make a statement that is not accurate because it is too general
"overgeneralize" Antonyms

23 Sentences With "overgeneralize"

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

If you want to overgeneralize the decision to switch from tokens to the MetroCard, you should.
The researchers also found that the classifiers can overgeneralize, over-extrapolate, and incorrectly include tangential categories.
But as with any predictive technology, it's easy to overgeneralize if the analysis is not done well.
Let's not overgeneralize: Eric Schmidt, the largest tech philanthropist of 226, gave $1.3 billion to charitable efforts.
RAYMOND ARROYO, FOX NEWS CONTRIBUTOR: And you don&apost want to overgeneralize because there are some great things about millennials.
Political Twitter makes it tempting to overgeneralize, but the right's reaction to the Puerto Rico primary actually embodies one of Rubio's central liabilities.
But, using these incidents to overgeneralize about members of a profession, and partaking in the spread of relentless negativity and criticism, is counterproductive.
Though, and not to way overgeneralize, some older people have dementia and it's a little bit harder to recognize that the computer is not actually alive.
When people learn not to overgeneralize their arguments, they're going to be very careful not to think that if you're poor you're necessarily uneducated or vice versa.
It is of course dangerous to overgeneralize from a single paper about a single city, particularly a paper that has not passed the full gauntlet of peer scrutiny.
"To overgeneralize about a nation and say 'These people shouldn't come here' is plainly racist, and it's plainly wrong," said Mr. Zahraei, 28, who is from Iran, one of the countries included in the executive order.
"One of the hallmarks of science is that we are taught not to overgeneralize from a single case," said Mindy Fullilove, a professor of urban policy and health at The New School, who adds that she grew up in poverty, too.
Overall, the shift of the development economics movement toward conducting lots of empirical research has been good for our ability to generalize about the effects of problems — even if some people overgeneralize and wrongly assume RCTs have more external validity than they do.
Gaetz also said that the "conditions in some countries are really bad," but said that it was "very dangerous" to overgeneralize contributions by people based on their national origin alone, leading Hayes to point out that Trump's purported "shithole" remark was also an overgeneralization.
Those who are depressed tend to overgeneralize their memories and are not able to remember as many specific details of any events as compared to those without depression.
Humans first have the tendency to categorize everything that appears similar into groups. In other words, people tend to overgeneralize. With perceptual learning, humans can battle the tendency to overgeneralize by learning to make appropriate distinctions, such as the specific patterns and properties of different stimulus. An example Gibson and her husband used to describe this is that someone who regularly participates in wine tasting can taste the differences in many wines.
An interlanguage is an idiolect that has been developed by a learner of a second language (or L2) which preserves some features of their first language (or L1), and can also overgeneralize some L2 writing and speaking rules. These two characteristics of an interlanguage result in the system's unique linguistic organization. An interlanguage is idiosyncratically based on the learners' experiences with the L2. It can "fossilize", or cease developing, in any of its developmental stages.
Orville W. Taylor contends in the Journal of Negro History that Blassingame had a tendency to overgeneralize and make "unsubstantiatable claims to originality and uniqueness".Orville W. Taylor, review of The Slave Community, in Journal of Negro History 58 (October 1973): pp. 470–471. In the Journal of Political Economy, economic historian Stanley L. Engerman complains that the book is not "written by or for economists" and makes "limited use of economic analysis".
The "conservatism" hypothesis proposes that children do not overgeneralize the double object construction to verbs such as [donate] and [whisper] (ex. [John whispers Mary the secret]), because the child never hears ungrammatical double object constructions in their input. The child only recreates forms they hear in their input and therefore does not generalize the double object construction. This idea was first suggested by Baker (1979) who posited that children never make errors similar to those shown in (15b).
Research suggests that children overgeneralize stress rules when they are reproducing novel Spanish words and that they have a tendency to stress the penultimate syllables of antepenultimately stressed words, to avoid a violation of nonverb stress rules that they have acquired. Many of the most frequent words heard by children have irregular stress patterns or are verbs, which violate nonverb stress rules. This complicates stress rules until ages three to four, when stress acquisition is essentially complete, and children begin to apply these rules to novel irregular situations.
Bohm maintained that relativity and quantum theories are in basic contradiction in these essential respects, and that a new concept of order should begin with that toward which both theories point: undivided wholeness. This should not be taken to mean that he advocated such powerful theories be discarded. He argued that each was relevant in a certain context—i.e., a set of interrelated conditions within the explicate order—rather than having unlimited scope, and that apparent contradictions stem from attempts to overgeneralize by superposing the theories on one another, implying greater generality or broader relevance than is ultimately warranted.
However, Chao pointed out in his letters to Wang that it was wrong for him to overgeneralize the dialectal patterns in a large area with multiple dialects solely based on the linguistic behaviors of one single dialect. Taking Chao's advice, Wang narrowed his research down to the study of the dialect in Bobai county. Afterwards, Wang went back to China in 1931 and started teaching at Tsinghua University in Beijing, ranked as the top three academic institutions in China. In his spare time, he produced various works of literature including books about Greek and Roman literature and translations of Émile Zola's Nana, Molière's plays and Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du mal.
The psychology of pseudoscience attempts to explore and analyze pseudoscientific thinking by means of thorough clarification on making the distinction of what is considered scientific vs. pseudoscientific. The human proclivity for seeking confirmation rather than refutation (confirmation bias), the tendency to hold comforting beliefs, and the tendency to overgeneralize have been proposed as reasons for pseudoscientific thinking. According to Beyerstein (1991), humans are prone to associations based on resemblances only, and often prone to misattribution in cause-effect thinking. Michael Shermer's theory of belief-dependent realism is driven by the belief that the brain is essentially a "belief engine" which scans data perceived by the senses and looks for patterns and meaning.

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