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"overgeneralized" Antonyms

24 Sentences With "overgeneralized"

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

Turns out he overgeneralized, and numerous studies have since disproved Pauling's claim.
We also agree that generational labels quickly become unproductive when they turn into overgeneralized caricatures.
And that's also why the classifier overgeneralized tricycles to bicycles and circles, and digital clocks to keyboards and calculators.
As a result, the category has been overgeneralized for a group of people with divergent, specific sexual practices and gender expressions.
More broadly, experts in conflict management would argue, we'd all be well served by avoiding the mental trap of overgeneralized fear.
In fact, the researchers point out, their findings should not be "overgeneralized"; in other words, "the more, the better" does not apply here.
Ultimately, however, Begley undercuts herself with the sort of sweeping, overgeneralized assertions that seem to be endemic among popular science books these days.
The latest Verge Science video covers this odd story, which is about real science, overgeneralized results, lots of high hopes, and people trying to make a quick buck.
" And audiences today will be as hard pressed as those in 1992 – or 1922, for that matter – to identify any distinct Middle Eastern cultures beyond that of an overgeneralized "East.
On the basis of the overgeneralized difference stemming from the categorization into in-group and out-group, the group members in each group necessarily will be pushed into the labyrinth of cognitive biases which are the cornerstones of the hostile image of the other.
Todd Kashdan, researcher and author of "Designing Positive Psychology", explained early science's findings should not be overgeneralized or adopted too uncritically. Mindfulness to Kashdan is very resource-intensive processing; he warned it is not simply better at all times. To illustrate, when a task is best performed with very little conscious thought (e.g., a paramedic performing practiced, emergency maneuvers).
However, the views of Adam Smith were found to have overgeneralized Chinese poverty.Maddison, A. (2007). The world economy volume 1: A millennial perspective volume 2: Historical statistics. Academic Foundation. 46–50.Broadberry, S., & Gupta, B. (2006). The early modern great divergence: wages, prices and economic development in Europe and Asia, 1500–1800 1. The Economic History Review, 59(1), 2-31.
From a simpler perspective, natural selection will tend to reinforce a tendency to generate weak associations or heuristics that are overgeneralized. If there is a strong survival advantage to making correct associations, then this will outweigh the negatives of making many incorrect, "superstitious" associations. It has also been argued that there may be connections between OCD and superstition.de Silva, Padmal and Rachman, Stanley (2004) Obsessive- compulsive Disorder, Oxford University Press, p.
This is one of the unsolved problems in physics. Initially, the term "theory of everything" was used with an ironic connotation to refer to various overgeneralized theories. For example, a great-grandfather of Ijon Tichy, a character from a cycle of Stanisław Lem's science fiction stories of the 1960s, was known to work on the "General Theory of Everything". Physicist John Ellis claims to have introduced the term into the technical literature in an article in Nature in 1986.
An analysis of one nice Dugu offering is the 1946 Cisitalia 202 by Pininfarina – a sleek car that was to completely change sports car design during the 1950s (Gardiner and O'Neill 1996, p. 36). Like most Dugus it was offered in 1:43 scale about the year 1974. The shape of the car is perfectly rendered in miniature with some details very strikingly portrayed while others seem overgeneralized (Richardson 1999, p. 134). The Cisitalia grille is oversimplified with large chrome bars.
Archived from the original on 14 May 2013. Some researchers have criticized the usage of the term destructive cult, writing that it is used to describe groups which are not necessarily harmful in nature to themselves or others. In his book Understanding New Religious Movements, John A. Saliba writes that the term is overgeneralized. Saliba sees the Peoples Temple as the "paradigm of a destructive cult", where those that use the term are implying that other groups will also commit mass suicide.
The authors state, however, that these results are limited to a narrow age-range, experimental procedure and cultural context, and call for further registered reports and replication studies on the topic. Despite these limitations, they state in conclusion that their study shows "that the effects of stereotype threat on math test performance should not be overgeneralized." Numerous meta- analyses and systematic reviews have shown significant evidence for the effects of stereotype threat. However they also point to ways in which the phenomenon defies over-simplistic characterization.
Depersonalization is an overgeneralized reaction in that it doesn't diminish just the unpleasant experience, but more or less all experience - leading to a feeling of being detached from the world and experiencing it in a more bland way. An important distinction must be made between depersonalization as a mild, short term reaction to unpleasant experience and depersonalization as a chronic symptom stemming from a severe mental disorder such as PTSD or Dissociative Identity Disorder. Chronic symptoms may represent persistence of depersonalization beyond the situations under threat.
While Harris' contributions to anthropology are wide,Giulio Angioni, Fare, dire, sentire (Nuoro, Il Maestrale, 2011) it has been said that "Other anthropologists and observers had almost as many opinions about Dr. Harris as he had about why people behave as they do." The Smithsonian magazine allegedly called him "one of the most controversial anthropologists alive." The Washington Post described him as "a storm center in his field", and the Los Angeles Times accused him of "overgeneralized assumptions". Harris could be an acerbic critic of other theories and frequently received return fire.
In theoretical physics, a theory of everything (TOE) is a hypothetical theory that fully explains and links together all known physical phenomena. Initially, the term was used with an ironic connotation to refer to various overgeneralized theories. For example, a great-grandfather of Ijon Tichy—a character from a cycle of Stanisław Lem's science fiction stories of the 1960s—was known to work on the "General Theory of Everything". Over time, the term stuck in popularizations of quantum physics to describe a theory that would unify or explain through a single model the theories of all fundamental interactions of nature.
Evidence from these types of experiments can lead to overgeneralized and misleading conclusions, because the recognition process of complex, three- dimensional patterns could be very different from simple schematics. Furthermore, some have criticized the methodology used in generating the confusion matrix, because it confounds perceptual confusion (error in identification caused by overlapping features between the error and the correct answer) with post-perceptual guessing (people randomly guessing because they cannot be sure what they saw). However, these criticisms were somewhat addressed when similar results were replicated with other paradigms (e.g., go/no go and same-different tasks), supporting the claim that humans do have elementary feature detectors.
In English, ethnonyms are generally formulated through suffixation; most ethnonyms for toponyms ending in -a are formed by adding -n: Bulgaria, Bulgarian; Estonia, Estonian. In English, in many cases, the name for the dominant language of a group is identical to their English-language ethnonym; the French speak French, the Germans speak German. This is sometimes erroneously overgeneralized; it may be assumed that people from India speak "Indian", despite there being no language in India which is called by that name. Generally, any group of people may have numerous ethnonyms, associated with the political affiliation with a state or a province, with geographical landmark, with the language, or another distinct feature.
In order to create the nation of the United States on land that was already inhabited, a narrative of native inferiority was often employed to justify their subjugation. As a result of an overgeneralized picture of native peoples as being defeated and white invaders as victors, internalized racism continues to present itself in Native American communities. Julian Rice notes that apathy towards cultural traditions, self-centeredness, and materialistic obsession could all be seen as an adoption of narratives from the US government or missionaries that emphasized the superior mindset of whiteness. Lisa Poupart adds to these assertions, saying that Native Americans are forced into a "double consciousness," of being simultaneously deprived of past traditions and constantly reminded that those traditions were taken from them.
" According to Judge > Mayer, the judicial exceptions to 35 U.S.C. § 101 "create[] a 'patent-free > zone' and place[] within it the indispensable instruments of social, > economic, and scientific endeavor." Thus, the Judge advocated that "Section > 101, if properly applied, can preserve the Internet's open architecture and > weed out those patents that chill political expression and impermissibly > obstruct the marketplace of ideas. The blog criticized Mayer's opinion as indulging in > a robustly overgeneralized statement – 'patents constricting essential > channels of online communications run afoul of the First Amendment' – and > moves on to other topics." The commentary concludes that Judge Mayer's > "unnerving" First Amendment comments are "results-oriented judicial > vagueness [that] is a form of dangerous reasoning – especially when it > implicates, but does not acknowledge, the intricacies of navigating the case > law surrounding such a fundamental constitutional right.

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