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      quizlet.com

      • The point where your optic nerves converge to exit the eye and into the brain is known as the optic disc. This area of the eye has no light-sensitive cells to detect light rays. This results in a break in the visual field known as your “blind spot.” When the cross mark disappears, you instead “see” a continuous white field.
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  2. The point where your optic nerves converge to exit the eye and into the brain is known as the optic disc. This area of the eye has no light-sensitive cells to detect light rays. This results in a break in the visual field known as your “blind spot.”.

  3. Jul 27, 2012 · New researchers often get inadequacies and blank and blind spots muddled up. While research which has blank and blind spots might be disappointing, it is not actually sloppy – it’s either under-ambitious or, in reality, more likely simply partial.

  4. Mar 24, 2023 · Blind spots filter out information that destabilizes existing belief systems and power bases. They may present as: lack of action despite available information, absence of information due to lack of measurement tools, inability to identify causes of problematic behavior (Lodge, 2019).

    • Barbara Redman
    • br68@nyu.edu
  5. Oct 4, 2002 · This study, thus, aims to indicate the 'blank spots' and the 'blind spots' in the existing research (Gough, 2002). Such spots come from the hidden features of the context and circumstances of the...

    • Noel Gough
  6. Our meta-research study of common western blotting publication practices in neuroscience and cell biology highlights several shortcomings that can prevent readers from critically assessing or independently replicating western blot experiments.

  7. Ensuring a Blind Review. Removing Identifying Information From Your Manuscript. Authors are responsible for removing any information from their manuscripts that might lead a reviewer to discern their identities or affiliations.

  8. Jun 26, 2017 · What is blinding? Blinding is about ensuring that participants and/or personnel within a study are unaware of a particular element of that study. It is done to minimise bias [1,2]. Although blinding can be implemented in a range of study designs, for the purposes of this article, we will focus specifically on randomised controlled trials (RCTs).

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