0 a guess that you make or an opinion that you form based on the information that you have:
1 a belief or opinion that you develop from the information that you know
Looking time is recorded, and longer looking at the novel stimulus permits the inference that the infant has discriminated the two emotions.
The intercept was assumed to be random in order to take within-subject correlations of the dependent variables into account for statistical inference.
It is from these signs that one can draw inferences and find out about things previously unknown, just as through speech.
The structural alignment process suggests that inferences are made on the basis of systematicity.
Comparing personal trajectories and drawing causal inferences from longitudinal data.
In this situation, voters face a standard inference problem of predicting the unobservable type (whether competent or not) of the incumbent from the observable policy.
Another, potentially bigger benefit is that the inference can make program code robust against changes of types.
An inductive inference is then made to the conclusion that certain instances, types, groups, or patterns of evils are gratuitous.