Sentences with phrase «removing subjectivity»

Registry CrimSAFE increases the effectiveness of criminal background screenings by removing subjectivity from the screening process and enforcing consistent screening decisions.
Finally, by removing subjectivity from outcome measurement, remote eye gaze tracking could greatly enhance our knowledge of effective treatments and reduce the time to discovery of new treatments.
Creating a levelling framework for your company can remove any subjectivity, irrespective of how subconscious it may be, from an employee's career growth.
I would just remove any subjectivity from setting the shot clock (like it is in basketball), rather than the officials deciding when to start it.
This removes subjectivity and»em otional» involvement from the trading process.

Not exact matches

Removing gatekeepers» subjectivity and prejudices from the process will not only help level the playing field for candidates today, but also ensure a lower barrier for entry for underrepresented talent pools in the future.
On the whole, the Latin races have leaned more towards the former way of looking upon evil, as made up of ills and sins in the plural, removable in detail; while the Germanic races have tended rather to think of Sin in the singular, and with a capital S, as of something ineradicably ingrained in our natural subjectivity, and never to be removed by any superficial piecemeal operations.
But by locating revelation in the realm of transcendental subjectivity, or on a plane radically discontinuous with actual human events, they have removed it from a more challenging proximity to our historical existence.
In LeWitt's installations he aimed to remove all elements of chance and subjectivity, relying instead on highly specific instructions, particularly for his wall drawings, which have been restaged in a range of different institutions by teams of assistants.
It's probably best alternative we have, when a great inherent value is given on the objectivity in the sense that a decision made once removes further subjectivity in the analysis.
The virtue of an approach that remains wedded to the text and settled doctrine is not that it removes judicial bias, subjectivity or moralizing, but rather that it constrains and limits those things.
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