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recency
[ ree-suhn-see ]
noun
- the fact of being recent, of having occurred a relatively short time ago; closeness of a past event to a later past time or to the present:
The general nervousness during that period was mostly due to the recency of the great stock market crash.
- the fact of being more recent than something else and therefore more salient or memorable (often used attributively):
The data might be showing recency effects—that is, choices presented later were more likely to be selected by participants.
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
Origin of recency1
Example Sentences
Decades of research has repeatedly shown that the average American voter is not ideological, has a recency bias, is imagistic, and in total lacks a sophisticated understanding of politics.
There may be a recency bias here, but Brook's blistering counter-attack in the second Test against New Zealand at Wellington gets the nod.
“Walker certainly has the pedigree,†Roberts said, “but as far as recency, we haven’t seen it.â€
Trump’s team messed up the key element of “primacy and recency,†Rossi explained.
Maybe we are a little guilty of succumbing to recency bias, or maybe Usyk really is the greatest fighter of his generation.
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