The bias described is measurement bias , also often called systematic error or systematic measurement bias.

Why measurement bias fits

  • The question says the method of observation produces values that systematically differ from the true value. That pattern of always-too-high or always-too-low is the hallmark of measurement bias.
  • Measurement bias arises from issues like a miscalibrated instrument, a flawed observation procedure, or a consistent way of recording that skews all results in one direction.

In contrast, random error makes measurements fluctuate around the true value, but not in a consistent direction; systematic/measurement bias consistently pulls them away from the truth.

So the correct answer is: measurement bias (systematic error).

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