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"underemphasize" Definitions
  1. to fail to emphasize adequately

6 Sentences With "underemphasize"

How to use underemphasize in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "underemphasize" and check conjugation/comparative form for "underemphasize". Mastering all the usages of "underemphasize" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Clark's theories underemphasize the importance of other people as the primary embodiment of external representation, rather than our own bodies, machines, or objects in the world.
"It's a typical immigrant experience to overemphasize some of the things you want to remember," he said, "and underemphasize some of the things you want to forget."
In focusing on this political cartel effect, however, critics tend to underemphasize the increasing fragility of the universities themselves—the second great factor that has wiped away tolerance for "dangerous" ideas on college campuses since the mid-twentieth century.
It is no surprise that when a disaster happens, whether it's an oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico or flooding in Louisiana, political reporters overemphasize questions like whether Obama looks like he's responding to the crisis effectively, and underemphasize questions like: Is the response working?
"I don't think you can underestimate or underemphasize the impact of the bailout," Norm Ornstein, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a center-right think Washington think tank, told me in an email: The widespread sense that all the elites in Washington and New York conspired to bail out the miscreants who caused the disaster and then gave them bonuses, while the rest of us lost our houses or saw their value, the biggest and often only asset of Americans, plummet, lost our jobs or saw them frozen and stagnant, and then saw gaping inequality grow even more, is just palpable.
Instead of speaking of a hypothesis of an actor- observer asymmetry, some textbooks and research articles speak of an "actor- observer bias." The term "bias" is typically used to imply that one of the explainers (either the actor or the observer) is biased or incorrect in their explanations. But which one—the actor or the observer—is supposed to be incorrect is not clear from the literature. On the one hand, Ross's (1977) hypothesis of a "fundamental attribution error" suggests that observers are incorrect, because they show a general tendency to overemphasize dispositional explanations and underemphasize situational ones.

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