conditionalization: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples

Very Low
UK/kənˌdɪʃ.ən.ə.laɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/US/kənˌdɪʃ.ə.nə.ləˈzeɪ.ʃən/

Formal, Technical, Academic

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Quick answer

What does “conditionalization” mean?

The action or process of making something conditional, or subject to certain conditions, requirements, or states of affairs.

Audio

Pronunciation

Definition

Meaning and Definition

The action or process of making something conditional, or subject to certain conditions, requirements, or states of affairs.

1. (Formal/Logical) The process of modifying a statement, probability, or belief by explicitly incorporating a specific condition or set of conditions into it. 2. (Linguistics) The grammatical process or result of making a clause conditional.

Dialectal Variation

British vs American Usage

Differences

No significant difference in usage between UK and US English, as it is a highly technical term.

Connotations

Neutral, technical, formal.

Frequency

Extremely rare in general discourse in both variants; its frequency is confined to specific academic subfields.

Grammar

How to Use “conditionalization” in a Sentence

the conditionalization of [probability/belief/theory] on [evidence/data]conditionalization upon [a condition]

Vocabulary

Collocations

strong
Bayesian conditionalizationrigid conditionalizationprobability conditionalization
medium
process of conditionalizationprinciple of conditionalization
weak
logical conditionalizationbelief conditionalization

Examples

Examples of “conditionalization” in a Sentence

verb

British English

  • To arrive at a rational belief, one must conditionalise one's prior probabilities on the new evidence.
  • The philosopher argued we should conditionalise our theories on observable data.

American English

  • To arrive at a rational belief, one must conditionalize one's prior probabilities on the new evidence.
  • The researcher conditionalized the model on the demographic variables.

adverb

British English

  • The probabilities were updated conditionalizationally, following strict Bayesian rules. (Highly marked and rare)

American English

  • The agent reasoned conditionalizationally based on the incoming data stream. (Highly marked and rare)

adjective

British English

  • The conditionalizational procedure is central to Bayesian epistemology.
  • He proposed a new conditionalizational rule for belief revision.

American English

  • The conditionalizational procedure is central to Bayesian epistemology.
  • She studied the conditionalizational framework of the theory.

Usage

Meaning in Context

Business

Virtually never used.

Academic

Used in philosophy (epistemology), statistics, probability theory, and formal semantics to describe the updating of beliefs or probabilities based on new evidence.

Everyday

Extremely unlikely to be encountered or used.

Technical

The primary domain. Refers to a formal procedure for incorporating conditions into a logical or probabilistic framework.

Vocabulary

Synonyms of “conditionalization”

Strong

Bayesian updating (specific to probability theory)

Neutral

conditioning (in probability)qualificationmodification by condition

Vocabulary

Antonyms of “conditionalization”

unconditional acceptancecategorical assertionabsolute belief

Watch out

Common Mistakes When Using “conditionalization”

  • Misspelling: 'conditionization', 'conditionlization'.
  • Using it in non-technical contexts where 'making it conditional' or 'adding a condition' would be appropriate.
  • Confusing it with 'conditioning' in psychology.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

No, it is a very rare, specialised term used almost exclusively in academic fields like philosophy, logic, and probability theory.

'Conditional' is an adjective describing something that depends on a condition. 'Conditionalization' is a noun for the *process* of making something conditional or the specific technical procedure of updating probabilities/beliefs based on conditions.

In British English: /kənˌdɪʃ.ən.ə.laɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/. In American English: /kənˌdɪʃ.ə.nə.ləˈzeɪ.ʃən/. The primary stress is on the '-ize-'/'aɪz/' syllable.

Yes, 'conditionalisation' is the standard British English spelling. 'Conditionalization' with a 'z' is the standard American English spelling. Both are correct within their respective varieties.

The action or process of making something conditional, or subject to certain conditions, requirements, or states of affairs.

Conditionalization is usually formal, technical, academic in register.

Phrases

Idioms & Phrases

  • None. Too technical for idiomatic use.

Learning

Memory Aids

Mnemonic

Think: CONDITION + ALIZE + ATION. The act of making a theory or belief depend on a specific condition.

Conceptual Metaphor

BELIEF/UPDATING IS A CALCULATION (Specifically, a belief is a variable that is recalculated when new conditional data is input).

Practice

Quiz

Fill in the gap
The core principle of Bayesian epistemology is , the process of rationally updating a belief based on new information.
Multiple Choice

In which field is the term 'conditionalization' MOST commonly used?