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Get out homework and discuss with neighbor. Be prepared with any questions you might have. Get out materials for notes. Designing Experiments, cont. Section 5.2 . Cautions About Experimentation.
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Get out homework and discuss with neighbor. • Be prepared with any questions you might have. • Get out materials for notes.
Designing Experiments, cont. Section 5.2
Cautions About Experimentation • A Randomized Comparative Experiment depends on our ability to treat all the experimental units identically in every way EXCEPT the actual treatments being compared.
Cautions About Experimentation • Attention to detail • How can you ensure that every unit receives exactly the same treatment? • Physicians’ Health Study from yesterday
Cautions About Experimentation • Double-blind experiment • Neither the subjects nor the people observing the response know which treatment a subject received What are some examples of an experiment that can’t be blind? Double-blind?
Examples • http://articles.latimes.com/2011/may/09/health/la-he-unreal-greys-anatomy-20110509 • http://www.thealzcenter.com/trials/
Cautions About Experimentation • Lack of realism • Setting, treatment, or subjects may not realistically duplicate the conditions we want to study • Limits our ability to apply the conclusions of an experiment to the settings of greatest interest. Read Examples 5.14 & 5.15 on p. 300
Cautions About Experimentation • Completely randomized designs are simple but often not as good as more sophisticated designs
Cautions About Experimentation • Matched pairs design • Compares two treatments together in pairs • Each individual gets BOTH treatments • Must randomize the order that treatments are given • An example of block design Read example 5.16 p. 301
Cautions About Experimentation • Block design • Block – a group of units (subjects) that are known to be similar in a way that’s expected to affect response to treatment • Read example 5.17 p. 302 • Random assignment to each treatment is carried out separately within each block
Example • Read Example 5.17, 5.18, & 5.19 p. 302 & 303
Diagrams of Designs Random Assignment testing two treatments Treatment 1 Group 1 Compare Results Random Assignment Treatment 2 Group 2 Random Assignment testing three treatments Treatment 1 Group 1 Compare Results Random Assignment Treatment 2 Group 2 Group 3 Treatment 3
Diagrams of Designs Block Design Treatment 1 Block 1 Compare Results Treatment 2 Treatment 1 Subjects Block 2 Compare Results Treatment 2 Treatment 1 Block 3 Compare Results Treatment 2
Homework • Exercises 5.43, 5.44, 5.45