1 / 10

Lack of independent replicates: A common pitfall in experimental design.

Lack of independent replicates: A common pitfall in experimental design. Replication. the number of individual samples included in an average greater replication provides greater statistical strength reduces variance; strengthens the generality of the mean. Replicates must be Independent.

micheal
Download Presentation

Lack of independent replicates: A common pitfall in experimental design.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lack of independent replicates: A common pitfall in experimental design.

  2. Replication • the number of individual samples included in an average • greater replication provides greater statistical strength • reduces variance; strengthens the generality of the mean

  3. Replicates must be Independent • all statistical analyses assume replicate values are independent observations • a single value does not depend on one, more than it does on another • failures of the assumption of independence • lack of truly random sampling or assignment to treatment groups • pseudoreplication (Hurlbert, S.H. 1984. Ecological Monographs 54(2): 187-211)

  4. Inhibition of Biofilm Formation Chemical 1 Chemical 2 Chemical 3 Control

  5. Replicates are not independent because they are all in the same dish Differences between dishes will be misinterpreted as differences between treatments

  6. Inhibition of Biofilm Formation Chemical 1 Chemical 2 Chemical 3 Control

  7. PseudoreplicationStuart Hurlbert. 1984. Ecological Monographs 54(2): 187-211 • Treating multiple measurements from/on the same sample the same as single measurements made from/on multiple samples • The multiple measurements are not independent because they are all from the same sample; hence they are not replicates

  8. At which temperature will Serratia marcescens grow best? 20C 25C 35C 45C Measure absorbance of five samples from each flask.

  9. Pseudoreplication because. . . • Multiple measurements from the same flask are treated as if they were single measurements from multiple flasks • Each flask represents a single replicate, because multiple samples taken from each flask are not independent of one another

  10. Five flasks incubated at each temperature. 20C 25C 35C 45C Measure absorbance of one sample from each of the 20 flasks.

More Related