The Practice of Statistics

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
DESIGNING EXPERIMENTS
Advertisements

Warm-Up Grab a sheet and review!. Section 4.2 Experiments Some of these things are going to look familiar, but remember…we are talking about different.
Chapter 13 Notes Observational Studies and Experimental Design
Section 5.2 Designing Experiments AP Statistics
Brian Kelly '06 Chapter 13: Experiments. Observational Study n Observational Study: A type of study in which individuals are observed or certain outcomes.
Collection of Data Chapter 4. Three Types of Studies Survey Survey Observational Study Observational Study Controlled Experiment Controlled Experiment.
LT 4.2 Designing Experiments Thanks to James Jaszczak, American Nicaraguan School.
Designing Experiments Purpose for experiments – to study the response of one variable to the changes in other variables. Experimental Units (Subjects)
The Practice of Statistics, 5th Edition Starnes, Tabor, Yates, Moore Bedford Freeman Worth Publishers CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies 4.2Experiments.
Chapter 3.1.  Observational Study: involves passive data collection (observe, record or measure but don’t interfere)  Experiment: ~Involves active data.
Lecture PowerPoint Slides Basic Practice of Statistics 7 th Edition.
Section 5.2 Designing Experiments. Observational Study - Observes individuals and measures variables of interest but DOES NOT attempt to influence the.
CHAPTER 9: Producing Data Experiments ESSENTIAL STATISTICS Second Edition David S. Moore, William I. Notz, and Michael A. Fligner Lecture Presentation.
CHAPTER 3- DESIGNING EXPERIMENTS
Lecture PowerPoint Slides Basic Practice of Statistics 7 th Edition.
Producing Data (C11-13 BVD) C13: Experiments and Observational Studies.
Designing Experiments 5.2. Vocabulary Experimental Units: the individuals on which the experiment is done Subjects: when the experimental units are humans.
Observations vs. Experiments Target Goals: I can distinguish between an observational study and an experiment. I can explain how a lurking variable in.
The Practice of Statistics, 5th Edition Starnes, Tabor, Yates, Moore Bedford Freeman Worth Publishers CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies 4.2Experiments.
Designing Experiments
Chapter 5.2 Designing experiments. Terminology The individuals on which the experiment is done are the experiment units. When the units are human beings.
CHAPTER 9: Producing Data Experiments ESSENTIAL STATISTICS Second Edition David S. Moore, William I. Notz, and Michael A. Fligner Lecture Presentation.
1 Chapter 11 Understanding Randomness. 2 Why Random? What is it about chance outcomes being random that makes random selection seem fair? Two things:
Silent Do Now (5 minutes) *Before you begin, grab a new weekly sheet and take out your homework!  An opinion poll calls 2000 randomly chosen residential.
Ten things about Experimental Design AP Statistics, Second Semester Review.
Counting in binary is as easy as What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
Experimental Design.
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
Observational Studies and Experiments
MATH 2311 Sections 6.2 & 6.3.
Section 5.2 Designing Experiments
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
Ten things about Experimental Design
Designing Experiments
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
CHAPTER 9: Producing Data— Experiments
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
DRILL If you needed to select 5 students from a group of 6250, how could you use the table of random digits to carry out the selection process. Starting.
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
Experiments & Observational Studies
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
MATH 2311 Sections 6.2.
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
Chapter 4: Designing Studies
Homework: pg. 349 #21, 24, ) A. The individuals are adults, presumably those who are eligible to vote, in the country. B. The individuals.
Designing Experiments
Warmup A drug company wants to test a new drug, statsium, to determine if it improves memory in young adults. There will be two treatments: a daily.
Principles of Experimental Design
Experimental Design Statistics.
Experiments Observational Study – observes individuals and measures variables of interest but does not attempt to influence the responses. Experiment.
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
Experiments Observational Study – observes individuals and measures variables of interest but does not attempt to influence the responses. Experiment.
Principles of Experimental Design
CHAPTER 4 Designing Studies
MATH 2311 Sections 6.2.
Presentation transcript:

The Practice of Statistics Daniel S. Yates The Practice of Statistics Third Edition Chapter 5: Producing Data 5.2 Designing Experiments Copyright © 2008 by W. H. Freeman & Company

Essential Questions What are the three basic principles of experimental design? What is completely randomized design? What is the purpose of randomization and blocking in an eperimental design? What are blocking, matched-pair, blind, double-blind experimental designs?

Terminology The individuals on which the experiment is done are the experimental units. When the units are human beings, they are called subjects. A specific experimental condition applied to the units is called the treatment.

Experiments Units Treatment Observe Response

More terminology The explanatory variables in an experiment are often called factors. Each treatment is formed by combining a specific value (often called a level) of each of the factors.

Two Explanatory variables: Factor A and Factor B. Factor A has two levels and Factor B has three levels.

Example Describe the units, factors, treatments and response variable. The ability to grow in shade may help pines found in the dry forests of Arizona to resist drought., How well do these pines grow in shade? Investigators planted pine seedlings in a greenhouse in either full light or light reduced to 5% of normal by shade cloth. At the end of the study, they dried the young trees and weighed them.

Other Variables Lurking variable – A variable that has an important effect and yet is not included amongst the predictor variables under consideration. Perhaps its existence is unknown or its effect unsuspected http://www.stat.berkeley.edu/users/brill/Stat215a/nov13.pdf Confounded varibles – Two possible influences on an observed outcome are confounded if they are mixed together in a way that makes it impossible to separate their effects on the response. (Statistics in Action Understanding a World of Data. Page 246.)

The Placebo Effect The patients’ response may have been due the placebo effect. A placebo is a dummy treatment. Many patients respond favorably to any treatment, even a placebo. This may be due to trust in the doctor and expectations of a cure, or simply to the fact that medical conditions often improve without treatment.

Principles of Experimental Design Control: We control sources of variation (lurking and confounded variables) other than the factors we are testing by random assignment and ensuring that conditions are similar as possible for all treatment groups. Randomization: The use of chance to assign units to treatments allows us to equalize the effects of unknown or uncontrolled sources of variation. Replication: Use enough subjects to reduce chance variation. We would like to see units in a treatment group responding similarly to one another and hopefully different from other treatment groups. (Systematic difference in response.)