Producing Data: Samples and Experiments Chapter 5.

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Producing Data: Samples and Experiments Chapter 5

Transcript of Producing Data: Samples and Experiments Chapter 5.

Page 1: Producing Data: Samples and Experiments Chapter 5.

Producing Data: Samples and Experiments

Chapter 5

Page 2: Producing Data: Samples and Experiments Chapter 5.

Discussion example 1

One school board member noticed that students in band tended to be in the top 25% of their school. She compiled a list from each high school’s band director and took a random sample of 25 students from each school’s band. She then took a random sample of 25 students from each high school that wasn’t in band. She found a slightly higher average G.P.A. of student’s in band.

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Discussion example 1

Will this study give evidence that being in band causes an increase in a students G.P.A?

Will this study help her generalize that student’s in band tend to have a slightly higher G.P.A. than students not in band?

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Vocabulary from example 1

Observational study a study based on data collected from

individuals that meet a determined criteria

Lurking variable an outside factor that is not the explanatory nor

response variable prevents causal relationships from being

established in observational studies

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Discussion example 2

Another school board member is surprised the increase is so slight. First, he emails each band director and asks for a list of 30 students. He then accesses each high school’s roster takes the first 40 listed striking any student’s name has already has. He found the average G.P.A. of student’s in band to be more significant than the first study.

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Discussion example 2

Will this study give evidence that being in band causes an increase in a students G.P.A?

Will this study help her generalize that student’s in band tend to have a slightly higher G.P.A. than students not in band?

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Discussion example 3

Walmart is considering buying a gasoline additive that is suppose to improve gas mileage. They found 30 employees in Texas that drive the same car. Fifteen employees are randomly selected to receive the additive, the remaining fifteen are given a bottle with just gas. Each employee is given a set route around the city to drive. The gas mileage is recorded by an onboard computer which shows the additive gives the driver 12% better gas mileage.

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Discussion example 3

Will this study give evidence that using the additive will give a car better gas mileage?

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Vocabulary from example 3Experiment

a planned study where deliberate conditions are imposed to see how the response variable will change

Confounding variable a variable associated (noncausal) with the explanatory

variable that affects the response variable in some way makes it difficult to tell if the treatment or the

confounding variable affected the response variable significantly

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Lurking versus confounding

Observation study

x y

z

Lurking

Experiment

x y

z

Confounding

??

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Randomized comparative experiments

Goal of an experiment: collect statistically significant evidence for a cause-and-effect relationship.

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Principles of Experimental Design

Control: using comparison ensures that outside factors

operate equally on all groups comparison minimizes effects of confounding

variables allowing effects of treatments to be better evaluated

control groups allow us to accurately assess the change in the response variable

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Principles of Experimental Design

Control: Randomization:

use of impersonal chance in order equalize unanticipated factors so that groups that should be similar in all respects.

homogenous groups reduce variability allowing better assessment of treatments

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Principles of Experimental Design

Control: Randomization: Replication:

perform the experiment on as many subjects to reduce chance variation in the results

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Experimental Design Examples

Read each design example and write a description on how each experiment should be run.

Key terms: groups, treatments, comparison, randomization

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Completely Randomized Design

Random Allocation

Group 1

15 babies

Group 2

15 babies

Treatment 1

Her product

Treatment 2

Competitor’s

Compare weight gain

Babies will be numbered 01 to 30. Using a random number table, the first 15 selected will be in Group 1 with the remaining placed in group 2. Each babies’ weight will be measured in pounds and compared.

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Block Design

Subjects

African American men

White men

Random assignment

Random assignment

Group 1

Group 2

Group 3

Group 4

Treatment 1 Calcium

Treatment 1 Calcium

Treatment 2 Placebo

Treatment 2 Placebo

Compare blood pressure

All African American men will be assigned a random number. Half themen who have the smallest numbers will be assigned group 1, the halfwith the largest numbers will be assigned group 2. The process will repeatfor the white men. The reduction in blood pressure will be compared.

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Matched pair Design

Random Allocation

Group 1

Group 2

Treatment 1

left hand

Treatment 2

right hand

Compare

difference

A coin will be flipped to decide which hand will be measured first by each participant. Heads will squeeze the left hand first, tails will squeeze the right hand first. The different in the pounds on the scale will be compared.

Treatment 1

left hand

Treatment 2

right hand

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Calcium experiment revisted

What potential problems might be have because we started with random assignment?

How should we alter our experiment?

Random Assignment

Group 1

Group 2

Treatment 1

Calcium

Treatment 2

Placebo

Compare blood pressure

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Block Design

All participants

African American men

White men

Completely randomized experiment

Completely randomized experiment

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Improving the Design

A block is a group of experimental units or subjects that are known before the experiment to be similar in some way that is expected to affect the response to the treatments.

Block design has the same rationale as a stratified random sample.

Blocks allow us to reduce the amount of variation to improve the accuracy of our conclusions by creating homogeneous groups.

single blind versus double blind

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Improving the Design

In a matched pair design, each subject in the experiment will receive two (and only two) treatments.

The order that each subject receives both treatments is randomly selected to preserve the important aspect of randomization.