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Experimental Design for the Life Sciences 4th Revised edition


Experimental Design for the Life Sciences 4th Revised edition

Paperback by Ruxton, Graeme D. (Professor, Professor, University of St Andrews); Colegrave, Nick (Lecturer in Biology, Lecturer in Biology, The University of Edinburgh)

Experimental Design for the Life Sciences

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ISBN:
9780198717355
Publication Date:
9 Jun 2016
Edition/language:
4th Revised edition / English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Pages:
224 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 2 - 3 May 2024
Experimental Design for the Life Sciences

Description

The careful design of experiments lies at the core of good research. Experimental Design for the Life Sciences equips you with the skills you need to effectively design experiments, making this essential aspect of the research process readily understandable. It demonstrates how good experimental design relies on clear thinking and biological understanding, not mathematical or statistical complexity. With a refreshingly approachable and articulate style, the book walks you through the considerations that go into designing an experiment in clear, practical terms. Using examples drawn from across the life sciences - from ecology, biochemistry, molecular biology, genetics, and health sciences - the authors illustrate how these concepts are applied within the broad context of real biological research. Online Resource Centre The Online Resource centre to accompany Experimental Design for the Life Sciences features: For students: · Self-test questions and answers · Additional examples · Supplementary sections discuss complex concepts and statistical issues in more depth · Links to useful websites and free software For lecturers: · Suggested course structures, complete with practical exercises · Figures from the book, available to download

Contents

1: Why you should care about design 2: Starting with a well-defined hypothesis 3: Selecting the broad design of your study 4: Between-individual variation, replication, and sampling 5: Pseudoreplication 6: Sample size, power, and efficient design 7: The simplest type of experimental design: completely randomized single-factor 8: Experiments with several factors (factorial designs) 9: Beyond complete randomization: blocking and covariates 10: Within-subject designs 11: Taking measurements

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