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Published byRaymond Beasley Modified over 9 years ago
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Experimental Design Controlled Experiments
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Biologists use controlled experiments to answer many questions Controlled Experiment: An experiment in which two or more groups are set up for comparison; only one variable is different between the groups. Example: Question:“Does eating high-sodium foods cause high blood pressure”? What two groups would be compared in an experiment to answer this question?
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Sodium Experiment One group eats the “normal” amount of sodium. (Diet meets the daily recommended value). One group eats a high-sodium diet (exceeds the recommended value.)
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Control & Experimental Groups Control Group: Either, Does not get the treatment, or Is followed under “normal” conditions. Ex: Eats a diet that meets the daily recommended value for sodium. Experimental Group: Either, Gets the treatment, or Is followed under altered conditions. Ex: Eats a diet that exceeds the recommended value for sodium. Can have more than 1 group. Different groups can eat varying amounts of sodium, all exceeding the recommendation.
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Hypotheses Controlled experiments are designed to answer a question, but more specifically, are designed to determine the validity of a hypothesis. Hypothesis: a testable statement of what is thought to be true based on initial observations, prior knowledge and scientific evidence.
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“If…then…” statements The format for writing a hypothesis is the “If…then…” format. If…[what is thought to be true], then…[testable statement]. Complete the If…then…hypothesis for the example scientific question. If a high-sodium diet causes high blood pressure, then ____________________.
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Example: Hypothesis If a high-sodium diet causes high blood pressure, then people who consume a high-sodium diet will have higher blood pressure after one year than people who eat a low- sodium diet.
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Variables of a Controlled Experiment Independent Variable: the variable that differs between the control and experimental groups. Dependent Variable: the variable that will be measured/observed to see if the I.V. made a difference. Controlled Variables: the variables that will be the same (constant) between the two groups.
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Example Question: What are the I.V., D.V., and C.V. of the experiment? Independent Variable: sodium level in diet Dependent Variable: blood pressure, measured 2x per month for 1 year Controlled variables: age, health, family health history, gender, # of calories eaten, exercise, medication taken…
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