12.4
View the full transcript and gain access to JoVE Core videos
Q1: What are the main types of experimental design used in research?
There are three widely used types of experimental design: pre-experimental, true experimental, and quasi-experimental. Pre-experimental design compares data before and after intervention. True experimental design uses randomized assignment into control and test groups. Quasi-experimental design resembles true experimental design but lacks random assignment, making it practical when random assignment is impractical.
Q2: How does true experimental design differ from pre-experimental design?
True experimental design randomly divides samples into control and test groups, with the control group receiving no treatment while the test group receives the intervention. Pre-experimental design simply observes participants before and after intervention without a separate control group. True experimental design provides stronger causal evidence by comparing treated and untreated groups, whereas pre-experimental design relies on before-and-after comparisons within the same group.
Q3: Why is random assignment important in true experimental design?
Random assignment ensures that control and test groups are comparable at baseline, reducing bias and confounding variables. This allows researchers to attribute differences in outcomes directly to the treatment rather than pre-existing group differences. Randomized experiments strengthen causal inference by creating equivalent groups that differ only in the intervention received.
Q4: When would researchers choose quasi-experimental design over true experimental design?
Quasi-experimental design is chosen when random assignment is impractical or unethical. Participants freely choose their group assignment rather than being randomly assigned. This design is useful in real-world settings where controlling group membership is impossible, such as comparing students in existing classrooms or allowing participants to self-select into treatment conditions.
Q5: What role does the control group play in experimental design?
The control group receives no treatment or a standard treatment, establishing a baseline response for comparison. By comparing test group outcomes to control group outcomes, researchers can isolate the effect of the intervention. The control group helps distinguish treatment effects from natural variation or other confounding factors affecting the outcome.
Q6: How do researchers draw inferences from experimental design results?
Researchers compare outcome measurements between groups to evaluate the treatment effect. In true experimental design, random assignment allows causal conclusions about the independent variable's effect on the dependent variable. In pre-experimental and quasi-experimental designs, comparisons are less rigorous but still reveal patterns in how interventions affect measured outcomes.
Q7: What is the relationship between experimental design and study design in statistics?
Experimental design is a core component of study design in statistics, providing the framework for systematically testing causal relationships between variables. Study design encompasses broader methodological choices including experimental, quasi-experimental, and observational approaches. Understanding experimental design principles helps researchers select appropriate study design in statistics for their research questions.
Explore Related Chapters















