Synopses & Reviews
A valuable guide to conducting experiments and analyzingdata across a wide range of applications
Experimental design is an important component of the scientific method. Thisbook provides guidance on planning efficient investigations. It compilesdesigns for a wide range of experimental situations not previously found inaccessible form. Focusing on applications in the physical, engineering,biological, and social sciences, Planning, Construction, and StatisticalAnalysis of Comparative Experiments is a valuable guide to designingexperiments and correctly analyzing and interpreting the results. The authorsdraw on their years of experience in the classroom and as statisticalconsultants to research programs on campus, in government, and in industry. Theobject is always to strike the right balance between mathematical necessitiesand practical constraints.
Serving both as a textbook for students of intermediatestatistics and a hands-on reference for active researchers, the text includes:
- A wide range of applications, including agricultural sciences, animal and biomedical sciences, and industrial engineering studies
- General formulas for estimation and hypothesis testing, presented in a unified and simplified manner
- Guidelines for evaluating the power and efficiency of designs that are not perfectly balanced
- New developments in the design of fractional factorials with non-prime numbers of levels in mixed-level fractional factorials
- Detailed coverage on the construction of plans and the relationship among categories of designs
- Thorough coverage of balanced, lattice, cyclic, and alpha designs
- Strategies for sequences of fractional factorials
- Data sets and SAS® code on a companion web site
An ideal handbook for the investigator planning a researchprogram, the text comes complete with detailed plans of experiments andalternative approaches for added flexibility.
Review
"…an excellent reference for statisticians and practitioners who would like to gain broad exposure to the tools available for studying relationships between qualitative and quantitative factors…" (
Journal of the American Statistical Association, June 2005)
“The level of detail is higher than in most other books on similar topics and therefore makes this one a useful reference tool.” (Short Book Reviews, Vol.25, No.1, April 2005)
"I will instruct statistician reporting to me to get a copy of the book, and will keep the review copy readily available on my shelf…" (Technometrics, February 2005)
"There is a moderate amount of material that is not in other design books…in addition to some tricks of the trade that appear to be new…practitioners…will find the book useful." (Journal of Quality Technology, October 2004)
"...an excellent resource handbook for researchers and statisticians, providing them with the tools necessary to construct better experiments and plan more efficient investigations.” (CHOICE, October 2004)
Synopsis
(Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics) Description: The outgrowth of more than 40 years of experience teaching and consulting with students and active researchers in many disciplines, this is a useful guide for both students and active researchers to experimental design. Researchers will find it an invaluable handbook that encapsulates the past 25 years of developments and new techniques for planning and designing experiments. The book also serves as a carefully-crafted text for a second year course in experimental design. Key Features: At once a comprehensive handbook for the active researcher and a thorough introduction for the advanced student, this reference provides:
Synopsis
At once a comprehensive handbook for the active researcher and a thorough introduction for the advanced student, this reference provides:
* Coverage of wide range of applications, including agricultural sciences, animal and biomedi-cal sciences, and industrial and engineering studies
* Information on new developments in the design of fractional factorials with non-prime numbers of levels in mixed-level fractional factorials
* Detailed information on the construction of plans and the relationships among categories of designs
* Thorough discussion of balanced, partially balanced, lattice, cyclic and alpha-designs
* Accommodations for how to evaluate the power and efficiency of designs that are not perfectly balanced
* Unified and simplified presentation of general forms for estimation and hypothesis testing
Synopsis
* Unified and simplified presentation of general forms for estimation and hypothesis testing
About the Author
FRANCIS G. GIESBRECHT, PhD, is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Statistics at North Carolina State University in Raleigh, North Carolina. He earned his PhD in Statistics from the Iowa State University.
MARCIA L. GUMPERTZ, PhD, is a professor in the Department of Statistics at North Carolina State University where she also received her PhD in Statistics.
Table of Contents
Preface.
Introduction.
The Completely Randomized Design.
Linear Models for Designed Experiments.
Testing Hypotheses and Determining Sample Size.
Methods of Reducing Unexplained Variation.
Latin Squares.
Split-Plot and Related Designs.
Incomplete Block Designs.
Repeated Teatments Designs.
Factorial Experiments, the 2n System.
Factorial Experiments, the 3n System.
Analysis of Experiments Without Designed Error Terms.
Confounding Effects with Blocks.
Fractional Factorial Experiments.
Response Surface Designs.
Plackett-Burmann Hadamard Plans.
The General Pn and Nonstandard Factorials.
Factorial Experiments with Quantitative Factors.
Plans for Which Run Order is Important.
Supersaturated Plans.
Sequences of Fractions of Factorials.
Multi-Stage xperiments.
Orthogonal Arrays and Related Structures.
Factorial Plans Derived via Orthogonal Arrays.
Experiments on the Computer.