statistical experimentation - meaning and definition. What is statistical experimentation
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What (who) is statistical experimentation - definition

Experimentation data

Self-experimentation in medicine         
  • Dr. [[Herta Oberheuser]] being sentenced at Nuremberg
  • Karl Landsteiner in Stockholm, 1930
  • Jesse Lazear
  • Max von Pettenkofer
  • Nicholas Senn
  • Rosalyn Yalow at the Bronx [[VA Hospital]] in 1977
  • Alexander Hoekstra self-administering an experimental, intranasal COVID-19 vaccine developed by [[Rapid Deployment Vaccine Collaborative]] in 2020.
  • Joseph Barcroft
  • Stapp being brought to a sudden stop in the rocket sled
  • Werner Forssmann
PRACTICE OF RESEARCHERS TRYING PROCEDURES ON THEMSELVES
Self-experimentation with drugs
Self-experimentation refers to scientific experimentation in which the experimenter conducts the experiment on themself. Often this means that the designer, operator, subject, analyst, and user or reporter of the experiment are all the same.
Ensemble (mathematical physics)         
  • classical]] systems in [[phase space]] (top). Each system consists of one massive particle in a one-dimensional [[potential well]] (red curve, lower figure). The initially compact ensemble becomes swirled up over time.
  • Visual representation of five statistical ensembles (from left to right): [[microcanonical ensemble]], [[canonical ensemble]], [[grand canonical ensemble]], [[isobaric-isothermal ensemble]], [[isoenthalpic-isobaric ensemble]]
SET OF POSSIBLE STATES
Using statistical ensembles; Using Statistical Ensembles; Ensemble average; Statistical ensemble; Thermodynamic ensemble; Gibbsian ensemble; Statistical Ensemble; Ensemble averaging (statistical mechanics); Ensemble average (statistical mechanics); Statistical ensemble (mathematical physics)
In physics, specifically statistical mechanics, an ensemble (also statistical ensemble) is an idealization consisting of a large number of virtual copies (sometimes infinitely many) of a system, considered all at once, each of which represents a possible state that the real system might be in. In other words, a statistical ensemble is a set of systems of particles used in statistical mechanics to describe a single
Ensemble average         
  • classical]] systems in [[phase space]] (top). Each system consists of one massive particle in a one-dimensional [[potential well]] (red curve, lower figure). The initially compact ensemble becomes swirled up over time.
  • Visual representation of five statistical ensembles (from left to right): [[microcanonical ensemble]], [[canonical ensemble]], [[grand canonical ensemble]], [[isobaric-isothermal ensemble]], [[isoenthalpic-isobaric ensemble]]
SET OF POSSIBLE STATES
Using statistical ensembles; Using Statistical Ensembles; Ensemble average; Statistical ensemble; Thermodynamic ensemble; Gibbsian ensemble; Statistical Ensemble; Ensemble averaging (statistical mechanics); Ensemble average (statistical mechanics); Statistical ensemble (mathematical physics)
In statistical mechanics, the ensemble average is defined as the mean of a quantity that is a function of the microstate of a system, according to the distribution of the system on its micro-states in this ensemble.

Wikipedia

Experimental data

Experimental data in science and engineering is data produced by a measurement, test method, experimental design or quasi-experimental design. In clinical research any data produced are the result of a clinical trial. Experimental data may be qualitative or quantitative, each being appropriate for different investigations.

Generally speaking, qualitative data are considered more descriptive and can be subjective in comparison to having a continuous measurement scale that produces numbers. Whereas quantitative data are gathered in a manner that is normally experimentally repeatable, qualitative information is usually more closely related to phenomenal meaning and is, therefore, subject to interpretation by individual observers.

Experimental data can be reproduced by a variety of different investigators and mathematical analysis may be performed on these data.