The Principle of Replication 2. The Principle of Randomization and The 3. Principle of Local Control

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PRINCIPLES OF EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH DESIGN

Professor Fisher has enumerated three principles of experimental designs:


1. the Principle of Replication;
2. the Principle of Randomization; and the
3. Principle of Local Control
According to the Principle of Replication, the experiment should be repeated more than
once. Thus, each treatment is applied in many experimental units instead of one. By doing
so the statistical accuracy of the experiments is increased. For example, suppose we are to
examine the effect of two varieties of rice. For this purpose we may divide the field into two
parts and grow one variety in one part and the other variety in the other part. We can then
compare the yield of the two parts and draw conclusion on that basis. But if we are to apply
the principle of replication to this experiment, then we first divide the field into several parts,
grow one variety in half of these parts and the other variety in the remaining parts. We can
then collect the data of yield of the two varieties and draw conclusion by comparing the
same. The result so obtained will be more reliable in comparison to the conclusion we draw
without applying the principle of replication. The entire experiment can even be repeated
several times for better results. Conceptually replication does not present any difficulty, but
computationally it does. For example, if an experiment requiring a two-way analysis of
variance is replicated, it will then require a three-way analysis of variance since replication
itself may be a source of variation in the data. However, it should be remembered that
replication is introduced in order to increase the precision of a study; that is to say, to
increase the accuracy with which the main effects and interactions can be estimated.

The Principle of Randomization provides protection, when we conduct an experiment,


against the effect of extraneous factors by randomization. In other words, this principle
indicates that we should design or plan the experiment in such a way that the variations
caused by extraneous factors can all be combined under the general heading of “chance.”
For instance, if we grow one variety of rice, say, in the first half of the parts of a field and the
other variety is grown in the other half, then it is just possible that the soil fertility may be
different in the first half in comparison to the other half. If this is so, our results would not
be realistic. In such a situation, we may assign the variety of rice to be grown in different
parts of the field on the basis of some random sampling technique i.e., we may apply
randomization principle and protect ourselves against the effects of the extraneous factors
(soil fertility differences in the given case). As such, through the application of the principle
of randomization, we can have a better estimate of the experimental error.

The Principle of Local Control is another important principle of experimental designs. Under
it the extraneous factor, the known source of variability, is made to vary deliberately over as
wide a range as necessary and this needs to be done in such a way that the variability it
causes can be measured and hence eliminated from the experimental error. This means
that we should plan the experiment in a manner that we can perform a two-way analysis of
variance, in which the total variability of the data is divided into three components attributed
to treatments (varieties of rice in our case), the extraneous factor (soil fertility in our case)
and experimental error. In other words, according to the principle of local control, we first
divide the field into several homogeneous parts, known as blocks, and then each such block
is divided into parts equal to the number of treatments. Then the treatments are randomly
assigned to these parts of a block. Dividing the field into several homogenous parts is
known as ‘blocking’. In general, blocks are the levels at which we hold an extraneous factor
fixed, so that we can measure its contribution to the total variability of the data by means of
a two-way analysis of variance. In brief, through the principle of local control we can
eliminate the variability due to extraneous factor(s) from the experimental error.

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