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Related Concept Videos

Randomized Experiments01:13

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The randomization process involves assigning study participants randomly to experimental or control groups based on their probability of being equally assigned. Randomization is meant to eliminate selection bias and balance known and unknown confounding factors so that the control group is similar to the treatment group as much as possible. A computer program and a random number generator can be used to assign participants to groups in a way that minimizes bias.
Simple randomization
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Bias01:22

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Bias refers to any tendency that prevents a question from being considered unprejudiced. In research, bias occurs when one outcome or answer is selected or encouraged over others in sampling or testing. Bias can occur during any research phase, including study design, data collection, analysis, and publication.
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The most basic experimental design involves two groups: the experimental group and the control group. The two groups are designed to be the same except for one difference— experimental manipulation. The experimental group gets the experimental manipulation—that is, the treatment or variable being tested—and the control group does not. Since experimental manipulation is the only difference between the experimental and control groups, we can be sure that any differences between...
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Blinding is a commonly used method of not telling participants which treatment a subject is receiving. Blinding is a critical part of a randomized control trial or RCT. It reduces the bias that affects the results. In an RCT, blinding is used in the form of a placebo. A placebo effect occurs when untreated subjects falsely believe they have received the treatment and report improved symptoms. A placebo or a dummy treatment is administered to subjects to negate the bias caused by such an effect.
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Ideally, the people who observe and record the children’s behavior are unaware of who was assigned to the experimental or control group, in order to control for experimenter bias. Experimenter bias refers to the possibility that a researcher’s expectations might skew the results of the study. Remember, conducting an experiment requires a lot of planning, and the people involved in the research project have a vested interest in supporting their hypotheses. If the observers knew which...
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An experiment is a planned activity carried out under controlled conditions. The purpose of an experiment is to investigate the relationship between two variables. When one variable causes change in another, we call the first variable the explanatory or independent variable. The affected variable is called the response or dependent variable. In a randomized experiment, the researcher manipulates values of the explanatory variable and measures the resulting changes in the response variable. The...
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Public Policy Experiments without Equipoise: When Is Randomization Fair?

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) can be fair even without equipoise. This study identifies conditions for fair random assignment to superior public policy interventions, rejecting alternatives like stepped-wedge designs.

Keywords:
equipoisehuman research ethicslottery in researchrandomized controlled trialsstepped-wedge designs

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Area of Science:

  • Public Policy Evaluation
  • Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs)
  • Ethics in Research

Background:

  • Government agencies and nonprofits increasingly use RCTs for policy evaluation.
  • Random assignment is typically considered fair when there is equipoise (uncertainty about intervention effectiveness).
  • Debate exists on the fairness of randomization when an intervention is expected to be superior.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the ethical permissibility of randomization in public policy RCTs when equipoise is absent.
  • To identify conditions under which random assignment to a superior intervention is ethically fair.
  • To critically evaluate alternative study designs for allocating beneficial interventions.

Main Methods:

  • Theoretical investigation of ethical principles in randomization.
  • Analysis of conditions for fair allocation of scarce resources.
  • Rejection of claims regarding the fairness of stepped-wedge and uneven randomization designs.

Main Results:

  • Two sets of conditions are identified where random assignment to a superior intervention is deemed fair.
  • The fairness argument is linked to the allocation of scarce, beneficial interventions via lottery.
  • Alternative designs like stepped-wedge and uneven randomization are found not to be fair alternatives for allocating beneficial interventions.

Conclusions:

  • Randomization in public policy RCTs can be ethically justified even without equipoise, under specific conditions.
  • Fairness in allocation hinges on the potential benefits and scarcity of the intervention.
  • Alternative study designs do not provide a fair substitute for justified randomization when allocating superior interventions.