Experimental Design B/C
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Re: Experimental Design B/C
Could you do 4 levels? And if you did, would you get more points for it?
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Re: Experimental Design B/C
You can, but they only care about the first three that you list under the IV. So no, you would not get more points.brayden box wrote:Could you do 4 levels? And if you did, would you get more points for it?
In case you have similar questions in the future, check the rubric here before asking.
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Re: Experimental Design B/C
Is there going to be Experimental Design in regionals for Div. B?
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Re: Experimental Design B/C
I don't know the conventions for your regional tournament, but given that you are in Illinois, it should be run. Their state organization is well established, so you should expect all events to be run.Whiteheat073 wrote:Is there going to be Experimental Design in regionals for Div. B?
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Re: Experimental Design B/C
Have you guys ever used anything other than linear regression in an experiment? Do you think it'd be worth it to know quadratic, logarithmic, and/or sinusoidal regressions? And if a quadratic curve does fit the data better, should it still be sketched on the graph as a "line (or curve) of best fit"?
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Re: Experimental Design B/C
While this isn't an official answer, Experimental Design should be run at the regional you're attending (assuming that your school is Wredling).Whiteheat073 wrote:Is there going to be Experimental Design in regionals for Div. B?
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Re: Experimental Design B/C
I think it's generally best to use a linear regression because then you can interpret the intercepts. Plus, I think it's generally good practice to linearize data when the relationship turns out not to be linear (although I don't know that the event supervisors would expect teams to do that in the time given). Best case scenario is that you design an experiment that you know will turn out to be linear. If it's not, I would still sketch the line/curve of best fit just to be safe. Although technically you don't /need/ it since it's in the statistics section, so as long as you have enough other appropriate statistics to get the 6 points, you should be fine. However, I'm not sure how relevant other statistics would be on a non-linear graph, so I think having a non-linear graph could be a bit of a risk.Willows wrote:Have you guys ever used anything other than linear regression in an experiment? Do you think it'd be worth it to know quadratic, logarithmic, and/or sinusoidal regressions? And if a quadratic curve does fit the data better, should it still be sketched on the graph as a "line (or curve) of best fit"?
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Re: Experimental Design B/C
Hi, what exactly are linear/quadratic/logarithmic/sinusoidal regressions? This is my first year doing the event and I've honestly never even heard of those before.
Also, I'm in Div. B, so would knowing those be necessary for my division or is it mostly just for C?
Thanks
Also, I'm in Div. B, so would knowing those be necessary for my division or is it mostly just for C?
Thanks
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ExpD: 1/1/1/1/9
Foss: 3/1/8/4/1
Green Gen: 2/1/4/1/7
Met: 2/2/3/8/4
the dipstick is an intricate device used to measure the amount of rain in a rain gauge. it can also be used as a derogatory term for your meteorology partners
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Re: Experimental Design B/C
In simple terms, a regression is a statistical model of a set of bivariable data (i.e. has an independent and dependent variable, each with some numerical value) such that the average distance from the line to each point is a minimum. This link talks about linear regressions, which should be used when the data appears to form a uniform line. Likewise, quadratic regressions are for data that form a parabolic shape; logarithmic regressions for data forming the shape of a logarithmic graph; and sinusoidal regressions for data forming the shape of a sine wave. The derivation involves a ton of linear algebra; if you want to look it up, feel free.coprolite_dipstick wrote:Hi, what exactly are linear/quadratic/logarithmic/sinusoidal regressions? This is my first year doing the event and I've honestly never even heard of those before.
Also, I'm in Div. B, so would knowing those be necessary for my division or is it mostly just for C?
Thanks
Regressions are not required for either division and do not earn you brownie points, but you definitely will impress the judges if you do a regression.
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Re: Experimental Design B/C
I've been in Experimental Design for a few years now and the same question still comes to mind: When getting to a very competitive level (i.e. the teams competing know the rubric inside and outside, word for word in their head), for example, top 10 at Nationals, how are teams distinguished in rank? When it gets to a point where each Ex Des has the same key information required, how does a proctor decide if between four 120 point Ex Des's, one should be the champion?
Considering Experimental Design is mostly memorization of the rubric with consistent practice, I'm wondering what kind of special flair a team should do to distinguish themselves from the rest of the high-scoring pack.
Considering Experimental Design is mostly memorization of the rubric with consistent practice, I'm wondering what kind of special flair a team should do to distinguish themselves from the rest of the high-scoring pack.