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Experiment

An experiment is a systematic procedure carried out to test a hypothesis, establish causal relationships, or demonstrate a principle by deliberately altering one or more variables and observing the effects. Experiments are characterized by the manipulation of an independent variable, measurement of a dependent variable, and attempts to control or randomize extraneous variables. They contrast with observational studies, where researchers do not intervene.

Common types include controlled experiments (often conducted in laboratories) with a comparison group; field experiments conducted

Key design features include operational definitions, replication, and randomization. Blinding or double-blinding reduces bias. Controls, such

The typical workflow comprises formulating a testable question, proposing a hypothesis, planning and conducting the experiment,

History traces experiments to early science, with notable contributions from figures such as Galileo and Bacon,

in
real-world
settings;
natural
experiments
where
conditions
approximate
an
experiment
but
are
not
fully
controlled;
and
randomized
controlled
trials,
in
which
participants
are
randomly
assigned
to
treatment
or
control
conditions.
Quasi-experiments
resemble
true
experiments
but
lack
random
assignment.
as
placebos
or
sham
interventions,
help
isolate
the
effect
of
the
independent
variable.
Validity
concerns
include
internal
validity
(causal
inference
within
the
study)
and
external
validity
(generalizability).
collecting
and
analyzing
data,
and
reporting
results.
Ethical
considerations
may
involve
informed
consent,
safety,
privacy,
and
welfare,
particularly
in
research
involving
humans
or
animals,
often
overseen
by
an
ethics
review
board.
and
they
remain
central
to
the
scientific
method
as
a
means
of
testing
ideas
and
building
evidence.