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Experimental Design for Biologists, Second Edition

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The effective design and analysis of experiments in biology are critical to success, yet graduate students in biological and medical sciences typically receive very little formal training in these steps. With feedback from readers of the first edition, colleagues, and students taking the very popular experimental design courses taught by the author, this second edition of Experimental Design for Biologists retains the engaging writing style while organizing the book around the four elements of experimental design: the framework, the system, the experiment, and the model. The approach has been tested in the classroom, where the author has taught numerous graduate students, MD/PhD students, and postdoctoral fellows. The goal of every scientist is to discover something new and with the aid of Experimental Design for Biologists, this task is made a little easier.
This handbook explains how to establish the framework for an experimental project, how to set up all of the components of an experimental system, design experiments within that system, determine and use the correct set of controls, and formulate models to test the veracity and resiliency of the data. This thoroughly updated edition of Experimental Design for Biologists is an essential source of theory and practical guidance for designing a research plan.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published November 28, 2006

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About the author

David J. Glass

2 books1 follower

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Mohammad Roufarshbaf.
225 reviews30 followers
February 1, 2021
Written in November 2017:
I read six chapters of it, but I prefer to read another book instead of this one and then come back and complete it. Reading this book needs both concentration and a higher level of English proficiency for me. I hope to enjoy and learn more from this book the next time I start reading it again.

UPDATE in February 2021:
Finally, I read the book "Experimental Design for Biologists," written by David. J. Glass. Reading this book was a huge challenge for me due to its relation to the philosophy of science.

In 2017, I decided to approach the book, but I left it after reading six chapters. In 2020, I came back to read it with more confidence due to being more proficient at English. This time, I could understand many of its chapters better than before; however, I cannot claim that I have understood all of the book's parts. I should review the book later.

After reading this book and some other ones and finishing online courses such as "Statistics in Medicine" and "Writing in the Sciences" offered by Stanford Online, I feel more confident to move toward getting a PhD and becoming a scientist as soon as possible.

I should thank my professor, Dr. Yousof Gheisari, for introducing the book to me.
Profile Image for Leslie (updates on SG).
1,489 reviews38 followers
July 27, 2015
In lucid prose, Glass carefully takes the reader through the steps a scientist should take to carry out a successful and reproducible project. I especially enjoyed Glass's argument for the question over hypothesis to frame a project and his numerous examples regarding validating a system. I wish, however, more examples were given for the different types of controls. Overall, an excellent book for the experimental biologist.

Caveat: I have heard Glass talk about some of these topics before, but this book is a fine substitute for those who don't have the same opportunity.
Profile Image for Oly.
1 review1 follower
July 11, 2016
the author addresses a very complicated issue that falls in the realm of philosophy, as simply as possible. he tries to demonstrate that "critical rationalists' approach has its pitfalls, and argues that "inductive reasoning" should be used in its stead. anyway this books is more about the philosophy of science than mere statistical design, and the argument certainly doesn't serve the biologists only, as per the title .
Profile Image for Riccardo Scribano.
20 reviews2 followers
May 5, 2023
Warning: my review is based on the 2nd edition of this book. This is noteworthy, since as mentioned in the introduction to the latter, the content of the book has been majorly rearranged and expanded from the first to the second edition.

What I liked most of this book is that it doesn't deal with statistics at all. Normally, in experimental design books this would be a huge lack, and definitely not an upside. Nonetheless, in this case this is an advantage: 1) because it avoids repetition, in case you have a foundation in stats (and was it not the case there are plenty of options out there for you to catch up) and 2) because instead, it deals with topics that I haven't seen in other experimental design books, or at least it does in a simple and interesting way.
If you want to learn about the general features of an experimental project, this is the book for you. Some of the main points treated here are: framing a research project,system validation (what type of data are we to measure? How? How do we ensure that the system is going to work?), Controls (positive, negative, controls for assumptions and so on) and model building and validation. Noticeably, a considerable part of the book is devoted to a discussion of two different experimental frameworks: the hypothesis-falsification one and the open-question one.
Overall I do suggest this book but make sure to complement this one with another that goes into more detail on topics such as how to establish the sample size and how to carry out statistical analysis. Last, a small criticism to this book maybe be the way replication is treated. After reading "Experimental design for laboratory biologists" by E. Lazsic (similar title, I know) I found the treatment of this matter inappropriate in this one by Glass. The distinction between "biological replicates" and "technical replicates" is in my opinion a bit too superficial, so I would suggest to complement this part of the book with further reading as well.
Profile Image for Fabio Mologni.
173 reviews2 followers
March 31, 2019
Overall a very good book, addressing problems often overlooked in most of uni biology courses. However, despite the title, this book does not suit all biologists. It is tailored for molecular/cell biology, not for ecology or conservation biology.
Profile Image for Tassanee.
20 reviews1 follower
December 3, 2023
I would recommend it to everyone who may forget the proper way to do biological research.
Experimental design for biologists. I borrowed this book from the library (second edition). It helps me frame my research and determine to what extent I can interpret the results.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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