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Definition of Experimental condition
1. Noun. The procedure that is varied in order to estimate a variable's effect by comparison with a control condition.
Group relationships: Experiment, Experimentation
Generic synonyms: Procedure, Process
Lexicographical Neighbors of Experimental Condition
Literary usage of Experimental condition
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1883)
"In the experimental condition, new questionnaires were distributed and the groups
were asked to discuss each item for 2 minutes and not to mark their final ..."
2. The Advanced Montessori Method by Maria Montessori (1917)
"Liberty is the experimental condition for studying the phenomena of the child's
attention. It will be enough to remember that the stimuli of infant ..."
3. The Argentine in the Twentieth Century by Alberto B. Martinez, Maurice Lewandowski (1915)
"... culture of the silk-worm might be established in the Argentine, but at present
exists only in an experimental condition. MATE—Large consumption of this ..."
4. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1905)
"The experimental condition is the nature of the subject's attention, ... As regards
the experimental condition, the experimenters merely assume that a given ..."
5. Surgery, Gynecology & Obstetrics by The American College of Surgeons, Franklin H. Martin Memorial Foundation (1913)
"The operative method above described produces a definite experimental condition
which is as follows : Two joint surfaces, with the cartilage removed, ..."
6. Drug Abuse Prevention Through Family Interventions edited by Rebecca S. Ashery, Elizabeth B. Robertson, Karol L. Kumpfer (2000)
"Considerable work was done in developing a manual for the experimental
condition (Szapocznik and Kurtines 1989; Szapocznik et al. ..."
7. A Text Book of Naval Architecture for the Use of Officers of the Royal Navy by John Joseph Welch, Great Britain Admiralty (1893)
"... for the experimental condition. The ballast (of weight ic) from one side of
the ship is now moved to the other through a certain distance (h feet say), ..."
8. Text-book of Theoretical Naval Architecture by Edward Lewis Attwood (1902)
"The vertical position of G in the experimental condition is found by subtracting
the experimental GM, viz. 2-92 feet, from the height of the ..."