Reproducibility of experiment
Dear Marc and R-list, thanks for your help. I have checked Bland-Altman help page about repeatability, and I learnt that instead of reproducibility, I was talking about repeatability. Although I am not sure whether they only focuse on agreement of two different measurement methods, and not on repeatability of one single method. To explain further on my topic, I have repeated ten times an experiment involving protein quantification(i.e. how much protein I have), giving me ten continuous values. All experimental settings are similar so there should be no variability due to day of experiment, operator or any batch effect. My aim is to know whether these ten observations are good enough so that I can conclude that the repeatability of my detection technique is good. But as I have learnt from Altman?s page, it is not possible to set a threshold to the repeatability score to say my experiment is "repeatable". I guess I can obtain a 95% confidence interval for the protein quantification values, but I am not sure this will show how well my experiment performs. Putting it differently, something I would like to know is whether I can estimate beforehand how many times I need to run an experiment in order to be confident that it is "repeatable". Thanks for your comments David
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 17:23 +0100, darteta001 at ikasle.ehu.es wrote:
Dear list, I have an experiment that I have run 10 times in order to find out
its
reproducibility. I wonder if there is any function that I can use
for
obtaining a significance value of reproducibility or agreement of measurements. I thought of coefficient of variation but, as far as
I
know, I would have to set a threshold for saying the experiment is
not
reproducible. Any pointers to something more "objective" would be
very
helpful. Thanks David
I suspect that you are going to have to be more specific regarding
the
subject matter and the experimental design so that those with the requisite expertise could comment. If this is looking at a continuous measure (ie. instrumentation measurements), you could look at Bland-Altman methods. More
information
here: http://www-users.york.ac.uk/~mb55/meas/meas.htm Otherwise, given that Google returns almost a million hits with the phrase "reproducibility of experiment"... HTH, Marc Schwartz