Difference between revisions of "Examples for Errors"
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|rowspan="3"|'''Errors that are inherent to the process and influence the outcome''' | |rowspan="3"|'''Errors that are inherent to the process and influence the outcome''' | ||
|Uncontrolable, not-measured differences in study subjects, e.g. genetic differences | |Uncontrolable, not-measured differences in study subjects, e.g. genetic differences | ||
+ | |- | ||
|positive control does not exist for this type of experiment | |positive control does not exist for this type of experiment | ||
+ | |- | ||
|Equipment not sensitive enough or with a big variance | |Equipment not sensitive enough or with a big variance | ||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 19:06, 5 September 2020
The following table describes different types of errors and gives examples.
Description | Example |
Reoccuring errors | Experiment can often not be performed due to missing consumables |
New researchers use equipment wrongly | |
Strong bleeding during surgery | |
Injection fluid is coming out again | |
Positive control in experiment forgotten | |
Pipetting error | |
Sudden errors that can be fixed or vanish again | Contamination in cell culture |
pH-meter not calibrated due to technician on sick leave | |
96 well plate dropped | |
Errors that are inherent to the process and influence the outcome | Uncontrolable, not-measured differences in study subjects, e.g. genetic differences |
positive control does not exist for this type of experiment | |
Equipment not sensitive enough or with a big variance |
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