Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Describing an
experiment (usually medical) in which theidentity of those conducting the test(s) is kept secret from both thesubjects and theadministrators until the outcome of the experiment is known.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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Experimenters often use what is called a double-blind procedure to assure the validity of their data.
INSIDE OF A DOG ALEXANDRA HOROWITZ 2009
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Experimenters often use what is called a double-blind procedure to assure the validity of their data.
INSIDE OF A DOG ALEXANDRA HOROWITZ 2009
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If neither the women participating in the study nor the health professionals working with them know which group each woman is in, the study is called double-blind.
Our Bodies, Ourselves: Menopause M.D. Vivian Pinn 2006
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If neither the women participating in the study nor the health professionals working with them know which group each woman is in, the study is called double-blind.
Our Bodies, Ourselves: Menopause M.D. Vivian Pinn 2006
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If neither the women participating in the study nor the health professionals working with them know which group each woman is in, the study is called double-blind.
Our Bodies, Ourselves: Menopause M.D. Vivian Pinn 2006
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If neither the women participating in the study nor the health professionals working with them know which group each woman is in, the study is called double-blind.
Our Bodies, Ourselves: Menopause M.D. Vivian Pinn 2006
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The mistake rate, however, fell to 12 per cent in the so-called "double-blind sequential" line-ups.
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Complicating the issue is the fact that many believe a gold-standard study would be unethical: How could you carry out what’s called a double-blind study of a large group of children—randomly assigning half to be immunized and half not, leaving the second group of kids vulnerable to serious and often deadly diseases?
You Raising Your Child Michael F. Roizen 2010
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Complicating the issue is the fact that many believe a gold-standard study would be unethical: How could you carry out what’s called a double-blind study of a large group of children—randomly assigning half to be immunized and half not, leaving the second group of kids vulnerable to serious and often deadly diseases?
You Raising Your Child Michael F. Roizen 2010
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Complicating the issue is the fact that many believe a gold-standard study would be unethical: How could you carry out what’s called a double-blind study of a large group of children—randomly assigning half to be immunized and half not, leaving the second group of kids vulnerable to serious and often deadly diseases?
You Raising Your Child Michael F. Roizen 2010
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