Examples of using Digital experiments in English and their translations into Slovak
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Official
-
Medicine
-
Financial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Official/political
-
Computer
-
Programming
I hope that you are excited about the possibilities of doing your own digital experiments.
you might think that you can't run digital experiments.
In conclusion, digital experiments can have dramatically different cost structures than analog experiments. .
Now, however, researchers should also organize experiments along a continuum between analog experiments and digital experiments.
the differences between analog experiments and digital experiments.
But, if you don't work at a tech company you might think that you can't run digital experiments. Fortunately, that's wrong;
But, if you don't work at a tech company you might think that you can't run digital experiments.
Even if you don't work at a big tech company you can run digital experiments.
the differences between analog experiments and digital experiments.
Now, however, researchers should also organize experiments along a continuum between analog experiments and digital experiments.
a useful working definition is that fully digital experiments are experiments that make use of digital infrastructure to recruit participants,
pure digital experiments, and a variety of hybrids.
In digital experiments where researchers partner with companies
these opportunities to run partially digital experiments in the physical world will increase dramatically.
In digital experiments where researchers partner with companies
these opportunities to run partially digital experiments in the physical world will increase dramatically.
pure digital experiments, and a variety of hybrids.
But in digital experiments, particularly those with zero variable cost,
is that the data environment in digital experiments has created new opportunities such as using machine learning methods to estimate heterogeneity of treatment effects(Imai and Ratkovic 2013).
is often available in digital experiments because they are run on top of always-on measurement systems(see chapter 2).