Waters | Nonlinear Dynamics

Progenesis LC-MS

A unique approach for label-free LC-MS data analysis
Quantify and identify the significant proteins in your experiment…

How do my experiment designs affect analysis?

Progenesis LC‑MS supports two types of experiment design. Each performs a variation of the one-factor ANOVA calculation and produces p-values to indicate the statistical significance of the difference in group expression data.

The differences in the calculations are intended to take into account subtle differences in the way that the experiments may have been performed and so give a more effective and reliable statistical analysis.

The two supported experiment designs are described below to help you choose which type suits your experiment.

Between-subject design

Do samples from a given subject appear in only one condition? Then use the between-subject design.

Between-subject experiment design

To set up this design, you simply group the samples according to the condition (factor level) of the samples. The ANOVA calculation assumes that the conditions are independent and therefore gives a statistical test of whether the means of the conditions are all equal.

Within-subject design

Have you taken samples from a given subject under different conditions? Then use the within-subject design.

Note: you must have a sample from every subject for every condition to use a within-subject design.

For example, you would choose this type of design for a time series experiment where every subject has been sampled at each time point.

Within-subject experiment design

To set up this design, you tell the software not only which condition (factor level) each sample belongs to but also which subject it came from. The software will then perform a repeated measures ANOVA.

A standard ANOVA is not appropriate because the data violates the ANOVA assumption of independence. With a repeated measures ANOVA individual differences can be eliminated or reduced as a source of between condition differences (which helps to create a more powerful test).

The within-subject design can be thought of as an extension of the paired-samples t-test to include comparison between more than two repeated measures.