Repetition
When someone else conducts your experiment, it is often referred to as "replication" or "reproducibility." Replication is a fundamental aspect of the scientific method, as it allows for verification of results and ensures that findings are reliable and not due to chance or specific conditions of the original study. This process can help strengthen the validity of scientific claims and contribute to the overall body of knowledge in a field.
A factor in an experiment that can change is called a variable. Variables are used in experiments to test a hypothesis, and someone will manipulate the variable, while keeping something else the same, a control, in order to see how the variables react in comparison with a control.
Informational social influence
It's important to control your experiment so that you can be sure the results are due to the experimental variable (independent variable) and not something else.
Well basically the "control" group is the part of the procedure or experiment where the specimen or whatever your testing is separated from everything else and nothing is done to it, so you have something to compare your other results to.
You can find someone else to experiment...
It is called quoting (or to quote) the person and you should do also giving acknowledgement to the person and in which work he wrote it.
A quote is to repeat some else's words; be sure to use quote marks if you write it down.
When you sell someone else's product, it is called "reselling" or "retailing."
A paraphrase is when you reword someone else's ideas in your own words, while a quotation is when you repeat someone else's exact words.
Someone who picks on someone else is called a bully. They are not nice people.
When someone else writes about someone who is deceased, it is called a biography.
I really dont know ask someone else
Envious.
Copying someone else's work without permission is called plagiarism.
AutoBiography
When someone else conducts your experiment, it is often referred to as "replication" or "reproducibility." Replication is a fundamental aspect of the scientific method, as it allows for verification of results and ensures that findings are reliable and not due to chance or specific conditions of the original study. This process can help strengthen the validity of scientific claims and contribute to the overall body of knowledge in a field.