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Data reporting inter-laboratory studies

In summary, official German analytical methods for pesticide residues are always validated in several laboratories. These inter-laboratory studies avoid the acceptance of methods which cannot readily be reproduced in further laboratories and they do improve the ruggedness of analytical procedures applied. The recently introduced calibration with standards in matrix improves the trueness of the reported recovery data. Other aspects of validation (sample processing, analyte stability, extraction efficiency) are not considered. [Pg.128]

Kent and Smith (1987) reported the results of an inter-laboratoiy study on measmement of colom standards. They came to the obvious and important conclusion that in order to transfer and compare colour data from one laboratory to another, which is certainly necessary when colour is being used as a buying criterion, the measuring system and the colour standard have to be carefully defined. Most instrument manufacturers will provide details of best practice with respect to how the instrument and its standards should be maintained. [Pg.90]

The accuracy of exposure assessment is determined by systematic and random errors in the assessment. For quantitative exposure assessments, important sources of error include measurement errors (i.e. from laboratory and field monitoring techniques), as well as variations in exposure over time and space. For qualitative exposure proxies (e.g. self-reported past exposures, occupational histories or expert evaluations), the most important sources of error are recall bias (systematic differences in exposure recall between cases and controls) and random error, expressed in terms of intra- and inter-rater agreement. Although systematic errors can result in serious misinterpretations of the data, especially due to scaling problems, random errors have received more attention in epidemiology because this type of error is pervasive, and its effect is usually to diminish estimates of association between exposure and disease. The magnitude of random errors can be considerable in epidemiological field studies. [Pg.254]


See other pages where Data reporting inter-laboratory studies is mentioned: [Pg.631]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.674]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.390]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.297]   


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