To take the idea of blinding one step further, the people administering the experiment or analyzing the experiment can also remain unaware of which group the participants are in. This additional blinding helps reduce the impact of observer-expectancy bias (also called experimenter bias), where the cognitive biases of the researchers, or observers, may cause them to influence the outcome in the direction they expected.
Chapter:
Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics
Section:
To Believe Or Not Believe