Experiment (disambiguation)

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An experiment is a set of observations performed in the context of solving a particular problem or question.

Experiment scientific procedure

An experiment is a procedure carried out to support, refute, or validate a hypothesis. Experiments provide insight into cause-and-effect by demonstrating what outcome occurs when a particular factor is manipulated. Experiments vary greatly in goal and scale, but always rely on repeatable procedure and logical analysis of the results. There also exists natural experimental studies.

Experiment may also refer to:

In probability theory, an experiment or trial is any procedure that can be infinitely repeated and has a well-defined set of possible outcomes, known as the sample space. An experiment is said to be random if it has more than one possible outcome, and deterministic if it has only one. A random experiment that has exactly two possible outcomes is known as a Bernoulli trial.

Experiment is an unincorporated community in Columbia County, Arkansas, United States.

Experiment, Georgia CDP in Georgia, United States

Experiment is a census-designated place (CDP) in Spalding County, Georgia, United States. The population was 3,233 at the 2000 census. It is named for the University of Georgia Agricultural Experiment Station located there.

See also

Experimentalism is the philosophical belief that the way to truth is through experiments and empiricism. It is also associated with instrumentalism, the belief that truth should be evaluated based upon its demonstrated usefulness. Deborah Mayo suggests that we should focus on how experimental knowledge is actually arrived at and how it functions in science. Mayo also suggests that the reason New Experimentalists have come up short, is that the part of experiments that have the most to offer in building an account of inference and evidence that are left untapped: designing, generating, modelling and analysing experiments and data.

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<i>Lilo & Stitch</i> 2002 American animated science fiction comedy-drama film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation

Lilo & Stitch is a 2002 American animated adventure science fiction comedy-drama film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation and released by Walt Disney Pictures. Disney's 42nd animated feature film, it was written and directed by Dean DeBlois and Chris Sanders, and features the voices of Daveigh Chase, Tia Carrere, David Ogden Stiers, Kevin McDonald, Ving Rhames, Jason Scott Lee, and Kevin Michael Richardson. It was the second of three Disney animated features produced primarily at the Florida animation studio located at Disney's Hollywood Studios in Walt Disney World near Orlando, Florida. It was released on June 21, 2002, to positive reviews and was nominated for the 2002 Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. That Academy Award was won by Studio Ghibli's 2001 film Spirited Away, which was also distributed in the United States by Walt Disney Pictures, and also starred Chase and Stiers in the English version.

Mogul may refer to:

Tia Carrere American actress

Althea Rae Janairo, known professionally as Tia Carrere, is an American actress and musician who obtained her first big break as a regular on the daytime soap opera General Hospital.

Stitch, Stitches or Stitched may refer to:

Burning Love song written by Dennis Linde

"Burning Love" is a 1972 song by Elvis Presley written by Dennis Linde and originally recorded by country soul artist Arthur Alexander, who included it on his 1972 self-titled album. Elvis Presley had a major hit with the song, becoming his biggest hit single in the United States since "Suspicious Minds" in 1969 and his last Top 10 hit in the American Hot 100 or pop charts.

Lilo & Stitch: The Series is an American animated television series produced by Walt Disney Television Animation. It premiered on September 20, 2003 on ABC as part of ABC Kids, with a delayed premiere on Disney Channel on October 12, 2003. The series ended on July 29, 2006 after airing 65 episodes in two seasons. A sequel spin-off of the 2002 feature film of the same name, and the follow-up to the August 2003 direct-to-video pilot Stitch! The Movie, it was the first of three television series produced in the Lilo & Stitch franchise, although it's the only one to maintain the same setting as the original film. It was aired on Disney Channel worldwide, but has only been released on DVD full in Japan, in four box sets. On March 11, 2018, the series returned on Disney XD.

<i>Stitch! The Movie</i> 2003 direct-to-video pilot film of Lilo & Stitch: The Series directed by Tony Craig

Stitch! The Movie is an American direct-to-video animated science fiction comedy film produced by Walt Disney Television Animation and Rough Draft Korea, released on August 26, 2003. It is the second film released in the Lilo & Stitch franchise and the third film chronologically, taking place after the 2002 first film and the 2005 direct-to-video sequel Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch. The film also serves as the backdoor pilot of the spin-off sequel series Lilo & Stitch: The Series, which debuted the following month. The story is an introduction to Dr. Jumba Jookiba's 625 experiments that he created with the financing of Dr. Jacques von Hämsterviel.

<i>Leroy & Stitch</i> 2006 animated TV film concluding Lilo & Stitch: The Series

Leroy & Stitch is a 2006 American animated science fiction comedy television film produced by Walt Disney Television Animation. It is the third and final sequel film of the 2002 animated feature film Lilo & Stitch, and the television series finale to Lilo & Stitch: The Series. It also concluded the main continuity of the Lilo & Stitch franchise where Lilo Pelekai is a main character and Hawaii is the main setting. The film debuted on Disney Channel on June 23, 2006 and also aired on Toon Disney on June 26, 2006.

<i>Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch</i> 2005 direct-to-video Disney animated comedy-drama film directed by Tony Leondis

Lilo & Stitch 2: Stitch Has a Glitch is a 2005 American direct-to-video animated science fiction comedy-drama film produced by the Australian office of Disneytoon Studios. The film takes place between the events of the 2002 Walt Disney Animation Studios feature film Lilo & Stitch and the 2003 direct-to-video film Stitch! The Movie. This was also the final time that Jason Scott Lee voiced David Kawena, and the only film in which Daveigh Chase did not voice Lilo, being replaced by Dakota Fanning.

Stitchs Great Escape! Attraction at Walt Disney World Resort

Stitch's Great Escape! is a Tomorrowland attraction at the Magic Kingdom theme park within the Walt Disney World Resort. It is a "theater-in-the-round" experience starring the title alien from Walt Disney Feature Animation's 2002 film Lilo & Stitch. It opened on November 16, 2004 as a replacement for the ExtraTERRORestrial Alien Encounter and is the fourth attraction to occupy its show building. Many of the animators who worked on Lilo & Stitch partnered with Walt Disney Imagineering for the attraction. The attraction has been operating on a seasonal schedule since October 2, 2016. When not in use, the attraction's first pre-show area can be converted into a character greeting area for Stitch and other costumed characters.

<i>Disneys Stitch: Experiment 626</i> 2002 prequel video game tie-in to Lilo & Stitch

Disney's Stitch: Experiment 626 is a 2002 third-person shooter action-adventure platform video game developed by High Voltage Software and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation 2. The game serves as a prequel to the 2002 Disney film Lilo & Stitch. The game has Chris Sanders, David Ogden Stiers and Kevin Michael Richardson reprise their voice roles from the film. The game was released on June 19, 2002, two days before the theatrical release of the Lilo & Stitch film.

Chop suey is a dish in American Chinese cuisine.

<i>The Ugly Duckling</i> (1939 film) 1939 film by Jack Cutting

The Ugly Duckling is an animated film from 1939 by Walt Disney, based on the fairy tale "The Ugly Duckling" by Hans Christian Andersen. The film was directed by Jack Cutting and Clyde Geronimi, and released in theaters on April 7, 1939. Music was composed by Albert Hay Malotte, who was uncredited for the film. The animated short was first distributed by RKO Radio Pictures.

<i>Stitch!</i> 2008 Japanese anime television spin-off of Disneys Lilo & Stitch franchise

Stitch! is a Japanese anime spin-off of Disney's Lilo & Stitch franchise. It is the franchise's second television series, after Lilo & Stitch: The Series. The anime series aired in Japan from October 2008 to March 2011, later receiving additional television specials in 2012 and 2015. It features a Japanese girl named Yuna Kamihara, who takes the place of Lilo Pelekai as the best friend of the titular Stitch, and is set on a fictional island in the Ryukyus off the shore of Okinawa called Izayoi instead of Kauai, Hawaii.

<i>Lilo & Stitch</i> (franchise) Disney media franchise about extraterrestrials living with humans on Earth

Lilo & Stitch is an American Disney media franchise that commenced in 2002 with the release of the animated film of the same name written and directed by Chris Sanders and Dean DeBlois. The combined critical and commercial success of the original film, which was a rarity for the company's feature animation studio during the early 2000s, led to three direct-to-video and television sequel films, a short film, three animated television series, several video games, some theme park attractions, and various merchandise.

Stitch (Disney) fictional extraterrestrial character from Disneys Lilo & Stitch franchise

Stitch is a fictional character in Disney's Lilo & Stitch franchise. An illegally-made, genetically-engineered, extraterrestrial lifeform resembling a blue koala, he is one of the franchise's two title characters, alongside his adopter and best friend Lilo Pelekai, and its primary protagonist. Stitch was created by Lilo & Stitch co-writer and co-director Chris Sanders, who also voices him in all Western-produced media that he appears in, while Ben Diskin voices the character in the English versions of the Eastern-produced television series Stitch! and Stitch & Ai.

<i>Lilo & Stitch: Trouble in Paradise</i> 2002 video game tie-tin to Lilo & Stitch

Disney's Lilo & Stitch: Trouble in Paradise is a 2002 action-platform video game developed by Blitz Games for PlayStation and Microsoft Windows. The game is a tie-in to and based on the Walt Disney Feature Animation film, Lilo & Stitch. The PlayStation version was published by Sony Computer Entertainment, while the Windows version was published by Disney Interactive Studios.

<i>Stitch & Ai</i> 2017 Chinese animated series spin-off in the Lilo & Stitch franchise

Stitch & Ai is a Chinese animated spin-off of Disney's Lilo & Stitch franchise. It is the franchise's third television series, after the Western animated Lilo & Stitch: The Series and the Japanese Stitch! anime series. The show features a Chinese girl named Wang Ai Ling in place of the original 2002–06 Western continuity's Lilo Pelekai and the anime's Yuna Kamihara, and is set in Huangshan, Anhui. The show, which was produced in English with the assistance of American animators, debuted in China on March 27, 2017 with a Mandarin Chinese dub, airing through April 6. The original English language version aired throughout the month of February 2018 in Southeast Asia, airing from February 5 to February 27. Most of the series later received a free digital streaming release in the United States via DisneyNow on December 1, 2018.

<i>Disneys Lilo & Stitch</i> (Game Boy Advance video game) 2002 Game Boy Advance video game tie-in to Lilo & Stitch

Disney's Lilo & Stitch is a 2002 side-scrolling shoot 'em up platform video game developed by Digital Eclipse for the Game Boy Advance that is based on the Disney animated film of the same name. It was first released in North America on June 7, 2002 by Disney Interactive. Ubisoft distributed the game in Europe on October 4, 2002, and in Australia on March 24, 2005.