1. | The individuals are anonymous. | A. | Anonymity | |
2. | When the units are human beings | B. | Confounding | |
3. | The response to a dummy treatment | C. | Completely randomized design | |
4. | Explanatory variables in an experiment | D. | Match pair design | |
5. | A specific value of each of the factors | E. | Experimental units | |
6. | Can prevent generalizing the results of the experiment | F. | Factors | |
7. | A specific condition applied to a individuals in an experiment | G. | Levels | |
8. | An observed effect so large that it would rarely occur by chance | H. | Treatment | |
9. | the smallest collection of individuals to which treatments are applied. | I. | Random assignment | |
10. | When a block is created by matching pairs of similar experimental units | J. | Subjects | |
11. | The treatments are assigned to all the experimental units completely by chance | K. | Block | |
12. | It deliberately imposes some treatment on individuals to measure their responses | L. | Placebo effect | |
13. | The random assignment of experimental units to treatments is carried out separately in each block | M. | Lack of realism | |
14. | It means that the experimental units are assigned to treatments at random, that is, using some sort of chance process | N. | Experiment | |
15. | Something that observes individuals and measures variables of interest but does not attempt to influence the responses | O. | Statistically significant | |
16. | A variable that is not among the explanatory or response variable in a study but that may influence the response variable | P. | Randomized block design | |
17. | When neither the subjects nor those who interact with them are measured the response variable know which treatment the subject received | Q. | Double blind | |
18. | It occurs when two variables are associated in such a way that their effects on a response variable cannot be distinguished from each other | R. | Lurking variable | |
19. | A group of experimental units that are known before the experiment to be similar in some way that is expected to affect the response to the treatments | S. | Observation Study |
A | 1. | The individuals are anonymous. | A. | Anonymity |
J | 2. | When the units are human beings | B. | Confounding |
L | 3. | The response to a dummy treatment | C. | Completely randomized design |
F | 4. | Explanatory variables in an experiment | D. | Match pair design |
G | 5. | A specific value of each of the factors | E. | Experimental units |
M | 6. | Can prevent generalizing the results of the experiment | F. | Factors |
H | 7. | A specific condition applied to a individuals in an experiment | G. | Levels |
O | 8. | An observed effect so large that it would rarely occur by chance | H. | Treatment |
E | 9. | the smallest collection of individuals to which treatments are applied. | I. | Random assignment |
D | 10. | When a block is created by matching pairs of similar experimental units | J. | Subjects |
C | 11. | The treatments are assigned to all the experimental units completely by chance | K. | Block |
N | 12. | It deliberately imposes some treatment on individuals to measure their responses | L. | Placebo effect |
P | 13. | The random assignment of experimental units to treatments is carried out separately in each block | M. | Lack of realism |
I | 14. | It means that the experimental units are assigned to treatments at random, that is, using some sort of chance process | N. | Experiment |
S | 15. | Something that observes individuals and measures variables of interest but does not attempt to influence the responses | O. | Statistically significant |
R | 16. | A variable that is not among the explanatory or response variable in a study but that may influence the response variable | P. | Randomized block design |
Q | 17. | When neither the subjects nor those who interact with them are measured the response variable know which treatment the subject received | Q. | Double blind |
B | 18. | It occurs when two variables are associated in such a way that their effects on a response variable cannot be distinguished from each other | R. | Lurking variable |
K | 19. | A group of experimental units that are known before the experiment to be similar in some way that is expected to affect the response to the treatments | S. | Observation Study |