mahmoud-teaima ★ 2017-05-23 18:49 (2523 d 02:55 ago) Posting: # 17401 Views: 3,463 |
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Dear D. Labes and YJ Lee, could you please, advise us about the subject # in the rl.gui in bear2.8.2; why the subject number increase only by 2 in the TRR,RRT,RTR (2x3x3) study design? I think it should increase by three to give a balanced design? as the following output shows: "Summary of randomisation 40 subjects randomized into 3 sequence groups. Number of subjects in sequence groups: RRT RTR TRR 14 12 14 Runs test of randomness: p.value=0.1798 based on: D. Labes (2017). randomizeBE: Create a Random List for Crossover Studies. R package version 0.3-3. https://CRAN.R-project.org/package=randomizeBE " Greetings. — Mahmoud Teaima, PhD. |
yjlee168 ★★★ Kaohsiung, Taiwan, 2017-05-23 20:00 (2523 d 01:44 ago) (edited by yjlee168 on 2017-05-23 20:13) @ mahmoud-teaima Posting: # 17402 Views: 2,848 |
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Dear Dr. Teaima, It's totally my fault. Very sorry about that. In the package of randomizeBE, there is no such limitation (subject# increases only by 2). I will fix that later. Here is the codes if you need to do randomization list immediately. require(randomizeBE) where n is the sample size (or the total subject #). Of course, you can change the values of variables in function RL4(). Thanks for your bug report. Great. [edited after the above messages] bear v2.8.3 has been uploaded to Sourceforge. screenshot of new rl.gui()(also fixed the errors for blocksize setting in Ubuntu/Linux and maybe OSX also) ❝ ... ❝ could you please, advise us about the subject # in the rl.gui in bear2.8.2; why the subject number increase only by 2 in the TRR,RRT,RTR (2x3x3) study design? ❝ I think it should increase by three to give a balanced design? ... — All the best, -- Yung-jin Lee bear v2.9.1:- created by Hsin-ya Lee & Yung-jin Lee Kaohsiung, Taiwan https://www.pkpd168.com/bear Download link (updated) -> here |
mahmoud-teaima ★ 2017-05-25 03:54 (2521 d 17:50 ago) @ yjlee168 Posting: # 17411 Views: 2,687 |
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Dear YJ Lee, Many thanks for the quick response. Greetings. — Mahmoud Teaima, PhD. |