ElMaestro
★★★

Denmark,
2019-02-24 14:05
(1887 d 06:05 ago)

Posting: # 19969
Views: 3,917
 

 A weird CI [General Sta­tis­tics]

Hi all,

I am in a strange situation a follows:

We have two treatment groups.
In one group the subjects receive T once.
In the other treatment group subject receive R twice.
The task is simply to construct a 90% CI for T vs R :-)

You may feel like asking questions starting eloquently with words such as "How the eff you see kay....?!???!", or "What the h#ll.... !??!!?".
Please don't :-D

Make all the assumptions you wish. I am going to do the same.

Pass or fail!
ElMaestro
Yura
★    

Belarus,
2019-02-24 15:02
(1887 d 05:08 ago)

@ ElMaestro
Posting: # 19970
Views: 3,539
 

 A weird CI

Hi, ElMaestro
parallel design, only twice as many subjects in a group R
:cool:
Ohlbe
★★★

France,
2019-03-04 00:09
(1879 d 20:01 ago)

@ ElMaestro
Posting: # 19993
Views: 2,976
 

 A weird CI

Dear ElMaestro,

❝ You may feel like asking questions starting eloquently with words such as "How the eff you see kay....?!???!", or "What the h#ll.... !??!!?".

❝ Please don't :-D


You're removing all the salt from the discussion :-D

(OK, maybe off somebody's wounds too...)

Regards
Ohlbe
UA Flag
Activity
 Admin contact
22,993 posts in 4,828 threads, 1,652 registered users;
129 visitors (0 registered, 129 guests [including 4 identified bots]).
Forum time: 21:10 CEST (Europe/Vienna)

Never never never never use Excel.
Not even for calculation of arithmetic means.    Martin Wolfsegger

The Bioequivalence and Bioavailability Forum is hosted by
BEBAC Ing. Helmut Schütz
HTML5