00:01
Okay, so here we're going to be picking the experimental designs that are completely randomized designs.
00:08
The key to a completely randomized design is that you have whatever your sample is, right? and hopefully that was randomly selected, but it doesn't actually have to be.
00:19
The random part comes when you divide your sample into groups.
00:26
You know, group a, group b.
00:27
You could have more than two groups, but at least two groups, right? and then you compare.
00:35
If there's anything else going on, any other separating going on at any other places, or if it's not random, then it's not a completely randomized design.
00:45
So for the first one, with the scientists, it says the scientists assign plants on the outer edge to an old fertilizer, in the middle get a new fertilizer.
01:00
So you can see it doesn't say anything about the plants getting randomly put into different groups, right? it's just like the scientist just picked one and the other.
01:10
So it's not a completely randomized design.
01:15
For the one that says a computer scientist are testing a new antivirus software, it says that we randomly selected 10 computers with...