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  2. Random assignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Random_assignment

    For example, using random assignment may create an assignment to groups that has 20 blue-eyed people and 5 brown-eyed people in one group. This is a rare event under random assignment, but it could happen, and when it does it might add some doubt to the causal agent in the experimental hypothesis.

  3. Applications of randomness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Applications_of_randomness

    Randomness has many uses in science, art, statistics, cryptography, gaming, gambling, and other fields. For example, random assignment in randomized controlled trials helps scientists to test hypotheses, and random numbers or pseudorandom numbers help video games such as video poker. These uses have different levels of requirements, which leads ...

  4. Randomization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randomization

    Randomization is a statistical process in which a random mechanism is employed to select a sample from a population or assign subjects to different groups. [1][2][3] The process is crucial in ensuring the random allocation of experimental units or treatment protocols, thereby minimizing selection bias and enhancing the statistical validity. [4]

  5. Stratified randomization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stratified_randomization

    Stratified randomization may also refer to the random assignment of treatments to subjects, in addition to referring to random sampling of subjects from a population, as described above. Simple random sampling after stratification step. In this context, stratified randomization uses one or multiple prognostic factors to make subgroups, on ...

  6. Randomized controlled trial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randomized_controlled_trial

    For example, a block size of 6 and an allocation ratio of 2:1 would lead to random assignment of 4 subjects to one group and 2 to the other. This type of randomization can be combined with "stratified randomization", for example by center in a multicenter trial, to "ensure good balance of participant characteristics in each group."

  7. Fair random assignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_random_assignment

    Fair random assignment (also called probabilistic one-sided matching) is a kind of a fair division problem. In an assignment problem (also called house-allocation problem or one-sided matching), there are m objects and they have to be allocated among n agents, such that each agent receives at most one object. Examples include the assignment of ...

  8. Completely randomized design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Completely_randomized_design

    Completely randomized design. In the design of experiments, completely randomized designs are for studying the effects of one primary factor without the need to take other nuisance variables into account. This article describes completely randomized designs that have one primary factor. The experiment compares the values of a response variable ...

  9. Randomized algorithm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Randomized_algorithm

    A randomized algorithm is an algorithm that employs a degree of randomness as part of its logic or procedure. The algorithm typically uses uniformly random bits as an auxiliary input to guide its behavior, in the hope of achieving good performance in the "average case" over all possible choices of random determined by the random bits; thus either the running time, or the output (or both) are ...