Thanks again.
I just need a confirmation on one thing..
You mentioned in the previous mails that "increasing the design also means that you will ....... efficiency per choice task will actually go down" & "that the D-error hasn't got much meaning".
I executed the most recent script shared by you for 2 scenarios and following were the results:
1. Rows=30; block=2; (which comprise of less efficient choice tasks) and the simulation stabilized at a D-error ~ 0.66
2. Rows=15 (which comprise of more efficient choice tasks than the former) and the simulation stabilized at a D-error ~ 1.33
So, should I still consider the second design to be more efficient even if the D-error is worse off than the first case? Please confirm.
Also, which metric helps us in deciding that the second design is more efficient?
Thanks
Neeraj