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Augmented Row–Column Designs for a Small Number of Checks
Author(s) -
Piepho HansPeter,
Williams Emlyn R.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
agronomy journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.752
H-Index - 131
eISSN - 1435-0645
pISSN - 0002-1962
DOI - 10.2134/agronj2016.06.0325
Subject(s) - row , blocking (statistics) , column (typography) , flexibility (engineering) , intersection (aeronautics) , row and column spaces , code (set theory) , replication (statistics) , computer science , variance (accounting) , mathematics , block (permutation group theory) , arithmetic , algorithm , statistics , combinatorics , connection (principal bundle) , geometry , engineering , accounting , set (abstract data type) , database , business , programming language , aerospace engineering
Augmented designs allow the testing of a large number of unreplicated entries. Replication of interspersed check cultivars according to a blocked design allows estimation of an error variance as well as local control for unreplicated entries. The most commonly used augmented designs use one‐way blocking, but extensions have been suggested using blocking in rows and columns. We propose a flexible strategy to generate such designs, which is particularly suitable when the number of check cultivars is small. A salient feature of the approach is a grouping of adjacent rows and columns and the imposition of an additional blocking unit formed by the intersection of row and column groups. These superimposed blocking structures cater for an even distribution of replications for checks across the experimental field. We provide SAS code using the OPTEX procedure to generate such designs and discuss three examples illustrating the flexibility of the approach. Core Ideas For augmented designs, the number of unreplicated entries and blocking unit dimensions needs flexibility. Blocking in rows and columns is desirable for local error control. Super‐blocks can be defined based on groups of adjacent rows and columns. Units formed by the intersection of row and column groups can be a further blocking unit. These blocking units provide a convenient mechanism to distribute replications of check cultivars.