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| Details of the FACTEX Procedure |
In particular, for resolution 5 designs, all main effects and two-factor interactions can be estimated free of each other. For resolution 4 designs, all main effects can be estimated free of each other and free of two-factor interactions, but some two-factor interactions are confounded with each other and/or with blocks. For resolution 3 designs, all main effects can be estimated free of each other, but some of them are confounded with two-factor interactions.
In general, higher resolutions require larger designs. Resolution 3 designs are popular because they handle relatively many factors in a minimal number of runs. However, they offer no protection against interactions. If resources allow, you should use a resolution 5 design so that all main effects and two-factor interactions will be independently estimable. If a resolution 5 design is too large, you should use a design of resolution 4, which ensures estimability of main effects free of any two-factor interactions. In this case, if data from the initial design reveal significant effects associated with confounded two-factor interactions, further experiments can be run to distinguish between effects that are confounded with each other in the design. See Example 15.2 for an example.
Note that most references on fractional factorial designs use Roman numerals to denote resolution of a design -III, IV, V, and so on. A common notation for an orthogonally confounded design of resolution r for k q-level factors in qk-p runs is
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