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A student is considering doing a complete repeated measures design experiment involving motor skills. The student's advisor has told him that people show a large initial improvement on the task followed by slow steady improvement after this initial change. The student must choose a technique for balancing practice effects. Which technique should the student not use?A. block randomizationB. Latin SquareC. ABBA counterbalancingD. all possible orders

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Answer:

C). ABBA counterbalancing.

Step-by-step explanation:

As per the question, the technique which the student should not use to balance the practice effects would be 'ABBA counterbalancing' as it repeats the conditions and dispenses them evenly to balance/counter the effects which is not appropriate in this context(as it follows the stages of improvement and could not be distributed).

Except for this one, any of the other three could be employed to balance the practice effects as block randomization involves division of subjects into blocks that would make it easier and convenient while Latin square design offers a statistical method of counterbalancing and 'all possible orders' exemplify the inclusion of every possible sequence to the conditions. Thus, option C is the correct answer.

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