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Does Target account for multiple family errors (Stats) ?

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Level 2

Basically what the title says- a statistics question.

For everyone else interested. Multiple family errors (alpha inflation) happens when testing more than one variant to 95% confidence (p = .05). While each test individually has a 5% chance of Type I error, as a family grouping the error rate increased with more variants. (Formula is: 1-(1-alpha)^n where alpha is .05 and n is the number of tests). So if we are testing 8 variations (+ 1 default), the formula would be: 1-(1-.05)^8 = .34 or a 34% chance of seeing a false positive among our grouping if we are testing 8 variants.

Does Target account for this automatically, or do we have to apply a correction post-hoc (or as a priori)?

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Correct answer by
Employee

Our sample size calculator offers the ability to account for family-wise error using Bonferroni correction. 

We also discuss pitfalls and their resolutions in this article: Nine Common A/B Testing Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

https://docs.adobe.com/content/target-microsite/testcalculator.html

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Correct answer by
Employee

Our sample size calculator offers the ability to account for family-wise error using Bonferroni correction. 

We also discuss pitfalls and their resolutions in this article: Nine Common A/B Testing Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

https://docs.adobe.com/content/target-microsite/testcalculator.html

1236771_pastedImage_1.png

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Level 2

Thanks Jason, so it isn't automatically calculated. That's not an issue, just didn't want to create more work for myself. Do you know what type of Bonferroni correction the calculator uses?