Should we then draw different conclusions from their experiments?
I assume you mean if you only saw one of them (knowing the researcher’s intentions ineither case)? In that case, I would say yes. For the first, the N is random, while for the second N is the smallest N were r>=60.
In the second case, the question is: what is the probability that the cure rate will ever reach 60%, while the first case answers the Q: what is the cure rate probability accoding to a sample on N=100
Yes, I would say, draw very differenct conclusions since you ar answering very different questions!
I assume you mean if you only saw one of them (knowing the researcher’s intentions ineither case)? In that case, I would say yes. For the first, the N is random, while for the second N is the smallest N were r>=60. In the second case, the question is: what is the probability that the cure rate will ever reach 60%, while the first case answers the Q: what is the cure rate probability accoding to a sample on N=100
Yes, I would say, draw very differenct conclusions since you ar answering very different questions!