But the p-values go exponentially close to one with the size of the study. If you had three studies that used 11 boxes, vs. one with 33, you’d get exactly the same posterior probability for the ticket being a winner.
In other words, more experiments are exponentially more valuable than higher p-values, but higher p-values are exponentially cheaper.
But the p-values go exponentially close to one with the size of the study. If you had three studies that used 11 boxes, vs. one with 33, you’d get exactly the same posterior probability for the ticket being a winner.
In other words, more experiments are exponentially more valuable than higher p-values, but higher p-values are exponentially cheaper.