Neighbor-balanced designs are used in the experiments where the performance of a treatment is affected by the treatments applied to its neighboring units. These are well-known designs to balance the neighbor effects. Among these designs, minimal neighbor-balanced designs are economical; therefore, these are preferred by the experimenters. For
v
even, minimal neighbor balanced designs in circular blocks cannot be constructed for most of the cases, where
v
is number of treatments. In such situations, experimenters would like to relax the neighbor balance property up to some extent and consider the minimal circular weakly balanced neighbor designs as the better alternates to the minimal circular neighbor-balanced designs. In this article, some generators are developed to obtain minimal circular weakly balanced neighbor designs in blocks of equal, two and three different sizes.
Minimal neighbour designs (NDs) are used when a response of a treatment (direct
effect) is affected by the treatment(s) applied in the neighbouring units. Minimal
generalised NDs are preferred when minimal NDs cannot be constructed. Through the method
of cyclic shifts (Rule I), the conditions for the existence of minimal circular
generalised NDs are discussed, in which v/2 unordered pairs do not appear as neighbours.
Certain generators are also developed to obtain minimal circular generalised NDs in
blocks of two different sizes, where k2 = 3, 4 and 5. All these designs are constructed
using i sets of shifts for k1 and two for k2.
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