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The PLAN Procedure

Randomly Assigning Subjects to Treatments

You can use the PLAN procedure to design a completely randomized design. Suppose you have 12 experimental units, and you want to assign one of two treatments to each unit. Use a DATA step to store the unrandomized design in a SAS data set, and then call PROC PLAN to randomize it by specifying one factor with the default type of RANDOM, having 12 levels. The following statements produce Figure 65.3 and Figure 65.4:

title 'Completely Randomized Design';
/* The unrandomized design */
data Unrandomized;
   do Unit=1 to 12;
      if (Unit <= 6) then Treatment=1;
      else                Treatment=2;
      output;
   end;
run;
/* Randomize the design */
proc plan seed=27371;
   factors Unit=12;
   output data=Unrandomized out=Randomized;
run;
proc sort data=Randomized;
   by Unit;
proc print;
run;

Figure 65.3 shows that the 12 levels of the unit factor have been randomly reordered and then lists the new ordering.

Figure 65.3 A Completely Randomized Design for Two Treatments
Completely Randomized Design

The PLAN Procedure

Factor Select Levels Order
Unit 12 12 Random

Unit
8 5 1 4 6 2 12 7 3 9 10 11

After the data set is sorted by the unit variable, the randomized design is displayed (Figure 65.4).

Figure 65.4 A Completely Randomized Design for Two Treatments
Completely Randomized Design

Obs Unit Treatment
1 1 1
2 2 1
3 3 2
4 4 1
5 5 1
6 6 1
7 7 2
8 8 1
9 9 2
10 10 2
11 11 2
12 12 2

You can also generate the plan by using a TREATMENTS statement instead of a DATA step. The following statements generate the same plan.

proc plan seed=27371;
   factors Unit=12;
   treatments Treatment=12 cyclic (1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2);
   output out=Randomized;
run;


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