Practise the standard verbs for formulating hypotheses and splitting traffic in experiments.
0 / 5 completed
1 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ a hypothesis before launching any experiment.'
We 'formulate a hypothesis' — the standard scientific/product collocation. 'Make up', 'build' and 'form up' are informal or awkward here.
2 / 5
Fill in: 'The test will ___ significance once enough users have been sampled.'
We 'reach significance' — the standard statistics collocation. 'Hit', 'touch' and 'strike' are informal and not idiomatic in experimentation contexts.
3 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ traffic evenly between the control and variant groups.'
We 'split traffic' — the standard A/B testing collocation. 'Cut', 'chop' and 'divide up' are less precise or too literal for this technical process.
4 / 5
Fill in: 'Once results are in, we ___ the experiment before rolling out broadly.'
We 'conclude the experiment' — the standard collocation for formally ending it based on results. 'End up', 'wrap' and 'close off' are informal alternatives.
5 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ novelty effects that can skew early experiment results.'
We 'account for' effects — the standard collocation for factoring something into analysis. 'Count', 'reckon' and 'figure' don't fit this analytical register.