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lme4 (version 0.999999-2)

Penicillin: Variation in penicillin testing

Description

Six samples of penicillin were tested using the B. subtilis plate method on each of 24 plates. The response is the diameter (mm) of the zone of inhibition of growth of the organism.

Usage

data(Penicillin)

Arguments

source

O.L. Davies and P.L. Goldsmith (eds), Statistical Methods in Research and Production, 4th ed., Oliver and Boyd, (1972), section 6.6

Details

The data are described in Davies and Goldsmith (1972) as coming from an investigation to assess the variability between samples of penicillin by the B. subtilis method. In this test method a bulk-innoculated nutrient agar medium is poured into a Petri dish of approximately 90 mm. diameter, known as a plate. When the medium has set, six small hollow cylinders or pots (about 4 mm. in diameter) are cemented onto the surface at equally spaced intervals. A few drops of the penicillin solutions to be compared are placed in the respective cylinders, and the whole plate is placed in an incubator for a given time. Penicillin diffuses from the pots into the agar, and this produces a clear circular zone of inhibition of growth of the organisms, which can be readily measured. The diameter of the zone is related in a known way to the concentration of penicillin in the solution.

Examples

Run this code
str(Penicillin)
dotplot(reorder(plate, diameter) ~ diameter, Penicillin, groups = sample,
        ylab = "Plate", xlab = "Diameter of growth inhibition zone (mm)",
        type = c("p", "a"), auto.key = list(columns = 3, lines = TRUE,
        title = "Penicillin sample"))
(fm1 <- lmer(diameter ~ (1|plate) + (1|sample), Penicillin))
image(fm1@L,
      sub = "Structure of random effects interaction in penicillin model")

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