(A bit of serious humor on this general topic:)
Now that the problem is solved, I'd like to introduce a movie scene that we could be turned into a teachable moment for DOE screening methods.
In 2021, a movie titled The Tomorrow War premiered on Amazon Prime. About that movie:
Time travelers arrive from 2051 to deliver an urgent message: 30 years in the future mankind is losing a war against a deadly alien species. The only hope for survival is for soldiers and civilians to be transported to the future and join the fight. Determined to save the world for his daughter, Dan Forester teams up with a brilliant scientist and his estranged father to rewrite the planet’s fate.
Having watched the movie enough times to start thinking about other things at the same time, I noticed that at time 01:19:02 into the movie there is a discussion of experiments needed to identify an agent within the (female) invading aliens, that neutralizes a toxin designed to kill the creatures.
As the lab scenes unfold, we can see from the characters' reasoning and from computer displays that DOE is not being employed – though one can see how the dramatic requirements of the script might require this. The scientist on-screen speaks of thousands of factors, and of creating hundreds of variations of test sera:
...to make thousands of tests. With any luck, we should have a working female toxin in the morning."
Comments, or reverse engineering ideas, anyone?