Hi Victor,
Thank you for getting back to me. This answer definitely helps. I am mentioning below more about my study. It would be great if you could help me with this.
I am conducting choice experiments with my respondents. As you mentioned, I have used Choice designs (DoE -> Consumer Studies -> Choice Design) to create my choice profiles.
In the choice design, I did mention more information like the number of respondents per survey (200), number of choice sets (8), profiles per choice sets(2), number of attributes that can change within a choice set(6) number of surveys (3).
To give you a background, I am conducting choice experiments with respondents where I will present them a set of choice profiles out of which they would need to select their preferred one. I have 6 factors (traits), 2 factors with 3 levels and 4 factors with 2 level. The total possible combination with this set would be 144. However, we cannot include 144 combinations in the survey. For that reason, I decided to mention 3 surveys so that I can randomly assign one block/survey to one participant.
JMP gave me 3 surveys with the possible combinations. Can I say this is a fractional factorial design because I got 48 possible combinations (a subset of 144 combinations)? Is this the correct way to do it? Also, how can I check the d-efficiency level? I have read research papers on choice experiments which have used JMP and they often mention the d-efficiency score. I am not able to figure out how can I check that.
Thanks