But in this case the testing is given different amounts of time.
The thing you think works gets less testing time than the thing you aren't so sure works.
Thus the thing you think works is more likely to pass, just because you are subjecting it to less tests.
Your bias (whether you think the thing works) is having an effect on the outcome.
Good testing, as with good judging should involve 0 preconceptions.
Yes it could be that the judge has a good eye for how long a topic will take, but leaving less time for the facts to come out, necessarily means the facts are less likely to come out.
The thing you think works gets less testing time than the thing you aren't so sure works.
Thus the thing you think works is more likely to pass, just because you are subjecting it to less tests.
Your bias (whether you think the thing works) is having an effect on the outcome.
Good testing, as with good judging should involve 0 preconceptions.
Yes it could be that the judge has a good eye for how long a topic will take, but leaving less time for the facts to come out, necessarily means the facts are less likely to come out.