The student’s research looks at the effects of combinations 
        of certain foods on cholesterol levels in humans. After obtaining approval 
        for the use of human subjects in his study from the Institutional Review 
        Board (IRB), the student recruits 30 subjects for each of his control 
        and treatment groups. For three months, subjects in the treatment group 
        follow a specific diet, have their blood drawn weekly, and keep a food 
        log, whereas subjects in the control group have their blood drawn weekly 
        and keep a food log. During the intervention phase of the study, just 
        over one third of the subjects in the treatment group and one quarter 
        of the control group subjects drop out of the study. 
      At the end of the intervention, the student is preparing 
        to meet with his advisor regarding his results. To his dismay, the student 
        discovers that the data he has collected are insufficient to perform a 
        robust analysis due to the high subject attrition rates. The student knows 
        that his advisor will require him to collect additional data, which will 
        most likely involve rerunning the experiment. However, he does not feel 
        that he has time to rerun the experiment and, though he enjoyed conducting 
        the study, he is anxious to complete his graduate work and move on to 
        postdoctoral studies. After reflecting on all the time and energy he has 
        invested in this study to date, the student finds himself trying to decide 
        among the following courses of action: