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Published byWesley Long Modified over 9 years ago
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INT 506/706: Total Quality Management Lec #9, Analysis Of Data
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Outline Confidence Intervals t-tests –1 sample –2 sample ANOVA 2
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Hypothesis Testing Often used to determine if two means are equal
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Hypothesis Testing Null Hypothesis (H o )
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Hypothesis Testing Alternative Hypothesis (H a )
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Hypothesis Testing Uses for hypothesis testing
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Hypothesis Testing Assumptions
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Confidence Intervals Estimate +/- margin of error
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Confidence Intervals CONCLUSION DRAWN Do Not Reject H o Reject H o THE TRUE STATE Ho is TRUECORRECT TYPE I Error (α risk) Ho is FALSE TYPE II Error (β risk)CORRECT You conclude there is a difference when there really isn’t You conclude there is NO difference when there really is
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Confidence Intervals Balancing Alpha and Beta Risks Confidence level = 1 - α Power = 1 - β
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Confidence Intervals Sample size Large samples means more confidence Less confidence with smaller samples
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Confidence Intervals
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t-tests A statistical test that allows us to make judgments about the average process or population
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t-tests Used in 2 situations: 1)Sample to point of interest (1-sample t-test) 2)Sample to another sample (2-sample t-test)
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t-tests t-distribution is wider and flatter than the normal distribution
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1-sample t-tests Compare a statistical value (average, standard deviation, etc) to a value of interest
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1-sample t-tests
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Example An automobile mfg has a target length for camshafts of 599.5 mm +/- 2.5 mm. Data from Supplier 2 are as follows: Mean=600.23, std. dev. = 1.87
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1-sample t-tests Null Hypothesis – The camshafts from Supplier 2 are the same as the target value Alternative Hypothesis – The camshafts from Supplier 2 are NOT the same as the target value
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1-sample t-tests
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2-sample t-tests Used to test whether or not the means of two samples are the same
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2-sample t-tests “mean of population 1 is the same as the mean of population 2”
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2-sample t-test Example The same mfg has data for another supplier and wants to compare the two: Supplier 1: mean = 599.55, std. dev. =.62, C.I. (599.43 – 599.67) – 95% Supplier 2: mean = 600.23, std. dev. = 1.87, C.I. (599.86 – 600.60) – 95%
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2-sample t-tests
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ANOVA Used to analyze the relationships between several categorical inputs and one continuous output
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ANOVA Factors: inputs Levels: Different sources or circumstances
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ANOVA Example Compare on-time delivery performance at three different facilities (A, B, & C). Factor of interest: Facilities Levels: A, B, & C Response variable: on-time delivery
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ANOVA To tell whether the 3 or more options are statistically different, ANOVA looks at three sources of variability Total Total: variability among all observations Between Between: variation between subgroups means (factors) Within Within: random (chance) variation within each subgroup (noise, statistical error)
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ANOVA
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Factor SS = 4*(Factor mean-Grand mean)^2 SS = (Each value – Grand mean) 2 Total SS = ∑ (Each value – Grand mean) 2
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ANOVA (Each mean – Factor mean) 2 ∑
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ANOVA Total Total: variability among all observations 184.92 Between Between: variation between subgroups means (factors) 118.17 Within Within: random (chance) variation within each subgroup (noise, statistical error) 66.75
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ANOVA Between group variation (factor) 118.17 + Within group variation (error/noise) 66.75 Total Variability 184.92
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ANOVA
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Two-way ANOVA More complex – more factors – more calculations Example: Photoresist to copper clad, p. 360
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ANOVA
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