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Theory and applications of univariate distribution-free Shewhart, CUSUM and EWMA control chartsGraham, Marien Alet 19 November 2008 (has links)
Statistical quality control charts originated in the late 1920’s by Shewhart (1926, 1931 and 1939). Their applications in various disciplines have been ever-increasing. Although most control charts are distribution-based, recent literature witnessed the development of a considerable number of distribution-free or nonparametric control charts. The purpose of this thesis is to present the concepts and introduce the researcher to the essentials of univariate nonparametric control charts. Various properties of nonparametric control charts are comprehensively discussed and concepts are clearly explained. Proofs and detailed calculations have been given to help the reader to study and understand the subject more thoroughly. This text contains a wide variety of illustrative examples to give an overall picture of how nonparametric control charts are used. Both simulated and real data examples have been integrated throughout the text. Since most practical problems are too large to be solved using hand calculations, some type of statistical software package is required to solve these problems. There are several excellent statistical packages available and in this thesis we make use of Microsoft Excel, SAS, Minitab, Mathcad and Mathematica to construct (almost all) the tables in this thesis. We point out that a number of Mathematica programs are provided by Chakraborti and Van de Wiel (2003) by means of the website www.win.tue.nl/~markvdw. The aim throughout is to convey the concepts of univariate nonparametric control charts in a way that readers will find attractive and interesting. Since the majority of nonparametric procedures, to be distribution-free, require a continuous population, only variables control charts are covered. We only consider control charts for monitoring the location of a process, since very few nonparametric charts are available for monitoring the spread. In this thesis we consider the three main classes of control charts: the Shewhart, CUSUM and EWMA control charts and their refinements. The text is divided into several chapters. An introduction to nonparametric control charts is presented in Chapter 1. A discussion of some of the advantages of nonparametric control charts is included while pointing out some of the disadvantages. In Chapter 2 we describe the Shewhart-, CUSUMand EWMA-type sign control charts with (and without) warning limits. In Chapter 3 we describe the Shewhart-, CUSUM- and EWMA-type signed-rank control charts with (and without) runs-type signalling rules. The Shewhart-type sign-like control chart with (and without) signalling rules is considered in Chapter 4. In Chapter 5 we consider the Shewharttype signed-rank-like control chart. Finally, in Chapter 6 we consider the Shewhart- and CUSUM-type Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon control charts. We considered decision problems under both Phase I and Phase II (see Section 1.5 for a distinction between the two phases). In all the sections of this thesis we considered Phase II process monitoring, except in Section 6.2 where a CUSUM-type control chart for the preliminary Phase I analysis of individual observations based on the Mann-Whitney two-sample test is proposed. In the last chapter we have some concluding remarks along with some ideas for future research. / Dissertation (MSc)--University of Pretoria, 2011. / Statistics / unrestricted
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Economic design of control charts for multivariate, multistate processesHarris, Richard John 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Economic design of control charts for correlated, multivariate observationsAlt, Francis Bernard 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Univariate and Multivariate Surveillance Methods for Detecting Increases in Incidence RatesJoner, Michael D. Jr. 02 May 2007 (has links)
It is often important to detect an increase in the frequency of some event. Particular attention is given to medical events such as mortality or the incidence of a given disease, infection or birth defect. Observations are regularly taken in which either an incidence occurs or one does not. This dissertation contains the result of an investigation of prospective monitoring techniques in two distinct surveillance situations. In the first situation, the observations are assumed to be the results of independent Bernoulli trials. Some have suggested adapting the scan statistic to monitor such rates and detect a rate increase as soon as possible after it occurs. Other methods could be used in prospective surveillance, such as the Bernoulli cumulative sum (CUSUM) technique. Issues involved in selecting parameters for the scan statistic and CUSUM methods are discussed, and a method for computing the expected number of observations needed for the scan statistic method to signal a rate increase is given. A comparison of these methods shows that the Bernoulli CUSUM method tends to be more effective in detecting increases in the rate. In the second situation, the incidence information is available at multiple locations. In this case the individual sites often report a count of incidences on a regularly scheduled basis. It is assumed that the counts are Poisson random variables which are independent over time, but the counts at any given time are possibly correlated between regions. Multivariate techniques have been suggested for this situation, but many of these approaches have shortcomings which have been demonstrated in the quality control literature. In an attempt to remedy some of these shortcomings, a new control chart is recommended based on a multivariate exponentially weighted moving average. The average run-length performance of this chart is compared with that of the existing methods. / Ph. D.
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A COMPARISON OF TWO MULTIVARIATE CUMULATIVE SUM CONTROL CHART TECHNIQUES.Korpela, Kathryn Schuler, 1960- January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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A VARIABLE SAMPLING FREQUENCY CUMULATIVE SUM CONTROL CHART SCHEMEMyslicki, Stefan Leopold, 1953- January 1987 (has links)
This study uses Monte Carlo simulation to examine the performance of a variable frequency sampling cumulative sum control chart scheme for controlling the mean of a normal process. The study compares the performance of the method with that of a standard fixed interval sampling cumulative sum control chart scheme. The results indicate that the variable frequency sampling cumulative sum control chart scheme is superior to the standard cumulative sum control chart scheme in detecting a small to moderate shift in the process mean.
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Economically optimal control charts for two stage samplingHall, Kathryn B. 23 January 1990 (has links)
Control charts are designed to monitor population parameters. Selection of a
control chart sampling plan involves determination of the frequency of samples, size
of each sample, and critical values to determine when the system is sending an out-of-control signal. Since the main use of control charts is in industry, a widely
accepted measure of a good sampling plan is one that minimizes the total cost of
operating the system per unit time.
Methods for selection of control chart sampling plans for economically optimal
X charts are well established. These plans focus on single stage sampling at each
sampling period. However, some populations naturally call for two stage sampling.
Here, the cost of operating a system per unit time is redefined in terms of two stage
sampling plans, and computer search techniques are developed to determine the control
chart parameters. First the sample sizes and critical values are fixed, and
Newton's method is used to determine the optimal time between samples. Then, a
Hooke - Jeeves search is used to simultaneously determine the optimal critical value,
sample sizes and time between samples. Adjustment to the latter is required whenever
any of the other three parameters change. Alternative methods are also discussed.
Information from a single sample is usually used to control shifts in both the
process mean and variance. With two stage sampling, this means two additional control
charts are used, one for each variance component. The computer algorithm
developed for selection of parameters for X charts is adapted by expanding the Hooke
Jeeves search region to a six dimensional space, now over three critical values, sample
sizes for both stages of sampling, and the time between samples.
These methods are applied to a real data set that requires two stage sampling. A
representative analysis of the sensitivity of the optimal sampling scheme to the input
parameters completes the paper. / Graduation date: 1990
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Statistical Monitoring and Control of Locally Proactive Routing Protocols in MANETsJanuary 2012 (has links)
abstract: Mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) have attracted attention for mission critical applications. This dissertation investigates techniques of statistical monitoring and control for overhead reduction in a proactive MANET routing protocol. Proactive protocols transmit overhead periodically. Instead, we propose that the local conditions of a node should determine this transmission decision. While the goal is to minimize overhead, a balance in the amount of overhead transmitted and the performance achieved is required. Statistical monitoring consists of techniques to determine if a characteristic has shifted away from an in-control state. A basic tool for monitoring is a control chart, a time-oriented representation of the characteristic. When a sample deviates outside control limits, a significant change has occurred and corrective actions are required to return to the in-control state. We investigate the use of statistical monitoring of local conditions in the Optimized Link State Routing (OLSR) protocol. Three versions are developed. In A-OLSR, each node uses a Shewhart chart to monitor betweenness of its two-hop neighbourhood. Betweenness is a social network metric that measures a node's influence; betweenness is larger when a node has more influence. Changes in topology are associated with changes in betweenness. We incorporate additional local node conditions including speed, density, packet arrival rate, and number of flows it forwards in A+-OLSR. Response Surface Methodology (RSM) is used to optimize timer values. As well, the Shewhart chart is replaced by an Exponentially Weighted Moving Average (EWMA) chart, which is more sensitive to small changes in the characteristic. It is known that control charts do not work as well in the presence of correlation. Hence, in A*-OLSR the autocorrelation in the time series is removed and an Auto-Regressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA) model found; this removes the dependence on node speed. A*-OLSR also extends monitoring to two characteristics concurrently using multivariate cumulative sum (MCUSUM) charts. The protocols are evaluated in simulation, and compared to OLSR and its variants. The techniques for statistical monitoring and control are general and have great potential to be applied to the adaptive control of many network protocols. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Computer Science 2012
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Tracking Change : Usefulness of Statistical Process Control in Improving Psychiatric CareGremyr, Andreas January 2016 (has links)
Healthcare is facing great challenges and psychiatric care is no exception. Extensive attempts to improve quality are made. It is essential to use methods that enable learning from experience, to improve performance. The core feature of Statistical Process Control (SPC), the control charts, are in use in various settings to enable learning and to support quality improvement work, but its use in psychiatric settings are scarce. This master´s thesis explores the usefulness of control charts, in quality improvement work. This was done in a case study at a department of psychosis by addressing two questions related to: a) control chart’s contribution to knowledge on if, when, where and how changes occur, and 2) how usefulness of control charts is perceived at the department. Control charts were applied to important variables and development officer’s and manager’s thoughts on usefulness were analysed using pattern matching. The use of charts shows shifts and differences between wards related to ongoing improvement projects. There is a readiness to start using control charts. The perceived usefulness matches the benefits and challenges identified in literature. Control charts as a tool supporting continuous improvement work in a psychiatric context, has a great potential still awaiting its use.
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Comparisons of Neural Networks, Shewhart ‾x, and CUSUM Control Charts Under the Condition of NonnormalityYi, Junsub 08 1900 (has links)
In this study, neural networks are developed under conditions of nonnormality as alternatives to standard control charts, and their performance is compared with those of standard ‾x and CUSUM control charts.
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