cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
The Discovery Summit 2025 Call for Content is open! Submit an abstract today to present at our premier analytics conference.
See how to use JMP Live to centralize and share reports within groups. Webinar with Q&A April 4, 2pm ET.
Choose Language Hide Translation Bar
View Original Published Thread

Sample Size for DOE

Simone1
Level IV

Hello,

I write you to have some suggestion regarding on topic linked to the DOE.

I have a industrial process. The outout (response) of the process is the percentage of scrap.

The average of this scrap is around 1.5%.

I want to create a DOE to identify main factors, interactions, model,...

My question is: how I can determine the number of the replicates for each corner (for a specific power) to be sure to have correct statisical results (if in one trial I will obtain "0% of scrap" it is real output change or only a case)?

 

Thanks in advance for your feedback.

Best Regards,

Simone

 

11 REPLIES 11
statman
Super User


Re: Sample Size for DOE

My suggestion is to be more creative in developing an appropriate response variable (and use multiple responses).  If color is the issue, there are multiple ways to measure this:

  • ∆L: the difference in lightness/darkness
  • ∆A: the difference in red/green values
  • ∆B: the difference in yellow/blue values
  • ∆C: the difference in chromaticity
  • ∆E: the spectral “distance” between the two colors
  • ∆H: the difference in hues

If human perception is of interest, then an ordinal scale might be very useful.  I have attached a paper I wrote to provide guidance on using such a scale.  Binary responses are not very descriptive, require larger sample sizes and lack discrimination.

"All models are wrong, some are useful" G.E.P. Box
Simone1
Level IV


Re: Sample Size for DOE

I understand your suggestion regarding the usage of some "∆" and tranform "OK/KO" in some data measurable.

Not easy... but not impossible.

Thanks also for the paper.

Have you a good day.

Best Regards,

Simone