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Practice JMP using these webinar videos and resources. We hold live Mastering JMP Zoom webinars with Q&A most Fridays at 2 pm US Eastern Time. See the list and register. Local-language live Zoom webinars occur in the UK, Western Europe and Asia. See your country jmp.com/mastering site.

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Developer Tutorial: Using JMP to Create Orthogonal Mixed-level Screening Designs

Orthogonal Mixed-level Screening Designs introduced in JMP 18 are useful for JMP DOE users who need to test the effectiveness of many interventions simultaneously in a single experiment with minimal runs. See how to use JMP 18 orthogonal mixed-level screening designs to mix continuous and two-level categorical factors and use special constructions for mixed-level screening designs where continuous factors have some levels at the center. The three-level factors must be continuous, and the two-level factors can be either continuous or categorical. Additionally, these designs supply substantial bias protection of the main effects estimates due to active two-factor interactions.

 

The video includes a discussion with Tom Donnelly  @tom_donnelly  (~ time 49:24) about JMP design choices related to orthogonal mixed-level designs.  Tom's slides are included in the attachments to this video post.

 

See how to:

  • Find the designs in JMP using DOE->Classical->Factor Screening->Screening Design path
  • Understand the motivation for Orthogonal Mixed-Leve Designs
    • Main effects screening primary goal
    • Mix of three-level and two-level factors
    • Three-level factors are continuous (we’re not looking for balance)
    • Almost as many factors as runs (saturated, main effects screening), to 3/4 run size
    • DSD-like, but with more 2-level factors
  • Understand and view demo of Method/Option 3, where n is a multiple of 16
  • Understand and view demo of Method/Option 2, where n is a multiple of 8
  • Understand and view demo of Method/Option 1, where n is a multiple of 2
  • Delve into issues
    • Screening important factors, DSD too expensive, not all 3-levels
    • Detecting LARGE quadratics
    • Determining how much to go after quadratics

 

Resources

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