BNAD 276 exam 2
Chance variation
-Caused by a number of randomly occurring events that are part of the production process. - not controllable by the individual worker or machine - expected, so not a source of alarm as long as it's magnitude is tolerable and the end product meets specifications
Control Charts
-Developed by Walter A Shewhart - a plot of calculated statistics of the production process over time - production process is "in control" if the calculated statistics fall in an expected range - production process is "out of control" if calculated statistics reveal an undesirable trend
Assignable variation
-caused by specific events or factors that can usually be identified and eliminated - identified and corrected or removed
Parameters
A constant whose value may be unknown. Only one population.
Estimate
A particular value of the estimator.
Statistics
A random variable who's value depends on the chosen random sample. Used to make inferences about the population parameters.
Simple random sample
A sample of n observations which has the same probability of being selected from the population as any other sample of n observations
Estimator
A statistic that is used to estimate a population parameter
Sample
A subset of the population
nonresponse bias
A systematic difference in preferences between respondents and non-respondents to a survey or a poll
selection bias
A systematic exclusion of certain groups from consideration for the sample
Margin of error
Accounts for the variability of the estimator and the desired confidence level of the interval. Formal definition: "the 1/2 width of a CI"
Normal Transformation (standardization)
Any normal distributed random variable X with mean u and standard deviation o can be transformed into the standard normal random variable Z
Sample statistic
Calculated from sample and used to make inferences about the population
Population
Consists of all items of interest in a statistical problem
Continuous Uniform Distribution
Describes a random variable that has an equally likely chance of assuming a value within a specified range
Probability Density Function
Describes the relative likelihood that X assumes a value within a given interval that add up to 1
Cluster sampling
Divide population into mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive groups, called clusters
Stratified random sampling
Divide the population into mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive groups, called strata
Sampling distribution
Each random sample of size n drawn from the population provides an estimate of u- the sample mean
Central Limit Theorem
For any population X with expected value u and standard deviation o, the sampling distribution of X will be approximately normal if the sample size n is sufficiently large
Bias
The tendency of a sample statistic to systematically over- or underestimate a population parameter
Acceptance sampling
Used at the completion of a production process or service. If a particular product does not conform to certain specifications, then it is either discarded or repaired
Finite population correction factor
Used to reduce the sampling variation of the sample proportion
Inverse transformation
you are given a probability and have to solve for x (value in raw data)
Standard normal table (Z table)
Gives the cumulative probabilities and negative values of
Width of a confidence interval
Influenced by sample size n, standard deviation o, and confidence level 100 (1-...)%
Detection approach
Inspection occurs during the process in order to detect any nonconformance to specifications. Goal is to determine whether the production process should be continued or adjusted before producing a large number of defects.
Statistical quality control
Involves statistical techniques used to develop and maintain a firm's ability to produce high-quality goods and services. Two approaches are acceptance sampling and detection approach
Cumulative density function
It shows how the sum of the probabilities approaches 1, which sometimes occurs at a constant rate and sometimes occurs at a changing rate
Standard Normal distribution
Mean is equal to zero and standard deviation is equal to one.
Standard deviation
Measure of dispersion for population
Standard error
Measure of dispersion for samples
Expected value
On average or over the long-term
Confidence interval
Provides a range of values that, with a certain level of confidence, contains the population parameter of interest
Normal distribution
Symmetric. Bell-shaped curve. Closely approximates the probability distribution of a wide range of random variables. Describes by two parameters u (the population mean which describes the central location of the distribution) and o^2 (the population variance which describes the dispersion of the distribution)
Discrete
The random variable assumes a countable number
Continuous
The random variable is characterized by uncountable values within any interval