Synopses & Reviews
Statistical process control and the use of designed experiments in industry have led to some remarkable successes in recent years. Many of these have been well publicized, as has the contribution of statistical methods to the development of industrial supremacy in the Pacific Rim nations. Nevertheless, statisticians are often heard to bewail the fact that these methods are not so widely used as they might be. The purpose of The Pocket Statistician is therefore to provide, in five handy chapters, a practical guide to the use of statistics in industry. Rather than expounding the underlying theory, the authors have provided insight into what methods can do and how they do it; and knowing that the intended readership are busy people the discussions have been kept as concise as possible. A data disk is included in the back so that the analyses can be practiced immediately.
Table of Contents
List of contributors
Preface
1. Getting started, Ian Puzey
2. Making sense of data, Clare Morris
3. Picture your numbers, Tony Greenfield
4. Why design experiments, Shirley Coleman
5. Understanding SPC charts, Roger Jones
A last word
Index