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  2. Fractional factorial design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractional_factorial_design

    Each generator halves the number of runs required. A design with p such generators is a 1/(l p)=l −p fraction of the full factorial design. [3] For example, a 2 5 − 2 design is 1/4 of a two-level, five-factor factorial design. Rather than the 32 runs that would be required for the full 2 5 factorial experiment, this experiment requires only ...

  3. Aliasing (factorial experiments) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aliasing_(factorial...

    In a fractional factorial experiment, the contrast vectors belonging to a given effect are restricted to the treatment combinations in the fraction. Thus, in the half-fraction {11, 12, 13} in the 2 × 3 example, the three effects may be represented by the column vectors in the following table:

  4. Yates analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yates_Analysis

    A fractional factorial design contains a carefully chosen subset of these combinations. The criterion for choosing the subsets is discussed in detail in the fractional factorial designs article. Formalized by Frank Yates , a Yates analysis exploits the special structure of these designs to generate least squares estimates for factor effects for ...

  5. Plackett–Burman design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plackett–Burman_design

    Plackett–Burman designs are experimental designs presented in 1946 by Robin L. Plackett and J. P. Burman while working in the British Ministry of Supply. [1] Their goal was to find experimental designs for investigating the dependence of some measured quantity on a number of independent variables (factors), each taking L levels, in such a way as to minimize the variance of the estimates of ...

  6. Factorial experiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factorial_experiment

    The interaction of two factors with s 1 and s 2 levels, respectively, has (s 11)(s 2 −1) degrees of freedom. The formula for more than two factors follows this pattern. In the 2 × 3 example above, the degrees of freedom for the two main effects and the interaction — the number of columns for each — are 1, 2 and 2, respectively.

  7. List of numerical libraries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_numerical_libraries

    Matrix Toolkit Java is a linear algebra library based on BLAS and LAPACK. ojAlgo is an open source Java library for mathematics, linear algebra and optimisation. exp4j is a small Java library for evaluation of mathematical expressions. SuanShu is an open-source Java math library. It supports numerical analysis, statistics and optimization.

  8. Central composite design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_composite_design

    There are many different methods to select a useful value of α. Let F be the number of points due to the factorial design and T = 2k + n, the number of additional points, where n is the number of central points in the design. Common values are as follows (Myers, 1971):

  9. Factorial number system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factorial_number_system

    The factorial number system is a mixed radix numeral system: the i-th digit from the right has base i, which means that the digit must be strictly less than i, and that (taking into account the bases of the less significant digits) its value is to be multiplied by (i − 1)!