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  2. Fractional factorial design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractional_factorial_design

    In statistics, fractional factorial designs are experimental designs consisting of a carefully chosen subset (fraction) of the experimental runs of a full factorial design. [1] The subset is chosen so as to exploit the sparsity-of-effects principle to expose information about the most important features of the problem studied, while using a ...

  3. Aliasing (factorial experiments) - Wikipedia

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

    A fractional factorial design is said to have resolution if every -factor effect [note 4] is unaliased with every effect having fewer than factors. For example, a design has resolution R = 3 {\displaystyle R=3} if main effects are unaliased with each other (taking p = 1 ) {\displaystyle p=1)} , though it allows main effects to be aliased with ...

  4. Yates analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yates_Analysis

    Yates analysis. In statistics, a Yates analysis is an approach to analyzing data obtained from a designed experiment, where a factorial design has been used. Full- and fractional-factorial designs are common in designed experiments for engineering and scientific applications. In these designs, each factor is assigned two levels, typically ...

  5. Factorial experiment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factorial_experiment

    Designed experiments with full factorial design (left), response surface with second-degree polynomial (right) In statistics, a full factorial experiment is an experiment whose design consists of two or more factors, each with discrete possible values or "levels", and whose experimental units take on all possible combinations of these levels across all such factors.

  6. Box–Behnken design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box–Behnken_design

    The design with 7 factors was found first while looking for a design having the desired property concerning estimation variance, and then similar designs were found for other numbers of factors. Each design can be thought of as a combination of a two-level (full or fractional) factorial design with an incomplete block design. In each block, a ...

  7. Plackett–Burman design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plackett–Burman_design

    The solution to this problem is to find an experimental design where each combination of levels for any pair of factors appears the same number of times, throughout all the experimental runs (refer to table). A complete factorial design would satisfy this criterion, but the idea was to find smaller designs.

  8. Response surface methodology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Response_surface_methodology

    Response surface methodology. In statistics, response surface methodology (RSM) explores the relationships between several explanatory variables and one or more response variables. RSM is an empirical model which employs the use of mathematical and statistical techniques to relate input variables, otherwise known as factors, to the response.

  9. Conjoint analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conjoint_analysis

    Conjoint analysis is a survey-based statistical technique used in market research that helps determine how people value different attributes (feature, function, benefits) that make up an individual product or service. The objective of conjoint analysis is to determine what combination of a set of attributes is most influential on respondent ...