DocumentCode
1328426
Title
Factorial Design for Efficient Experimentation
Author
Spall, James C.
Author_Institution
Appl. Phys. Lab., Johns Hopkins Univ. (JHU), Laurel, MD, USA
Volume
30
Issue
5
fYear
2010
Firstpage
38
Lastpage
53
Abstract
While James Dyson´s eponymous company, Dyson Ltd., based in Malmesbury, United Kingdom, is known to make high-quality vacuum cleaners, Dyson might have saved himself and his company a lot of time and money if he had been aware of the factorial design approach to experimentation. In fact, as discussed below, the statement of Dyson on cause and effect is incorrect. It is possible to learn what improves a system by changing more than one input variable at a time. Furthermore, this learning can be done more efficiently and with the additional benefit of acquiring information about input-variable interactions that cannot be revealed in the one-at-a-time changes advocated by Dyson. Unfortunately, he is not alone in his beliefs. Many in industry, government, and elsewhere share such misconceptions. The aim of this article is to present some of the key ideas in factorial designs and demonstrate how this approach offers both greater efficiency and insight than one-at-a-time changes.
Keywords
design of experiments; identification; Malmesbury United Kingdom; efficient experimentation; factorial design; high-quality vacuum cleaners; Analytical models; Computational modeling; Design for experiments; Input variables; Response surface methodology; System identification;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Control Systems, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1066-033X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MCS.2010.937677
Filename
5578533
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