ABSTRACT

Every technical investigation involving trial-and-error experimentation embodies a strategy for deciding what experiments to perform, when to quit, and how to interpret the data. This handbook presents several statistically derived strategies which are more efficient than any intuitive approach and will get the investigator to their goal with the fewest experiments, give the greatest degree of reliability to their conclusions, and keep the risk of overlooking something of practical importance to a minimum.

Features:

  • Provides a comprehensive desk reference on experimental design that will be useful to practitioners without extensive statistical knowledge
  • Features a review of the necessary statistical prerequisites
  • Presents a set of tables that allow readers to quickly access various experimental designs
  • Includes a roadmap for where and when to use various experimental design strategies
  • Shows compelling examples of each method discussed
  • Illustrates how to reproduce results using several popular software packages on a companion web site

Following the outlines and examples in this book should quickly allow a working professional or student to select the appropriate experimental design for a research problem at hand, follow the design to conduct the experiments, and analyze and interpret the resulting data.

John Lawson and John Erjavec have a combined 25 years of industrial experience and over 40 years of academic experience.  They have taught this material to numerous practicing engineers and scientists as well as undergraduate and graduate students. 

chapter 2|32 pages

Statistics and Probability

chapter 3|34 pages

Basic Two-Level Factorial Experiments

chapter 4|28 pages

Additional Tools for Two-Level Factorials

chapter 5|24 pages

General Factorial Experiments and ANOVA

chapter 6|28 pages

Variance Component Studies

chapter 7|40 pages

Screening Designs

chapter 8|34 pages

Regression Analysis

chapter 9|26 pages

Response Surface Designs

chapter 10|24 pages

Response Surface Model Fitting

chapter 11|30 pages

Sequential Experimentation

chapter 12|42 pages

Mixture Experiments