Fractional factorial design

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. 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 fraction of the effort of a full factorial design in terms of experimental runs and resources.

Notation

Fractional designs are expressed using the notation lk − p, where "l" is the number of levels of each factor investigated, "k" is the number of factors investigated, and "p" describes the size of the fraction of the full factorial used. Formally, "p" is the number of "generators", assignments as to which effects or interactions are "confounded", "i.e.", cannot be estimated independently of each other (see below). A design with "p" such generators is a 1/(lp) fraction of the full factorial design.

For example, a 25 − 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 25 factorial experiment, this experiment requires only eight runs.

In practice, one rarely encounters "l" > 2 levels in fractional factorial designs, since response surface methodology is a much more experimentally efficient way to determine the relationship between the experimental response and factors at multiple levels. In addition, the methodology to generate such designs for more than two levels is much more cumbersome.

The levels of a factor are commonly coded as +1 for the higher level, and -1 for the lower level. For a three-level factor, the intermediate value is coded as 0.

Generation

In practice, experimenters typically rely on statistical reference books to supply the "standard" fractional factorial designs, consisting of the "principal fraction". The "principal fraction" is the set of treatment combinations for which the generators evaluate to + under the treatment combination algebra. However, in some situations, the experimenter may take it upon himself or herself to generate his own fractional design.

A fractional factorial experiment is generated from a full factorial experiment by choosing an "alias structure". The alias structure determines which effects are confounded with each other. For example, the five factor 25 − 2 can be generated by using a full three factor factorial experiment involving three factors (say "A"," B", and "C") and then choosing to confound the two remaining factors "D" and "E" with interactions generated by "D" = "A"*"B" and "E" = "A"*"C". These two expression are called the "generators" of the design. So for example, when the experiment is run and the experimenter estimates the effects for factor "D", what is really being estimated is a combination of the main effect of "D" and the two-factor interaction involving "A" and "B".

An important characteristic of a fractional design is the defining relation, which gives the set of interaction columns equal in the design matrix to a column of plus signs, denoted by "I". For the above example, since "D" = "AB" and "E" = "AC", then "ABD" and "ACE" are both columns of plus signs, and consequently so is "BDCE". In this case the defining relation of the fractional design is "I" = "ABD" = "ACE" = "BCDE". The defining relation allows the alias pattern of the design to be determined.

Resolution

An important property of a fractional design is its resolution or ability to separate main effects and low-order interactions from one another. Formally, the resolution of the design is the minimum word length in the defining relation excluding ("1"). The most important fractional designs are those of resolution III, IV, and V: Resolutions below III are not useful and resolutions above V are wasteful in that they can estimate very high-order interactions which rarely occur in practice. The 25 − 2 design above is resolution III since its defining relation is I = ABD = ACE = BCDE.

External links

* [http://www.itl.nist.gov/div898/handbook/pri/section3/pri334.htm Fractional Factorial Designs (National Institute of Standards and Technology)]
* [http://www.isixsigma.com/library/content/c020429a.asp Save Time With Fractional Factorial DOEs (www.sixsigma.com)]

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Factorial experiment — In statistics, a 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… …   Wikipedia

  • Design of experiments — In general usage, design of experiments (DOE) or experimental design is the design of any information gathering exercises where variation is present, whether under the full control of the experimenter or not. However, in statistics, these terms… …   Wikipedia

  • Glossary of experimental design — The following is a glossary of terms. It is not intended to be all inclusive. Concerned fields *Statistics *Experimental design *Estimation theory Glossary * Alias: When the estimate of an effect also includes the influence of one or more other… …   Wikipedia

  • Box-Behnken design — Box Behnken designs are experimental designs for response surface methodology, devised by George E. P. Box and Donald Behnken in 1960, to achieve the following goals: * Each factor, or independent variable, is placed at one of three equally… …   Wikipedia

  • Multifactor design of experiments software — Software that is used for designing factorial experiments plays an important role in scientific experiments generally and represents a route to the implementation of design of experiments procedures that derive from statistical and combinatoric… …   Wikipedia

  • Central composite design — In statistics, a central composite design is an experimental design, useful in response surface methodology, for building a second order (quadratic) model for the response variable without needing to use a complete three level factorial… …   Wikipedia

  • Optimal design — This article is about the topic in the design of experiments. For the topic in optimal control theory, see shape optimization. Gustav Elfving developed the optimal design of experiments, and so minimized surveyors need for theodolite measurements …   Wikipedia

  • Completely randomized design — In the design of experiments, completely randomized designs are for studying the effects of one primary factor without the need to take other nuisance variables into account. This article describes completely randomized designs that have one… …   Wikipedia

  • Bayesian experimental design — provides a general probability theoretical framework from which other theories on experimental design can be derived. It is based on Bayesian inference to interpret the observations/data acquired during the experiment. This allows accounting for… …   Wikipedia

  • Randomized block design — In the statistical theory of the design of experiments, blocking is the arranging of experimental units in groups (blocks) that are similar to one another. Typically, a blocking factor is a source of variability that is not of primary interest to …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”