Minimum Risk Acceptance Sampling Plans: A Review
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K. Subramani
Abstract
Since the first acceptance sampling plans have been developed almost 80 years ago, a number of selection principles have emerged. The majority of these principles is characterized by the fact that they look upon producer and consumer as two opposing parties. However, in many occasions, e.g., in final inspection, producer and consumer represent the same party and, therefore, the used sampling plan should not make an attempt to discriminate between their interests. In this case the interest is to avoid wrong decisions, i.e., reject product of sufficient quality and accept product of insufficient quality. Thus, the natural objective in these cases is to use the overall risk for a wrong decision as optimization criteria. This is the case with so-called “minimum risks sampling plans”, which are reviewed in this paper so as to make them better known to those responsible for quality control.
© Heldermann Verlag
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- Economic Design of A Dynamic CCC – r Chart for High-Yield Processes
- A Note on Average Run Lengths of Moving Average Control Charts
- A Group Runs Control Chart for Detecting Shifts in the Process Mean
- A Capability Index Calibrated to the Nonconformance Probability
- Stochastic Methods for Production Processes
- Parametric Bivariate Regression Analysis Based on Censored Samples: A Weibull Model
- A Note on Savings in Experimental Time Under Type II Censoring
- Expected Time for Attainment Threshold Level A Shock Model Approach
- Maintenance Models for a Repairable System
- Minimum Average Fraction Inspected for Combined Continuous Lot by Lot Acceptance Sampling Plan
- Minimum Risk Acceptance Sampling Plans: A Review
- Improving Resistivity of Resin
Articles in the same Issue
- Economic Design of A Dynamic CCC – r Chart for High-Yield Processes
- A Note on Average Run Lengths of Moving Average Control Charts
- A Group Runs Control Chart for Detecting Shifts in the Process Mean
- A Capability Index Calibrated to the Nonconformance Probability
- Stochastic Methods for Production Processes
- Parametric Bivariate Regression Analysis Based on Censored Samples: A Weibull Model
- A Note on Savings in Experimental Time Under Type II Censoring
- Expected Time for Attainment Threshold Level A Shock Model Approach
- Maintenance Models for a Repairable System
- Minimum Average Fraction Inspected for Combined Continuous Lot by Lot Acceptance Sampling Plan
- Minimum Risk Acceptance Sampling Plans: A Review
- Improving Resistivity of Resin