Stats
Sigma in the control chart.
Dear Professor Mean, I ran a control chart in SPSS for individual values,
and the control limits don't correspond with what I would expect from the
descriptive procedure that I ran first. In particular, the value of sigma in
the control chart appears to be an approximation of what I computed earlier.
Why would SPSS use a different calculation for sigma?
The use of the word "sigma" in quality control circles is different than
how it is used in other circles. So the sigma limits that you get in your
control chart are different than what you would get in any other descriptive
statistics procedure. In particular, sigma represents neither the sample
standard deviation, nor the standard error of the mean.
The reason the sigma in a control chart differs from any of the numbers you
might get in a descriptive summary is that:
1. In a control chart, sigma represents short term variation only. If sigma
included long term variation, then it would be too big. It would include
things like a slow drift or trend that would inflate the limits and make the
control chart useless.
2. In a control chart, sigma is corrected for bias. The correction factor
is more complicated than the "n-1" factor which makes the variance (but not
the standard deviation) unbiased.
3. In this particular control chart, the moving range is used to
approximate sigma. The moving range is not used either directly or indirectly
in other descriptive summaries. Keep in mind also that a moving range is only
meaningful if there is a natural time sequence to your data (as would have to
be the case for a control chart). Many of the data sets that might be
summarized in a descriptive procedure would not have a natural time sequence.
Further reading
Donald Wheeler has authored or co-authored three excellent books that
explain this material far better than I can.
- Understanding Variation. The Key to Managing Chaos.
Wheeler DJ.
Knoxvile TN: SPC Press, Inc (1993).
ISBN: 0-945320-35-3.
- Understanding Statistical Process Control, Second Edition
Wheeler DJ, Chambers DS.
Knoxville TN: SPC Press, Inc (1992).
ISBN: 0-945320-13-2.
- Advanced Topics in Statistical Process Control. The Power of
Shewhart's Charts
Wheeler DJ.
Knoxville TN: SPC Press Inc (1995).
ISBN: 0-945320-45-0.
Category: Ask Professor Mean,
Category: Control charts