kontrollkaarte
Kontrollkaarte, known in English as control charts, are a tool in statistical process control used to monitor a process's variation over time. Each chart plots a statistic calculated from samples taken sequentially from the process, typically the sample mean (X) and a measure of dispersion such as the range (R) or standard deviation. A central line represents the process target or estimated mean, while upper and lower control limits define the expected range of natural variation, commonly set at ±3 standard deviations from the mean.
There are several common forms: X-bar and R charts, X-bar and S charts (for standard deviation), and
To construct a kontrollkaart, collect sequential samples with size n, compute the statistic for each sample,
Interpretation focuses on detecting non-random patterns that indicate a departure from stable, in-control variation. Points outside
Kontrollkaarte originated with Walter A. Shewhart in the 1920s and were later popularized by Deming. They are