1941
DOI: 10.1214/aoms/1177731788
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Determination of Sample Sizes for Setting Tolerance Limits

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Cited by 730 publications
(319 citation statements)
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“…Thus, tin this work the statistical analyses of the model evaluations for obtaining confidence intervals for safety parameters estimates rely on the use of Order Statistics (OS), along a non-parametric approach initially explored by [Wilks, 1941;Wilks, 1942]; this brings the advantage that the number of code calculations needed for safety margins evaluation is independent of the number of uncertain input parameters and provides a given confidence on the reliability of the calculated point-estimate obtained with a limited number of code runs. Figure 1 shows a schematic sketch of the non-parametric procedure here adopted [Secchi et al, 2008]; for ease of illustration, a single safety parameter y is considered.…”
Section: Notation and List Of Acronymsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Thus, tin this work the statistical analyses of the model evaluations for obtaining confidence intervals for safety parameters estimates rely on the use of Order Statistics (OS), along a non-parametric approach initially explored by [Wilks, 1941;Wilks, 1942]; this brings the advantage that the number of code calculations needed for safety margins evaluation is independent of the number of uncertain input parameters and provides a given confidence on the reliability of the calculated point-estimate obtained with a limited number of code runs. Figure 1 shows a schematic sketch of the non-parametric procedure here adopted [Secchi et al, 2008]; for ease of illustration, a single safety parameter y is considered.…”
Section: Notation and List Of Acronymsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this case, the confidence in the estimates becomes crucial for decision making and must, thus, be quantified [Wilks, 1941;Wilks, 1942;Guba et al, 2003;Nutt et al, 2004].…”
Section: Estimation Of Safety Marginsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Starting from the early forties many publications have appeared in the literature on tolerance intervals and regions (e.g., Wilks (1941), Wald (1943), Tukey (1947Tukey ( , 1948, Ackermann (1983)). They dealt with both parametric and nonparametric cases and considered two types of tolerance regions (guaranteed coverage and mean coverage in the terminology of Aitchison and Dunsmore (1975) or ,B-content and ,B-expectation in the terminology of Guttman (1970)).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They dealt with both parametric and nonparametric cases and considered two types of tolerance regions (guaranteed coverage and mean coverage in the terminology of Aitchison and Dunsmore (1975) or ,B-content and ,B-expectation in the terminology of Guttman (1970)). Classical tolerance intervals introduced by Wilks (1941) are intervals with order statistics as endpoints. Since the classical procedure is based on order statistics it was troublesome to extend it to higher dimensions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%