Continuous Improvement Toolkit Scatter Diagram www. citoolkit .com - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

continuous improvement toolkit scatter diagram
SMART_READER_LITE
LIVE PREVIEW

Continuous Improvement Toolkit Scatter Diagram www. citoolkit .com - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Continuous Improvement Toolkit Scatter Diagram www. citoolkit .com The Continuous Improvement Map Managing Selecting & Decision Making Planning & Project Management* Risk PDPC Daily Planning PERT/CPM Break-even Analysis Importance


slide-1
SLIDE 1

www.citoolkit.com

Continuous Improvement Toolkit Scatter Diagram

slide-2
SLIDE 2

www.citoolkit.com

The Continuous Improvement Map

Multivariate Brainstorming IDEF0 Document control Check Sheets** Flowcharting Flow Process Charts** KPIs SCAMPER*** Pugh Matrix Lateral Thinking Reliability Service Blueprints Affinity Diagrams Mind Mapping* Attribute Analysis Morphological Analysis How-How Diagram*** Control Charts Waste Analysis** Time Value Map** Value Stream Mapping** Value Analysis** Suggestion Systems Histograms Activity Networks RACI Matrix Stakeholder Analysis Improvement Roadmaps DMAIC SWOT Analysis Policy Deployment Project Charter PDCA Gantt Charts MOST PERT/CPM Daily Planning Delphi Method Payoff Matrix Relations Mapping Data Mining Just in Time Automation Product Family Matrix Flow Spaghetti** Multi-vari Studies Decision Tree FMEA PDPC RAID Log* Fault Tree Analysis Paired Comparison Traffic Light Assessment TPN Analysis Risk Analysis* Run Charts Scatter Diagram A3 Thinking Importance Urgency Matrix Four Field Matrix Critical-to X Portfolio Matrix Force Field Analysis Decision Balance Sheet Break-even Analysis Voting Quality Function Deployment Pick Chart Gap Analysis* Bottleneck Analysis Cost Benefit Analysis Kaizen Events Control Planning Standard Work Mistake Proofing Quick Changeover Visual Management Simulation TPM 5S Health & Safety Best Practices Pareto Analysis 5 Whys Prioritization Matrix Hypothesis SIPOC* Matrix Diagram Fishbone Diagrams Tree Diagram* Root Cause Analysis Correlation DOE ANOVA Nonparametric Chi-Square Regression Observations Kano Lean Measures Benchmarking*** Interviews Graphical Methods Data collection planner* Questionnaires Probability Distributions MSA Descriptive Statistics Cost of Quality* Sampling Focus Groups Capability Indices Process Yield Project KPIs Normal Distribution

Data Collection Understanding Performance** Implementing Solutions*** Planning & Project Management* Managing Risk Understanding Cause & Effect Designing & Analyzing Processes Group Creativity Selecting & Decision Making

Five Ws Process Redesign Pull Process Mapping OEE

slide-3
SLIDE 3

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Many situations require the investigating whether a relationship exists between two or more variables

slide-4
SLIDE 4

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

A line manager may want to check the relationship between the number of training hours and employee productivity

Or if the number of defects is a function of the experience of the person causing it

slide-5
SLIDE 5

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Other Examples

The relationship between equipment downtime and its cost of maintenance

slide-6
SLIDE 6

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Other Examples

The relationship between driving speed and fuel consumption

slide-7
SLIDE 7

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Other Examples

The relationship between the number of people working on a shift and the average answer time in a call center

slide-8
SLIDE 8

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Other Examples

The relationship between the number of years of education someone has and the annual income of that person

slide-9
SLIDE 9

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

A diagram that shows whether two variables are correlated or related to each other

It shows patterns in the relationship that cannot be seen by just looking at the data

slide-10
SLIDE 10

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

It works with both continuous and count data

slide-11
SLIDE 11

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Primarily used to visually investigate the relationship between two variables

Often an output and an input variables

Y

0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0

X

slide-12
SLIDE 12

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

This is useful to verify that a change in one variable can affect the other variable

It helps detecting the primary factors that are really causing a problem and hence eliminating non-critical factors from consideration

slide-13
SLIDE 13

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Often used as a first step when analyzing and communicating the correlation between pairs of variables

Before conducting advanced statistical techniques

slide-14
SLIDE 14

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Often used with statistical tools (such as regression) to support or reject hypotheses about the data

slide-15
SLIDE 15

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Where do scatter diagrams fit?

Graph the data Scatter diagram Check the correlations Use Pearson Coefficient 1st regression Linear / Multiple regression Evaluate regression R-squared and analyze residuals Re-run regression

(If necessary)

Simple: With different model (Cubic) Multiple: Remove unnecessary items Use the results Control critical process inputs and select best operating levels

slide-16
SLIDE 16

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

The input variable is normally placed on the horizontal axis while the output variable is placed on the vertical axis

Input or explanatory or independent variable Output or response or dependent variable

slide-17
SLIDE 17

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

You may also compare two input or output variables to each other

In this case, it doesn’t matter which variable goes on the horizontal axis and which goes on the vertical axis

X1 X2 & Y1 Y2 & X Y &

slide-18
SLIDE 18

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Scatter diagrams can indicate several types of correlation

X X X X X X X X X X X

No correlation when the data points are scattered randomly without showing any particular pattern.

Note that the width of the scattered pattern reflects the strength of the relationship

slide-19
SLIDE 19

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

A positive correlation occurs when the values of one variable increase as the values of the

  • ther also increase.

X X X X X X X X X X X

Scatter diagrams can indicate several types of correlation

The fitted line slopes from bottom left to top right

slide-20
SLIDE 20

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Scatter diagrams can indicate several types of correlation A negative correlation occurs when the values of one variable increase as the values of the

  • ther decrease.

X X X X X X X X X X X X

The fitted line slopes from upper left to lower right

slide-21
SLIDE 21

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Scatter diagrams can indicate several types of correlation Scatter diagrams can also indicate nonlinear relationships between variables.

X X X X X X X X X XX

slide-22
SLIDE 22

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Example – Forest Trees

Both are output variables

20.0 1 7.5 1 5.0 1 2.5 1 0.0 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 1 0

Diameter Volume

Shows the relationship between the volume and the diameter of sample trees in a forest.

Data source: Minitab

slide-23
SLIDE 23

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Example – Presence of Diabetes at a Workplace

An analysis that was conducted for diagnosing the presence of diabetes at a workplace. The population was generally young (75.8% were below thirty).

slide-24
SLIDE 24

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Example – Presence of Diabetes

This scatter diagram illustrates that there is no obvious relationship between age and glucose levels. High glucose levels are found in all ages, and normal glucose levels are found in higher ages.

slide-25
SLIDE 25

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Example – The amount of sales per month generated at two locations

Location A Location B

The plotted points form a negative slope. The sales at location B is inversely related to the sales at location A.

slide-26
SLIDE 26

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Example – The amount of sales per month generated at two locations

Location A Location B

Does this mean that location A caused the decrease in sales at location B, or vice versa? Answer: Not necessarily, unless the two locations are direct competitors.

slide-27
SLIDE 27

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

How to Construct a Scatter Diagram

Collect the two paired sets of data

C r e a t e a s u m m a r y t a b l e o f t h e d a t a Variable 1 Variable 2

slide-28
SLIDE 28

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

How to Construct a Scatter Diagram

Draw and label the horizontal and vertical axes with variable names and scale values

Xxxx Xxxx

slide-29
SLIDE 29

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

How to Construct a Scatter Diagram

Plot the data pairs on the diagram by placing a dot at the intersection of each data pair

Look at how the pattern appears and how the two variables vary together

Y X

X X X X X

slide-30
SLIDE 30

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Matrix Plots

Summarizes the relationship between pairs of multiple variables in one graph

Allows to visually assess the variables that might be related 3 variables

X1 X2 & Y &

slide-31
SLIDE 31

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Matrix Plots

Produces a scatter diagram for every combination of variables

Potential correlations between pairs of variables can then be identified

X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X

slide-32
SLIDE 32

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Matrix Plots – Example

1 00 80 60 20 1 0 9 6 3 9 6 3 1 00 80 60 20 1 0

Salary Publication Years

There may be a relationship between the years of experience and salaries # of publications doesn't appear to be correlated with the years of experience

slide-33
SLIDE 33

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Matrix Plots – Example

1 00 80 60 20 1 0 9 6 3 9 6 3 1 00 80 60 20 1 0

Salary Publication Years

Is there a correlation between the number of publication and salaries?

slide-34
SLIDE 34

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Further Information – One of the 7 Basic Tools of Quality

slide-35
SLIDE 35

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Further Information

When the relationship is not so clear, Correlation can be used to help validate if a relationship exists between the variables Regression techniques go a step further by defining the relationship in a mathematical format

# of Defects Years of experience

slide-36
SLIDE 36

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Further Information

Be careful before concluding that there is a direct cause-and- effect relationship between the variables There might be a third factor that is causing the change in the two variables

Y=f(x)

slide-37
SLIDE 37

www.citoolkit.com

Scatter Diagram

Further Information

You can also illustrate a stratification factor in scatter diagrams For example, the relationship between a process output and a process input for two different settings