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Resolution III Designs. Designs with main effects aliased with two-factor interactions Used for screening (5 – 7 variables in 8 runs, 9 - 15 variables in 16 runs, for example) A saturated design has k = N – 1 variables See Table 8-19, page 313 for a . Resolution III Designs.
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Resolution III Designs • Designs with main effects aliased with two-factor interactions • Used for screening (5 – 7 variables in 8 runs, 9 - 15 variables in 16 runs, for example) • A saturated design has k = N – 1 variables • See Table 8-19, page 313 for a
Resolution III Designs Complete defining relation I = ABD = ACE = BCF = ABCG = BCDE = ACDF = CDG = ABEF = BEG = AFG = DEF = ADEG = CEFG = BDFG = ABCDEFG The aliases of an effect (e.g. B) B = AD = ABCE = CF = ACG = CDE = ABCDF = BCDG = AEF = EG = ABFG = BDEF = ABDEG = BCEFG = DFG = ACDEFG
Resolution III Designs • dof = N – 1 = 7 (used to estimate 7 main effects) • Assuming three and higher order interactions are negligible • Saturated resolution III design can be used to obtain resolution III designs with fewer factors • e.g. by dropping one column (e.g. column G) • Complete defining relation • I = ABD = ACE = BCF = ABCG = BCDE = ACDF = CDG • = ABEF= BEG = AFG = DEF = ADEG = CEFG = BDFG = ABCDEFG
Resolution III Designs • Dropping several factors in the defining relation to form a new design. E.g. drop B, D, F and G • I = ABD = ACE = BCF = ABCG = BCDE = ACDF = CDG • = ABEF = BEG = AFG = DEF = ADEG = CEFG = BDFG = ABCDEFG • It’s possible to form a 23 design with A, B, and C • Care is needed to form the best design
Resolution III Designs • Sequential assembly of fractions to separate aliased effects by combining designs generated by switching certain signs – fold over • Switching the signs in one column provides estimates of that factor and all of its two-factor interactions • Switching the signs in all columns de-aliases all main effects from their two-factor interaction alias chains – called a full fold-over/reflection
Resolution III Designs • Defining relation for a fold-over design • Each separate fraction has L + U words as generators, and the combined design will have L + U – 1 words as generators, where • L: words of like sign • U-1: words of independent even products of the words of unlike sign • Example • First fraction: I=ABD, I=ACE, I=BCF, and I=ABCG • Second fraction: I=-ABD, I=-ACE, I=-BCF, and I=ABCG • L=1, U=3, L+U=4 • Combined design: L+U-1=3 generators • I=ABCG, I=(ABD)(ACE)=BCDE, I=(ABD)(BCF)=ACDF • Complete defining relation • I=ABCG=BCDE=ACDF=ADEG=BDFG=ABEF=CEFG
Principal fraction Alternate fraction
Effects from the combined design • Be careful – these rules only work for Resolution III designs • There are other rules for Resolution IV designs, and other methods for adding runs to fractions to de-alias effects of interest
Resolution III Designs – Example 8-7 • Response: eye focus time • Seven factors, two levels each, a design • First screening, then concentrate on important factors
lA, lB, and lD are large, but the interpretation of the data is not unique • As ABD is a word in the defining relation, this design projects into a replicated design • As the projected design is a resolution three design, A is aliased with BD, and so on • A second fraction is needed (with all the signs reversed) to separate the main effects with the 2fis.
Plackett-Burman Designs • These are a different class of 2-level, resolution III design • k = N-1 variables, N runs • The number of runs, N, needs only be a multiple of four N = 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 28, 32, 36, 40, … • The designs where N = 12, 20, 24, etc. are called nongeometric PB designs • PB designs have a messy alias structure – be careful
Plackett-Burman Designs • Projection of the 12-run design into • 2-factor full factorials, or • A 23 + a , or • A unbalanced 4 factor design
Plackett-Burman Designs • The alias structure is complex in the PB designs • For example, with N = 12 and k = 11, every main effect is aliased with every 2FI not involving itself • Every 2FI alias chain has 45 terms • Partial aliasing can greatly complicate interpretation • Interactions can be particularly disruptive • Use very, very carefully (maybe never)
Resolution IV Designs: Section 8-6 • Designs with main effects not aliased with two-factor interactions, and some 2fis are aliased with each other • Any design must contain at least 2k runs • + its reflection (fold over)
Resolution IV and V Designs • Aliased two-factor interactions can be separated by folding over resolution IV designs • Break the 2fis involving a specific factor • Break the 2fis on a specific alias chain • Break as many 2fi interaction alias chains as possible • One method is to run a second fraction in which the sign is reversed on every design generator that has an even number of letters • Folding over a resolution IV designs will not necessarily separate all 2fis
Resolution IV and V Designs • In resolution V designs main effects and 2fis do not alias with other main effects and 2fis – powerful • Standard resolution V designs require large number of runs => irregular resolution V fractional factorials • A complete fold over of a resolution IV or V design is usually unnecessary, as adding small number of runs to the original fraction (partial fold over) can de-alias the few aliased interactions of interest
Partial fold over (semifold) • An alternative to a complete fold over • For a design , only 8 runs (as opposed to 16 runs as in a complete fold over) are needed • Procedure: • Construct a single-factor fold over in the usual way by changing the signs on a factor involved in a 2-fi of interest • Select only half of the fold-over runs by choosing those runs where the chosen factor is either at its high or low level. Select the level that you believe will generate the most desirable response
Partial fold over (semifold) • For a design , the combined design has 16 (original fraction) + 16/2 (partial fold over) = 24 runs • Defining relation and aliasing relations for the combined (original fraction + partial fold over) are the same as those for the combined (original fraction + complete fold over)
General Method for Finding Aliasing Relations • For a 2k-pfractional factorial design: use the complete defining relation • For more complex settings, e.g., irregular fractions and partial fold-over designs: use a general method • Procedure: • Make a polynomial or regression model in the form • y = X1b1 + e • yis an n × 1 vector of the responses, X1 is an n × p1 matrix containing the design matrix expanded to the form of the model that the experimenter is fitting, β1 is an p1 × 1 vector of the model parameters, and ε is an n × 1 vector of errors. • The least squares estimate of β1 is
Procedure: • Adding another term to the model • y = X1b1 + X2b2+ e • where X2 is an n × p2 matrix containing additional variables that are not in the fitted model and β2 is a p2× 1 vector of the parameters associated with these variables. • It can be easily shown that • where is called the alias matrix. The elements of this matrix operating on β2 identify the alias relationships for the parameters in the vector β1.
Example: A 23-1 Design Consider a main effect model first: y = bo + b1x1 + b2x2 + b3x3+ e
In order to consider the aliasing relations between main and two factor interactions, add corresponding terms to the model: y = bo + b1x1 + b2x2 + b3x3+ b12x1x2 +b13x1x3 +b23x2x3 +e