An overview on selection methods

In many studies the experimenter has under consideration several (two or more) alternatives, and is studying them in order to determine which is the best (with regard to certain specified criteria of “goodness”). Such an experimenter does not wish basically to test hypotheses, or construct confidenc...

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Main Author: J. W. H. Swanepoel
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: South African Journal of Science and Technology 1982-03-01
Series:South African Journal of Science and Technology
Online Access:http://www.satnt.ac.za/index.php/satnt/article/view/1148
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spelling doaj-3b5c72b077b647118b949bbf3ab745702020-11-25T03:39:23ZafrSouth African Journal of Science and TechnologySouth African Journal of Science and Technology 0254-34862222-41731982-03-0112919610.4102/satnt.v1i2.11481008An overview on selection methodsJ. W. H. SwanepoelIn many studies the experimenter has under consideration several (two or more) alternatives, and is studying them in order to determine which is the best (with regard to certain specified criteria of “goodness”). Such an experimenter does not wish basically to test hypotheses, or construct confidence intervals, or perform regression analyses (though these may be appropriate parts of his analysis); he does wish to select the best of several alternatives, and the major part of his analysis should therefore be directed towards this goal. It is precisely for this problem that ranking and selection procedures were developed. This paper presents an overview of some recent work in this field, with emphasis on aspects important to experimenters confronted with selection problems. Fixed sample size and sequential procedures for both the indifference zone and subset formulations of the selection problem are discussed.http://www.satnt.ac.za/index.php/satnt/article/view/1148
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. W. H. Swanepoel
spellingShingle J. W. H. Swanepoel
An overview on selection methods
South African Journal of Science and Technology
author_facet J. W. H. Swanepoel
author_sort J. W. H. Swanepoel
title An overview on selection methods
title_short An overview on selection methods
title_full An overview on selection methods
title_fullStr An overview on selection methods
title_full_unstemmed An overview on selection methods
title_sort overview on selection methods
publisher South African Journal of Science and Technology
series South African Journal of Science and Technology
issn 0254-3486
2222-4173
publishDate 1982-03-01
description In many studies the experimenter has under consideration several (two or more) alternatives, and is studying them in order to determine which is the best (with regard to certain specified criteria of “goodness”). Such an experimenter does not wish basically to test hypotheses, or construct confidence intervals, or perform regression analyses (though these may be appropriate parts of his analysis); he does wish to select the best of several alternatives, and the major part of his analysis should therefore be directed towards this goal. It is precisely for this problem that ranking and selection procedures were developed. This paper presents an overview of some recent work in this field, with emphasis on aspects important to experimenters confronted with selection problems. Fixed sample size and sequential procedures for both the indifference zone and subset formulations of the selection problem are discussed.
url http://www.satnt.ac.za/index.php/satnt/article/view/1148
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