Quality Management System Glossary: C
The comparison of a measurement instrument or system of unverified accuracy to a measurement instrument or system of known accuracy to detect any variation from the required performance specification.
The total range of inherent variation in a stable process; determined by using data from control charts.
An identified reason for the presence of a defect or problem.
Also called a
fishbone diagram or an
Ishikawa diagram (after its developer).
A quality control tool used to analyze potential causes of problems in a product or process.
See
Count Chart.
A line on a graph that represents the overall average (mean) operating level of the process.
Also known as
Central Limit Theorem Formula.
An important statistical theorem that states that subgroup averages tend to be normally distributed even if the output overall is not. This concept allows control charts to be widely used for process control even if the underlying process is not normally distributed.
Also known as
Measures of Central Tendency.
The tendency of data gathered from a process to cluster toward a middle value somewhere between the high and low values of measurement.
A factor, element, or measure that defines and differentiates a process, function, product, service, or other entity.
A tool for organizing, summarizing, and depicting data in graphic form.
A simple data recording device. The check sheet is custom-designed by the user, which allows him or her to readily interpret the results.
The listing of possible defects of a unit, classified according to their level of severity. Commonly used classifications include:
A, B, C, or
D; critical, major, minor, or
incidental; and
critical, major, or
minor. A separate acceptance sampling plan is generally applied to each class of defects.
Cause of variation that is inherent in a process over time. A common cause affects every outcome of the process and everyone working in the process. Also see
Special Cause.
Pertains to sampling and the potential risk that bad products will be accepted and shipped to the consumer.
A method of manufacturing that aims to move a single unit in each step of a process, rather than treating units as batches for each step.
Also known as
Continuous Quality Improvement and
Continual Improvement.
The ongoing improvement of products, services, or processes through incremental (over time) and/or breakthrough (all at once) improvements.
Used when the product is manufactured in a continuous flow and is not able to be grouped into lots (batches). Two parameters are considered: Frequency (f) and Clearing Number (i). This is a progressive type of plan in which the Clearing Number is X (example = 60) and the frequency is 1/X (example = 1/20). The manufacturer inspects 100 percent of the product until (i)=60 is reached. If defect-free, the Frequency (example = 1/20) applies and now every (f)=20th sample is inspected. If at least one defect is found in the first (i)=60, 100-percent inspection continues until the Clearing Number is reached.
A graph used to study how a process changes over time. Frequently shows a central line to help detect a trend of plotted values toward either upper or lower
Control Limit.
Also known as
Process Control Limit and
Natural Process Limit.
The boundaries of a process within specified confidence levels expressed as the
Upper Control Limit (UCL) and the
Lower Control Limit (LCL).
Written descriptions of the systems for controlling part and process quality by addressing the key characteristics and engineering requirements.
A solution meant to reduce or eliminate an identified problem.
A measure of the relationship between two data sets of variables.
The costs that would disappear if systems, processes, and products were perfect. These costs are organized into four categories: internal failure costs (costs associated with defects found before the customer receives the product or service); external failure costs (costs associated with defects found after the customer receives the product or service); appraisal costs (costs incurred to determine the degree of conformance to quality requirements); and prevention costs (costs incurred to keep failure and appraisal costs to a minimum).
A means to quantify the total cost of quality-related efforts and deficiencies. Considered by some to be synonymous with COPQ.
A Control Chart for evaluating the stability of a process in terms of the count of events of a given classification occurring in a sample. Commonly referred to as a c-chart.
See
Attribute Data.
Also known as a
u-chart.
A type of control chart used to monitor count-type data where the sample size is greater than one, typically the average number of nonconformities per unit.
A measure of dispersion, sometimes described as
the engineering tolerance divided by the natural tolerance. The ratio of tolerance to 6 sigma (i.e., the Upper Specification Limit [USL], minus the Lower Specification Limit [LSL], divided by 6 sigma.
Also known as
Process Capability Index.
Equals the lesser of the Upper Specification Limit minus the mean divided by 3 sigma or the mean minus the Lower Specification Limit divided by 3 sigma. The greater the Cpk value, the better.
A type of control chart used to monitor small shifts in the process mean. It uses the cumulative sum of deviations from a target.