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This book offers a comprehensive overview of quality and quality
management. It also explores total quality management, covering its
human, technological and analytical imperatives. It also examines
quality systems and system standards, highlighting essential
features and avoiding a reproduction of the ISO 9000 standard, as
well as people-related issues in implementing a quality system. A
holistic understanding of quality considerations, which now
permeate every aspect of human life, should guide related policies,
plans and practices. The book describes the all-pervasive
characteristics of quality, putting together diverse definitions of
"quality," outlining its different dimensions, and linking it with
reliability and innovation. It goes on to assess the quality of
measurements in terms of precision, accuracy and uncertainty and
discusses managing quality with a focus on business performance.
This is followed by a chapter on improving process quality, which
is the summum bonum of quality management, and a chapter addressing
the crucial problem of measuring customer satisfaction through
appropriate models and tools. Further, it covers non-traditional
subjects such as quality of life, quality of working life, quality
assurance and improvement in education, with special reference to
higher education, quality in research and development and
characterizes the quality-related policies and practices in Indian
industry. The last chapter provides a broad sketch of some recent
advances in statistical methods for quality management. Along with
the research community, the book's content is also useful for
practitioners and industry watchers.
This book presents various recently developed and traditional
statistical techniques, which are increasingly being applied in
social science research. The social sciences cover diverse
phenomena arising in society, the economy and the environment, some
of which are too complex to allow concrete statements; some cannot
be defined by direct observations or measurements; some are
culture- (or region-) specific, while others are generic and
common. Statistics, being a scientific method - as distinct from a
'science' related to any one type of phenomena - is used to make
inductive inferences regarding various phenomena. The book
addresses both qualitative and quantitative research (a combination
of which is essential in social science research) and offers
valuable supplementary reading at an advanced level for
researchers.
This book offers a comprehensive overview of quality and quality
management. It also explores total quality management, covering its
human, technological and analytical imperatives. It also examines
quality systems and system standards, highlighting essential
features and avoiding a reproduction of the ISO 9000 standard, as
well as people-related issues in implementing a quality system. A
holistic understanding of quality considerations, which now
permeate every aspect of human life, should guide related policies,
plans and practices. The book describes the all-pervasive
characteristics of quality, putting together diverse definitions of
"quality," outlining its different dimensions, and linking it with
reliability and innovation. It goes on to assess the quality of
measurements in terms of precision, accuracy and uncertainty and
discusses managing quality with a focus on business performance.
This is followed by a chapter on improving process quality, which
is the summum bonum of quality management, and a chapter addressing
the crucial problem of measuring customer satisfaction through
appropriate models and tools. Further, it covers non-traditional
subjects such as quality of life, quality of working life, quality
assurance and improvement in education, with special reference to
higher education, quality in research and development and
characterizes the quality-related policies and practices in Indian
industry. The last chapter provides a broad sketch of some recent
advances in statistical methods for quality management. Along with
the research community, the book's content is also useful for
practitioners and industry watchers.
This book presents various recently developed and traditional
statistical techniques, which are increasingly being applied in
social science research. The social sciences cover diverse
phenomena arising in society, the economy and the environment, some
of which are too complex to allow concrete statements; some cannot
be defined by direct observations or measurements; some are
culture- (or region-) specific, while others are generic and
common. Statistics, being a scientific method - as distinct from a
'science' related to any one type of phenomena - is used to make
inductive inferences regarding various phenomena. The book
addresses both qualitative and quantitative research (a combination
of which is essential in social science research) and offers
valuable supplementary reading at an advanced level for
researchers.
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