Title: Quality Culture, Basic Statistical Tools
1Session V Quality Culture, Basic Statistical Tools
2Creating a Quality Culture
- Applying the lessons of Organizational Behavior
- Individual Level (Micro OB)
- Group Level (Macro OB)
- Theories of Leadership
3Individual-Level Human Factors
- General Human Characteristics
- Theories of Motivation
- Content Theories
- Process Theories
- Individual Differences
4General Human Characteristics Content Theories
of Motivation
- Maslows Hierarchy
- Self-Actualization
- Esteem
- Relatedness
- Security
- Physiological
- Herzbergs Two Factor Theory
- Motivators
- Hygiene Factors
5General Human Characteristics Process Theories
of Motivation
- Classical Conditioning
- The Worker as Pavlovs dog
- Operant Conditioning
- Behavior is Shaped by its Consequences (Skinner,
1953) - Reinforcement Contingencies
- Positive reinforcement
- Extinction
- Negative reinforcement
- Punishment
- Schedules of Reinforcement
6Individual Differences
- McClellands Three-Factor Theory
- Need for Achievement
- Need for Power
- Need for Affiliation
- Myers Briggs
- Extraversion vs. Introversion
- Sensing vs. Intuiting
- Thinking vs. Feeling
- Judging vs. Perceiving
7Individual Differences The Big Five
The development of the five factor model Tupes
and Christal (1961), Norman (1963), Goldberg
(1990) A Dissenting View Block (1995) The
development of the instrument used (the NEO Five
Factor Inventory, or NEO-FFI) Costa and McCrae
(1992), McCrae and Costa (1992) The validity of
the five factor model for predicting work
performance Mount, Barrick, and Strauss (1994),
Barrick (1991), Barrick (1993), Dollinger and Orf
(1991) Legal and Moral Issues Sackett (1994)
8Macro Theories McGregor
- Theory X
- human beings dislike work will avoid it if
possible - people must be controlled and threatened
- people dislike responsibility and desire security
above everything - Theory Y
- physical and mental effort in work is as natural
as play or rest - people will direct themselves if committed to the
aims of the organization. - job satisfaction leads to commitment to the
organization - people learn to accept and seek responsibility
- under the conditions of modern industrial life,
the intellectual potentialities of average
workers are only partially utilized
9Macro Theories Burns and Stalker
- Organizations in stable environments tend to be
mechanistic - formal rules and procedures
- decisions reached at higher levels
- narrow spans of control
- Organizations in dynamic environments are more
organic - less attention to formal procedures
- more decision making at lower levels
- wide spans of control
10Job Characteristics Model
Job Characteristics
Psychological States
Outcomes
Skill Variety Task Identity Task Significance
Meaningfulness
Intrinsic Job Motivation Work Satisfaction High
Quality Output Low Absenteeism
Autonomy
Felt Responsibility
Feedback
Knowledge of Results
Growth Need Strength Satisfaction with Hygiene
Factors Organization Culture
Source Hackman Oldham (1976) Burns Stalker
(1961) Herzberg (1966) Hackman Oldham
11Theories of Leadership
- Traits Model
- Situational Leadership
- structural properties of the organization
- organizational climate
- role characteristics
- subordinate characteristics
- Two Dimensions
- initiating structures (concern for organizational
tasks, goal achievement ) - consideration (concern for individuals and
interpersonal relations, group maintenance )
12Basic Statistical Tools
- Descriptive Statistics
- Central Tendency
- Dispersion
- Association
- Graphical Tools
- Frequency Distribution, Histogram
- Box Plot
- Run Chart, Time Series
- Scatter Diagram
- Theoretical Probability Distributions
- Normal, Students T
- Exponential
- Poisson
- Weibull
- Binomial
13Descriptive Statistics Central Tendency
14Descriptive Statistics Dispersion
15Descriptive Statistics Dispersion
16Descriptive Statistics Association
17Manufacturing Scenario
- Aluminum castings
- Important factor Hardness
- Measured with Brinell units
- Possibly affected by
- Machine and/or Operator
- Chemistry (Iron, Zinc, Manganese)
- Physics (Pressure, Temperature)
- Minimum acceptable hardness is 70 HB
18Frequency Distribution for discrete
variables Histogram for continuous variables
19Box Plot
20Run Chart, Time Series
21Scatter Diagram
22Normal Distribution
23Normal Distribution
- Goes from -8 to 8
- Symmetrical
- Not affected by sample size
- Describes many natural processes
24Normal Distribution
25Normal Distribution
26Students T Distribution
- Similar to Normal
- Affected by sample size (degrees of freedom)
- Used when the variance is not known with
certainty (i.e. always)
27Students T Distribution
28Students T Distribution
29Students T Distribution
30Normal and T Distributions
- Important because of the Central Limit Theorem
- Basis of many hypothesis testing and estimation
procedures
31Exponential Distribution
32Exponential Distribution
- Important because of its mathematical simplicity
(memoryless property) - Basis of many queueing models (i.e. times between
customer arrivals) - Sometimes used in reliability analysis (i.e.
times between failures)
33Exponential Distribution
34Poisson Distribution
35Poisson Distribution
- Comes from from the exponential distribution If
the time between events in exponential, then the
number of events in a specified time period is
Poisson - Can only be integers at least zero
- Derived by Siméon-Denis Poisson (1781-1840)
36Poisson Distribution
37Weibull Distribution
38Weibull Distribution
- Basis of many reliability models (i.e. times
between failures) - Derived by Wallodi Weibull, Swedish engineer and
mathematician
39Weibull Distribution
40Binomial Distribution
41Binomial Distribution
- Calculates the probability of X successes out
of n independent trials, where each trial has p
probability of success - Useful for some reliability models and models of
customer behavior
42Binomial Distribution
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