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The igate package implements the initial Guided Analytics for parameter Testing and controland Extraction (iGATE) framework for manufacturing data. The goal of iGATE is to enable guided analytics in industry, that is, to provide a statistically sound framework for process optimization that is easy enough to be used and understood by employees without statistical training. The goal is to have simplicity and interpretability while maintaining statistical rigor.
Having identified a manufacturing ‘problem’ to be investigated, a data set is assembled for a ‘typical’ period of operation, i.e. excluding known disturbances such as maintenance or equipment failures. This data set includes the so called target variable, a direct indication or proxy for the problem under consideration and the variable whose variation we want to explain, and a number of parameters representing suspected sources of variation (SSVs), i.e. variables that we consider potentially influential for the value of the target
. Parameters with known and explainable relationships with the target variable should be excluded from the analysis, although this can be addressed in an iterative manner though subsequent exclusion and repeating of the process. Care has been taken to robustify the approach against outliers and missing data, in order to make it a reliable tool that can be used with possibly messy or incomplete real-world data sets. The iGATE procedure consists of the following steps (detailed explanations follow below):
versus
argument of igate
/ categorical.igate
.Steps 1-4 are performed using the igate
function for continuous target variables or the categorical.igate
function for categorical target variables. Especially for categorical targets with few categories robust.categorical.igate
is a robustified version of categorical.igate
and should be considered.
When running igate
/ categorical.igate
with default settings, any outliers for the target variable are excluded and the observations corresponding to the best 8 (B) and worst 8 (W) instances of the target variable are identified. For each of these 16 observations, each SSV is inspected in turn. The distribution of the values of the SSV of the 8 BOB and 8 WOW are analyzed by applying the Tukey-Duckworth test (Tukey 1959). If the critical value returned by the test is larger than 6 (this corresponds to a p-value of less than 0.05), the SSV is retained as being potentially significant. This test was chosen for its simplicity and ease of interpretation and visualization. SSVs failing the test are highly unlikely to be influential whilst SSVs passing the test may be influential. The Wilcoxon-Rank test performed in step three of iGATE serves as a possibly more widely known alternative, that might, however, be harder to explain to non-statisticians. The main function of these steps is to facilitate dimensionality reduction in the data set to generate a manageable population for expert consideration.
Step 5 is performed by calling igate.regressions
, resp. categorical.freqplot
. These functions produce a regression (for continuous target) resp. frequency (for categorical targets) plot and save it to the current working directory. The domain expert should review these plots and decide which parameters to keep for further analysis based on goodness of fit of the data to the plot.
For the validation step, the production period from which the validation data is selected is dependent on the business situation, but should be from a period of operation consistent with that from which the initial population was drawn, i.e. similar product types, similar level of equipment status etc. The validation step then considers all the retained SSV as a collective in terms of good and bad bands, and extracts from the validation sample all the records which satisfy the condition that all retained SSVs lie within these bands. The expectation is that where all the SSVs lie within the good band, then the target should also correspond to the best performance, and vice versa where the retained SSVs all lie in the bad bands we expect to see bad performance. The application gives feedback on the extent to which this criterion is satisfied in order to help the user conclude the exploration and make recommendations for subsequent improvements. Validation is performed via the validate
function.
We consider the last step, the reporting of the results in a standardized manner, an integral part of iGATE that ensures that knowledge about past analyses is retained within a company. This is achieved by calling the report
function.
Install igate
just like any other R package directly from CRAN and load it afterwards by running
We recommend changing the working directory to a new, empty directory, as various functions in the igate
package will save plots to the current working directory. The working directory can be changed using the setwd()
function or, when using R Studio, via clicking Session -> Set Working Directory -> Choose Directory.
We use the iris
data as an example for performing igate on a continuous target.
set.seed(123)
n <- nrow(iris)*2/3
rows <- sample(1:nrow(iris), n)
df <- iris[rows, ]
results <- igate(df, target = "Sepal.Length", good_end = "high", savePlots = TRUE)
#> 0 outliers have been removed.
#> Retaining 100 observations.
#> Using pairwise comparison with 8 BOB vs. 8 WOW.
#> Using counting method with Wilcoxon rank test as follow up test.
#> Warning in wilcox.test.default(x, y): cannot compute exact p-value with
#> ties
#> Warning in wilcox.test.default(x, y): cannot compute exact p-value with
#> ties
results
#> Causes Count p.values good_lower_bound good_upper_bound
#> 1 Petal.Length 16 0.0008831660 6.1 6.9
#> 2 Petal.Width 16 0.0007638596 1.6 2.3
#> bad_lower_bound bad_upper_bound na_removed ties_lower_end
#> 1 1.0 1.5 0 0
#> 2 0.1 0.3 0 0
#> competition_lower_end ties_upper_end competition_upper_end
#> 1 0 3 1
#> 2 0 3 1
#> adjusted.p.values
#> 1 0.001527719
#> 2 0.001527719
The significant variables are shown alongside their count summary statistic from the Tukey-Duckworth Test as well as the p-value from the Wilcoxon-Rank test. Also, we see the good and bad control bands as well as several summary statistics to ascertain the randomness in the results (see documentation of igate
for details). Remember to use the option savePlots = TRUE
if you want to save the boxplot of the target variable as a png. This png will be needed for producing the final report of the analysis.
Next, we perform a sanity check for the found results
igate.regressions(df, target = "Sepal.Length", ssv = results$Causes, savePlots = TRUE)
#> 0 outliers have been removed.
#> Retaining 100 observations.
#> Causes outliers_removed observations_retained regression_plot
#> 1 Petal.Length 0 100 TRUE
#> 2 Petal.Width 0 100 TRUE
#> r_squared gradient intercept
#> 1 0.7813656 0.4347797 4.196576
#> 2 0.6743999 0.9524464 4.690730
A data frame is output, showing us that the regression succeeded (column regression_plot
) for both SSV as well as displaying the respective \(r^2\) value, gradient and intercept values etc. Regression plots of each SSV against the target will be plotted. Remember to set the option savePlots = TRUE
in the call of igate.regressions
to save the regression plots as png files. These will be needed if you want to produce a report with the report
function. Upon visual inspection, the expert can decide if they want to keep the SSV for further analysis or not.
validation_df <- iris[-rows,]
val <- validate(iris, target = "Sepal.Length", causes = results$Causes, results_df = results)
#> Guessing that perfromed igate was continuous. Using type = 'continuous'.
If the type (continuous or categorical) of igate to be validated is not specified, validate
will guess it automatically. The output val
is a list of three data frames: The first contains all the observations in the validation data set falling into all the good resp. all the bad control bands plus an additional column expected_quality
, indicating whether the observation falls into the good or the bad band.
head(val[[1]])
#> Sepal.Length Petal.Length Petal.Width expected_quality
#> 1 7.6 6.6 2.1 good
#> 2 7.3 6.3 1.8 good
#> 3 7.7 6.7 2.2 good
#> 4 7.7 6.9 2.3 good
#> 5 7.7 6.7 2.0 good
#> 6 7.4 6.1 1.9 good
The second data frame has one row for each validated SSV and a column Good_count
reps. Bad_count
giving the number of observations from the validation data frame that fall into the good resp. bad control band for this SSV. The first data frame is the intersection of all these these observations for all the SSV.
Lastly, the third data frame summarizes the first. If our target was continuous, it contains minimum and maximum target value of the observations in the first data frame with expected_quality
good resp. bad.
val[[3]]
#> # A tibble: 2 x 3
#> expected_quality max_target min_target
#> <chr> <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1 good 7.9 7.3
#> 2 bad 5.8 4.3
As we can see, indeed those observations with predicted good quality have higher values than those with predicted bad quality, indicating that our analysis was successful and we found the significant process parameters.
Finally, if we specified savePlots = TRUE
in igate
and igate.regressions
and saved the corresponding plots to the current working directory, we can produce a standardized report summarizing our results by running
validatedObs <- val[[1]]
validationCounts <- val[[2]]
validationSummary <- val[[3]]
# choose a directory you want to save the plot into.
output_dir <- "YOUR_DIRECTORY"
report(df = df,
target = "Sepal.Length",
type = "continuous",
good_outcome = "high",
results_path = "results",
validation = TRUE,
validation_path = "validatedObs",
validation_counts = "validationCounts",
validation_summary = "validationSummary",
output_name = "testing_igate",
output_directory = output_dir)
This will create a html file titled “igate_Report.html” in the current working directory.
Using igate for categorical target variables is completely analogous, simply run categorical.igate
and categorical.freqplot
instead of igate
and igate.regressions
.
Tukey, John W. 1959. “A Quick, Compact, Two-Sample Test to Duckworth’s Specifications.” Technometrics 1 (1). [Taylor & Francis, Ltd., American Statistical Association, American Society for Quality]: 31–48.
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