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Activity Number:
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413
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Type:
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Topic Contributed
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Date/Time:
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Wednesday, August 1, 2007 : 10:30 AM to 12:20 PM
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Sponsor:
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Section on Statistical Consulting
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| Abstract - #310038 |
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Title:
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Resolving a Multimillion Dollar Contract Dispute with a Latin Square Design
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Author(s):
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Steven Crunk*+ and William B. Fairley and Marian Hofer and Peter J. Kempthorne
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Companies:
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San Jose State University and Analysis and Inference, Inc. and California State University, East Bay and Kempthorne Analytics, Inc.
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Address:
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375 Mullinix Way, San Jose, CA, 95136,
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Keywords:
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Latin Square ; experimental design ; contract ; dispute ; measure
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Abstract:
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A major eastern City negotiated a dispute over the performance of new garbage trucks with the vehicle manufacturer. The dispute concerned fulfillment of a contract calling for trucks to hold a "minimum full-load of 12.5 tons." On behalf of the City, and in cooperation with the manufacturer, statisticians developed a Latin Square design to estimate loads. The field experiment controlled for factors such as city districts, day-of-the-week, weight measurement method, instructions to crews, and supervision. To carry out the experiment, 5 pairs of trucks operated on 5 days in 5 districts. The contract spec did not further define the criterion of a "minimum full-load of 12.5 tons." Thus, different measures of contract fulfillment were defined. The experiment demonstrated successful fulfillment of the contract and resolved the dispute.
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- The address information is for the authors that have a + after their name.
- Authors who are presenting talks have a * after their name.
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