Caio Merlini Giuliani, Eduardo Camponogara, et al.
Computational and Applied Mathematics
Summary & Conclusions - Consider a system of k components that fails whenever there is a defect in at least one of the components. Due to cost & time constraints it is not feasible to learn exactly which components are defective. Instead, test procedures ascertain that the defective components belong to some subset of the k components. This phenomenon is termed masking. We describe a 2-stage procedure in which a sample of masked subsets is subjected to intensive failure analysis. This enables maximum-likelihood estimation of the defect probability of each individual component and leads to diagnosis of the defective components in future masked failures. © 1996 IEEE.
Caio Merlini Giuliani, Eduardo Camponogara, et al.
Computational and Applied Mathematics
Sidney J. Winawer, Betty J. Flehinger, et al.
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association
Andrew R. Conn, Katya Scheinberg, et al.
IMA Journal of Numerical Analysis
Myron R. Melamed, Betty J. Flehinger, et al.
Cancer