When designing an experiment, a common diagnostic is the statistical power of effects. Bradley Jones has written a number of blog posts on this very topic. In essence, what is the probability that we can detect non-negligible effects given a specified model? Of course, there are a set of assumptions/specifications
Tag: JMP 13
The Simulate Responses feature throughout various design of experiments (DOE) platforms has always been a useful tool for generating a set of responses according to a specified model. I use it frequently for the simulated responses in Fit Model (or other appropriate platforms), as a way to check that the
Virtually joining data tables is a new capability in JMP 13 that can save you space and memory, while increasing your productivity in analyzing your data from multiple tables. This new feature can help with large data tables, and save you time in trying to figure out the best way
In JMP 12, an interactive HTML Profiler was added, as I had previously blogged about. That change mainly updated the existing Flash functionality to HTML5 technology, making it available on mobile devices like an iPad, but it also introduced a few new features. Among these was the option of exporting
For most of us, the data we analyze in JMP starts out somewhere else: in a relational database, Excel, a CSV file or perhaps SAS. The need to seamlessly move such data into JMP and prepare it for analysis led us to introduce the Query Builder feature in JMP 12.
This is a continuation of a series of blog posts on interactive HTML for Graph Builder reports in JMP 13. Here, I'm discussing support for Points, Box Plots, Heat Maps and Map Shapes. These Graph Builder elements are highlighted in the figure below. Since this blog post describes interactive web
Writing JMP documentation is a team effort. Susan Conaghan, Michael Crotty, Colleen McKendry, Karen Copeland and I work with JMP developers, technical support, and other subject matter experts to provide you with help so that you can quickly create and interpret your JMP reports and graphs. There’s so much to
By now, you may have heard that in JMP 13, you can save Graph Builder reports as interactive HTML, and the most frequently used features remain interactive. These interactive HTML reports can then be viewed using just a web browser. Getting Graph Builder output to work for the web in
By now, you’ve probably seen and heard about a lot of the new features that are available in JMP 13 and JMP Pro 13. To help demonstrate those features, the documentation team has added nearly 60 new sample data tables to the Sample Data Library. As a reminder, you can
In JMP 11, we built interactive HTML technology into JMP to enable customers to share results. You can publish JMP results to the Web, post them to a corporate intranet or shared drive, or share them with colleagues via e-mail. In JMP 12, we added support for Bubble Plots, Profilers