 | Quality: Encyclopedia - Quality
Quality
Quality refers to the inherent or distinctive characteristics or properties of a person, object, process or other thing. Such characteristics may enhance a subject's distinctiveness, or may denote some degree of achievement or excellence. When used in relation to people, the term may also signify a personal character or trait.
The term is sometimes contrasted with the concept of quantity. In science, the work of Aristotle focused on measuring quality, whereas the work of Galileo resulted in a shift towards the study of quantity.
Quality can be used as a tool of measurement, like metric or fahrenheit, as it is used to judge both subjects that are esteemed as credible and agreeable as "high quality" and subjects that are viewed as confusing, offensive, unhelpful, or incredible as "low quality." But quality is also used as a positive word, as in the sense of "this is a quality chair." Its antonym can be perceived as poorness, incredibility, unhelpfulness, and a variety of other words that reflect the concept of having low quality.
ISO 9000 defines quality as "degree to which a set of inherent characteristic fulfils requirements".
Quality - In manufacturing
In manufacturing, "quality" means on target with minimum variation. Many different techniques and concepts have been tried to minimize defects in products, including SPC, Zero Defects, Six Sigma, quality circles, TQM and continuous improvement.
ISO 9000, Quality Management System, Quality time, Quality control, Six Sigma, Total Quality Management, Metaphysics of Quality from Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and Lila: An Inquiry into Morals by Robert M. Pirsig, Software quality, Video quality, Energy quality
Quality - Historical development of the concept
The meaning for the term quality has developed over time. Five distinctive interpretations:
- "Conformance to specifications" (Phil Crosby in the 1980s). The difficulty with this is that the specifications may not be what the customer wants; Crosby treats this as a separate problem.
- "Fitness for use" (Joseph M. Juran). Fitness is defined by the customer.
- A two-dimensional model of quality (Noriaki Kano and others). The quality has two dimensions: "must-be quality" and "attractive quality". The former is near to the "fitness for use" and the latter is what the customer would love, but has not yet thought about. Supporters characterise this model more succinctly as: "Products and services that meet or exceed customers' expectations". One writer believes (without citation) that this is today the most used interpretation for the term quality.
- "Value to some person" (Gerald M. Weinberg)
- (W. Edwards Deming), "Quality is pride of workmanship." See http://www.deming.org/
Quality - In music
In music quality refers primarily to the timbre, but also dynamics and musical texture, of a section or piece.
Quality - In phonetics
In phonetics quality refers to the articulatory features that distinguish vowels and to their acoustic correspondent. Vowel quality is opposed to vowel quantity.
See also
- ISO 9000
- Quality Management System
- Quality time
- Quality control
- Six Sigma
- Total Quality Management
- Metaphysics of Quality from Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and Lila: An Inquiry into Morals by Robert M. Pirsig
- Software quality
- Video quality
- Energy quality
Quality - Finding related topics
- list of economics topics
- list of information technology management topics
- list of production topics
Other related archives1980s, Aristotle, Energy quality, Galileo, Gerald M. Weinberg, ISO 9000, Joseph M. Juran, Lila: An Inquiry into Morals, Metaphysics of Quality, Noriaki Kano, Phil Crosby, Products, Quality Management System, Quality control, Quality time, Robert M. Pirsig, SPC, Six Sigma, Software quality, TQM, Total Quality Management, Video quality, W. Edwards Deming, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, acoustic, articulatory, character, continuous improvement, customer, dynamics, fahrenheit, list of economics topics, list of information technology management topics, list of production topics, manufacturing, metric, music, musical texture, object, phonetics, quality circles, quantity, science, services, timbre, trait, vowel quantity, vowels
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Quality", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |