Abstract
There is an obvious need that measurements in the fields of health, safety, environmental control and nuclear safeguards be adequate for their intended purpose—that their uncertainty be small enough to only negligibly affect the decisions and performance of the processes of which they are a part, but it is no less true for all other measurements in science and industry. This note discusses the procedures by which one obtains measurement assurance, the analog for measurement processes of industrial quality assurance.
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Notes on contributors
Joseph M. Cameron
Joseph Cameron is Chief of Office Measurement Services, National Bureau of Standards, Washington, D.C. He is a member of ASQC.