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[Издательство Прямой доставка] Введение в промышленное и системное инженерное введение 3 -е издание иностранное университет ** Учебник промышленной инженерной серии.

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Параметры продукта

Название: Введение в промышленность и системное проектирование (3 -е издание) (выдающийся учебник для иностранных университетов)

Оригинальная цена: 49,00 юань

Автор: Уэйн С. Тернер, подожди

Пресса: издательство Tsinghua University Press

Дата публикации: 2006-07-31

ISBN: 9787302056027

Слова:

Номер страницы: 540

Издание: 3

Кадры: P Инсталляция



Введение

«Введение в промышленное и системное проектирование (3 -е издание) ()» - это учебник, который всесторонне вводит область промышленного и систематического проектирования. дисциплины, и история дисциплин промышленного инженера, а также отношения с соответствующим обучением.


Оглавление

preface
part 1 history and perspective of industrial engineering
1 history of engineering and development of inoustrial engineering
1.1. introductio1
1.2. early developments 2
1.3. the modem era 3
1.4. the engineering process 5
1.5. engineering as a professio6
1.6. professional ethics 8
1.7. professional licensing 8
1.8. engineering educatioand abet accreditation
1.9. chronology of industrial engineering 12
1.10. industrial engineering organizations 15
1.11. definitioof industrial engineering 18
1.12. industrial engineering educatiol8
1.13. impact of related developments 19
1.14. relationship to other engineering disciplines 21
1.15. challenges of the future 23

2 industrial and systems engineering
2.1. introductio25
2.2. industrial and systems engineering desig26
2.3. typical i.&s.e. activities 28
2.4. relationship to total organizatio33
2.5. internal organizatioof the i.&s.e. functio36
2.6. effectiveness measures for the i.&s.e. functio36
2.7. the nature of"systems" 36
2.8. feedback control isystems 38

part 2 industrial and systems engineering methodologies
3 manufawring engineering
3.1. introductio43
3.2. product--productiodesiginteractio44
3.3. process engineering 45
3.4. industrial processes 56
3.5. ancillary functions 68
3.6. example 73
3.7. computer applications 73

4 facilities locatioand layout
4.1. introductioto facilities locatio80
4.2. considerations 8l
4.3. analytical techniques 83
4.4. introductioto facilities layout 99
4.5. general considerations l02
4.6. systematic layout planning l02
4.7. computerized layout planning (optional) 113
4.8. impact of computers 118

5 material handling, distribution. and routing
5.1. introductio125
5.2. material handling 126
5.3. distributio137

6 work oesigand organizational performance--work measurement
6.1. introductio151
6.2. methods improvement 154
6.3. work measurement 165
6.4. organizational system performance measurement 175
6.5. computers and work measurement and desig178

7 operatons planning ano control
7.1. introductio183
7.2. overview of operations planning and control 184
7.3. techniques for demand forecasting 190
7.4. techniques for operations planning 194
7.5. techniques for inventory planning and control 197
7.6. techniques for operations scheduling 2(x)
7.7. dispatching and progress control 203
7.8. mrp systems 203
7.9. just-in-time manufacturing 207

8 quality control
8.1. introductio212
8.2. a bit of history 213
8.3. the malcolm baldrige national quality award 213
8.4. deming's thoughts ocontinuous improvement 216
8.5. juran's contributions to quality thought 217
8.6. tools for on-line vs. off-line quality control 218
8.7. quality functiodeployment 2l8
8.8. quality cost systems 220
8.9. benchmarking 221
8.10. tools of statistical process control 223
8.11. background ocontrol charts 234
8.12. control charts for variables 236
8.13. sensitivity checks for control charts 241
8.14. process capability analysis 241
8.15. control charts for attributes 243

9 financial compensation
9.1. introductio252
9.2. job analysis 253
9.3. job evaluatio254
9.4. wage surveys 262
9.5. wage payment 266

10 cad/cam. robotics. and automation
10.1. the second industrial revolutio275
10.2. computer-aided desig279
10.3. computer-aided manufacturing 282
10.4. robotics 291
10.5. automatio296
10.6. the promise of cim 297
10.7. opportunities for i.e.'s 298

11 humafactors
11.1. perspective 301
11.2. physiological aspects of humaperformance 302
11.3. psychological aspects of humaactivities 304
11.4. humainterface with the world of work 305

12 resource management
12.1. introductio312
12.2. energy management 314
12.3. water management 322
12.4. hazardous material management 324
12.5. summary 327

13 financial manage.ent and engineering economy
13.1. introductio329
13.2. accounting 330
13.3. cost accounting 333
13.4. engineering economy 336
13.5. interest factors 337
13.6. back to gadgets--present worth calculations 343
13.7. impact of the computer oaccounting and engineering economy 345

14 deterministic operations research
14.1. introductio-- definitio349
14.2. similarity to industrial engineering 350
14.3. nature of operations research 351
14.4. categorizatioof operations research 352
14.5. deterministic operations research 354
14.6. mathematical programming 354
14.7. unconstrained optimizatio355
14.8. linear programming 362
14.9. other techniques 372
14.10. impact of computers 373

15 probabilistic models
15.1. introductio378
15.2. queueing theory 378
15.3. inventory control 384
15.4. markov chains 389
15.5. impact of statistics and computers 393

16 simulation
16.1. introductio396
16.2. simulatioexamples 397
16.3. random number generatio403
16.4. time-flow mechanism 407
16.5. simulatiolanguages 407

17 project management
17.1. introductio411
17.2. project planning networks 413
17.3. critical path method 415
17.4. program evaluatioand review technique 419
17.5. time--cost trade-offs 424
17.6. resource leveling 429

part 3 integrated systems design
18 systems concepts
18.1. introductio432
18.2. introductioto systems thinking 433
18.3. definitions and terminology 436
18.4. systems engineering 440
18.5. system representatio442

19 management systems design
19.1. introductioand perspective 448
19.2. a systems view of aorganizatio449
19.3. organizatiodesig456
19.4. providing management controls 463
19.5. the organizatiolife cycle 464

20 computers and informatiosystems
20.1. perspective 469
20.2. basic concepts of informatiosystems 470
20.3. the process of designing informatiosystems 472
20.4. data-base management systems 476
20.5. data communications networks 479

21 personnel management
21.1. introductio483
21.2. selection, testing, and placement 484
21.3. performance appraisal, training, education, and promotions 486
21.4. job analysis and descriptio490
21.5. labor relations 490
21.6. safety programs 492
21.7. benefits and services 493
21.8. motivation, supervision, and communications 494
21.9. engineering management 498

appendices
a probability and statistics
a.1. introductio50l
a.2. basic probability theory 502
a.3. random variables 505
a.4. estimating probabilities 506
a.5. some important probability distributions 508
a.6. expected values and variability 5l8
a.7. populations and samples 520
a.8. central limit theorem 523
b tables
table b.1. poissodistribution--cumulative 528
table b.2. normal distribution--cumulative 531
indix