Intro Decision Analysis
Intro Decision Analysis
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Decision Tree Showing Possible Outcomes
Projected
Sales
Results
Outcomes
Outcome A
A.2 Sales Up 15%
Decision Made
B.1 Sales Up 5%
Outcome B
B.2 Sales Even
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Decision Tree of Outcomes -- Quantifying Uncertainties
Projected
Sales
Results
80%
A.1 Sales Up 10% 32%
Outcome A
40% 20% A.2 Sales Up 15% 8%
Decision Made
70% B.1 Sales Up 5% 42%
60%
Outcome B
30% B.2 Sales Even 18%
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Example of Using a Decision Tree or Table to Capture Complex Business Logic
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Articulating Complex Business Rules
Complex business/logic rules, such as our example, can
become rather confusing
Capturing such rules in text form alone can lead to ambiguity
and misinterpretation
As an alternative, it is often wise to capture such rules in
decision tress or decision tables
The examples on the following slides will illustrate this
technique
Decision Tree for this Example
< 100 kwh minimum charge
fixed
rate
billing >= 100 kwh schedule A
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Decision Table for Example – Version 1
Is this a
Rules valid
business
Conditions 1 2 3 4 5 case? Did
we miss
Fixed rate acct T T F F F something?
Variable rate acct F F T T F
Consumption < 100 kwh T F T F
Consumption >= 100 kwh F T F T
Actions
Minimum charge X
Schedule A X X
Schedule A on first 99 kwh, X
Schedule B on kwh 100 +
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Decision Table for Example – Version 2
Rules
Conditions 1 2 3 4
Account type fixed fixed variable variable
Consumption < 100 >=100 <100 >= 100
Actions
Minimum charge X
Schedule A X X
Schedule A on first 99 kwh, X
Schedule B on kwh 100 +
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Activity
Consider the following description of a company’s matching retirement
contribution plan:
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Team Activity (cont’d)
1) Do one of the following tasks :
a) Create a decision tree that captures the business rules in this
policy.
b) Create a decision table that captures the business rules in this
policy.
2) Did your analysis uncover any questions, ambiguities, or missing
rules?
3) If so, do you think these would be as easy to spot and to analyze
using only the narrative description of this policy?
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Developing a More Complex Decision Table
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Developing More Complex Decision Tables
_____________________________________
1
Taken from “A History of Decision Tables” located at
http://www.catalyst.com/products/logicgem/overview.html
Steps to create a decision table
1. List all the conditions which determine which action to take.
2. Calculate the number of rules required.
– Multiple the number of values for each condition by each other.
• Example: Condition 1 has 2 values, Condition 2 has 2 values, Condition
3 has 2 values. Thus 2 X 2 X 2 = 8 rules
3. Fill all combinations in the table.
4. Define the action for each rule
5. Analyze column by column to determine which actions are
appropriate for each rule.
6. Reduce the table by eliminating redundant columns.
All possible combinations
<cond-1> F T F T F T F T … T
<cond-2> F F T T F F T T … T
Conditions <cond-3> F F F F T T T T … T
… …
<cond-n> F F F F F F F F … T
<action-1> X X X X
<action-2> X X X X
Actions <action-3> X X X X
… …
<action-m> X X X
_____________________________________
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Example taken form: Structured Analysis and System Specification, Tom de Marco,
Yourdon inc., New York,
List all the conditions that determine which
action to take.
Conditions Values
The flight more than half-full? Yes (Y), No (N)
… …
n 2n
Calculate the Number of Rules in
Table
domestic flight N Y N Y N Y N Y
ACTIONS
Analyze column by column to determine which
actions are appropriate for each combination
POSSIBLE RULES
domestic flight N Y N Y N Y N Y
serve cocktails X X X X
ACTIONS
free X
Reduce the table by eliminating
redundant columns.
POSSIBLE COMBINATIONS
more than half-
full
N N N N Y Y Y Y Note that some
columns are identical
CONDITONS
domestic flight N Y N Y N Y N Y
ACTIONS
serve cocktails X X X X
free X
Reduce the table by eliminating
redundant columns.
POSSIBLE RULES
more than half- Note that some
N N N N Y Y Y Y
full columns are identical
except for one condition.
CONDITONS
domestic flight - N Y N Y N Y
ACTIONS
serve cocktails X X X X
free X
Reduce the table by eliminating
redundant columns.
domestic flight - - N Y N Y
ACTIONS
serve cocktails X X X X
free X
Reduce the table by eliminating
redundant columns.
serve cocktails X X X X
free X
Reduce the table by eliminating
redundant columns.
domestic flight - - N Y
serve cocktails X X X
over looked something?
free X
Final Solution
Rules
domestic flight - - N Y
serve cocktails X X X
ACTIONS
free X
Example:
“A marketing company wishes to construct a decision
table to decide how to treat clients according to three
characteristics:
Gender, City Dweller, and age group: A (under 30), B
(between 30 and 60), C (over 60).
The company has four products (W, X, Y and Z) to test
market.
Product W will appeal to female city dwellers.
Product X will appeal to young females.
Product Y will appeal to Male middle aged shoppers who
do not live in cities.
Product Z will appeal to all but older females.”
The process used to create this decision table is the following:
1. Identify conditions and their alternative values.
There are 3 conditions: gender, city dweller, and age group. Put these into table as 3 rows
in upper left side.
Gender’s alternative values are: F and M.
City dweller’s alternative values are: Y and N
Age group’s alternative values are: A, B, and C
2. Compute max. number of rules.
Determine the product of number of alternative values for each condition.
2 x 2 x 3 = 12.
Fill table on upper right side with one column for each unique combination of these
alternative values. Label each column using increasing numbers 1-12 corresponding to
the 12 rules. For example, the first column (rule 1) corresponds to F, Y, and A. Rule 2
corresponds to M, Y, and A. Rule 3 corresponds to F, N, and A. Rule 4 corresponds to M,
N, and A. Rule 5 corresponds to F, Y, and B. Rule 6 corresponds to M, Y, and B and so on.
3. Identify possible actions
Market product W, X, Y, or Z. Put these into table as 4 rows in lower left side.
4. Define each of the actions to take given each rule.
For example, for rule 1 where it is F, Y, and A; we see from the above example scenario
that products W, X, and Z will appeal. Therefore, we put an ‘X’ into the table’s
intersection of column 1 and the rows that correspond to the actions: market product W,
market product X, and market product Z.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Gender F M F M F M F M F M F M
City Y Y N N Y Y N N Y Y N N
Age A A A A B B B B C C C C
Market X X X
W
MarketX X X
MarketY X
MarketZ X X X X X X X X X X
5. Verify that the actions given to each rule are correct.
6. Simplify the table.
Determine if there are rules (columns) that represent impossible situations. If
so, remove those columns. There are no impossible situations in this
example.
Determine if there are rules (columns) that have the same actions. If so,
determine if these are rules that are identical except for one condition and
for that one condition, all possible values of this condition are present in the
rules in these columns. In the example scenario, columns 2, 4, 6, 7, 10, and
12 have the same action. Of these columns: 2, 6, and 10 are identical except
for one condition: age group. The gender is M and they are city dwellers. The
age group is A for rule 2, B for rule 6, and C for rule 10. Therefore, all possible
values of condition ‘age group’ are present. For rules 2, 6, and 10; the age
group is a “don’t care”. These 3 columns can be collapsed into one column
and a hyphen is put into the age group location to signify that we don’t care
what the value of the age group is, we will treat all male city dwellers the
same: market product Z.
Final Decision Table
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Gender F M F M F M F M F M
City Y Y N N Y N N Y N N
Age A A A B B B C C C
MarketW X X X
MarketX X X
MarketY X
MarketZ X X X X X X X X
Complex Decision Table Exercise
A company is trying to maintain a meaningful list of customers. The objective is to
send out only the catalogs from which customers will buy merchandise.
The company realizes that certain loyal customers order from every catalog and
some people on the mailing list never order. These customers are easy to identify.
Deciding which catalogs to send to customers who order from only selected catalogs
is a more difficult decision. Once these decisions have been made by the marketing
department, you as the analyst have been asked to develop a decision table for the
three conditions described below. Each condition has two alternatives (Y or N):
1. Customer ordered from Fall catalog
2. Customer ordered from Christmas catalog
3. Customer ordered from Specialty catalog
The actions for these conditions, as determined by marketing, are described on the
next slide.
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Complex Decision Table Exercise
Customers who ordered from all three catalogs will get the Christmas and
Special catalogs. Customers who ordered from the Fall and Christmas catalogs
but not the Special catalog will get the Christmas catalog. Customers who
ordered from the Fall catalog and the Special catalog but not the Christmas
catalog will get the Special catalog. Customers who ordered only from the
Fall catalog but no other catalog will get the Christmas catalog. Customers
who ordered from the Christmas and Special catalogs but not the Fall catalog
will get both catalogs. Customers who ordered only from the Christmas
catalog or only from the Special catalog will get only the Christmas or Special
catalogs respectively. Customers who ordered from no catalog will get the
Christmas catalog.
1. Create a simplified decision table based on the above decision logic.
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