quality circles - translation to spanish
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quality circles - translation to spanish

GROUP OF WORKERS WHO MEET REGULARLY TO IDENTIFY, ANALYZE AND SOLVE WORK-RELATED PROBLEMS
Quality circles; Quality Circles; Quality control circle; Management quality circle

quality circles         
Círculos de cualidad (técnica de administración que se dedica a dividir a los trabajadores en grupos en las que hablarán de sus problemas y encontrarán soluciones)
picture quality         
  • Blown highlights are detrimental to image quality. Top: Original image. Bottom: Blown areas highlighted in red.
  • At full resolution, this image has clearly visible compression artifacts, for example along the edges of the rightmost trusses.
CHARACTERISTIC OF AN IMAGE THAT MEASURES PERCEIVED IMAGE DEGRADATION
Image Quality; Picture quality
(n.) = calidad de la imagen
Ex: The video playback units are all Betamax format because it is felt that the picture quality is far superior to VHS (Video Home System) and other formats.
sound quality         
ASSESSMENT OF THE AUDIO OUTPUT FROM AN ELECTRONIC DEVICE
Sound Quality; Audio quality; Delivered Audio Quality
(n.) = calidad del sonido
Ex: Sound quality and download times are also compared.

Definition

quality circle
A quality circle is a small group of workers and managers who meet to solve problems and improve the quality of the organization's products or services. (BUSINESS)
Riddick's first move was to form a quality circle.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Quality circle

A quality circle or quality control circle is a group of workers who do the same or similar work, who meet regularly to identify, analyze and solve work-related problems. It consists of minimum three and maximum twelve members in number. Normally small in size, the group is usually led by a supervisor or manager and presents its solutions to management; where possible, workers implement the solutions themselves in order to improve the performance of the organization and motivate employees. Quality circles were at their most popular during the 1980s, but continue to exist in the form of Kaizen groups and similar worker participation schemes.

Typical topics for the attention of quality circles are improving occupational safety and health, improving product design, and improvement in the workplace and manufacturing processes. The term quality circles was most accessibly defined by Professor Kaoru Ishikawa in his 1985 handbook, "What is Total Quality Control? The Japanese Way" and circulated throughout Japanese industry by the Union of Japanese Scientists and Engineers in 1960. The first company in Japan to introduce Quality Circles was the Nippon Wireless and Telegraph Company in 1962. By the end of that year there were 36 companies registered with JUSE by 1978 the movement had grown to an estimated 1 million Circles involving some 10 million Japanese workers. The movement built on work by Dr. W. Edwards Deming during the Allied Occupation of Japan, for which the Deming Prize was established in 1950, as well as work by Joseph M. Juran in 1954.

Quality circles are typically more formal groups. They meet regularly on company time and are trained by competent persons (usually designated as facilitators) who may be personnel and industrial relations specialists trained in human factors and the basic skills of problem identification, information gathering and analysis, basic statistics, and solution generation. Quality circles are generally free to select any topic they wish (other than those related to salary and terms and conditions of work, as there are other channels through which these issues are usually considered).

Quality circles have the advantage of continuity; the circle remains intact from project to project. (For a comparison to Quality Improvement Teams, see Juran's Quality by Design.).