Quality of results

Quality of Results (QoR) is a term used in evaluating technological processes. It is generally represented as a vector of components, with the special case of uni-dimensional value as a synthetic measure.

History

The term was coined by the electronic design automation (EDA) industry in the late 1980s. QoR was meant to be an indicator of the performance of integrated circuits (chips), and initially measured the area and speed of a chip.{{cite web|last1=Carlson|first1=Steve|title='Quality of Silicon' metric gauges EDA tool success|url=http://www.eetimes.com/document.asp?doc_id=1217531|website=eetimes.com|publisher=UBM Tech|access-date=7 July 2015}} As the industry evolved, new chip parameters were considered for coverage by the QoR, illustrating new areas of focus for chip designers (for example power dissipation, power efficiency, routing overhead, etc.). Because of the broad scope of quality assessment, QoR eventually evolved into a generic vector representation comprising a number of different values, where the meaning of each vector value was explicitly specified in the QoR analysis document.

Currently the term is gaining popularity in other sectors of technology, with each sector using its own appropriate components.

References