"background": "Process-control systems in industrial settings are critical for operational efficiency and safety. However, rigorous, field-based methodologies for diagnosing their efficiency in resource-constrained contexts are underdeveloped, leading to reliance on theoretical or anecdotal assessments. ", "purpose and objectives": "This article presents a novel quasi-experimental framework designed to empirically measure efficiency gains from process-control interventions within Ugandan industrial plants. The objective is to provide a structured, replicable methodology for engineering diagnostics that accounts for local operational constraints. ", "methodology": "The framework employs a difference-in-differences design, comparing treatment plants implementing a specified control system upgrade with matched control plants. Key performance indicators (KPIs) are measured pre- and post-intervention. The core statistical model is Y{it = \0 + \1 + \2 + \ (\) + \₈ₓ, where \ is the causal effect of interest. Inference relies on cluster-robust standard errors at the plant level. ", "findings": "As a methodology article, this paper presents no empirical results from a completed study. However, the framework's diagnostic power is demonstrated through a simulated application, indicating a minimum detectable effect of a 15% improvement in throughput efficiency with 80% power under typical local variance conditions. ", "conclusion": "The proposed quasi-experimental framework provides a robust, context-adapted methodological tool for structural and control engineers to move beyond theoretical efficiency claims towards evidence-based system evaluation. ", "recommendations": "Practitioners should adopt this structured diagnostic approach during the commissioning and auditing phases of control systems. Future research should apply the framework to generate a comparative dataset of system performance across different industrial sectors. ", "key words": "quasi-experimental design, process control, efficiency diagnostics, difference-in-differences, industrial engineering, Uganda", "contribution statement":
Josephine Nalwoga (Sun,) studied this question.