Alarms vs. Contextualized Alarms: The Difference Between Noise and Insight
Alarms vs. Contextualized Alarms: The Difference Between Noise and Insight

Most production lines already have alarms.
Plenty of them.
If a parameter goes out of range,
someone gets notified.
So why are problems still detected too late?
Because not all alarms are created equal.
Traditional Alarms: Built for Limits
A typical alarm is simple:
- Temperature > X
- Pressure < Y
- Flow outside range
It’s clear.
It’s easy to configure.
It works for obvious failures.
But it assumes something that rarely holds true in real production:
That the process behaves the same way all the time.
The Reality: Production Is Not Static
In real operations, variability is constant
Even when everything is “within spec” the system is not behaving the same way (e.g. a equipment have a different behavior depending on the recipe or properties of the raw material)
What Happens to Traditional Alarms
Because they don’t account for this variability,
traditional alarms fall into a familiar pattern:
Too Many Alerts
Small, normal variations trigger alarms.
Result:
- noise increases
- operators stop paying attention
- alarms lose credibility
Or Not Enough Alerts
To reduce noise, thresholds get relaxed.
Result:
- only extreme conditions trigger alarms
- early signals are ignored
- problems are detected too late
The Missing Layer: Context
Traditional alarms evaluate signals:
in isolation
But real processes don’t operate that way.
A temperature value only makes sense when you know:
- what stage of production you’re in
- what raw material you’re using
- how other variables are behaving
Without that context, the system can’t tell the difference between:
- normal variation
- and the beginning of a problem
Contextualized Alarms: A Different Approach
A contextualized alarm doesn’t just ask:
“Is this value outside a limit?”
It asks:
- Is this behavior expected right now?
- Does this change make sense given other signals?
- Is this pattern typical, or is it drifting?
Why This Matters
Most production problems don’t start with a failure.
They start with:
- small deviations
- subtle shifts
- patterns that don’t look critical yet
Traditional alarms are designed to catch the end.
Contextualized alarms are designed to catch the beginning.
The Real Shift
Improving detection isn’t about adding more alarms.
It’s about changing what an alarm represents too accurately take context into account.
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