EPJ Web of Conferences (Jan 2021)
TOWARDS OVERCOMING THE CURSE OF DIMENSIONALITY IN PREDICTIVE MODELLING AND UNCERTAINTY QUANTIFICATION
Abstract
This invited presentation summarizes new methodologies developed by the author for performing high-order sensitivity analysis, uncertainty quantification and predictive modeling. The presentation commences by summarizing the newly developed 3rd-Order Adjoint Sensitivity Analysis Methodology (3rd-ASAM) for linear systems, which overcomes the “curse of dimensionality” for sensitivity analysis and uncertainty quantification of a large variety of model responses of interest in reactor physics systems. The use of the exact expressions of the 2nd-, and 3rd-order sensitivities computed using the 3rd-ASAM is subsequently illustrated by presenting 3rd-order formulas for the first three cumulants of the response distribution, for quantifying response uncertainties (covariance, skewness) stemming from model parameter uncertainties. The use of the 1st-, 2nd-, and 3rd-order sensitivities together with the formulas for the first three cumulants of the response distribution are subsequently used in the newly developed 2nd/3rd-BERRU-PM (“Second/Third-Order Best-Estimated Results with Reduced Uncertainties Predictive Modeling”), which aims at overcoming the curse of dimensionality in predictive modeling. The 2nd/3rd-BERRU-PM uses the maximum entropy principle to eliminate the need for introducing a subjective user-defined “cost functional quantifying the discrepancies between measurements and computations.” By utilizing the 1st-, 2nd- and 3rd-order response sensitivities to combine experimental and computational information in the joint phase-space of responses and model parameters, the 2nd/3rd-BERRU-PM generalizes the current data adjustment/assimilation methodologies. Even though all of the 2nd- and 3rd-order are comprised in the mathematical framework of the 2nd/3rd-BERRU-PM formalism, the computations underlying the 2nd/3rd-BERRU-PM require the inversion of a single matrix of dimensions equal to the number of considered responses, thus overcoming the curse of dimensionality which would affect the inversion of hessian and higher-order matrices in the parameter space.
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