scholarly journals Global Reliability‐oriented Sensitivity Analysis under Distribution Parameter Uncertainty

Author(s):  
Vincent Chabridon ◽  
Mathieu Balesdent ◽  
Guillaume Perrin ◽  
Jérôme Morio ◽  
Jean‐Marc Bourinet ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
pp. 251-262
Author(s):  
Timothy E. Essington

The chapter “Sensitivity Analysis” reviews why sensitivity analysis is a critical component of mathematical modeling, and the different ways of approaching it. A sensitivity analysis is an attempt to identify the parts of the model (i.e. structure, parameter values) that are most important for governing the output. It is an important part of modeling because it is used to quantify the degree of uncertainty in the model prediction and, in many cases, is the main goal of the model (i.e. the model was developed to identify the most important ecological processes). The chapter covers the idea of “local” versus “global” sensitivity analysis via individual parameter perturbation, and how interactive effects of parameters can be revealed via Monte Carlo analysis. Structural versus parameter uncertainty is also explained and explored.


Author(s):  
M. Li ◽  
N. Williams ◽  
S. Azarm

Sensitivity analysis has received significant attention in engineering design. While sensitivity analysis methods can be global, taking into account all variations, or local, taking into account small variations, they generally identify which uncertain parameters are most important and to what extent their effect might be on design performance. The extant methods do not, in general, tackle the question of which ranges of parameter uncertainty are most important or how to best allocate investments to partial uncertainty reduction in parameters under a limited budget. More specifically, no previous approach has been reported that can handle single-disciplinary multi-output global sensitivity analysis for both a single design and multiple designs under interval uncertainty. Two new global uncertainty metrics, i.e., radius of output sensitivity region and multi-output entropy performance, are presented. With these metrics, a multi-objective optimization model is developed and solved to obtain fractional levels of parameter uncertainty reduction that provide the greatest payoff in system performance for the least amount of “investment”. Two case studies of varying difficulty are presented to demonstrate the applicability of the proposed approach.


1996 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 381-384 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Costanza

William Nordhaus has gone further than any economist to date at building a dynamic integrated model of the world’s climate and economic systems, with some one-way linkages to agricultural systems and ecosystems. Managing the Commons is an admirably readable description of this effort which, in his words, ‘balances the costs of emissions controls in energy policies and other areas against the impacts to agriculture, coastlines, and ecosystem values’. In addition to a detailed description of the Dynamic Integrated Climate and the Economy (DICE) model and several scenarios produced by the model, the book includes large sections on sensitivity analysis of the model’s parameter uncertainty and an analysis of the value of information gained at various times in the future to the decision process.


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