scholarly journals Stopping Criteria for Technology Assisted Reviews based on Counting Processes

Author(s):  
Alison Sneyd ◽  
Mark Stevenson
Author(s):  
Alexander Haberl ◽  
Dirk Praetorius ◽  
Stefan Schimanko ◽  
Martin Vohralík

AbstractWe consider a second-order elliptic boundary value problem with strongly monotone and Lipschitz-continuous nonlinearity. We design and study its adaptive numerical approximation interconnecting a finite element discretization, the Banach–Picard linearization, and a contractive linear algebraic solver. In particular, we identify stopping criteria for the algebraic solver that on the one hand do not request an overly tight tolerance but on the other hand are sufficient for the inexact (perturbed) Banach–Picard linearization to remain contractive. Similarly, we identify suitable stopping criteria for the Banach–Picard iteration that leave an amount of linearization error that is not harmful for the residual a posteriori error estimate to steer reliably the adaptive mesh-refinement. For the resulting algorithm, we prove a contraction of the (doubly) inexact iterates after some amount of steps of mesh-refinement/linearization/algebraic solver, leading to its linear convergence. Moreover, for usual mesh-refinement rules, we also prove that the overall error decays at the optimal rate with respect to the number of elements (degrees of freedom) added with respect to the initial mesh. Finally, we prove that our fully adaptive algorithm drives the overall error down with the same optimal rate also with respect to the overall algorithmic cost expressed as the cumulated sum of the number of mesh elements over all mesh-refinement, linearization, and algebraic solver steps. Numerical experiments support these theoretical findings and illustrate the optimal overall algorithmic cost of the fully adaptive algorithm on several test cases.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong Li ◽  
Xiuchun Bi ◽  
Shuguang Zhang
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-87
Author(s):  
Sophie Donnet ◽  
Vincent Rivoirard ◽  
Judith Rousseau ◽  
Catia Scricciolo

Technometrics ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 362-362 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shin Ta Liu

Author(s):  
Fred J. Hickernell ◽  
Sou-Cheng T. Choi ◽  
Lan Jiang ◽  
Lluís Antoni Jiménez Rugama

2007 ◽  
Vol 2007 ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Don McNickle

We consider some simple Markov and Erlang queues with limited storage space. Although the departure processes from some such systems are known to be Poisson, they actually consist of the superposition of two complex correlated processes, the overflow process and the output process. We measure the cross-correlation between the counting processes for these two processes. It turns out that this can be positive, negative, or even zero (without implying independence). The models suggest some general principles on how big these correlations are, and when they are important. This may suggest when renewal or moment approximations to similar processes will be successful, and when they will not.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document