Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6931778 Journal of Computational Physics 2015 18 Pages PDF
Abstract
All of the first-order relative response sensitivities to the model parameters have significantly large values, of order unity. Also importantly, most of the second-order relative sensitivities are just as large, and some even up to twice as large as the first-order sensitivities. In the illustrative example presented in this work, the second-order sensitivities contribute little to the response variances and covariances. However, they have the following major impacts on the computed moments of the response distribution: (a) they cause the “expected value of the response” to differ from the “computed nominal value of the response”; and (b) they contribute decisively to causing asymmetries in the response distribution. Indeed, neglecting the second-order sensitivities would nullify the third-order response correlations, and hence would nullify the skewness of the response. Consequently, any events occurring in a response's long and/or short tails, which are characteristic of rare but decisive events (e.g., major accidents, catastrophes), would likely be missed. The 2nd-ASAM is expected to affect significantly other fields that need efficiently computed second-order response sensitivities, e.g., optimization, data assimilation/adjustment, model calibration, and predictive modeling.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science Applications
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