Finding Efficient Trade-offs in Multi-Fidelity Response Surface Modeling

03/04/2021
by   Sander van Rijn, et al.
0

In the context of optimization approaches to engineering applications, time-consuming simulations are often utilized which can be configured to deliver solutions for various levels of accuracy, commonly referred to as different fidelity levels. It is common practice to train hierarchical surrogate models on the objective functions in order to speed-up the optimization process. These operate under the assumption that there is a correlation between the high- and low-fidelity versions of the problem that can be exploited to cheaply gain information. In the practical scenario where the computational budget has to be allocated between multiple fidelities, limited guidelines are available to help make that division. In this paper we evaluate a range of different choices for a two-fidelity setup that provide helpful intuitions about the trade-off between evaluating in high- or low-fidelity. We present a heuristic method based on subsampling from an initial Design of Experiments (DoE) to find a suitable division of the computational budget between the fidelity levels. This enables the setup of multi-fidelity optimizations which utilize the available computational budget efficiently, independent of the multi-fidelity model used.

READ FULL TEXT

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset