The article presents a new paradigm for global sensitivity analysis that departs from the traditional Sobol-Hoeffding functional decomposition approach. The key ideas are:
Sensitivity maps are defined as functions that quantify the sensitivity of the output to different subsets of the inputs. These maps satisfy three axioms that capture the intuitive notion of sensitivity.
Sensitivity maps can be identified with factorial experiments, where the presence or absence of inputs defines the factors. This allows for a natural definition of main and interaction effects, without relying on any functional decomposition.
Weighted factorial effects are introduced, which generalize the standard factorial effects. This allows for the recovery of well-known sensitivity indices like Sobol indices and Shapley effects as special cases.
The total output variability can be decomposed in different ways using appropriate weight functions, leading to Sobol-like or Shapley-like decompositions.
The concept of a dual sensitivity map is introduced, which provides an alternative perspective on the sensitivity analysis.
The proposed paradigm offers several advantages over the traditional approach: it can handle arbitrary input distributions, it is not restricted to variance-based analysis, and the interpretation of main and interaction effects is more straightforward. The connection to factorial experiments also opens up the possibility of leveraging techniques from experimental design to tackle high-dimensional problems.
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by Gildas Mazo ... a las arxiv.org 09-11-2024
https://arxiv.org/pdf/2409.06271.pdfConsultas más profundas