Authors
Timothy W Simpson, Jesse Peplinski, Patrick N Koch, Janet K Allen
Publication date
1997/9/14
Conference
International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference
Volume
80456
Pages
V003T30A008
Publisher
American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Description
Perhaps the most prevalent use of statistics in engineering design is through Taguchi’s parameter and robust design — using orthogonal arrays to compute signal-to-noise ratios in a process of design improvement. In our view, however, there is an equally exciting use of statistics in design that could become just as prevalent: it is the concept of metamodeling whereby statistical models are built to approximate detailed computer analysis codes. Although computers continue to get faster, analysis codes always seem to keep pace so that their computational time remains non-trivial. Through metamodeling, approximations of these codes are built that are orders of magnitude cheaper to run. These metamodels can then be linked to optimization routines for fast analysis, or they can serve as a bridge for integrating analysis codes across different domains.
In this paper we first review metamodeling techniques …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
TW Simpson, J Peplinski, PN Koch, JK Allen - … Conferences and Computers and Information in …, 1997