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Many black-box optimization problems rely on simulations to evaluate the quality of candidate solutions. These evaluations can be computationally expensive and very time-consuming. We present and approach to mitigate this problem by taking into consideration two factors: The number of evaluations and the execution time. We aim to keep the number of evaluations low by using Bayesian optimization (BO) – known to be sample efficient– and to reduce wall-clock times by executing parallel evaluations. Four parallelization methods using BO as optimizer are compared against the inherently parallel CMA-ES. Each method is evaluated on all the 24 objective functions of the Black-Box-Optimization-Benchmarking test suite in their 20-dimensional versions. The results show that parallelized BO outperforms the state-of-the-art CMA-ES on most of the test functions, also on higher dimensions.
An important class of black-box optimization problems relies on using simulations to assess the quality of a given candidate solution. Solving such problems can be computationally expensive because each simulation is very time-consuming. We present an approach to mitigate this problem by distinguishing two factors of computational cost: the number of trials and the time needed to execute the trials. Our approach tries to keep down the number of trials by using Bayesian optimization (BO) –known to be sample efficient– and reducing wall-clock times by parallel execution of trials. We compare the performance of four parallelization methods and two model-free alternatives. Each method is evaluated on all 24 objective functions of the Black-Box-Optimization- Benchmarking (BBOB) test suite in their five, ten, and 20-dimensional versions. Additionally, their performance is investigated on six test cases in robot learning. The results show that parallelized BO outperforms the state-of-the-art CMA-ES on the BBOB test functions, especially for higher dimensions. On the robot learning tasks, the differences are less clear, but the data do support parallelized BO as the ‘best guess’, winning on some cases and never losing.
Sensor placement for contaminant detection in water distribution systems (WDS) has become a topic of great interest aiming to secure a population's water supply. Several approaches can be found in the literature with differences ranging from the objective selected to optimize to the methods implemented to solve the optimization problem. In this work we aim to give an overview of the current work in sensor placement with focus on contaminant detection for WDS. We present some of the objectives for which the sensor placement problem is defined along with common optimization algorithms and Toolkits available to help with algorithm testing and comparison.
Drinking water supply and distribution systems are critical infrastructure that has to be well maintained for the safety of the public. One important tool in the maintenance of water distribution systems (WDS) is flushing. Flushing is a process carried out in a periodic fashion to clean sediments and other contaminants in the water pipes. Given the different topographies, water composition and supply demand between WDS no single flushing strategy is suitable for all of them. In this report a non-exhaustive overview of optimization methods for flushing in WDS is given. Implementation of optimization methods for the flushing procedure and the flushing planing are presented. Suggestions are given as a possible option to optimise existing flushing planing frameworks.
Die steigende Komplexität der Produktionssysteme, insbesondere im Maschinenbau, führt zu einer Belastung für Automatisierer und Anlagenbauer. Um dieser Belastung entgegenzuwirken, bietet Industrie 4.0 mit Cyber-physischen Systemen und intelligenten Automatisierungssystemen eine Lösung. Dabei wird menschliches Expertenwissen in die Automatisierung verlagert, indem Ziele deklarativ formuliert werden, anstatt prozedurale Handlungsabläufe zu beschreiben. Dieser Ansatz ermöglicht es intelligenten Systemen, ausreichenden Handlungsspielraum zu haben und den menschlichen Aufwand bei der Optimierung, Inbetriebnahme und Anlagenumbau zu reduzieren. Um intelligente Automation umzusetzen, werden neue Automatisierungstechniken und Software-Services benötigt, die verschiedene Methoden wie maschinelles Lernen, Condition-Monitoring und Diagnose-Algorithmen sowie Optimierungsverfahren nutzen. Derzeit werden diese Services unabhängig voneinander implementiert und die Schnittstellen sind oft proprietär, was den Austausch von Daten, Modellen und Ergebnissen erschwert. Dennoch strebt Industrie 4.0 die Zusammenarbeit von Geräten und Komponenten unterschiedlicher Hersteller an. Als ein Lösungsansatz wurde in diesem Projekt eine kognitive Referenzarchitektur entwickelt, welche die genannten Punkte adressiert.
Die Arbeit beschreibt die Entwicklung und Verbreitung künstlicher Intelligenz (KI) und die damit verbundenen Herausforderungen und Chancen. Es wird hervorgehoben, dass trotz des offensichtlichen Nutzens von KI, Bedenken hinsichtlich unerwünschter Nebenwirkungen durch fehlerhafte oder missbräuchliche Anwendungen bestehen. Um diese Herausforderungen zu bewältigen, wird ein Ansatz vorgeschlagen, der als “konviviale künstliche Intelligenz” bezeichnet wird. Dieser Ansatz zielt auf ein harmonisches Zusammenspiel zwischen KI und Mensch ab und betont die Notwendigkeit einer menschenzentrierten Gestaltung bei der Entwicklung und Implementierung von KI-Modellen.
Cyclone Dust Separators are devices often used to filter solid particles from flue gas. Such cyclones are supposed to filter as much solid particles from the carrying gas as possible. At the same time, they should only introduce a minimal pressure loss to the system. Hence, collection efficiency has to be maximized and pressure loss minimized. Both the collection efficiency and pressure loss are heavily influenced by the cyclones geometry. In this paper, we optimize seven geometrical parameters of an analytical cyclone model. Furthermore, noise variables are introduced to the model, representing the non-deterministic structure of the real-world problem. This is used to investigate robustness and sensitivity of solutions. Both the deterministic as well as the stochastic model are optimized with an SMS-EMOA. The SMS-EMOA is compared to a single objective optimization algorithm. For the harder, stochastic optimization problem, a surrogate-model-supported SMS-EMOA is compared against the model-free SMS-EMOA. The model supported approach yields better solutions with the same run-time budget.
EventDetectR: An efficient Event Detection System (EDS) capable of detecting unexpected water quality conditions. This approach uses multiple algorithms to model the relationship between various multivariate water quality signals. Then the residuals of the models were utilized in constructing the event detection algorithm, which provides a continuous measure of the probability of an event at every time step. The proposed framework was tested for water contamination events with industrial data from automated water quality sensors. The results showed that the framework is reliable with better performance and is highly suitable for event detection.