Incremental space-filling design based on coverings and spacings: improving upon low discrepancy sequences
From MaRDI portal
Publication:2241652
DOI10.1007/s42519-021-00210-2zbMath1473.62276arXiv2106.05833OpenAlexW3198512780MaRDI QIDQ2241652
Luc Pronzato, A. Nogales Gómez, Maria João Rendas
Publication date: 9 November 2021
Published in: Journal of Statistical Theory and Practice (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2106.05833
Design of statistical experiments (62K99) Numerical approximation and computational geometry (primarily algorithms) (65D99)
Related Items
Quasi-uniform designs with optimal and near-optimal uniformity constant ⋮ A new partition method for DIRECT-type algorithm based on minimax design
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Maximal spacings in several dimensions
- Design of computer experiments: space filling and beyond
- Clustering to minimize the maximum intercluster distance
- The design and analysis of computer experiments.
- Greedy vector quantization
- Error estimates and condition numbers for radial basis function interpolation
- Foundations of quantization for probability distributions
- Measures minimizing regularized dispersion
- Covering of high-dimensional cubes and quantization
- Mesh ratios for best-packing and limits of minimal energy configurations
- Discrépance de suites associées à un système de numération (en dimension s)
- An analysis of approximations for maximizing submodular set functions—I
- Computer Experiments: Prediction Accuracy, Sample Size and Model Complexity Revisited
- Bayesian Quadrature, Energy Minimization, and Space-Filling Design
- Coffee-House Designs
- Collecting Spatial Data
- Learning with Submodular Functions: A Convex Optimization Perspective
- Computer Aided Design of Experiments
- On the distribution of points in a cube and the approximate evaluation of integrals
- The Sequential Generation of $D$-Optimum Experimental Designs
- Sequential Design with Mutual Information for Computer Experiments (MICE): Emulation of a Tsunami Model
- Combinatorial optimization. Theory and algorithms.