DocumentCode
3272313
Title
Better than a petaflop: The power of efficient experimental design
Author
Sanchez, Susan M. ; Wan, Hong
Author_Institution
Oper. Res. Dept., Naval Postgrad. Sch., Monterey, CA, USA
fYear
2011
fDate
11-14 Dec. 2011
Firstpage
1436
Lastpage
1450
Abstract
Recent advances in high-performance computing have pushed computational capabilities to a petaflop (a thousand trillion operations per second) in a single computing cluster. This breakthrough has been hailed as a way to fundamentally change science and engineering by letting people perform experiments that were previously beyond reach. But for those interested in exploring the I/O behavior of their simulation model, efficient experimental design has a much higher payoff at a much lower cost. A well-designed experiment allows the analyst to examine many more factors than would otherwise be possible, while providing insights that cannot be gleaned from trial-and-error approaches or by sampling factors one at a time. We present the basic concepts of experimental design, the types of goals it can address, and why it is such an important and useful tool for simulation. Ideally, this tutorial will entice you to use experimental designs in your upcoming simulation studies.
Keywords
design of experiments; parallel machines; I/O behavior; experimental design; high-performance computing; petaflop; single computing cluster; trial-and-error approaches; Analytical models; Computational modeling; Computers; Mathematical model; Numerical models; Response surface methodology; US Department of Energy;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Simulation Conference (WSC), Proceedings of the 2011 Winter
Conference_Location
Phoenix, AZ
ISSN
0891-7736
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-2108-3
Electronic_ISBN
0891-7736
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/WSC.2011.6147863
Filename
6147863
Link To Document