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Details of Grant 

EPSRC Reference: EP/T021624/1
Title: Multi-objective optimal design of experiments
Principal Investigator: Gilmour, Professor S
Other Investigators:
Mylona, Dr K Pigoli, Dr D
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Dr O Egorova Dr V Koutra
Project Partners:
Department: Mathematics
Organisation: Kings College London
Scheme: Standard Research
Starts: 14 December 2020 Ends: 13 March 2024 Value (£): 814,578
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Statistics & Appl. Probability
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
No relevance to Underpinning Sectors
Related Grants:
Panel History:
Panel DatePanel NameOutcome
31 Aug 2020 EPSRC Mathematical Sciences Prioritisation Panel September 2020 Announced
Summary on Grant Application Form
An experiment differs from a purely observational study in that interventions are deliberately made to the system under study and the effects of these interventions observed. In almost all fields of science, engineering, medicine and business, experiments are the most robust and reliable way of drawing causal conclusions - if we want to know the effect of making a change, we have to make that change and observe the effect. Interpreting the results of all but the simplest experiments involves analysing data on responses (outputs) from the experiment, using statistical models whose complexity depends on the complexity of the experiment. The validity and robustness of conclusions that can be drawn from the experiment depend on how informative the data are with respect to the statistical models used, and how informative the data are depends on the way the experiment is designed.

The statistical design of experiments has developed over the last 100 years to deal with different structures of experiments and data collected from them. Historically there have been two different approaches. Optimal design involves defining a mathematical function, which depends on the particular sets of interventions (treatments) used in the experiment, and then choosing the treatments to optimise this function. This has the advantage of being easily understood to be directly related to the properties of the data analysis, e.g. choose a design to minimise the variance of the estimate of some important quantity. However, it has the disadvantage of oversimplifying the multiple objectives that experimenters actually have in practice. Classical design, on the other hand, chooses designs with attractive mathematical structures (usually based on symmetries) which can make the designs fairly good for many objectives. However, classical designs can be difficult or impossible to find for some experimental structures and there is no guarantee that they will be very good for the objectives of any particular experiment.

This project aims to develop and implement methods which will get the best of both optimal and classical designs, namely multi-objective optimal designs (MOODs). MOODs use the idea of optimising a mathematical function, but that function represents a compromise between the many different objectives that experimenters have in practice. Some of the objectives can be used to restrict the set of designs over which we search for an optimum, e.g. in some cases we might restrict the search to designs which allow us to obtain uncorrelated estimates of the main effects of factors. Other objectives will be combined in a compound optimality criterion, which defines a weighted geometric mean of several individual simple criteria. Since MOODs require a more complex optimisation than standard designs, we will derive theoretical results to allow simplification of the criterion, e.g. by showing that two objectives are actually complementary, so only one is needed. We will also develop algorithms for searching for optimal designs and implement them in programs that can be used by experimenters.

The focus in this project will be on four types of experiment: those with many treatment factors being varied simultaneously; those where the experiments are carried out on a network of subjects; those in which the measured response is a function (or curve); and those in which the treatment factors can be varied over time within the same experimental unit. The breadth of these structures should help other researchers adapt the methods to different types of experiment in the future.

Since so many areas of application use experiments, the methods developed here have the potential to be applied in many different fields, either directly or after further development for particular types of experiment. Experimenters will benefit from being able to get exactly the information required from their experiment as economically and as free from bias as possible.
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