Authors: Kuhnt, Sonja
Riccomagno, Eva
Rudak, Nikolaus
Title: Numerical algebraic fan of a design for statistical model building
Language (ISO): en
Abstract: In this article we develop methods for the analysis of non-standard experimental designs by using techniques from algebraic statistics. Our work is motivated by a thermal spraying process used to produce a particle coating on a surface, e.g. for wear protection or durable medical instruments. In this application non-standard designs occur as intermediate results from initial standard designs in a two-stage production process. We investigate algebraic methods to derive better identifiable models with particular emphasis on the second stage of two-stage processes. Ideas from algebraic statistics are explored where the design as finite set of distinct experimental settings is expressed as solution of a system of polynomials. Thereby the design is identified by a polynomial ideal and features and properties of the ideal are explored and provide inside into the structures of models identifiable by the design [Pistone et al., 2001, Riccomagno, 2009]. Holliday et al. [1999] apply these ideas to a problem from the automotive industry with an incomplete standard factorial design, Bates et al. [2003] to the question of finding good polynomial metamodels for computer experiments. In our thermal spraying application, designs for the controllable process parameters are run and properties of particles in flight measured as intermediate responses. The final output describes the coating properties, which are very time-consuming and expensive to measure as the specimen has to be destroyed. It is desirable to predict coating properties either on the basis of process parameters and/or from particle properties. Rudak et al. [2012] provides a first comparison of different modeling approaches. There are still open questions: which models are identifiable with the different choices of input (process parameters, particle properties, or both)? Is it better to base the second model between particle and coating properties on estimated expected values or the observations themselves? The present article is a contribution in this direction. Especially in the second stage particle properties as input variables are observed values from the originally chosen design for the controllable factors. The resulting design on the particle property level can be tackled with algebraic statistics to determine identifiable models. However, it turns out that resulting models contain elements which are only identifiable due to small deviations of the design from more regular points, hence leading to unwanted unstable model results. We tackle this problem with tools from algebraic statistics. Because of the fact that data in the second stage are very noisy, we extend existing theory by switching from symbolic, exact computations to numerical computations in the calculation of the design ideal and of its fan. Specifically, instead of polynomials whose solution are the design points, we identify a design with a set of polynomials which "almost vanish" at the design points using results and algorithms from Fassino [2010]. The paper is organized as follows. In Section 2 three different approaches towards the modeling of a final output in a two-stage process are introduced and compared. The algebraic treatment and reasoning is the same whatever the approach. Section 3 contains the theoretical background of algebraic statistics for experimental design, always exemplified for the special application. Section 4 is the case study itself.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2003/29885
http://dx.doi.org/10.17877/DE290R-5168
Issue Date: 2013-01-29
Appears in Collections:Sonderforschungsbereich (SFB) 823

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