Sequential selection for accelerated life testing via approximate Bayesian inference
From MaRDI portal
Publication:6077361
DOI10.1002/nav.22009arXiv2001.05602OpenAlexW3176402747MaRDI QIDQ6077361
Qiong Zhang, Wenjun Cai, Ye Chen, Ming-Yang Li
Publication date: 18 October 2023
Published in: Naval Research Logistics (NRL) (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/2001.05602
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Bayesian analysis for step-stress accelerated life testing using Weibull proportional hazard model
- Efficient global optimization of expensive black-box functions
- Simulation budget allocation for further enhancing the efficiency of ordinal optimization
- Inference for a simple step-stress model with competing risks for failure from the exponential distribution under time constraint
- The Knowledge-Gradient Policy for Correlated Normal Beliefs
- Sequential Sampling to Myopically Maximize the Expected Value of Information
- On the Convergence Rates of Expected Improvement Methods
- A Knowledge-Gradient Policy for Sequential Information Collection
- Asymptotically Optimum Over-Stress Tests to Estimate the Survival Probability at a Condition with a Low Expected Failure Probability
- A fully sequential procedure for indifference-zone selection in simulation
- Design of accelerated life testing plans under multiple stresses
- Gaussian Markov Random Fields for Discrete Optimization via Simulation: Framework and Algorithms
- Technical Note—Consistency Analysis of Sequential Learning Under Approximate Bayesian Inference
- Complete expected improvement converges to an optimal budget allocation
- Myopic Allocation Policy With Asymptotically Optimal Sampling Rate
- A Stochastic Approximation Method
- A Single-Sample Multiple Decision Procedure for Ranking Means of Normal Populations with known Variances
- Moment-Matching-Based Conjugacy Approximation for Bayesian Ranking and Selection
This page was built for publication: Sequential selection for accelerated life testing via approximate Bayesian inference