Machine Learning for Simulation

Project network 6 (PN6)

So far, classical simulations and Machine Learning (ML) are separated fields based on different paradigms. This Project Network paves the way for integrating them with joint model-based and data-driven predictions capable of tackling simulation problems that are currently out of reach. In addition, opening the black box of ML through visualization will give non-experts access to these tools. On the one hand, the network will focus methodologically on supervised, unsupervised, and reinforcement learning. We will develop, analyze, and implement novel ML strategies adapted to the characteristics of simulation data, such as symmetries, invariances, and physical prior knowledge. And, surprisingly, even deterministic trajectories are incompatible with statistical assumptions required for standard learning guarantees for ML methods.

The new ML techniques will further support visual exploration and interactive control by users and will be applied to the different stages of the simulation cycle, specifically in the modeling, prediction, visualization, and visual analytics stages. On the other hand, and complementary to these methodological considerations, PN 6 will aim at broad collaborations with the other networks by disseminating our network’s ML and visualization competences as well as tools to the diverse application fields. To this end, we will combine ML expertise in mathematics and computer science in this network with domain expertise from collaborating networks.

 

Interplay of the RQs and ML

Research questions

RQ 1 ML4Sim: How can ML be adopted for simulation; specifically, how can we incorporate application-specific physical constraints and prior knowledge, and how can we learn in the absence of ML-specific statistical assumptions?

RQ 2 Sim4ML: How can simulation data augment real-world/experimental data for ML?

RQ 3 VisML2: How can we use visualization to better understand and control ML and, vice versa, how can we leverage ML for data-integrated visualization?

 

Project Network Coordinators

This image shows Dirk Pflüger

Dirk Pflüger

Prof. Dr. rer. nat.

Scientific Computing | Vice-Head of GS SimTech

[Photo: SimTech/Max Kovalenko]

This image shows Ingo Steinwart

Ingo Steinwart

Univ.-Prof. Dr. rer. nat.

Stochastics

[Photo: SimTech/Max Kovalenko]

Mathias Niepert

Prof. Dr.

Machine Learning for Simulation Science

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