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Propagation of distributions by Monte-Carlo sampling: Real number types with uncertainty represented by samples.

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baggepinnen/MonteCarloMeasurements.jl

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Imagine you had a type that behaved like your standard Float64 but it really represented a probability distribution like Gamma(0.5) or MvNormal(m, S). Then you could call y=f(x) and have y be the probability distribution y=p(f(x)). This package gives you such a type.

This package facilitates working with probability distributions by means of Monte-Carlo methods, in a way that allows for propagation of probability distributions through functions. This is useful for, e.g., nonlinear uncertainty propagation. A variable or parameter might be associated with uncertainty if it is measured or otherwise estimated from data. We provide two core types to represent probability distributions: Particles and StaticParticles, both <: Real. (The name "Particles" comes from the particle-filtering literature.) These types all form a Monte-Carlo approximation of the distribution of a floating point number, i.e., the distribution is represented by samples/particles. Correlated quantities are handled as well, see multivariate particles below.

Although several interesting use cases for doing calculations with probability distributions have popped up (see Examples), the original goal of the package is similar to that of Measurements.jl, to propagate the uncertainty from input of a function to the output. The difference compared to a Measurement is that Particles represent the distribution using a vector of unweighted particles, and can thus represent arbitrary distributions and handle nonlinear uncertainty propagation well. Functions like f(x) = x², f(x) = sign(x) at x=0 and long-time integration, are examples that are not handled well using linear uncertainty propagation ala Measurements.jl. MonteCarloMeasurements also support correlations between quantities.

A number of type Particles behaves just as any other Number while partaking in calculations. Particles also behave like a distribution, so after a calculation, an approximation to the complete distribution of the output is captured and represented by the output particles. mean, std etc. can be extracted from the particles using the corresponding functions pmean and pstd. Particles also interact with Distributions.jl, so that you can call, e.g., Normal(p) and get back a Normal type from distributions or fit(Gamma, p) to get a Gammadistribution. Particles can also be asked for maximum/minimum, quantile etc. using functions with a prefix p, i.e., pmaximum. If particles are plotted with plot(p), a histogram is displayed. This requires Plots.jl. A kernel-density estimate can be obtained by density(p) is StatsPlots.jl is loaded.

Below, we show an example where an input uncertainty is propagated through σ(x)

transformed densities

In the figure above, we see the probability-density function of the input p(x) depicted on the x-axis. The density of the output p(y) = f(x) is shown on the y-axis. Linear uncertainty propagation does this by linearizing f(x) and using the equations for an affine transformation of a Gaussian distribution, and hence produces a Gaussian approximation to the output density. The particles form a sampled approximation of the input density p(x). After propagating them through f(x), they form a sampled approximation to p(y) which correspond very well to the true output density, even though only 20 particles were used in this example. The figure can be reproduced by examples/transformed_densities.jl.

Quick start

using MonteCarloMeasurements, Plots
a = π ± 0.1 # Construct Gaussian uncertain parameters using ± (\\pm)
# Particles{Float64,2000}
#  3.14159 ± 0.1
b = 2  0.1 # ∓ (\\mp) creates StaticParticles (with StaticArrays)
# StaticParticles{Float64,100}
#  2.0 ± 0.0999
pstd(a)     # Ask about statistical properties
# 0.09999231528930486
sin(a)      # Use them like any real number
# Particles{Float64,2000}
#  1.2168e-16 ± 0.0995
plot(a)     # Plot them
b = sin.(1:0.1:5)  0.1; # Create multivariate uncertain numbers
plot(b)                   # Vectors of particles can be plotted
using Distributions
c = Particles(500, Poisson(3.)) # Create uncertain numbers distributed according to a given distribution
# Particles{Int64,500}
#  2.882 ± 1.7

For further help, see the documentation, the examples folder or the arXiv paper.