Nowadays, an increasing number of scattering measurements rely on the use of large-scale research facilities, which is usually granted after highly competitive peer-reviewing and typically for short time lapses. The optimal use of the allocated time requires rigorous estimates on the reliability of the data analysis, as inferred from the limited statistical accuracy of the measurement. As discussed in this Chapter, Bayesian inference approaches can significantly help this endeavor by providing investigators with much-needed guidance under challenging decisions on experimental time management. In particular, we propose here a method based on the real-time data analysis of running experiments, which fully exploits the core strengths of Bayes theorem. The procedure is implemented in sequential steps in which the spectral measurement is adjourned by summing to it successive acquisition runs, and the spectral modeling is upgraded accordingly. At each stage, the statistical accuracy of the measurement improves, and a more grounded joint posterior distribution is drawn and used as a prior in the subsequent data acquisition stage. The gradual reduction in the model parameters' uncertainty down to the targets set a priori by experimenters provides a quantitative "success criterion," which helps prevent oversampling during acquisition, thus ultimately minimizing time waste. A similar "on the fly" data modeling, if implemented as a routine procedure in scattering measurements, might substantially change the way large-scale facilities operate.

Bayesian inference as a tool to optimize spectral acquisition in scattering experiments

Alessio De Francesco;
2022

Abstract

Nowadays, an increasing number of scattering measurements rely on the use of large-scale research facilities, which is usually granted after highly competitive peer-reviewing and typically for short time lapses. The optimal use of the allocated time requires rigorous estimates on the reliability of the data analysis, as inferred from the limited statistical accuracy of the measurement. As discussed in this Chapter, Bayesian inference approaches can significantly help this endeavor by providing investigators with much-needed guidance under challenging decisions on experimental time management. In particular, we propose here a method based on the real-time data analysis of running experiments, which fully exploits the core strengths of Bayes theorem. The procedure is implemented in sequential steps in which the spectral measurement is adjourned by summing to it successive acquisition runs, and the spectral modeling is upgraded accordingly. At each stage, the statistical accuracy of the measurement improves, and a more grounded joint posterior distribution is drawn and used as a prior in the subsequent data acquisition stage. The gradual reduction in the model parameters' uncertainty down to the targets set a priori by experimenters provides a quantitative "success criterion," which helps prevent oversampling during acquisition, thus ultimately minimizing time waste. A similar "on the fly" data modeling, if implemented as a routine procedure in scattering measurements, might substantially change the way large-scale facilities operate.
2022
978-1-80356-045-8
Bayesian inference
neutron and x-ray scattering
spectroscopy
MCMC methods
Bayes theorem
Brillouin neutron scattering
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/444026
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact