Article ID: | iaor19972179 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 42 |
Issue: | 7 |
Start Page Number: | 954 |
End Page Number: | 973 |
Publication Date: | Jul 1996 |
Journal: | Management Science |
Authors: | Barton Russell R., Ivey John S. |
Keywords: | optimization |
When the Nelder-Mead method is used to optimize the expected response of a stochastic system (e.g., an output of a discrete-event simulation model), the simplex-resizing steps of the method introduce risks of inappropriate termination. The authors give analytical and empirical results describing the performance of Nelder-Mead when it is applied to a response function that incorporates an additive white-noise error, and they use these results to develop new modifications of Nelder-Mead that yield improved estimates of the optimal expected response. Compared to Nelder-Mead, the best performance was obtained by a modified method, RS+S9, in which (a) the best point in the simplex is reevaluated at each shrink, step and (b) the simplex is reduced by 10% (rather than 50%) at each shrink step. In a suite of 18 test problems that were adapted from the MINIPACK collection of NETLIB, the expected response at the estimated optimal fioint obtained by RS+S9 had errors that averaged 15% less than at the original method’s estimated optimal point, at an average cost of three times as many function evaluations. Two well-known existing modifications for stochastic responses, the (