LGAISYOCMLDec 28, 2019

Value of structural health information in partially observable stochastic environments

arXiv:1912.12534v29 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses decision-making for structural safety in engineering, providing a theoretical framework for quantifying the benefits of information in partially observable stochastic environments, though it appears incremental as it applies existing POMDP methods to this domain.

The paper tackles the problem of optimizing inspection and monitoring strategies for deteriorating engineering systems by introducing Value of Information (VoI) and Value of Structural Health Monitoring (VoSHM) metrics within Partially Observable Markov Decision Processes (POMDPs), showing that POMDP policies inherently use VoI to guide observational actions optimally and that SHM or inspections improve long-term costs.

Efficient integration of uncertain observations with decision-making optimization is key for prescribing informed intervention actions, able to preserve structural safety of deteriorating engineering systems. To this end, it is necessary that scheduling of inspection and monitoring strategies be objectively performed on the basis of their expected value-based gains that, among others, reflect quantitative metrics such as the Value of Information (VoI) and the Value of Structural Health Monitoring (VoSHM). In this work, we introduce and study the theoretical and computational foundations of the above metrics within the context of Partially Observable Markov Decision Processes (POMDPs), thus alluding to a broad class of decision-making problems of partially observable stochastic deteriorating environments that can be modeled as POMDPs. Step-wise and life-cycle VoI and VoSHM definitions are devised and their bounds are analyzed as per the properties stemming from the Bellman equation and the resulting optimal value function. It is shown that a POMDP policy inherently leverages the notion of VoI to guide observational actions in an optimal way at every decision step, and that the permanent or intermittent information provided by SHM or inspection visits, respectively, can only improve the cost of this policy in the long-term, something that is not necessarily true under locally optimal policies, typically adopted in decision-making of structures and infrastructure. POMDP solutions are derived based on point-based value iteration methods, and the various definitions are quantified in stationary and non-stationary deteriorating environments, with both infinite and finite planning horizons, featuring single- or multi-component engineering systems.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes