NALGApr 17, 2023

Goal-oriented Uncertainty Quantification for Inverse Problems via Variational Encoder-Decoder Networks

arXiv:2304.08324v21 citationsh-index: 18
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of real-time uncertainty quantification in inverse problems for fields like medical imaging and hydrology, though it is an incremental improvement leveraging existing machine learning techniques.

The paper tackles efficient uncertainty quantification for goal-oriented inverse problems by using variational encoder-decoder networks to estimate quantities of interest directly from observations, avoiding complex inversion steps, and demonstrates applicability in medical tomography and hydraulic tomography.

In this work, we describe a new approach that uses variational encoder-decoder (VED) networks for efficient goal-oriented uncertainty quantification for inverse problems. Contrary to standard inverse problems, these approaches are \emph{goal-oriented} in that the goal is to estimate some quantities of interest (QoI) that are functions of the solution of an inverse problem, rather than the solution itself. Moreover, we are interested in computing uncertainty metrics associated with the QoI, thus utilizing a Bayesian approach for inverse problems that incorporates the prediction operator and techniques for exploring the posterior. This may be particularly challenging, especially for nonlinear, possibly unknown, operators and nonstandard prior assumptions. We harness recent advances in machine learning, i.e., VED networks, to describe a data-driven approach to large-scale inverse problems. This enables a real-time goal-oriented uncertainty quantification for the QoI. One of the advantages of our approach is that we avoid the need to solve challenging inversion problems by training a network to approximate the mapping from observations to QoI. Another main benefit is that we enable uncertainty quantification for the QoI by leveraging probability distributions in the latent space. This allows us to efficiently generate QoI samples and circumvent complicated or even unknown forward models and prediction operators. Numerical results from medical tomography reconstruction and nonlinear hydraulic tomography demonstrate the potential and broad applicability of the approach.

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