LGDec 17, 2025

Multi-stage Bayesian optimisation for dynamic decision-making in self-driving labs

arXiv:2512.15483v11 citationsh-index: 6
Originality Incremental advance
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This work addresses the problem of enabling more realistic and complex experimental workflows in self-driving labs for researchers in materials science and chemistry, representing an incremental advancement over existing methods.

The paper tackled the limitation of standard Bayesian optimization in self-driving labs, which cannot adapt to multi-stage workflows with intermediate measurements, by introducing an extension that incorporates proxy measurements, resulting in substantial improvements in solution quality and time efficiency across various scenarios.

Self-driving laboratories (SDLs) are combining recent technological advances in robotics, automation, and machine learning based data analysis and decision-making to perform autonomous experimentation toward human-directed goals without requiring any direct human intervention. SDLs are successfully used in materials science, chemistry, and beyond, to optimise processes, materials, and devices in a systematic and data-efficient way. At present, the most widely used algorithm to identify the most informative next experiment is Bayesian optimisation. While relatively simple to apply to a wide range of optimisation problems, standard Bayesian optimisation relies on a fixed experimental workflow with a clear set of optimisation parameters and one or more measurable objective functions. This excludes the possibility of making on-the-fly decisions about changes in the planned sequence of operations and including intermediate measurements in the decision-making process. Therefore, many real-world experiments need to be adapted and simplified to be converted to the common setting in self-driving labs. In this paper, we introduce an extension to Bayesian optimisation that allows flexible sampling of multi-stage workflows and makes optimal decisions based on intermediate observables, which we call proxy measurements. We systematically compare the advantage of taking into account proxy measurements over conventional Bayesian optimisation, in which only the final measurement is observed. We find that over a wide range of scenarios, proxy measurements yield a substantial improvement, both in the time to find good solutions and in the overall optimality of found solutions. This not only paves the way to use more complex and thus more realistic experimental workflows in autonomous labs but also to smoothly combine simulations and experiments in the next generation of SDLs.

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