4.6 Article

ACCELERATING MARKOV CHAIN MONTE CARLO WITH ACTIVE SUBSPACES

Journal

SIAM JOURNAL ON SCIENTIFIC COMPUTING
Volume 38, Issue 5, Pages A2779-A2805

Publisher

SIAM PUBLICATIONS
DOI: 10.1137/15M1042127

Keywords

MCMC; active subspaces; dimension reduction

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science, Office of Advanced Scientific Computing Research, Applied Mathematics program [DE-SC-0011077]
  2. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's Enabling Quantification of Uncertainty in Physical Systems
  3. J. Tinsley Oden Faculty Fellowship Research Program

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The Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method is the computational workhorse for Bayesian inverse problems. However, MCMC struggles in high-dimensional parameter spaces, since its iterates must sequentially explore the high-dimensional space. This struggle is compounded in physical applications when the nonlinear forward model is computationally expensive. One approach to accelerate MCMC is to reduce the dimension of the state space. Active subspaces are part of an emerging set of tools for subspace-based dimension reduction. An active subspace in a given inverse problem indicates a separation between a low-dimensional subspace that is informed by the data and its orthogonal complement that is constrained by the prior. With this information, one can run the sequential MCMC on the active variables while sampling independently according to the prior on the inactive variables. However, this approach to increase efficiency may introduce bias. We provide a bound on the Hellinger distance between the true posterior and its active subspace exploiting approximation. And we demonstrate the active subspace-accelerated MCMC on two computational examples: (i) a two-dimensional parameter space with a quadratic forward model and one-dimensional active subspace and (ii) a 100-dimensional parameter space with a PDE-based forward model and a two-dimensional active subspace.

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