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Parallel Monte Carlo applications require the pseudorandom numbers used on each processor to be independent in a probabilistic sense. The TestU01 software package is the standard testing suite for detecting stream dependence and other properties that make certain pseudorandom generators ineffective in parallel (as well as serial) settings. TestU01 employs

Parallel Monte Carlo applications require the pseudorandom numbers used on each processor to be independent in a probabilistic sense. The TestU01 software package is the standard testing suite for detecting stream dependence and other properties that make certain pseudorandom generators ineffective in parallel (as well as serial) settings. TestU01 employs two basic schemes for testing parallel generated streams. The first applies serial tests to the individual streams and then tests the resulting P-values for uniformity. The second turns all the parallel generated streams into one long vector and then applies serial tests to the resulting concatenated stream. Various forms of stream dependence can be missed by each approach because neither one fully addresses the multivariate nature of the accumulated data when generators are run in parallel. This dissertation identifies these potential faults in the parallel testing methodologies of TestU01 and investigates two different methods to better detect inter-stream dependencies: correlation motivated multivariate tests and vector time series based tests. These methods have been implemented in an extension to TestU01 built in C++ and the unique aspects of this extension are discussed. A variety of different generation scenarios are then examined using the TestU01 suite in concert with the extension. This enhanced software package is found to better detect certain forms of inter-stream dependencies than the original TestU01 suites of tests.
ContributorsIsmay, Chester (Author) / Eubank, Randall (Thesis advisor) / Young, Dennis (Committee member) / Kao, Ming-Hung (Committee member) / Lanchier, Nicolas (Committee member) / Reiser, Mark R. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description

This brief article, written for a symposium on "Collaboration and the Colorado River," evaluates the U.S. Department of the Interior's Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program ("AMP"). The AMP has been advanced as a pioneering collaborative and adaptive approach for both decreasing scientific uncertainty in support of regulatory decision-making and

This brief article, written for a symposium on "Collaboration and the Colorado River," evaluates the U.S. Department of the Interior's Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program ("AMP"). The AMP has been advanced as a pioneering collaborative and adaptive approach for both decreasing scientific uncertainty in support of regulatory decision-making and helping manage contentious resource disputes -- in this case, the increasingly thorny conflict over the Colorado River's finite natural resources. Though encouraging in some respects, the AMP serves as a valuable illustration of the flaws of existing regulatory processes purporting to incorporate collaboration and regulatory adaptation into the decision-making process. Born in the shadow of the law and improvised with too little thought as to its structure, the AMP demonstrates the need to attend to the design of the regulatory process and integrate mechanisms that compel systematic program evaluation and adaptation. As such, the AMP provides vital information on how future collaborative experiments might be modified to enhance their prospects of success.

ContributorsCamacho, Alejandro E. (Author)
Created2008-09-19
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Description

With a focus on resources of the Colorado River ecosystem below Glen Canyon Dam, the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program has included a variety of experimental policy tests, ranging from manipulation of water releases from the dam to removal of non-native fish within Grand Canyon National Park. None of

With a focus on resources of the Colorado River ecosystem below Glen Canyon Dam, the Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program has included a variety of experimental policy tests, ranging from manipulation of water releases from the dam to removal of non-native fish within Grand Canyon National Park. None of these field-scale experiments has yet produced unambiguous results in terms of management prescriptions. But there has been adaptive learning, mostly from unanticipated or surprising resource responses relative to predictions from ecosystem modeling. Surprise learning opportunities may often be viewed with dismay by some stakeholders who might not be clear about the purpose of science and modeling in adaptive management. However, the experimental results from the Glen Canyon Dam program actually represent scientific successes in terms of revealing new opportunities for developing better river management policies. A new long-term experimental management planning process for Glen Canyon Dam operations, started in 2011 by the U.S. Department of the Interior, provides an opportunity to refocus management objectives, identify and evaluate key uncertainties about the influence of dam releases, and refine monitoring for learning over the next several decades. Adaptive learning since 1995 is critical input to this long-term planning effort. Embracing uncertainty and surprise outcomes revealed by monitoring and ecosystem modeling will likely continue the advancement of resource objectives below the dam, and may also promote efficient learning in other complex programs.

ContributorsMelis, Theodore S. (Author) / Walters, Carl (Author) / Korman, Josh (Author)
Created2015
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Description

The Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program (AMP) has been identified as a model for natural resource management. We challenge that assertion, citing the lack of progress toward a long-term management plan for the dam, sustained extra-programmatic conflict, and a downriver ecology that is still in jeopardy, despite over ten

The Glen Canyon Dam Adaptive Management Program (AMP) has been identified as a model for natural resource management. We challenge that assertion, citing the lack of progress toward a long-term management plan for the dam, sustained extra-programmatic conflict, and a downriver ecology that is still in jeopardy, despite over ten years of meetings and an expensive research program. We have examined the primary and secondary sources available on the AMP’s design and operation in light of best practices identified in the literature on adaptive management and collaborative decision-making. We have identified six shortcomings: (1) an inadequate approach to identifying stakeholders; (2) a failure to provide clear goals and involve stakeholders in establishing the operating procedures that guide the collaborative process; (3) inappropriate use of professional neutrals and a failure to cultivate consensus; (4) a failure to establish and follow clear joint fact-finding procedures; (5) a failure to produce functional written agreements; and (6) a failure to manage the AMP adaptively and cultivate long-term problem-solving capacity.

Adaptive management can be an effective approach for addressing complex ecosystem-related processes like the operation of the Glen Canyon Dam, particularly in the face of substantial complexity, uncertainty, and political contentiousness. However, the Glen Canyon Dam AMP shows that a stated commitment to collaboration and adaptive management is insufficient. Effective management of natural resources can only be realized through careful attention to the collaborative design and implementation of appropriate problem-solving and adaptive-management procedures. It also requires the development of an appropriate organizational infrastructure that promotes stakeholder dialogue and agency learning. Though the experimental Glen Canyon Dam AMP is far from a success of collaborative adaptive management, the lessons from its shortcomings can foster more effective collaborative adaptive management in the future by Congress, federal agencies, and local and state authorities.

ContributorsSusskind, Lawrence (Author) / Camacho, Alejandro E. (Author) / Schenk, Todd (Author)
Created2010-03-23
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DescriptionUnderstanding the evolution of opinions is a delicate task as the dynamics of how one changes their opinion based on their interactions with others are unclear.
ContributorsWeber, Dylan (Author) / Motsch, Sebastien (Thesis advisor) / Lanchier, Nicolas (Committee member) / Platte, Rodrigo (Committee member) / Armbruster, Dieter (Committee member) / Fricks, John (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
The increase in the photovoltaic (PV) generation on distribution grids may cause reverse power flows and challenges such as service voltage violations and transformer overloading. To resolve these issues, utilities need situational awareness, e.g., PV-feeder mapping to identify the potential back-feeding feeders and meter-transformer mapping for transformer overloading. As circuit

The increase in the photovoltaic (PV) generation on distribution grids may cause reverse power flows and challenges such as service voltage violations and transformer overloading. To resolve these issues, utilities need situational awareness, e.g., PV-feeder mapping to identify the potential back-feeding feeders and meter-transformer mapping for transformer overloading. As circuit schematics are outdated, this work relies on data. In cases where the advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) data is unavailable, e.g., analog meters or bandwidth limitation, the dissertation proposes to use feeder measurements from utilities and solar panel measurements from solar companies to identify PV-feeder mapping. Several sequentially improved methods based on quantitative association rule mining (QARM) are proposed, where a lower bound for performance guarantee is also provided. However, binning data in QARM leads to information loss. So, bands are designed to replace bins for increased robustness. For cases where AMI data is available but solar PV data is unavailable, the AMI voltage data and location data are used for situational awareness, i.e., meter-transformer mapping, to resolve voltage violation and transformer overloading. A density-based clustering method is proposed that leverages AMI voltage data and geographical information to efficiently segment utility meters such that the segments comprise meters of few transformers only. Although it is helpful for utilities, it may not directly recover the meter-transformer connectivity, which requires transformer-wise segmentation. The proposed density-based method and other past methods ignore two common scenarios, e.g., having large distance between a meter and parent transformer or high similarity of a meter's consumption pattern to a non-parent transformer's meters. However, going from meter-meter can lead to the parent transformer group meters due to the usual observation that the similarity of intra-cluster meter voltages is usually stronger than the similarity of inter-cluster meter voltages. Therefore, performance guarantee is provided via spectral embedding with voltage data under reasonable assumption. Moreover, the assumption is partially relaxed using location data. It will benefit the utility in many ways, e.g., mitigating voltage violations by transformer tap settings and identifying overloaded transformers.
ContributorsSaleem, Muhammad Bilal (Author) / Weng, Yang (Thesis advisor) / Lanchier, Nicolas (Committee member) / Wu, Meng (Committee member) / Cook, Elizabeth (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
This dissertation consists of three papers about opinion dynamics. The first paper is in collaboration with Prof. Lanchier while the other two papers are individual works. Two models are introduced and studied analytically: the Deffuant model and the Hegselmann-Krause~(HK) model. The main difference between the two models is that the

This dissertation consists of three papers about opinion dynamics. The first paper is in collaboration with Prof. Lanchier while the other two papers are individual works. Two models are introduced and studied analytically: the Deffuant model and the Hegselmann-Krause~(HK) model. The main difference between the two models is that the Deffuant dynamics consists of pairwise interactions whereas the HK dynamics consists of group interactions. Translated into graph, each vertex stands for an agent in both models. In the Deffuant model, two graphs are combined: the social graph and the opinion graph. The social graph is assumed to be a general finite connected graph where each edge is interpreted as a social link, such as a friendship relationship, between two agents. At each time step, two social neighbors are randomly selected and interact if and only if their opinion distance does not exceed some confidence threshold, which results in the neighbors' opinions getting closer to each other. The main result about the Deffuant model is the derivation of a positive lower bound for the probability of consensus that is independent of the size and topology of the social graph but depends on the confidence threshold, the choice of the opinion space and the initial distribution. For the HK model, agent~$i$ updates its opinion~$x_i$ by taking the average opinion of its neighbors, defined as the set of agents with opinion at most~$\epsilon$ apart from~$x_i$. Here,~$\epsilon > 0$ is a confidence threshold. There are two types of HK models: the synchronous and the asynchronous HK models. In the former, all the agents update their opinion simultaneously at each time step, whereas in the latter, only one agent is selected uniformly at random to update its opinion at each time step. The mixed model is a variant of the HK model in which each agent can choose its degree of stubbornness and mix its opinion with the average opinion of its neighbors. The main results of this dissertation about HK models show conditions under which the asymptotic stability holds or a consensus can be achieved, and give a positive lower bound for the probability of consensus and, in the one-dimensional case, an upper bound for the probability of consensus. I demonstrate the bounds for the probability of consensus on a unit cube and a unit interval.
ContributorsLi, Hsin-Lun (Author) / Lanchier, Nicolas (Thesis advisor) / Camacho, Erika (Committee member) / Czygrinow, Andrzej (Committee member) / Fishel, Susanna (Committee member) / Motsch, Sebastien (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021