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Design of Experiments Guide > Space-Filling Designs > Overview of Space-Filling Designs
Publication date: 05/05/2023

Overview of Space-Filling Designs

Space-filling designs are useful for modeling systems that are deterministic or near-deterministic. Space filling designs include sphere packing Latin hypercube, uniform, minimum potential, maximum entropy, Gaussian process, and fast flexible designs.

One example of a deterministic system is a computer simulation. Such simulations can be very complex involving many variables with complicated interrelationships. A goal of designed experiments on these systems is to find a simpler empirical model that adequately predicts the behavior of the system over limited ranges of the factors.

In experiments on systems where there is substantial random noise, the goal is to minimize the variance of prediction. In experiments on deterministic systems, there is no variance but there is bias. Bias is the difference between the approximation model and the true mathematical function. The goal of space-filling designs is to bound the bias.

One approach to bound the bias is to spread the design points out as far from each other as possible while staying inside the experimental boundaries. The other approach is to space the points out evenly over the region of interest.

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