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Compartmental OED

From mintOC
Compartmental OED
State dimension: 1
Differential states: 12
Discrete control functions: 1


The Compartmental OED problem looks for an optimal measurement strategy to determine three parameters in a one-dimensional ODE model, where we can directly measure the single state. The following description is taken from [1].

Here we consider the open one-compartment model with first-order absorption input fitted by Button (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Texas A&M University, 1979) to the results of an experiment in which six horses each received 15 mg/kg of theophylline as aminophylline by intragastric administration.

The optimal integer control functions shows bang bang behavior.

Mathematical formulation

For the three-dimensional parameter p=(θ1,θ2,θ3) the original initial value problem is given by y˙(t)=f(t,p)=θ3(θ1exp(θ1t)+θ2exp(θ2t)),y(0)=0.

We assume both x0 and tf to be fixed and are only interested in when to measure, with an upper bound M on the measuring time. We can measure the state directly, i.e. h(x(t))=x(t).

Now we formulate the OED problem:

miny,G,F,z,wtrace(F1(tf))subject toy˙(t)=f(t,p)G˙(t)=fp(y(t),p)F˙(t)=w(t)(hy(y(t))G(t))T(hy(y(t))G(t))z˙(t)=w(t),y(0)=y0G(0)=0F(0)=0,z(0)=0w(t)𝒲z(tf)M

Parameters

These fixed values are used within the model:

y0=0;tf=40;𝒲=[0,1];M=5;p=(0.05884,4.298,21.80)

Reference Solutions

Here is one local solution to the above control problem.

References

[1] Optimum Experimental Designs for Properties of a Compartmental Model, A. Atkinson, K. Chaloner, A. Herzberg, J. Juritz, https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/2532547.pdf