Methoden vergelijken
Bekijk de geselecteerde methoden naast elkaar; rijen die verschillen zijn gemarkeerd.
| Discrete-Event Simulation (DES)× | Stochastische optimalisatie× | |
|---|---|---|
| Vakgebied≠ | Simulatie | Optimalisatie |
| Familie | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Jaar van ontstaan≠ | 1960s (formalized); modern computational form from 1970s onward | 1951 (SGD); 2014 (Adam) |
| Grondlegger≠ | Banks, Carson, Nelson & Nicol (textbook lineage); foundational work by Tocher & Conway (1960s) | — |
| Type≠ | Stochastic process simulation | Gradient-based iterative optimization |
| Oorspronkelijke bron≠ | Banks, J., Carson, J.S., Nelson, B.L. & Nicol, D.M. (2010). Discrete-Event System Simulation (5th ed.). Pearson. ISBN: 978-0136062127 | Robbins, H. & Monro, S. (1951). A Stochastic Approximation Method. Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 22(3), 400-407. DOI ↗ |
| Aliassen≠ | DES, event-driven simulation, Ayrık Olay Simülasyonu (DES) | Stokastik Optimizasyon (SGD & Varyantları), stochastic gradient descent, SGD, Adam |
| Verwant≠ | 4 | 3 |
| Samenvatting≠ | Discrete-Event Simulation (DES) is a computational modeling paradigm in which the state of a system changes only at a countable sequence of points in time — the events. Between events nothing changes, so the simulation clock jumps directly from one event to the next. Formalized through the foundational textbooks of Banks, Carson, Nelson and Nicol and of Law in the 1960s–2000s, DES has become the standard tool for analyzing queuing systems, healthcare patient flows, manufacturing lines, and logistics networks where entities move through resources over time. | Stochastic optimization is a family of iterative methods that minimize an objective function by computing gradients on randomly sampled subsets of data — mini-batches — rather than on the entire dataset at once. Pioneered by Robbins and Monro in 1951 as stochastic approximation, the approach became the standard engine for training large-scale machine-learning models through variants such as SGD with momentum, AdaGrad, RMSProp, and Adam. |
| ScholarGateGegevensset ↗ |
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