Abstract

This article proposes a sampling technique that delivers robust designs, that is, point sets selected from a design domain in the shape of a unit hypercube. The designs are guaranteed to provide a statistically uniform point distribution, meaning that every location has the same probability of being selected. Moreover, the designs are sample uniform, meaning that each individual design has its points spread evenly throughout the domain. The sample uniformity (often measured via a discrepancy criterion) is achieved using distance-based criteria ( or Maximin), that is, criteria normally used in space-filling designs. We show that the standard intersite metrics employed in distance-based criteria (Maximin and (phi)) do not deliver statistically uniform designs. Similarly, designs optimized via centered L2 discrepancy or support points are also not statistically uniform. When these designs (after optimization based on intersite distances) are used for Monte Carlo type of integration, their statistical nonuniformity is a serious problem as it may lead to a systematic bias. This article proposes using a periodic metric to guarantee the statistical uniformity of the family of distance-based designs. The presented designs used as benchmarks in the article are only taken from the class of Latin hypercube designs, which forces univariate projections to be uniform and improves accuracy in Monte Carlo integration of some functions. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.

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