Publication | Open Access
Direct Comparison between Bayesian and Frequentist Uncertainty Quantification for Nuclear Reactions
76
Citations
18
References
2019
Year
Bayesian StatisticEngineeringDirect ComparisonMuch Narrower UncertaintiesUncertain DataUncertain ReasoningUncertainty FormalismUncertainty ModelingBayesian InferenceUncertainty QuantificationBiostatisticsBayesian MethodsPublic HealthStatisticsNuclear ReactionsProbability TheoryBayesian StatisticsNarrower UncertaintiesFrequentist Uncertainty QuantificationStatistical Inference
Until recently, uncertainty quantification in low energy nuclear theory was typically performed using frequentist approaches. However in the last few years, the field has shifted toward Bayesian statistics for evaluating confidence intervals. Although there are statistical arguments to prefer the Bayesian approach, no direct comparison is available. In this work, we compare, directly and systematically, the frequentist and Bayesian approaches to quantifying uncertainties in direct nuclear reactions. Starting from identical initial assumptions, we determine confidence intervals associated with the elastic and the transfer process for both methods, which are evaluated against data via a comparison of the empirical coverage probabilities. Expectedly, the frequentist approach is not as flexible as the Bayesian approach in exploring parameter space and often ends up in a different minimum. We also show that the two methods produce significantly different correlations. In the end, the frequentist approach produces significantly narrower uncertainties on the considered observables than the Bayesian. Our study demonstrates that the uncertainties on the reaction observables considered here within the Bayesian approach represent reality more accurately than the much narrower uncertainties obtained using the standard frequentist approach.
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