Simulation Intelligence: Towards a New Generation of Scientific Methods
Alexander Lavin, David Krakauer, Hector Zenil, Justin Gottschlich, Tim, Mattson, Johann Brehmer, Anima Anandkumar, Sanjay Choudry, Kamil Rocki,, At{\i}l{\i}m G\"une\c{s} Baydin, Carina Prunkl, Brooks Paige, Olexandr, Isayev, Erik Peterson, Peter L. McMahon, Jakob Macke

TL;DR
This paper proposes a comprehensive framework called simulation intelligence (SI), integrating nine essential computational motifs to revolutionize scientific methods through advanced algorithms and AI integration.
Contribution
It introduces the nine motifs of simulation intelligence and their layered SI-stack, outlining a roadmap for merging scientific computing, simulation, and AI to accelerate discovery.
Findings
Detailed the nine motifs and their interconnections.
Presented examples of current methods and challenges.
Outlined strategies for advancing and integrating motifs.
Abstract
The original "Seven Motifs" set forth a roadmap of essential methods for the field of scientific computing, where a motif is an algorithmic method that captures a pattern of computation and data movement. We present the "Nine Motifs of Simulation Intelligence", a roadmap for the development and integration of the essential algorithms necessary for a merger of scientific computing, scientific simulation, and artificial intelligence. We call this merger simulation intelligence (SI), for short. We argue the motifs of simulation intelligence are interconnected and interdependent, much like the components within the layers of an operating system. Using this metaphor, we explore the nature of each layer of the simulation intelligence operating system stack (SI-stack) and the motifs therein: (1) Multi-physics and multi-scale modeling; (2) Surrogate modeling and emulation; (3) Simulation-based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsScientific Computing and Data Management · Simulation Techniques and Applications
