TY - JOUR
T1 - Mean-performance of sharp restart I
T2 - Statistical roadmap
AU - Eliazar, Iddo
AU - Reuveni, Shlomi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 IOP Publishing Ltd.
PY - 2020/10/9
Y1 - 2020/10/9
N2 - Restart is a general framework, of prime importance and wide applicability, for expediting first-passage times and completion times of general stochastic processes. Restart protocols can use either deterministic or stochastic timers. Restart protocols with deterministic timers - 'sharp restart' - assume a principal role: if there exists a restart protocol that improves mean-performance, then there exists a sharp-restart protocol that performs as good or better. This paper, the first of a duo, presents a comprehensive mean-performance analysis of sharp restart. Using statistical methods, the analysis establishes universal criteria that determine when sharp restart improves or worsens mean-performance, i.e., decreases or increases mean first-passage/completion times. These criteria are akin to those recently discovered for the most widely applied restart protocols - 'exponential restart' - which use exponentially-distributed timers. However, while the exponential-restart criteria cover only the case of slow timers, the sharp-restart criteria established here further cover the cases of fast, critical, and general timers; moreover, the latter criteria address the very existence of timers with which sharp restart improves or worsens mean-performance. Using the slow-timers criteria, we discover a general scenario for which: sharp restart improves mean-performance, whereas exponential restart worsens mean-performance. The potency of the novel results presented here is demonstrated by examples, and by the results' application to canonical diffusion processes.
AB - Restart is a general framework, of prime importance and wide applicability, for expediting first-passage times and completion times of general stochastic processes. Restart protocols can use either deterministic or stochastic timers. Restart protocols with deterministic timers - 'sharp restart' - assume a principal role: if there exists a restart protocol that improves mean-performance, then there exists a sharp-restart protocol that performs as good or better. This paper, the first of a duo, presents a comprehensive mean-performance analysis of sharp restart. Using statistical methods, the analysis establishes universal criteria that determine when sharp restart improves or worsens mean-performance, i.e., decreases or increases mean first-passage/completion times. These criteria are akin to those recently discovered for the most widely applied restart protocols - 'exponential restart' - which use exponentially-distributed timers. However, while the exponential-restart criteria cover only the case of slow timers, the sharp-restart criteria established here further cover the cases of fast, critical, and general timers; moreover, the latter criteria address the very existence of timers with which sharp restart improves or worsens mean-performance. Using the slow-timers criteria, we discover a general scenario for which: sharp restart improves mean-performance, whereas exponential restart worsens mean-performance. The potency of the novel results presented here is demonstrated by examples, and by the results' application to canonical diffusion processes.
KW - completion times
KW - first-passage times
KW - hazard rate
KW - resetting
KW - residual lifetime
KW - restart
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85096119919&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/1751-8121/abae8c
DO - 10.1088/1751-8121/abae8c
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AN - SCOPUS:85096119919
SN - 1751-8113
VL - 53
JO - Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical
JF - Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical
IS - 40
M1 - 405004
ER -