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System dynamics modeling with bayesian inference

Project description

Reno System Dynamics (reno-sd)

Code style: black PyPI version Conda version tests License Python versions

Reno is a tool for creating, visualizing, and analyzing system dynamics models in Python. It additionally has the ability to convert models to PyMC, allowing Bayesian inference on models with variables that include prior probability distributions.

Reno models are created by defining the equations for the various stocks, flows, and variables, and can then be simulated over time similar to something like Insight Maker, examples of which can be seen below and in the notebooks folder.

Currently, models only support discrete timesteps (technically implementing difference equations rather than true differential equations.)

Installation

Install from PyPI via:

pip install reno-sd

Install from conda-forge with:

conda install reno-sd

Example

A classic system dynamics example is the predator-prey population model, described by the Lotka-Volterra equations.

Implementing these in Reno would look something like:

import reno

m = reno.Model(name="m", steps=200, doc="Classic predator-prey interaction model example")

# make stocks to monitor the predator/prey populations over time
m.rabbits = reno.Stock(init=100.0)
m.foxes = reno.Stock(init=100.0)

# free variables that can quickly be changed to influence equilibrium
m.rabbit_growth_rate = reno.Variable(.1, doc="Alpha")
m.rabbit_death_rate = reno.Variable(.001, doc="Beta")
m.fox_death_rate = reno.Variable(.1, doc="Gamma")
m.fox_growth_rate = reno.Variable(.001, doc="Delta")

# flows that define how the stocks are influenced
m.rabbit_births = reno.Flow(m.rabbit_growth_rate * m.rabbits)
m.rabbit_deaths = reno.Flow(m.rabbit_death_rate * m.rabbits * m.foxes, max=m.rabbits)
m.fox_deaths = reno.Flow(m.fox_death_rate * m.foxes, max=m.foxes)
m.fox_births = reno.Flow(m.fox_growth_rate * m.rabbits * m.foxes)

# hook up inflows/outflows for stocks
m.rabbits += m.rabbit_births
m.rabbits -= m.rabbit_deaths

m.foxes += m.fox_births
m.foxes -= m.fox_deaths

The stock and flow diagram for this model (obtainable via m.graph()) looks like this: (green boxes are variables, white boxes are stocks, the labels between arrows are the flows)

stock_and_flow_diagram

Once a model is defined it can be called like a function, optionally configuring any free variables/initial values by passing them as arguments. You can print the output of m.get_docs() to see a docstring showing all possible arguments and what calling it should look like:

>>> print(m.get_docs())
Classic predator-prey interaction model example

Example:
	m(rabbit_growth_rate=0.1, rabbit_death_rate=0.001, fox_death_rate=0.1, fox_growth_rate=0.001, rabbits_0=100.0, foxes_0=100.0)

Args:
	rabbit_growth_rate: Alpha
	rabbit_death_rate: Beta
	fox_death_rate: Gamma
	fox_growth_rate: Delta
	rabbits_0
	foxes_0

To run and plot the population stocks:

m(fox_growth_rate=.002, rabbit_death_rate=.002, rabbits_0=120.0)
reno.plot_refs([(m.rabbits, m.foxes)])

basic_run

To use Bayesian inference, we define one or more metrics that can be observed (can have defined likelihoods.) For instance, we could determine what rabbit population growth rate would need to be for the fox population to oscillate somewhere between 20-120. Transpiling into PyMC and running the inference process is similar to the normal model call, but with .pymc(), specifying any free variables (at least one will need to be defined as a prior probability distribution), observations to target, and any sampling/pymc parameters:

m.minimum_foxes = reno.Metric(reno.series_min(m.foxes))
m.maximum_foxes = reno.Metric(reno.series_max(m.foxes))

trace = m.pymc(
    n=1000,
    fox_growth_rate=reno.Normal(.001, .0001),  # specify some variables as distributions to sample from
    rabbit_growth_rate=reno.Normal(.1, .01),   # specify some variables as distributions to sample from
    observations=[
        reno.Observation(m.minimum_foxes, 5, [20]),  # likelihood normally distributed around 20 with SD of 5
        reno.Observation(m.maximum_foxes, 5, [120]), # likelihood normally distributed around 120 with SD of 5
    ]
)

To see the shift in prior versus posterior distributions, we can plot the random variables and some of the relevant stocks using plot_trace_refs:

reno.plot_trace_refs(
    m,
    {"prior": trace.prior, "post": trace.posterior},
    ref_list=[m.minimum_foxes, m.maximum_foxes, m.fox_growth_rate, m.rabbit_growth_rate, m.foxes, m.rabbits],
    figsize=(8, 5),
)

bayes_run

showing that the rabbit_growth_rate needs to be around 0.07 in order for those observations to be met.

For a more in-depth introduction to reno, see the tub example in the ./notebooks folder.

Documentation

For the API reference as well as (eventually) the user guide, see https://ornl.github.io/reno/stable

Citation

To cite usage of Reno, please use the following bibtex:

@misc{doecode_166929,
    title = {Reno},
    author = {Martindale, Nathan and Stomps, Jordan and Phathanapirom, Urairisa B.},
    abstractNote = {Reno is a tool for creating, visualizing, and analyzing system dynamics models in Python. It additionally has the ability to convert models to PyMC, allowing Bayesian inference on models with variables that include prior probability distributions.},
    doi = {10.11578/dc.20251015.1},
    url = {https://doi.org/10.11578/dc.20251015.1},
    howpublished = {[Computer Software] \url{https://doi.org/10.11578/dc.20251015.1}},
    year = {2025},
    month = {oct}
}

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