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AI Engineering Software Updated to Recommend Validation Tests

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Monolith, a developer of AI powered software for the engineering sector, has released Next Test Recommender (NTR) which makes active recommendations for validation tests during the development of nonlinear products in industrial, automotive and aerospace applications.

As the physics of complex products in these industries become more and more intractable to understand, engineers find themselves in a dilemma, either conducting excessive tests to cover all possible operating conditions or running insufficient tests that risk the omission of critical performance parameters. NTR, powered by the company’s proprietary active learning technology, aims to optimise this trade off by providing test engineers with active recommendations, in ranked order, of the most impactful new tests to carry-out for their next batch of tests, to maximise coverage and optimise time and cost.

We found that existing tools didn’t fit their safety needs, and did not allow test engineers to incorporate their domain expertise into the test plan or influence the AI recommender.

Dr Richard Ahlfeld, company CEO and founder, explains: “Throughout our development process, we worked alongside our customers to understand how they would use an AI recommender system as part of their test workflow.

“We wanted to understand why they had not yet adopted such tools despite the well-known potential of AI to more quickly explore high-dimensional design spaces.

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“We found that existing tools didn’t fit their safety needs, and did not allow test engineers to incorporate their domain expertise into the test plan or influence the AI recommender.

“Our R&D team has been working for months on this robust active learning technology that powers Next Test Recommender and we’re pleased with early results and feedback, with even better results expected as the technology matures.”

NTR works for any complex system for which engineers are trying to safely explore the design space, such as aero map analysis for race cars or flight safety envelope of planes where engineers are trying to find where gusts or eigenfrequencies cause issues.

Another growing area is in powertrain development, such as battery or fuel cell cooling system calibration. In the latter use case, an engineer trying to configure a fan to provide optimal cooling for all driving conditions had a test plan for this highly complex, intractable application that included running a series of 129 tests. When this test plan was inserted into NTR, it returned a ranked list of what tests should be carried out first.  

While available, open-source AI methods don’t allow an engineer to influence the test plan, a critically unique aspect of NTR is that it allows for human-in-the-loop inspection of the selected experiments, granting a domain expert user oversight of the system, combining their expertise and domain knowledge with the power of machine learning without any knowledge of AI or coding.

A recent Forrester Consulting study commissioned by Monolith, found that 71% of engineering leaders need to find ways to speed product development to stay competitive and the majority (67%) also feel pressure to adopt AI. Remarkably, those who have are more likely to achieve increased revenue, profitability and competitiveness for their employers.

By leveraging AI and machine learning in the verification and validation process of product development, especially for highly complex products with intractable physics, engineers can extract valuable insights, optimise designs, and identify crucial performance parameters accurately. The result is enhanced operational efficiency and streamlined testing procedures, ultimately speeding time to market and strengthening competitiveness.

Monolith is a no-code AI software platform built for domain experts to leverage the power of machine learning with their existing, valuable testing datasets to speed product development. Self-learning models analyse and learn from test data to understand the impact of test conditions and predict a new test’s outcome ahead of time. The ability to attain active next test recommendations will further enable engineering teams to reduce costly, time-intensive prototype testing programmes and develop higher-quality products in half the time.

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Staff Reporter

FMIndustry.com covers the latest news, trends and opinion from the facilities management (FM) and corporate real estate (CRE) sectors. The FM market is currently estimated to be worth USD 1 trillion annually and is projected to grow at a compounded annualised rate of approximately 5% between now and 2026.

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  • Final Logo

    FMIndustry.com covers the latest news, trends and opinion from the facilities management (FM) and corporate real estate (CRE) sectors. The FM market is currently estimated to be worth USD 1 trillion annually and is projected to grow at a compounded annualised rate of approximately 5% between now and 2026.

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