Several very different optimization problems are studied by using the fixed-temperature Monte Carlo dynamics and found to share many common features. The most surprising result is that the cost function of these optimization problems itself is a very good stochastic variable to describe the complicated Monte Carlo processes. A multidimensional problem can therefore be mapped into a one-dimensional diffusion problem. This problem is either solved by direct numerical simulation or by using the Fokker-Planck equations. Above certain temperatures, the first passage time distribution functions of the original Monte Carlo processes are reproduced. At low temperatures, the first passage time has a path dependence and the single-stochastic-variable description is no longer valid. This analysis also provides a simple method to characterize the energy landscapes.
As the usage of BIM increased in the construction industry, some construction owners started exploring the use of BIM for maintaining their facilities. Construction Operations Building Information Exchange (COBIE), a spreadsheet data format suggested in 2007 to manipulate building information, is considered as one of the solutions that would facilitate the process of transferring information from BIM to applications for facilities management. Several BIM and Computer Aided Facilities Management (CAFM) applications offer functions to export or import the COBIE data. To facilitate the process of generating the COBIE data out of Building Information Model, some add-in applications, such as COBIE Toolkit for Revit, also were developed. However, most of these applications handle a limited amount of COBIE data. Professionals using these add-in applications therefore sometimes end up spending a significant amount of time to add additional data manually to the COBIE data file. To automatically get a data-rich COBIE file, we developed a prototype application that extracts information from Revit, which is one of the BIM authoring tools, stores them in an external database, and then produces the COBIE file using information stored in the database. We applied our application to a pilot project and produced 8 COBIE worksheets automatically, which demonstrated a significant amount of time saving. This paper presents how our prototype application produces 8 COBIE data sets automatically. It also addresses our attempt to handle more COBIE data sets.
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