“…Obviously, UQ and SA are highly relevant for a large number of high-impact and practically relevant tasks in science and technology. This includes fields like (computational) fluid dynamics [29] -which is one of the first fields in which UQ and SA became prominent-, combustion in rocket engines [18], climate modeling [28], materials science [20], tsunami and earthquake simulations [37,32], computational medicine [39,2], or, highly relevant at the time of the writing of this article, the mathematical modeling of epidemics, in particular the Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) [36,1,8], to name just a few. Any of these examples, and many more, could be used to make the case, but here, we will focus on one of the key physics problems in fusion research, namely how to quantify and predict turbulent transport in magnetic confinement experiments [6,14].…”