1,255 research outputs found

    NILM techniques for intelligent home energy management and ambient assisted living: a review

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    The ongoing deployment of smart meters and different commercial devices has made electricity disaggregation feasible in buildings and households, based on a single measure of the current and, sometimes, of the voltage. Energy disaggregation is intended to separate the total power consumption into specific appliance loads, which can be achieved by applying Non-Intrusive Load Monitoring (NILM) techniques with a minimum invasion of privacy. NILM techniques are becoming more and more widespread in recent years, as a consequence of the interest companies and consumers have in efficient energy consumption and management. This work presents a detailed review of NILM methods, focusing particularly on recent proposals and their applications, particularly in the areas of Home Energy Management Systems (HEMS) and Ambient Assisted Living (AAL), where the ability to determine the on/off status of certain devices can provide key information for making further decisions. As well as complementing previous reviews on the NILM field and providing a discussion of the applications of NILM in HEMS and AAL, this paper provides guidelines for future research in these topics.Agência financiadora: Programa Operacional Portugal 2020 and Programa Operacional Regional do Algarve 01/SAICT/2018/39578 Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia through IDMEC, under LAETA: SFRH/BSAB/142998/2018 SFRH/BSAB/142997/2018 UID/EMS/50022/2019 Junta de Comunidades de Castilla-La-Mancha, Spain: SBPLY/17/180501/000392 Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness (SOC-PLC project): TEC2015-64835-C3-2-R MINECO/FEDERinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Incorporating appliance usage patterns for non-intrusive load monitoring and load forecasting

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    This paper proposes a novel Non-Intrusive Load Monitoring (NILM) method which incorporates appliance usage patterns (AUPs) to improve performance of active load identi- fication and forecasting. In the first stage, the AUPs of a given residence were learnt using a spectral decomposition based standard NILM algorithm. Then, learnt AUPs were utilized to bias the priori probabilities of the appliances through a specifically constructed fuzzy system. The AUPs contain likelihood measures for each appliance to be active at the present instant based on the recent activity/inactivity of appliances and the time of day. Hence, the priori probabilities determined through the AUPs increase the active load identification accuracy of the NILM algorithm. The proposed method was successfully tested for two standard databases containing real household measurements in USA and Germany. The proposed method demonstrates an improvement in active load estimation when applied to the aforementioned databases as the proposed method augments the smart meter readings with the behavioral trends obtained from AUPs. Furthermore, a residential power consumption forecasting mechanism, which can predict the total active power demand of an aggregated set of houses, five minutes ahead of real time, was successfully formulated and implemented utilizing the proposed AUP based technique

    Robust energy disaggregation using appliance-specific temporal contextual information

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    An extension of the baseline non-intrusive load monitoring approach for energy disaggregation using temporal contextual information is presented in this paper. In detail, the proposed approach uses a two-stage disaggregation methodology with appliance-specific temporal contextual information in order to capture time-varying power consumption patterns in low-frequency datasets. The proposed methodology was evaluated using datasets of different sampling frequency, number and type of appliances. When employing appliance-specific temporal contextual information, an improvement of 1.5% up to 7.3% was observed. With the two-stage disaggregation architecture and using appliance-specific temporal contextual information, the overall energy disaggregation accuracy was further improved across all evaluated datasets with the maximum observed improvement, in terms of absolute increase of accuracy, being equal to 6.8%, thus resulting in a maximum total energy disaggregation accuracy improvement equal to 10.0%.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio

    Non-Intrusive Load Monitoring (NILM) using Deep Neural Networks: A Review

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    Demand-side management now encompasses more residential loads. To efficiently apply demand response strategies, it's essential to periodically observe the contribution of various domestic appliances to total energy consumption. Non-intrusive load monitoring (NILM), also known as load disaggregation, is a method for decomposing the total energy consumption profile into individual appliance load profiles within the household. It has multiple applications in demand-side management, energy consumption monitoring, and analysis. Various methods, including machine learning and deep learning, have been used to implement and improve NILM algorithms. This paper reviews some recent NILM methods based on deep learning and introduces the most accurate methods for residential loads. It summarizes public databases for NILM evaluation and compares methods using standard performance metrics

    Machine learning techniques for sensor-based household activity recognition and forecasting

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    Thanks to the recent development of cheap and unobtrusive smart-home sensors, ambient assisted living tools promise to offer innovative solutions to support the users in carrying out their everyday activities in a smoother and more sustainable way. To be effective, these solutions need to constantly monitor and forecast the activities of daily living carried out by the inhabitants. The Machine Learning field has seen significant advancements in the development of new techniques, especially regarding deep learning algorithms. Such techniques can be successfully applied to household activity signal data to benefit the user in several applications. This thesis therefore aims to produce a contribution that artificial intelligence can make in the field of activity recognition and energy consumption. The effective recognition of common actions or the use of high-consumption appliances would lead to user profiling, thus enabling the optimisation of energy consumption in favour of the user himself or the energy community in general. Avoiding wasting electricity and optimising its consumption is one of the main objectives of the community. This work is therefore intended as a forerunner for future studies that will allow, through the results in this thesis, the creation of increasingly intelligent systems capable of making the best use of the user's resources for everyday life actions. Namely, this thesis focuses on signals from sensors installed in a house: data from position sensors, door sensors, smartphones or smart meters, and investigates the use of advanced machine learning algorithms to recognize and forecast inhabitant activities, including the use of appliances and the power consumption. The thesis is structured into four main chapters, each of which represents a contribution regarding Machine Learning or Deep Learning techniques for addressing challenges related to the aforementioned data from different sources. The first contribution highlights the importance of exploiting dimensionality reduction techniques that can simplify a Machine Learning model and increase its efficiency by identifying and retaining only the most informative and predictive features for activity recognition. In more detail, it is presented an extensive experimental study involving several feature selection algorithms and multiple Human Activity Recognition benchmarks containing mobile sensor data. In the second contribution, we propose a machine learning approach to forecast future energy consumption considering not only past consumption data, but also context data such as inhabitants’ actions and activities, use of household appliances, interaction with furniture and doors, and environmental data. We performed an experimental evaluation with real-world data acquired in an instrumented environment from a large user group. Finally, the last two contributions address the Non-Intrusive-Load-Monitoring problem. In one case, the aim is to identify the operating state (on/off) and the precise energy consumption of individual electrical loads, considering only the aggregate consumption of these loads as input. We use a Deep Learning method to disaggregate the low-frequency energy signal generated directly by the new generation smart meters being deployed in Italy, without the need for additional specific hardware. In the other case, driven by the need to build intelligent non-intrusive algorithms for disaggregating electrical signals, the work aims to recognize which appliance is activated by analyzing energy measurements and classifying appliances through Machine Learning techniques. Namely, we present a new way of approaching the problem by unifying Single Label (single active appliance recognition) and Multi Label (multiple active appliance recognition) learning paradigms. This combined approach, supplemented with an event detector, which suggests the instants of activation, would allow the development of an end-to-end NILM approach
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