12,154 research outputs found
Spatial-temporal prediction of air quality based on recurrent neural networks
To predict air quality (PM2.5 concentrations, et al), many parametric regression models have been developed, while deep learning algorithms are used less often. And few of them takes the air pollution emission or spatial information into consideration or predict them in hour scale. In this paper, we proposed a spatial-temporal GRU-based prediction framework incorporating ground pollution monitoring (GPM), factory emissions (FE), surface meteorology monitoring (SMM) variables to predict hourly PM2.5 concentrations. The dataset for empirical experiments was built based on air quality monitoring in Shenyang, China. Experimental results indicate that our method enables more accurate predictions than all baseline models and by applying the convolutional processing to the GPM and FE variables notable improvement can be achieved in prediction accuracy
Air Quality Prediction in Smart Cities Using Machine Learning Technologies Based on Sensor Data: A Review
The influence of machine learning technologies is rapidly increasing and penetrating almost in every field, and air pollution prediction is not being excluded from those fields. This paper covers the revision of the studies related to air pollution prediction using machine learning algorithms based on sensor data in the context of smart cities. Using the most popular databases and executing the corresponding filtration, the most relevant papers were selected. After thorough reviewing those papers, the main features were extracted, which served as a base to link and compare them to each other. As a result, we can conclude that: (1) instead of using simple machine learning techniques, currently, the authors apply advanced and sophisticated techniques, (2) China was the leading country in terms of a case study, (3) Particulate matter with diameter equal to 2.5 micrometers was the main prediction target, (4) in 41% of the publications the authors carried out the prediction for the next day, (5) 66% of the studies used data had an hourly rate, (6) 49% of the papers used open data and since 2016 it had a tendency to increase, and (7) for efficient air quality prediction it is important to consider the external factors such as weather conditions, spatial characteristics, and temporal features
Bridging the Gap Between Training and Inference for Spatio-Temporal Forecasting
Spatio-temporal sequence forecasting is one of the fundamental tasks in
spatio-temporal data mining. It facilitates many real world applications such
as precipitation nowcasting, citywide crowd flow prediction and air pollution
forecasting. Recently, a few Seq2Seq based approaches have been proposed, but
one of the drawbacks of Seq2Seq models is that, small errors can accumulate
quickly along the generated sequence at the inference stage due to the
different distributions of training and inference phase. That is because
Seq2Seq models minimise single step errors only during training, however the
entire sequence has to be generated during the inference phase which generates
a discrepancy between training and inference. In this work, we propose a novel
curriculum learning based strategy named Temporal Progressive Growing Sampling
to effectively bridge the gap between training and inference for
spatio-temporal sequence forecasting, by transforming the training process from
a fully-supervised manner which utilises all available previous ground-truth
values to a less-supervised manner which replaces some of the ground-truth
context with generated predictions. To do that we sample the target sequence
from midway outputs from intermediate models trained with bigger timescales
through a carefully designed decaying strategy. Experimental results
demonstrate that our proposed method better models long term dependencies and
outperforms baseline approaches on two competitive datasets.Comment: ECAI 2020 Accepted, preprin
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