3 research outputs found

    The Performance of Binary Artificial Bee Colony (BABC) in Structure Selection of Polynomial NARX and NARMAX Models

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    This paper explores the capability of the Binary Artificial Bee Colony (BABC) algorithm for feature selection of Nonlinear Autoregressive Moving Average with Exogenous Inputs (NARMAX) model, and compares its implementation with the Binary Particle Swarm Optimization (BPSO) algorithm. A binarized modification of the BABC algorithm was used to perform structure selection of the NARMAX model on a Flexible Robot Arm (FRA) dataset. The solution quality and convergence was compared with the BPSO optimization algorithm. Fitting and validation tests were performed using the One-Step Ahead (OSA), correlation and histogram tests. BABC was able to outperform BPSO in terms of convergence consistency with equal solution quality. Additionally, it was discovered that BABC was less prone to converge to local minima while BPSO was able to converge faster. Results from this study showed that BABC was better-suited for structure selection in huge dataset and the convergence has been proven to be more consistent relative to BPSO

    Novel Approaches for Structural Health Monitoring

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    The thirty-plus years of progress in the field of structural health monitoring (SHM) have left a paramount impact on our everyday lives. Be it for the monitoring of fixed- and rotary-wing aircrafts, for the preservation of the cultural and architectural heritage, or for the predictive maintenance of long-span bridges or wind farms, SHM has shaped the framework of many engineering fields. Given the current state of quantitative and principled methodologies, it is nowadays possible to rapidly and consistently evaluate the structural safety of industrial machines, modern concrete buildings, historical masonry complexes, etc., to test their capability and to serve their intended purpose. However, old unsolved problematics as well as new challenges exist. Furthermore, unprecedented conditions, such as stricter safety requirements and ageing civil infrastructure, pose new challenges for confrontation. Therefore, this Special Issue gathers the main contributions of academics and practitioners in civil, aerospace, and mechanical engineering to provide a common ground for structural health monitoring in dealing with old and new aspects of this ever-growing research field
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