scholarly journals Highly Comparative Feature-Based Time-Series Classification

2014 ◽  
Vol 26 (12) ◽  
pp. 3026-3037 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ben D. Fulcher ◽  
Nick S. Jones
Processes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 790
Author(s):  
Gilseung Ahn ◽  
Hwanchul Lee ◽  
Jisu Park ◽  
Sun Hur

Diagnosis of bearing faults is crucial in various industries. Time series classification (TSC) assigns each time series to one of a set of pre-defined classes, such as normal and fault, and has been regarded as an appropriate approach for bearing fault diagnosis. Considering late and inaccurate fault diagnosis may have a significant impact on maintenance costs, it is important to classify bearing signals as early and accurately as possible. TSC, however, has a major limitation, which is that a time series cannot be classified until the entire series is collected, implying that a fault cannot be diagnosed using TSC in advance. Therefore, it is important to classify a partially collected time series for early time series classification (ESTC), which is a TSC that considers both accuracy and earliness. Feature-based TSCs can handle this, but the problem is to determine whether a partially collected time series is enough for a decision that is still unsolved. Motivated by this, we propose an indicator of data sufficiency to determine whether a feature-based fault detection classifier can start classifying partially collected signals in order to diagnose bearing faults as early and accurately as possible. The indicator is trained based on the cosine similarity between signals that were collected fully and partially as input to the classifier. In addition, a parameter setting method for efficiently training the indicator is also proposed. The results of experiments using four benchmark datasets verified that the proposed indicator increased both accuracy and earliness compared with the previous time series classification method and general time series classification.


Author(s):  
Fabíola S. F. Pereira ◽  
André C. P. L. F. Carvalho ◽  
Rafael Assis ◽  
Maxley Costa ◽  
Elaine R. Faria ◽  
...  

Entropy ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (8) ◽  
pp. 1059
Author(s):  
Shaocong Wu ◽  
Xiaolong Wang ◽  
Mengxia Liang ◽  
Dingming Wu

Time series classification (TSC) is a significant problem in data mining with several applications in different domains. Mining different distinguishing features is the primary method. One promising method is algorithms based on the morphological structure of time series, which are interpretable and accurate. However, existing structural feature-based algorithms, such as time series forest (TSF) and shapelet traverse, all features through many random combinations, which means that a lot of training time and computing resources are required to filter meaningless features, important distinguishing information will be ignored. To overcome this problem, in this paper, we propose a perceptual features-based framework for TSC. We are inspired by how humans observe time series and realize that there are usually only a few essential points that need to be remembered for a time series. Although the complex time series has a lot of details, a small number of data points is enough to describe the shape of the entire sample. First, we use the improved perceptually important points (PIPs) to extract key points and use them as the basis for time series segmentation to obtain a combination of interval-level and point-level features. Secondly, we propose a framework to explore the effects of perceptual structural features combined with decision trees (DT), random forests (RF), and gradient boosting decision trees (GBDT) on TSC. The experimental results on the UCR datasets show that our work has achieved leading accuracy, which is instructive for follow-up research.


2021 ◽  
pp. 107694
Author(s):  
Roghaye Khasha ◽  
Mohammad Mehdi Sepehri ◽  
Nasrin Taherkhani

Author(s):  
Stefano Mauceri ◽  
James Sweeney ◽  
Miguel Nicolau ◽  
James McDermott

AbstractWhen dealing with a new time series classification problem, modellers do not know in advance which features could enable the best classification performance. We propose an evolutionary algorithm based on grammatical evolution to attain a data-driven feature-based representation of time series with minimal human intervention. The proposed algorithm can select both the features to extract and the sub-sequences from which to extract them. These choices not only impact classification performance but also allow understanding of the problem at hand. The algorithm is tested on 30 problems outperforming several benchmarks. Finally, in a case study related to subject authentication, we show how features learned for a given subject are able to generalise to subjects unseen during the extraction phase.


2010 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 261-266
Author(s):  
Li Wan ◽  
Jian-xin Liao ◽  
Xiao-min Zhu ◽  
Ping Ni

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