scholarly journals The Data-Driven Multi-Step Approach for Dynamic Estimation of Buildings’ Interior Temperature

Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (24) ◽  
pp. 6654
Author(s):  
Stefano Villa ◽  
Claudio Sassanelli

Buildings are among the main protagonists of the world’s growing energy consumption, employing up to 45%. Wide efforts have been directed to improve energy saving and reduce environmental impacts to attempt to address the objectives fixed by policymakers in the past years. Meanwhile, new approaches using Machine Learning regression models surged in the modeling and simulation research context. This research develops and proposes an innovative data-driven black box predictive model for estimating in a dynamic way the interior temperature of a building. Therefore, the rationale behind the approach has been chosen based on two steps. First, an investigation of the extant literature on the methods to be considered for tests has been conducted, shrinking the field of investigation to non-recursive multi-step approaches. Second, the results obtained on a pilot case using various Machine Learning regression models in the multi-step approach have been assessed, leading to the choice of the Support Vector Regression model. The prediction mean absolute error on the pilot case is 0.1 ± 0.2 °C when the offset from the prediction instant is 15 min and grows slowly for further future instants, up to 0.3 ± 0.8 °C for a prediction horizon of 8 h. In the end, the advantages and limitations of the new data-driven multi-step approach based on the Support Vector Regression model are provided. Relying only on data related to external weather, interior temperature and calendar, the proposed approach is promising to be applicable to any type of building without needing as input specific geometrical/physical characteristics.

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanshuang Zhou ◽  
Na Li ◽  
Hong Li ◽  
Yongqiang Zhang

As cloud data center consumes more and more energy, both researchers and engineers aim to minimize energy consumption while keeping its services available. A good energy model can reflect the relationships between running tasks and the energy consumed by hardware and can be further used to schedule tasks for saving energy. In this paper, we analyzed linear and nonlinear regression energy model based on performance counters and system utilization and proposed a support vector regression energy model. For performance counters, we gave a general linear regression framework and compared three linear regression models. For system utilization, we compared our support vector regression model with linear regression and three nonlinear regression models. The experiments show that linear regression model is good enough to model performance counters, nonlinear regression is better than linear regression model for modeling system utilization, and support vector regression model is better than polynomial and exponential regression models.


2009 ◽  
Vol 19 (06) ◽  
pp. 457-464 ◽  
Author(s):  
HUICHENG LIAN

A novel approach for no-reference video quality measurement is proposed in this paper. Firstly, various feature extraction methods are used to quantify the quality of videos. Then, a support vector regression model is trained and adopted to predict unseen samples. Six different regression models are compared with the support vector regression model. The experimental results indicate that the combination of different video quality features with a support vector regression model can outperform other methods for no-reference video quality measurement significantly.


Author(s):  
Yumei Liu ◽  
Ningguo Qiao ◽  
Congcong Zhao ◽  
Jiaojiao Zhuang ◽  
Guangdong Tian

Accurate vibration time series modeling can mine the internal law of data and provide valuable references for reliability assessment. To improve the prediction accuracy, this study proposes a hybrid model – called the AR–SVR–CPSO hybrid model – that combines the auto regression (AR) and support vector regression (SVR) models, with the weights optimized by the chaotic particle swarm optimization (CPSO) algorithm. First, the auto regression model with the difference method is employed to model the vibration time series. Second, the support vector regression model with the phase space reconstruction is constructed for predicting the vibration time series once more. Finally, the predictions of the AR and SVR models are weighted and summed together, with the weights being optimized by the CPSO. In addition, the data collected from the reliability test platform of high-speed train transmission systems and the “NASA prognostics data repository” are used to validate the hybrid model. The experimental results demonstrate that the hybrid model proposed in this study outperforms the traditional AR and SVR models.


Author(s):  
Sachin Kumar ◽  
Karan Veer

Aims: The objective of this research is to predict the covid-19 cases in India based on the machine learning approaches. Background: Covid-19, a respiratory disease caused by one of the coronavirus family members, has led to a pandemic situation worldwide in 2020. This virus was detected firstly in Wuhan city of China in December 2019. This viral disease has taken less than three months to spread across the globe. Objective: In this paper, we proposed a regression model based on the Support vector machine (SVM) to forecast the number of deaths, the number of recovered cases, and total confirmed cases for the next 30 days. Method: For prediction, the data is collected from Github and the ministry of India's health and family welfare from March 14, 2020, to December 3, 2020. The model has been designed in Python 3.6 in Anaconda to forecast the forecasting value of corona trends until September 21, 2020. The proposed methodology is based on the prediction of values using SVM based regression model with polynomial, linear, rbf kernel. The dataset has been divided into train and test datasets with 40% and 60% test size and verified with real data. The model performance parameters are evaluated as a mean square error, mean absolute error, and percentage accuracy. Results and Conclusion: The results show that the polynomial model has obtained 95 % above accuracy score, linear scored above 90%, and rbf scored above 85% in predicting cumulative death, conformed cases, and recovered cases.


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