4.8 Article

A Hybrid Machine Learning Model for Demand Prediction of Edge-Computing-Based Bike-Sharing System Using Internet of Things

Journal

IEEE INTERNET OF THINGS JOURNAL
Volume 7, Issue 8, Pages 7345-7356

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JIOT.2020.2983089

Keywords

Bicycles; Predictive models; Machine learning; Internet of Things; Computational modeling; Regression tree analysis; Demand forecasting model; edge calculation; Internet of Things; regression tree (RT); self-organizing map (SOM); shared bicycle

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program [2017YFE0125300]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China-Guangdong Joint Fund [U1801264]
  3. Jiangsu Key Research and Development Program [BE2019648]
  4. Open Fund of State Key Laboratory of Acoustics [SKLA201901]
  5. National Science and Technology Major Project [2017-V-0011-0062]
  6. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2019M661096]

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The rapid development of Internet-of-Things technologies (such as edge computing) has promoted the development of numerous emerging urban applications, particularly smart transportation. As an anticipated aspect of smart transportation, bike-sharing systems have recently been deployed in many cities and are considered an efficient way to address the issue of the last mile. In a bike-sharing system, the supply and demand of shared bikes at each bike station frequently change over time. Consequently, one of the most challenging issues of a bike-sharing system is predicting the required number of shared bikes at each station. In this article, we take the real aspects of a bike-sharing system into account, e.g., the high complexity, nonlinearity, and uncertainty of the traffic flow, and propose a hybrid edge-computing-based machine learning model. Notably, our proposed model, which combines a self-organizing mapping network with a regression tree (RT), is applied to predict the bicycle demand of a certain station through the following steps: 1) the proposed model adopts self-organization mapping to assemble the original samples in the form of clusters and 2) each cluster is then built as an RT to forecast the required number of bikes at each station. Experiments based on real data from the Washington and London bike-sharing systems show that our proposed method achieves a higher prediction accuracy and better generalization than previous approaches.

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