4.6 Article

Unsupervised Offline Changepoint Detection Ensembles

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app11094280

Keywords

anomaly detection; changepoint detection; ensemble; time series; signal processing; signal segmentation; aggregation function; unsupervised learning; Tennessee Eastman Process (TEP); Skoltech Anomaly Benchmark (SKAB)

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Offline changepoint detection algorithms are used for optimal signal segmentation, based on known statistical properties and appropriate models. While ensemble approaches are known for increasing robustness and dealing with challenges, they are less formalized in CPD problems. The proposed unsupervised CPD ensemble procedure outperforms non-ensemble procedures in numerical experiments, with a focus on analyzing common CPD algorithms, scaling, and aggregation functions.
Offline changepoint detection (CPD) algorithms are used for signal segmentation in an optimal way. Generally, these algorithms are based on the assumption that signal's changed statistical properties are known, and the appropriate models (metrics, cost functions) for changepoint detection are used. Otherwise, the process of proper model selection can become laborious and time-consuming with uncertain results. Although an ensemble approach is well known for increasing the robustness of the individual algorithms and dealing with mentioned challenges, it is weakly formalized and much less highlighted for CPD problems than for outlier detection or classification problems. This paper proposes an unsupervised CPD ensemble (CPDE) procedure with the pseudocode of the particular proposed ensemble algorithms and the link to their Python realization. The approach's novelty is in aggregating several cost functions before the changepoint search procedure running during the offline analysis. The numerical experiment showed that the proposed CPDE outperforms non-ensemble CPD procedures. Additionally, we focused on analyzing common CPD algorithms, scaling, and aggregation functions, comparing them during the numerical experiment. The results were obtained on the two anomaly benchmarks that contain industrial faults and failures-Tennessee Eastman Process (TEP) and Skoltech Anomaly Benchmark (SKAB). One of the possible applications of our research is the estimation of the failure time for fault identification and isolation problems of the technical diagnostics.

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