4.6 Article

Label-Free Anomaly Detection Using Distributed Optical Fiber Acoustic Sensing

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23084094

Keywords

deep learning; distributed optical fiber acoustic sensing; unsupervised learning

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Deep learning anomaly detection is crucial in distributed optical fiber acoustic sensing (DAS). To overcome the challenges posed by scarcity of true-positive data and imbalance and irregularity within datasets, an unsupervised deep learning method is proposed, which learns only the normal data features to detect anomalies.
Deep learning anomaly detection is important in distributed optical fiber acoustic sensing (DAS). However, anomaly detection is more challenging than traditional learning tasks, due to the scarcity of true-positive data and the vast imbalance and irregularity within datasets. Furthermore, it is impossible to catalog all types of anomalies, therefore, the direct application of supervised learning is deficient. To overcome these problems, an unsupervised deep learning method that only learns the normal data features from ordinary events is proposed. First, a convolutional autoencoder is used to extract DAS signal features. A clustering algorithm then locates the feature center of the normal data, and the distance to the new signal is used to determine whether it is an anomaly. The efficacy of the proposed method was evaluated in a real high-speed rail intrusion scenario, and considered all behaviors that may threaten the normal operation of high-speed trains as abnormal. The results show that the threat detection rate of this method reaches 91.5%, which is 5.9% higher than that of the state-of-the-art supervised network and, at 7.2%, the false alarm rate is 0.8% lower than the supervised network. Moreover, using a shallow autoencoder reduces the parameters to 1.34 K, which is significantly lower than the 79.55 K of the state-of-the-art supervised network.

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