4.6 Article

Individualized Short-Term Electric Load Forecasting With Deep Neural Network Based Transfer Learning and Meta Learning

Journal

IEEE ACCESS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages 15413-15425

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3053317

Keywords

Deep learning; individualized models; meta learning; transfer learning; short-term load forecasting

Funding

  1. Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) - Korean government [20ZR1100]
  2. Korea Medical Device Development Fund' - Korea government (the Ministry of Science and ICT) [202013B14]
  3. Korea Medical Device Development Fund' - Korea government (Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy) [202013B14]
  4. Korea Medical Device Development Fund' - Korea government (Ministry of Health Welfare, Republic of Korea) [202013B14]
  5. Korea Medical Device Development Fund' - Korea government (Ministry of Food and Drug Safety) [202013B14]

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It is generally believed that individualized models are the best way to predict electric load, but traditional methods tend to favor one-for-all models. This study utilizes transfer learning and meta learning, successfully integrated into deep neural networks, to form high-performance individualized models using individual data in just a few days.
While the general belief is that the best way to predict electric load is through individualized models, the existing studies have focused on one-for-all models because the individual models are difficult to train and require a significantly larger data accumulation time per individual. In recent years, applying deep learning for forecasting electric load has become an important research topic but still one-for-all has been the main approach. In this work, we adopt transfer learning and meta learning that can be smoothly integrated into deep neural networks, and show how a high-performance individualized model can be formed using the individual's data collected over just several days. This is made possible by extracting the common patterns of many individuals using a sufficiently large dataset, and then customizing each individual model using the specific individual's small dataset. The proposed methods are evaluated over residential and non-residential datasets. When compared to the conventional methods, the meta learning model shows 7.84% and 15.07% RMSE improvements over the residential and non-residential datasets, respectively. Our results suggest that the individualized models can be used as effective tools for many short-term load forecasting tasks.

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