Energy
Visual Question Answering in Remote Sensing with Cross-Attention and Multimodal Information Bottleneck
Songara, Jayesh, Pande, Shivam, Choudhury, Shabnam, Banerjee, Biplab, Velmurugan, Rajbabu
In this research, we deal with the problem of visual question answering (VQA) in remote sensing. While remotely sensed images contain information significant for the task of identification and object detection, they pose a great challenge in their processing because of high dimensionality, volume and redundancy. Furthermore, processing image information jointly with language features adds additional constraints, such as mapping the corresponding image and language features. To handle this problem, we propose a cross attention based approach combined with information maximization. The CNN-LSTM based cross-attention highlights the information in the image and language modalities and establishes a connection between the two, while information maximization learns a low dimensional bottleneck layer, that has all the relevant information required to carry out the VQA task. We evaluate our method on two VQA remote sensing datasets of different resolutions. For the high resolution dataset, we achieve an overall accuracy of 79.11% and 73.87% for the two test sets while for the low resolution dataset, we achieve an overall accuracy of 85.98%.
Canonical and Noncanonical Hamiltonian Operator Inference
Gruber, Anthony, Tezaur, Irina
A method for the nonintrusive and structure-preserving model reduction of canonical and noncanonical Hamiltonian systems is presented. Based on the idea of operator inference, this technique is provably convergent and reduces to a straightforward linear solve given snapshot data and gray-box knowledge of the system Hamiltonian. Examples involving several hyperbolic partial differential equations show that the proposed method yields reduced models which, in addition to being accurate and stable with respect to the addition of basis modes, preserve conserved quantities well outside the range of their training data.
Analysis of Scale-Variant Robust Kernel Optimization for Non-linear Least Squares Problems
In this article, we present a method for increasing adaptivity of an existing robust estimation algorithm by learning two parameters to better fit the residual distribution. The analyzed method uses these two parameters to calculate weights for Iterative Re-weighted Least Squares. This adaptive nature of the weights can be helpful in situations where the noise level varies in the measurements. We test our algorithm first on the point cloud registration problem with synthetic data sets and LiDAR odometry with open source real-world data sets. We show that the existing approach needs an additional manual tuning of a residual scale parameter which our method directly learns from data and has similar or better performance. We further present the idea of decoupling scale and shape parameters to improve performance of the algorithm. We give detailed analysis of our algorithm along with its comparison with similar well-known algorithms from literature to show the benefits of the proposed approach.
Spatio-temporal Diffusion Point Processes
Yuan, Yuan, Ding, Jingtao, Shao, Chenyang, Jin, Depeng, Li, Yong
Spatio-temporal point process (STPP) is a stochastic collection of events accompanied with time and space. Due to computational complexities, existing solutions for STPPs compromise with conditional independence between time and space, which consider the temporal and spatial distributions separately. The failure to model the joint distribution leads to limited capacities in characterizing the spatio-temporal entangled interactions given past events. In this work, we propose a novel parameterization framework for STPPs, which leverages diffusion models to learn complex spatio-temporal joint distributions. We decompose the learning of the target joint distribution into multiple steps, where each step can be faithfully described by a Gaussian distribution. To enhance the learning of each step, an elaborated spatio-temporal co-attention module is proposed to capture the interdependence between the event time and space adaptively. For the first time, we break the restrictions on spatio-temporal dependencies in existing solutions, and enable a flexible and accurate modeling paradigm for STPPs. Extensive experiments from a wide range of fields, such as epidemiology, seismology, crime, and urban mobility, demonstrate that our framework outperforms the state-of-the-art baselines remarkably, with an average improvement of over 50%. Further in-depth analyses validate its ability to capture spatio-temporal interactions, which can learn adaptively for different scenarios. The datasets and source code are available online: https://github.com/tsinghua-fib-lab/Spatio-temporal-Diffusion-Point-Processes.
Neural Multigrid Memory For Computational Fluid Dynamics
Nguyen, Duc Minh, Vu, Minh Chau, Nguyen, Tuan Anh, Huynh, Tri, Nguyen, Nguyen Tri, Hy, Truong Son
Turbulent flow simulation plays a crucial role in various applications, including aircraft and ship design, industrial process optimization, and weather prediction. In this paper, we propose an advanced data-driven method for simulating turbulent flow, representing a significant improvement over existing approaches. Our methodology combines the strengths of Video Prediction Transformer (VPTR) (Ye & Bilodeau, 2022) and Multigrid Architecture (MgConv, MgResnet) (Ke et al., 2017). VPTR excels in capturing complex spatiotemporal dependencies and handling large input data, making it a promising choice for turbulent flow prediction. Meanwhile, Multigrid Architecture utilizes multiple grids with different resolutions to capture the multiscale nature of turbulent flows, resulting in more accurate and efficient simulations. Through our experiments, we demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed approach, named MGxTransformer, in accurately predicting velocity, temperature, and turbulence intensity for incompressible turbulent flows across various geometries and flow conditions. Our results exhibit superior accuracy compared to other baselines, while maintaining computational efficiency. Our implementation in PyTorch is available publicly at https://github.com/Combi2k2/MG-Turbulent-Flow
Physics-Informed Machine Learning for Modeling and Control of Dynamical Systems
Nghiem, Truong X., Drgoลa, Jรกn, Jones, Colin, Nagy, Zoltan, Schwan, Roland, Dey, Biswadip, Chakrabarty, Ankush, Di Cairano, Stefano, Paulson, Joel A., Carron, Andrea, Zeilinger, Melanie N., Cortez, Wenceslao Shaw, Vrabie, Draguna L.
Physics-informed machine learning (PIML) is a set of methods and tools that systematically integrate machine learning (ML) algorithms with physical constraints and abstract mathematical models developed in scientific and engineering domains. As opposed to purely data-driven methods, PIML models can be trained from additional information obtained by enforcing physical laws such as energy and mass conservation. More broadly, PIML models can include abstract properties and conditions such as stability, convexity, or invariance. The basic premise of PIML is that the integration of ML and physics can yield more effective, physically consistent, and data-efficient models. This paper aims to provide a tutorial-like overview of the recent advances in PIML for dynamical system modeling and control. Specifically, the paper covers an overview of the theory, fundamental concepts and methods, tools, and applications on topics of: 1) physics-informed learning for system identification; 2) physics-informed learning for control; 3) analysis and verification of PIML models; and 4) physics-informed digital twins. The paper is concluded with a perspective on open challenges and future research opportunities.
Multi-task multi-station earthquake monitoring: An all-in-one seismic Phase picking, Location, and Association Network (PLAN)
Si, Xu, Wu, Xinming, Li, Zefeng, Wang, Shenghou, Zhu, Jun
Earthquake monitoring is vital for understanding the physics of earthquakes and assessing seismic hazards. A standard monitoring workflow includes the interrelated and interdependent tasks of phase picking, association, and location. Although deep learning methods have been successfully applied to earthquake monitoring, they mostly address the tasks separately and ignore the geographic relationships among stations. Here, we propose a graph neural network that operates directly on multi-station seismic data and achieves simultaneous phase picking, association, and location. Particularly, the inter-station and inter-task physical relationships are informed in the network architecture to promote accuracy, interpretability, and physical consistency among cross-station and cross-task predictions. When applied to data from the Ridgecrest region and Japan regions, this method showed superior performance over previous deep learning-based phase-picking and localization methods. Overall, our study provides for the first time a prototype self-consistent all-in-one system of simultaneous seismic phase picking, association, and location, which has the potential for next-generation autonomous earthquake monitoring.
Towards Optimal Pricing of Demand Response -- A Nonparametric Constrained Policy Optimization Approach
Demand response (DR) has been demonstrated to be an effective method for reducing peak load and mitigating uncertainties on both the supply and demand sides of the electricity market. One critical question for DR research is how to appropriately adjust electricity prices in order to shift electrical load from peak to off-peak hours. In recent years, reinforcement learning (RL) has been used to address the price-based DR problem because it is a model-free technique that does not necessitate the identification of models for end-use customers. However, the majority of RL methods cannot guarantee the stability and optimality of the learned pricing policy, which is undesirable in safety-critical power systems and may result in high customer bills. In this paper, we propose an innovative nonparametric constrained policy optimization approach that improves optimality while ensuring stability of the policy update, by removing the restrictive assumption on policy representation that the majority of the RL literature adopts: the policy must be parameterized or fall into a certain distribution class. We derive a closed-form expression of optimal policy update for each iteration and develop an efficient on-policy actor-critic algorithm to address the proposed constrained policy optimization problem. The experiments on two DR cases show the superior performance of our proposed nonparametric constrained policy optimization method compared with state-of-the-art RL algorithms.
On Convex Data-Driven Inverse Optimal Control for Nonlinear, Non-stationary and Stochastic Systems
Garrabe, Emiland, Jesawada, Hozefa, Del Vecchio, Carmen, Russo, Giovanni
This paper is concerned with a finite-horizon inverse control problem, which has the goal of inferring, from observations, the possibly non-convex and non-stationary cost driving the actions of an agent. In this context, we present a result that enables cost estimation by solving an optimization problem that is convex even when the agent cost is not and when the underlying dynamics is nonlinear, non-stationary and stochastic. To obtain this result, we also study a finite-horizon forward control problem that has randomized policies as decision variables. For this problem, we give an explicit expression for the optimal solution. Moreover, we turn our findings into algorithmic procedures and we show the effectiveness of our approach via both in-silico and experimental validations with real hardware. All the experiments confirm the effectiveness of our approach.
Achieving Green AI with Energy-Efficient Deep Learning Using Neuromorphic Computing
Deep learning (DL) systems have been widely adopted in many industrial and business applications, dramatically improving human productivity, and enabling new industries. However, deep learning has a carbon emission problem.a For example, training a single DL model can consume as much as 656,347 kilowatt-hours of energy and generate up to 626,155 pounds of CO2 emissions, approximately equal to the total lifetime carbon footprint of five cars. Therefore, in pursuit of sustainability, the computational and carbon costs of DL have to be reduced. Modeled after systems in the human brain and nervous system, neuromorphic computing has the potential to be the implementation of choice for low-power DL systems.