Kaori Suefusa

AS
4papers
846citations
Novelty31%
AI Score22

4 Papers

ASSep 25, 2020
Deep Autoencoding GMM-based Unsupervised Anomaly Detection in Acoustic Signals and its Hyper-parameter Optimization

Harsh Purohit, Ryo Tanabe, Takashi Endo et al.

Failures or breakdowns in factory machinery can be costly to companies, so there is an increasing demand for automatic machine inspection. Existing approaches to acoustic signal-based unsupervised anomaly detection, such as those using a deep autoencoder (DA) or Gaussian mixture model (GMM), have poor anomaly-detection performance. In this work, we propose a new method based on a deep autoencoding Gaussian mixture model with hyper-parameter optimization (DAGMM-HO). In our method, the DAGMM-HO applies the conventional DAGMM to the audio domain for the first time, with the idea that its total optimization on reduction of dimensions and statistical modelling will improve the anomaly-detection performance. In addition, the DAGMM-HO solves the hyper-parameter sensitivity problem of the conventional DAGMM by performing hyper-parameter optimization based on the gap statistic and the cumulative eigenvalues. Our evaluation of the proposed method with experimental data of the industrial fans showed that it significantly outperforms previous approaches and achieves up to a 20% improvement based on the standard AUC score.

ASJun 10, 2020
Description and Discussion on DCASE2020 Challenge Task2: Unsupervised Anomalous Sound Detection for Machine Condition Monitoring

Yuma Koizumi, Yohei Kawaguchi, Keisuke Imoto et al.

In this paper, we present the task description and discuss the results of the DCASE 2020 Challenge Task 2: Unsupervised Detection of Anomalous Sounds for Machine Condition Monitoring. The goal of anomalous sound detection (ASD) is to identify whether the sound emitted from a target machine is normal or anomalous. The main challenge of this task is to detect unknown anomalous sounds under the condition that only normal sound samples have been provided as training data. We have designed this challenge as the first benchmark of ASD research, which includes a large-scale dataset, evaluation metrics, and a simple baseline system. We received 117 submissions from 40 teams, and several novel approaches have been developed as a result of this challenge. On the basis of the analysis of the evaluation results, we discuss two new approaches and their problems.

ASMay 19, 2020
Anomalous sound detection based on interpolation deep neural network

Kaori Suefusa, Tomoya Nishida, Harsh Purohit et al.

As the labor force decreases, the demand for labor-saving automatic anomalous sound detection technology that conducts maintenance of industrial equipment has grown. Conventional approaches detect anomalies based on the reconstruction errors of an autoencoder. However, when the target machine sound is non-stationary, a reconstruction error tends to be large independent of an anomaly, and its variations increased because of the difficulty of predicting the edge frames. To solve the issue, we propose an approach to anomalous detection in which the model utilizes multiple frames of a spectrogram whose center frame is removed as an input, and it predicts an interpolation of the removed frame as an output. Rather than predicting the edge frames, the proposed approach makes the reconstruction error consistent with the anomaly. Experimental results showed that the proposed approach achieved 27% improvement based on the standard AUC score, especially against non-stationary machinery sounds.

SDSep 20, 2019
MIMII Dataset: Sound Dataset for Malfunctioning Industrial Machine Investigation and Inspection

Harsh Purohit, Ryo Tanabe, Kenji Ichige et al.

Factory machinery is prone to failure or breakdown, resulting in significant expenses for companies. Hence, there is a rising interest in machine monitoring using different sensors including microphones. In the scientific community, the emergence of public datasets has led to advancements in acoustic detection and classification of scenes and events, but there are no public datasets that focus on the sound of industrial machines under normal and anomalous operating conditions in real factory environments. In this paper, we present a new dataset of industrial machine sounds that we call a sound dataset for malfunctioning industrial machine investigation and inspection (MIMII dataset). Normal sounds were recorded for different types of industrial machines (i.e., valves, pumps, fans, and slide rails), and to resemble a real-life scenario, various anomalous sounds were recorded (e.g., contamination, leakage, rotating unbalance, and rail damage). The purpose of releasing the MIMII dataset is to assist the machine-learning and signal-processing community with their development of automated facility maintenance. The MIMII dataset is freely available for download at: https://zenodo.org/record/3384388