GAT-GAN : A Graph-Attention-based Time-Series Generative Adversarial Network
This addresses the challenge of generating high-fidelity synthetic time-series data for applications like forecasting or simulation, though it is incremental as it builds on existing GAN and graph-attention methods.
The paper tackles the problem of generating realistic multivariate time-series data by proposing GAT-GAN, a graph-attention-based GAN that explicitly models temporal and spatial relationships, and it outperforms state-of-the-art benchmarks on metrics like Frechet Transformer distance and predictive score.
Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) have proven to be a powerful tool for generating realistic synthetic data. However, traditional GANs often struggle to capture complex relationships between features which results in generation of unrealistic multivariate time-series data. In this paper, we propose a Graph-Attention-based Generative Adversarial Network (GAT-GAN) that explicitly includes two graph-attention layers, one that learns temporal dependencies while the other captures spatial relationships. Unlike RNN-based GANs that struggle with modeling long sequences of data points, GAT-GAN generates long time-series data of high fidelity using an adversarially trained autoencoder architecture. Our empirical evaluations, using a variety of real-time-series datasets, show that our framework consistently outperforms state-of-the-art benchmarks based on \emph{Frechet Transformer distance} and \emph{Predictive score}, that characterizes (\emph{Fidelity, Diversity}) and \emph{predictive performance} respectively. Moreover, we introduce a Frechet Inception distance-like (FID) metric for time-series data called Frechet Transformer distance (FTD) score (lower is better), to evaluate the quality and variety of generated data. We also found that low FTD scores correspond to the best-performing downstream predictive experiments. Hence, FTD scores can be used as a standardized metric to evaluate synthetic time-series data.