LGAISPJul 19, 2023

Towards a population-informed approach to the definition of data-driven models for structural dynamics

arXiv:2307.09862v18 citationsh-index: 42
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of building trusted and efficient data-driven models for structural dynamics in industry, though it appears incremental by adapting existing meta-learning techniques to this domain.

The paper tackles the problem of data scarcity in machine learning for structural dynamics by proposing a population-informed approach using meta-learning algorithms, which outperformed traditional methods in approximating quantities of interest.

Machine learning has affected the way in which many phenomena for various domains are modelled, one of these domains being that of structural dynamics. However, because machine-learning algorithms are problem-specific, they often fail to perform efficiently in cases of data scarcity. To deal with such issues, combination of physics-based approaches and machine learning algorithms have been developed. Although such methods are effective, they also require the analyser's understanding of the underlying physics of the problem. The current work is aimed at motivating the use of models which learn such relationships from a population of phenomena, whose underlying physics are similar. The development of such models is motivated by the way that physics-based models, and more specifically finite element models, work. Such models are considered transferrable, explainable and trustworthy, attributes which are not trivially imposed or achieved for machine-learning models. For this reason, machine-learning approaches are less trusted by industry and often considered more difficult to form validated models. To achieve such data-driven models, a population-based scheme is followed here and two different machine-learning algorithms from the meta-learning domain are used. The two algorithms are the model-agnostic meta-learning (MAML) algorithm and the conditional neural processes (CNP) model. The algorithms seem to perform as intended and outperform a traditional machine-learning algorithm at approximating the quantities of interest. Moreover, they exhibit behaviour similar to traditional machine learning algorithms (e.g. neural networks or Gaussian processes), concerning their performance as a function of the available structures in the training population.

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