LGAPNov 6, 2023

Quantifying the value of information transfer in population-based SHM

arXiv:2311.03083v16 citationsh-index: 34
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the risk of performance degradation in transfer learning for engineers managing structural health, but it appears incremental as it builds on existing domain adaptation methods.

The paper tackles the problem of negative transfer in population-based structural health monitoring by proposing a decision framework based on the expected value of information transfer, using a probabilistic regression to predict classification performance from structural similarity, though no concrete numerical results are provided.

Population-based structural health monitoring (PBSHM), seeks to address some of the limitations associated with data scarcity that arise in traditional SHM. A tenet of the population-based approach to SHM is that information can be shared between sufficiently-similar structures in order to improve predictive models. Transfer learning techniques, such as domain adaptation, have been shown to be a highly-useful technology for sharing information between structures when developing statistical classifiers for PBSHM. Nonetheless, transfer-learning techniques are not without their pitfalls. In some circumstances, for example if the data distributions associated with the structures within a population are dissimilar, applying transfer-learning methods can be detrimental to classification performance -- this phenomenon is known as negative transfer. Given the potentially-severe consequences of negative transfer, it is prudent for engineers to ask the question `when, what, and how should one transfer between structures?'. The current paper aims to demonstrate a transfer-strategy decision process for a classification task for a population of simulated structures in the context of a representative SHM maintenance problem, supported by domain adaptation. The transfer decision framework is based upon the concept of expected value of information transfer. In order to compute the expected value of information transfer, predictions must be made regarding the classification (and decision performance) in the target domain following information transfer. In order to forecast the outcome of transfers, a probabilistic regression is used here to predict classification performance from a proxy for structural similarity based on the modal assurance criterion.

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