LGNEJul 10, 2024

A Self-organizing Interval Type-2 Fuzzy Neural Network for Multi-Step Time Series Prediction

arXiv:2407.08010v28 citationsh-index: 3
AI Analysis

This work addresses uncertainty handling and interpretability issues in multi-step predictions for applications like chaotic and microgrid systems, representing an incremental advance with specific architectural improvements.

The paper tackled the challenge of multi-step time series prediction under data uncertainty by proposing a self-organizing interval type-2 fuzzy neural network with multiple outputs, which improved accuracy by 1.6% to 30% over state-of-the-art methods depending on noise levels.

Data uncertainty is inherent in many real-world applications and poses significant challenges for accurate time series predictions. The interval type 2 fuzzy neural network (IT2FNN) has shown exceptional performance in uncertainty modelling for single-step prediction tasks. However, extending it for multi-step ahead predictions introduces further issues in uncertainty handling as well as model interpretability and accuracy. To address these issues, this paper proposes a new selforganizing interval type-2 fuzzy neural network with multiple outputs (SOIT2FNN-MO). Differing from the traditional six-layer IT2FNN, a nine-layer network architecture is developed. First, a new co-antecedent layer and a modified consequent layer are devised to improve the interpretability of the fuzzy model for multi-step time series prediction problems. Second, a new link layer is created to improve the accuracy by building temporal connections between multi-step predictions. Third, a new transformation layer is designed to address the problem of the vanishing rule strength caused by high-dimensional inputs. Furthermore, a two-stage, self-organizing learning mechanism is developed to automatically extract fuzzy rules from data and optimize network parameters. Experimental results on chaotic and microgrid prediction problems demonstrate that SOIT2FNN-MO outperforms state-of-the-art methods, by achieving a better accuracy ranging from 1.6% to 30% depending on the level of noises in data. Additionally, the proposed model is more interpretable, offering deeper insights into the prediction process.

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