LGAISep 21, 2024

Test Time Learning for Time Series Forecasting

arXiv:2409.14012v35 citationsh-index: 5
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses performance gaps in time-series forecasting for applications requiring long-range dependencies, though it appears incremental by building on existing methods like Mamba.

The paper tackles the challenge of improving accuracy and scalability in long-term time series forecasting by proposing Test-Time Training (TTT) modules in a parallel architecture, demonstrating significant improvements in MSE and MAE on benchmark datasets like Electricity, Traffic, and Weather.

Time-series forecasting has seen significant advancements with the introduction of token prediction mechanisms such as multi-head attention. However, these methods often struggle to achieve the same performance as in language modeling, primarily due to the quadratic computational cost and the complexity of capturing long-range dependencies in time-series data. State-space models (SSMs), such as Mamba, have shown promise in addressing these challenges by offering efficient solutions with linear RNNs capable of modeling long sequences with larger context windows. However, there remains room for improvement in accuracy and scalability. We propose the use of Test-Time Training (TTT) modules in a parallel architecture to enhance performance in long-term time series forecasting. Through extensive experiments on standard benchmark datasets, we demonstrate that TTT modules consistently outperform state-of-the-art models, including the Mamba-based TimeMachine, particularly in scenarios involving extended sequence and prediction lengths. Our results show significant improvements in Mean Squared Error (MSE) and Mean Absolute Error (MAE), especially on larger datasets such as Electricity, Traffic, and Weather, underscoring the effectiveness of TTT in capturing long-range dependencies. Additionally, we explore various convolutional architectures within the TTT framework, showing that even simple configurations like 1D convolution with small filters can achieve competitive results. This work sets a new benchmark for time-series forecasting and lays the groundwork for future research in scalable, high-performance forecasting models.

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