University of Notre Dame
Browse
ArulJayachandranM022022T.pdf (1.46 MB)

Application of Shapelet Transform to Time Series Classification of Earthquake, Wind and Wave Data

Download (1.46 MB)
thesis
posted on 2022-02-23, 00:00 authored by Monica Arul Jayachandran

Autonomous detection of desired events from large databases using time series classification is becoming increasingly important in civil engineering as a result of continued long-term health monitoring of a large number of engineering structures encompassing buildings, bridges, towers, and offshore platforms. In this context, this study proposes the application of a relatively new time series representation named “Shapelet transform”, which is based on local similarity in the shape of the time series subsequences. In consideration of the individual attributes distinctive to time series signals in earthquake, wind and ocean engineering, the application of this transform yields a new shape-based feature representation. Combining this shape-based representation with a standard machine learning algorithm, a truly “white-box” machine learning model is proposed with understandable features and a transparent algorithm. This model automates event detection without the intervention of domain practitioners, yielding a practical event detection procedure. The efficacy of this proposed shapelet transform-based autonomous detection procedure is demonstrated by examples, to identify known and unknown earthquake events from continuously recorded ground-motion measurements, to detect pulses in the velocity time history of ground motions to distinguish between near-field and far-field ground motions, to identify thunderstorms from continuous wind speed measurements, to detect large-amplitude wind-induced vibrations from the bridge monitoring data, and to identify plunging breaking waves that have a significant impact on offshore structures.

History

Date Modified

2022-03-02

CIP Code

  • 14.0801

Research Director(s)

Ahsan Kareem

Degree

  • Master of Science in Civil Engineering

Degree Level

  • Master's Thesis

Alternate Identifier

1300759552

Library Record

6168235

OCLC Number

1300759552

Program Name

  • Civil and Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences

Usage metrics

    Masters Theses

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC