Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings9090204
Title: Building energy consumption raw data forecasting using data cleaning and deep recurrent neural networks
Authors: Yang, J. 
Tan, K.K.
Santamouris, M. 
Lee, S.E. 
Keywords: Data imputation
Deep recurrent neural networks
Energy forecasting
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: MDPI AG
Citation: Yang, J., Tan, K.K., Santamouris, M., Lee, S.E. (2019). Building energy consumption raw data forecasting using data cleaning and deep recurrent neural networks. Buildings 9 (9) : 204. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings9090204
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: With the rising focus on building energy big data analysis, there lacks a framework for raw data preprocessing to answer the question of how to handle the missing data in the raw data set. This study presents a methodology and framework for building energy consumption raw data forecasting. A case building is used to forecast the energy consumption by using deep recurrent neural networks. Four different methodologies to impute missing data in the raw data set are compared and implemented. The question of sensitivity of gap size and available data percentage on the imputation accuracy was tested. The cleaned data were then used for building energy forecasting. While the existing studies explored only the use of small recurrent networks of 2 layers and less, the question of whether a deep network of more than 2 layers would be performing better for building energy consumption forecasting should be explored. In addition, the problem of overfitting has been cited as a significant problem in using deep networks. In this study, the deep recurrent neural network is then used to explore the use of deeper networks and their regularization in the context of an energy load forecasting task. The results show a mean absolute error of 2.1 can be achieved through the 2*32 gated neural network model. In applying regularization methods to overcome model overfitting, the study found that weights regularization did indeed delay the onset of overfitting. � 2019 by the authors.
Source Title: Buildings
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/212937
ISSN: 20755309
DOI: 10.3390/buildings9090204
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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