
Unsupervised transfer learning across different data modalities for bearing's speed identification
- Author
- Diego Nieves Avendano (UGent) , Dirk Deschrijver (UGent) and Sofie Van Hoecke (UGent)
- Organization
- Project
- Abstract
- Recent advancements in transfer learning have revolutionized predictive maintenance, enabling cross-domain generalization for components with varying characteristics and operating under different conditions. While traditional transfer learning approaches require labeled data in both source and target domains, unsupervised transfer learning strives for a more cost-effective alternative for which only labels are available in the source domain. This study investigates adversarial transfer learning between two different sensor modalities: vibration and acoustic. The goal is to enable bearing monitoring using microphones, which are, in general terms, cheaper and easier to deploy than vibration sensors; and without the need to label data in the target domain. The research goal is to identify the operating speed of a bearing testbed. The source domain data correspond to vibration measurements taken from an attached sensor, while the target domain uses a microphone array at distance. Artificial Neural Networks are used as the base architecture. Transferability is assessed with two unsupervised adversarial learning techniques: gradient reversal and deep correlation alignment. Their performance is compared to traditional supervised transfer learning via fine-tuning. Experimental results demonstrate that gradient reversal outperforms deep correlation alignment and is able to achieve results similar to those obtained with supervised transfer learning. These findings highlight the feasibility of speed identification using a microphone array and establish a baseline for future condition monitoring research with such sensors.
- Keywords
- CONVOLUTION NEURAL-NETWORK, RESIDUAL LIFE, FAULT, PREDICTIONS, DIAGNOSTICS
Downloads
-
DS780 acc.pdf
- full text (Accepted manuscript)
- |
- open access
- |
- |
- 4.83 MB
-
(...).pdf
- full text (Published version)
- |
- UGent only
- |
- |
- 4.92 MB
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-01J2K105GCBFXBS9T8XEFW4EFE
- MLA
- Nieves Avendano, Diego, et al. “Unsupervised Transfer Learning across Different Data Modalities for Bearing’s Speed Identification.” INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ACOUSTICS AND VIBRATION, vol. 29, no. 2, 2024, pp. 175–86, doi:10.20855/ijav.2024.29.22046.
- APA
- Nieves Avendano, D., Deschrijver, D., & Van Hoecke, S. (2024). Unsupervised transfer learning across different data modalities for bearing’s speed identification. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ACOUSTICS AND VIBRATION, 29(2), 175–186. https://doi.org/10.20855/ijav.2024.29.22046
- Chicago author-date
- Nieves Avendano, Diego, Dirk Deschrijver, and Sofie Van Hoecke. 2024. “Unsupervised Transfer Learning across Different Data Modalities for Bearing’s Speed Identification.” INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ACOUSTICS AND VIBRATION 29 (2): 175–86. https://doi.org/10.20855/ijav.2024.29.22046.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Nieves Avendano, Diego, Dirk Deschrijver, and Sofie Van Hoecke. 2024. “Unsupervised Transfer Learning across Different Data Modalities for Bearing’s Speed Identification.” INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ACOUSTICS AND VIBRATION 29 (2): 175–186. doi:10.20855/ijav.2024.29.22046.
- Vancouver
- 1.Nieves Avendano D, Deschrijver D, Van Hoecke S. Unsupervised transfer learning across different data modalities for bearing’s speed identification. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ACOUSTICS AND VIBRATION. 2024;29(2):175–86.
- IEEE
- [1]D. Nieves Avendano, D. Deschrijver, and S. Van Hoecke, “Unsupervised transfer learning across different data modalities for bearing’s speed identification,” INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ACOUSTICS AND VIBRATION, vol. 29, no. 2, pp. 175–186, 2024.
@article{01J2K105GCBFXBS9T8XEFW4EFE, abstract = {{Recent advancements in transfer learning have revolutionized predictive maintenance, enabling cross-domain generalization for components with varying characteristics and operating under different conditions. While traditional transfer learning approaches require labeled data in both source and target domains, unsupervised transfer learning strives for a more cost-effective alternative for which only labels are available in the source domain. This study investigates adversarial transfer learning between two different sensor modalities: vibration and acoustic. The goal is to enable bearing monitoring using microphones, which are, in general terms, cheaper and easier to deploy than vibration sensors; and without the need to label data in the target domain. The research goal is to identify the operating speed of a bearing testbed. The source domain data correspond to vibration measurements taken from an attached sensor, while the target domain uses a microphone array at distance. Artificial Neural Networks are used as the base architecture. Transferability is assessed with two unsupervised adversarial learning techniques: gradient reversal and deep correlation alignment. Their performance is compared to traditional supervised transfer learning via fine-tuning. Experimental results demonstrate that gradient reversal outperforms deep correlation alignment and is able to achieve results similar to those obtained with supervised transfer learning. These findings highlight the feasibility of speed identification using a microphone array and establish a baseline for future condition monitoring research with such sensors.}}, author = {{Nieves Avendano, Diego and Deschrijver, Dirk and Van Hoecke, Sofie}}, issn = {{1027-5851}}, journal = {{INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ACOUSTICS AND VIBRATION}}, keywords = {{CONVOLUTION NEURAL-NETWORK,RESIDUAL LIFE,FAULT,PREDICTIONS,DIAGNOSTICS}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{2}}, pages = {{175--186}}, title = {{Unsupervised transfer learning across different data modalities for bearing's speed identification}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.20855/ijav.2024.29.22046}}, volume = {{29}}, year = {{2024}}, }
- Altmetric
- View in Altmetric
- Web of Science
- Times cited: