Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Clustering" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Disentangled representation learning for multi-view clustering via von Mises-Fisher hyperspherical embedding Li Z; Luo Z; Bouguila N; Su W; Fan W; 40664160
ENCS
2 Distinguishing Persistent Versus Episodic Clusters of At-Risk Respondents on the Problem Gambling Severity Index Murch WS; Scheurich R; Monson E; French M; Kairouz S; 40338426
PSYCHOLOGY
3 Clustering and Interpretability of Residential Electricity Demand Profiles Kallel S; Amayri M; Bouguila N; 40218540
ENCS
4 Deep clustering analysis via variational autoencoder with Gamma mixture latent embeddings Guo J; Fan W; Amayri M; Bouguila N; 39662201
ENCS
5 Data-Weighted Multivariate Generalized Gaussian Mixture Model: Application to Point Cloud Robust Registration Ge B; Najar F; Bouguila N; 37754943
ENCS
6 Entropy-Based Variational Scheme with Component Splitting for the Efficient Learning of Gamma Mixtures Bourouis S; Pawar Y; Bouguila N; 35009726
ENCS
7 Spectral-Clustering of Lagrangian Trajectory Graphs: Application to Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms Darwish A; Norouzi S; Kadem L; 34845627
ENCS
8 Randomness, Informational Entropy, and Volatility Interdependencies among the Major World Markets: The Role of the COVID-19 Pandemic Lahmiri S; Bekiros S; 33286604
JMSB
9 Computer-Aided Diagnosis System of Alzheimer's Disease Based on Multimodal Fusion: Tissue Quantification Based on the Hybrid Fuzzy-Genetic-Possibilistic Model and Discriminative Classification Based on the SVDD Model. Lazli L, Boukadoum M, Ait Mohamed O 31652635
ENCS
10 Cluster based statistical feature extraction method for automatic bleeding detection in wireless capsule endoscopy video. Ghosh T, Fattah SA, Wahid KA, Zhu WP, Ahmad MO 29407997
IMAGING

 

Title:Clustering and Interpretability of Residential Electricity Demand Profiles
Authors:Kallel SAmayri MBouguila N
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40218540/
DOI:10.3390/s25072026
Publication:Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
Keywords:cluster validation indices (CVIs)clustering algorithmsdata characteristicsdecision tree interpretabilitydimensionality reductionelectricity load profilinginterpretable machine learning
PMID:40218540 Category: Date Added:2025-04-13
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Concordia Institute for Information Systems Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, QC H3G 1M8, Canada.

Description:

Efficient energy management relies on uncovering meaningful consumption patterns from large-scale electricity load demand profiles. With the widespread adoption of sensor technologies such as smart meters and IoT-based monitoring systems, granular and real-time electricity usage data have become available, enabling deeper insights into consumption behaviors. Clustering is a widely used technique for this purpose, but previous studies have primarily focused on a limited set of algorithms, often treating clustering as a black-box approach without addressing interpretability. This study explores a wide number of clustering algorithms by comparing hard clustering algorithms (K-Means, K-Medoids) versus soft clustering techniques (Fuzzy C-Means, Gaussian Mixture Models) in segmenting electricity consumption profiles. The clustering performance is evaluated using five different clustering validation indices (CVIs), assessing intra-cluster cohesion and inter-cluster separation. The results show that soft clustering methods effectively capture inter-cluster characteristics, leading to better cluster separation, whereas intra-cluster characteristics exhibit similar behavior across all clustering approaches. This study assesses which CVIs provide reliable evaluations independent of clustering algorithm sensitivity. It provides a comprehensive analysis of the different CVIs' responses to changes in data characteristics, highlighting which indices remain robust and which are more susceptible to variations in cluster structures. Beyond evaluating clustering effectiveness, this study enhances interpretability by introducing two decision tree models, axis-aligned and sparse oblique decision trees, to generate human-readable rules for cluster assignments. While the axis-aligned tree provides a complete explanation of all clusters, the sparse oblique tree offers simpler, more interpretable rules, emphasizing a trade-off between full interpretability and rule complexity. This structured evaluation provides a framework for balancing transparency and complexity in clustering explanations, offering valuable insights for utility providers, policymakers, and researchers aiming to optimize both clustering performance and explainability in sensor-driven energy demand analysis.





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