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Discrimination of doubled Acoustic Emission events using Neural Networks.

Petr KolářMatěj Petružálek
Published in: Ultrasonics (2024)
In observatory seismology, the effective automatic processing of seismograms is a time-consuming task. A contemporary approach for seismogram processing is based on the Deep Neural Network formalism, which has been successfully applied in many fields. Here, we present a 4D network, based on U-net architecture, that simultaneously processes seismograms from an entire network. We also interpret Acoustic Emission data based on a laboratory loading experiment. The obtained data was a very good testing set, similar to real seismograms. Our Neural network is designed to detect multiple events. Input data are created by augmentation from previously interpreted single events. The advantage of the approach is that the positions of (multiple) events are exactly known, thus, the efficiency of detection can be evaluated. Even if the method reaches an average efficiency of only around 30% for the onset of individual tracks, average efficiency for the detection of double events was approximately 97% for a maximum target, with a prediction difference of 20 samples. Such is the main benefit of simultaneous network signal processing.
Keyphrases
  • neural network
  • electronic health record
  • big data
  • deep learning
  • machine learning
  • loop mediated isothermal amplification
  • data analysis
  • real time pcr
  • soft tissue
  • artificial intelligence
  • sensitive detection