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Search Results (2,075)

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Keywords = environmental neural network modeling

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58 pages, 3568 KB  
Article
Investigation of Corporate Sustainability Performance Data and Developing an Innovation-Oriented Novel Analysis Method with Multi-Criteria Decision Making Approach
by Huseyin Haliloglu, Ahmet Feyzioglu, Leonardo Piccinetti, Trevor Omoruyi, Muzeyyen Burcu Hidimoglu and Akin Emrecan Gok
Sustainability 2025, 17(19), 8860; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17198860 - 3 Oct 2025
Abstract
This study addresses the growing importance of integrating innovation into corporate sustainability strategies by examining the financial and environmental performance of ten firms listed on the Borsa Istanbul Sustainability Index over a five-year period. The main objective is to develop and test a [...] Read more.
This study addresses the growing importance of integrating innovation into corporate sustainability strategies by examining the financial and environmental performance of ten firms listed on the Borsa Istanbul Sustainability Index over a five-year period. The main objective is to develop and test a novel, data-driven analytical framework that reduces reliance on subjective expert judgments while providing actionable insights for sustainability-oriented decision-making. Within this framework, the entropy method from the Multi-Criteria Decision Making (MCDM) approach is first applied to calculate the objective weights of sustainability criteria, ensuring that the analysis is grounded in real performance data. Building on these weights, an innovative reverse Decision-Making Trial and Evaluation Laboratory (DEMATEL) model, implemented through a custom artificial neural network-based software, is introduced to estimate direct influence matrices and reveal the causal relationships among criteria. This methodological advance makes it possible to explore how environmental and financial factors interact with R&D expenditures and to simulate their systemic interdependencies. The findings demonstrate that R&D serves as a central driver of both environmental and financial sustainability, highlighting its dual role in fostering corporate innovation and long-term resilience. By positioning R&D as both an enabler and outcome of sustainability dynamics, the proposed framework contributes a novel tool for aligning innovation with strategic sustainability goals, offering broader implications for corporate managers, policymakers, and researchers. Full article
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24 pages, 1454 KB  
Article
AI-Driven Monitoring for Fish Welfare in Aquaponics: A Predictive Approach
by Jorge Saúl Fandiño Pelayo, Luis Sebastián Mendoza Castellanos, Rocío Cazes Ortega and Luis G. Hernández-Rojas
Sensors 2025, 25(19), 6107; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25196107 - 3 Oct 2025
Abstract
This study addresses the growing need for intelligent monitoring in aquaponic systems by developing a predictive system based on artificial intelligence and environmental sensing. The goal is to improve fish welfare through the early detection of adverse water conditions. The system integrates low-cost [...] Read more.
This study addresses the growing need for intelligent monitoring in aquaponic systems by developing a predictive system based on artificial intelligence and environmental sensing. The goal is to improve fish welfare through the early detection of adverse water conditions. The system integrates low-cost digital sensors to continuously measure key physicochemical variables—pH, dissolved oxygen, and temperature—using these as inputs for real-time classification of fish health status. Four supervised machine learning models were evaluated: linear discriminant analysis (LDA), support vector machines (SVMs), neural networks (NNs), and random forest (RF). A dataset of 1823 instances was collected over eight months from a red tilapia aquaponic setup. The random forest model yielded the highest classification accuracy (99%), followed by NN (98%) and SVM (97%). LDA achieved 82% accuracy. Performance was validated using 5-fold cross-validation and label permutation tests to confirm model robustness. These results demonstrate that sensor-based predictive models can reliably detect early signs of fish stress or mortality, supporting the implementation of intelligent environmental monitoring and automation strategies in sustainable aquaponic production. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Sensing)
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24 pages, 1421 KB  
Article
Machine Learning-Aided Supply Chain Analysis of Waste Management Systems: System Optimization for Sustainable Production
by Zhe Wee Ng, Biswajit Debnath and Amit K Chattopadhyay
Sustainability 2025, 17(19), 8848; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17198848 - 2 Oct 2025
Abstract
Electronic-waste (e-waste) management is a key challenge in engineering smart cities due to its rapid accumulation, complex composition, sparse data availability, and significant environmental and economic impacts. This study employs a bespoke machine learning infrastructure on an Indian e-waste supply chain network (SCN) [...] Read more.
Electronic-waste (e-waste) management is a key challenge in engineering smart cities due to its rapid accumulation, complex composition, sparse data availability, and significant environmental and economic impacts. This study employs a bespoke machine learning infrastructure on an Indian e-waste supply chain network (SCN) focusing on the three pillars of sustainability—environmental, economic, and social. The economic resilience of the SCN is investigated against external perturbations, like market fluctuations or policy changes, by analyzing six stochastically perturbed modules, generated from the optimal point of the original dataset using Monte Carlo Simulation (MCS). In the process, MCS is demonstrated as a powerful technique to deal with sparse statistics in SCN modeling. The perturbed model is then analyzed to uncover “hidden” non-linear relationships between key variables and their sensitivity in dictating economic arbitrage. Two complementary ensemble-based approaches have been used—Feedforward Neural Network (FNN) model and Random Forest (RF) model. While FNN excels in regressing the model performance against the industry-specified target, RF is better in dealing with feature engineering and dimensional reduction, thus identifying the most influential variables. Our results demonstrate that the FNN model is a superior predictor of arbitrage conditions compared to the RF model. The tangible deliverable is a data-driven toolkit for smart engineering solutions to ensure sustainable e-waste management. Full article
25 pages, 5489 KB  
Article
CottonCapT6: A Multi-Task Image Captioning Framework for Cotton Disease and Pest Diagnosis Using CrossViT and T5
by Chenzi Zhao, Xiaoyan Meng, Bing Bai and Hao Qiu
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(19), 10668; https://doi.org/10.3390/app151910668 - 2 Oct 2025
Abstract
The identification of cotton diseases and pests is crucial for maintaining cotton yield and quality. However, conventional manual methods are inefficient and prone to high error rates, limiting their practicality in real-world agricultural scenarios. Furthermore, Convolutional Neural Network–Long Short-Term Memory (CNN-LSTM) models are [...] Read more.
The identification of cotton diseases and pests is crucial for maintaining cotton yield and quality. However, conventional manual methods are inefficient and prone to high error rates, limiting their practicality in real-world agricultural scenarios. Furthermore, Convolutional Neural Network–Long Short-Term Memory (CNN-LSTM) models are insufficient in generating fine-grained and semantically rich image captions, particularly for complex disease and pest features. To overcome these challenges, we introduce CottonCapT6, a novel multi-task image captioning framework based on the Cross Vision Transformer (CrossViT-18-Dagger-408) and Text-to-Text Transfer Transformer (T5). We also construct a new dataset containing annotated images of seven common cotton diseases and pests to support this work. Experimental results demonstrate that CottonCapT6 achieves a Consensus-based Image Captioning Evaluation (CIDEr) score of 197.2% on the captioning task, demonstrating outstanding performance. Notably, the framework excels in providing more descriptive, coherent, and contextually accurate captions. This approach has strong potential to be deployed in cotton farms in the future, helping pest control personnel and farmers make precise judgments on cotton diseases and pests. However, its generalizability to other crops and environmental conditions remains an area for future exploration. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Science and Technology)
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19 pages, 2183 KB  
Article
A Hierarchical RNN-LSTM Model for Multi-Class Outage Prediction and Operational Optimization in Microgrids
by Nouman Liaqat, Muhammad Zubair, Aashir Waleed, Muhammad Irfan Abid and Muhammad Shahid
Electricity 2025, 6(4), 55; https://doi.org/10.3390/electricity6040055 - 1 Oct 2025
Abstract
Microgrids are becoming an innovative piece of modern energy systems as they provide locally sourced and resilient energy opportunities and enable efficient energy sourcing. However, microgrid operations can be greatly affected by sudden environmental changes, deviating demand, and unexpected outages. In particular, extreme [...] Read more.
Microgrids are becoming an innovative piece of modern energy systems as they provide locally sourced and resilient energy opportunities and enable efficient energy sourcing. However, microgrid operations can be greatly affected by sudden environmental changes, deviating demand, and unexpected outages. In particular, extreme climatic events expose the vulnerability of microgrid infrastructure and resilience, often leading to increased risk of system-wide outages. Thus, successful microgrid operation relies on timely and accurate outage predictions. This research proposes a data-driven machine learning framework for the optimized operation of a microgrid and predictive outage detection using a Recurrent Neural Network–Long Short-Term Memory (RNN-LSTM) architecture that reflects inherent temporal modeling methods. A time-aware embedding and masking strategy is employed to handle categorical and sparse temporal features, while mutual information-based feature selection ensures only the most relevant and interpretable inputs are retained for prediction. Moreover, the model addresses the challenges of experiencing rapid power fluctuations by looking at long-term learning dependency aspects within historical and real-time data observation streams. Two datasets are utilized: a locally developed real-time dataset collected from a 5 MW microgrid of Maple Cement Factory in Mianwali and a 15-year national power outage dataset obtained from Kaggle. Both datasets went through intensive preprocessing, normalization, and tokenization to transform raw readings into machine-readable sequences. The suggested approach attained an accuracy of 86.52% on the real-time dataset and 84.19% on the Kaggle dataset, outperforming conventional models in detecting sequential outage patterns. It also achieved a precision of 86%, a recall of 86.20%, and an F1-score of 86.12%, surpassing the performance of other models such as CNN, XGBoost, SVM, and various static classifiers. In contrast to these traditional approaches, the RNN-LSTM’s ability to leverage temporal context makes it a more effective and intelligent choice for real-time outage prediction and microgrid optimization. Full article
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31 pages, 489 KB  
Systematic Review
Explainable Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning for Air Pollution Risk Assessment and Respiratory Health Outcomes: A Systematic Review
by Israel Edem Agbehadji and Ibidun Christiana Obagbuwa
Atmosphere 2025, 16(10), 1154; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16101154 - 1 Oct 2025
Abstract
Air pollution is a leading environmental risk that causes respiratory morbidity and mortality. The increasing availability of high-resolution environmental data and air pollution-related health cases have accelerated the use of machine learning models (ML) to estimate environmental exposure–response relationships, forecast health risks and [...] Read more.
Air pollution is a leading environmental risk that causes respiratory morbidity and mortality. The increasing availability of high-resolution environmental data and air pollution-related health cases have accelerated the use of machine learning models (ML) to estimate environmental exposure–response relationships, forecast health risks and call for the needed policy and practical interventions. Unfortunately, ML models are opaque, in a sense that, it is unclear how these models combine various data inputs to make a concise decision. Thus, limiting its trust and use in clinical matters. Explainable artificial intelligence (xAI) models offer the necessary techniques to ensure transparent and interpretable models. This systematic review explores online data repositories through the lens of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guideline to synthesize articles from 2020 to 2025. Various inclusion and exclusion criteria were established to narrow the search to a final selection of 92 articles, which were thoroughly reviewed by independent researchers to reduce bias in article assessment. Equally, the ROBINS-I (Risk Of Bias In Non-randomized Studies of Interventions) domain strategy was helpful in further reducing any possible risk in the article assessment and its reproducibility. The findings reveal a growing adoption of ML techniques such as random forests, XGBoost, parallel lightweight diagnosis models and deep neural networks for health risk prediction, with SHAP (SHapley Additive exPlanations) emerging as the dominant technique for these models’ interpretability. The extremely randomized tree (ERT) technique demonstrated optimal performance but lacks explainability. Moreover, the limitations of these models include generalizability, data limitations and policy translation. Conclusion: This review’s outcome suggests limited research on the integration of LIME (Local Interpretable Model-Agnostic Explanations) in the current ML model; it recommends that future research could focus on causal-xAI-ML models. Again, the use of such models in respiratory health issues may be complemented with a medical professional’s opinion. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Air Quality and Health)
49 pages, 517 KB  
Review
A Comprehensive Review of Data-Driven Techniques for Air Pollution Concentration Forecasting
by Jaroslaw Bernacki and Rafał Scherer
Sensors 2025, 25(19), 6044; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25196044 - 1 Oct 2025
Abstract
Air quality is crucial for public health and the environment, which makes it important to both monitor and forecast the level of pollution. Polluted air, containing harmful substances such as particulate matter, nitrogen oxides, or ozone, can lead to serious respiratory and circulatory [...] Read more.
Air quality is crucial for public health and the environment, which makes it important to both monitor and forecast the level of pollution. Polluted air, containing harmful substances such as particulate matter, nitrogen oxides, or ozone, can lead to serious respiratory and circulatory diseases, especially in people at risk. Air quality forecasting allows for early warning of smog episodes and taking actions to reduce pollutant emissions. In this article, we review air pollutant concentration forecasting methods, analyzing both classical statistical approaches and modern techniques based on artificial intelligence, including deep models, neural networks, and machine learning, as well as advanced sensing technologies. This work aims to present the current state of research and identify the most promising directions of development in air quality modeling, which can contribute to more effective health and environmental protection. According to the reviewed literature, deep learning–based models, particularly hybrid and attention-driven architectures, emerge as the most promising approaches, while persistent challenges such as data quality, interpretability, and integration of heterogeneous sensing systems define the open issues for future research. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Smart Gas Sensor Applications in Environmental Change Monitoring)
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24 pages, 22010 KB  
Article
Improving the Temporal Resolution of Land Surface Temperature Using Machine and Deep Learning Models
by Mohsen Niroomand, Parham Pahlavani, Behnaz Bigdeli and Omid Ghorbanzadeh
Geomatics 2025, 5(4), 50; https://doi.org/10.3390/geomatics5040050 - 1 Oct 2025
Abstract
Land Surface Temperature (LST) is a critical parameter for analyzing urban heat islands, surface–atmosphere interactions, and environmental management. This study enhances the temporal resolution of LST data by leveraging machine learning and deep learning models. A novel methodology was developed using Landsat 8 [...] Read more.
Land Surface Temperature (LST) is a critical parameter for analyzing urban heat islands, surface–atmosphere interactions, and environmental management. This study enhances the temporal resolution of LST data by leveraging machine learning and deep learning models. A novel methodology was developed using Landsat 8 thermal data and Sentinel-2 multispectral imagery to predict LST at finer temporal intervals in an urban setting. Although Sentinel-2 lacks a thermal band, its high-resolution multispectral data, when integrated with Landsat 8 thermal observations, provide valuable complementary information for LST estimation. Several models were employed for LST prediction, including Random Forest Regression (RFR), Convolutional Neural Network (CNN), Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) network, and Gated Recurrent Unit (GRU). Model performance was assessed using the coefficient of determination (R2) and Mean Absolute Error (MAE). The CNN model demonstrated the highest predictive capability, achieving an R2 of 74.81% and an MAE of 1.588 °C. Feature importance analysis highlighted the role of spectral bands, spectral indices, topographic parameters, and land cover data in capturing the dynamic complexity of LST variations and directional patterns. A refined CNN model, trained with the features exhibiting the highest correlation with the reference LST, achieved an improved R2 of 84.48% and an MAE of 1.19 °C. These results underscore the importance of a comprehensive analysis of the factors influencing LST, as well as the need to consider the specific characteristics of the study area. Additionally, a modified TsHARP approach was applied to enhance spatial resolution, though its accuracy remained lower than that of the CNN model. The study was conducted in Tehran, a rapidly urbanizing metropolis facing rising temperatures, heavy traffic congestion, rapid horizontal expansion, and low energy efficiency. The findings contribute to urban environmental management by providing high-temporal-resolution LST data, essential for mitigating urban heat islands and improving climate resilience. Full article
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22 pages, 3283 KB  
Article
A Domain-Adaptive Deep Learning Approach for Microplastic Classification
by Max Barker, Tanmay Singha, Meg Willans, Mark Hackett and Duc-Son Pham
Microplastics 2025, 4(4), 69; https://doi.org/10.3390/microplastics4040069 - 1 Oct 2025
Abstract
Microplastics pose a growing environmental concern, necessitating accurate and scalable methods for their detection and classification. This study presents a novel deep learning framework that integrates a transformer-based architecture with domain adaptation techniques to classify microplastics using reflectance micro-FTIR spectroscopy. A key challenge [...] Read more.
Microplastics pose a growing environmental concern, necessitating accurate and scalable methods for their detection and classification. This study presents a novel deep learning framework that integrates a transformer-based architecture with domain adaptation techniques to classify microplastics using reflectance micro-FTIR spectroscopy. A key challenge addressed in this work is the domain shift between laboratory-prepared reference spectra and environmentally sourced spectra, which can significantly degrade model performance. To overcome this, three domain-adaptation strategies—Domain Adversarial Neural Networks (DANN), Deep Subdomain-Adaptation Networks (DSAN), and Deep CORAL—were evaluated for their ability to enhance cross-domain generalization. Experimental results show that while DANN was unstable, DSAN and Deep CORAL improved target domain accuracy. Deep CORAL achieved 99% accuracy on the source and 94% on the target, offering balanced performance. DSAN reached 95% on the target but reduced source accuracy. Overall, statistical alignment methods outperformed adversarial approaches in transformer-based spectral adaptation. The proposed model was integrated into a reflectance micro-FTIR workflow, accurately identifying PE and PP microplastics from unlabelled spectra. Predictions closely matched expert-validated results, demonstrating practical applicability. This first use of a domain-adaptive transformer in microplastics spectroscopy sets a benchmark for high-throughput, cross-domain analysis. Future work will extend to more polymers and enhance model efficiency for field use. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Feature Papers in Microplastics)
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17 pages, 2893 KB  
Article
TY-SpectralNet: An Interpretable Adaptive Network for the Pattern of Multimode Fiber Spectral Analysis
by Yuzhe Wang, Songlu Lin, Fudong Zhang and Zhihong Wang
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(19), 10606; https://doi.org/10.3390/app151910606 - 30 Sep 2025
Abstract
Background: The high-precision analysis of multimode fibers (MMFs) is a critical task in numerous applications, including remote sensing, medical imaging, and environmental monitoring. In this study, we propose a novel deep interpretable network approach to reconstruct spectral images captured using CCD sensors. [...] Read more.
Background: The high-precision analysis of multimode fibers (MMFs) is a critical task in numerous applications, including remote sensing, medical imaging, and environmental monitoring. In this study, we propose a novel deep interpretable network approach to reconstruct spectral images captured using CCD sensors. Methods: Our model leverages a Tiny-YOLO-inspired convolutional neural network architecture, specifically designed for spectral wavelength prediction tasks. A total of 1880 CCD interference images were acquired across a broad near-infrared range from 1527.7 to 1565.3 nm. To ensure precise predictions, we introduce a dynamic factor α and design a dynamic adaptive loss function based on Huber loss and Log-Cosh loss. Results: Experimental evaluation with five-fold cross-validation demonstrates the robustness of the proposed method, achieving an average validation MSE of 0.0149, an R2 score of 0.9994, and a normalized error (μ) of 0.0005 in single MMF wavelength prediction, confirming its strong generalization capability across unseen data. The reconstructed outputs are further visualized as smooth spectral curves, providing interpretable insights into the model’s decision-making process. Conclusions: This study highlights the potential of deep learning-based interpretable networks in reconstructing high-fidelity spectral images from CCD sensors, paving the way for advancements in spectral imaging technology. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Optical Fiber Sensors: Applications and Technology)
27 pages, 3355 KB  
Article
ECO-HYBRID: Sustainable Waste Classification Using Transfer Learning with Hybrid and Enhanced CNN Models
by Sharanya Shetty, Saanvi Kallianpur, Roshan Fernandes, Anisha P. Rodrigues and Vijaya Padmanabha
Sustainability 2025, 17(19), 8761; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17198761 - 29 Sep 2025
Abstract
Effective waste management is important for reducing environmental harm, improving recycling operations, and building urban sustainability. However, accurate waste classification remains a critical challenge, as many deep learning models struggle with diverse waste types. In this study, classification accuracy is enhanced using transfer [...] Read more.
Effective waste management is important for reducing environmental harm, improving recycling operations, and building urban sustainability. However, accurate waste classification remains a critical challenge, as many deep learning models struggle with diverse waste types. In this study, classification accuracy is enhanced using transfer learning, ensemble techniques, and custom architectures. Eleven pre-trained convolutional neural networks, including ResNet-50, EfficientNet variants, and DenseNet-201, were fine-tuned to extract meaningful patterns from waste images. To further improve model performance, ensemble strategies such as weighted averaging, soft voting, and stacking were implemented, resulting in a hybrid model combining ResNet-50, EfficientNetV2-M, and DenseNet-201, which outperformed individual models. In the proposed system, two specialized architectures were developed: EcoMobileNet, an optimized MobileNetV3 Large-based model incorporating Squeeze-and-Excitation blocks for efficient mobile deployment, and EcoDenseNet, a DenseNet-201 variant enhanced with Mish activation for improved feature extraction. The evaluation was conducted on a dataset comprising 4691 images across 10 waste categories, sourced from publicly available repositories. The implementation of EcoMobileNet achieved a test accuracy of 98.08%, while EcoDenseNet reached an accuracy of 97.86%. The hybrid model also attained 98.08% accuracy. Furthermore, the ensemble stacking approach yielded the highest test accuracy of 98.29%, demonstrating its effectiveness in classifying heterogeneous waste types. By leveraging deep learning, the proposed system contributes to the development of scalable, sustainable, and automated waste-sorting solutions, thereby optimizing recycling processes and minimizing environmental impact. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Smart Cities with Innovative Solutions in Sustainable Urban Future)
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28 pages, 5987 KB  
Article
Embedded Sensing in Additive Manufacturing Metal and Polymer Parts: A Comparative Study of Integration Techniques and Structural Health Monitoring Performance
by Matthew Larnet Laurent, George Edward Marquis, Maria Gonzalez, Ibrahim Tansel and Sabri Tosunoglu
Algorithms 2025, 18(10), 613; https://doi.org/10.3390/a18100613 - 29 Sep 2025
Abstract
This study presents a comparative evaluation of post-process sensor integration in additively manufactured (AM) metal and the in-situ process for polymer structures for structural health monitoring (SHM), with an emphasis on embedded sensors. Geometrically identical specimens were fabricated using copper via metal fused [...] Read more.
This study presents a comparative evaluation of post-process sensor integration in additively manufactured (AM) metal and the in-situ process for polymer structures for structural health monitoring (SHM), with an emphasis on embedded sensors. Geometrically identical specimens were fabricated using copper via metal fused filament fabrication (FFF) and PLA via polymer FFF, with piezoelectric transducers (PZTs) inserted into internal cavities to assess the influence of material and placement on sensing fidelity. Mechanical testing under compressive and point loads generated signals that were transformed into time–frequency spectrograms using a Short-Time Fourier Transform (STFT) framework. An engineered RGB representation was developed, combining global amplitude scaling with an amplitude-envelope encoding to enhance contrast and highlight subtle wave features. These spectrograms served as inputs to convolutional neural networks (CNNs) for classification of load conditions and detection of damage-related features. Results showed reliable recognition in both copper and PLA specimens, with CNN classification accuracies exceeding 95%. Embedded PZTs were especially effective in PLA, where signal damping and environmental sensitivity often hinder surface-mounted sensors. This work demonstrates the advantages of embedded sensing in AM structures, particularly when paired with spectrogram-based feature engineering and CNN modeling, advancing real-time SHM for aerospace, energy, and defense applications. Full article
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34 pages, 8649 KB  
Article
Direct Multiple-Step-Ahead Forecasting of Daily Gas Consumption in Non-Residential Buildings Using Wavelet/RNN-Based Models and Data Augmentation— Comparative Evaluation
by Jana Mižáková, Branislav Piteľ, Pavlo Pomin and Alexander Hošovský
Technologies 2025, 13(10), 435; https://doi.org/10.3390/technologies13100435 - 28 Sep 2025
Abstract
The article focuses on forecasting 7-day daily natural gas consumption for a healthcare facility in Slovakia during the winter season (1 October–30 April). The goal is to optimise operational costs while maintaining user comfort and considering economic and environmental indicators. The prediction is [...] Read more.
The article focuses on forecasting 7-day daily natural gas consumption for a healthcare facility in Slovakia during the winter season (1 October–30 April). The goal is to optimise operational costs while maintaining user comfort and considering economic and environmental indicators. The prediction is based on historical gas consumption and temperature data from eleven heating seasons (taking into account external factors such as COVID-19 and geopolitical conflicts). Linear regression and counting of residuals, Wavelet decomposition and Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) neural networks were used. Two approaches were tested: firstly, data augmentation using Wavelet decomposition and creating an LSTM model and secondly, individual prediction of wavelet components by LSTM and combining the best-performing models. The second approach, which forecasted each wavelet component separately and then reconstructed the final prediction, yielded the best accuracy (nMAE = 5.71%, NRMSE = 7.80%). The results showed that using predicted temperatures slightly reduced accuracy. Overall, the Wavelet-LSTM model proved to be the most effective method for forecasting gas consumption in healthcare facilities during winter. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Information and Communication Technologies)
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18 pages, 2095 KB  
Article
Parallel Time-Frequency Multi-Scale Attention with Dynamic Convolution for Environmental Sound Classification
by Hongjie Wan, Hailei He and Yuying Li
Entropy 2025, 27(10), 1007; https://doi.org/10.3390/e27101007 - 26 Sep 2025
Abstract
Convolutional neural network (CNN) models are widely used for environmental sound classification (ESC). However, 2-D convolutions assume translation invariance along both time and frequency axes, while in practice the frequency dimension is not shift-invariant. Additionally, single-scale convolutions limit the receptive field, leading to [...] Read more.
Convolutional neural network (CNN) models are widely used for environmental sound classification (ESC). However, 2-D convolutions assume translation invariance along both time and frequency axes, while in practice the frequency dimension is not shift-invariant. Additionally, single-scale convolutions limit the receptive field, leading to incomplete feature representation. To address these issues, we introduce a parallel time-frequency multi-scale attention (PTFMSA) module that integrates local and global attention across multiple scales to improve dynamic convolution in order to overcome these problems. We also introduce the parallel branch structure to avoid mutual interference of information in case of extracting time and frequency domain features. Additionally, we utilize learnable parameters that can dynamically adjust the weights of different branches during network training. Building on this module, we develop PTFMSAN, a compact network that processes raw waveforms directly for ESC. To further strengthen learning, between-class (BC) training is applied. Experiments on the ESC-50 dataset show that PTFMSAN outperforms the baseline model, achieving a classification accuracy of 90%, competitive among CNN-based networks. We also performed ablation experiments to verify the effectiveness of each module. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Signal and Data Analysis)
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27 pages, 1382 KB  
Article
Integrating AI and Geospatial Technologies for Sustainable Smart City Development: A Case Study of Yerevan
by Khoren Mkhitaryan, Anna Sanamyan, Mariam Mnatsakanyan, Erika Kirakosyan and Svetlana Ratner
Urban Sci. 2025, 9(10), 389; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci9100389 - 26 Sep 2025
Abstract
Urban growth and environmental pressures in rapidly transforming cities require innovative governance tools that integrate advanced technologies with institutional assessment. This study develops and applies a strategic integration framework that combines spatial analysis, Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs)-based land-use classification, SHAP-based feature attribution, and [...] Read more.
Urban growth and environmental pressures in rapidly transforming cities require innovative governance tools that integrate advanced technologies with institutional assessment. This study develops and applies a strategic integration framework that combines spatial analysis, Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs)-based land-use classification, SHAP-based feature attribution, and stakeholder interviews to evaluate Yerevan, Armenia, as a case of a mid-income city facing accelerated urbanization. The case selection is justified by Yerevan’s rapid built-up expansion, fragmented green areas, and institutional challenges in aligning urban development with sustainability goals. The CNN model achieved 92.4% accuracy in land-use classification, and projections under a business-as-usual scenario indicate a 12.8% increase in built-up areas and a 6.5% decline in green zones by 2030. SHAP analysis identified land surface temperature and NDVI as the most influential predictors, while governance interviews highlighted gaps in regulatory support and technical capacity. The proposed framework advances the literature by integrating AI-driven geospatial analysis with qualitative governance assessment, providing actionable insights for urban policymakers. Findings underscore the potential of combining machine learning, geospatial technologies, and institutional diagnostics to guide smart city planning in transition economies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Urbanization, Regional Planning and Development)
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