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Keywords = hybrid architectures

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16 pages, 11765 KiB  
Article
The European Influence on Qing Dynasty Architecture: Design Principles and Construction Innovations Across Cultures
by Manuel V. Castilla
Heritage 2025, 8(8), 311; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8080311 (registering DOI) - 2 Aug 2025
Abstract
The design and planning of Western-style constructions during the early Qing Dynasty in China constituted a significant multicultural encounter that fused technological advancement with aesthetic innovation. This cultural interplay is particularly evident in the imperial garden and pavilion projects commissioned by the Qing [...] Read more.
The design and planning of Western-style constructions during the early Qing Dynasty in China constituted a significant multicultural encounter that fused technological advancement with aesthetic innovation. This cultural interplay is particularly evident in the imperial garden and pavilion projects commissioned by the Qing court, which served as physical and symbolic sites of cross-cultural dialogue. Influenced by the intellectual and artistic movements of the European Renaissance, Western architectural concepts gradually found their way into the spatial and visual language of Chinese architecture, especially within the royal gardens and aristocratic buildings of the time. These structures were not simply imitative but rather represented a selective adaptation of Western ideas to suit Chinese imperial tastes and principles. This article examines the architectural language that emerged from this encounter between Chinese and European cultures, analysing symbolic motifs, spatial design, ornamental aesthetics, the application of linear perspective, and the integration of foreign architectural forms. These elements collectively functioned as tools to construct a unique visual discourse that communicated both political authority and cultural hybridity. The findings underscore that this architectural phenomenon was not merely stylistic imitation, but rather a dynamic convergence of technological knowledge and artistic vision across cultural boundaries. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Progress in Heritage Education: Evolving Techniques and Methods)
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24 pages, 1681 KiB  
Article
A Hybrid Quantum–Classical Architecture with Data Re-Uploading and Genetic Algorithm Optimization for Enhanced Image Classification
by Aksultan Mukhanbet and Beimbet Daribayev
Computation 2025, 13(8), 185; https://doi.org/10.3390/computation13080185 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Quantum machine learning (QML) has emerged as a promising approach for enhancing image classification by exploiting quantum computational principles such as superposition and entanglement. However, practical applications on complex datasets like CIFAR-100 remain limited due to the low expressivity of shallow circuits and [...] Read more.
Quantum machine learning (QML) has emerged as a promising approach for enhancing image classification by exploiting quantum computational principles such as superposition and entanglement. However, practical applications on complex datasets like CIFAR-100 remain limited due to the low expressivity of shallow circuits and challenges in circuit optimization. In this study, we propose HQCNN–REGA—a novel hybrid quantum–classical convolutional neural network architecture that integrates data re-uploading and genetic algorithm optimization for improved performance. The data re-uploading mechanism allows classical inputs to be encoded multiple times into quantum states, enhancing the model’s capacity to learn complex visual features. In parallel, a genetic algorithm is employed to evolve the quantum circuit architecture by optimizing gate sequences, entanglement patterns, and layer configurations. This combination enables automatic discovery of efficient parameterized quantum circuits without manual tuning. Experiments on the MNIST and CIFAR-100 datasets demonstrate state-of-the-art performance for quantum models, with HQCNN–REGA outperforming existing quantum neural networks and approaching the accuracy of advanced classical architectures. In particular, we compare our model with classical convolutional baselines such as ResNet-18 to validate its effectiveness in real-world image classification tasks. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of scalable, high-performing quantum–classical systems and offer a viable path toward practical deployment of QML in computer vision applications, especially on noisy intermediate-scale quantum (NISQ) hardware. Full article
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26 pages, 5263 KiB  
Article
A System Dynamics-Based Hybrid Digital Twin Model for Driving Green Manufacturing
by Sucheng Fan, Huagang Tong and Song Wang
Systems 2025, 13(8), 651; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems13080651 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
Green manufacturing has emerged as a critical objective in the evolution of advanced production systems. Although digital twin technology is widely recognized for enhancing efficiency and promoting sustainability, the majority of existing research focuses exclusively on physical systems. They neglect the impact of [...] Read more.
Green manufacturing has emerged as a critical objective in the evolution of advanced production systems. Although digital twin technology is widely recognized for enhancing efficiency and promoting sustainability, the majority of existing research focuses exclusively on physical systems. They neglect the impact of soft systems, including human behavior, decision-making, and operational strategies. To address this limitation, the present study introduces an innovative hybrid digital twin model that integrates both physical and soft systems to support green manufacturing initiatives comprehensively. The primary contributions of this work are threefold. First, a novel hybrid architecture is developed by coupling real-time physical data with virtual soft system components that simulate factory operations. Second, lean production principles are systematically incorporated into the soft system, thereby facilitating reduced energy consumption and minimizing environmental impact. Third, a parameter-driven programming model is formulated to correlate critical variables with green performance metrics, and a genetic algorithm is utilized to optimize these variables, ultimately enhancing sustainability outcomes. This integrated approach not only expands the applicability of digital twin technology but also offers a data-driven decision-support tool for the advancement of green manufacturing practices. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Systems Engineering)
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25 pages, 4446 KiB  
Article
Counter-Cartographies of Extraction: Mapping Socio-Environmental Changes Through Hybrid Geographic Information Technologies
by Mitesh Dixit, Nataša Danilović Hristić and Nebojša Stefanović
Land 2025, 14(8), 1576; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14081576 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
This paper examines Krivelj, a copper mining village in Serbia, as a critical yet overlooked node within global extractive networks. Despite supplying copper essential for renewable energy and sustainable architecture, Krivelj experiences severe ecological disruption, forced relocations, and socio-spatial destabilization, becoming a “sacrifice [...] Read more.
This paper examines Krivelj, a copper mining village in Serbia, as a critical yet overlooked node within global extractive networks. Despite supplying copper essential for renewable energy and sustainable architecture, Krivelj experiences severe ecological disruption, forced relocations, and socio-spatial destabilization, becoming a “sacrifice zone”—an area deliberately subjected to harm for broader economic interests. Employing a hybrid methodology that combines ethnographic fieldwork with Geographic Information Systems (GISs), this study spatializes narratives of extractive violence collected from residents through walking interviews, field sketches, and annotated aerial imagery. By integrating satellite data, legal documents, environmental sensors, and lived testimonies, it uncovers the concept of “slow violence,” where incremental harm occurs through bureaucratic neglect, ambient pollution, and legal ambiguity. Critiquing the abstraction of Planetary Urbanization theory, this research employs countertopography and forensic spatial analysis to propose a counter-cartographic framework that integrates geospatial analysis with local narratives. It demonstrates how global mining finance manifests locally through tangible experiences, such as respiratory illnesses and disrupted community relationships, emphasizing the potential of counter-cartography as a tool for visualizing and contesting systemic injustice. Full article
36 pages, 6545 KiB  
Review
MXene-Based Composites for Energy Harvesting and Energy Storage Devices
by Jorge Alexandre Alencar Fotius and Helinando Pequeno de Oliveira
Solids 2025, 6(3), 41; https://doi.org/10.3390/solids6030041 (registering DOI) - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
MXenes, a class of two-dimensional transition metal carbides and nitrides, emerged as a promising material for next-generation energy storage and corresponding applications due to their unique combination of high electrical conductivity, tunable surface chemistry, and lamellar structure. This review highlights recent advances in [...] Read more.
MXenes, a class of two-dimensional transition metal carbides and nitrides, emerged as a promising material for next-generation energy storage and corresponding applications due to their unique combination of high electrical conductivity, tunable surface chemistry, and lamellar structure. This review highlights recent advances in MXene-based composites, focusing on their integration into electrode architectures for the development of supercapacitors, batteries, and multifunctional devices, including triboelectric nanogenerators. It serves as a comprehensive overview of the multifunctional capabilities of MXene-based composites and their role in advancing efficient, flexible, and sustainable energy and sensing technologies, outlining how MXene-based systems are poised to redefine multifunctional energy platforms. Electrochemical performance optimization strategies are discussed by considering surface functionalization, interlayer engineering, scalable synthesis techniques, and integration with advanced electrolytes, with particular attention paid to the development of hybrid supercapacitors, triboelectric nanogenerators (TENGs), and wearable sensors. These applications are favored due to improved charge storage capability, mechanical properties, and the multifunctionality of MXenes. Despite these aspects, challenges related to long-term stability, sustainable large-scale production, and environmental degradation must still be addressed. Emerging approaches such as three-dimensional self-assembly and artificial intelligence-assisted design are identified as key challenges for overcoming these issues. Full article
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26 pages, 1790 KiB  
Article
A Hybrid Deep Learning Model for Aromatic and Medicinal Plant Species Classification Using a Curated Leaf Image Dataset
by Shareena E. M., D. Abraham Chandy, Shemi P. M. and Alwin Poulose
AgriEngineering 2025, 7(8), 243; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriengineering7080243 - 1 Aug 2025
Abstract
In the era of smart agriculture, accurate identification of plant species is critical for effective crop management, biodiversity monitoring, and the sustainable use of medicinal resources. However, existing deep learning approaches often underperform when applied to fine-grained plant classification tasks due to the [...] Read more.
In the era of smart agriculture, accurate identification of plant species is critical for effective crop management, biodiversity monitoring, and the sustainable use of medicinal resources. However, existing deep learning approaches often underperform when applied to fine-grained plant classification tasks due to the lack of domain-specific, high-quality datasets and the limited representational capacity of traditional architectures. This study addresses these challenges by introducing a novel, well-curated leaf image dataset consisting of 39 classes of medicinal and aromatic plants collected from the Aromatic and Medicinal Plant Research Station in Odakkali, Kerala, India. To overcome performance bottlenecks observed with a baseline Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) that achieved only 44.94% accuracy, we progressively enhanced model performance through a series of architectural innovations. These included the use of a pre-trained VGG16 network, data augmentation techniques, and fine-tuning of deeper convolutional layers, followed by the integration of Squeeze-and-Excitation (SE) attention blocks. Ultimately, we propose a hybrid deep learning architecture that combines VGG16 with Batch Normalization, Gated Recurrent Units (GRUs), Transformer modules, and Dilated Convolutions. This final model achieved a peak validation accuracy of 95.24%, significantly outperforming several baseline models, such as custom CNN (44.94%), VGG-19 (59.49%), VGG-16 before augmentation (71.52%), Xception (85.44%), Inception v3 (87.97%), VGG-16 after data augumentation (89.24%), VGG-16 after fine-tuning (90.51%), MobileNetV2 (93.67), and VGG16 with SE block (94.94%). These results demonstrate superior capability in capturing both local textures and global morphological features. The proposed solution not only advances the state of the art in plant classification but also contributes a valuable dataset to the research community. Its real-world applicability spans field-based plant identification, biodiversity conservation, and precision agriculture, offering a scalable tool for automated plant recognition in complex ecological and agricultural environments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Implementation of Artificial Intelligence in Agriculture)
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36 pages, 5053 KiB  
Systematic Review
Prescriptive Maintenance: A Systematic Literature Review and Exploratory Meta-Synthesis
by Marko Orošnjak, Felix Saretzky and Slawomir Kedziora
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8507; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158507 (registering DOI) - 31 Jul 2025
Abstract
Prescriptive Maintenance (PsM) transforms industrial asset management by enabling autonomous decisions through simultaneous failure anticipation and optimal maintenance recommendations. Yet, despite increasing research interest, the conceptual clarity, technological maturity, and practical deployment of PsM remains fragmented. Here, we conduct a comprehensive and application-oriented [...] Read more.
Prescriptive Maintenance (PsM) transforms industrial asset management by enabling autonomous decisions through simultaneous failure anticipation and optimal maintenance recommendations. Yet, despite increasing research interest, the conceptual clarity, technological maturity, and practical deployment of PsM remains fragmented. Here, we conduct a comprehensive and application-oriented Systematic Literature Review of studies published between 2013–2024. We identify key enablers—artificial intelligence and machine learning, horizontal and vertical integration, and deep reinforcement learning—that map the functional space of PsM across industrial sectors. The results from our multivariate meta-synthesis uncover three main thematic research clusters, ranging from decision-automation of technical (multi)component-level systems to strategic and organisational-support strategies. Notably, while predictive models are widely adopted, the translation of these capabilities to PsM remains limited. Primary reasons include semantic interoperability, real-time optimisation, and deployment scalability. As a response, a structured research agenda is proposed to emphasise hybrid architectures, context-aware prescription mechanisms, and alignment with Industry 5.0 principles of human-centricity, resilience, and sustainability. The review establishes a critical foundation for future advances in intelligent, explainable, and action-oriented maintenance systems. Full article
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25 pages, 2082 KiB  
Article
XTTS-Based Data Augmentation for Profanity Keyword Recognition in Low-Resource Speech Scenarios
by Shin-Chi Lai, Yi-Chang Zhu, Szu-Ting Wang, Yen-Ching Chang, Ying-Hsiu Hung, Jhen-Kai Tang and Wen-Kai Tsai
Appl. Syst. Innov. 2025, 8(4), 108; https://doi.org/10.3390/asi8040108 - 31 Jul 2025
Abstract
As voice cloning technology rapidly advances, the risk of personal voices being misused by malicious actors for fraud or other illegal activities has significantly increased, making the collection of speech data increasingly challenging. To address this issue, this study proposes a data augmentation [...] Read more.
As voice cloning technology rapidly advances, the risk of personal voices being misused by malicious actors for fraud or other illegal activities has significantly increased, making the collection of speech data increasingly challenging. To address this issue, this study proposes a data augmentation method based on XText-to-Speech (XTTS) synthesis to tackle the challenges of small-sample, multi-class speech recognition, using profanity as a case study to achieve high-accuracy keyword recognition. Two models were therefore evaluated: a CNN model (Proposed-I) and a CNN-Transformer hybrid model (Proposed-II). Proposed-I leverages local feature extraction, improving accuracy on a real human speech (RHS) test set from 55.35% without augmentation to 80.36% with XTTS-enhanced data. Proposed-II integrates CNN’s local feature extraction with Transformer’s long-range dependency modeling, further boosting test set accuracy to 88.90% while reducing the parameter count by approximately 41%, significantly enhancing computational efficiency. Compared to a previously proposed incremental architecture, the Proposed-II model achieves an 8.49% higher accuracy while reducing parameters by about 98.81% and MACs by about 98.97%, demonstrating exceptional resource efficiency. By utilizing XTTS and public corpora to generate a novel keyword speech dataset, this study enhances sample diversity and reduces reliance on large-scale original speech data. Experimental analysis reveals that an optimal synthetic-to-real speech ratio of 1:5 significantly improves the overall system accuracy, effectively addressing data scarcity. Additionally, the Proposed-I and Proposed-II models achieve accuracies of 97.54% and 98.66%, respectively, in distinguishing real from synthetic speech, demonstrating their strong potential for speech security and anti-spoofing applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advancements in Deep Learning and Its Applications)
18 pages, 1910 KiB  
Article
Hierarchical Learning for Closed-Loop Robotic Manipulation in Cluttered Scenes via Depth Vision, Reinforcement Learning, and Behaviour Cloning
by Hoi Fai Yu and Abdulrahman Altahhan
Electronics 2025, 14(15), 3074; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14153074 (registering DOI) - 31 Jul 2025
Abstract
Despite rapid advances in robot learning, the coordination of closed-loop manipulation in cluttered environments remains a challenging and relatively underexplored problem. We present a novel two-level hierarchical architecture for a depth vision-equipped robotic arm that integrates pushing, grasping, and high-level decision making. Central [...] Read more.
Despite rapid advances in robot learning, the coordination of closed-loop manipulation in cluttered environments remains a challenging and relatively underexplored problem. We present a novel two-level hierarchical architecture for a depth vision-equipped robotic arm that integrates pushing, grasping, and high-level decision making. Central to our approach is a prioritised action–selection mechanism that facilitates efficient early-stage learning via behaviour cloning (BC), while enabling scalable exploration through reinforcement learning (RL). A high-level decision neural network (DNN) selects between grasping and pushing actions, and two low-level action neural networks (ANNs) execute the selected primitive. The DNN is trained with RL, while the ANNs follow a hybrid learning scheme combining BC and RL. Notably, we introduce an automated demonstration generator based on oriented bounding boxes, eliminating the need for manual data collection and enabling precise, reproducible BC training signals. We evaluate our method on a challenging manipulation task involving five closely packed cubic objects. Our system achieves a completion rate (CR) of 100%, an average grasping success (AGS) of 93.1% per completion, and only 7.8 average decisions taken for completion (DTC). Comparative analysis against three baselines—a grasping-only policy, a fixed grasp-then-push sequence, and a cloned demonstration policy—highlights the necessity of dynamic decision making and the efficiency of our hierarchical design. In particular, the baselines yield lower AGS (86.6%) and higher DTC (10.6 and 11.4) scores, underscoring the advantages of content-aware, closed-loop control. These results demonstrate that our architecture supports robust, adaptive manipulation and scalable learning, offering a promising direction for autonomous skill coordination in complex environments. Full article
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32 pages, 7263 KiB  
Article
Time Series Prediction and Modeling of Visibility Range with Artificial Neural Network and Hybrid Adaptive Neuro-Fuzzy Inference System
by Okikiade Adewale Layioye, Pius Adewale Owolawi and Joseph Sunday Ojo
Atmosphere 2025, 16(8), 928; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16080928 (registering DOI) - 31 Jul 2025
Abstract
The time series prediction of visibility in terms of various meteorological variables, such as relative humidity, temperature, atmospheric pressure, and wind speed, is presented in this paper using Single-Variable Regression Analysis (SVRA), Artificial Neural Network (ANN), and Hybrid Adaptive Neuro-fuzzy Inference System (ANFIS) [...] Read more.
The time series prediction of visibility in terms of various meteorological variables, such as relative humidity, temperature, atmospheric pressure, and wind speed, is presented in this paper using Single-Variable Regression Analysis (SVRA), Artificial Neural Network (ANN), and Hybrid Adaptive Neuro-fuzzy Inference System (ANFIS) techniques for several sub-tropical locations. The initial method used for the prediction of visibility in this study was the SVRA, and the results were enhanced using the ANN and ANFIS techniques. Throughout the study, neural networks with various algorithms and functions were trained with different atmospheric parameters to establish a relationship function between inputs and visibility for all locations. The trained neural models were tested and validated by comparing actual and predicted data to enhance visibility prediction accuracy. Results were compared to assess the efficiency of the proposed systems, measuring the root mean square error (RMSE), coefficient of determination (R2), and mean bias error (MBE) to validate the models. The standard statistical technique, particularly SVRA, revealed that the strongest functional relationship was between visibility and RH, followed by WS, T, and P, in that order. However, to improve accuracy, this study utilized back propagation and hybrid learning algorithms for visibility prediction. Error analysis from the ANN technique showed increased prediction accuracy when all the atmospheric variables were considered together. After testing various neural network models, it was found that the ANFIS model provided the most accurate predicted results, with improvements of 31.59%, 32.70%, 30.53%, 28.95%, 31.82%, and 22.34% over the ANN for Durban, Cape Town, Mthatha, Bloemfontein, Johannesburg, and Mahikeng, respectively. The neuro-fuzzy model demonstrated better accuracy and efficiency by yielding the finest results with the lowest RMSE and highest R2 for all cities involved compared to the ANN model and standard statistical techniques. However, the statistical performance analysis between measured and estimated visibility indicated that the ANN produced satisfactory results. The results will find applications in Optical Wireless Communication (OWC), flight operations, and climate change analysis. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Atmospheric Modeling with Artificial Intelligence Technologies)
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22 pages, 1268 KiB  
Review
Natural Polymer-Based Hydrogel Platforms for Organoid and Microphysiological Systems: Mechanistic Insights and Translational Perspectives
by Yeonoh Cho, Jungmok You and Jong Hun Lee
Polymers 2025, 17(15), 2109; https://doi.org/10.3390/polym17152109 - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 49
Abstract
Organoids and microphysiological systems (MPSs) have emerged as physiologically relevant platforms that recapitulate key structural and functional features of human organs, tissues, and microenvironments. As one of the essential components that define the success of these systems, hydrogels play the central role of [...] Read more.
Organoids and microphysiological systems (MPSs) have emerged as physiologically relevant platforms that recapitulate key structural and functional features of human organs, tissues, and microenvironments. As one of the essential components that define the success of these systems, hydrogels play the central role of providing a three-dimensional, biomimetic scaffold that supports cell viability, spatial organization, and dynamic signaling. Natural polymer-based hydrogels, derived from materials such as collagen, gelatin, hyaluronic acid, and alginate, offer favorable properties including biocompatibility, degradability, and an extracellular matrix-like architecture. This review presents recent advances in the design and application of such hydrogels, focusing on crosslinking strategies (physical, chemical, and hybrid), the viscoelastic characteristics, and stimuli-responsive behaviors. The influence of these materials on cellular processes, such as stemness maintenance, differentiation, and morphogenesis, is critically examined. Furthermore, the applications of organoid culture and dynamic MPS platforms are discussed, highlighting their roles in morphogen delivery, barrier formation, and vascularization. Current challenges and future perspectives toward achieving standardized, scalable, and translational hydrogel systems are also addressed. Full article
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26 pages, 5549 KiB  
Article
Intrusion Detection and Real-Time Adaptive Security in Medical IoT Using a Cyber-Physical System Design
by Faeiz Alserhani
Sensors 2025, 25(15), 4720; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25154720 (registering DOI) - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 47
Abstract
The increasing reliance on Medical Internet of Things (MIoT) devices introduces critical cybersecurity vulnerabilities, necessitating advanced, adaptive defense mechanisms. Recent cyber incidents—such as compromised critical care systems, modified therapeutic device outputs, and fraudulent clinical data inputs—demonstrate that these threats now directly impact life-critical [...] Read more.
The increasing reliance on Medical Internet of Things (MIoT) devices introduces critical cybersecurity vulnerabilities, necessitating advanced, adaptive defense mechanisms. Recent cyber incidents—such as compromised critical care systems, modified therapeutic device outputs, and fraudulent clinical data inputs—demonstrate that these threats now directly impact life-critical aspects of patient security. In this paper, we introduce a machine learning-enabled Cognitive Cyber-Physical System (ML-CCPS), which is designed to identify and respond to cyber threats in MIoT environments through a layered cognitive architecture. The system is constructed on a feedback-looped architecture integrating hybrid feature modeling, physical behavioral analysis, and Extreme Learning Machine (ELM)-based classification to provide adaptive access control, continuous monitoring, and reliable intrusion detection. ML-CCPS is capable of outperforming benchmark classifiers with an acceptable computational cost, as evidenced by its macro F1-score of 97.8% and an AUC of 99.1% when evaluated with the ToN-IoT dataset. Alongside classification accuracy, the framework has demonstrated reliable behaviour under noisy telemetry, maintained strong efficiency in resource-constrained settings, and scaled effectively with larger numbers of connected devices. Comparative evaluations, radar-style synthesis, and ablation studies further validate its effectiveness in real-time MIoT environments and its ability to detect novel attack types with high reliability. Full article
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16 pages, 832 KiB  
Article
Development and Evaluation of Neural Network Architectures for Model Predictive Control of Building Thermal Systems
by Jevgenijs Telicko, Andris Krumins and Agris Nikitenko
Buildings 2025, 15(15), 2702; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15152702 (registering DOI) - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 38
Abstract
The operational and indoor environmental quality of buildings has a significant impact on global energy consumption and human quality of life. One of the key directions for improving building performance is the optimization of building control systems. In modern buildings, the presence of [...] Read more.
The operational and indoor environmental quality of buildings has a significant impact on global energy consumption and human quality of life. One of the key directions for improving building performance is the optimization of building control systems. In modern buildings, the presence of numerous actuators and monitoring points makes manually designed control algorithms potentially suboptimal due to the complexity and human factors. To address this challenge, model predictive control based on artificial neural networks can be employed. The advantage of this approach lies in the model’s ability to learn and understand the dynamic behavior of the building from monitoring datasets. It should be noted that the effectiveness of such control models is directly dependent on the forecasting accuracy of the neural networks. In this study, we adapt neural network architectures such as GRU and TCN for use in the context of building model predictive control. Furthermore, we propose a novel hybrid architecture that combines the strengths of recurrent and convolutional neural networks. These architectures were compared using real monitoring data collected with a custom-developed device introduced in this work. The results indicate that, under the given experimental conditions, the proposed hybrid architecture outperforms both GRU and TCN models, particularly when processing large sequential input vectors. Full article
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29 pages, 15488 KiB  
Article
GOFENet: A Hybrid Transformer–CNN Network Integrating GEOBIA-Based Object Priors for Semantic Segmentation of Remote Sensing Images
by Tao He, Jianyu Chen and Delu Pan
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(15), 2652; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17152652 (registering DOI) - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 43
Abstract
Geographic object-based image analysis (GEOBIA) has demonstrated substantial utility in remote sensing tasks. However, its integration with deep learning remains largely confined to image-level classification. This is primarily due to the irregular shapes and fragmented boundaries of segmented objects, which limit its applicability [...] Read more.
Geographic object-based image analysis (GEOBIA) has demonstrated substantial utility in remote sensing tasks. However, its integration with deep learning remains largely confined to image-level classification. This is primarily due to the irregular shapes and fragmented boundaries of segmented objects, which limit its applicability in semantic segmentation. While convolutional neural networks (CNNs) excel at local feature extraction, they inherently struggle to capture long-range dependencies. In contrast, Transformer-based models are well suited for global context modeling but often lack fine-grained local detail. To overcome these limitations, we propose GOFENet (Geo-Object Feature Enhanced Network)—a hybrid semantic segmentation architecture that effectively fuses object-level priors into deep feature representations. GOFENet employs a dual-encoder design combining CNN and Swin Transformer architectures, enabling multi-scale feature fusion through skip connections to preserve both local and global semantics. An auxiliary branch incorporating cascaded atrous convolutions is introduced to inject information of segmented objects into the learning process. Furthermore, we develop a cross-channel selection module (CSM) for refined channel-wise attention, a feature enhancement module (FEM) to merge global and local representations, and a shallow–deep feature fusion module (SDFM) to integrate pixel- and object-level cues across scales. Experimental results on the GID and LoveDA datasets demonstrate that GOFENet achieves superior segmentation performance, with 66.02% mIoU and 51.92% mIoU, respectively. The model exhibits strong capability in delineating large-scale land cover features, producing sharper object boundaries and reducing classification noise, while preserving the integrity and discriminability of land cover categories. Full article
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21 pages, 1928 KiB  
Article
A CNN-Transformer Hybrid Framework for Multi-Label Predator–Prey Detection in Agricultural Fields
by Yifan Lyu, Feiyu Lu, Xuaner Wang, Yakui Wang, Zihuan Wang, Yawen Zhu, Zhewei Wang and Min Dong
Sensors 2025, 25(15), 4719; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25154719 (registering DOI) - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 56
Abstract
Accurate identification of predator–pest relationships is essential for implementing effective and sustainable biological control in agriculture. However, existing image-based methods struggle to recognize insect co-occurrence under complex field conditions, limiting their ecological applicability. To address this challenge, we propose a hybrid deep learning [...] Read more.
Accurate identification of predator–pest relationships is essential for implementing effective and sustainable biological control in agriculture. However, existing image-based methods struggle to recognize insect co-occurrence under complex field conditions, limiting their ecological applicability. To address this challenge, we propose a hybrid deep learning framework that integrates convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and Transformer architectures for multi-label recognition of predator–pest combinations. The model leverages a novel co-occurrence attention mechanism to capture semantic relationships between insect categories and employs a pairwise label matching loss to enhance ecological pairing accuracy. Evaluated on a field-constructed dataset of 5,037 images across eight categories, the model achieved an F1-score of 86.5%, mAP50 of 85.1%, and demonstrated strong generalization to unseen predator–pest pairs with an average F1-score of 79.6%. These results outperform several strong baselines, including ResNet-50, YOLOv8, and Vision Transformer. This work contributes a robust, interpretable approach for multi-object ecological detection and offers practical potential for deployment in smart farming systems, UAV-based monitoring, and precision pest management. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sensor and AI Technologies in Intelligent Agriculture: 2nd Edition)
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