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19 pages, 3217 KB  
Article
Cost-Effective Planning of Station-Based Car-Sharing Systems: Increasing Efficiency While Emphasizing User Comfort
by Nico Nachtigall and Markus Lienkamp
Smart Cities 2026, 9(4), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/smartcities9040060 (registering DOI) - 28 Mar 2026
Abstract
Station-based car-sharing has been shown to reduce resource-intensive private car ownership. However, only a small proportion of the population uses station-based car-sharing, which could be improved by redesigning the service to reduce walking distances and increase availability. We developed a method for designing [...] Read more.
Station-based car-sharing has been shown to reduce resource-intensive private car ownership. However, only a small proportion of the population uses station-based car-sharing, which could be improved by redesigning the service to reduce walking distances and increase availability. We developed a method for designing an efficient and cost-effective station-based car-sharing network for smart cities that emphasizes user comfort and convenience, while reducing the number of needed cars. To quantify the placements, we created a high-resolution synthetic population for Munich, Germany as a case study. The population was based on census and OpenStreetMap data, and each person was assigned to a suitable mobility plan derived from two mobility surveys. Since car ownership and station-based car-sharing are particularly associated with trips for vacations, we supplemented the mobility plans with long-distance travel data from a one-year tracking dataset. This allowed us to perform a spatial and temporal analysis of the theoretical potential of various station placements for station-based car-sharing. The tested station networks varied in user comfort, especially in the distance to the nearest station and the group size of car-sharing users. Our findings indicate that the best trade-off between convenience and efficiency is a station design with a group size of 217–949 people. We further found that the car-sharing fleet size is strongly influenced by long-distance trips, and that a substitution rate of 1:1.25 to 3.3 with private cars is possible. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cost-Effective Transportation Planning for Smart Cities)
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18 pages, 972 KB  
Article
CPU Deployment-Oriented Evaluation of Compact Neural Networks for Remaining Useful Life Prediction
by Ali Naderi Bakhtiyari, Vahid Hassani and Mohammad Omidi
Machines 2026, 14(4), 375; https://doi.org/10.3390/machines14040375 (registering DOI) - 28 Mar 2026
Abstract
Remaining Useful Life (RUL) prediction is a key component of prognostics and health management for modern industrial systems. While deep learning methods have significantly improved prediction accuracy, many existing approaches rely on large neural networks that are difficult to deploy on resource-constrained edge [...] Read more.
Remaining Useful Life (RUL) prediction is a key component of prognostics and health management for modern industrial systems. While deep learning methods have significantly improved prediction accuracy, many existing approaches rely on large neural networks that are difficult to deploy on resource-constrained edge devices. This study presents a deployment-oriented evaluation of compact neural networks for RUL prediction using the NASA C-MAPSS turbofan engine benchmark. Two lightweight hybrid architectures, CNN–GRU and CNN–TCN, were developed with approximately 28k–32k parameters to represent realistic models for CPU-based edge inference. A systematic experimental analysis was conducted across all four C-MAPSS subsets (FD001–FD004), which represent increasing levels of operational and fault complexity. In addition to baseline performance, two post-training compression techniques (i.e., global unstructured magnitude pruning and dynamic INT8 quantization) were evaluated. To assess real deployment behavior, inference latency was measured on both a high-performance Intel x86 workstation and a resource-constrained ARM platform. Results show that CNN–GRU generally achieves higher predictive accuracy, whereas CNN–TCN provides more consistent and lower inference latency due to its convolution-only temporal modeling. Unstructured pruning can yield modest improvements in prediction accuracy, suggesting a regularization effect, but it does not reliably reduce model size or latency on standard CPUs due to the overhead associated with pruning masks. Dynamic quantization substantially reduces model size (particularly for CNN–GRU) while preserving predictive accuracy; however, it increases runtime latency because of additional quantization and dequantization operations. These findings demonstrate that compression techniques commonly used for large models do not necessarily translate into deployment benefits for already compact RUL architectures and highlight the importance of hardware-aware evaluation when designing edge prognostics systems. Full article
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27 pages, 2258 KB  
Article
Towards a Relational Egyptology: The Emergence of Social Network Analysis in Egyptian Studies
by Joaquín Jiménez-Puerto
Heritage 2026, 9(4), 136; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9040136 (registering DOI) - 28 Mar 2026
Abstract
This study presents a systematic review of Social Network Analysis (SNA) applications in Egyptology, examining methodological developments, current achievements, and future research directions. Despite Egypt’s exceptional documentary legacy spanning three millennia—administrative papyri, diplomatic correspondence, and prosopographical inscriptions—Egyptology has adopted network analytical methods more [...] Read more.
This study presents a systematic review of Social Network Analysis (SNA) applications in Egyptology, examining methodological developments, current achievements, and future research directions. Despite Egypt’s exceptional documentary legacy spanning three millennia—administrative papyri, diplomatic correspondence, and prosopographical inscriptions—Egyptology has adopted network analytical methods more slowly than other archaeological disciplines. The review evaluates existing research across major historical periods, assessing methodological approaches and contributions to understanding Egyptian administrative structures, elite strategies, and social organization. Critical gaps identified include limited coverage of the Late Period, insufficient attention to economic and religious networks, minimal focus on gender and household-level analysis, and geographic concentration in Upper Egypt. The review also identifies methodological challenges specific to Egyptian sources: temporal depth, hierarchical social structures, preservation biases, and integration of diverse evidence types. Priority areas for development include large-scale collaborative projects, computational relationship extraction from digitised sources, and temporal network analysis capitalising on Egypt’s exceptional chronological span. The field stands at a critical juncture where coordinated development could transform understanding of ancient Egyptian society while contributing to broader archaeological network science. Full article
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18 pages, 1802 KB  
Article
A Multi-Attention Gated Fusion and Physics-Informed Model for Steam Turbine Regulating-Stage Fault Detection
by Yuanli Ma, Gang Ding, Qiang Zhang, Jiangming Zhou and Yue Cao
Energies 2026, 19(7), 1665; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19071665 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
The increasing proportion of renewable energy leads to frequent changes in turbine load, making the regulating stage more prone to degradation. Traditional anomaly detection methods lack sufficient sensitivity and generalization. To address this issue, this study proposes a method combining multi-attention gated fusion [...] Read more.
The increasing proportion of renewable energy leads to frequent changes in turbine load, making the regulating stage more prone to degradation. Traditional anomaly detection methods lack sufficient sensitivity and generalization. To address this issue, this study proposes a method combining multi-attention gated fusion and physical information learning. A gated fusion mechanism is proposed to adaptively extract and fuse key temporal and feature information. Furthermore, the generalization ability of the model is improved by introducing physical constraints derived from the relationship between pressure, temperature, and valve position. Finally, a dynamic temperature prediction model is established using the multi-output long short-term memory neural network. Experiments using actual power plant data demonstrate that the proposed method effectively improves the accuracy of post-regulating-stage temperature prediction and the sensitivity of anomaly detection. The proposed gating fusion method improves prediction accuracy by 4.6% compared to direct addition, while the fusion of physical information reduces the generalization error by more than 6%. In addition, compared to traditional deep learning and machine learning models, the proposed method improves anomaly detection accuracy by at least 3.9%. This research is of great significance for the safe operation of thermal power units and the power grid. Full article
14 pages, 983 KB  
Article
Time–Frequency Parallel and Channel-Adaptive Gating for Multivariate Time Series Prediction
by Xin He and Zhenwen He
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(7), 3266; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16073266 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
In real-world scenarios, multivariate time series data typically presents a variety of complex characteristics simultaneously, including long-term trends, multiple seasonality, sudden event disturbances and random noise. Owing to remarkable discrepancies among different variables in dimensions, periodic stability and other aspects, and the gradual [...] Read more.
In real-world scenarios, multivariate time series data typically presents a variety of complex characteristics simultaneously, including long-term trends, multiple seasonality, sudden event disturbances and random noise. Owing to remarkable discrepancies among different variables in dimensions, periodic stability and other aspects, and the gradual evolution of these periodic characteristics over time, models are confronted with numerous challenges in handling non-stationarity, multi-scale dynamic variations and heterogeneous fusion of variables. To tackle these problems, this paper proposes a time–frequency parallel fusion framework—TFDG-Net (Time–Frequency Dual-Branch Gated Fusion Network). This framework models the prior information in the frequency domain and the temporal query network in the time domain in parallel, and introduces a channel-wise gating mechanism to achieve more flexible adaptive fusion after data inverse normalization. Such a design enables the model to operate collaboratively on the original physical scale, which not only improves the long-term prediction capability for periodically stable variables, but also effectively suppresses the interference of noise and event-driven factors, thus significantly enhancing prediction accuracy and the robustness of the training process. In multiple long-term prediction benchmark tests covering fields such as energy and finance, compared with various mainstream models, TFDG-Net reduces the mean squared error and mean absolute error by an average of 12.0% and 7.8% respectively. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Computing and Artificial Intelligence)
46 pages, 2125 KB  
Review
Big Data and Graph Deep Learning for Financial Decision Support from Social Networks: A Critical Review
by Leonidas Theodorakopoulos and Alexandra Theodoropoulou
Electronics 2026, 15(7), 1405; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics15071405 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
Social network content is increasingly used as an auxiliary evidence stream for financial monitoring, risk assessment, and short-horizon decision support, yet many reported gains are hard to interpret because observability, timing, and attribution are handled inconsistently across studies. This review critically synthesizes the [...] Read more.
Social network content is increasingly used as an auxiliary evidence stream for financial monitoring, risk assessment, and short-horizon decision support, yet many reported gains are hard to interpret because observability, timing, and attribution are handled inconsistently across studies. This review critically synthesizes the end-to-end pipeline that transforms social posts, interaction traces, linked artifacts, and related signals into decision-facing indicators, emphasizing evidence provenance, sampling bias, conditioning (bot/spam filtering, entity linking, timestamp alignment), and the modeling blocks typically used (text, temporal, relational, and fusion components) under deployment constraints. Across sentiment, relational, and multimodal or cross-platform signals, the analysis finds that apparent improvements often depend more on alignment discipline and conservative attribution than on architectural novelty, and that performance can be inflated by attention confounds, temporal leakage, and visibility effects. Relational indicators are most defensible for monitoring coordination and propagation patterns, while multimodal gains require clear ablations and realistic missing-modality tests. To support decision readiness, the paper consolidates assurance requirements covering manipulation, degraded observability, calibration and traceability, and provides compact reporting checklists and failure-mode mitigations. Overall, the review supports bounded claims and argues for time-aware evaluation and auditable pipelines as prerequisites for operational use. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Deep Learning and Data Analytics Applications in Social Networks)
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23 pages, 1545 KB  
Article
Advanced Hybrid Deep Learning Framework for Short-Term Solar Radiation Forecasting Using Temporal and Meteorological Features
by Farrukh Hafeez, Zeeshan Ahmad Arfeen, Muhammad I. Masud, Abdoalateef Alzhrani, Mohammed Aman, Nasser Alkhaldi and Mehreen Kausar Azam
Processes 2026, 14(7), 1081; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr14071081 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
Short-term forecasting of solar radiation is essential for the efficient operation of solar energy systems. This study presents a neural network-based approach for short-term solar radiation forecasting using a hybrid framework that integrates temporal characteristics with weather-based features. The proposed model combines a [...] Read more.
Short-term forecasting of solar radiation is essential for the efficient operation of solar energy systems. This study presents a neural network-based approach for short-term solar radiation forecasting using a hybrid framework that integrates temporal characteristics with weather-based features. The proposed model combines a Gated Recurrent Unit (GRU) to capture short-term temporal dynamics, a Transformer Encoder, and a Multilayer Perceptron (MLP) to integrate these representations for final prediction. Key meteorological variables, including temperature, humidity, and wind speed, are incorporated along with engineered time-related features such as lagged values, rolling statistics, and cyclical time-of-day encodings. The results demonstrate that the hybrid model effectively integrates sequential learning and feature interaction, leading to improved forecasting accuracy. The proposed approach achieves a test Mean Absolute Error (MAE) of 0.056, Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) of 0.086, and coefficient of determination (R2) of 0.92, outperforming benchmark models such as AutoRegressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA), Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM), GRU, and Extreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost). The model maintains stable performance across cross-validation folds, multiple forecasting horizons, and varying weather conditions. These findings indicate that the proposed framework provides a reliable and practical solution for accurate short-term solar radiation forecasting, supporting real-time solar energy management and renewable energy system optimization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Technologies of Renewable Energy Sources (RESs))
25 pages, 4104 KB  
Article
Prediction of Postoperative Stroke in Elderly Surgical ICU Patients Using Random Forest Model: Development on MIMIC-IV with Cross-Institutional and Temporal External Validation
by Houji Jin, Mohammadsaeed Haghi, Nausin Kudrot, Kamiar Alaei and Maryam Pishgar
BioMedInformatics 2026, 6(2), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedinformatics6020016 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
Postoperative stroke is a serious and fatal condition that often affects elderly surgical patients. This rare but severe complication arises from complex interactions between comorbidities, physiologic instability and demographic disturbances that traditional risk tools often fail to capture.This study aims to develop and [...] Read more.
Postoperative stroke is a serious and fatal condition that often affects elderly surgical patients. This rare but severe complication arises from complex interactions between comorbidities, physiologic instability and demographic disturbances that traditional risk tools often fail to capture.This study aims to develop and validate a machine learning model with an improved ability to predict the risk of postoperative stroke in elderly patients utilising the comprehensive clinical and demographic ICU data from the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care IV (MIMIC-IV) database. External validation was performed on MIMIC-III and the eICU Collaborative Research Database, with eICU being the primary validation set. We identified postoperative surgical intensive care unit (SICU) patients aged 55 years or older from all databases. A strict temporal window of the first 24 h of ICU admission was applied across all three datasets while extracting features like laboratory measurements and vital sign summaries in order to ensure that all predictor values were derived from a fixed observation period at the beginning of ICU stay. After preprocessing, applying Multivariate Imputation by Chained Equations (MICE) imputation and initial screening of 88 candidate variables, 20 clinically meaningful predictors were selected through a multistage feature selection pipeline incorporating RFECV and permutation importance. SHAP analysis and LIME analysis were used for interpretability. We evaluated ten machine learning techniques, including Logistic Regression, Decision Tree, Random Forest, K-Nearest Neighbors (KNNs), Support Vector Machine (SVM–RBF Kernel), Gradient Boosting (GBDT), Neural Network, XGBoost, CatBoost, Naive Bayes. Among them, Random Forest demonstrated strong predictive performance by achieving an AUROC of 0.8072 (95% CI [0.7890, 0.8253]) on the internal validation set. The model also achieved AUROC of 0.7557 (95% CI [0.7267, 0.7794]) and 0.9144 (95% CI [0.8893, 0.9378]) on the external validation sets eICU and MIMIC-III, respectively. Mean systolic blood pressure, Elixhauser score, minimum calcium, and minimum INR (PT) were consistently identified as the most influential predictors through both SHAP analysis and LIME analysis, thus strengthening model interpretability. Our findings suggest that a Random Forest-based predictive model can provide an accurate and generalisable prediction of postoperative stroke in elderly ICU patients using routinely collected physiologic and laboratory data. This also supports early risk stratification and targeted postoperative monitoring. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Applied Biomedical Data Science)
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35 pages, 3539 KB  
Article
Early Detection of Short-Term Performance Degradation in Electric Vehicle Lithium-Ion Batteries via Physics-Guided Multi-Sensor Fusion and Deep Learning
by David Chunhu Li
Batteries 2026, 12(4), 116; https://doi.org/10.3390/batteries12040116 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
Early detection of battery degradation is essential for ensuring the safety and reliability of electric vehicle (EV) systems under real-world operating variability. This paper proposes a physics-guided multi-sensor learning framework, termed SensorFusion-Former (SFF), for early warning of short-term EV battery performance degradation. The [...] Read more.
Early detection of battery degradation is essential for ensuring the safety and reliability of electric vehicle (EV) systems under real-world operating variability. This paper proposes a physics-guided multi-sensor learning framework, termed SensorFusion-Former (SFF), for early warning of short-term EV battery performance degradation. The proposed approach integrates a physics-based baseline model for operational normalization, a multi-sensor fusion attention mechanism to model cross-modality interactions, and a lightweight transformer architecture for efficient temporal representation learning. Weak supervision is derived from physics-consistent residual analysis with temporal smoothing, enabling scalable training without dense manual annotations. To support reliable deployment, evidential uncertainty modeling and conformal calibration are incorporated to obtain statistically controlled decision thresholds. Experiments conducted on a real driving cycle dataset from IEEE DataPort demonstrate that SFF consistently outperforms classical machine learning methods, deep neural networks, and standard transformer models in terms of early-warning lead time, false alarm rate, and inference efficiency while maintaining competitive discriminative performance. Cross-scenario evaluations under diverse thermal conditions further confirm the robustness and generalization capability of the proposed framework. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Energy Storage System Aging, Diagnosis and Safety)
20 pages, 1166 KB  
Article
Circadian Phase Shapes Muscle-Derived Extracellular Vesicle microRNA Profiles with Context-Dependent Modulation by Exercise in High-Fat-Diet-Fed Mice
by Shuo Wang, Noriaki Kawanishi, Cong Wu, Haruki Kobori and Katsuhiko Suzuki
Nutrients 2026, 18(7), 1076; https://doi.org/10.3390/nu18071076 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
Background: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) released from skeletal muscle mediate metabolic communication via microRNAs (miRNAs). While both circadian rhythms and exercise influence metabolism, the joint modulation of the muscle-derived EV miRNA landscape by circadian rhythms and chronic exercise remains undefined, particularly under the metabolic [...] Read more.
Background: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) released from skeletal muscle mediate metabolic communication via microRNAs (miRNAs). While both circadian rhythms and exercise influence metabolism, the joint modulation of the muscle-derived EV miRNA landscape by circadian rhythms and chronic exercise remains undefined, particularly under the metabolic stress of obesity. Methods: Employing a 2×2 factorial design (Phase: ZT3 vs. ZT15; Condition: sedentary vs. exercise; ZT, Zeitgeber Time), EV-enriched fractions were isolated from ex vivo quadriceps muscle (QUA) cultures of high-fat diet-fed mice following an 8-week treadmill training regimen using polymer-based precipitation, and comprehensive miRNA profiling was performed by small RNA sequencing. Results: Principal component analysis (PCA) revealed that circadian phase accounted for a greater proportion of global variance in EV miRNA profiles than exercise. Differential expression analysis identified miR-1a-3p and miR-1b-5p as upregulated across both composite phase and exercise contrasts; however, condition-specific analyses indicated that this signal was primarily driven by the sedentary-phase comparison (ZT15-sed vs. ZT3-sed), in which the miR-29 family was also prominently co-upregulated, rather than constituting independent phase and exercise effects; this phase-associated signature was absent in the corresponding exercise-condition comparison. Exploratory functional enrichment of experimentally validated targets revealed phase-preferential association with metabolic and iron–heme pathways, whereas exercise-associated miRNAs mapped to signaling, inflammatory, and transcription-related networks. Conclusions: Circadian phase was the dominant contributor to global variance in muscle-derived EV-enriched miRNA profiles in obesity, as reflected by the phase-associated separation along principal component 1 (PC1, 33.47% of total variance), with exercise introducing context-dependent adaptive modulation. This study provides a foundational basis for investigating the temporal regulation of muscle secretome dynamics under high-fat diet conditions, highlighting temporal specificity as a key dimension in EV-mediated exercise physiology research. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Gene–Diet Interactions and Obesity)
12 pages, 300 KB  
Article
On Syntactical Simplification of Temporal Operators in Negation-Free Metric Temporal Logic
by Mathijs van Noort, Femke Ongenae and Pieter Bonte
Mathematics 2026, 14(7), 1124; https://doi.org/10.3390/math14071124 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
Temporal reasoning in dynamic, data-intensive environments increasingly demands expressive yet tractable logical frameworks. Traditional approaches often rely on negation to express absence or contradiction. In such contexts, negation-as-failure is commonly used to infer negative information from the lack of positive evidence. However, for [...] Read more.
Temporal reasoning in dynamic, data-intensive environments increasingly demands expressive yet tractable logical frameworks. Traditional approaches often rely on negation to express absence or contradiction. In such contexts, negation-as-failure is commonly used to infer negative information from the lack of positive evidence. However, for open and distributed systems such as IoT networks and the Semantic Web, negation-as-failure semantics become unreliable due to incomplete and asynchronous data. This has led to growing interest in negation-free fragments of temporal rule-based systems, which preserve monotonicity and enable scalable reasoning. This paper investigates the expressive power of negation-free Metric Temporal Logic (MTL), a temporal logic framework designed for rule-based reasoning over time. We show that the “always” operators ⊞ and ⊟, often treated as syntactic sugar for combinations of other temporal constructs, can be eliminated using “once”, “since” and “until” operators. Remarkably, even the “once” operators can be removed, yielding a fragment based solely on “until” and “since”. These results challenge the assumption that negation is necessary for expressing universal temporal constraints and reveal a robust fragment capable of capturing both existential and invariant temporal patterns. Furthermore, the results induce a reduction in the syntax of MTL, which, in turn, can provide benefits for both theoretical study as well as for implementation efforts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Formal Methods in Computer Science: Theory and Applications)
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24 pages, 1541 KB  
Article
Infrared Moving Maritime Vessel Segmentation Based on Multi-Scale Spatial–Temporal Transformer Network
by Wenhui Liu, Yulong Qiao, Yue Zhao and Zhengyi Xing
Remote Sens. 2026, 18(7), 1006; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18071006 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
Infrared moving maritime vessel segmentation is a crucial image processing task for maritime security, which is a challenging problem due to the complex backgrounds and targets with varying sizes. To address these issues, we propose an end-to-end segmentation network based on a multi-scale [...] Read more.
Infrared moving maritime vessel segmentation is a crucial image processing task for maritime security, which is a challenging problem due to the complex backgrounds and targets with varying sizes. To address these issues, we propose an end-to-end segmentation network based on a multi-scale spatiotemporal vision transformer (ST-VT) for segmenting the moving maritime vessels in the infrared image sequence. Specifically, in the feature extraction module, we introduce a multi-scale feature encoding structure that combines a multi-scale backbone and Feature Pyramid Network technology. Then, the multi-scale deformable encoder structure and a cross-scale fusion module with the pixel decoder are proposed to generate the multi-scale spatiotemporal features. Subsequently, we employ the improved attention blocks that are the core blocks of the coarse-to-fine framework (across scales) of the prompt decoder to obtain the prompts. Finally, a multi-scale mask decoder is applied to achieve the final target segmentation. The experiments are conducted on the benchmark dataset IPATCH and our labeled dataset LAS-MassMIND. The results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves state-of-the-art performance, especially within complex backgrounds and targets of varying sizes. Full article
15 pages, 2013 KB  
Article
Detrended Fluctuation Analysis Complements Spectral Features in Characterizing Functional Brain Aging
by Simone Cauzzo, Sadaf Moaveninejad, Angelo Antonini, Maurizio Corbetta and Camillo Porcaro
Fractal Fract. 2026, 10(4), 224; https://doi.org/10.3390/fractalfract10040224 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
Aging is a significant risk factor for several neurodegenerative diseases. Understanding brain aging processes is a fundamental step in identifying the early signs of pathological dysfunction. Nonetheless, regional functional changes are still poorly characterized. In this study, we employed Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (DFA) [...] Read more.
Aging is a significant risk factor for several neurodegenerative diseases. Understanding brain aging processes is a fundamental step in identifying the early signs of pathological dysfunction. Nonetheless, regional functional changes are still poorly characterized. In this study, we employed Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (DFA) to investigate age-related changes in the scale-free temporal dynamics of blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal fluctuations derived from resting-state networks. We compared DFA to fractional amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (fALFF) to assess their ability to discriminate between young and old adults. Significant decreases (p < 0.01) in fALFF in the visuospatial and dorsal default mode networks and in DFA in the salience network, were identified as key predictors of functional brain aging. Using machine learning, we showed that DFA and fALFF provide complementary information for predicting aging, with an accuracy of approximately 80% achieved only through their combined use. Overall, DFA captures alterations in scale-free temporal organization that complement conventional spectral measures, providing additional insight into network-specific functional aging. Full article
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22 pages, 1502 KB  
Article
Optimal Joint Scheduling and Forecasting of Photovoltaic and Wind Power Generation Based on Transformer-BiLSTM
by Wei Luo, Liyuan Zhu, Defa Cao, Wei Wu, Yi Yang, Jiamin Zhang and Long Wang
Energies 2026, 19(7), 1651; https://doi.org/10.3390/en19071651 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
Addressing the challenge of coordinated dispatch between wind/solar and thermal power in new energy grids, this research proposes a thermal power unit output prediction method based on a Transformer-BiLSTM hybrid deep learning model. First, a simulated annealing algorithm optimizes the output configuration of [...] Read more.
Addressing the challenge of coordinated dispatch between wind/solar and thermal power in new energy grids, this research proposes a thermal power unit output prediction method based on a Transformer-BiLSTM hybrid deep learning model. First, a simulated annealing algorithm optimizes the output configuration of solar thermal power plants to mitigate fluctuations in wind and solar combined generation. An ant colony-greedy algorithm is then integrated to determine the optimal dispatch data for thermal power units, constructing a high-quality training dataset under physical constraints. In the model design, a bidirectional long short-term memory network captures short-term temporal features, while the Transformer’s multi-head self-attention mechanism models long-term dependencies. The model innovatively incorporates the learnable positional encoding to enhance temporal awareness. Experimental results demonstrate accurate predictions, with the power constraint mechanism effectively correcting over-limit forecasts. This ensures 98.7% of predictions during low-load periods comply with unit technical specifications. Compared to existing methods, this model avoids data limitations and manual feature engineering bottlenecks through the end-to-end wind–solar–thermal mapping, providing a high-precision solution for dispatch decisions in renewable-dominated grids. Full article
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25 pages, 1530 KB  
Article
FocuS-MN: Focusing on Underwater Signal Denoising via Sequential Memory Networks with Learnable Resampling
by Shouao Gu, Zitong Li and Jun Tang
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2026, 14(7), 621; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse14070621 - 27 Mar 2026
Abstract
The coupling of non-stationary marine noise and complex ship-radiated signals makes high-fidelity signal recovery exceptionally difficult. Existing deep learning methods often prioritize objective metrics, such as the Scale-Invariant Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SI-SNR), but fail to maintain the integrity of narrow-band line spectral data. We [...] Read more.
The coupling of non-stationary marine noise and complex ship-radiated signals makes high-fidelity signal recovery exceptionally difficult. Existing deep learning methods often prioritize objective metrics, such as the Scale-Invariant Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SI-SNR), but fail to maintain the integrity of narrow-band line spectral data. We propose FocuS-MN, an end-to-end framework that combines learnable resampling with Feedforward Sequential Memory Network (FSMN)-based temporal modeling for precise waveform reconstruction. The model is optimized using a two-stage training strategy to ensure stable magnitude estimation and waveform consistency. On the ShipsEar dataset, FocuS-MN shows strong generalization to unseen vessel types. At a −5 dB Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR), it achieves a Signal-to-Distortion Ratio (SDR) of 3.77 dB and a Segmental Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SSNR) of 3.83 dB. Power Spectral Density (PSD) analysis further confirms that FocuS-MN recovers fine-grained line spectral structures, proving its effectiveness in both noise suppression and signal fidelity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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