Abstract

Electricity theft damages power grid infrastructure and is also responsible for huge revenue losses for electric utilities. Integrating smart meters in traditional power grids enables real-time monitoring and collection of consumers’ electricity consumption (EC) data. Based on the collected data, it is possible to identify the normal and malicious behavior of consumers by analyzing the data using machine learning (ML) and deep learning methods. This paper proposes a deep learning-based meta-learner model to distinguish between normal and malicious patterns in EC data. The proposed model consists of two stages. In Fold-0, the ML classifiers extract diverse knowledge and learns based on EC data. In Fold-1, a multilayer perceptron is used as a meta-learner, which takes the prediction results of Fold-0 classifiers as input, automatically learns non-linear relationships among them, and extracts hidden complicated features to classify normal and malicious behaviors. Therefore, the proposed model controls the overfitting problem and achieves high accuracy. Moreover, extensive experiments are conducted to compare its performance with boosting, bagging, standalone conventional ML classifiers, and baseline models published in top-tier outlets. The proposed model is evaluated using a real EC dataset, which is provided by the Energy Informatics Group in Pakistan. The model achieves 0.910 ROC-AUC and 0.988 PR-AUC values on the test dataset, which are higher than those of the compared models.

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