Abstract
In the context of electrical power systems, modeling the edge-end interaction involves understanding the dynamic relationship between different components and endpoints of the system. However, the time series of electrical power obtained by user terminals often suffer from low-quality issues such as missing values, numerical anomalies, and noisy labels. These issues can easily reduce the robustness of data mining results for edge-end interaction models. Therefore, this paper proposes a time–frequency noisy label classification (TF-NLC) model, which improves the robustness of edge-end interaction models in dealing with low-quality issues. Specifically, we employ two deep neural networks that are trained concurrently, utilizing both the time and frequency domains. The two networks mutually guide each other’s classification training by selecting clean labels from batches within small loss data. To further improve the robustness of the classification of time and frequency domain feature representations, we introduce a time–frequency domain consistency contrastive learning module. By classifying the selection of clean labels based on time–frequency representations for mutually guided training, TF-NLC can effectively mitigate the negative impact of noisy labels on model training. Extensive experiments on eight electrical power and ten other different realistic scenario time series datasets show that our proposed TF-NLC achieves advanced classification performance under different noisy label scenarios. Also, the ablation and visualization experiments further demonstrate the robustness of our proposed method.
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