Abstract
Identifying anomalies in multi-dimensional sequential data is crucial for ensuring optimal performance across various domains and in large-scale systems. Traditional contrastive methods utilize feature similarity between different features extracted from multidimensional raw inputs as an indicator of anomaly severity. However, the complex objective functions and meticulously designed modules of these methods often lead to efficiency issues and a lack of interpretability. Our study introduces a structural framework called SimDetector, which is a Local–Global Multi-Scale Similarity Contrast network. Specifically, the restructured and enhanced GRU module extracts more generalized local features, including long-term cyclical trends. The multi-scale sparse attention module efficiently extracts multi-scale global features with pattern information. Additionally, we modified the KL divergence to suit the characteristics of time series anomaly detection, proposing a symmetric absolute KL divergence that focuses more on overall distribution differences. The proposed method achieves results that surpass or approach the State-of-the-Art (SOTA) on multiple real-world datasets and synthetic datasets, while also significantly reducing Multiply-Accumulate Operations (MACs) and memory usage.
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