Abstract
Long-span bridges play a crucial role in urbanization, connecting communities across vast obstacles. Structural health monitoring techniques have been deployed on these bridges, generate large amounts of data through sensor measurements, requiring data-driven approaches like deep learning (DL) for effective analysis. However, feature extraction from time-domain vibration response signals poses challenges for DL methods. To address this, the study proposes utilizing signal processing techniques such as the multivariate empirical mode decomposition (MEMD) and Wavelet transform (WT) to extract essential features for damage classification. The incorporation of MEMD and WT aims to overcome limitations and process nonstationary and nonlinear signals effectively. Three DL techniques, long-short-term memory (LSTM), one dimensional convolutional neural network (1D-CNN), multi-layer perceptron (MLP) are tuned and applied to Structural Health Monitoring of Tianjin Yonghe Bridge (located in China) as a real-world case study, in order to detect its condition by Deep signal anomaly detection and identify types of the damage. A powerful meta-heuristic algorithm called Observer-Teacher-Learner-Based Optimization, is used to optimize both hyperparameters and architecture of each DL models. The results demonstrate that the optimally tuned DLs are successful in identifying types of damage, as well as the condition of the structure, for the Tianjin Yonghe Bridge. The average accuracy values are obtained as 98.13, 97.96, and 97.79 for 1D-CNN, LSTM, and MLP, respectively. Such optimally tuned DLs are evaluated as effective solutions for detecting damage on large-scale bridges by extracting statistical time-domain and time–frequency domain features using the WT and MEMD.
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