Abstract

Accuracy is a key focus of current work in time series classification. However, speed and data reduction are equally important in many applications, especially when the data scale and storage requirements rapidly increase. Current multivariate time series classification (MTSC) algorithms need hundreds of compute hours to complete training and prediction. This is due to the nature of multivariate time series data which grows with the number of time series, their length and the number of channels. In many applications, not all the channels are useful for the classification task, hence we require methods that can efficiently select useful channels and thus save computational resources. We propose and evaluate two methods for channel selection. Our techniques work by representing each class by a prototype time series and performing channel selection based on the prototype distance between classes. The main hypothesis is that useful channels enable better separation between classes; hence, channels with a larger distance between class prototypes are more useful. On the UEA MTSC benchmark, we show that these techniques achieve significant data reduction and classifier speedup for similar levels of classification accuracy. Channel selection is applied as a pre-processing step before training state-of-the-art MTSC algorithms and saves about 70% of computation time and data storage with preserved accuracy. Furthermore, our methods enable efficient classifiers, such as ROCKET, to achieve better accuracy than using no selection or greedy forward channel selection. To further study the impact of our techniques, we present experiments on classifying synthetic multivariate time series datasets with more than 100 channels, as well as a real-world case study on a dataset with 50 channels. In both cases, our channel selection methods result in significant data reduction with preserved or improved accuracy.

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