Abstract

Predicting air quality in fine spatiotemporal granularity is of great importance for air pollution control and urban sustainability. However, existing studies are either focused on predicting station-wise future air quality, or inferring current air quality for unmonitored regions. How to accurately forecast future air quality for these unmonitored regions in a fine granularity remains an unexplored problem. In this paper, we propose the Self-Supervised Hierarchical Graph Neural Network (SSH-GNN), for fine-grained air quality forecasting in a semi-supervised way. Specifically, to augment spatially sparse air quality observations, SSH-GNN first approximates the city-wide air quality distribution based on historical readings and various urban contextual factors (e.g., weather conditions and traffic flows). Then, we propose a hierarchical recurrent graph neural network to make city-wide predictions, which encodes the spatial hierarchy of urban regions for long-range spatiotemporal correlation modeling. Moreover, by leveraging spatiotemporal self-supervision strategies, SSH-GNN exploits both universal topological and contextual patterns to further enhance the forecasting effectiveness. Extensive experiments on two real-world datasets show that SSH-GNN significantly outperforms the state-of-the-art algorithms.

Full Text
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