Cross-Domain Active Learning for Electronic Nose Drift Compensation

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Abstract

The problem of drift in the electronic nose (E-nose) is an important factor in the distortion of data. The existing active learning methods do not take into account the misalignment of the data feature distribution between different domains due to drift when selecting samples. For this, we proposed a cross-domain active learning (CDAL) method based on the Hellinger distance (HD) and maximum mean difference (MMD). In this framework, we weighted the HD with the MMD as a criterion for sample selection, which can reflect as much drift information as possible with as few labeled samples as possible. Overall, the CDAL framework has the following advantages: (1) CDAL combines active learning and domain adaptation to better assess the interdomain distribution differences and the amount of information contained in the selected samples. (2) The introduction of a Gaussian kernel function mapping aligns the data distribution between domains as closely as possible. (3) The combination of active learning and domain adaptation can significantly suppress the effects of time drift caused by sensor ageing, thus improving the detection accuracy of the electronic nose system for data collected at different times. The results showed that the proposed CDAL method has a better drift compensation effect compared with several recent methodological frameworks.

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APA

Sun, F., Sun, R., & Yan, J. (2022). Cross-Domain Active Learning for Electronic Nose Drift Compensation. Micromachines, 13(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/mi13081260

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