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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/31458
Title: Impact of Data Leakage in Vibration Signals Used for Bearing Fault Diagnosis
Authors: Wheat, Lesley
Mohrenschildt, Martin V.
Habibi, Saeid
Al-Ani, Dhafar
Department: Computing and Software
Keywords: Machine Learning;Vibration;Fault Diagnosis;Data Leakage;Domain Shift;Rotating Machines
Publication Date: 13-Nov-2024
Publisher: IEEE Access
Abstract: Bearing fault diagnosis is a well-developed field and an active area of research in which the combination of model-free machine learning techniques with vibration data has become a popular approach. However, vibration data from rotating machines has the potential to contain domain shifts beyond the accepted causes in this research area (different part models, operating conditions and sensor locations) which can enable data leakage between training and test datasets. To demonstrate the impact of data leakage, six common bearing diagnosis methods are applied to two datasets using three data splitting methods to compare classification performance. Diagnosis is preformed using Principal Component Analysis (PCA), Supervised Principal Component Analysis (SPCA) and Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) in combination with frequency analysis and envelope analysis feature extraction methods. Datasets from McMaster University and Paderborn University are used as experimental data sources, and produce vastly differing results (over a 40% drop in accuracy) depending on the selected dataset splitting method, revealing a previously unknown domain shift. Despite great results for diagnosis methods using frequency response analysis on the data from McMaster, these results are not expected to generalize due to possible data leakage. Out of fifty-five previous works using the Paderborn dataset, ten are identified as likely to be affected and only six properly address the problem. Recommendations are given for future experiment design, model creation and model evaluation.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/31458
ISSN: 10.1109/ACCESS.2024.3497716
Other Identifiers: 10.1109/ACCESS.2024.3497716
Appears in Collections:Student Publications (Not Graduate Theses)

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