Efficient data-driven nonlinear system identification for structural health monitoring: A proof-of-principle study

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

10-7-2024

Department

Department of Mechanical Engineering-Engineering Mechanics

Abstract

Structural health monitoring (SHM) is the process of detecting damage in structures. Typically, the damage-sensitive feature identification is based on fitting some models to the measured system response data. The parameters of these models or the prediction errors associated with these models then become the desired damage-sensitive features. Real-world structures usually exhibit significant nonlinear behaviors. Data-driven nonlinear system identification (NSI) is essential to obtain accurate models of structural dynamics for reliable damage detection. However, on the one hand, the data acquisition of real-world structures for damage detection is usually difficult or scarce. On the other hand, NSI generally needs to solve a nonlinear optimization problem that requires more computational time for convergence than linear system identification. Data efficiency and computational efficiency become two critical challenges in data-driven NSI. To address these challenges, this work presents a proof-of-principle study on developing a meta learning-based method for efficient data-driven NSI. Specifically, the meta learning algorithm leverages a previously collected database of similar but different systems to learn the meta-knowledge about how to identify a new system, enabling a fast identification/modeling with limited data. Numerical simulations are performed to validate the method on fundamental nonlinear dynamical systems widely seen in civil engineering. It is observed that the presented meta learning-based method outperforms the conventional method in terms of both data and computational efficiency. Limitations of this work are further discussed.

Publication Title

Advances in Structural Engineering

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