1st Edition

Computational Intelligent Data Analysis for Sustainable Development

Edited By Ting Yu, Nitesh Chawla, Simeon Simoff Copyright 2013
    440 Pages 81 B/W Illustrations
    by Chapman & Hall

    440 Pages 81 B/W Illustrations
    by Chapman & Hall

    Going beyond performing simple analyses, researchers involved in the highly dynamic field of computational intelligent data analysis design algorithms that solve increasingly complex data problems in changing environments, including economic, environmental, and social data. Computational Intelligent Data Analysis for Sustainable Development presents novel methodologies for automatically processing these types of data to support rational decision making for sustainable development. Through numerous case studies and applications, it illustrates important data analysis methods, including mathematical optimization, machine learning, signal processing, and temporal and spatial analysis, for quantifying and describing sustainable development problems.

    With a focus on integrated sustainability analysis, the book presents a large-scale quadratic programming algorithm to expand high-resolution input-output tables from the national scale to the multinational scale to measure the carbon footprint of the entire trade supply chain. It also quantifies the error or dispersion between different reclassification and aggregation schemas, revealing that aggregation errors have a high concentration over specific regions and sectors.

    The book summarizes the latest contributions of the data analysis community to climate change research. A profuse amount of climate data of various types is available, providing a rich and fertile playground for future data mining and machine learning research. The book also pays special attention to several critical challenges in the science of climate extremes that are not handled by the current generation of climate models. It discusses potential conceptual and methodological directions to build a close integration between physical understanding, or physics-based modeling, and data-driven insights.

    The book then covers the conservation of species and ecologically valuable land. A case study on the Pennsylvania Dirt and Gravel Roads Program demonstrates that multiple-objective linear programming is a more versatile and efficient approach than the widely used benefit targeting selection process.

    Moving on to renewable energy and the need for smart grids, the book explores how the ongoing transformation to a sustainable energy system of renewable sources leads to a paradigm shift from demand-driven generation to generation-driven demand. It shows how to maximize renewable energy as electricity by building a supergrid or mixing renewable sources with demand management and storage. It also presents intelligent data analysis for real-time detection of disruptive events from power system frequency data collected using an existing Internet-based frequency monitoring network as well as evaluates a set of computationally intelligent techniques for long-term wind resource assessment.

    In addition, the book gives an example of how temporal and spatial data analysis tools are used to gather knowledge about behavioral data and address important social problems such as criminal offenses. It also applies constraint logic programming to a planning problem: the environmental and social impact assessment of the regional energy plan of the Emilia-Romagna region of Italy.

    Sustainable development problems, such as global warming, resource shortages, global species loss, and pollution, push researchers to create powerful data analysis approaches that analysts can then use to gain insight into these issues to support rational decision making. This volume shows both the data analysis and sustainable development communities how to use intelligent data analysis tools to address practical problems and encourages researchers to develop better methods.

    Computational Intelligent Data Analysis for Sustainable Development: An Introduction and Overview
    Ting Yu, Nitesh Chawla, and Simeon Simoff

    Integrated Sustainability Analysis
    Tracing Embodied CO2 in Trade Using High-Resolution Input-Output Tables
    Daniel Moran and Arne Geschke

    Aggregation Effects in Carbon Footprint Accounting Using Multi-Region Input-Output Analysis
    Xin Zhou, Hiroaki Shirakawa, and Manfred Lenzen

    Computational Intelligent Data Analysis for Climate Change
    Climate Informatics
    Claire Monteleoni, Gavin A. Schmidt, Francis Alexander, Alexandru Niculescu-Mizil, Karsten Steinhaeuser, Michael Tippett, Arindam Banerjee, M. Benno Blumenthal, Auroop R. Ganguly, Jason E. Smerdon, and Marco Tedesco

    Computational Data Sciences for Actionable Insights on Climate Extremes and Uncertainty
    Auroop R. Ganguly, Evan Kodra, Snigdhansu Chatterjee, Arindam Banerjee, and Habib N. Najm

    Computational Intelligent Data Analysis for Biodiversity and Species Conservation
    Mathematical Programming Applications to Land Conservation and Environmental Quality
    Jacob R. Fooks and Kent D. Messer

    Computational Intelligent Data Analysis for Smart Grid and Renewable Energy
    Data Analysis Challenges in the Future Energy Domain
    Frank Eichinger, Daniel Pathmaperuma, Harald Vogt, and Emmanuel Müller

    Electricity Supply without Fossil Fuels
    John Boland, Peter Pudney, and Jerzy Filar

    Data Analysis for Real-Time Identification of Grid Disruptions
    Varun Chandola, Olufemi Omitaomu, and Steven J. Fernandez

    Statistical Approaches for Wind Resource Assessment
    Kalyan Veeramachaneni, Xiang Ye, and Una-May O’Reilly

    Computational Intelligent Data Analysis for Sociopolitical Sustainability
    Spatio-Temporal Correlations in Criminal Offense Records
    Jameson L. Toole, Nathan Eagle, and Joshua B. Plotkin

    Constraint and Optimization Techniques for Supporting Policy Making
    Marco Gavanelli, Fabrizio Riguzzi, Michela Milano, and Paolo Cagnoli

    Index

    Biography

    Ting Yu, Ph.D., is an honorary research fellow in the Integrated Sustainability Analysis Group at the University of Sydney. He is also a transport modeler for the Transport for NSW. His research interests include machine learning, data mining, parallel computing, applied economics, and sustainability analysis. He earned a Ph.D. in computing science from the University of Technology, Sydney.

    Nitesh Chawla, Ph.D., is an associate professor in the Department of Computer Science and Engineering, director of the Interdisciplinary Center for Network Science and Applications, and director of the Data Inference Analysis and Learning Lab at the University of Notre Dame. A recipient of multiple awards for research and teaching, Dr. Chawla is chair of the IEEE Computational Intelligence Society Data Mining Technical Committee and associate editor of IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics (Part B) and Pattern Recognition Letters. His research focuses on machine learning, data mining, and network science.

    Simeon Simoff, Ph.D., is dean of the School of Computing, Engineering and Mathematics at the University of Western Sydney. He is also a founding director and fellow of the Institute of Analytics Professionals of Australia. He serves on the American Society of Civil Engineering Technical Committees on Data and Information Management and on Intelligent Computing and is an editor of the Australian Computer Society’s Conferences in Research and Practice in Information Technology.