Trustworthy Soft Sensing in Water Supply Systems using Deep Learning
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In many industrial and scientific applications, accurate sensor measurements are crucial. Instruments such as nitrate sensors are vulnerable to environmental conditions, calibration drift, high maintenance costs, and degrading. Researchers have turned to advanced computational methods, including mathematical modeling, statistical analysis, and machine learning, to overcome these limitations. Deep learning techniques have shown promise in outperforming traditional methods in many applications by achieving higher accuracy, but they are often criticized as 'black-box' models due to their lack of transparency. This thesis presents a framework for deep learning-based soft sensors that can quantify the robustness of soft sensors by estimating predictive uncertainty and evaluating performance across various scenarios. The framework facilitates comparisons between hard and soft sensors. To validate the framework, I conduct experiments using data generated by AI and Cyber for Water and Ag (ACWA), a cyber-physical system water-controlled environment testbed. Afterwards, the framework is tested on real-world environment data from Alexandria Renew Enterprise (AlexRenew), establishing its applicability and effectiveness in practical settings.