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Auteur principal: Wang, Zheheng
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2024
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.19876
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author Wang, Zheheng
author_facet Wang, Zheheng
contents This study introduces an advanced transient stability assessment (TSA) method for power systems, addressing the challenges of sample class imbalance and data noise through a novel CatBoost algorithm framework. By implementing a Gradient Harmonizing Mechanism (GHM), this method adjusts the gradient norm distribution across samples by incorporating a coordination parameter for each, thus optimizing the gradient weights for various sample types. This enhancement enables more effective training of the CatBoost algorithm, reducing the negative impacts of class imbalance and noise, and enhancing algorithmic performance. Additionally, the feature importance functionality of the CatBoost framework guides the placement of phasor measurement units, promoting economical operation of the power system. Numerical results from the New England 10-machine 39-bus system demonstrate the superior versatility, reduced application cost, and lower maintenance expenses of the proposed method compared to existing techniques.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_19876
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Data-Driven Transient Stability Assessment of Power Systems with a Novel GHM-Enhanced CatBoost Algorithm
Wang, Zheheng
Systems and Control
This study introduces an advanced transient stability assessment (TSA) method for power systems, addressing the challenges of sample class imbalance and data noise through a novel CatBoost algorithm framework. By implementing a Gradient Harmonizing Mechanism (GHM), this method adjusts the gradient norm distribution across samples by incorporating a coordination parameter for each, thus optimizing the gradient weights for various sample types. This enhancement enables more effective training of the CatBoost algorithm, reducing the negative impacts of class imbalance and noise, and enhancing algorithmic performance. Additionally, the feature importance functionality of the CatBoost framework guides the placement of phasor measurement units, promoting economical operation of the power system. Numerical results from the New England 10-machine 39-bus system demonstrate the superior versatility, reduced application cost, and lower maintenance expenses of the proposed method compared to existing techniques.
title Data-Driven Transient Stability Assessment of Power Systems with a Novel GHM-Enhanced CatBoost Algorithm
topic Systems and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.19876