Giacomo Boracchi

Papers from this author

Inferring Functional Properties from Fluid Dynamics Features

Andrea Schillaci, Maurizio Quadrio, Carlotta Pipolo, Marcello Restelli, Giacomo Boracchi

Responsive image

Auto-TLDR; Exploiting Convective Properties of Computational Fluid Dynamics for Medical Diagnosis

Slides Poster Similar

In a wide range of applied problems involving fluid flows, Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) provides detailed quantitative information on the flow field, at various levels of fidelity and computational cost. However, CFD alone cannot predict high-level functional properties of the system that are not easily obtained from the equations of fluid motion. In this work, we present a data-driven framework to extract additional information, such as medical diagnostic output, from CFD solutions. The task is made difficult by the huge data dimensionality of CFD, together with the limited amount of training data implied by its high computational cost. By pursuing a traditional ML pipeline of pre-processing, feature extraction, and model training, we demonstrate that informative features can be extracted from CFD data. Two experiments, pertaining to different application domains, support the claim that the convective properties implicit into a CFD solution can be leveraged to retrieve functional information for which an analytical definition is missing. Despite the preliminary nature of our study and the relative simplicity of both the geometrical and CFD models, for the first time we demonstrate that the combination of ML and CFD can diagnose a complex system in terms of high-level functional information.

PIF: Anomaly detection via preference embedding

Filippo Leveni, Luca Magri, Giacomo Boracchi, Cesare Alippi

Responsive image

Auto-TLDR; PIF: Anomaly Detection with Preference Embedding for Structured Patterns

Slides Poster Similar

We address the problem of detecting anomalies with respect to structured patterns. To this end, we conceive a novel anomaly detection method called PIF, that combines the advantages of adaptive isolation methods with the flexibility of preference embedding. Specifically, we propose to embed the data in a high dimensional space where an efficient tree-based method, PI-FOREST, is employed to compute an anomaly score. Experiments on synthetic and real datasets demonstrate that PIF favorably compares with state-of-the-art anomaly detection techniques, and confirm that PI-FOREST is better at measuring arbitrary distances and isolate points in the preference space.