Paper ID: 2401.06821
Surrogate Neural Networks Local Stability for Aircraft Predictive Maintenance
Mélanie Ducoffe, Guillaume Povéda, Audrey Galametz, Ryma Boumazouza, Marion-Cécile Martin, Julien Baris, Derk Daverschot, Eugene O'Higgins
Surrogate Neural Networks are nowadays routinely used in industry as substitutes for computationally demanding engineering simulations (e.g., in structural analysis). They allow to generate faster predictions and thus analyses in industrial applications e.g., during a product design, testing or monitoring phases. Due to their performance and time-efficiency, these surrogate models are now being developed for use in safety-critical applications. Neural network verification and in particular the assessment of their robustness (e.g., to perturbations) is the next critical step to allow their inclusion in real-life applications and certification. We assess the applicability and scalability of empirical and formal methods in the context of aircraft predictive maintenance for surrogate neural networks designed to predict the stress sustained by an aircraft part from external loads. The case study covers a high-dimensional input and output space and the verification process thus accommodates multi-objective constraints. We explore the complementarity of verification methods in assessing the local stability property of such surrogate models to input noise. We showcase the effectiveness of sequentially combining methods in one verification 'pipeline' and demonstrating the subsequent gain in runtime required to assess the targeted property.
Submitted: Jan 11, 2024