Tuesday 28 July 2015

NILM 2015 Workshop Summary



During July 2015, Imperial College London played host to nearly 70 attendees from all over the world for the European Non-Intrusive Load Monitoring (NILM) workshop, bringing together energy disaggregation researchers and professionals for this 2-day event.

The purpose of the workshop was to provide a forum for energy disaggregation enthusiasts to learn about recent developments in the field, as well as network and discuss projects for future collaboration. The workshop was attended by academics, employees of energy disaggregation companies, multinational utility companies and a few hobbyists.

Prof Mario Bergés, Assistant Professor at Carnegie Mellon University gave the keynote speech which focussed on the relevance of NILM within the emerging domain of the Internet of Things (IoT). Mario covered recent trends in energy disaggregation, as well as his projection of the field’s relevance into the future. His talk also proposed four ‘million dollar’ ideas which he believes will have significant impact on the domain of energy disaggregation. You can watch Mario’s full talk below.



Workshop attendees also enjoyed talks from both academic and industry aspects, with speakers including Mingjun Zhong from the University of Edinburgh and Stephen Makonin from Simon Fraser University representing academic findings, and focussed on models for energy disaggregation, socioeconomic concerns and accuracy evaluation. From an industry perspective the workshop welcomed Bruno Charbonnier from EDF R&D, and Hjalmar Nilsonne from Watty who cemented the importance and benefits of disaggregating electricity and announced the release of a new dataset.

Delegates were invited to bring a poster to present at a dedicated ‘lightning talk’ session, giving each presenter a chance to disseminate and discuss a NILM related topic of their choice for 1 minute. During the lunch and break sessions, posters were displayed on the walls, giving the presenter an opportunity to engage in one-to-one discussions with other attendees. The posters are available via a dropbox folder, while the lightning talk session can be watched below.



An MSc group from Imperial College London presented a tool for evaluating NILM algorithms without requiring the NILM algorithm’s code to be released. There was a real buzz of excitement around such an initiative, and a number of improvements were suggested around the need for a real-world private data set.

As the NILM Workshop came to a close, an agenda was decided for topics to discuss the following morning at an informal user group designed to encourage collaboration and potential projects among attendees, which included funding applications and data sharing. The afternoon session explored NILMTK; an open source toolkit for non-intrusive load monitoring and included an overview of the toolkit as well as discussions on how to encourage contributions from the community. The need for a collaborative knowledge base, where items such as public data sets can be described in an easily comparable and searchable format was also discussed, with the result being a web based wiki which will be available on the nilm.eu website soon.

The most obvious learning from the workshop was the increasing momentum in this domain. The 2014 European Workshop was attended by around 20 people while this year saw nearly 70 attendees from around the globe. In addition, the diversity of the problems being studied by each of the attendees was also clear from the poster session, as each start up or academic project has a subtle but significantly different take on the problem of energy disaggregation. Lastly, the problem of evaluation accuracy cropped up regularly throughout the workshop. The need for standard data sets, metrics and methodologies is now more important than ever.

The workshop was streamed live on YouTube, and videos of all talks can be seen via our YouTube playlist, while each presenter's slides can be downloaded from our dropbox folder.

The two day workshop finished with a discussion of plans for the 2016 European workshop. While the location of the workshop is yet to be decided, it was clear that there was sufficient demand for a future meeting. We will soon be announcing a call for hosts, with the aim of hosting the workshop in a city with convenient international transport links with the rest of Europe.

Monday 13 July 2015

NILM 2015 presentation videos

In case you missed the live stream of the Second European NILM Workshop, we've also uploaded each talk to a YouTube playlist.

Oliver Parson, University of Southampton - Introduction



Mario Bergés, CMU - NILM in the era of IoT



A series of 1-minute lightning talks by each poster presenter



Stephen Makonin, Simon Fraser University - From socioeconomic concerns to standardising accuracy to water NILM



Mingjun Zhong, University of Edinburgh - Incorporating long-term and population-level information into Machine-Learning based NILM



Imperial MSc Group - green gauge: Comparing Algorithms for Energy Disaggregation



Bruno Charbonnier, EDF - Decortic: A method for detecting and estimating the consumption of electrical space heating



Hjalmar Nilsonne - Connecting the world’s energy data



Saturday 4 July 2015

NILM 2015 Live Stream

As the upcoming European NILM Workshop is now fully booked, we're also hoping to stream the presentation sessions via a Hangout On Air. The link to the Hangout On Air event is:
https://plus.google.com/events/chkt7cmig57pp6n9hfbv1dboas4

The agenda for the day is as follows:

  • 10.00 Welcome and workshop overview - Oliver Parson
  • 10.30 Keynote talk - Mario Bergés
  • 11.30 Poster lightning talks - All poster presenters
  • 12.00 Lunch & poster session (not streamed)
  • 13:40 Academic talks - Mingun Zhong & Stephen Makonin
  • 14.30 NILM evaluation tool - Imperial MSc group
  • 15.00 Coffee & networking (not streamed)
  • 15.40 Industry talks - Bruno Charbonnier & Hjalmar Nilsonne
  • 16.30 Roundup and discussion for future workshops
  • 17.00 Stream ends

Please note all times are local London time (BST = GMT+1).

We might need to restart the Hangout if we encounter technical problems on the day, so please keep an eye on NILM_Workshop on twitter for links to new streams.

Videos of the talks should be available on YouTube shortly after the event so long as everything goes smoothly on the day.

We have also set up a LinkedIn group to allow people to introduce themselves, continue workshop discussions, or catch up on anything they've missed.