Enhanced Wind Energy Forecasting Using an Extended Long Short-Term Memory Model

This paper presents an innovative approach to wind energy forecasting through the implementation of an extended long short-term memory (xLSTM) model. This research addresses fundamental limitations in time-sequence forecasting for wind energy by introducing architectural enhancements to traditional...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Algorithms
Main Authors: Zachary Barbre, Gang Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-04-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1999-4893/18/4/206
Description
Summary:This paper presents an innovative approach to wind energy forecasting through the implementation of an extended long short-term memory (xLSTM) model. This research addresses fundamental limitations in time-sequence forecasting for wind energy by introducing architectural enhancements to traditional LSTM networks. The xLSTM model incorporates two key innovations: exponential gating with memory mixing and a novel matrix memory structure. These improvements are realized through two variants, i.e., scalar LSTM and matrix LSTM, which are integrated into residual blocks to form comprehensive architectures. The xLSTM model was validated using SCADA data from wind turbines, with rigorous preprocessing to remove anomalous measurements. Performance evaluation across different wind speed regimes demonstrated robust predictive capabilities, with the xLSTM model achieving an overall coefficient of determination value of 0.923 and a mean absolute percentage error of 8.47%. Seasonal analysis revealed consistent prediction accuracy across varied meteorological patterns. The xLSTM model maintains linear computational complexity with respect to sequence length while offering enhanced capabilities in memory retention, state tracking, and long-range dependency modeling. These results demonstrate the potential of xLSTM for improving wind power forecasting accuracy, which is crucial for optimizing turbine operations and grid integration of renewable energy resources.
ISSN:1999-4893