Abstract
Ozone pollution is one of the most important pollutants that have a negative effect on human health and the ecosystem. An effective statistical methodology to detect abnormal ozone measurements is proposed in this study. We used a Deep Belief Network model to account for nonlinear variation of ground-level ozone concentrations, in combination with a one-class support vector machine, for detecting abnormal ozone measurement. We assessed the efficiency of this methodology by using real data from a network of air quality monitoring systems in Isere, France. Results demonstrated the capability of the proposed strategy to identify abnormalities in ozone measurements.