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ANN-based prediction intervals to forecast labour productivity

journal contribution
posted on 2020-01-01, 00:00 authored by Farnad NasirzadehFarnad Nasirzadeh, Hussain Mohammed Dipu Kabir, M Akbari, Abbas KhosraviAbbas Khosravi, Saeid Nahavandi, D G Carmichael
Purpose: This study aims to propose the adoption of artificial neural network (ANN)-based prediction intervals (PIs) to give more reliable prediction of labour productivity using historical data. Design/methodology/approach: Using the proposed PI method, various sources of uncertainty affecting predictions can be accounted for, and a PI is proposed instead of a less reliable single-point estimate. The proposed PI consists of a lower and upper bound in which the realization of the predicted variable, namely, labour productivity, is anticipated to fall with a defined probability and represented in terms of a confidence level (CL). Findings: The proposed PI method is implemented on a case study project to predict labour productivity. The quality of the generated PIs for the labour productivity is investigated at three confidence levels. The results show that the proposed method can predict the value of labour productivity efficiently. Practical implications: This study is the first attempt in construction management to undertake a shift from deterministic point predictions to interval forecasts to improve the reliability of predictions. The proposed PI method will help project managers obtain accurate and credible predictions of labour productivity using historical data. With a better understanding of future outcomes, project managers can adopt appropriate improvement strategies to enhance labour productivity before commencing a project. Originality/value: Point predictions provided by traditional deterministic ANN-based forecasting methodologies may be unreliable due to the different sources of uncertainty affecting predictions. The current study proposes ANN-based PIs as an alternative and robust tool to give a more reliable prediction of labour productivity using historical data. Using the proposed method, various sources of uncertainty affecting the predictions are accounted for, and a PI is proposed instead of a less reliable single point estimate.

History

Journal

Engineering, construction and architectural management

Volume

27

Issue

9

Pagination

2335 - 2351

Publisher

Emerald Group Publishing

Location

Bingley, Eng.

ISSN

0969-9988

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal