Modeling and forecasting air quality plays a crucial role in informed air pollution management and protecting public health. The air quality data of a region, collected through various pollution monitoring stations, display nonlinearity, nonstationarity, and highly dynamic nature and detain intense stochastic spatiotemporal correlation. Geometric deep learning models such as Spatiotemporal Graph Convolutional Networks (STGCN) can capture spatial dependence while forecasting temporal time series data for different sensor locations. Another key characteristic often ignored by these models is the presence of extreme observations in the air pollutant levels for severely polluted cities worldwide. Extreme value theory is a commonly used statistical method to predict the expected number of violations of the National Ambient Air Quality Standards for air pollutant concentration levels. This study develops an extreme value theory-based STGCN model (E-STGCN) for air pollution data to incorporate extreme behavior across pollutant concentrations. Along with spatial and temporal components, E-STGCN uses generalized Pareto distribution to investigate the extreme behavior of different air pollutants and incorporate it inside graph convolutional networks. The proposal is then applied to analyze air pollution data (PM2.5, PM10, and NO2) of 37 monitoring stations across Delhi, India. The forecasting performance for different test horizons is evaluated compared to benchmark forecasters (both temporal and spatiotemporal). It was found that E-STGCN has consistent performance across all the seasons in Delhi, India, and the robustness of our results has also been evaluated empirically. Moreover, combined with conformal prediction, E-STGCN can also produce probabilistic prediction intervals.
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