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  1. Our goal in this work is to build effective yet robust models to predict unreliable and inconsistent in-kind donations at both weekly and monthly levels for two food banks across coasts: the Food Bank of Central Eastern North Carolina in North Carolina and Los Angeles Regional Food Bank in California. We explore three factors: model, data length, and window type. For the model, we evaluate a series of classic time-series forecasting models against the state-of-the-art approaches such as Bayesian Structural Time Series modeling (BSTS) and deep learning models; for the data length, we vary training data from 2 weeks to 13 years; for the window type, we compare sliding vs. expanding. Our results show the effectiveness of different models heavily depends on the data length and the window type as well as characteristics of the food bank. Motivated by these findings, we investigate the effectiveness of employing an average of all predictions formed by considering all three factors at both monthly and weekly levels for both food banks. Our results show that this average of predictions significantly and consistently outperforms all classical models, deep learning, and BSTS for the donation prediction at both monthly and weekly levels for both food banks. 
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