7,112 research outputs found
Value of Information in Feedback Control
In this article, we investigate the impact of information on networked
control systems, and illustrate how to quantify a fundamental property of
stochastic processes that can enrich our understanding about such systems. To
that end, we develop a theoretical framework for the joint design of an event
trigger and a controller in optimal event-triggered control. We cover two
distinct information patterns: perfect information and imperfect information.
In both cases, observations are available at the event trigger instantly, but
are transmitted to the controller sporadically with one-step delay. For each
information pattern, we characterize the optimal triggering policy and optimal
control policy such that the corresponding policy profile represents a Nash
equilibrium. Accordingly, we quantify the value of information
as the variation in the cost-to-go of the system given
an observation at time . Finally, we provide an algorithm for approximation
of the value of information, and synthesize a closed-form suboptimal triggering
policy with a performance guarantee that can readily be implemented
Suboptimal Event-Triggered Consensus of Multiagent Systems
In this paper the suboptimal event-triggered consensus problem of Multiagent systems is investigated. Using the combinational measurement approach, each agent only updates its control input at its own event time instants. Thus the total number of events and the amount of controller updates can be significantly reduced in practice. Then, based on the observation of increasing the consensus rate and reducing the number of triggering events, we have proposed the time-average cost of the agent system and developed a suboptimal approach to determine the triggering condition. The effectiveness of the proposed strategy is illustrated by numerical examples
Event-based recursive distributed filtering over wireless sensor networks
In this technical note, the distributed filtering problem is investigated for a class of discrete time-varying systems with an event-based communication mechanism. Each intelligent sensor node transmits the data to its neighbors only when the local innovation violates a predetermined Send-on-Delta (SoD) data transmission condition. The aim of the proposed problem is to construct a distributed filter for each sensor node subject to sporadic communications over wireless networks. In terms of an event indicator variable, the triggering information is utilized so as to reduce the conservatism in the filter analysis. An upper bound for the filtering error covariance is obtained in form of Riccati-like difference equations by utilizing the inductive method. Subsequently, such an upper bound is minimized by appropriately designing the filter parameters iteratively, where a novel matrix simplification technique is developed to handle the challenges resulting from the sparseness of the sensor network topology and filter structure preserving issues. The effectiveness of the proposed strategy is illustrated by a numerical simulation.This work is supported by National Basic Research Program of China (973 Program) under Grant 2010CB731800, National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grants 61210012, 61290324, 61473163 and 61273156, and Jiangsu Provincial Key Laboratory of E-business at Nanjing University of Jiangsu and Economics of China under Grant JSEB201301
Stability analysis of event-triggered anytime control with multiple control laws
To deal with time-varying processor availability and lossy communication
channels in embedded and networked control systems, one can employ an
event-triggered sequence-based anytime control (E-SAC) algorithm. The main idea
of E-SAC is, when computing resources and measurements are available, to
compute a sequence of tentative control inputs and store them in a buffer for
potential future use. State-dependent Random-time Drift (SRD) approach is often
used to analyse and establish stability properties of such E-SAC algorithms.
However, using SRD, the analysis quickly becomes combinatoric and hence
difficult to extend to more sophisticated E-SAC. In this technical note, we
develop a general model and a new stability analysis for E-SAC based on Markov
jump systems. Using the new stability analysis, stochastic stability conditions
of existing E-SAC are also recovered. In addition, the proposed technique
systematically extends to a more sophisticated E-SAC scheme for which, until
now, no analytical expression had been obtained.Comment: Accepted for publication in IEEE Transactions on Automatic Contro
Seamless Infrastructure independent Multi Homed NEMO Handoff Using Effective and Timely IEEE 802.21 MIH triggers
Handoff performance of NEMO BS protocol with existent improvement proposals
is still not sufficient for real time and QoS-sensitive applications and
further optimizations are needed. When dealing with single homed NEMO, handoff
latency and packet loss become irreducible all optimizations included, so that
it is impossible to meet requirements of the above applications. Then, How to
combine the different Fast handoff approaches remains an open research issue
and needs more investigation. In this paper, we propose a new Infrastructure
independent handoff approach combining multihoming and intelligent
Make-Before-Break Handoff. Based on required Handoff time estimation, L2 and L3
handoffs are initiated using effective and timely MIH triggers, reducing so the
anticipation time and increasing the probability of prediction. We extend MIH
services to provide tunnel establishment and switching before link break. Thus,
the handoff is performed in background with no latency and no packet loss while
pingpong scenario is almost avoided. In addition, our proposal saves cost and
power consumption by optimizing the time of simultaneous use of multiple
interfaces. We provide also NS2 simulation experiments identifying suitable
parameter values used for estimation and validating the proposed mode
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