2,343 research outputs found

    Optimal Neuro-Controller Synthesis for Variable-Time Impulse Driven Systems

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    This paper develops a systematic scheme to solve for the optimal controls of variable time impulsive systems. First, the optimality conditions for variable time impulse driven systems are derived using the calculus of variation. After wards, a neural network based adaptive critic method is proposed to numerically solve the two-point boundary value problems formulated based on the optimality conditions derived. Finally, two examples - one linear and one nonlinear - are presented to illustrate the conditions derived and to show the power of the neural network based adaptive critic method proposed

    Optimal Neuro-Controller Synthesis for Impulse-Driven System

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    This paper presents a new controller design technique for systems driven with impulse inputs. Necessary conditions for optimal impulse control are derived. A neural network structure to solve the resulting equations is presented. The solution concepts are illustrated with a few example problems that exhibit increasing levels of difficulty. Two linear problems-one scalar and one vector-and a benchmark nonlinear problem-Van Der Pol oscillator-are used as case studies. Numerical results show the efficacy of the new solution process for impulse driven systems. Since the theoretical development and the design technique are free from restrictive assumptions, this technique is applicable to many problems in engineering and science

    Computer simulation of a pilot in V/STOL aircraft control loops

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    The objective was to develop a computerized adaptive pilot model for the computer model of the research aircraft, the Harrier II AV-8B V/STOL with special emphasis on propulsion control. In fact, two versions of the adaptive pilot are given. The first, simply called the Adaptive Control Model (ACM) of a pilot includes a parameter estimation algorithm for the parameters of the aircraft and an adaption scheme based on the root locus of the poles of the pilot controlled aircraft. The second, called the Optimal Control Model of the pilot (OCM), includes an adaption algorithm and an optimal control algorithm. These computer simulations were developed as a part of the ongoing research program in pilot model simulation supported by NASA Lewis from April 1, 1985 to August 30, 1986 under NASA Grant NAG 3-606 and from September 1, 1986 through November 30, 1988 under NASA Grant NAG 3-729. Once installed, these pilot models permitted the computer simulation of the pilot model to close all of the control loops normally closed by a pilot actually manipulating the control variables. The current version of this has permitted a baseline comparison of various qualitative and quantitative performance indices for propulsion control, the control loops and the work load on the pilot. Actual data for an aircraft flown by a human pilot furnished by NASA was compared to the outputs furnished by the computerized pilot and found to be favorable

    An optimization formulation for characterization of pulsatile cortisol secretion

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    Cortisol is released to relay information to cells to regulate metabolism and reaction to stress and inflammation. In particular, cortisol is released in the form of pulsatile signals. This low-energy method of signaling seems to be more efficient than continuous signaling. We hypothesize that there is a controller in the anterior pituitary that leads to pulsatile release of cortisol, and propose a mathematical formulation for such controller, which leads to impulse control as opposed to continuous control. We postulate that this controller is minimizing the number of secretory events that result in cortisol secretion, which is a way of minimizing the energy required for cortisol secretion; this controller maintains the blood cortisol levels within a specific circadian range while complying with the first order dynamics underlying cortisol secretion. We use an ℓ0-norm cost function for this controller, and solve a reweighed ℓ1-norm minimization algorithm for obtaining the solution to this optimization problem. We use four examples to illustrate the performance of this approach: (i) a toy problem that achieves impulse control, (ii) two examples that achieve physiologically plausible pulsatile cortisol release, (iii) an example where the number of pulses is not within the physiologically plausible range for healthy subjects while the cortisol levels are within the desired range. This novel approach results in impulse control where the impulses and the obtained blood cortisol levels have a circadian rhythm and an ultradian rhythm that are in agreement with the known physiology of cortisol secretion. The proposed formulation is a first step in developing intermittent controllers for curing cortisol deficiency. This type of bio-inspired pulse controllers can be employed for designing non-continuous controllers in brain-machine interface design for neuroscience applications.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant DP1-OD003646)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant GM104948-03)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant 0836720)National Science Foundation (U.S.). Office of Emerging Frontiers in Research and Innovation (Grant EFRI-0735956

    Design of feedback controllers for paraplegic standing

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    The development, implementation and experimental evaluation of feedback systems for the control of the upright posture of paraplegic persons in standing is described. While the subject stands in a special apparatus, stabilising torque at the ankle joint is generated by electrical stimulation of the paralysed calf muscles of both legs using surface electrodes. This allows the subject to stand without the need to hold on to external supports for stability- this is termed 'unsupported standing'. Sensors in the apparatus allow independent measurement of left and right ankle moments together with measurement of the inclination angle. A nested loop structure for control of standing is implemented, where a high-bandwidth inner loop provides control of the ankle moments, while the angle controller in the outer loop regulates the inclination angle. A number of important modifications to a control strategy which was previously tested with both neurologically intact and paraplegic subjects are presented. The new strategy is described, and an experimental evaluation with intact subjects is reported. The experimental results show that the control system for unsupported standing performs reliably, and according to the design formulation. There aa-e a number of design choices, appropriate to different situations, and the practical effect of each is clear. This allows easy 'tuning' during an experimental session. This is important since the complete design procedure, from muscle dynamics identification to control design, has to be carried out as quickly as possible while the subject is standing in the apparatus. A number of recommendations are made regarding the preferred design choices for control of unsupported standing

    A hierarchical Mamdani-type fuzzy modelling approach with new training data selection and multi-objective optimisation mechanisms: A special application for the prediction of mechanical properties of alloy steels

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    In this paper, a systematic data-driven fuzzy modelling methodology is proposed, which allows to construct Mamdani fuzzy models considering both accuracy (precision) and transparency (interpretability) of fuzzy systems. The new methodology employs a fast hierarchical clustering algorithm to generate an initial fuzzy model efficiently; a training data selection mechanism is developed to identify appropriate and efficient data as learning samples; a high-performance Particle Swarm Optimisation (PSO) based multi-objective optimisation mechanism is developed to further improve the fuzzy model in terms of both the structure and the parameters; and a new tolerance analysis method is proposed to derive the confidence bands relating to the final elicited models. This proposed modelling approach is evaluated using two benchmark problems and is shown to outperform other modelling approaches. Furthermore, the proposed approach is successfully applied to complex high-dimensional modelling problems for manufacturing of alloy steels, using ‘real’ industrial data. These problems concern the prediction of the mechanical properties of alloy steels by correlating them with the heat treatment process conditions as well as the weight percentages of the chemical compositions

    Robust Controller for Delays and Packet Dropout Avoidance in Solar-Power Wireless Network

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    Solar Wireless Networked Control Systems (SWNCS) are a style of distributed control systems where sensors, actuators, and controllers are interconnected via a wireless communication network. This system setup has the benefit of low cost, flexibility, low weight, no wiring and simplicity of system diagnoses and maintenance. However, it also unavoidably calls some wireless network time delays and packet dropout into the design procedure. Solar lighting system offers a clean environment, therefore able to continue for a long period. SWNCS also offers multi Service infrastructure solution for both developed and undeveloped countries. The system provides wireless controller lighting, wireless communications network (WI-FI/WIMAX), CCTV surveillance, and wireless sensor for weather measurement which are all powered by solar energy

    Fuzzy-Immune-Regulated Adaptive Degree-of-Stability LQR for a Self-Balancing Robotic Mechanism: Design and HIL Realization

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    This letter formulates a fuzzy-immune adaptive system for the online adjustment of the Degree-of-Stability (DoS) of Linear-Quadratic-Regulator (LQR) procedure to strengthen the disturbance attenuation capacity of a self-balancing mechatronic system. The fuzzy-immune adaptive system uses pre-configured control input-based rules to alter the DoS parameter of LQR for dynamically relocating the closed-loop system's eigenvalues in the complex plane's left half. The corresponding changes in the eigenvalues are conveyed to the Riccati equation, which eventually yields the self-adjusting LQR gains. This arrangement allows for the flexible manipulation of the applied control effort and the response speed as the error conditions change. The efficacies of the self-tuning LQR scheme are verified by performing custom-designed hardware-in-the-loop experiments on the Quanser rotary inverted pendulum system. As compared to the DoS-LQR, the proposed controller improves the pendulum's transient recovery time, overshoots, input demands, and offsets by 32.3%, 50.5%, 33.9%, and 33.3%, respectively, under disturbances. These experimental outcomes verify that the proposed self-tuning LQR law considerably improves the system's disturbance attenuation capability
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