Intelligent Control Systems Members Publications

Networked Control and Communication

Ncs
Abstraction of a networked control system. Multiple autonomous agents are connected to a dynamic system through sensors (S) and actuators (A), and they coordinate their actions by communicating over a network. This can represent autonomous vehicles driving in formation or robots working together on a task, for example. Event-based communication ensures that data is exchanged only when necessary to avoid overload of the network.

Members

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Intelligent Control Systems
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Autonomous Motion
Thumb ticker sm dominik baumann
Intelligent Control Systems
  • Guest Scientist
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Intelligent Control Systems
  • Doctoral Researcher

Publications

Autonomous Motion Intelligent Control Systems Learning and Dynamical Systems Conference Paper LMI-Based Synthesis for Distributed Event-Based State Estimation Muehlebach, M., Trimpe, S. In Proceedings of the American Control Conference, July 2015 (Published)
This paper presents an LMI-based synthesis procedure for distributed event-based state estimation. Multiple agents observe and control a dynamic process by sporadically exchanging data over a broadcast network according to an event-based protocol. In previous work [1], the synthesis of event-based state estimators is based on a centralized design. In that case three different types of communication are required: event-based communication of measurements, periodic reset of all estimates to their joint average, and communication of inputs. The proposed synthesis problem eliminates the communication of inputs as well as the periodic resets (under favorable circumstances) by accounting explicitly for the distributed structure of the control system.
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Autonomous Motion Intelligent Control Systems Learning and Dynamical Systems Conference Paper Guaranteed H2 Performance in Distributed Event-Based State Estimation Muehlebach, M., Trimpe, S. In Proceeding of the First International Conference on Event-based Control, Communication, and Signal Processing, June 2015 (Published) PDF DOI BibTeX

Autonomous Motion Intelligent Control Systems Conference Paper On the Choice of the Event Trigger in Event-based Estimation Trimpe, S., Campi, M. In Proceeding of the First International Conference on Event-based Control, Communication, and Signal Processing, June 2015 (Published) PDF DOI BibTeX

Autonomous Motion Intelligent Control Systems Conference Paper Event-based Estimation and Control for Remote Robot Operation with Reduced Communication Trimpe, S., Buchli, J. In Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, May 2015 (Published)
An event-based communication framework for remote operation of a robot via a bandwidth-limited network is proposed. The robot sends state and environment estimation data to the operator, and the operator transmits updated control commands or policies to the robot. Event-based communication protocols are designed to ensure that data is transmitted only when required: the robot sends new estimation data only if this yields a significant information gain at the operator, and the operator transmits an updated control policy only if this comes with a significant improvement in control performance. The developed framework is modular and can be used with any standard estimation and control algorithms. Simulation results of a robotic arm highlight its potential for an efficient use of limited communication resources, for example, in disaster response scenarios such as the DARPA Robotics Challenge.
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Autonomous Motion Intelligent Control Systems Article Wenn es was zu sagen gibt Trimpe, S. Bild der Wissenschaft, 20-23, November 2014, (popular science article in German) PDF BibTeX

Autonomous Motion Intelligent Control Systems Conference Paper Stability Analysis of Distributed Event-Based State Estimation Trimpe, S. In Proceedings of the 53rd IEEE Conference on Decision and Control, Los Angeles, CA, 2014 (Published)
An approach for distributed and event-based state estimation that was proposed in previous work [1] is analyzed and extended to practical networked systems in this paper. Multiple sensor-actuator-agents observe a dynamic process, sporadically exchange their measurements over a broadcast network according to an event-based protocol, and estimate the process state from the received data. The event-based approach was shown in [1] to mimic a centralized Luenberger observer up to guaranteed bounds, under the assumption of identical estimates on all agents. This assumption, however, is unrealistic (it is violated by a single packet drop or slight numerical inaccuracy) and removed herein. By means of a simulation example, it is shown that non-identical estimates can actually destabilize the overall system. To achieve stability, the event-based communication scheme is supplemented by periodic (but infrequent) exchange of the agentsâ?? estimates and reset to their joint average. When the local estimates are used for feedback control, the stability guarantee for the estimation problem extends to the event-based control system.
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