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Switching observer design, consensus management, and time-delayed control with applications for rigid-body attitude dynamicsChunodkar, Apurva Arvind 29 January 2013 (has links)
This dissertation addresses three diverse research problems pertaining to
rigid body attitude stabilization and control. The problems addressed result in
theoretical development for the topics of cooperative control, delayed feedback, and
state estimation, through the formulation of a novel class of switching observers.
In the area of consensus management for cooperative control, the problem
of designing torque control laws that synchronize the attitude of a team of rigid
bodies under constant, unknown communication time delays is addressed. Directed
communication graphs are considered, which encompass both leader-follower and
leaderless architectures. A feedback linearization result involving the Modified
Rodrigues parameter (MRP) representation of attitude kinematics reduces the attitude
dynamics equations to double integrator agents and the remainder of the
control effort achieves position consensus. New necessary and sufficient delay dependent stability conditions for the system of double integrator agents are presented.
This dissertation also considers the problem of stabilizing attitude dynamics
with unknown piecewise-constant delayed feedback. The problem is addressed
through stability analysis of switched linear time-invariant and nonlinear timedelay
systems. In the case of linear systems with switched delay feedback, a new
sufficiency condition for average dwell time result is presented using a complete
type Lyapunov-Krasovskii (L-K) functional approach. Further, the corresponding
switched system with nonlinear perturbations is proven to be exponentially stable
inside a well characterized region of attraction for an appropriately chosen average
dwell time.
Finally, this dissertation provides a new switching angular velocity observer
formulation to the classical problem of rigid body attitude tracking in the absence
of angular rate measurements. Exponential convergence of the angular velocity
state estimation errors is proven independent of control design by using a novel
error signal definition through this switching-type observer. The switching ensures
C0 continuity for all the estimated states. Further, the maximum number of
switches required by the observer is shown to be finite and that zeno-type behavior
cannot occur. A “separation property” type result in the absence of actual angular
rate measurements is established, wherein a linear and nonlinear controller
utilizes angular velocity estimates from the proposed observer to achieve attitude
tracking. / text
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Sensory input encoding and readout methods for in vitro living neuronal networksOrtman, Robert L. 06 July 2012 (has links)
Establishing and maintaining successful communication stands as a critical prerequisite for achieving the goals of inducing and studying advanced computation in small-scale living neuronal networks. The following work establishes a novel and effective method for communicating arbitrary "sensory" input information to cultures of living neurons, living neuronal networks (LNNs), consisting of approximately 20 000 rat cortical neurons plated on microelectrode arrays (MEAs) containing 60 electrodes. The sensory coding algorithm determines a set of effective codes (symbols), comprised of different spatio-temporal patterns of electrical stimulation, to which the LNN consistently produces unique responses to each individual symbol. The algorithm evaluates random sequences of candidate electrical stimulation patterns for evoked-response separability and reliability via a support vector machine (SVM)-based method, and employing the separability results as a fitness metric, a genetic algorithm subsequently constructs subsets of highly separable symbols (input patterns). Sustainable input/output (I/O) bit rates of 16-20 bits per second with a 10% symbol error rate resulted for time periods of approximately ten minutes to over ten hours. To further evaluate the resulting code sets' performance, I used the system to encode approximately ten hours of sinusoidal input into stimulation patterns that the algorithm selected and was able to recover the original signal with a normalized root-mean-square error of 20-30% using only the recorded LNN responses and trained SVM classifiers. Response variations over the course of several hours observed in the results of the sine wave I/O experiment suggest that the LNNs may retain some short-term memory of the previous input sample and undergo neuroplastic changes in the context of repeated stimulation with sensory coding patterns identified by the algorithm.
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