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DTSTART:20380119T061407
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DTSTART:20160907T000000
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DTSTART;TZID=Turkey:20180511T133000
DTEND;TZID=Turkey:20180511T153000
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Assoc. Prof. Klaus Werner Schmidt\, Middle East Techni
 cal University\n\nTopic: &quot;Supervisory Control for Discrete Event Systems: 
 Introduction\, Methods and Applications&quot;\n\nLocation: Middle East Technica
 l University\, Ankara\, Turkey\n\nAbstract: Discrete event system (DES) mo
 dels are suitable to describe man-made systems such as manufacturing syste
 ms\, automation systems\, telecommunication networks\, traffic systems or 
 logistic systems. As a common feature\, such systems have a discrete state
  space and their dynamic behavior is driven by the occurrence of asynchron
 ous events. Moreover\, such systems are usually composed of a large number
  of interacting components such that systems of practical size have a very
  large state space. Accordingly\, the controller (supervisor) design for D
 ES is a challenging problem and requires advanced concepts such as modular
 ity and system abstraction. This talk first introduces the DES modeling fr
 amework and discusses the basic supervisory control framework. Then\, the 
 ideas of modularity and system abstraction are outlined in order to reduce
  the design complexity. Application examples illustrate that the described
  concepts are applicable to systems of practical size and support the idea
  of &quot;correctness by design&quot;.\n\nBio: Klaus Werner Schmidt received the Dip
 loma and Ph.D. degrees in electrical\, electronic\, and communication engi
 neering from University of Erlangen-Nürnberg\, Germany\, in 2002 and 2005
 \, respectively. He is currently an Associate Professor with the Departmen
 t of Electrical and Electronics Engineering\, Middle East Technical Univer
 sity\, Ankara. His research interests include supervisory control for disc
 rete event systems\, industrial automation systems\, industrial communicat
 ion networks\, intelligent transportation systems\, and industrial project
  control. He is an Associate Editor of the journal &quot;Discrete Event Dynamic
  Systems: Theory and Applications&quot; and of the &quot;Turkish Journal of Electric
 al Engineering &amp; Computer Sciences&quot;\n\nSpeaker(s): Assoc. Prof. Klaus Wern
 er Schmidt\, \n\nAnkara\, Ankara\, Türkiye
LOCATION:Ankara\, Ankara\, Türkiye
ORGANIZER:ozergul@metu.edu.tr
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:IEEE AP/MTT/EMC/ED TURKEY CHAPTER SEMINAR SERIES -- SEMINAR 32
URL;VALUE=URI:https://events.vtools.ieee.org/m/173147
X-ALT-DESC:Description: &lt;br /&gt;&lt;p&gt;Speaker: Assoc. Prof. Klaus Werner Schmidt
 \, Middle East Technical University&lt;/p&gt;\n&lt;p&gt;Topic: &quot;Supervisory Control fo
 r Discrete Event Systems: Introduction\, Methods and Applications&quot;&lt;/p&gt;\n&lt;p
 &gt;Location:&amp;nbsp\;Middle East Technical University\, Ankara\, Turkey&lt;/p&gt;\n&lt;
 p&gt;Abstract:&amp;nbsp\;Discrete event system (DES) models are suitable to descr
 ibe man-made systems such as manufacturing systems\, automation systems\, 
 telecommunication networks\, traffic systems or logistic systems. As a com
 mon feature\, such systems have a discrete state space and their dynamic b
 ehavior is driven by the occurrence of asynchronous events. Moreover\, suc
 h systems are usually composed of a large number of interacting components
  such that systems of practical size have a very large state space. Accord
 ingly\, the controller (supervisor) design for DES is a challenging proble
 m and requires advanced concepts such as modularity and system abstraction
 . This talk first introduces the DES modeling framework and discusses the 
 basic supervisory control framework. Then\, the ideas of modularity and sy
 stem abstraction are outlined in order to reduce the design complexity. Ap
 plication examples illustrate that the described concepts are applicable t
 o systems of practical size and support the idea of &quot;correctness by design
 &quot;.&lt;/p&gt;\n&lt;p&gt;Bio: Klaus Werner Schmidt received the Diploma and Ph.D. degree
 s in electrical\, electronic\, and communication engineering from Universi
 ty of Erlangen-N&amp;uuml\;rnberg\, Germany\, in 2002 and 2005\, respectively.
  He is currently an Associate Professor with the Department of Electrical 
 and Electronics Engineering\, Middle East Technical University\, Ankara. H
 is research interests include supervisory control for discrete event syste
 ms\, industrial automation systems\, industrial communication networks\, i
 ntelligent transportation systems\, and industrial project control. He is 
 an Associate Editor of the journal &quot;Discrete Event Dynamic Systems: Theory
  and Applications&quot; and of the &quot;Turkish Journal of Electrical Engineering &amp;
 amp\; Computer Sciences&quot;&lt;/p&gt;
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