INFORMATION BASED CONTROL AND CONTROL COMMUNICATION COMPLEXITY

#Control #Systems #Communication #channel #optimal #computation
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The interaction of information and control has been a topic of interest to system theorists that can be traced back to the 1950’s when the fields of communications, control, and information theory were new but developing rapidly.  Recent advances in our understanding of this interplay have emerged from work on the dynamical effect of state quantization and a corresponding understanding of how communication channel data rates affect system stability.  While a large body of research has now emerged dealing with communication constrained feedback channels and optimal design of information flows in networks, less attention has been paid to ways in which control systems should be designed in order to optimally mediate computation and communication.  Such optimization problems are of interest in the context of quantum computing, and similar problems have recently been discussed in connection with protocols for assembly of molecular components in synthetic biology.



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  • Date: 25 Oct 2016
  • Time: 07:00 PM to 08:00 PM
  • All times are (UTC-04:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
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  • 800 Lancaster Ave.
  • Villanova University
  • Villanova, Pennsylvania
  • United States 19085
  • Building: Tolentine Hall
  • Room Number: 215
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  • Co-sponsored by Villanova Center for Analytics of Dynamic Systems
  • Starts 15 September 2016 12:01 AM
  • Ends 25 October 2016 07:00 PM
  • All times are (UTC-04:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
  • No Admission Charge


  Speakers

Dr. John Baillieul of Boston University

Topic:

INFORMATION BASED CONTROL AND CONTROL COMMUNICATION COMPLEXITY

The interaction of information and control has been a topic of interest to system theorists that can be traced back to the 1950’s when the fields of communications, control, and information theory were new but developing rapidly.  Recent advances in our understanding of this interplay have emerged from work on the dynamical effect of state quantization and a corresponding understanding of how communication channel data rates affect system stability.  While a large body of research has now emerged dealing with communication constrained feedback channels and optimal design of information flows in networks, less attention has been paid to ways in which control systems should be designed in order to optimally mediate computation and communication.  Such optimization problems are of interest in the context of quantum computing, and similar problems have recently been discussed in connection with protocols for assembly of molecular components in synthetic biology.

Biography:

John Baillieul's research deals with robotics, the control of mechanical systems, and mathematical system theory. His PhD dissertation, completed at Harvard University under the direction of R.W. Brockett in 1975, was an early work dealing with connections between optimal control theory and what came to be called “sub-Riemannian geometry.” After publishing a number of papers developing geometric methods for nonlinear optimal control problems, he turned his attention to problems in the control of nonlinear systems modeled by homogeneous polynomial differential equations. Such systems describe, for example, the controlled dynamics of a rigid body. His main controllability theorem applied the concept of finiteness embodied in the Hilbert basis theorem to develop a controllability condition that could be verified by checking the rank of an explicit finite dimensional operator. Baillieul’s current research is aimed at understanding decision making and novel ways to communicate in mixed teams of humans and intelligent automata. John Baillieul is a Fellow of IFAC, a Fellow of the IEEE and a Fellow of SIAM.

Email:

Address:Boston Univeristy, One Silber Way, Boston, United States, 02215

Dr. John Baillieul of Boston University

Topic:

INFORMATION BASED CONTROL AND CONTROL COMMUNICATION COMPLEXITY

Biography:

Email:

Address:Boston, United States






Agenda

Tuesday, October 25, 2016: 7-8 PM