Uniting and Balancing Control Objectives


Book Description

Multi-robot systems can accomplish a variety of tasks through the power of coordination. There are mutliple benefits. These systems have many advantages over a single very complex robot in term of scalability, versatility, and adaptability. In many cases, the robots cannot accomplish much by itself, but coordination empowers them the ability to complete various objectives. Even when the individuals robots are very capable, coordination can increase robot efficiency by allocating robots with fitting tasks. In both scenarios, the problem of balancing the system objectives arise naturally, and properly addressing it can lead to better overall performance. Motivated by this observation, this dissertation seek to understand how different objectives can be put together and how to strike a balance between them. We consider control objectives at the most fundamental level to control systems, such as stability, system safety, smoothness of the controller, performance, and resources spent for accomplishing tasks. This dissertation is divided into two parts. The first part deals with control laws that considerboth stability and safety objectives. We design controllers that can satisfy simultaneously conditions given by control Lyapunov functions and control barrier functions. Depending on the smoothness properties of the given functions, we guarantee the continuity or smoothness of the controller. In particular, we design a continuous controller for connectivity maintenance, and also design a universal formula for smooth safe stabilization. In the second part, we study the resource-efficient implementation of control laws using event-triggered control. We improve the existing event-triggered control framework for stabilization by incorporating prescribed performance into the design. The resulting framework further enhances the advantage of resource conservation characteristic of event-triggered control. We build on the proposed framework to design an intrinsically Zeno-free distributed triggering mechanisms for network systems. In addition, this dissertation also explores unconventional ways to utilize the event-triggered control framework. In one way, we deviate ourselves from trigger conditions that use Lyapunov functions replacing it instead with barrier certificate and develop an event-triggered control framework for safety objectives. Another interesting way we explore to use event-triggered control is in the context of human supervised multiobjective optimization. In this setting, we consider the human as a valuable resource, which should be used sparingly, and use event-triggered control to accommodate various models of human performance, such as constraints on the response time and the interaction frequency.




The Code of Federal Regulations of the United States of America


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The Code of Federal Regulations is the codification of the general and permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the executive departments and agencies of the Federal Government.













National Science Foundation Legislation, 1975


Book Description




Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States


Book Description

Some vols. include supplemental journals of "such proceedings of the sessions, as, during the time they were depending, were ordered to be kept secret, and respecting which the injunction of secrecy was afterwards taken off by the order of the House".










The United States And The Ussr In A Changing World


Book Description

As the Cold War draws to a close, new issues inevitably have begun to surface in U.S.-Soviet relations. This reader brings together Soviet and U.S. perspectives on the broad range of challenges that both nations now face. Within the context of a "debate" format that presents parallel U.S. and Soviet views, these timely readings illustrate areas of cooperation and conflict and weigh policy similarities and differences. Topics covered include Soviet-U.S. relations after the Cold War, military and national security debates, and the changing international economic environment. The selections also consider the impact that the evolving Soviet-U.S. interaction is having on the "new" Europe and the developing world. The volume concludes by considering the direction the superpower relationship may take in the future. Students of Soviet and U.S. foreign policy will find this text invaluable in unraveling the complexities of U.S.-Soviet relations.