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1.
Recently we proposed relative observability for supervisory control of discrete-event systems under partial observation. Relative observability is closed under set unions and hence there exists the supremal relatively observable sublanguage of a given language. In this paper we present a new characterization of relative observability, based on which an operator on languages is proposed whose largest fixpoint is the supremal relatively observable sublanguage. Iteratively applying this operator yields a monotone sequence of languages; exploiting the linguistic concept of support based on Nerode equivalence, we prove for regular languages that the sequence converges finitely to the supremal relatively observable sublanguage, and the operator is effectively computable. Moreover, for the purpose of control, we propose a second operator that in the regular case computes the supremal relatively observable and controllable sublanguage.  相似文献   

2.
The authors address the supervisory synthesis problem of controlling the sequential behaviors of discrete-event dynamical systems (DEDSs) under complete and partial information through the use of synchronous composition of the plants and the supervisors. The authors present the notion of complete languages, discuss some of its algebraic properties, and show its close relation to ω-languages. The authors prove that the supremal (closed) complete and controllable sublanguage of a given language exists, and present an algorithm to compute it. They present a closed-form expression for the supremal ω-controllable sublanguage of a given ω-language in terms of the supremal (closed) complete and controllable sublanguage. This closed-form expression suggests that certain operations on a given ω-language can alternatively be achieved by performing certain other similar operations on its prefix (which is a finite language) and then taking the limit (to obtain the desired ω-language). A necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of a supervisor in case of partial observation is presented in terms of ω-observability. Notion of ω-normality is also introduced, and a closed-form expression for the supremal ω-normal sublanguage, in terms of the supremal closed, complete, and normal sublanguage, is presented  相似文献   

3.
We consider the problem of finding the mask value of the supremal normal sublanguage LR of some given language L. We describe a straightforward algorithmic solution that can be applied to existing off-line procedures for determining the supremal controllable and normal sublanguage of L and that does not require an explicit calculation of L R. This problem is fundamental because it is related to the supervisory control problem under partial observation. Our algorithm applies only to closed languages  相似文献   

4.
Supervisory control of fuzzy discrete event systems.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
To cope with situations in which a plant's dynamics are not precisely known, we consider the problem of supervisory control for a class of discrete event systems modeled by fuzzy automata. The behavior of such discrete event systems is described by fuzzy languages; the supervisors are event feedback and can only disable controllable events with any degree. In this new sense, we present a necessary and sufficient condition for a fuzzy language to be controllable. We also study the supremal controllable fuzzy sublanguage and the infimal controllable fuzzy superlanguage.  相似文献   

5.
It is well known that the design of supervisors for partially observed discrete-event systems is an NP-complete problem and hence computationally impractical. Furthermore, optimal supervisors for partially observed systems do not generally exist. Hence, the best supervisors that can be designed directly for operation under partial observation are the ones that generate the supremal normal (and controllable) sublanguage. In the present paper we show that a standard procedure exists by which any supervisor that has been designed for operation under full observation, can be modified to operate under partial observation. When the procedure is used to modify the optimal full-observation supervisor (i.e., the one that generates the supremal controllable language), the resultant modified supervisor is at least as efficient as the best one that can be designed directly (that generates the supremal normal sublanguage). The supervisor modification algorithm can be carried out on-line with linear computational complexity and hence makes the control under partial observation a computationally feasible procedure.  相似文献   

6.
In this paper, we give some new methods for synthesis of controllers of discrete event dynamical systems (DEDS) with partial event informations. Given a regular target language L, we construct some effective computable algorithms for computing the controllable and observable sublanguages of L. We show that any one of these controllable and observable sublanguages obtained by our algorithms is larger than the supremal controllable and normal sublanguage of L.  相似文献   

7.
Supremal controllable and normal sublanguages have been shown to play an important role in supervisor synthesis. In this paper, we discuss the computation of supremal controllable and normal sublanguages. We derive formulas for both supremal controllable sublanguages and supremal normal sublanguages when the languages involved are closed. As a result, those languages can be computed without applying recursive algorithms. We also discuss those aspects of these formulas.  相似文献   

8.
On computation of supremal controllable, normal sublanguages   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
In this paper, we present an algorithm for the computation of the controllable, normal sublanguage of a given language, encountered in the solution of the supervisory control of discrete-event systems under partial observation. The algorithm produces the desired result under certain assumptions on the plant and the event projection map. In particular, the plant has to be nonblocking. The advantage of the algorithm over the solution available in the literature is that it does not involve iterations on the supremal controllable sublanguage and supremal normal sublanguage operators.  相似文献   

9.
In this paper, we study nonblocking decentralized supervisory control of discrete event systems. We introduce a modified normality condition defined in terms of a modified natural projection map. The modified normality condition is weaker than the original one and stronger than the co-observability condition. Moreover, it is preserved under union. Given a marked language specification, there exists a nonblocking decentralized supervisor for the supremal sublanguage which satisfies Lm(G)-closure, controllability, and modified normality. Such a decentralized supervisor is more permissive than the one which achieves the supremal Lm(G)-closed, controllable, and normal sublanguage.  相似文献   

10.
We extend the class of control problems that can be modeled by Petri nets considering the notion of weak terminal behavior. Deterministic weak languages represent closed-loop terminal behaviors that may be enforced by nonblocking Petri net supervisors if controllable. The class of deterministic weak PN languages is not closed under the supremal controllable sublanguage operator  相似文献   

11.
Observability and decentralized control of fuzzy discrete-event systems   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Fuzzy discrete-event systems as a generalization of (crisp) discrete-event systems have been introduced in order that it is possible to effectively represent uncertainty, imprecision, and vagueness arising from the dynamic of systems. A fuzzy discrete-event system has been modeled by a fuzzy automaton; its behavior is described in terms of the fuzzy language generated by the automaton. In this paper, we are concerned with the supervisory control problem for fuzzy discrete-event systems with partial observation. Observability, normality, and co-observability of crisp languages are extended to fuzzy languages. It is shown that the observability, together with controllability, of the desired fuzzy language is a necessary and sufficient condition for the existence of a partially observable fuzzy supervisor. When a decentralized solution is desired, it is proved that there exist local fuzzy supervisors if and only if the fuzzy language to be synthesized is controllable and co-observable. Moreover, the infimal controllable and observable fuzzy superlanguage, and the supremal controllable and normal fuzzy sublanguage are also discussed. Simple examples are provided to illustrate the theoretical development.  相似文献   

12.
This paper studies the language generated under fully decentralized supervision proposed by Kozak and Wonham (1995). The author assumes that desirable behavior is specified as a closed language. A closed-form expression for the language generated under fully decentralized supervision is presented. It is shown that the generated language is larger than the supremal closed, controllable, and strongly decomposable sublanguage. Moreover, a necessary and sufficient condition is derived for the generated language to be the supremal closed and controllable sublanguage  相似文献   

13.
In this paper, we study the concept of relative coobservability in decentralised supervisory control of discrete-event systems under partial observation. This extends our previous work on relative observability from a centralised setup to a decentralised one. A fundamental concept in decentralised supervisory control is coobservability (and its several variations); this property is not, however, closed under set union, and hence there generally does not exist the supremal element. Our proposed relative coobservability, although stronger than coobservability, is algebraically well behaved, and the supremal relatively coobservable sublanguage of a given language exists. We present a language-based algorithm to compute this supremal sublanguage; the algorithm allows straightforward implementation using off-the-shelf algorithms. Moreover, relative coobservability is weaker than conormality, which is also closed under set union; unlike conormality, relative coobservability imposes no constraint on disabling unobservable controllable events.  相似文献   

14.
Consider an event alphabet Sigma. The supervisory control theory of Ramadge and Wonham asks the question: given a plant model G with language LM (G) sube Sigma* and another language K sube LM (G), is there a supervisor phi such that LM (phi/G) = K? Ramadge and Wonham showed that a necessary condition for this to be true is the so-called controllability of K with respect to LM (G). They showed that when G is a finite-state automaton and K is a regular language (also generated by a finite state automaton), then there is a regular supremal controllable sublanguage supC (K) sube K that is effectively constructable from generators of K and G. In this paper, we show: 1) there is an algorithm to compute the supremal controllable sublanguage of a prefix closed K accepted by a deterministic pushdown automaton (DPDA) when the plant language is also prefix closed and accepted by a finite state automaton and 2) in this case, we show that this supremal controllable sublanguage is also accepted by a DPDA.  相似文献   

15.
Supervisor Reduction for Discrete-Event Systems   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
In supervisory control theory (SCT) the supremal supervisor (representing the supremal controllable sublanguage) typically has a large state size (of order the product of state sizes of the plant and specification automata). In this paper, we propose an algorithm which can significantly reduce supervisor size while preserving control action. We also show that finding a supervisor of minimal size is NP-hard.  相似文献   

16.
A partial information supervisor that generates a class of closed controllable and observable sublanguages of a specified “legal” language is presented. This supervisor has the following features: 1) it can be implemented online (i.e., the disabled event set need only be computed once upon each event observation); 2) the computations of the disabled event set can be performed in O(mn) worst case complexity, where a is the number of states in the legal language generator and m is the number of events; 3) an online supervisor presented previously by Heymann and Lin (1993) is a special case of the new supervisor; and 4) all the languages generated by the new supervisor contain the supremal closed controllable and normal (supCCN) sublanguage of the legal language (in fact, they contain a language developed by Fa et al. (1993) that was shown to contain the supCCN sublanguage)  相似文献   

17.
Supervisory control using variable lookahead policies   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
This paper deals with the efficient on-line calculation of supervisory controls for discrete event systems (DES's) in the framework of limited lookahead control policies (or LLPs) that we introduced in previous papers. In the LLP scheme, the control action after a given trace of events has been executed is calculated on-line on the basis of anN-step ahead projection of the behavior of the DES. To compute these controls, one must calculate after the execution of each event the supremal controllable sublanguage of a finite language with respect to another finite larger language. In our previous work, we showed how the required supremal controllable sublanguage calculation can be performed by using a backward dynamic programming algorithm over the nodes of the tree representation of these two languages. In this paper, we pursue the same approach for the calculation of LLP controls, but instead we adopt a forward calculation procedure over theN-level tree of interest. This forward procedure improves upon previous work by avoiding the explicit consideration of all the nodes of theN-level tree, while still permitting tree-to-tree recursiveness as enabled events are executed by the system. The forward search ends whenever a control decision can be made unambiguously or whenever the boundary of theN-level tree is reached, whichever comes first. This motivates the name Variable Lookahead Policy (or VLP) for this implementation of the LLP supervisory control scheme. This paper presents a general VLP algorithm and studies the properties of several special cases of it. The paper also discusses the implementation of the VLP algorithms and presents computational results regarding the application of these algorithms to a time-varying DES.  相似文献   

18.
This paper deals with the on-line control of partially observed discrete event systems (DES). The goal is to restrict the behavior of the system within a prefix-closed legal language while accounting for the presence ofuncontrollable andunobservable events. In the spirit of recent work on the on-line control of partially observed DES (Heymann and Lin 1994) and on variable lookahead control of fully observed DES (Ben Hadj-Alouane et al. 1994c), we propose an approach where, following each observable event, a control action is computed on-line using an algorithm oflinear worst-case complexity. This algorithm, calledVLP-PO, has the following additional properties: (i) the resulting behavior is guaranteed to be amaximal controllable and observable sublanguage of the legal language; (ii) different maximals may be generated by varying the priorities assigned to the controllable events, a parameter ofVLP-PO; (iii) a maximal containing the supremal controllable and normal sublanguage of the legal language can be generated by a proper selection of controllable event priorities; and (iv) no off-line calculations are necessary. We also present a parallel/distributed version of theVLP-PO algorithm calledDI-VLP-PO. This version uses several communicating agents that simultaneously run (on-line) identical versions of the algorithm but on possibly different parts of the system model and the legal language, according to the structural properties of the system and the specifications. While achieving the same behavior asVLO-PO, DI-VLP-PO runs at a total complexity (for computation and communication) that is significantly lower than its sequential counterpart.  相似文献   

19.
Robust nonblocking supervisory control of discrete-event systems   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In this note, we generalize a robust supervisory control framework to deal with marked languages. We show how to synthesize a supervisor to control a family of plant models, each with its own specification. The solution we obtain is the most general in that it provides the closest approximation to the supremal controllable sublanguage for each plant/specification pair. We end the note by extending these results to deal with timed discrete-event systems.  相似文献   

20.
Brandin and Wonham have developed a supervisory control framework for timed discrete event systems (TDESs) in order to deal with not only logical specifications but also temporal specifications. Lin and Wonham have extended this framework to the partial observation case, and presented necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of a nonblocking supervisor under partial observation. In this paper, we define a new class of supervisors for TDESs under partial observation. We then present necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of a nonblocking supervisor defined in this paper. These existence conditions of our supervisor are weaker than those of Lin and Wonham's supervisor. Note, however, that the price that must be paid to weaken the existence conditions is the higher computational cost. Moreover, given a closed regular language, we study computation of a sublanguage that satisfies the existence conditions of our supervisor. We present an algorithm for computing such a sublanguage larger than the supremal closed, controllable, and normal sublanguage.  相似文献   

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