A Game-Theoretic approach to Fault Diagnosis of Hybrid Systems

Physical systems can fail. For this reason the problem of identifying and reacting to faults has received a large attention in the control and computer science communities. In this paper we study the fault diagnosis problem for hybrid systems from a game-theoretical point of view. A hybrid system is...

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Main Authors: Davide Bresolin, Marta Capiluppi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Publishing Association 2011-06-01
Series:Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
Online Access:http://arxiv.org/pdf/1106.1244v1
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spelling doaj-0bb7e1da0d314b4c8f55e81cfd8000ff2020-11-25T00:51:52ZengOpen Publishing AssociationElectronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science2075-21802011-06-0154Proc. GandALF 201123724910.4204/EPTCS.54.17A Game-Theoretic approach to Fault Diagnosis of Hybrid SystemsDavide BresolinMarta CapiluppiPhysical systems can fail. For this reason the problem of identifying and reacting to faults has received a large attention in the control and computer science communities. In this paper we study the fault diagnosis problem for hybrid systems from a game-theoretical point of view. A hybrid system is a system mixing continuous and discrete behaviours that cannot be faithfully modeled neither by using a formalism with continuous dynamics only nor by a formalism including only discrete dynamics. We use the well known framework of hybrid automata for modeling hybrid systems, and we define a Fault Diagnosis Game on them, using two players: the environment and the diagnoser. The environment controls the evolution of the system and chooses whether and when a fault occurs. The diagnoser observes the external behaviour of the system and announces whether a fault has occurred or not. Existence of a winning strategy for the diagnoser implies that faults can be detected correctly, while computing such a winning strategy corresponds to implement a diagnoser for the system. We will show how to determine the existence of a winning strategy, and how to compute it, for some decidable classes of hybrid automata like o-minimal hybrid automata. http://arxiv.org/pdf/1106.1244v1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Davide Bresolin
Marta Capiluppi
spellingShingle Davide Bresolin
Marta Capiluppi
A Game-Theoretic approach to Fault Diagnosis of Hybrid Systems
Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
author_facet Davide Bresolin
Marta Capiluppi
author_sort Davide Bresolin
title A Game-Theoretic approach to Fault Diagnosis of Hybrid Systems
title_short A Game-Theoretic approach to Fault Diagnosis of Hybrid Systems
title_full A Game-Theoretic approach to Fault Diagnosis of Hybrid Systems
title_fullStr A Game-Theoretic approach to Fault Diagnosis of Hybrid Systems
title_full_unstemmed A Game-Theoretic approach to Fault Diagnosis of Hybrid Systems
title_sort game-theoretic approach to fault diagnosis of hybrid systems
publisher Open Publishing Association
series Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science
issn 2075-2180
publishDate 2011-06-01
description Physical systems can fail. For this reason the problem of identifying and reacting to faults has received a large attention in the control and computer science communities. In this paper we study the fault diagnosis problem for hybrid systems from a game-theoretical point of view. A hybrid system is a system mixing continuous and discrete behaviours that cannot be faithfully modeled neither by using a formalism with continuous dynamics only nor by a formalism including only discrete dynamics. We use the well known framework of hybrid automata for modeling hybrid systems, and we define a Fault Diagnosis Game on them, using two players: the environment and the diagnoser. The environment controls the evolution of the system and chooses whether and when a fault occurs. The diagnoser observes the external behaviour of the system and announces whether a fault has occurred or not. Existence of a winning strategy for the diagnoser implies that faults can be detected correctly, while computing such a winning strategy corresponds to implement a diagnoser for the system. We will show how to determine the existence of a winning strategy, and how to compute it, for some decidable classes of hybrid automata like o-minimal hybrid automata.
url http://arxiv.org/pdf/1106.1244v1
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