CONNECTED MULTI-DOMAIN AUTONOMY AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: AUTONOMOUS LOCALIZATION, NETWORKING, AND DATA CONFORMITY EVALUATION

The objective of this dissertation work is the development of a solid theoretical and algorithmic framework for three of the most important aspects of autonomous/artificialintelligence (AI) systems, namely data quality assurance, localization, and communications. In the era of AI and machine learnin...

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Other Authors: Tountas, Konstantinos (author)
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Florida Atlantic University
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Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00013617
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spelling ndltd-fau.edu-oai-fau.digital.flvc.org-fau_647232021-02-11T05:05:22Z CONNECTED MULTI-DOMAIN AUTONOMY AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: AUTONOMOUS LOCALIZATION, NETWORKING, AND DATA CONFORMITY EVALUATION FA00013617 Tountas, Konstantinos (author) Pados, Dimitris (Thesis advisor) Florida Atlantic University (Degree grantor) Department of Computer and Electrical Engineering and Computer Science College of Engineering and Computer Science 148 p. application/pdf Electronic Thesis or Dissertation Text English The objective of this dissertation work is the development of a solid theoretical and algorithmic framework for three of the most important aspects of autonomous/artificialintelligence (AI) systems, namely data quality assurance, localization, and communications. In the era of AI and machine learning (ML), data reign supreme. During learning tasks, we need to ensure that the training data set is correct and complete. During operation, faulty data need to be discovered and dealt with to protect from -potentially catastrophic- system failures. With our research in data quality assurance, we develop new mathematical theory and algorithms for outlier-resistant decomposition of high-dimensional matrices (tensors) based on L1-norm principal-component analysis (PCA). L1-norm PCA has been proven to be resistant to irregular data-points and will drive critical real-world AI learning and autonomous systems operations in the future. At the same time, one of the most important tasks of autonomous systems is self-localization. In GPS-deprived environments, localization becomes a fundamental technical problem. State-of-the-art solutions frequently utilize power-hungry or expensive architectures, making them difficult to deploy. In this dissertation work, we develop and implement a robust, variable-precision localization technique for autonomous systems based on the direction-of-arrival (DoA) estimation theory, which is cost and power-efficient. Finally, communication between autonomous systems is paramount for mission success in many applications. In the era of 5G and beyond, smart spectrum utilization is key.. In this work, we develop physical (PHY) and medium-access-control (MAC) layer techniques that autonomously optimize spectrum usage and minimizes intra and internetwork interference. Florida Atlantic University Artificial intelligence Machine learning Tensor algebra Includes bibliography. Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2020. FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection Copyright © is held by the author with permission granted to Florida Atlantic University to digitize, archive and distribute this item for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires permission of the copyright holder. http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00013617 https://fau.digital.flvc.org/islandora/object/fau%3A64723/datastream/TN/view/CONNECTED%20MULTI-DOMAIN%20AUTONOMY%20AND%20ARTIFICIAL%20INTELLIGENCE%3A%20AUTONOMOUS%20LOCALIZATION%2C%20NETWORKING%2C%20AND%20DATA%20CONFORMITY%20EVALUATION.jpg
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Artificial intelligence
Machine learning
Tensor algebra
spellingShingle Artificial intelligence
Machine learning
Tensor algebra
CONNECTED MULTI-DOMAIN AUTONOMY AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: AUTONOMOUS LOCALIZATION, NETWORKING, AND DATA CONFORMITY EVALUATION
description The objective of this dissertation work is the development of a solid theoretical and algorithmic framework for three of the most important aspects of autonomous/artificialintelligence (AI) systems, namely data quality assurance, localization, and communications. In the era of AI and machine learning (ML), data reign supreme. During learning tasks, we need to ensure that the training data set is correct and complete. During operation, faulty data need to be discovered and dealt with to protect from -potentially catastrophic- system failures. With our research in data quality assurance, we develop new mathematical theory and algorithms for outlier-resistant decomposition of high-dimensional matrices (tensors) based on L1-norm principal-component analysis (PCA). L1-norm PCA has been proven to be resistant to irregular data-points and will drive critical real-world AI learning and autonomous systems operations in the future. At the same time, one of the most important tasks of autonomous systems is self-localization. In GPS-deprived environments, localization becomes a fundamental technical problem. State-of-the-art solutions frequently utilize power-hungry or expensive architectures, making them difficult to deploy. In this dissertation work, we develop and implement a robust, variable-precision localization technique for autonomous systems based on the direction-of-arrival (DoA) estimation theory, which is cost and power-efficient. Finally, communication between autonomous systems is paramount for mission success in many applications. In the era of 5G and beyond, smart spectrum utilization is key.. In this work, we develop physical (PHY) and medium-access-control (MAC) layer techniques that autonomously optimize spectrum usage and minimizes intra and internetwork interference. === Includes bibliography. === Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2020. === FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
author2 Tountas, Konstantinos (author)
author_facet Tountas, Konstantinos (author)
title CONNECTED MULTI-DOMAIN AUTONOMY AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: AUTONOMOUS LOCALIZATION, NETWORKING, AND DATA CONFORMITY EVALUATION
title_short CONNECTED MULTI-DOMAIN AUTONOMY AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: AUTONOMOUS LOCALIZATION, NETWORKING, AND DATA CONFORMITY EVALUATION
title_full CONNECTED MULTI-DOMAIN AUTONOMY AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: AUTONOMOUS LOCALIZATION, NETWORKING, AND DATA CONFORMITY EVALUATION
title_fullStr CONNECTED MULTI-DOMAIN AUTONOMY AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: AUTONOMOUS LOCALIZATION, NETWORKING, AND DATA CONFORMITY EVALUATION
title_full_unstemmed CONNECTED MULTI-DOMAIN AUTONOMY AND ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: AUTONOMOUS LOCALIZATION, NETWORKING, AND DATA CONFORMITY EVALUATION
title_sort connected multi-domain autonomy and artificial intelligence: autonomous localization, networking, and data conformity evaluation
publisher Florida Atlantic University
url http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00013617
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