2010 Conference on Control and Fault-Tolerant Systems (SysTol) 2010
DOI: 10.1109/systol.2010.5675945
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Sensor network scheduling for identification of spatially distributed processes

Abstract: The work treats the problem of fault detection for processes described by partial differential equations as that of maximizing the power of a parametric hypothesis test which checks whether or not system parameters have nominal values. A simple node activation strategy is discussed for the design of a sensor network deployed in a spatial domain that is supposed to be used while detecting changes in the underlying parameters which govern the process evolution. The setting considered relates to a situation where… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In particular, the box-constrained problem is a special case of experimental design problems with linear constraints studied in [9,10,27] and theory and solution techniques developed in these references apply here. Similarly, although there are related results in [13,33,34,35], the equivalence theorem for this specific version of the problem (see Theorem 3.1 below) is novel and will be useful in future studies, potentially for different applications.…”
Section: Commercial Solversmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, the box-constrained problem is a special case of experimental design problems with linear constraints studied in [9,10,27] and theory and solution techniques developed in these references apply here. Similarly, although there are related results in [13,33,34,35], the equivalence theorem for this specific version of the problem (see Theorem 3.1 below) is novel and will be useful in future studies, potentially for different applications.…”
Section: Commercial Solversmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is a need to optimally place observations that will maximally improve the accuracy of numerical solutions at forecast times typical for the considered models. The resulting observation network could be adapted for a wide range of forecasting goals, and it could be adapted either by allocating existing observations differently or by adding observations from programmable platforms to the existing network . Expensive field‐deployed resources can thus be utilised more effectively by selecting an optimal observational network.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sensor location problem for DPSs has already attained a lot of attention [6]-[10, for reviews, see] and various effective approaches have been proposed concentrating mainly on the stationary (or motionless) sensor placement [8], [11]- [14]. A very attractive alternative is the application of moving [15]- [23] or scanning [24]- [30] observations, because they offers possibility to significantly increase the degree of optimality for solutions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%