December 7th, 2016 lecture Some Event-triggered schemes for multi-agent systems

Date:2016-12-30Views:234

Title:Some Event-triggered schemes for multi-agent systems

Speaker: Professor Daniel W.C. Ho

Abstruct: Cooperative behaviors in networks involving autonomous mobile agents have aroused great research interest from different research communities due to their wide applications in various fields including the engineering field, robotics, and parallel computation. One of the important problems of cooperative behaviors is consensus which aims to design effective algorithms for communication and control of agents so that all members agree upon the same final state.

Most of these works assume that either agents get continuous access to the states of their neighbors or the controllers update themselves continuously via current states of agents. In order to lower the cost, a sample-data approach was proposed. In general, sampled-data control is essentially time driven and needs to estimate a conservative sampling period or average sampling period. Recently, a new approach is developed based on event-triggered. It has provided an alternative mechanism where agents broadcast their states or update controller only when they need, which is unknown in advance. That is, only when the condition is triggered, the agents will then take the sample of information or controllers take the corresponding action respectively. Compared with traditional control methods, even-driven controller has the advantages of lowering cost and saving energy. In this talk, we shall discuss various types of event-triggered techniques over different kinds of network topologies.

CV:

Prof. Daniel W. C. Ho received BSc, MSc and PhD degrees in mathematics from the University of Salford (UK) in 1980, 1982 and 1986 respectively. From 1985 to 1988, he was a Research Fellow in Industrial Control Unit, University of Strathclyde (Glasgow, Scotland).  In 1989, he joined the Department of Mathematics, City University of Hong Kong. Currently, he is the Chair Professor and Assistant Dean in Teaching Innovations of College of Science and Engineering.

Prof. Ho serves as Subject editor for Journal of the Franklin Institute , Associate Editor for five other international Control journals including IET Control Theory and its applications, and Asian Journal of Control.  He is recipient of “The Best paper award” from the 8th Asian Control Conference. In 2012, he is honored to be the Chang Jiang Chair Professor,  awarded by Ministry of Education, China.  Recently, he is named as Highly Cited Researchers in Engineering by Thomson Reuters in 2014, 2015 and 2016. He will be elevated to  IEEE Fellow from 2017.