Title :
Divergence-based characterization of fundamental limitations of adaptive dynamical systems
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Duke Univ., Durham, NC, USA
fDate :
Sept. 29 2010-Oct. 1 2010
Abstract :
Adaptive dynamical systems arise in a multitude of contexts, e.g., optimization, control, communications, signal processing, and machine learning. A precise characterization of their fundamental limitations is therefore of paramount importance. In this paper, we consider the general problem of adaptively controlling and/or identifying a stochastic dynamical system, where our a priori knowledge allows us to place the system in a subset of a metric space (the uncertainty set). We present an information-theoretic meta-theorem that captures the trade-off between the metric complexity (or richness) of the uncertainty set, the amount of information acquired online in the process of controlling and observing the system, and the residual uncertainty remaining after the observations have been collected. Following the approach of Zames, we quantify a priori information by the Kolmogorov (metric) entropy of the uncertainty set, while the information acquired online is expressed as a sum of information divergences. The general theory is used to derive new minimax lower bounds on the metric identification error, as well as to give a simple derivation of the minimum time needed to stabilize an uncertain stochastic linear system.
Keywords :
adaptive systems; entropy; linear systems; stochastic systems; uncertain systems; Kolmogorov entropy; adaptive dynamical systems; divergence-based characterization; information divergence; information-theoretic metatheorem; metric complexity; metric identification error; stochastic dynamical system; uncertain stochastic linear system; Control systems; Kernel; Markov processes; Measurement; Uncertainty; Yttrium;
Conference_Titel :
Communication, Control, and Computing (Allerton), 2010 48th Annual Allerton Conference on
Conference_Location :
Allerton, IL
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8215-3
DOI :
10.1109/ALLERTON.2010.5706895