DocumentCode :
321213
Title :
System identification of complex systems: problem formulation and results
Author :
Venkatesh, Saligrama R. ; Dahleh, Munther A.
Author_Institution :
Lab. for Inf. & Decision Syst., MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume :
3
fYear :
1997
fDate :
10-12 Dec 1997
Firstpage :
2441
Abstract :
We are motivated by the need to derive simple control-oriented models of complex systems. Briefly, complex systems are a collection of systems that are not approximable (arbitrarily closely) by a finitely parameterized collection of systems. The study of system identification for such classes of systems has received considerable attention in the past few years. In this paper a new formulation of the system identification problem, which balances between the set-membership and probabilistic approaches is presented. The salient feature of the formulation is that we distinguish between the two principal sources of error encountered in the input-output data-noise and unmodeled dynamics. Unmodeled dynamics arise from the fact that the finitely parameterized model that we seek does not truly characterize the real system. Therefore, unmodeled dynamics are “modeled” as the residual error between the parametric model and the real system. This viewpoint leads to a decomposition between the parametric model class and unmodeled dynamics. In contrast noise is modeled so that it is uncorrelated (in a deterministic or a stochastic sense) from the input. The identification problem deals with obtaining the appropriate finite parametric model from input-output data. The identification problem is studied for several different norms including l1 and H. One of the chief outcomes is a new notion of a persistent input and showing that there are both deterministic and stochastic inputs which meet the new criterion
Keywords :
computational complexity; large-scale systems; optimisation; parameter estimation; set theory; statistical analysis; H norm; complex systems; control-oriented models; deterministic inputs; finite parametric model; l1 norm; persistent input; probabilistic approaches; real system; residual error; set-membership approach; stochastic inputs; system identification; unmodeled dynamics; Approximation algorithms; Laboratories; Noise measurement; Parametric statistics; Polynomials; Space technology; Stochastic resonance; Stochastic systems; System identification; White noise;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Decision and Control, 1997., Proceedings of the 36th IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
ISSN :
0191-2216
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4187-2
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CDC.1997.657522
Filename :
657522
Link To Document :
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