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Discrete Networked Dynamic Systems : Analysis and Performance

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Discrete Networked Dynamic Systems: Analysis and Performance provides a high-level treatment of a general class of linear discrete-time dynamic systems interconnected over an information network, exchanging relative state measurements or output measurements.

It presents a systematic analysis of the material and provides an account to the math development in a unified way. The topics in this book are structured along four dimensions: Agent, Environment, Interaction, and Organization, while keeping global (system-centered) and local (agent-centered) viewpoints. The focus is on the wide-sense consensus problem in discrete networked dynamic systems.

The authors rely heavily on algebraic graph theory and topology to derive their results.

It is known that graphs play an important role in the analysis of interactions between multiagent/distributed systems.

Graph-theoretic analysis provides insight into how topological interactions play a role in achieving coordination among agents.

Numerous types of graphs exist in the literature, depending on the edge set of G.

A simple graph has no self-loop or edges. Complete graphs are simple graphs with an edge connecting any pair of vertices.

The vertex set in a bipartite graph can be partitioned into disjoint non-empty vertex sets, whereby there is an edge connecting every vertex in one set to every vertex in the other set.

Random graphs have fixed vertex sets, but the edge set exhibits stochastic behavior modeled by probability functions.

Much of the studies in coordination control are based on deterministic/fixed graphs, switching graphs, and random graphs.

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Product Details
Academic Press Inc
0128236981 / 9780128236987
Paperback / softback
629.8
23/10/2020
United States
English
484 pages
23 cm
Print on demand edition.