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Modern measurement schemes for linear dynamical systems are typically designed so that different sensors can be scheduled to be used at each time step. To determine which sensors to use, various metrics have been suggested. One possible such metric is the observability of the system. Observability is a binary condition

Modern measurement schemes for linear dynamical systems are typically designed so that different sensors can be scheduled to be used at each time step. To determine which sensors to use, various metrics have been suggested. One possible such metric is the observability of the system. Observability is a binary condition determining whether a finite number of measurements suffice to recover the initial state. However to employ observability for sensor scheduling, the binary definition needs to be expanded so that one can measure how observable a system is with a particular measurement scheme, i.e. one needs a metric of observability. Most methods utilizing an observability metric are about sensor selection and not for sensor scheduling. In this dissertation we present a new approach to utilize the observability for sensor scheduling by employing the condition number of the observability matrix as the metric and using column subset selection to create an algorithm to choose which sensors to use at each time step. To this end we use a rank revealing QR factorization algorithm to select sensors. Several numerical experiments are used to demonstrate the performance of the proposed scheme.
ContributorsIlkturk, Utku (Author) / Gelb, Anne (Thesis advisor) / Platte, Rodrigo (Thesis advisor) / Cochran, Douglas (Committee member) / Renaut, Rosemary (Committee member) / Armbruster, Dieter (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
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The data explosion in the past decade is in part due to the widespread use of rich sensors that measure various physical phenomenon -- gyroscopes that measure orientation in phones and fitness devices, the Microsoft Kinect which measures depth information, etc. A typical application requires inferring the underlying physical phenomenon

The data explosion in the past decade is in part due to the widespread use of rich sensors that measure various physical phenomenon -- gyroscopes that measure orientation in phones and fitness devices, the Microsoft Kinect which measures depth information, etc. A typical application requires inferring the underlying physical phenomenon from data, which is done using machine learning. A fundamental assumption in training models is that the data is Euclidean, i.e. the metric is the standard Euclidean distance governed by the L-2 norm. However in many cases this assumption is violated, when the data lies on non Euclidean spaces such as Riemannian manifolds. While the underlying geometry accounts for the non-linearity, accurate analysis of human activity also requires temporal information to be taken into account. Human movement has a natural interpretation as a trajectory on the underlying feature manifold, as it evolves smoothly in time. A commonly occurring theme in many emerging problems is the need to \emph{represent, compare, and manipulate} such trajectories in a manner that respects the geometric constraints. This dissertation is a comprehensive treatise on modeling Riemannian trajectories to understand and exploit their statistical and dynamical properties. Such properties allow us to formulate novel representations for Riemannian trajectories. For example, the physical constraints on human movement are rarely considered, which results in an unnecessarily large space of features, making search, classification and other applications more complicated. Exploiting statistical properties can help us understand the \emph{true} space of such trajectories. In applications such as stroke rehabilitation where there is a need to differentiate between very similar kinds of movement, dynamical properties can be much more effective. In this regard, we propose a generalization to the Lyapunov exponent to Riemannian manifolds and show its effectiveness for human activity analysis. The theory developed in this thesis naturally leads to several benefits in areas such as data mining, compression, dimensionality reduction, classification, and regression.
ContributorsAnirudh, Rushil (Author) / Turaga, Pavan (Thesis advisor) / Cochran, Douglas (Committee member) / Runger, George C. (Committee member) / Taylor, Thomas (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Models that learn from data are widely and rapidly being deployed today for real-world use, and have become an integral and embedded part of human lives. While these technological advances are exciting and impactful, such data-driven computer vision systems often fail in inscrutable ways. This dissertation seeks to study and

Models that learn from data are widely and rapidly being deployed today for real-world use, and have become an integral and embedded part of human lives. While these technological advances are exciting and impactful, such data-driven computer vision systems often fail in inscrutable ways. This dissertation seeks to study and improve the reliability of machine learning models from several perspectives including the development of robust training algorithms to mitigate the risks of such failures, construction of new datasets that provide a new perspective on capabilities of vision models, and the design of evaluation metrics for re-calibrating the perception of performance improvements. I will first address distribution shift in image classification with the following contributions: (1) two methods for improving the robustness of image classifiers to distribution shift by leveraging the classifier's failures into an adversarial data transformation pipeline guided by domain knowledge, (2) an interpolation-based technique for flagging out-of-distribution samples, and (3) an intriguing trade-off between distributional and adversarial robustness resulting from data modification strategies. I will then explore reliability considerations for \textit{semantic vision} models that learn from both visual and natural language data; I will discuss how logical and semantic sentence transformations affect the performance of vision--language models and my contributions towards developing knowledge-guided learning algorithms to mitigate these failures. Finally, I will describe the effort towards building and evaluating complex reasoning capabilities of vision--language models towards the long-term goal of robust and reliable computer vision models that can communicate, collaborate, and reason with humans.
ContributorsGokhale, Tejas (Author) / Yang, Yezhou (Thesis advisor) / Baral, Chitta (Thesis advisor) / Ben Amor, Heni (Committee member) / Anirudh, Rushil (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
The availability of data for monitoring and controlling the electrical grid has increased exponentially over the years in both resolution and quantity leaving a large data footprint. This dissertation is motivated by the need for equivalent representations of grid data in lower-dimensional feature spaces so that

The availability of data for monitoring and controlling the electrical grid has increased exponentially over the years in both resolution and quantity leaving a large data footprint. This dissertation is motivated by the need for equivalent representations of grid data in lower-dimensional feature spaces so that machine learning algorithms can be employed for a variety of purposes. To achieve that, without sacrificing the interpretation of the results, the dissertation leverages the physics behind power systems, well-known laws that underlie this man-made infrastructure, and the nature of the underlying stochastic phenomena that define the system operating conditions as the backbone for modeling data from the grid.

The first part of the dissertation introduces a new framework of graph signal processing (GSP) for the power grid, Grid-GSP, and applies it to voltage phasor measurements that characterize the overall system state of the power grid. Concepts from GSP are used in conjunction with known power system models in order to highlight the low-dimensional structure in data and present generative models for voltage phasors measurements. Applications such as identification of graphical communities, network inference, interpolation of missing data, detection of false data injection attacks and data compression are explored wherein Grid-GSP based generative models are used.

The second part of the dissertation develops a model for a joint statistical description of solar photo-voltaic (PV) power and the outdoor temperature which can lead to better management of power generation resources so that electricity demand such as air conditioning and supply from solar power are always matched in the face of stochasticity. The low-rank structure inherent in solar PV power data is used for forecasting and to detect partial-shading type of faults in solar panels.
ContributorsRamakrishna, Raksha (Author) / Scaglione, Anna (Thesis advisor) / Cochran, Douglas (Committee member) / Spanias, Andreas (Committee member) / Vittal, Vijay (Committee member) / Zhang, Junshan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020