News

Visit from Prof. Brian D.O. Anderson (ANU) in September 2014

We are glad to welcome Prof. Brian Anderson from September, 13th until September, 26th, 2014 at our Chair.

Prof. Anderson is a distinguished professor at the Australian National University and researcher in National ICT Australia. His current research interests include distributed control, sensor networks and econometric modelling. To find out more about him, please go to http://users.rsise.anu.edu.au/~briandoa/

During his stay he will give a seminar with the title "UAV formation operations with restricted sensing". It will take place on September, 16th  at 10 a.m.  in the ITR seminar room (S4533), Barer Str. 21, 4th floor. Interested students and colleagues are welcome to attend.

Abstract:
Formations of mobile agents, including unmanned airborne vehicles, may often be used to localize objects in the environment. Simultaneous measurements are obtained by the agents in the formation from the target object, which can be merged to determine the object’s location. Operating formations this way requires an ability to control and maintain their shape, and to move the agents in the formation with a common velocity. In turn, this requires the agents to be able to sense the relative position (i.e. range and direction) of other agents in the formation, or at least some of those other agents such as neighbors.

This talk reviews procedures for formation shape control, and achieving of velocity consensus of formation agents, and then moves on to consider how these tasks can be achieved when there is limited sensing, i.e. the formation agents may be able to sense either the bearing of their neighbors, or the range of their neighbors, but not the relative position of their neighbors.

We show that by superimposing limited periodic motion on top of the general formation motion, it becomes possible to dispense with much sensing and achieve both shape control and velocity consensus.

Bio:
Brian Anderson was born in Sydney, Australia, and educated at Sydney University in mathematics and electrical engineering, with PhD in electrical engineering from Stanford University in 1966. He joined ANU as its first engineering professor in 1982 and is now a Distinguished Professor in the College of Engineering and Computer Science and Distinguished Researcher in National ICT Australia (NICTA). His research work has focussed on problems of automatic control and signal processing. For this work he has won a number of international prizes and medals, and is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science, the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering, the Royal Society, an Honorary Fellow of the Institution of Engineers, Australia, and a Foreign Associate of the US National Academy of Engineering. He holds honorary doctorates from a number of universities, including Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium, and ETH, Zürich and five Australian universities. He is a past president of the International Federation of Automatic Control and the Australian Academy of Science. He served as the first President of National ICT Australia (NICTA), and was a member of company boards, including Cochlear Ltd, the world’s major supplier of bionic ears, and a member of the Prime Minister’s Science Council under three prime ministers. He received awards from both the Australian and Japanese Governments.