A Quantitative Performance Index for Model-Based Monitoring Systems

Author(s):  
Kunsoo Huh ◽  
Jeffrey L. Stein
2014 ◽  
Vol 628 ◽  
pp. 186-189
Author(s):  
Meng Xiong Zeng ◽  
Jin Feng Zhao ◽  
Wen Ouyang

The control system performance requirement was divided into three parts. They were the stability, rapidity and accuracy. The time-frequency domain analysis in the requirements of three performance were measured through quantitative performance index. The mutual restriction of time-frequency performance and system characteristic parameters of normal second order was discussed. The correlation of system time-frequency performance index was established. The relationship between time-frequency performance indexes in standard two order system was extended to higher order system. The mutually constraining and time-frequency correlation between each performance index was obtained by analysis and calculation. The work had been done above had practical significance to reflect the system dynamic performance in different analytical domains.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 (1) ◽  
pp. 2228-2241
Author(s):  
Torstein Pedersen ◽  
Javier Perez ◽  
Jos Van Heseen

ABSTRACT A typical oil spill recovery vessel has been historically outfitted with an oil spill detection (OSD) radar. During an oil spill recovery operation, there is a dedicated operator who is responsible for interpreting information from the radar image. Industry developments over the last several years now require that an OSD radar automatically detect and track an oil spill. There are two primary needs driving this development. The first is that OSD systems and operations are becoming more sophisticated; automatic OSD aids for a more efficient oil spill operation where an operator's attention may be directed to a potential spill. The automatic OSD also aids a multi-sensor system; one such example is where an OSD radar is used to steer an IR camera to a candidate spill for more detailed evaluation or validation. The other primary driver for automatic OSD is for monitoring systems, which serve for early warning. Monitoring systems may be found along coastal installations or oil platforms. The automatic spill detection functionality of an OSD system may be implemented in different levels of sophistication. Perhaps the simplest configuration is one that uses fixed thresholds relative to the image for alarming whether a region in a radar image is a spill or not. The benefit of simple threshold detector is that it is easy to implement in software. The weakness is that it is prone to both lower overall detection rate and high false alarm rate. A more robust automatic spill detection method is one that treats it as an image-processing problem. The paper here presents a model based OSD. Generation of confidence maps is central to the method and provides an indication of the likelihood of oil. Inputs to the confidence maps come from multiple sources, several of which are based on uniquely constructed models. Among these is a histogram comparator, which scans a radar image and compares the data to reference models from real oil spills. A discussion of the methods used focuses on (a) the necessary steps prior to the confidence map construction, (b) how the confidence maps are layered with inputs, (c) how the information in the confidence maps is transitioned into the detection of oil, (d) and finally alarming.


Volume 3 ◽  
2004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhanqun Shi ◽  
Fengshou Gu ◽  
Robert Pietruszkiewicz ◽  
Andrew Ball

The integration of control and monitoring systems often restricts more advanced monitoring algorithms to be used because of the limitation of hardware resource. This paper proposed a remote on-line model-based monitoring scheme, in which the monitoring and the control are implemented in different stations but synchronised through a Fieldbus network. Moreover, the synchronism period is adjustable so that it allows implementation of various monitoring tasks of different monitoring accuracy. This approach is demonstrated by applying it to a mechatronic control system. The implementation details are presented and the benefits of the approach are highlighted.


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