CCNY Lecture Series on Computer Vision, Robotics and Human-Computer Interaction


Title:  Distributed Control: from Robots to Networks

Professor John T. Wen
Department of Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering
Director, Center for Automation Technologies and Systems (CATS)
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Date: April 3 (Mon)             
Time: 12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
Location: EE Conference room, T-648

Abstract

Distributed control occurs in nature such as the collaborative load carrying in social insects and
formation flying in flocking birds, and man-made systems such as congestion control in data networks,
power distribution in power systems, and collaborative transport and assembly in team robots. It is
possible to achieve a common group objective without explicit coordination and communication between
individual actions through indirect communications using feedback. In this talk, we consider the
stability, performance, and robustness of several distributed control examples: collaborative load
carrying by multiple robots, network flow regulation, and CDMA power control. The main tool that we
use is the concept of passivity. Passivity is motivated by energy conservation or dissipation in
physical systems and has long been used in the stability analysis and design of nonlinear feedback
systems, including mechanical structures and electrical circuits. I will review the passivity approach
and then present its applications to distributed control.

Biography

John Ting-Yung Wen received his B.Eng. from McGill University in 1979, M.S. from University of
Illinois in 1981, and Ph.D. from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1985, all in Electrical
Engineering. He worked on pulp and paper plant control at Fisher Controls from 1981-1982. From
1985-1988, he was a member of technical staff at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory where he worked on
modeling and control for large space structures and space robots. Since 1988, he has been with
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute where he is currently a professor in the Department of Electrical,
Computer, and Systems Engineering with a joint appointment in the Department of Mechanical, Aerospace,
and Nuclear Engineering. He was an ASEE/NASA Summer Faculty Fellow in 1993, a Japan Society for the
Promotion of Science (JSPS) Senior Visiting Scientist in 1997. His research interest lies in modeling,
control, and planning of dynamical systems with applications to vibration suppression, robot
manipulation, biomedical systems, advanced material design, and network flow and power control. Dr.
Wen is a Fellow of IEEE.


The lecture series is supported by CCNY Grove School of Engineering, and National Science Foundation.