화학공학소재연구정보센터
IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, Vol.48, No.2, 213-223, 2003
Feedback can reduce the specification complexity of motor programs
In this paper, we show that when it is possible to use feedback in the specification of "motor programs," the length of the descriptions of the instruction sequences for carrying out a given task can be reduced by a factor that reflects the richness of the available feedback signals. The model on which this work is based is that of a finite automaton, modified in such away that instruction processing is akin to the way in which difference or differential equations "process" piecewise constant inputs. In terms of such "free-running" automata, we show that when feedback is available the length of the shortest description can be reduced by a factor depending on the ratio of the size of the entire state space to the size of the set of states for which feedback is locally effective.