Jose Casadiego

2papers

2 Papers

SYJan 28, 2017
From State Estimation to Network Reconstruction

Farnaz Basiri, Jose Casadiego, Marc Timme et al.

We develop methods to efficiently reconstruct the topology and line parameters of a power grid from the measurement of nodal variables. We propose two compressed sensing algorithms that minimize the amount of necessary measurement resources by exploiting network sparsity, symmetry of connections and potential prior knowledge about the connectivity. The algorithms are reciprocal to established state estimation methods, where nodal variables are estimated from few measurements given the network structure. Hence, they enable an advanced grid monitoring where both state and structure of a grid are subject to uncertainties or missing information.

NCMar 27, 2018
Inferring network connectivity from event timing patterns

Jose Casadiego, Dimitra Maoutsa, Marc Timme

Reconstructing network connectivity from the collective dynamics of a system typically requires access to its complete continuous-time evolution although these are often experimentally inaccessible. Here we propose a theory for revealing physical connectivity of networked systems only from the event time series their intrinsic collective dynamics generate. Representing the patterns of event timings in an event space spanned by inter-event and cross-event intervals, we reveal which other units directly influence the inter-event times of any given unit. For illustration, we linearize an event space mapping constructed from the spiking patterns in model neural circuits to reveal the presence or absence of synapses between any pair of neurons as well as whether the coupling acts in an inhibiting or activating (excitatory) manner. The proposed model-independent reconstruction theory is scalable to larger networks and may thus play an important role in the reconstruction of networks from biology to social science and engineering.