Jiabao He

2papers

2 Papers

10.1SYMay 15
Preserving Topology Privacy of Network Systems by Feedback: Conditions and Distributed Design

Yushan Li, Jiabao He, Julien M. Hendrickx et al.

This paper develops a feedback-based method to preserve the topology privacy of consensus protocols in network systems. The key idea is to intentionally violate topology identifiability conditions, thereby preventing unique or accurate recovery of the true topology from available observations, while preserving the intended consensus behavior. This problem is challenging because the feedback magnitude directly reflects the privacy level of edges, while it is strongly coupled with the consensus convergence and constrained by local communications at each node. To begin with, we derive the feedback conditions of both partial and full observation cases, where the topology unsolvability from observation data is characterized in the former, and the solution space that enforces topology inaccuracy from data is constructed in the latter. Then, we propose a novel distributed topology modification design under limited privacy budgets, and establish the performance guarantees through a controllable tradeoff between the consensus deviation and the topology privacy. Finally, we develop a low-complexity heuristic algorithm to achieve optimal privacy preservation on existing edges. Comparative simulations validate the effectiveness and outperformance of the proposed preservation design.

23.4SYApr 9
Data-Driven Moving Horizon Estimators for Linear Systems with Sample Complexity Analysis

Peihu Duan, Jiabao He, Yuezu Lv et al.

This paper investigates the state estimation problem for linear systems subject to Gaussian noise, where the model parameters are unknown. By formulating and solving an optimization problem that incorporates both offline and online system data, a novel data-driven moving horizon estimator (DDMHE) is designed. We prove that the expected 2-norm of the estimation error of the proposed DDMHE is ultimately bounded. Further, we establish an explicit relationship between the system noise covariances and the estimation error of the proposed DDMHE. Moreover, through a sample complexity analysis, we show how the length of the offline data affects the estimation error of the proposed DDMHE. We also quantify the performance gap between the proposed DDMHE using noisy data and the traditional moving horizon estimator with known system matrices. Finally, the theoretical results are validated through numerical simulations.