Haoming Shen

h-index2
2papers

2 Papers

69.5SYMar 19
Safety-Aware Performance Boosting for Constrained Nonlinear Systems

Danilo Saccani, Haoming Shen, Luca Furieri et al.

We study a control architecture for nonlinear constrained systems that integrates a performance-boosting (PB) controller with a scheduled Predictive Safety Filter (PSF). The PSF acts as a pre-stabilizing base controller that enforces state and input constraints. The PB controller, parameterized as a causal operator, influences the PSF in two ways: it proposes a performance input to be filtered, and it provides a scheduling signal to adjust the filter's Lyapunov-decrease rate. We prove two main results: (i) Stability by design: any controller adhering to this parametrization maintains closed-loop stability of the pre-stabilized system and inherits PSF safety. (ii) Trajectory-set expansion: the architecture strictly expands the set of safe, stable trajectories achievable by controllers combined with conventional PSFs, which rely on a pre-defined Lyapunov decrease rate to ensure stability. This scheduling allows the PB controller to safely execute complex behaviors, such as transient detours, that are provably unattainable by standard PSF formulations. We demonstrate this expanded capability on a constrained inverted pendulum task with a moving obstacle.

LGJan 30, 2025Code
Accuracy and Robustness of Weight-Balancing Methods for Training PINNs

Matthieu Barreau, Haoming Shen

Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs) have emerged as powerful tools for integrating physics-based models with data by minimizing both data and physics losses. However, this multi-objective optimization problem is notoriously challenging, with some benchmark problems leading to unfeasible solutions. To address these issues, various strategies have been proposed, including adaptive weight adjustments in the loss function. In this work, we introduce clear definitions of accuracy and robustness in the context of PINNs and propose a novel training algorithm based on the Primal-Dual (PD) optimization framework. Our approach enhances the robustness of PINNs while maintaining comparable performance to existing weight-balancing methods. Numerical experiments demonstrate that the PD method consistently achieves reliable solutions across all investigated cases, even in the low-data regime, and can be easily implemented, facilitating its practical adoption. The code is available at https://github.com/haoming-SHEN/Accuracy-and-Robustness-of-Weight-Balancing-Methods-for-Training-PINNs.git.