Descriptive Control Theory: A Proposal
This work addresses the need for a formal logical foundation in control theory to enhance reliability and automation in the design of real-time, hybrid, and cyber-physical systems.
The paper proposes a new logical and computational foundation for control theory, aiming to unify logic-based methods with traditional control theory to improve reliability and automation in engineering systems.
Logic is playing an increasingly important role in the engineering of real-time, hybrid, and cyber-physical systems, but mostly in the form of posterior verification and high-level analysis. The core methodology in the design of real-world systems consists mainly of control theory and numerical analysis, and has remained mostly free of logic and formal approaches. As a result, besides facing extreme difficulty in guaranteeing the reliability of these systems, engineers are also missing out the computational power of logic-based methods that has greatly advanced in the past decades. To change this situation, we need a logical and computational foundation for control theory. The name "descriptive control theory" emphasizes the overarching theme of using logic to express, analyze, and solve problems in control theory. If the program is successfully carried out, logical approaches will significantly extend existing engineering methods towards a unified methodology for handling nonlinear and hybrid systems, and bring design automation and reliability to an unprecedented level in the broad field of engineering.