On Input Design for Regularized LTI System Identification: Power-constrained Input
It provides a practical solution to input design for KRMs, a problem not previously addressed, but the approach is incremental as it builds on existing convex optimization techniques.
This paper addresses input design for kernel-based regularization methods (KRMs) in LTI system identification under power constraints. It proposes a two-step convex optimization approach that yields efficient input design, with analytic results for special kernels.
Input design is an important issue for classical system identification methods but has not been investigated for the kernel-based regularization method (KRM) until very recently. In this paper, we consider in the time domain the input design problem of KRMs for LTI system identification. Different from the recent result, we adopt a Bayesian perspective and in particular make use of scalar measures (e.g., the $A$-optimality, $D$-optimality, and $E$-optimality) of the Bayesian mean square error matrix as the design criteria subject to power-constraint on the input. Instead to solve the optimization problem directly, we propose a two-step procedure. In the first step, by making suitable assumptions on the unknown input, we construct a quadratic map (transformation) of the input such that the transformed input design problems are convex, the number of optimization variables is independent of the number of input data, and their global minima can be found efficiently by applying well-developed convex optimization software packages. In the second step, we derive the expression of the optimal input based on the global minima found in the first step by solving the inverse image of the quadratic map. In addition, we derive analytic results for some special types of fixed kernels, which provide insights on the input design and also its dependence on the kernel structure.