Abstract
We claim that in scenarios involving a human operator with responsibility over systems being monitored by diagnoser, presenting said operator with a concise set of observations capturing the essence of a failure improves the operator's understanding of the diagnosis. We take this in the context of Discrete Event Systems and demonstrate how the idea can be applied to systems utilising event-based observations, which can contain implicit information. We introduce the notion of an abstracted event stream, called a sub-observation, that makes the implicit information explicit for the operator and allows a diagnoser to arrive at the same diagnosis. We call the most abstract of these the critical observation. We provide relevant definitions, properties, and a procedure for computing the critical observation in a diagnosis problem.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 119-126 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | CEUR Workshop Proceedings |
Volume | 1507 |
Publication status | Published - 2015 |
Event | 26th International Workshop on Principles of Diagnosis, DX 2015 - co-located with 9th IFAC Symposium on Fault Detection, Supervision and Safety for Technical Processes, Safeprocess 2015 - Paris, France Duration: 31 Aug 2015 → 3 Sept 2015 |