1 / 29

A GENERIC COMPONENT BASED EXPERT SYSTEM SHELL FOR AIRBORNE EQUIPMENT DESIGN

A GENERIC COMPONENT BASED EXPERT SYSTEM SHELL FOR AIRBORNE EQUIPMENT DESIGN. B.Ramesh Kumar 1 , J.Shanmugam 1 , S.Janarthanan 2 & R.Santhiseela 2 1 Madras Institute of Technology, India 2 Defence R&D Organisation, India. Objective Expert System for G A S.

ely
Download Presentation

A GENERIC COMPONENT BASED EXPERT SYSTEM SHELL FOR AIRBORNE EQUIPMENT DESIGN

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A GENERIC COMPONENT BASED EXPERT SYSTEM SHELL FOR AIRBORNE EQUIPMENT DESIGN B.Ramesh Kumar1, J.Shanmugam1, S.Janarthanan2 & R.Santhiseela2 1 Madras Institute of Technology, India 2Defence R&D Organisation, India 119/ MAPLD 2004

  2. ObjectiveExpert System for GAS • Expert System to provide Guidelines • Architecture Selection • Environmental Testing • EMI/EMC • Reliability Engineering • Testability • Power • Expert System for Auditing - To ProvideTesting Procedurefor the equipment & component and help the designer with the evaluation process • Expert System for Searching 119/ MAPLD 2004

  3. Why such a System is needed? Problem 1:Interlinking of various domains • The design of airborne equipment requires expertise knowledgein various interdependent domains • Thus the simultaneous processing of all domains make the design complex • If the airborne equipment is going to be critical in its function, then the design becomes more complex • All these burdens the designer Problem 2 : Voluminous of Parameters • In the design of airborne equipment lots of parameters have to be considered in detail • Due to voluminous of data and parameter, the designer can leave some parameters unnoticed or may skip one or more design steps 119/ MAPLD 2004

  4. KNOWLEDGE ENGINEERING ACQUISITION QUERIES + EXPLANATION KNOWLEDGEBASE HUMAN EXPERT INFERENCE ENGINE USER Expert System • The British Computer Society’s specialist group on Expert System produced the following formal definition: “An Expert System is regarded as the embodiment within a computer of a knowledge-based component, from an expert skill, in such a form that the system can offer intelligent advice or decisionabout a processing function” 119/ MAPLD 2004

  5. How KNOWLEDGE BASE for Airborne Equipment Design is Framed? GeneralisedExample Block_Name Value_1 Value_2 … … … Value_n End Architecture_Candidate Processor Buses Topology End Processor Type_Of_Processor Speed Throughput Weight End 119/ MAPLD 2004

  6. How INFERENCE ENGINE in Airborne Equipment Design Expert System Works? Architecture_Candidate Processor Buses Topology End Using Forward Chaining Method Processor Type_Of_Processor Speed Throughput Weight End Buses Bus_Width Bus_Speed Transmission End 119/ MAPLD 2004

  7. Generic Components Based Expert System Shell Knowledge Base 1 Knowledge Base 2 Generic Inference Engine User Interface Knowledge Base 3 . . . Knowledge Base n 119/ MAPLD 2004

  8. Architecture Selection Process • Frame Standard Metrics • Determine Physical Constraints • Select Architecture Candidates appropriately • Architecture Candidates • Computation Element • Communication Element • Configuration 119/ MAPLD 2004

  9. User Interface ArchitectureGuidelines 119/ MAPLD 2004

  10. User InterfaceReliability Engg. 119/ MAPLD 2004

  11. User InterfaceEnvironmental Testing 119/ MAPLD 2004

  12. User InterfaceTestability DesignGuidelines 119/ MAPLD 2004

  13. Testability • Design Guidelines • Evaluation of Equipment • Equipment = Digital Circuits + Analog Circuits + PSU + RF • Evaluation of Digital Circuits 119/ MAPLD 2004

  14. User InterfaceTestability Evaluation of Airborne Equipment 119/ MAPLD 2004

  15. Testability Evaluation of EquipmentSome areas in Design & some sample Questions 119/ MAPLD 2004

  16. Testability Evaluation of EquipmentStatistical Analysis • Some Experts’ expertise in particular field like Analog, Digital, PSU etc., • So more Weightage is given to the score, given by the Expert of that particular field Analog Expert BIT Analog Design More Weightage PSU Digital Design 119/ MAPLD 2004

  17. Testability Evaluation of Digital Circuits • Testability, TY = f (Controllability,Observability) • Testability Measures - studied • SCOAP (Sandia Controllability Observability Analysis Program) • TMEAS (Testability MEASurement program) • CAMLOT (Computer-Aided Measure for LOgic Testability) • CAMLOT was chosen 119/ MAPLD 2004

  18. Testability Evaluation of Digital CircuitsATPG - Modified FAN (FANout algorithm) • Propagate the fault to Primary Output (PO) • Backtrace from PO to all Primary Inputs (PIs) • Proceed with forward tracing from PIs to all Pos • ATPG Algorithms analysed • D-Algorithm • PODEM • FAN • FAN Algorithm is chosen, and modified to suit our need 119/ MAPLD 2004

  19. Testability Evaluation of Digital CircuitsWorking of Modified FAN Algorithm A B C A B C Y Y X A B C A B C Y Y 1. Fixing fault 2. Making Line to be fault 3. Propagate the fault to (PO 4. Backtrace PO value to PI 5. Find all Line values (Test patterns) A B C Y 119/ MAPLD 2004

  20. User InterfaceTestability Evaluation 119/ MAPLD 2004

  21. Electromagnetic Interference/ Compatibility(Applicable to Airborne Equipments Excluding RF) 119/ MAPLD 2004

  22. User InterfaceElectromagnetic Interference/ Compatibility 119/ MAPLD 2004

  23. User InterfaceEMI/ EMC Evaluation 2 1 3 119/ MAPLD 2004

  24. User InterfaceElectric PowerGuidelines 119/ MAPLD 2004

  25. User InterfaceExpert System Based Guidelines Search • Enter the Question • On search, identifies the keywords and searches for them • It displays the matches found • It asks the user to select the preferred match • It displays the guidelines for the selected match 119/ MAPLD 2004

  26. Organisation of Knowledge Base for Expert Search Example B1 B0.1 end B1.1 B1 end B1.3 B1 end B1.3.1 B1.3 end • Rule Structure • Blockname • Predecessor • end How Inference Engine Works Here? Searching for B1.3.1(end branch of a tree) leads to the identification of B1.3 which in turn identifies B1. Similarly the iteration continues till it finds the root (B0.1) 119/ MAPLD 2004

  27. Who can use this System? • Fresh Designer (as Study Material and as thumb rules for design) • Designer (during Design process) • Designer (after Design is complete for Evaluation) 119/ MAPLD 2004

  28. References [1] Dutta.S, 1997, Strategies For Implementing Knowledge Based Systems, 20132, IEEE Trans. Engineering Management, pp. 79-90. [2] Santhiseela.R and Janarthanan.S, 2003, An Expert System For Automatic Fault Diagnosis Of A Quadruplex Digital Computer, International Conf on Advances in Aerospace Science, pp. 294-301. [3] Spitzer.R.Cary, 1993, Digital Avionics Systems: Principles And Practices, Ed 2, MGH Inc. [4] James.P.Ignizio, 1991, Introduction To Expert Systems – The Development And Implementation Of Rule Based Expert System, NY, MGH Inc. [5] Spitzer.R.Cary, 2001, The Avionics Handbook, NY, CRC Press. [6] Donald.A.Waterman, 1985, A Guide To Expert Systems, MA, Addison-Wesley Pubs Co. [7] James.N.Siddall, 1990, Expert System For Engineers, NY, Marcel Dekker Inc. [8] Dickman.T.J and Roberts.T.M, 1988, Modular Avionics System Architecture Decision Support System, IEEE 88CH2596-5, Proc. IEEE 1988 NAECON, pp.1549-1552. [9] MIL-HDBK-338B, 1998, Electronic Reliability Design Handbook, USA, DOD. 119/ MAPLD 2004

  29. References [10] MIL-STD-810F, 2000, Test Method For Environmental Engineering Considerations And Laboratory Tests, USA, DOD. [11] MIL-STD-461D, 1993, Requirements For The Control Of Electromagnetic Interference Emission And Susceptibility, USA, DOD. [12] MIL-HDBK-1857, 1998, Grounding Bonding and Shielding Design Practices, USA, DOD. [13] MIL-STD-2165, 1985, Testability Program For Electronic Systems And Equipment, USA, DOD. [14] Kovijanic.P.G, 1979, Testability Analysis, IEEE Test Conference, Digest Of Papers, pp.310-316. [15] MIL-STD-704E, 1991, Aircraft Electric Power Characteristics, USA, DOD. [16] Bennetts.R.G, Maunder.C.M and Robinson.G.D, 1981, CAMLOT: A Computer Aided Measure Of Logic Testability, Vol. 2, Proc. IEEE International Conference On Circuit and Computers. [17] Fujiwara.H and Shimono.T, 1983, On The Acceleration Of Test Generation Algorithms, Vol. C-32, IEEE Trans. Computers, pp. 1137-1144. 119/ MAPLD 2004

More Related