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Full Title | Biomimicry for Optimization, Control, and Automation |
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Author(s) | Kevin M. Passino |
Edition | |
ISBN | 9781846280696, 9781852338046 |
Publisher | Springer |
Format | PDF and EPUB |
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Full Title | Biomimicry for Optimization, Control, and Automation |
---|---|
Author(s) | Kevin M. Passino |
Edition | |
ISBN | 9781846280696, 9781852338046 |
Publisher | Springer |
Format | PDF and EPUB |
Biomimicry uses our scienti?c understanding of biological systems to exploit ideas from nature in order to construct some technology. In this book, we focus onhowtousebiomimicryof the functionaloperationofthe “hardwareandso- ware” of biological systems for the development of optimization algorithms and feedbackcontrolsystemsthatextendourcapabilitiestoimplementsophisticated levels of automation. The primary focus is not on the modeling, emulation, or analysis of some biological system. The focus is on using “bio-inspiration” to inject new ideas, techniques, and perspective into the engineering of complex automation systems. There are many biological processes that, at some level of abstraction, can berepresentedasoptimizationprocesses,manyofwhichhaveasa basicpurpose automatic control, decision making, or automation. For instance, at the level of everyday experience, we can view the actions of a human operator of some process (e. g. , the driver of a car) as being a series of the best choices he or she makes in trying to achieve some goal (staying on the road); emulation of this decision-making process amounts to modeling a type of biological optimization and decision-making process, and implementation of the resulting algorithm results in “human mimicry” for automation. There are clearer examples of – ological optimization processes that are used for control and automation when you consider nonhuman biological or behavioral processes, or the (internal) – ology of the human and not the resulting external behavioral characteristics (like driving a car). For instance, there are homeostasis processes where, for instance, temperature is regulated in the human body.