A Risk-Sensitive Finite-Time Reachability Approach for Safety of Stochastic Dynamic Systems
Title | A Risk-Sensitive Finite-Time Reachability Approach for Safety of Stochastic Dynamic Systems |
Publication Type | Conference Proceedings |
Year of Publication | 2019 |
Authors | Margaret Chapman, Jonathan Lacotte, Aviv Tamar, Donggun Lee, Kevin M. Smith, Victoria Cheng, Jamie Fisac, Susmit Jha, Marco Pavone, Claire J. Tomlin |
Conference Name | American Control Conference |
Date Published | 2/28/2019 |
Publisher | arXiv |
Conference Location | Philadelphia, PA |
Keywords | finite-time reachability approach, risk-neutral, risk-sensitive evaluation, stochastic dynamic systems, stormwater catchment |
Abstract | A classic reachability problem for safety of dynamic systems is to compute the set of initial states from which the state trajectory is guaranteed to stay inside a given constraint set over a given time horizon. In this paper, we leverage existing theory of reachability analysis and risk measures to devise a risk-sensitive reachability approach for safety of stochastic dynamic systems under non-adversarial disturbances over a finite time horizon. Specifically, we first introduce the notion of a risk-sensitive safe set as a set of initial states from which the risk of large constraint violations can be reduced to a required level via a control policy, where risk is quantified using the Conditional Value-at-Risk (CVaR) measure. Second, we show how the computation of a risk-sensitive safe set can be reduced to the solution to a Markov Decision Process (MDP), where cost is assessed according to CVaR. Third, leveraging this reduction, we devise a tractable algorithm to approximate a risk-sensitive safe set, and provide theoretical arguments about its correctness. Finally, we present a realistic example inspired from stormwater catchment design to demonstrate the utility of risk-sensitive reachability analysis. In particular, our approach allows a practitioner to tune the level of risk sensitivity from worst-case (which is typical for Hamilton-Jacobi reachability analysis) to risk-neutral (which is the case for stochastic reachability analysis). |
URL | https://arxiv.org/pdf/1902.11277.pdf |
Citation Key | node-62272 |