Visible to the public A Risk-Sensitive Finite-Time Reachability Approach for Safety of Stochastic Dynamic SystemsConflict Detection Enabled

TitleA Risk-Sensitive Finite-Time Reachability Approach for Safety of Stochastic Dynamic Systems
Publication TypeConference Proceedings
Year of Publication2019
AuthorsMargaret Chapman, Jonathan Lacotte, Aviv Tamar, Donggun Lee, Kevin M. Smith, Victoria Cheng, Jamie Fisac, Susmit Jha, Marco Pavone, Claire J. Tomlin
Conference NameAmerican Control Conference
Date Published2/28/2019
PublisherarXiv
Conference LocationPhiladelphia, PA
Keywordsfinite-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).

URLhttps://arxiv.org/pdf/1902.11277.pdf
Citation Keynode-62272