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Cybernetics and transport processes automation. Tutorial
Alexander Korpukov

Vadim Shmal

Pavel Minakov

Dmitry Abramov


Abramov Dmitry, Moscow Polytechnic UniversityKorpukov Alexander, Pirogov Russian National Research Medical UniversityShmal Vadim, Federal state autonomous educational institution of higher education Russian university of transportMinakov Pavel, Federal state autonomous educational institution of higher education Russian university of transport





Cybernetics and transport processes automation

Tutorial



Alexander Korpukov

Dmitry Abramov

Vadim Shmal

Pavel Minakov



Alexander Korpukov,2022

Dmitry Abramov,2022

Vadim Shmal,2022

Pavel Minakov,2022



ISBN978-5-0059-3941-8

Created with Ridero smart publishing system




About cybernetics


Cybernetics is the science ofcommunication and control. He also explores the self-perception ofpeople and social groups. This concerns how human activities and communication affect collective behavior. The social context ofcybernetics is vast and growing. Cybernetics is adynamic and diverse field ofresearch. New trends and scientific discoveries will influence the field ofcybernetics inthe coming years.

Cybernetics is aportfolio word that combines cybernetic with biology. American mathematician John von Neumann published Automata, an article on cybernetics, inwhich he outlined the fundamental paradigm ofthe theory: there are situations that are controlled byacentral computer. Von Neumann applied the term automaton toany device or system that can be analyzed like automata.

Cybernetics takes aholistic approach and works with communication at an elementary level. Early cybernetics also explored how language affects the way people interact. Topics ofhow society and people perceive and interact with information technology are ofgreat interest. Aspecial issue ofCybernetics examines the meaning and development ofthe word cybernetics. These reviews shed light on this rather little-known branch ofscience. Despite these theoretical advances and new developments, this area is still poorly understood. Only 10% to30% ofresearchers working inthis field publish more than three articles ayear. A2006study found that there is adead end inattracting the attention ofleading journals tonew research proposals.

The applied part ofcybernetics deals with the control and movement ofsystems, as well as how toregulate or control their behavior. Along with systems theory, statistics, and operations research, cybernetics is one ofthe three main disciplines ofscience and technology and the first scientific discipline todeal with controlling and influencing the behavior ofasystem. The main goal ofthe broad field ofcybernetics is tounderstand and define human intelligence. According tocybernetics, the process ofunderstanding how tobuild and maintain the human brain and its intellectual capacity is complex and multidimensional.

Cybernetics is defined as the study ofinteractions between people and things, the study ofthe interaction between people and their environment, the study ofsystems, the systematization ofactions. The importance ofunderstanding these interrelationships is what made cybernetics one ofthe most widespread sciences inthe 20th century. The scientific study ofany human phenomenon action, planning, protection, communication, etc. was included inthe disciplinary study ofcybernetics.

Cybernetics has been defined indifferent ways, bydifferent people, from awide variety ofdisciplines. It is abroad concept that encompasses many areas. On one level, it has todo with the nature ofall life; transfer and control ofinformation within biological systems and between them. On the other hand, we are talking about the control ofprocesses at the atomic and molecular levels and the network connections between them.

Research automation proves that akey innovation inmachine intelligence is achieving or exceeding the ability ofhumans tocontrol and manipulate data. The fundamental role ofacomputer (or smart machine) is not tomake calculations; but manage the information processed bythe machine. The information network is the basis ofintelligence. AIs primary focus is todevelop systems that can monitor the network and dynamically change its connections toimprove its performance inresponse tochanging circumstances.

The correlation versus causality discussion incybernetics means that we need tointerpret the data without succumbing toCartesian dualism. Interms ofneoclassical economics, the main driving forces ofbusiness are the subjective preferences ofpeople, driven byincentives. The emergent point ofview is an emergent system inwhich different levels ofcausal structure appear and disappear over time. Bostrom uses this model tosee the nature ofintelligence.

Robots and other artificial intelligence systems must evolve following astrategy ofmaking the system as responsive tothe environment as possible. They must constantly adapt and improve, following the rules given tothem, the strategy adopted for this reason, because ahuman programmer cannot foresee all future events. The rule-based nature ofAI is akey ingredient inits evolution and also, inother words, its goal (although this goal is often overlooked). The ability tolearn from experience (learning bydoing) is fundamental tointelligent behavior.

The development ofAI led byhumans will not be associated with the construction ofahigh-performance superintelligence; but about strengthening and expanding the system inrelation tothose fundamental principles ofcybernetics that we expect from people: learning, adaptation and repetition. Acertain learning tolearn (programmability, emergent behavior) is the foundation ofcybernetics.

Once the AI is created, the system must evolve like any other living system; learning toadapt tothe environment as it develops through natural selection, kind oflike aDarwinian process. The emulation (evaluation) process is critical towhat happens inAI. We can simulate an AI system bysimulating aproblem. We did this bysimulating achess program. However, the result is limited. He is only able toreproduce simple chess-related activities. This is possible because we have limited the number ofthings the system can do. We have only simulated the output ofthe program.

It is impossible tocreate arobot unless we first understand the basic process bywhich the system learns, building it, based on trial and error. Tolearn, asystem must understand what it is doing and have some ability toreverse the processes it is learning. The process ofdeveloping an AI system should be copying asimpler system with its own rules.

Since we do not design upgrades toour artificial intelligence systems, they evolve bycopying some simpler system. The adaptive system does not repeat afixed sequence ofevents inorder tolearn; rather, it needs tolearn about different patterns, behaviors and habits. This imitation process is based on astimulus-response function.

The principle ofadaptive learning (or learning bydoing) is agood example ofimitation inaction. It is the process bywhich any machine, any computer or intelligent agent learns how it should behave based on its experience. Learning byimitation is similar tothis principle, but it is based on the fact that aperson (or group ofpeople) imitates another group or person inorder tolearn something new. The emulated group or person has their own individual rules ofoperation (rules ofimitation) that determine what types ofreactions or behaviors are learned.

Adaptive emulators (learning byemulation) play acrucial role inthe development ofintelligence. This is the most important mechanism for learning and developing knowledge. According toBostrom, they will also play acrucial role inthe evolution ofintelligent systems.

Emulation cannot learn if the observer does not, and the observer must be able tolearn. This is called an observer loophole. This is the simplest explanation for the so-called social intelligence problem. Inpractice, the observer loophole makes the emulations look like real intelligent agents. But they have all their inherent limitations.

Emulation also fails if the emulated system has problems that the observer is not aware of. If the observer cannot tell that the emulated system has problems, he cannot learn from these problems.

This brings us tothe final problem with emulation: learning byemulation is only one mechanism bywhich intelligent systems can evolve. Atrue adaptive agent is intelligent because it is designed toevolve with the characteristics ofan evolving system.

Emulation is useful for teaching how tobuild intelligent systems similar tointelligent systems. However, he cannot learn what an intelligent system can and cannot do, unlike an intelligent agent. This brings us toavery important question: is emulation really amethod ofstudying complex intelligent systems?

And for the design philosophy towork, it was important tomake sure that we can not only learn about responsive emulators, but also improve them. Therefore, we carefully studied adaptive emulators and developed asystem that could learn from them. This learning process began with the ability todefine adaptive emulators. Then, bychance, aslightly better method ofidentifying them came along, which allowed us tocreate aresponsive emulator with very high usability.

Cybernetics has evolved inways that distinguish first-order cybernetics (about observable systems) from second-order cybernetics (about observing systems) inparticular, second-order cybernetics is usually associated with systems that control and act on each other and differs from modern cybernetics mainly when it comes toquestions about whether reflexivity or reflection has an explanatory role.

Incybernetics, the phenomena oftime and space are identical tophysical phenomena inthat there are fundamental problems oftheory and measurement.

The first order cybernetics concept is the observer concept. Second order cybernetics is the theoretical practice ofcybernetics. Second-order cybernetics makes no distinction between cybernetics and modeling. This approach was afundamental principle ofcybernetics as applied tophysical systems. It also suggests that cybernetics is not amodel, but atool for understanding phenomena and systems.

Cybernetic intelligence can use alogical-linguistic system totransform communication data into machine instructions. Such asystem can use the well-known Fisher-Simon transform toconvert instructions todata. This allows the system todirectly translate from syntactic forms, which inturn allows the system tounderstand the language inastatistical sense. This idea theoretically suggests that acybernetic system can act on athird party (for example, aperson), and he can act as an intermediary between aperson and acomputer, or vice versa.

Acybernetic automaton is ahypothetical (albeit mathematically possible) system that simulates aphysical system (for example, amachine).

The design ofself-regulating control systems for aplanned economy inreal time was studied inthe 1950s. Agood example is the rational programmer method, which claims that the rational planning method can be used todesign control systems. This method, although somewhat abstracted, can be understood interms offeedback control theory. The main idea behind the rational programmer method was that real-time planned economies like those developed inthe Soviet Union could be planned using the rational programmer method. Arational planner manages asystem ofrational rules bythinking interms ofprograms and control systems.

Inarational control system, the planner does not need tobe aware ofall the activities that the system is performing. Instead, the planner must make decisions based on observable data and improve the system, for example bycreating more rational rules and more efficient data processing mechanisms. Many pre-programmed control systems use feedback toautomatically improve the system over time. Examples include most industrial automation and industrial robots, as well as many process control systems.




Process simulation


Ethan Zhang has developed anumber ofapproaches tocreating self-modifying systems. Among other things, Zhang described the problem ofdesigning and implementing reliable controls.

Here is an example ofaself-modifying control system. One way tothink ofsuch asystem is that it is like aclosed-loop controller, where there is some influence ofthe system on the controller, and the controller is tosome extent the input or output ofthe system.

Process modeling is the process oftransforming data from aphysical environment into agraphical representation and allowing the user tointeract with that environment. Complex technological systems require efficient and powerful modeling. This includes adaptive modeling and assessment techniques, predictive analytics, and analysis ofend-to-end system behavior such as total life cycle cost, economic impact, and potential for failure. Digital process control encompasses many subsectors. They differ according tothe specific tasks ofthe subject area. Although it provides control over the operation ofmachines, digital process control provides the ability toobtain in-depth information about the behavior ofmachines and the information flow between them. Process simulation allows operators toremotely monitor, troubleshoot, and automate process activities. It combines simulation, simulation and control tooptimize and control the overall performance ofaprocess, equipment or production line.

Controlling the output devices ofan automated system often requires some knowledge ofthe system; this knowledge can be simulated on acomputer, and these simulation tools can be used toremotely simulate equipment performance, system automation, and manufactured parts quality. These simulators are also acommon way toaccess internal system information.

Cybernetics studies control systems as aconcept, trying todiscover the basic principles underlying things like behavior, motivation, learning, and goal pursuit.

Although this is the broadest sense ofcybernetics, the exact scope ofcybernetics inthis broader sense is not entirely clear, since cybernetics inanarrower applied sense is often limited tothe higher problems ofmanaging communication systems. Inapplications ofcybernetics tothe human system, this understanding ofcybernetics usually differs. Cybernetics is aview ofcomplexity. That is, cybernetics studies how things connect and the interactions that occur between them. Cybernetics has received widespread attention thanks toresearch incomputer science, systems theory, and information theory. Much ofthis research, especially infields such as robotics, incorporates ideas from cybernetics and looks at the human systems that underlie them.

Cybernetics is the study ofhow complex feedback systems, feedback loops, and other dynamic processes interact tocreate acomplex organization. It covers management theory and social and economic systems. Inits simplest form, cybernetics studies feedback systems, which are usually motivated byone or more goals, which may be known or unknown. It is often studied alongside other fields such as mechanics, electronics, mechanical engineering, manufacturing, and others such as economics.

Control theory and feedback loops inone form or another can be found inmost modern technologies. For example, insystems engineering, control theory is used todesign and implement automated control systems, and inoperations research, control theory is used inlinear programming problems. Incomputer science and systems engineering, feedback loops are also used todesign and implement electronic communication networks. Many modern forms ofcomputing have both acontrol theory-based implementation and amodel-based or cybernetics-based abstraction.

Inarchitectural theory, cybernetics has along and sometimes controversial history. The philosophy ofcybernetics has abuilt-in concept according towhich the goal ofthe scientific study ofthe phenomena oflife is toachieve intellectual control over them. Inother words, cybernetics sought toachieve absolute control over the subject. Since cybernetics deals with the mechanics ofacomplex system, it has aprofound effect on the physical aspects ofbuilding construction. An example ofthis is the construction ofthe Olympic Village for the 1996Summer Olympics, which was recognized bythe American Society ofCivil Engineers as the most advanced technology inarchitecture because it used embedded data-driven computer systems tocontrol the buildings. Computer systems provided efficient waste disposal tosave money on sanitation. The main buildings have been optimized for energy efficiency and designed so that simple power cables can be easily replaced. This resulted inless damage tobuildings inthe event ofafire. The buildings were built with many devices and computer control. Inmany ways, the Olympic Village is asymbol ofthe utopian cybernetic architectural movement.




Biology


Theories ofhuman behavior and decision making have been known for hundreds ofyears. However, it is only relatively recently that psychologists have gained an understanding ofthe factors that contribute tohuman decision-making and how their decisions are influenced bysensory, motor and cognitive information processing. Modern psychology studies the influence ofthese factors on people inorder tounderstand how people think, act and interact with each other. Modern discoveries inpsychology are using computers toaid intheir experiments. Computers can simulate processes inthe human brain and allow researchers toconduct new experiments inthis area.

The revolution inmolecular genetics has become awatershed for neuroscientists, as molecular biology, coupled with relatively recent advances inelectrochemistry and optogenetics, has created many experimental tools for studying the brain. This allowed neuroscientists tounderstand the functional architecture and organization ofthe brain, and todetermine the role ofneural networks inthe brain, especially incognition. The idea ofneural networks inthe brain arose from the study ofabiological model ofthe nervous system, inwhich cells were divided into specific functionally integrated groups, with groups with the same type offunction having the strongest relationship. Thanks tothe discovery ofthe molecular genetic foundations ofthe functioning ofthe nervous system, such as the role oftranscription factors and proteins inthe formation ofthe neural network, as well as the biophysics ofgene expression, anumber ofgenetic tools have emerged tostudy the relationship between the molecular genetics ofneural networks. It is now understood that the neurobiological mechanisms underlying cognition are the result ofglobal brain networks formed bytens ofthousands ofneuronal cells.

Developments inneuroscience include brain imaging, bioelectrical impedance analysis, magnetic resonance imaging, functional magnetic resonance imaging, transcranial magnetic stimulation, and electroencephalography, which are some ofthe most important tools for neurobiological research.

These tools also play an important role inconnecting the brains neural networks with the cerebral cortex, which is responsible for our higher cognitive functions such as language, perception, memory, attention, thinking, reasoning, and emotion. Its alink that hasnt been made before, linking the functional architecture ofan area ofthe brain tothe fundamental workings ofthat area.

Neuropsychology is abranch ofpsychology devoted tothe study ofthe psychology ofhuman consciousness and the human mind ingeneral. Neuropsychology tries tounderstand the human mind on aneural basis, that is, through the interaction ofvarious neural circuits (neurons and synapses). It is also considered tobe the most rigorous and reliable branch ofclinical psychology. It can help people with all aspects ofthe functioning ofthe brain, mind and body and can help provide answers tothe questions: What happens inthe brain during mental processes? and What are the neural foundations ofsuch processes as: sight, hearing, emotion, memory, self-awareness, thought, decision-making, thought process, language, understanding, reasoning, sleep or consciousness? It provides acommon language and common language that transcends different disciplines. Neuropsychology tries tobe acomprehensive science inthe field ofpsychology and science, understanding the mechanisms underlying human mental functions and using the results ofthe cognitive, neurological and physiological sciences toelucidate the basic processes and explain human cognition. Neuropsychology studies the emergence ofthe human mind from its neural sources and is the leading scientific field ofresearch on the brain and behavior.

Research into the neurochemistry ofmotivation and skill acquisition insports has led toabetter understanding ofthe interaction between skill acquisition and brain physiology. Musicians research has shown that although they have alarge frontal cortex, most ofthe emotional areas oftheir brains are overwhelmed byincoming information. This makes it necessary toconstantly switch attention from the concrete details ofthe problem toabstract thinking. The same effect can be seen with high-level artists; they must constantly shift their attention from analyzing awork ofart toworking on another.

Research has shown that the hippocampus is involved indecision making. The hippocampus participates inmemory and decision making byproviding input during decision processing. The left-lateralized hippocampus is involved indecision-making that is more efficiently processed bythe influence ofthe left hemisphere. This activation ofthe right hemisphere ofthe brain when making adecision is known as the lateralized effect. Inother words, the right hemisphere is more likely touse logic and reasoning when making decisions, while the left hemisphere uses emotions and feelings tomake decisions. The right hemisphere uses affect as its base input, while the left hemisphere uses analytical reasoning. The right hemisphere ofthe brain is more dominant indecision making. Studies oflateralized decision making inboth the right and left hemispheres ofthe brain have shown that processing inthe left hemisphere during decision making aids coding ofinformation inepisodic memory and decision making. The activation ofthe right hemisphere during decision making is associated with gamma fluctuations inthe cerebral cortex. It was found that gamma waves inthe cerebral cortex are triggered byencoding incoming sensory data into episodic memory. The hippocampus is involved inthe restoration and maintenance oflong-term memory. The hippocampus works inconjunction with the medial temporal lobe and entorhinal cortex tocreate spatial memory. Consequently, the processing ofspatial information leads tothe creation ofepisodic memory. It has also been observed that the right hemisphere ofthe brain can access episodic memory more easily. This may be due tothe fact that the right side ofthe brain plays amuch more important role inspatial processing and generation ofinformation inlong-term memory. This confirms the hypothesis that the right side ofthe brain is better at extracting and processing spatial information.

The medial temporal lobe is associated with short-term memory, semantic memory, language, speech production, language understanding and production, speech processing, facial processing, and emotional and prosodic processing. The hippocampus is closely associated with the medial temporal lobe, including Brocas area and Wernickes area.

It has been suggested that the medial temporal lobe is associated with memory consolidation, whereas the hippocampus may be responsible for retention, learning, and knowledge. This is supported bystudies that show that during consolidation, hippocampal formation works tointegrate episodic memory and choose which information toretain from the original memory. Incontrast, Wernickes zone and associative zone help maintain the integrity and availability ofmemory.

Many other brain structures contribute tomemory. However, the hippocampus is primarily responsible for creating space-time maps. The hippocampus plays an important role incontextual information. For example, space-time maps are used tofigure out where abody is inrelation toits environment. The medial temporal lobe is associated with complex thinking, speech, and higher cognitive functions. Inaddition, it plays an important role inthe processing ofemotions. The medial temporal lobe also functions as aconnection between the two hemispheres ofthe brain and aids inemotional and affective processing.




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Abramov Dmitry, Moscow Polytechnic University Korpukov Alexander, Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University Shmal Vadim, Federal state autonomous educational institution of higher education «Russian university of transport» Minakov Pavel, Federal state autonomous educational institution of higher education «Russian university of transport»

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