Journal article

Frequency-domain identification of the human controller

H Gollee, A Mamma, ID Loram, PJ Gawthrop

Biological Cybernetics | Published : 2012

Abstract

System identification techniques applied to experimental human-in-the-loop data provide an objective test of three alternative control-theoretical models of the human control system: non-predictive control, predictive control, and intermittent predictive control. A two-stage approach to the identification of a single-input single-output control system is used: first, the closed-loop frequency response is derived using the periodic property of the experimental data, followed by the fitting of a parametric model. While this approach is well-established for non-predictive and predictive control, it is here used for the first time with intermittent predictive control. This technique is applied t..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

The study reported here was supported by the linked EPSRC Grants EP/F068514/1, EP/F069022/1 and EP/F06974X/1 "Intermittent control of man and machine". Peter Gawthrop was a Leverhulme Emeritus Research Fellow when this study was initiated, and he gratefully acknowledges the support of the Leverhulme Trust. The authors wish to thank Dr Martin Lakie, School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Birmingham, for his contributions to the experimental aspects of this study.