Over the past 20 years, there has been much work in the area of model-based diagnosis (MBD). By this we mean diagnosis systems arising from Computer Science or Artificial Intelligence approaches where a generic software engine is developed to address a large class of diagnosis problems [1], [2]. Later, models are created to apply the engine to a specific problem. These techniques are very attractive, suggesting a vision of machines that repair themselves, reduced costs for all kinds of endeavors, spacecraft that continue their missions even when failing, and so on. This promise inspired a broad range of activity, including our involvement over several years in flying the Livingstone and Livingstone 2 on-board model-based diagnosis and recovery systems as experiments on two spacecraft [3], [4], [5], [6], [7]. While a great deal was learned through a variety of applications to simulators, testbeds and flight experiments, no project adopted the technology in operations and the expected benefits have not yet come to fruition.


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    Title :

    Costs and Benefits of Model-based Diagnosis


    Contributors:


    Publication date :

    2008-03-01


    Size :

    4284994 byte





    Type of media :

    Conference paper


    Type of material :

    Electronic Resource


    Language :

    English



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