Abstract

In this article, the event-triggered security consensus problem is studied for time-varying multiagent systems (MASs) against false data-injection attacks (FDIAs) and parameter uncertainties over a given finite horizon. In the process of information transmission, the malicious attacker tries to inject false signals to destroy consensus by compromising the integrity of measurements and control signals. The randomly occurring stealthy FDIAs on sensors and actuators are modeled by the Bernoulli processes. In order to reduce the unnecessary utilization of communication resources, an event-triggered control mechanism with state-dependent threshold is adopted to update the control input signal. The main objective of this article is to design a controller such that, under randomly occurring FDIAs and admissible parameter uncertainties, the MASs achieve consensus. By utilizing stochastic analysis method, two sufficient criteria are derived to ensure that the prescribed H∞ consensus performance can be achieved. Then, the desired controller gains are derived by solving recursive linear matrix inequalities. Simulation results are presented to illustrate the effectiveness and applicability of the proposed control method.

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