Abstract

This paper extends the formulation of the Shannon entropy under probabilistic uncertainties which are basically established in terms or relative errors related to the theoretical nominal set of events. Those uncertainties can eventually translate into globally inflated or deflated probabilistic constraints. In the first case, the global probability of all the events exceeds unity while in the second one lies below unity. A simple interpretation is that the whole set of events losses completeness and that some events of negative probability might be incorporated to keep the completeness of an extended set of events. The proposed formalism is flexible enough to evaluate the need to introduce compensatory probability events or not depending on each particular application. In particular, such a design flexibility is emphasized through an application which is given related to epidemic models under vaccination and treatment controls. Switching rules are proposed to choose through time the active model, among a predefined set of models organized in a parallel structure, which better describes the registered epidemic evolution data. The supervisory monitoring is performed in the sense that the tested accumulated entropy of the absolute error of the model versus the observed data is minimized at each supervision time-interval occurring in-between each two consecutive switching time instants. The active model generates the (vaccination/treatment) controls to be injected to the monitored population. In this application, it is not proposed to introduce a compensatory event to complete the global probability to unity but instead, the estimated probabilities are re-adjusted to design the control gains.

Highlights

  • Classical entropy is a state function in Thermodynamics

  • This paper proposes a supervisory design tool to decrease the uncertainty between the observed data related to infectious disease, or those given by a complex model related to a disease, via the use of a set of dynamic integrated simplest models together with a higher-level supervisory switching algorithm

  • It is worth to mention that none of the models whose trajectory is depicted in Figures 2–5 can solely describe the dynamics of the whole accurate model, since none of them is able to reproduce the complex behavior generated by the time-varying seasonal incidence rate, β(t)

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Summary

Introduction

Classical entropy is a state function in Thermodynamics. The originator of the concept of entropy was the celebrated Rudolf Clausius in the mid-nineteenth century. This paper proposes a supervisory design tool to decrease the uncertainty between the observed data related to infectious disease, or those given by a complex model related to a disease, via the use of a set of dynamic integrated simplest models together with a higher-level supervisory switching algorithm Such a hierarchical structure selects on line the most appropriate model as the one which has a smaller error uncertainty according to an entropy description (the so-called “active model”).

Basic Entropy Preliminaries
Applications to Epidemic Systems
Simulation active controllerExamples
Open-Loop Switched Model
Closed-Loop Control
Example with Actual
Conclusions
Full Text
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