Abstract

Since its appearance in AI, model-based diagnosis is intrinsically set-oriented. Given a sequence of observations, the diagnosis task generates a set of diagnoses, or candidates, each candidate complying with the observations. What all the approaches in the literature have in common is that a candidate is invariably a set of faulty elements (components, events, or otherwise). In this paper, we consider a posteriori diagnosis of discrete-event systems (DESs), which are described by networks of components that are modeled as communicating automata. The diagnosis problem consists in generating the candidates involved in the trajectories of the DES that conform with a given temporal observation. Oddly, in the literature on diagnosis of DESs, a candidate is still a set of faulty events, despite the temporal dimension of trajectories. In our view, when dealing with critical domains, such as power networks or nuclear plants, set-oriented diagnosis may be less than optimal in explaining the supposedly abnormal behavior of the DES, owing to the lack of any temporal information relevant to faults, along with the inability to discriminate between single and multiple occurrences of the same fault. Embedding temporal information in candidates may be essential for critical-decision making. This is why a temporal-oriented approach is proposed for diagnosis of DESs, where candidates are sequences of faults. This novel perspective comes with the burden of unbounded candidates and infinite collections of candidates, though. To cope with, a notation based on regular expressions on faults is adopted. The diagnosis task is supported by a temporal diagnoser, a flexible data structure that can grow over time based on new observations and domain-dependent scenarios.

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