An adaptive event-triggered security control method is proposed for networked robotic teleoperation systems subject to time-varying delays and false data injection (FDI) attacks. An event-triggered scheme is designed via the position and velocity signals of the master and slave robots, where the triggering thresholds can change adaptively with the system states. The position and velocity triggered signals and the feedback error between the operator and the environment forces are utilized to detect whether the transmitted signals suffered from FDI attacks. Then, a switching controller is designed, which is able to adopt the corresponding control strategy according to the corresponding detection result. The stability of the system and the convergence of the tracking errors are proved through Lyapunov functions, and the proposed method is validated through practical experiments. The proposed method is able to adaptively adjust the triggering frequency and effectively reduce the transmitted data, thus saving the network resources. Meanwhile, it can ensure the stability of networked teleoperation systems under time-varying delays and FDI attacks, as well as the position and force tracking performance.
Read full abstract