3. Causal reasoning
The notion of causality was widely discussed in the 1980s
[14][41]
. In this section, we will only consider it in the light of the interest it has aroused in the field of supervision in recent years. In fact, diagnosis is typically a causal process, as it consists in searching for the faulty components that may explain the observed malfunctions. Whether we're talking about simulation, explanation or diagnosis, causality is a basic principle. If we add to this the idea of the dynamic propagation of the effects of a control, a disturbance or a failure mode, the notion of a dynamic causal graph for supervision becomes essential: because very strong dynamics for...
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Causal reasoning
Bibliography
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(1) - ALLEN (J.F.) -
Maintaining knowledge about temporal intervals
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. Communications of the ACM, p. 832-843 (1983).
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(2) - BAINBRIDGE (L.) -
Ironies of automation
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. Automatica, 19 (6), p. 775-779 (1983).
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