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Principles of Feedback Control
Mafuyu Kitahara English Theme8 Summary of Chapter 2, Carver & Scheier (1998), On the Self-Regulation of Behavior, Cambridge Univ. Press.
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Feedback control Goal of Chapter 2 To show abstract princples
Examples from domains other than psychology Feedback process Control of regulation of values within a system Cybernetics: coined by Wiener (1948) Background First computer in history: ENIAC (1946) Information science: bit, entropy, noise Systems without internal control: e.g., clock, camera
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Negative feedback (1) Concept
4 elements: input, reference, comparator, output
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Negative feedback (2) Example: thermostat Effect on evironment?
Output has indirect connection with input
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Additional issues (1) Sloppy vs. Tight control Lag Time
how precisely the comparator works Thermostat: 0.01, 0.1, or 1 degree deviation? Lag Time Output function cannot work immediately Thermostat: Slow heater (steam) vs. Quick heater (gas)
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Additional issues (2) Intermittent feedback Discontinuous: Continuous:
Output side: heater is only ON or OFF Input side: sensor works occasionally Continuous: Automatic steering system in a ship
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Further constructs (1) Positive feedback loops Thermostat example:
set goal as more than 20C (needs upper limit)
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Further constructs (2) Open loop systems
No checking on the consequences e.g. Spark plugs in a car engine Order: prespecified Timing: depends on the speed Useful for high-speed control Precise, No lag time, No intermittency Not useful for psychology
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Feedforward Anticipatory output First cycle Best estimate
No input is available
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Interdependency Interaction between feedback loops
Not explicitly connected but disturbing each other
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Reference value and input function
Slow adjustment of reference value e.g. Sleep hours
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Hierarchies Superordinate and subordinate systems
e.g., person and thermostat
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