English

Nonlinear Compressive Particle Filtering

Systems and Control 2013-09-30 v1

Abstract

Many systems for which compressive sensing is used today are dynamical. The common approach is to neglect the dynamics and see the problem as a sequence of independent problems. This approach has two disadvantages. Firstly, the temporal dependency in the state could be used to improve the accuracy of the state estimates. Secondly, having an estimate for the state and its support could be used to reduce the computational load of the subsequent step. In the linear Gaussian setting, compressive sensing was recently combined with the Kalman filter to mitigate above disadvantages. In the nonlinear dynamical case, compressive sensing can not be used and, if the state dimension is high, the particle filter would perform poorly. In this paper we combine one of the most novel developments in compressive sensing, nonlinear compressive sensing, with the particle filter. We show that the marriage of the two is essential and that neither the particle filter or nonlinear compressive sensing alone gives a satisfying solution.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1309.7315,
  title  = {Nonlinear Compressive Particle Filtering},
  author = {Henrik Ohlsson and Michel Verhaegen and S. Shankar Sastry},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1309.7315},
  year   = {2013}
}

Comments

Accepted to CDC 2013

R2 v1 2026-06-22T01:35:40.997Z