The Role of Confidence for Trust-Based Resilient Consensus

Conference Paper (2024)
Author(s)

L. Ballotta (TU Delft - Team Riccardo Ferrari)

Michal Yemini (Bar-Ilan University)

Research Group
Team Riccardo Ferrari
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.23919/ACC60939.2024.10644459
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
Team Riccardo Ferrari
Pages (from-to)
2822-2829
ISBN (electronic)
979-8-3503-8265-5
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Abstract

We consider a multi-agent system where agents aim to achieve a consensus despite interactions with malicious agents that communicate misleading information. Physical channels supporting communication in cyberphysical systems offer attractive opportunities to detect malicious agents, nevertheless, trustworthiness indications coming from the channel are subject to uncertainty and need to be treated with this in mind. We propose a resilient consensus protocol that incorporates trust observations from the channel and weighs them with a parameter that accounts for how confident an agent is regarding its understanding of the legitimacy of other agents in the network, with no need for the initial observation window T0 that has been utilized in previous works. Analytical and numerical results show that (i) our protocol achieves a resilient consensus in the presence of malicious agents and (ii) the steady-state deviation from nominal consensus can be minimized by a suitable choice of the confidence parameter that depends on the statistics of trust observations.

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