Title :
Hybrid expert systems for monitoring and fault diagnosis
Author :
Senjen, Rye ; De Beler, Muriel ; Leckie, Chris ; Rowles, Chris
Author_Institution :
Telecom Res. Lab., Clayton, Vic., Australia
Abstract :
The integration of connectionist and symbolic techniques within the one system is considered. The authors discuss the advantages of hybrid connectionist/symbolic knowledge-based systems. Integrating the two approaches can take many forms. A problem could be represented as a mixed connectionist and symbolic knowledge base with modes of reasoning selected as appropriate to the current task, or as one mode of reasoning embedded in a system where the overall flow of control is determined by the other mode. Both of these allow reasoning tasks to be undertaken using the appropriate mode, but also require a knowledge representation accessible to both modes. Two telecommunications problems that were solved using hybrid connectionist and rule-based reasoning are presented. The first application for hybrid reasoning is in the area of performance monitoring and fault diagnosis in telecommunication network management. The second application is a system that predicts and diagnoses faults in a telecommunication cable distribution network. Hybrids can extend the role played by knowledge-based systems by allowing different modes of knowledge representation and reasoning to be used when strict rule-based techniques do not work
Keywords :
computerised monitoring; diagnostic expert systems; diagnostic reasoning; fault diagnosis; knowledge representation; neural nets; telecommunication computing; connectionist; fault diagnosis; hybrid reasoning; knowledge representation; knowledge-based systems; performance monitoring; reasoning; rule-based reasoning; rule-based techniques; symbolic knowledge base; symbolic techniques; telecommunication cable distribution network; telecommunication network management; telecommunications problems; Communication cables; Control systems; Diagnostic expert systems; Fault diagnosis; Knowledge based systems; Knowledge representation; Monitoring; Power cables; Telecommunication control; Telecommunication network management;
Conference_Titel :
Artificial Intelligence for Applications, 1993. Proceedings., Ninth Conference on
Conference_Location :
Orlando, FL
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-3840-0
DOI :
10.1109/CAIA.1993.366605