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John B. Moore

Researcher at Australian National University

Publications -  352
Citations -  19139

John B. Moore is an academic researcher from Australian National University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Adaptive control & Linear-quadratic-Gaussian control. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 352 publications receiving 18573 citations. Previous affiliations of John B. Moore include Akita University & University of Hong Kong.

Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Performance and robustness trades in LQG regulator design

TL;DR: In this article, the use of fictitious noise processes to improve the robustness of controllers based on linear quadratic Gaussian synthesis is studied, by constructing the noise process so that its effective energy is primarily in the frequency bands where robustness is lacking, improvements can be made without changing the closed-loop characteristics outside those frequency bands.
Journal ArticleDOI

Robust stabilisation of nonlinear plants via left coprime factorizations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a robust stabilization theory for nonlinear plants using the left coprime factorizations of the plant and controller under certain differential boundedness assumptions. But their work is limited to the problem of nonlinear adaptive control and simultaneous stabilization.
Journal ArticleDOI

A gradient flow approach to computing lq optimal output feedback gains

TL;DR: It is shown that an optimal solution can be successfully computed by finding the limiting solution of an ordinary differential equation which is given in terms of the gradient flow associated with the cost function.
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Spectrum estimation of interleaved pulse trains

TL;DR: This work presents a novel approach for determining both the number of pulse trains present and the frequency of each pulse train, which is robust to noisy time of arrival data and missing pulses and very computationally efficient.
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Vitamin D and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.

TL;DR: The evidence relating either lower vitamin D status to the prevalence and severity ofNAFLD, or examining vitamin D supplementation in patients with NAFLD is inconclusive, and further mechanistic studies on the roles of vitamin D and VDR in influencing the gut-liver axis in NA FLD are warranted.