scholarly journals SP-100 power system, the present status and assessment of power conditioning and control technologies. Technical information report

1983 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.A. Bahrami
Author(s):  
Kehinde Oluwafemi Olusuyi ◽  
Paul Kehinde Olulope ◽  
Abiodun Ernest Amoran ◽  
Eno Edet Peter

The present-day electric power system is an evolving cyber-physical system. Researchers and industry players in the energy world continue to deploy new technologies towards making the electric power system a smarter grid. This involves the integration of information, communication, and control technologies into the existing power grid in order to improve its stability, security, and operational efficiency. Reliance of the modern power system's applications such as state estimation, sequential control and data acquisition (SCADA) systems, phasor measurement units (PMUs), etc. on open communication technologies including the internet has exposed the smart grid to various vulnerabilities, threats, and cyber-physical attacks. This chapter seeks to exploit the robust synergy which exists between artificial intelligence (AI) and fifth-generation (5G) technology to mitigate these challenges. A comprehensive review of techniques which have hitherto proven efficient and/or effective in mitigating identified challenges was carried out with a view to availing researchers of future directions.


Author(s):  
Stephen R. Barley

The four chapters of this book summarize the results of thirty-five years dedicated to studying how technologies change work and organizations. The first chapter places current developments in artificial intelligence into the historical context of previous technological revolutions by drawing on William Faunce’s argument that the history of technology is one of progressive automation of the four components of any production system: energy, transformation, and transfer and control technologies. The second chapter lays out a role-based theory of how technologies occasion changes in organizations. The third chapter tackles the issue of how to conceptualize a more thorough approach to assessing how intelligent technologies, such as artificial intelligence, can shape work and employment. The fourth chapter discusses what has been learned over the years about the fears that arise when one sets out to study technical work and technical workers and methods for controlling those fears.


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