2025Activity reportProject-TeamDISCO
RNSR: 201020959T- Research center Inria Saclay Centre at Université Paris-Saclay
- In partnership with:CentraleSupélec, CNRS
- Team name: Dynamical Interconnected Systems: Control and Optimization
- In collaboration with:Laboratoire des signaux et systèmes (L2S)
Creation of the Project-Team: 2024 June 01
Each year, Inria research teams publish an Activity Report presenting their work and results over the reporting period. These reports follow a common structure, with some optional sections depending on the specific team. They typically begin by outlining the overall objectives and research programme, including the main research themes, goals, and methodological approaches. They also describe the application domains targeted by the team, highlighting the scientific or societal contexts in which their work is situated.
The reports then present the highlights of the year, covering major scientific achievements, software developments, or teaching contributions. When relevant, they include sections on software, platforms, and open data, detailing the tools developed and how they are shared. A substantial part is dedicated to new results, where scientific contributions are described in detail, often with subsections specifying participants and associated keywords.
Finally, the Activity Report addresses funding, contracts, partnerships, and collaborations at various levels, from industrial agreements to international cooperations. It also covers dissemination and teaching activities, such as participation in scientific events, outreach, and supervision. The document concludes with a presentation of scientific production, including major publications and those produced during the year.
Keywords
Computer Science and Digital Science
- A6.1.1. Continuous Modeling (PDE, ODE)
- A6.1.2. Stochastic Modeling
- A6.1.3. Discrete Modeling (multi-agent, people centered)
- A6.2.1. Numerical analysis of PDE and ODE
- A6.2.6. Optimization
- A6.3.4. Model reduction
- A6.4. Automatic control
- A6.4.1. Deterministic control
- A6.4.2. Stochastic control
- A6.4.3. Observability and Controlability
- A6.4.4. Stability and Stabilization
- A6.4.5. Control of distributed parameter systems
- A6.4.6. Optimal control
- A8.11. Game Theory
- A9.2. Machine learning
Other Research Topics and Application Domains
- B1.1.8. Mathematical biology
- B1.1.10. Systems and synthetic biology
- B2.3. Epidemiology
- B2.5. Handicap and personal assistances
- B3.6. Ecology
- B4. Energy
- B5.2.3. Aviation
- B5.10. Biotechnology
- B7.2.1. Smart vehicles
1 Team members, visitors, external collaborators
Research Scientists
- Catherine Bonnet [Team leader, INRIA, Senior Researcher, HDR]
- Joseph Frederic Bonnans [INRIA, Emeritus, HDR]
- Ziad Kobeissi [INRIA, ISFP]
- Guilherme Mazanti [INRIA, ISFP]
- Frederic Mazenc [INRIA, Senior Researcher, HDR]
- Silviu-Iulian Niculescu [CNRS, Senior Researcher, HDR]
- Laurent Pfeiffer [INRIA, Researcher, HDR]
Faculty Members
- Islam Boussaada [IPSA, Professor, HDR]
- Giorgio Valmorbida [CENTRALESUPELEC, Professor, HDR]
Post-Doctoral Fellows
- Jules Berry [CENTRALESUPELEC, Post-Doctoral Fellow, from Nov 2025]
- Arthur Bottois [INRIA, Post-Doctoral Fellow]
- Benjamin Paul-Dubois-Taine [INRIA, Post-Doctoral Fellow, from Mar 2025]
- Cyprien Tamekue [UPSaclay, until Mar 2025]
- Nicolas Vanspranghe [CENTRALESUPELEC, Post-Doctoral Fellow, from Oct 2025]
PhD Students
- Maxime Béchu [Université Paris-Saclay]
- Francois Caffier [IFPEN]
- Anh-Tuan Clabaut [UPSaclay, from Oct 2025]
- Duc Duy Do [INRIA]
- Crédo Fanou [CNRS, from Apr 2025]
- Felipe Goncalves Netto [CENTRALESUPELEC]
- Gioia Montana [Università di Roma (cotutelle), from Aug 2025]
- Thibault Moquet [INRIA, from Oct 2025]
- Thibault Moquet [CENTRALESUPELEC, until Sep 2025]
- Enrico Sartor [CentraleSupélec]
- Juan Diego Torres Garcia [UPSaclay, until Sep 2025]
- Pieter Van Holm [Université Paris-Saclay, from Sep 2025]
Administrative Assistants
- Mélanie Da Silva [INRIA, until Oct 2025]
- Bamissa Sangare [INRIA, from Nov 2025]
External Collaborators
- Timothee Schmoderer [UNIV ORLÉANS]
- Ali Zemouche [UL, HDR]
2 Overall objectives
2.1 Objectives
Control of interacting complex natural or artificial systems guaranteeing performance, safety and low computational burden is a challenge for the years to come.
Things have drastically changed from a material point of view in the last 15 years in engineering, biological and medical fields. For instance, in the field of robotics, the time when large robots, evolving in secure spaces where no human was supposed to be able to enter, could be managed with very basic control laws is over. Developing control algorithms for robots of smaller size and having to adapt online their behaviour to the dynamics of the environment is much more difficult.
These topics are clearly the same in fields such as autonomous vehicles, unmanned aerial vehicles, traffic and energy networks etc. Moreover, in the case where several robots/vehicles/agents are cooperating, the question of communication is crucial and delays as well as disconnection are major issues in this context. The size of the network is certainly another key question.
Adopting a model-based approach, the aim of the team is to develop (optimal) control methods for (possibly large size) interconnected systems with the ultimate goal to produce implementable and low computational burden solutions (in the modest sense of favoring low complexity controllers from an implementation point of view).
We contribute to the modeling of chosen applications in Energy, bio-systems, Engineering and medicine. Partial Differential Equations (PDEs), Ordinary Differential Equations (ODEs) (possibly with delays), models will be considered in the linear as well as the nonlinear setting. Discretization of PDEs as well as the modeling of discrete measurements/actuation arising in continuous model systems will give rise to infinite or finite-dimensional discrete-time models. We also consider general classes of systems which encompass the framework of our applications such as Fractional Differential or Difference Equations.
Our goal is to analyze these models as much as possible without further simplifications in order to capture most of the phenomena (and, in particular, time-heterogeneity) and to develop control algorithms for them. This includes stability analysis, observation, robustness analysis and (optimal) control.
Note that we also perform some research at the confluence of Control Methods and Machine Learning (ML), not developing ourselves ML techniques to synthesize controllers from data but rather studying how System Theory and Optimization Theory can help analyzing closed-loop systems containing Neural Networks-based controllers.
3 Research program
3.1 Stability Analysis and Control of Linear Interconnected Systems
This first axis is devoted to the study of stability properties of (a small number of) interconnected linear systems, an area where many fundamental questions are still open. Algebraic tools, time-domain (including semi-group Theory) and frequency domain (where Hypergeometric functions should play an important role) techniques are involved to characterize stabilizability and controllability properties as well as asymptotic, exponential, and (in particular i.e. BIBO)-stability properties.
For standard or fractional systems with delays, we are particularly interested in questions such as :
- The location in the complex plane of the roots of quasi-polynomials of the type where are real polynomials in the complex variable satisfying and .
- The stability properties of linear delay systems with time-varying delays and/or time varying coefficients via both time-domain and input-output methods. Robustness issues will be investigated.
- Structural properties of time-delay systems, such as controllability or stabilizability.
- Partial pole placement for delay systems : we aim here at establishing a general approach to control the decay rate of the solutions via the assignment of the spectral abscissa.
For Systems Modeled by Partial Differential Equations, we want to perform the analysis of :
- Stability properties of propagation phenomena modeled by partial differential equations.
- Partial differential equations with different time scales
- Dynamical systems with Integral delay equations
- Delayed control of systems modeled by PDEs
3.2 Observation and Control of Nonlinear Interconnected Systems
The second axis explores the control and observation (in particular finite-time observation) of various classes of (a small number of interconnected) nonlinear delay systems. Lyapunov analysis will be a central tool.
Concerning the analysis of nonlinear systems, we will focus on:
- The local analysis of nonlinear systems with delays in particular via the trajectory-based approach.
-
The stability analysis and performance assessment of Piecewise Affine systems described by the equations
where the vector-valued function is a vector of ramp functions on each argument.
- Dynamical systems with Neural Networks (NN) in the loop
Concerning observers and estimation of parameters, we wish to develop:
- Finite-time observers and estimation of unknown parameters for classes of systems that encompass discrete-time systems and systems with unknown parameters in the measurements.
- Advanced estimation and control techniques for traffic networks (new mesoscopic models will be developed).
3.3 Optimal control of mean-field type dynamical systems
Our research activity in optimal control is motivated by large-scale problems and aims at addressing both theoretical and numerical aspects. We have a focus on situations involving a large number of interacting entities: for example, a fleet of electrical vehicles, a cell population in biology, or a large training set in supervized learning. In such situations, the mean-field approximation consists in considering the probability distribution of these entities rather than an enumeration of their states. This point of view allows for a simpler mathematical treatment and numerical resolution.
In the Mean Field Game domain, we want to:
- Address the case of Agents with constraints and free-final time
- Study a new class of interactions for MFGs, which we called pairwise interactions the cost of each agent is the sum, with respect to all other agents, of some interaction function of the considered agent and any other agent.
- Develop variants of the Frank-Wolfe algorithm (whose interest go beyond MFGs) which are capable to address constrained or non-smooth MFGs.
- Export of our expertise on classical MFG models to more applied problems, in interactions with other mathematical fields : Management of fisheries, Energy, biology
Concerning the Theoretical analysis of some modern machine-learning methods, we aim to to continue to exploit their natural connection to Mean Field Models by analyzing:
- Some machine learning methods that explicitly incorporate terms that can be interpreted as mean-field interactions.
- Deep neural networks that may be viewed as the discretization of ODE’s
- Neural networks that may be viewed as the discretization of PDEs (such as convolutional residual networks)
- Transformers, seens as a function on the set of probability measures.
4 Application domains
4.1 Analysis and Control of life sciences systems
The team is involved in life sciences applications. The actual two main lines are the analysis of bioreactors models (microorganisms; bacteria, microalgae, yeast, etc..) and the management of fisheries.
4.2 Energy Systems
4.2.1 Energy Management
The team is interested in Energy management and considers control problems in energy networks.
In the framework of a joint project with EDF, we aim at investigating large-scale and non-convex optimization problems related to the management of large population of “flexibilities”, which are small-size storage devices (batteries, thermostatic loads), which can be used to facilitate the energy balance when sources of renewable energy are introduced into the network.
4.2.2 Electrical Machines
Advanced techniques of nonlinear control are currently studied to account for the input constraints and embedded in electrical drives of AC motors. These platforms are benchmarks for the nonlinear control design and analysis techniques developed in by the team members.
4.3 Mechanical systems
4.3.1 Biomechanics
In collaboration with colleagues from BME Budapest and the Robert Merle d'Aubigné Institute, we are interested in understanding the human balance from mechanical/neural point of views. We mainly seek to better understand the principle functioning of the flow process generated by our nervous system and its effect on motor abilities through the experiment of human stance on a rolling board.
4.3.2 Mechanical engineering
The team is interested in vibration control (in link with the so-called multiplicity-induced-dominancy, MID and partial pole placement) and in developing advanced delay algorithms for compensating and tracking periodic signals (related to the repetitive control).
4.4 Transportation Systems
The team is interested in control applications in transportation systems. In particular, the problem of collision avoidance of autonomous vehicels has been investigated under the framework of Time Varying systems. The goal is to obtain closed-loop control laws that guarantee the execution of a trajectory under uncertainties such as road and vehicle conditions.
5 Highlights of the year
5.1 Awards
Silviu-Iulian Niculescu has been elected fellow of IFAC (International Federation of Automatic Control) to acknowledge his outstanding contributions in the fields of interest of IFAC (namely, for contributions to the analysis and control of dynamical systems with delays).
6 New results
6.1 Stability of delay systems with delay-dependent coefficients
Participants: Islam Boussaada, Silviu Niculescu, Keqin Gu [Illinois], Jin Chi [TuSimple Inc.], Quian Ma [Nanjing].
We developed in 13 a method of stability analysis of linear time-delay systems with commensurate delays and delay-dependent coefficients. The method is based on a D-decomposition formulation that consists of identifying the critical pairs of delay and frequency, and determining the corresponding crossing directions. The process of identifying the critical pairs consists of a magnitude condition and a phase condition. The magnitude condition utilizes the Orlando’s formula, and generates frequency curves within the delay interval of interest. Such frequency curves correspond to the delay-frequency pairs such that the decomposition equation has at least one solution on the unit circle. The delay interval of interest is divided into continuous frequency curve intervals (CFCIs). Under some non-degeneracy assumptions, the number of frequency curves remains constant within each CFCI, and the associated decomposition equation has one and only one solution on the unit circle at any point on a frequency curve. By traversing through the frequency curves, all the crossing points can be identified. The crossing direction is related to the sign of the lowest-order nonzero derivative of the phase angle with respect to the delay, which is a generalization of the existing literature even for the case with single delay. This conclusion allows one to determine the crossing direction by examining the phase angle vs delay diagram.
6.2 Partial poles placement and observer design in delay systems
Participants: Islam Boussaada, Silviu Niculescu, Ahlem Sassi [ESME], Michel Zasadzinski [Nancy].
We extended in 37, 45 the use of the pole placement ap- proach in the design of observers for certain classes of Linear-Time-Invariant (LTI) systems with time delay. Specifically, depending on how the delay appears in the system dynamics, two classes of dynamic systems are considered: state-delayed systems and input-delayed systems, respectively. First, we address the problem of designing a full-order Luenberger observer for the considered systems using partial placement of the error poles. Namely, we exploit the multiplicity-induced-dominancy (MID) property of the characteristic root with the maximal admissible nultiplicity of the characteristic function corresponding to the system’s error. After giving the existing condition for the proposed observer, we use the same MID property but in the so-called generic case. The performance and effectiveness of the proposed observers are highlighted through several illustrative examples.
6.3 Robustness filters for the Smith Predictor
Participants: Giorgio Valmorbida, Daniel Amaral, Bismarck Torrico [Universidade Federal do Ceará], Mattia Mattioni [Universidade Federal do Ceará].
We have studied the discrete-time version of the Smith predictor with the goal of designing a robustness filter. The goals for robustness are to guarantee disturbance rejection levels in presence of parametric uncertainties. The proposed methods for filter design guarantee the disturbance minimization.
6.4 Stabilization of time-varying delay systems
Participants: Frédéric Mazenc, Catherine Bonnet.
In the contribution 30, we proposed two control designs of exponentially stabilizing feedbacks for two families of time-varying continuous-time systems with a pointwise delay in the input. A smallness condition is imposed on the delay. In contrast to the classical reduction model approach, the results do not necessitate knowledge of the state transition matrix, which is crucial because, in general, no explicit formula for state transition matrices can be determined. The price to pay for this is a limitation on the size of the delay.
6.5 Interplay between discretization and controllability of linear delay systems: An algebraic viewpoint
Participants: Silviu-Iulian Niculescu, Hugues Mounier [L2S], Florentina Nicolau [ENSEA Cergy].
In the paper 21, the authors give an in depth study of linear delay systems controllability preservation/alteration through discretization. We make use of a module theoretic framework acting as a uni- fying one for most of the existing delay system controllability notions. We propose a formal generic definition of a discretization scheme and illustrate through examples that controllability properties may be lost through discretization. Then, we introduce the notion of preservation (that is, a measure of quantifying the ability of the discretizer to preserve control- lability properties) and prove that for a given discretizer, we can always find a delay system for which even the torsion-free controllability (which is the weakest controllability notion) is not preserved. Finally, we reverse the situation, and show that for any given delay system, preserving discretizers exist.
6.6 Strong stability of linear delay-difference equations
Participants: Yacine Chitour [L2S], Felipe Gonçalves Netto, Guilherme Mazanti.
Linear delay-difference equations have been previously considered in the literature due to the facts that, on the one hand, the analysis of some hyperbolic partial differential equations (PDEs) can be reduced to this class of systems and, on the other hand, their stability analysis also provides information on more general time-delay systems of neutral type 62, 64, 60, 61, 59, 53.
An importat observation about neutral time-delay systems and delay-difference equations is that some of their properties, such as exponential stability, are not robust with respect to arbitrarily small perturbations on some of the parameters of the system, namely the delays 62, 68. This has motivated the definition of stronger notions of stability, such as strong stability 62. In the literature, strong stability had been previously considered only for the case of perturbations of pointwise delays.
In 12, 49, we have first identified a suitable notion of perturbation of the delays that also extends to distributed delays, extending thus the definition of strong stability to a wider class of delay-difference equations. We have then proved in 12 that the classical Hale–Silkowski strong stability criterion (see, e.g., 54, 62, 68) can be extended to this new setting, at least for scalar equations. In the general setting of systems of equations, many partial results are provided in 49, proving that the Hale–Silkowski criterion also holds when the definition of strong stability is slightly modified in order to include a uniform rate of convergence, and up to considering only systems defined by measures with no singular part.
6.7 Delay-difference equations with varying delays
Participants: Guilherme Mazanti, Jaqueline Godoy Mesquita [UNICAMP, Brazil].
While the stability analysis of delay-differential equations with constant delays has been studied from several perspectives in the literature 62, 54, 60, 63, 67, 64, many subtleties appear when considering time- or state-dependent delays, as already pointed out in 55.
The work 52 provides a detailed analysis of the simplest form of a linear delay-difference equation with a single time-varying delay, namely , where is the instantaneous state at time , is a given matrix with real coefficients, and is a time-varying delay. The main goal of the work is to study the well-posedness of such a system and to characterize the asymptotic behavior of its solutions. We provide our investigations for three types of functional spaces: continuous functions, regulated functions, and functions, . We derive sufficient conditions for well-posedness that are, in most cases, close to being necessary, and our detailed analysis illustrates interesting phenomena specific to time-varying delays, such as the fact that an equation can be exponentially stable in some space but unstable in another space, . Finally, we provide applications of our results to difference equations with state-dependent delays for the cases of continuous and regulated function spaces, as well as to transport equations in one space dimension with time-dependent velocity.
6.8 Prescribed exponential stabilization of infinite dimensional systems
Participants: Islam Boussaada, Guilherme Mazanti, Silviu-Iulian Niculescu, Timothée Schmoderer, Kaïs Ammari [Monastir], Fazia Bedouhene [Tizi-Ouzou], Wim Michiels [Leuven], Cyprien Tamekue [IPSA], Sami Tliba [UPSaclay], Karim Trabelsi [IPSA].
The recently developed prescribed stabilization paradigm, which has been successfully applied to the control of certain classes of hyperbolic partial differential equations 3, 2, originates from a spectral technique known as partial poles placement (PPP). This method was initially introduced in the context of linear time-invariant functional differential equations; see, for instance, 58. Unlike standard pole placement for finite-dimensional systems, which reduces to a classical interpolation problem, PPP is considerably more subtle 57. In particular, PPP relies on a remarkable spectral property of delay equations, referred to as multiplicity-induced-dominancy (MID) and coexistent-real-roots-induced-dominancy (CRRID). In particular, in the context of the MID propoerty, when the multiplicity of a given spectral value coincides with the degree of the characteristic quasipolynomial, this property is called generic MID (GMID), in opposition to the intermediate MID (IMID), which corresponds to a multiplicity strictly smaller than the degree.
Motivated by recently obtained factorizations of characteristic functions satisfying the GMID property in terms of Kummer confluent hypergeometric functions, we provided in 8 a new representation of some Kummer functions with integer coefficients in terms of iterated integrals of an exponential kernel. As a consequence of the existing links between Kummer, Whittaker, and modified Bessel functions, the latter classes of special functions also take advantage of such an iterated integral representation. We also express characteristic functions of the aforementioned classes of time-delay systems in terms of iterated integrals, and illustrate how such an iterated integral representation allows us to obtain information on the location of the spectrum of the system, at least in some low-order cases.
Furthermore, it is shown in 19 that the multiple root configuration corresponds not only to rightmost roots, but also to global minimizers of the spectrum abscissa function. A computational characterization of minima of the spectral abscissa is made for output feedback, yielding a more complex picture, which includes configurations with both multiple and simple rightmost roots. In the analysis, the pivotal role of the invariant zeros is highlighted, which translates into restrictions on the tunable parameters in the closed-loop quasi-polynomial.
In 9 the IMID property is investigated for spectral values with the lowest overorder intermediate multiplicity, i.e., a multiplicity larger than the order of the DDE. We highlight the fact that a root of overorder multiplicity is necessarily a root of a particular polynomial, called the elimination-produced polynomial (EPP), and we address the MID property using a suitable factorization of the corresponding characteristic function involving special functions of Kummer type. Additional results and discussion are provided in the case of the nth order integrator, in particular on the local optimality of a multiple root. The derived results show how the delay can be further exploited as a control parameter and are applied to some problems of stabilization of standard benchmarks with prescribed exponential decay. Next, by exploiting the concept of the EPP in 10, the IMID property is fully characterized thanks to the representation of the corresponding characteristic function as a linear combinations of Kummer functions.
The MID property is investigated in the multidimensional context in 7, 42, where its validity is characterized in the planar case, then exploited in the design of a state-feedback achieving a prescribed exponential stabilization of the solution of planar dynamical systems with input delay.
Finally, in the context of partial differential equations, the prescribed stabilization is applied in 1 in the stabilization of the wave equation with pointwise delay feedback with the advantage of the assignation of the closed-loop exponential decay. The methodology involves a four-parameter autoregressive control structure for which the design strategy is based on multiplicity manifolds. An extension of the MID property for continuous-time difference equations is obtained.
6.9 Stability and stabilization of partial differential equations
Participants: Islam Boussaada, Guilherme Mazanti, Ismaila Balogoun, Jean Auriol [L2S].
We establish in 5 a necessary and sufficient stability condition for a class of two coupled first-order linear hyperbolic partial differential equations. Through a backstepping transform, the problem is reformulated as a stability problem for an integral difference equation, that is, a difference equation with distributed delay. Building upon a Stépán–Hassard argument variation theorem originally designed for time-delay systems of retarded type, we then introduce a theorem that counts the number of unstable roots of our integral difference equation. This leads to the expected necessary and sufficient stability criterion for the system of first-order linear hyperbolic partial differential equations. Finally, we validate our theoretical findings through simulations.
6.10 Extremum seeking
Participants: Frédéric Mazenc, Michael Malisoff [LSU], Emilia Fridman [Tel Aviv Univ].
In the contribution 18, we developed a novel stability analysis for a bounded-gradient-based extremum seeking scheme applied to two-variable static quadratic maps in the presence of time-varying additive measurement uncertainty. Unlike earlier approaches that rely on averaging techniques, our method is based on a new state transformation combined with a time-varying quadratic Lyapunov function and a comparison principle. This framework allowed us to derive significantly less conservative bounds on both the dither frequency and the ultimate bound of the estimation error than those reported in previous contributions. The effectiveness and reduced conservatism of the proposed approach were numerically validated through a representative example.
6.11 Construction of strict Lyapunov functions
Participants: Frédéric Mazenc, Mohamed Maghenem [GIPSA-Lab], Antonio Loria [L2S].
We worked on several problems pertaining to the design of strict Lyapunov functions i.e. Lyapunov functions having a strictly negative-definite derivative along the trajectories of the studied system.
In 17 and 32, we studied the robust stability for a large class of linear time-varying systems under the assumption that the system possesses some kind of excitation, which is necessary for uniform attractivity of the origin, but not even boundedness of the solutions is assumed a priori. We obtained strict Lyapunov functions, constructed based on an initial candidate whose derivative is sign-undefined. The Lyapunov function that we proposed guarantees input-to-state stability with respect to bounded additive inputs. As a byproduct of our main results, we provided a Lyapunov function for a class of systems reminiscent of model-reference adaptive control with non-differentiable regressors.
In 29, we revisited the problem of designing a strict Lyapunov function for systems appearing in model-reference adaptive control. Most of the results available in the literature are based on the assumption that the regressor is smooth and its derivative admits a known uniform bound. Our main result consisted in relaxing this assumption, which is notably useful in tracking control tasks, where it is required to track arbitrarily rapid reference trajectories. Our main statement was formulated for linear time-varying systems with regressors of dimension one, but we showed how it applies in the analysis of nonlinear systems, notably in adaptive control and adaptive observer design.
In , we studied stability and robustness for a large class of linear time-varying systems under a persistency of excitation assumption, which is necessary for uniform attractivity of the origin. But we did not assume a priori boundedness of the solutions. We obtained strict Lyapunov functions. We performed our construction by using an initial candidate Lyapunov function whose derivative is sign-undefined. The Lyapunov function that we constructed guarantees uniform global asymptotic stability and input-to-state stability with respect to bounded additive inputs. As a byproduct of our main results, we provide a Lyapunov function for a class of systems reminiscent of model-reference adaptive control with non-differentiable regressors.
6.12 Local Halanay’s Inequality
Participants: Frédéric Mazenc, Michael Malisoff [LSU].
In the contribition 16, we provided a local version of a stability analysis technique for continuous-time nonlinear systems that is based on the celebrated Halanay’s inequality. The results we obtained ensure local asymptotic stability of an equilibrium point. They are applicable to a family of nonlinear systems that contain state and input delays. We determined input-to-state stability inequalities when the systems contain additive uncertainty. We combined the results with an observer and a Gramian approach, to solve an output feedback stabilization problem. Our numerical examples illustrated how our theorems lead to new basin of attraction estimates.
6.13 Event-Triggered Control
Participants: Frédéric Mazenc, Michael Malisoff [LSU].
In the contribution, 33, we proved global exponential stability estimates for a class of nonlinear control systems that contain uncertain time-varying input delays and uncertain state delays. We proved that our new dynamic event-triggered controls ensured that Zeno's phenomenon does not occur. We used new synergies of the estimation tools called 'interval observers' and the celebrated Halanay's inequality to prove the main result. We illustrated our approach in a marine robotic dynamics that contains uncertain nonlinear terms.
6.14 Finite time and fixed time stabilization
Participants: Frédéric Mazenc, Michael Malisoff [LSU].
In the contribution 34, we designed sampled controls to obtained finite-time stabilization properties for continuous-time time-varying linear systems. Our main results yielded finite-time input-to-state stability, where the upper bounding supremum of the uncertainty is over a time interval of constant finite length. Our work included output feedback stabilization and input delays. We used our results to prove novel global exponential input-to-state estimates for nonlinear systems with state delays, including systems with outputs, using a stability analysis technique 'trajectory based approach'. We illustrated our work using a pendulum dynamics with poorly known friction.
In the contribution 35, for discrete-time time-varying linear systems, we constructed sampled-data control laws which result closed-loop systems for which one can find fixed-time input-to-state stability estimates. The upper bounds for the norms of the states in the estimates are suprema of the uncertainties over time intervals of constant finite lengths. We covered output feedback stabilization and input delays. We combined our results with a trajectory based approach, to prove novel global exponential input-to-state stability estimates for nonlinear systems with state delays. We illustrated our work using a dynamics containing an unknown nonlinearity and an unknown state delay.
6.15 Lur’e Systems Under Incremental-Like Restrictions
Participants: Giorgio Valmorbida, Gioia Montana, Andrea Cristofaro [Università di Roma, La Sapienza], Mattia Mattioni [Università di Roma, La Sapienza].
We look for global asymptotic stability certificates for discrete-time systems in 20. These certificates are expressed as Lyapunov functions. The main goal is to formulate stability conditions that are exact, namely do not rely on approximations of terms in the stability conditions. The main target to these stability conditions is their use on the analysis iterative algorithms. The proposed incremental description of the nonlinearities allows us to consider systms with continuous but non-differentiable nonlinearities. The framework is suitable to address multivariate coupled nonlinearities.
6.16 Iterative methods to solve Linear Programs
Participants: Giorgio Valmorbida, Morten Hovd [NTNU].
The paper 26 presents a strategy to solve an implicit equation obtained from the optimality conditions of linear programs. It consists of an iterative method looking for active sets of constraints where each iteration needs to perform the update of a matrix inversion where a rank two update is introduced. The method is applied to Linear Programs stemming from Model Predictive Control which present a particular structure that is exploited in the algorithm.
6.17 Risk-averse optimization
Participants: Laurent Pfeiffer, Riccardo Bonalli [L2S], Benoît Bonnet-Weill [L2S].
The preprint 48 establishes a new characterisation of coherent and law-invariant risk measures, with the help of a generalized optimal transport problem. When the associated transport problem is convex, this allows us to demonstrate a novel duality formula for risk measures that is of interest in a numerical perspective.
6.18 Chemical master equation
Participants: Laurent Pfeiffer, Guillaume Ballif [Inria Saclay], Jakob Ruess [Inria Saclay].
The preprint 47 is dedicated to continuous-time Markov chains on , modelling the evolution of a chemical reaction network (involving species). We propose a novel bounding technique, involving a Markov chain on , which is easier to investigate. This allows us to infer in a convenient fashion fundamental properties for the original Markov chain, such as the existence of a stationary distribution.
6.19 Management of fisheries using a mean-field-game approach
Participants: Ziad Kobeissi, Idriss Mazari-Fouquer [University Paris Dauphine-PSL], Domenec Ruiz-Balet [University Paris Dauphine-PSL].
We propose a novel model for managing fisheries, described by a system of three coupled partial differential equations. The first is a reaction-diffusion equation representing the dynamics of the fish population, which follows standard approaches in the mathematical literature on spatial ecology. The other two equations are derived using a mean-field-game (MFG) framework to model a large population of fishermen, where the number of fishermen is assumed to be large enough to be treated as infinite. Each fisherman aims to maximize his individual profit, calculated as the revenue from selling fish minus the cost of moving his boat. Under two different structural assumptions about the nonlinearities in the fish dynamics, we prove theoretical results illustrating the tragedy of the commons. Specifically, we show that a lack of coordination among fishermen can significantly harm, or even lead to the extinction of the fish population. Our findings are supported by several numerical simulations.
In 65 the main focus is on the derivation of analytical results (e.g existence, uniqueness) and of long time behaviour (here, convergence to the ergodic system) on the mean-field-game system of fishing introduced in 66. We develop novel and versatile tools to address this new class of MFG systems, where agent interactions are indirect and mediated through the solution of a third coupled partial differential equation. The challenging issue of uniqueness, a well-known difficulty in the mean-field game literature, is partially tackled using an innovative approach based on spectral methods inspired by shape optimization theory. We establish the convergence of the time-dependent system to its ergodic counterpart as the time horizon tends to infinity, both in the first- and second-order cases.
6.20 Prescribed stabilization and autoregressive control in vibration damping
Participants: Islam Boussaada, Silviu Niculescu, Sami Tliba [L2S].
As an application of the partial poles placement in vibration damping, we used in 46 the autoregressive control which has sufficient parametric degrees of freedom available for the controller's design. It turns out that the use of dynamical parameters corresponds to linear filtered terms in the control law of the original one. To emphasize the benefits brought by such a controller, the active vibration damping problem is addressed for a flexible mechanical structure equipped with a collocated pair of piezoelectric sensor and actuator.
6.21 Control of DC/DC converters
Participants: Frédéric Mazenc, Alessio Iovine [L2S].
The paper 31 falls within the research area of advanced control of power converters. In it, we proposed a bounded control strategy for a nonlinear model of a DC/DC boost converter that guarantees both boundedness of all closed-loop signals and stability of the overall system. We provided explicit guidelines for selecting the controller parameters. We performed simulations to validate the effectiveness of the proposed control approach in achieving reliable voltage regulation of the converter.
6.22 A new tool for the simulation of controllers for retarded delay systems
Participants: Catherine Bonnet, Duc Duy Do, Mustafa Oguz Yegin [Bilkent University], Hitay Ozbay [Bilkent University].
We developed a new software tool for reliable implementation of all stabilizing controllers for general retarded time delay systems, and the case of systems with one delay in the numerator and one delay in the denominator was presented in 25. This work was the continuation of 56; it demonstrated a Matlab/Simulink realization and how users interface with it. We also discussed some technical issues in the implementation of the infinite dimensional parts of the controller blocks.
7 Bilateral contracts and grants with industry
7.1 Bilateral contracts with industry
Participants: Laurent Pfeiffer, François Caffier.
The team signed in 2024 a contract with IFPEN in the framework of the Inria-IFPEN contract 20 June 2020. A PhD is funded for 3 years.
8 Partnerships and cooperations
8.1 International initiatives
8.1.1 Participation in other International Programs
SPECTRE-EDP
Participants: Islam Boussaada, Guilherme Mazanti, Silviu Niculescu.
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Title:
Prescribed stabilization: Delay effect on partial differential equations
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Partner Institution(s):
University of Monastir, Tunisia
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Date/Duration:
2024-2028
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Additionnal info/keywords:
CNRS-Africa Joint Research Programme
8.2 International research visitors
8.2.1 Visits of international scientists
Other international visits to the team
Jaqueline Godoy Mesquita
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Status
Researcher
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Institution of origin:
University of Campinas (UNICAMP)
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Country:
Brazil
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Dates:
June 30 to July 16, 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Guilherme Mazanti and Felipe Gonçalves Netto in the context of the cotutella PhD of Felipe Gonçalves Netto
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay
Kaïs Ammari
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Status
Full professor
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Institution of origin:
University of Monastir
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Country:
Tunisia
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Dates:
Mars, 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Islam Boussaada in the context of the PhD thesis of Credo Fanou
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay
Jonathan Palma Olate
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Status
Associate Professor
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Institution of origin:
Universidad de Talca
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Country:
Chile
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Dates:
May, 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Giorgio Valmorbida for collaboration on the regulation problem for saturating systems
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay funded by the program SticAmSud.
Erivelton Nepomuceno
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Status
Associate professor
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Institution of origin:
University of Maynooth
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Country:
Ireland
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Dates:
July, 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Giorgio Valmorbida for collaboration on the project individual blade pitch control for floating offshore wind turbines
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay funded by the PHC Ulysses scheme.
Pedro Luis Dias Peres
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Status
Full professor
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Institution of origin:
UNICAMP
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Country:
Brazil
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Dates:
July, 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Giorgio Valmorbida
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay funded by brazilian agencies.
Valter Leite
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Status
Full professor
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Institution of origin:
CEFET/MG
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Country:
Brazil
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Dates:
July, 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Giorgio Valmorbida
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay funded by brazilian agencies.
Ariadne Lourdes Justi Bertolin
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Status
Assistant professor
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Institution of origin:
University of Bath
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Country:
United Kingdom
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Dates:
August/September, 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Giorgio Valmorbida for collaboration on Stability Analysis of Nonlinear systems
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay funded by the French embassy in the UK.
Aditya Mahajan
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Status
Professor
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Institution of origin:
McGill University
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Country:
Canada
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Dates:
June 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Silviu-Iulian Niculescu for collaboration on Stochastic Approximations with delayed updates
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay funded by CentraleSupélec.
Matthew Turner
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Status
Professor
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Institution of origin:
University of Southampton
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Country:
United Kingdom
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Dates:
November, 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Giorgio Valmorbida for collaboration on Anti-Windup compensator desing for permanent magnet synchronous motors.
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay funded by the invited professor scheme of CentraleSupélec.
8.2.2 Visits to international teams
Research stays abroad
Guilherme Mazanti
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Visited institution:
University of Campinas (UNICAMP)
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Country:
Brazil
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Dates:
5 to 9 December 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Jaqueline Godoy Mesquita
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay
Islam Boussaada
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Visited institution:
University of Monastir
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Country:
Tunisia
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Dates:
January 10th-March 30, 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Kaïs Ammari
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Research stay
Giorgio Valmorbida
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Visited institution:
University of Maynooth
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Country:
Ireland
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Dates:
20th-24th July, 2025
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Context of the visit:
Collaboration with Team of Prof. Nepomuceno.
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Mobility program/type of mobility:
Collaboration within the PHC Ulysses framework.
8.3 National initiatives
- L. Pfeiffer is involved in the EDF-Inria DEFI on the "management of tomorrow's electrical systems".
9 Dissemination
9.1 Promoting scientific activities
9.1.1 Scientific events: organisation
- In the context of the project SPECTRE-EDP, Islam Boussaada organized the international conference Control & Stabilization of PDEs held from 15th to 17th of December 2025 at Monastir.
- Islam Boussaada organized the conference Control Theory & Inverse Problems (CTIP) held from 5th to 7th of May 2025 at Monastir.
General chair, scientific chair
- The team participated actively in the organization of the Joint IFAC Conference SSSC–TDS–COSY, which took place at CentraleSupélec between 30 June and 2 July 2025. Islam Boussaada was co-General chair of the conference, Laurent Pfeiffer was Artistic activity chair, Guilherme Mazanti was Student activity chair, and Timothée Schmoderer was Registration chair.
Member of the organizing committees
- Guilherme Mazanti was in the organizing team of the “Séminaire d'automatique du plateau de Saclay”, a series of seminars on automatic control.
9.1.2 Scientific events: selection
Chair of conference program committees
- Islam Boussaada was program co-editor of the 19th IFAC Workshop on Time-Delay Systems.
Member of the conference program committees
- Catherine Bonnet , Guilherme Mazanti , Frédéric Mazenc , and Silviu-Iulian Niculescu were members of the International Program Committee of the 19th IFAC Workshop on Time-Delay Systems.
- Laurent Pfeiffer was member of the International Program Committee of the 2nd IFAC Workshop on Control of Complex Systems.
Organizing tutorials at international conferencens
- Silviu-Iulian Niculescu co-organized (with A.Mahajan, R. Srikant and M.Vidyasagar) the tutorial session "Stochastic Approximation and Learning" at the SIAM Conference on Control and Its Applications (CT2025) held at Montréal, Canada (July 2025).
9.1.3 Book Series
- Silviu-Iulian Niculescu is the Founding Editor and the Editor-in-Chief of the Springer Nature Series: "Advances in Delays and Dynamics" (ADD@S) since its creation in 2012.
9.1.4 Journal
Member of the editorial boards
- Islam Boussaada : Associate Editor of Systems and Computing (SyCom).
- Islam Boussaada : Associate Editor of European Control Conference, Thessaloniki, Greece (2025).
- Guilherme Mazanti : Associate Editor of Matemática Contemporânea.
- Frédéric Mazenc : Editor of Asian Journal of Control.
- Frédéric Mazenc : Associate Editor of Automatica.
- Frédéric Mazenc : Associate Editor of IEEE Control Systems Letters.
- Frédéric Mazenc : Associate Editor of European Control Conference, Thessaloniki, Greece (2025).
- Silviu-Iulian Niculescu : Associate Editor of IMA Journal of Mathematical Control and Information
- Giorgio Valmorbida : Associate Editor of Automatica.
Reviewer - reviewing activities
Members of the team are reviewers for Automatica, IEEE trans. Auto. Contr., IEEE LCSS, Systems & Control Letters, SIAM Journal on Mathematics of Data Science (SIMODS), SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization (SICON), Applied Mathematics and Optimization (AMOP) .
9.1.5 Invited talks
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IFAC TDS working group webinar 2025
Speaker: Islam Boussaada
Title: Partial poles placement for infinite-dimensional systems: New perspectives via hypergeometric functions
December 5, 2025
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International conference ICAAM 2025
Sousse, Tunisia
Speaker: Islam Boussaada
Title: Prescribed stabilization: From functional equations to some classes of partial differential equations
December 28, 2025
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International conference RAMA13
Tamanghasset, Algeria
Speaker: Islam Boussaada
Title: Stabilisation prescrite pour des systèmes de dimension infinie : nouvelles perspectives de fonctions hypergéométriques
November 26, 2025
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International conference ICRAMI
Sousse, Tunisia
Speaker: Islam Boussaada
Title: Prescribed Stabilization for Infinite-Dimensional Systems: New Perspectives via Hypergeometric Functions
November 23, 2025
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Seminar at the Research Center on Stability, Instability, and Turbulence (SITE)
New York University Abu Dhabi
Speaker: Guilherme Mazanti
Title: First-order optimal-exit mean field games
28 January 2025
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Parisian seminar of optimization at Institut Henri Poincaré in Paris.
Speaker: Ziad Kobeissi
Title: Temporal Difference Learning with Continuous Time and State in the Stochastic Setting
Paris, 3 March 2025
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Seminar of the Mathematical Federation of Centralesupelec
Speaker: Ziad Kobeissi
Title: From Mean field Control to Stackelberg Mean Field Games.
Gif-sur-Yvette, 22 May 2025
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Workshop “Mean field games, optimal transport and machine learning” at NYU Paris
Speaker: Ziad Kobeissi
Title: Using Reinforcement Learning to approximate solution of second-order linear PDEs
Paris, 23 June 2025
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Joint IFAC Conference: SSSC, TDS, COSY at CentraleSupelec.
Speaker: Ziad Kobeissi
Title: Temporal Difference Learning with Continuous Time and State in the Stochastic Setting
Gif-sur-Yvette, 30 June 2025
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Workshop “Optimization, Control, and Aerospace Applications” at Zhejiang University
Speaker: Guilherme Mazanti
Title: A nonsmooth Frank–Wolfe algorithm through a dual cutting-plane approach
Hangzhou, China, 6 March 2025
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Seminar on Partial Differential Equations of the School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Science and Technology of China
Speaker: Guilherme Mazanti
Title: Wave equations with nonsmooth boundary conditions
Hefei, China, 10 March 2025
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Seminar at the Department of Control Science and Engineering Harbin Institute of Technology (HIT)
Speaker: Guilherme Mazanti
Title: Stabilization of delay-differential equations using multiple spectral values
Harbin, China, 14 March 2025
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Seminar at the School of Electronic Information and Communications (EIC), Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST)
Speaker: Guilherme Mazanti
Title: Duality-based convergence rates for simplicial methods
Wuhan, China, 21 March 2025
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Seminar “Analysis for PDE”' at the School of Mathematical Sciences, Peking University
Speaker: Guilherme Mazanti
Title: Approximate and exact controllability criteria for linear one-dimensional hyperbolic systems
Beijing, China, 28 March 2025
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Control Theory and Inverse Problems (CTIP 2025)
Speaker: Guilherme Mazanti
Title: Hautus-type controllability criteria for linear one-dimensional hyperbolic systems
Monastir, Tunisia, 7 May 2025
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5th Online Seminar on Input-to-State Stability and its Applications
University of Bayreuth, Department of Mathematics, Chair of Applied Mathematics
Speaker: Frédéric Mazenc
Title: A stability analysis technique called trajectory-based approach.
Date: Wednesday, 30 April 2025.
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4ème congrès de la Société Mathématique de France
Speaker: Laurent Pfeiffer
Title: On Law-Invariant and Coherent Risk Measures
Dijon, 3 June 2025
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ENUMATH Conference
Speaker: Laurent Pfeiffer
Title: Conditional gradient method for solving Mean Field Games with partially deterministic Markov processes
Heidelberg, September 4, 2025
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Seminar at Center of Oceanic Energy Research
Speaker: Giorgio Valmorbida
Title: Local Stability Analysis of Piecewise Affine Systems exploiting set-constrained co-positive matrices
Maynooth, July 24, 2025
9.1.6 Scientific expertise
- Catherine Bonnet is a member of the Scientific Council of CentraleSupélec since December 2021.
- Catherine Bonnet is a member of the board of directors of the Gaspard Monge Program for Optimization, Operations Research and their interactions with data sciences (PGMO) since October 2023.
- Islam Boussaada is a member of Scientific council of the cooperative research laboratory TéSA.
- Silviu-Iulian Niculescu was the Chair of the IFAC Manfred Thoma Medal (for the trieunium 2023-2026) recognizing outstanding contributions of a young researcher and/or engineer under the age of 40 to the field of systems and control in its widest sense
9.1.7 Research administration
- Catherine Bonnet is a member of the Council of L2S.
- Catherine Bonnet is co-President of the Parity Committee at Inria since January 2022.
- Catherine Bonnet is the Parity Referent at L2S for CNRS since its creation in November 2020.
- Catherine Bonnet is a member of the Coordination committee of the Mentoring Program of Inria Saclay Center.
- Laurent Pfeiffer is the representative of the “control" axis at the board of the “Fédération de Mathématiques de CentraleSupélec", since 2023.
- Laurent Pfeiffer is the scientific representative of CentraleSupélec at EDMH (Ecole Doctorale de Mathématiques Hadamard), since 2025.
- Giorgio Valmorbida is a member of the Council of L2S.
9.2 Teaching - Supervision - Juries - Educational and pedagogical outreach
9.2.1 Supervision
- Catherine Bonnet supervises the PhD thesis of Duc Duy Do 2024-2027.
- Catherine Bonnet , Guilherme Mazanti and Frédéric Mazenc supervise the postdoc of Nicolas Vanspranghe 2025-2026.
- Islam Boussaada and Guilherme Mazanti supervise the PhD thesis Anh-Tuan Clabaut 2025-2028.
- Islam Boussaada supervises the PhD thesis of Crédo Fanou 2024-2027.
- Islam Boussaada supervises the PhD thesis of Amira Remadna 2021-2026.
- Islam Boussaada supervises the postdoc of Tamas Balogh 2025-2026.
- Laurent Pfeiffer supervises the PhD thesis of François Caffier jointly with Paul Malisani (IFPEN), 2024-2027.
- Laurent Pfeiffer supervises the PhD thesis of Enrico Sartor jointly with Riccardo Bonalli (L2S), 2025-2028.
- Laurent Pfeiffer supervises the postdoc of Arthur Bottois, 2023-2026.
- Laurent Pfeiffer supervises the postdoc of Benjamin Dubois-Taine, jointly with Francis Bach (Inria Paris), Nadia Oudjane (EDF R&D), and Adrien Séguret (EDF R&D), 2025-2026.
- Laurent Pfeiffer supervises the postdoc of Jules Berry, jointly with Riccardo Bonalli (L2S), 2025-2026.
- Giorgio Valmorbida supervises the PhD thesis of Maxime Bechu jointly with Pedro Rodriguez Ayerbe (CentraleSupélec), 2024-2027.
- Giorgio Valmorbida supervises the PhD thesis of Pieter Van Holm jointly with Sorin Olaru (CentraleSupélec), 2025-2028.
- Giorgio Valmorbida supervises the PhD thesis of Gioia Montana jointly with Mattia Mattioni and Andrea Cristofaro (Università di Roma La Sapienza), 2024-2027.
9.2.2 Juries
- Catherine Bonnet was a member of the IFAC Award selection committee ‘Delay Systems Life Time Achievement Award’, June 2025.
- Catherine Bonnet is a member of the Gaspard Monge Program for Optimization, Operations Research and their interactions with data sciences (PGMO) PhD award July 2025.
- Catherine Bonnet was a member of the 2025 CRCN-ISFP recruiting committee of Inria Grenoble.
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Catherine Bonnet participated in the individual doctoral progress review for the academic year concerning the PhD thesis of Pauline Mazel, under the supervision of Frédéric Grognard and Walid Djema, Université Côte d’Azur. May 2025.
Title : Modélisation, analyse et contrôle des dynamiques de populations cellulaires cancéreuses
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Catherine Bonnet was a member of the the PhD committee of Echrak Chnib, université de Lorraine and Universita di Genova, 24 mars 2025.
Title : Study and development of an adaptive Vertical Farm.
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Catherine Bonnet was a member of the the PhD committee of Can Yuksel, Czech technical university in Prague and université Paris-Saclay, 8 avril 2025.
Title : Simultaneous Time-Delay compensator and Periodic Control.
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Catherine Bonnet was a member of the PhD committee of Min Li, Centrale Lille, 30 octobre 2025.
Title : commande et estimation de systèmes multi-agents basés sur l’homogénéité.
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Islam Boussaada was a reviewer of the PhD thesis of Marwa Boudana, under the supervision of Jean Jacques Loiseau. December 2025.
Title : Contribution à l'analyse, l'identification et la commande des systèmes linéaires d'ordre fractionnaire à retard.
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Guilherme Mazanti and Laurent Pfeiffer supervised the PhD thesis of Thibault Moquet , defended on December 1, 2025.
Title: Frank-Wolfe algorithms and duality in non-smooth convex optimization with applications to mean-field control.
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Frédéric Mazenc participated in the individual doctoral progress review for the academic year concerning the PhD thesis of Reynaud Olayo, under the supervision of Ahmad Hably (Gipsa-Lab) and Mohamed Maghenem (Gipsa-Lab). May 2025.
Titile : Analysis and design for safety in scenarios of delayed, constrained, and interactive dynamics.
- Laurent Pfeiffer participated in the individual doctoral progress committee of Joseph Gabet (L2S, CentraleSupélec), En Lai (UMA, Ensta-Paris), Maxime Latypov (MICS, CentraleSupélec), Mathurin Videau (LISN, Orsay Faculty of Sciences), and Weihao Weng (L2S, CentraleSupélec).
- Giorgio Valmorbida was a member of the 2025 recruiting committee of a Professor position at LAGEPP, Université de Lyon.
- Giorgio Valmorbida was a member of Jury and Reviewer of the PhD committee of Hiba Houmsi, INSA Lyon , 14 November 2025.
- Giorgio Valmorbida was a member of Jury and Reviewer of the PhD committee of Aurelien Pierron, Université de Lorraine, 8 July 2025.
9.3 Popularization
9.3.1 Participation in Live events
Catherine Bonnet gave a 1,5h talk to a group of middle-school students hosted at Inria Saclay Center, 25 June 2025.
10 Scientific production
10.1 Publications of the year
International journals
International peer-reviewed conferences
Conferences without proceedings
Scientific books
Scientific book chapters
Reports & preprints
10.2 Cited publications
- 53 articleAn explicit mapping from linear first order hyperbolic PDEs to difference systems.Systems Control Lett.1232019, 144--150URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sysconle.2018.11.012DOIback to text
- 54 articleOn the zeros of exponential polynomials.J. Math. Anal. Appl.7321980, 434--452URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-247X(80)90289-9DOIback to textback to text
- 55 articleDifference equations with delays depending on time.Bol. Soc. Brasil. Mat. (N. S.)2111990, 51--58URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01236279DOIback to text
- 56 inproceedingsImplementation of Stabilizing Controllers for Retarded Delay Systems.IFAC papers Online5827Dimitri BredaUdine, ItalySeptember 2024, 84-89HALDOIback to text
- 57 inproceedingsPartial Pole Placement via Delay Action: A Python Software for Delayed Feedback Stabilizing Design.2020 24th International Conference on System Theory, Control and Computing (ICSTCC)2020 24th International Conference on System Theory, Control and Computing (ICSTCC)Sinaia, RomaniaOctober 2020, 196--201HALDOIback to text
- 58 articleThe generic multiplicity-induced-dominancy property from retarded to neutral delay-differential equations: When delay-systems characteristics meet the zeros of Kummer functions.Comptes Rendus. Mathématique3602022, 349--369HALDOIback to text
- 59 articleBifurcation of periodic solutions in a nonlinear difference-differential equations of neutral type.Quart. Appl. Math.241966, 215--224URL: https://doi.org/10.1090/qam/204800DOIback to text
- 60 articleStability of non-autonomous difference equations with applications to transport and wave propagation on networks.Netw. Heterog. Media1142016, 563--601URL: https://doi.org/10.3934/nhm.2016010DOIback to textback to text
- 61 articleDifferential-difference equations and nonlinear initial-boundary value problems for linear hyperbolic partial differential equations.J. Math. Anal. Appl.241968, 372--387URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-247X(68)90038-3DOIback to text
- 62 bookIntroduction to functional-differential equations.99Applied Mathematical SciencesSpringer-Verlag, New York1993, x+447URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-4342-7DOIback to textback to textback to textback to textback to text
- 63 articleStrong stabilization of neutral functional differential equations.IMA J. Math. Control Inform.191-2Special issue on analysis and design of delay and propagation systems2002, 5--23URL: https://doi.org/10.1093/imamci/19.1_and_2.5DOIback to text
- 64 articleLinear autonomous neutral functional differential equations.J. Differential Equations151974, 106--128URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-0396(74)90089-8DOIback to textback to text
- 65 articleMean-field games for harvesting problems: Uniqueness, long-time behaviour and weak KAM theory.Journal of Differential Equations4482025, 113667back to text
- 66 articleThe tragedy of the commons: A Mean-Field Game approach to the reversal of travelling waves.Nonlinearity37112024, 115010back to text
- 67 bookStability, control, and computation for time-delay systems.27Advances in Design and ControlAn eigenvalue-based approachSociety for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM), Philadelphia, PA2014, xxiv+435URL: https://doi.org/10.1137/1.9781611973631DOIback to text
- 68 phdthesisStar-shaped regions of stability in hereditary systems.Division of Applied Mathematics, Brown University1976back to textback to text