outputconditioning
Outputconditioning refers to techniques applied to the observable outputs of a system to ensure they conform to required properties such as safety, reliability, compatibility, or presentation. It is the set of steps that occur after the primary processing or decision logic and before the output reaches its downstream consumer, actuator, or display.
- Scaling, clipping, and saturation to keep outputs within safe or expected ranges
- Unit conversion, formatting, and encoding to meet interface or protocol requirements
- Rounding, filtering, and smoothing to reduce noise or transient spikes
- Validation, sanitization, and error handling to ensure outputs are well-formed and safe for downstream use
- Fault-tolerant gating and deadband control to manage unexpected conditions
In control systems, outputconditioning may enforce actuator limits, apply anti-windup measures, or filter signals prior to
Outputconditioning trades fidelity for safety, robustness, or compatibility and can introduce latency or information loss. Designers
Outputconditioning is closely related to input conditioning, signal processing, data normalization, formatting, and verification and validation.