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Fuzzy Sets and Their Extensions: Representation, Aggregation and Models: Intelligent Systems from Decision Making to Data Mining, Web Intelligence and 2008 Edition
Contributor(s): Bustince, Humberto (Editor), Herrera, Francisco (Editor), Montero, Javier (Editor)
ISBN: 3540737227     ISBN-13: 9783540737223
Publisher: Springer
OUR PRICE:   $208.99  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: October 2007
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Mathematics | Applied
- Computers | Intelligence (ai) & Semantics
- Computers | Computer Science
Dewey: 006.3
LCCN: 2007932776
Series: Studies in Fuzziness and Soft Computing
Physical Information: 1.5" H x 6.14" W x 9.21" (2.52 lbs) 674 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Fuzzy Sets and Their Extensions: Representation, Aggregation and Models Intelligent Systems from Decision Making to Data Mining, Web Intelligence and Computer Vision Fuzzy sets are now more than 40 years old, and have come of age. However, the development of fuzzy set theory at the theoretical level, and its successful appli- tions to science and technology have often run in isolation. Only a little part of the theoretical apparatus was effectively used in past applications. The most prominent ones, namely fuzzy rule-based modeling and control engineering, were directly - spired from a seminal paper by Lot? Zadeh in 1973, suggesting how to use expert knowledge for synthetizing control laws, and from the ?rst experiments published by Abe Mamdani. Later in the eighties, when spectacular applications were bl- soming in Japan, fuzzy rule-based systems were systematized and simpli?ed by Michio Sugeno and colleagues, and became a basic approach to non-linear system modeling and control, soon hybridized with neural networks in the nineties. Thus fuzzy systems signi?cantly contributed to the raise of computational intelligence, and a lot of learning techniques for the construction of (supposedly interpretable) fuzzy models from data were developed under the ?ag of soft computing. Even if this area was quite successful, it is patent that the role, in the success of fuzzy logic, of new fuzzy set-related concepts developed quite at the same time in themathematicalnicheofthefuzzyset communitywaslimited.