Fuzzy Logic - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Fuzzy Logic

Description:

Fuzzy logic has three principal modes of qualification: ... Probability-qualification, as in (Mary is young) in unlikely. Possibility-qualification, s in (Mary ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:233
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 18
Provided by: milto7
Learn more at: http://web.cs.ucla.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Fuzzy Logic


1
Fuzzy Logic
2
Fuzzy Logic
  • Fuzzy logic can be viewed as an extension of
    multi-valued logic.
  • Fuzzy logic deals with the approximate rather
    than precise models.
  • Fuzzy logic is a matter of degree.

3
Basic Differences Between Two Logics
  • In two-valued logic systems, a proposition p is
    either true or false.
  • In fuzzy logic, the truth values are allowed to
    range over the fuzzy subsets of a finite or
    infinite truth value set T.
  • The predicates in two-valued logic are
    constrained to be crisp.
  • In fuzzy logic, the predicates may be crisp
  • E.g., mortal, even, etc.
  • They can also be more general
  • E.g., ill, tired, tall, very tall, etc.

4
Basic Difference Between Two Logics (Contd)
  • Two-valued logic allows only two quantifiers
    all and some.
  • In fuzzy logic, it allows, in addition, theuse of
    fuzzy quantifiers most, few, many,
    several, much of, etc.
  • In two-valued logical systems, a p may be
    quantified by associating with p
  • Truth value, true or false
  • A modal operator such as possible or
    necessary
  • An intensional operator such as know or
    believe

5
Basic Difference Between Two Logics (Contd)
  • Fuzzy logic has three principal modes of
    qualification
  • Truth-qualification, as in (Mary is young) is not
    quite true.
  • Probability-qualification, as in (Mary is young)
    in unlikely.
  • Possibility-qualification, s in (Mary is young)
    is almost impossible.

6
Meaning Representation and Inference
7
Canonical Form
8
Canonical Form (Example)
9
Inference Rules
  • Categorical
  • Rules that do not contain fuzzy quantifiers
  • Dispositional
  • Rules in which one or more premises may contain,
    explicitly or implicitly, the fuzzy quantifier
    usually.

10
Inference Rules (Contd)
11
Inference Rules (Contd)
12
Inference Rules (Contd)
13
Linguistic Variable
  • Definition A linguistic variable is a variable
    whose values are words or sentences in a natural
    or synthetic language.
  • For example
  • Age is a linguistic variable if its values are
    young, anot young, and so on.
  • In general, the values of the linguistic variable
    can be generated from a primary term (for
    example, young), its antonym (old), a
    collection of modifiers (not, very, quite),
    and the connectives and and or.
  • Furthermore, each value represents a possibility
    distribution

14
(No Transcript)
15
Fuzzy Car by Sugeno
16
Control Rules
17
Fuzzy Controllers
  • Fuzzy controllers are modeled according to the
    human behavior.
  • Fuzzy controllers are simpler, since they have a
    smaller number of rules.
  • Trade-off between imprecision and simplification.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com