DocumentCode :
1463225
Title :
From computing with numbers to computing with words. From manipulation of measurements to manipulation of perceptions
Author :
Zadeh, Lotfi A.
Author_Institution :
Comput. Sci. Div., California Univ., Berkeley, CA, USA
Volume :
46
Issue :
1
fYear :
1999
fDate :
1/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
105
Lastpage :
119
Abstract :
Discusses a methodology for reasoning and computing with perceptions rather than measurements. An outline of such a methodology-referred to as a computational theory of perceptions is presented in this paper. The computational theory of perceptions, or CTP for short, is based on the methodology of CW. In CTP, words play the role of labels of perceptions and, more generally, perceptions are expressed as propositions in a natural language. CW-based techniques are employed to translate propositions expressed in a natural language into what is called the Generalized Constraint Language (GCL). In this language, the meaning of a proposition is expressed as a generalized constraint, N is R, where N is the constrained variable, R is the constraining relation and isr is a variable copula in which r is a variable whose value defines the way in which R constrains S. Among the basic types of constraints are: possibilistic, veristic, probabilistic, random set, Pawlak set, fuzzy graph and usuality. The wide variety of constraints in GCL makes GCL a much more expressive language than the language of predicate logic. In CW, the initial and terminal data sets, IDS and TDS, are assumed to consist of propositions expressed in a natural language. These propositions are translated, respectively, into antecedent and consequent constraints. Consequent constraints are derived from antecedent constraints through the use of rules of constraint propagation. The principal constraint propagation rule is the generalized extension principle. The derived constraints are retranslated into a natural language, yielding the terminal data set (TDS). The rules of constraint propagation in CW coincide with the rules of inference in fuzzy logic. A basic problem in CW is that of explicitation of N, R, and r in a generalized constraint, X is R, which represents the meaning of a proposition, p, in a natural language
Keywords :
computation theory; constraint theory; fuzzy set theory; natural languages; CTP; Pawlak set constraints; antecedent constraints; computational theory; consequent constraints; constrained variable; constraining relation; constraint propagation; explicitation; fuzzy graph constraints; generalized constraint language; natural language; perceptions; possibilistic constraints; probabilistic constraints; random set constraints; terminal data set; usuality constraints; variable copula; veristic constraints; Bicycles; Constraint theory; Humans; Moon; Natural languages; Performance evaluation; Petroleum; Physics computing; Speech; Telescopes;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Circuits and Systems I: Fundamental Theory and Applications, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1057-7122
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/81.739259
Filename :
739259
Link To Document :
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