Fuzzy Implications from Fuzzy Logic Operations

Author(s):  
Michał Baczyński ◽  
Balasubramaniam Jayaram
2010 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 17-30
Author(s):  
Huiwen Deng ◽  
Huan Jiang

In this paper, the authors investigate the ordering property (OP), , together with the general form of the law of importation(LI), i.e., , whereis a t-norm andis a fuzzy implication for the four main classes of fuzzy implications. The authors give necessary and sufficient conditions under which both (OP) and (LI) holds for S-, R-implications and some specific families of QL-, D-implications. Following this, the paper proposes the sufficient condition under which the equivalence between CRI and triple I method for FMP can be established. Moreover, this conclusion can be viewed as a unified triple I method, a generalized form of the known results proposed by Wang and Pei.


1997 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaomin Zhou ◽  
James Z. Wen ◽  
Scott P. Campbell ◽  
Weishu Wu ◽  
Pochi Yeh
Keyword(s):  

2004 ◽  
Vol 25 (6) ◽  
pp. 743-751 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyoung Min Kim ◽  
Joong Jo Park ◽  
Myung Hyun Song ◽  
In Cheol Kim ◽  
Ching Y Suen
Keyword(s):  

Philosophies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 21
Author(s):  
Matthew Booth ◽  
Fabien Paillusson

Statistical Hypothesis Testing (SHT) is a class of inference methods whereby one makes use of empirical data to test a hypothesis and often emit a judgment about whether to reject it or not. In this paper, we focus on the logical aspect of this strategy, which is largely independent of the adopted school of thought, at least within the various frequentist approaches. We identify SHT as taking the form of an unsound argument from Modus Tollens in classical logic, and, in order to rescue SHT from this difficulty, we propose that it can instead be grounded in t-norm based fuzzy logics. We reformulate the frequentists’ SHT logic by making use of a fuzzy extension of Modus Tollens to develop a model of truth valuation for its premises. Importantly, we show that it is possible to preserve the soundness of Modus Tollens by exploring the various conventions involved with constructing fuzzy negations and fuzzy implications (namely, the S and R conventions). We find that under the S convention, it is possible to conduct the Modus Tollens inference argument using Zadeh’s compositional extension and any possible t-norm. Under the R convention we find that this is not necessarily the case, but that by mixing R-implication with S-negation we can salvage the product t-norm, for example. In conclusion, we have shown that fuzzy logic is a legitimate framework to discuss and address the difficulties plaguing frequentist interpretations of SHT.


Author(s):  
Yahachiro Tsukamoto ◽  

Logical problems with fuzzy implications have been investigated minutely (Baczynski and Jayaram [1]). Considering some of the normative criteria to be met bygeneralized modus ponens, we have formulated a method of fuzzy reasoning based on residual implication. Among these criteria, the specificity possessed by the conclusion deduced bygeneralized modus ponensshould not be stronger than that of the consequent in the fuzzy implication.


Author(s):  
KRASSIMIR T. ATANASSOV

Modifications of the intuitionistic fuzzy logic operations "conjunction", "disjunction" and "implications" are defined and some of their properties, and the relations among them are discussed.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Márcia Barbosa ◽  
Raimundo Real

We modelled the distributions of two toads (Bufo bufoandEpidalea calamita) in the Iberian Peninsula using the favourability function, which makes predictions directly comparable for different species and allows fuzzy logic operations to relate different models. The fuzzy intersection between individual models, representing favourability for the presence of both species simultaneously, was compared with another favourability model built on the presences shared by both species. The fuzzy union between individual models, representing favourability for the presence of any of the two species, was compared with another favourability model based on the presences of either or both of them. The fuzzy intersections between favourability for each species and the complementary of favourability for the other (corresponding to the logical operation “A and not B”) were compared with models of exclusive presence of one species versus the exclusive presence of the other. The results of modelling combined species data were highly similar to those of fuzzy logic operations between individual models, proving fuzzy logic and the favourability function valuable for comparative distribution modelling. We highlight several advantages of fuzzy logic over other forms of combining distribution models, including the possibility to combine multiple species models for management and conservation planning.


2017 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
pp. 241-248
Author(s):  
Adam Grabowski

SummaryIn the article we present in the Mizar system the catalogue of nine basic fuzzy implications, used especially in the theory of fuzzy sets. This work is a continuation of the development of fuzzy sets in Mizar; it could be used to give a variety of more general operations, and also it could be a good starting point towards the formalization of fuzzy logic (together with t-norms and t-conorms, formalized previously).


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