Publication | Closed Access
The paradoxical success of fuzzy logic
221
Citations
82
References
1994
Year
Artificial IntelligenceFuzzy SystemsEngineeringFuzzy ControlFuzzy ModelingIntelligent SystemsSemanticsComputing With WordsFuzzy Control SystemNon-classical LogicSystems EngineeringFuzzy Logic MethodsFuzzy Natural Language ProcessingFuzzy LogicFuzzy ComputingExpert SystemsComputer ScienceFuzzy Inference SystemsFuzzy OntologiesFuzzy MathematicsFuzzy Expert System
Fuzzy logic methods have been used successfully in many real-world applications, but the foundations of fuzzy logic remain under attack. Taken together, these two facts constitute a paradox. A second paradox is that almost all of the successful fuzzy logic applications are embedded controllers, while most of the theoretical papers on fuzzy methods deal with knowledge representation and reasoning. I hope to resolve these paradoxes by identifying which aspects of fuzzy logic render it useful in practice, and which aspects are inessential. My conclusions are based on a mathematical result, on a survey of literature on the use of fuzzy logic in heuristic control and in expert systems, and on practical experience in developing expert systems.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">></ETX>
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1