19,162 research outputs found
A Formal Approach based on Fuzzy Logic for the Specification of Component-Based Interactive Systems
Formal methods are widely recognized as a powerful engineering method for the
specification, simulation, development, and verification of distributed
interactive systems. However, most formal methods rely on a two-valued logic,
and are therefore limited to the axioms of that logic: a specification is valid
or invalid, component behavior is realizable or not, safety properties hold or
are violated, systems are available or unavailable. Especially when the problem
domain entails uncertainty, impreciseness, and vagueness, the appliance of such
methods becomes a challenging task. In order to overcome the limitations
resulting from the strict modus operandi of formal methods, the main objective
of this work is to relax the boolean notion of formal specifications by using
fuzzy logic. The present approach is based on Focus theory, a model-based and
strictly formal method for componentbased interactive systems. The contribution
of this work is twofold: i) we introduce a specification technique based on
fuzzy logic which can be used on top of Focus to develop formal specifications
in a qualitative fashion; ii) we partially extend Focus theory to a fuzzy one
which allows the specification of fuzzy components and fuzzy interactions.
While the former provides a methodology for approximating I/O behaviors under
imprecision, the latter enables to capture a more quantitative view of
specification properties such as realizability.Comment: In Proceedings FESCA 2015, arXiv:1503.0437
A survey of fuzzy control for stabilized platforms
This paper focusses on the application of fuzzy control techniques (fuzzy
type-1 and type-2) and their hybrid forms (Hybrid adaptive fuzzy controller and
fuzzy-PID controller) in the area of stabilized platforms. It represents an
attempt to cover the basic principles and concepts of fuzzy control in
stabilization and position control, with an outline of a number of recent
applications used in advanced control of stabilized platform. Overall, in this
survey we will make some comparisons with the classical control techniques such
us PID control to demonstrate the advantages and disadvantages of the
application of fuzzy control techniques
Fuzzy Logic in Clinical Practice Decision Support Systems
Computerized clinical guidelines can provide significant benefits to health outcomes and costs, however, their effective implementation presents significant problems. Vagueness and ambiguity inherent in natural (textual) clinical guidelines is not readily amenable to formulating automated alerts or advice. Fuzzy logic allows us to formalize the treatment of vagueness in a decision support architecture. This paper discusses sources of fuzziness in clinical practice guidelines. We consider how fuzzy logic can be applied and give a set of heuristics for the clinical guideline knowledge engineer for addressing uncertainty in practice guidelines. We describe the specific applicability of fuzzy logic to the decision support behavior of Care Plan On-Line, an intranet-based chronic care planning system for General Practitioners
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