WORLD CONGRESS OF
THE INTERNATIONAL FUZZY SYSTEMS ASSOCIATION
IFSA'2007
Cancun, Mexico, June 18-21, 2007
SPECIAL SESSION: Relation Between Interval and Fuzzy Techniques
SCOPE: The session is will include all aspects of
relations between interval and fuzzy techniques, including:
- the use of interval techniques to process fuzzy data - the use
motivated by the fact that a fuzzy number can be represented as
a nested family of intervals, and fuzzy data processing can be
described as processing the corresponding intervals
layer-by-layer
- theory and applications of interval-valued fuzzy sets
- general applications combining interval and fuzzy information
- results and algorithms from interval mathematics that are of
potential use in fuzzy applications
- challenging application-motivated open problems related to the
relation between interval and fuzzy techniques, including the
problems related to the need to go beyond interval-valued fuzzy
sets, for example:
- to more general second-order fuzzy sets, and
- to techniques combining interval, fuzzy, and other types of
uncertainty (probabilistic, rough sets, etc.).
MOTIVATION: The need for this session is motivated by the
following two developments:
- First, in the last decades, there has been a lot of progress in
interval techniques. Since the appearance of fuzzy logic and fuzzy
techniques, interval-based methods have been successfully used for
processing fuzzy data. However, most of these applications are
still based on the original 1960s and 1970s interval techniques.
It is desirable to inform the fuzzy community about the new more
efficient interval techniques, so that they can be more widely
used in fuzzy applications.
- Second, there has been a lot of progress in second-order
(type-2) fuzzy techniques, techniques that go beyond the
traditional [0,1]-based fuzzy logic. This progress is largely due
to the leadership of Jerry Mendel and his colleagues and
co-authors such as O. Castillo and P. Melin. From the purely
theoretical viewpoint, interval-valued fuzzy techniques are a very
specific particular case of such generalizations, but in most
practical applications, the transition to interval-based
techniques is the most useful (and further complications usually
do not add to the technique's success). In view of this empirical
fact, it is desirable to concentrate explicitly on the analysis of
such techniques, to try to explain why interval-valued techniques
are so successful, and to modify the existing general type-2
algorithms so that they will be most efficient in interval-valued
applications.
Sessions devoted to relations between interval and fuzzy
techniques have been successfully organized at several fuzzy
conferences such as FUZZ-IEEE and NAFIPS, but they were mainly
oriented towards practical applications. Since IFSA Congresses are
usually stronger in theoretical foundations, it is desirable to
organize a similar session at IFSA where more emphasis will be
placed on the theoretical foundations of the relations between
intervals and fuzzy, and not just on the practical consequences of
these relations.
ORGANIZER NAMES: Vladik Kreinovich, Weldon Lodwick, and Hung T. Nguyen
CONTACT INFORMATION: contact Vladik Kreinovich
mailing address:
Vladik Kreinovich
Department of Computer Science
University of Texas at El Paso
500 W. University
El Paso, TX 79968, USA
email vladik@utep.edu
phone (915) 747-6951
fax (915) 747-5030