A semantics for possibility theory based on likelihoods (Q1353693)
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A semantics for possibility theory based on likelihoods (English)
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17 March 1998
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The first section of this paper relates everything to everything: possibility measures are represented by possibility distributions, which in turn are represented as upper probability envelopes; given a mass function, as in Shafer's theory, this can be construed so as to give rise to a membership function in Zadeh's sense, and thus a possibility function; likelihoods can be used to obtain membership functions; and, as Cheeseman has observed, we can give a Bayesian twist to the membership function. The authors use convex sets of probabilities and conditional probabilities in a quite classical framework to provide a semantics for the possibility theory calculus. The basic semantical entity is a triple (\(\mathcal{O},\mathcal{P}\),\(O)\) where \(\mathcal O\) represents a space of observations, and \(\mathcal P\) = \(\mathcal{J} \times\)\( P_{1|2}\) is a convex set of joint probabilities. \(\mathcal J\) is the set of all possible probability measures on the hypothesis space \(U\) (it is assumed that such a set exists) and \(\mathcal P_{2|1}\) is a convex set of probabilities on \(\mathcal O\), given an element of \(U\). A possibility measure \(\Pi(A)\) is identified with \(\sup\{P(O|A):P \in \mathcal P\}\). The authors give some results on the combination of possibility measures when these measures are exclusive, or independent, and on the complement of a possibility measure. The main import of the paper is that the authors provide a semantical justification of the possibility measure calculus in terms of upper and lower probabilities.
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possibility theory
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likelihood
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fuzzy sets
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possibility distributions
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upper probability envelopes
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membership function
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space of observations
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hypothesis space
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combination of possibility measures
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complement
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