Expert system models for inference with imperfect knowledge: A comparative study
From MaRDI portal
Publication:1110349
DOI10.1016/0378-3758(88)90092-4zbMath0656.68113OpenAlexW2008088823MaRDI QIDQ1110349
Publication date: 1988
Published in: Journal of Statistical Planning and Inference (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0378-3758(88)90092-4
uncertaintydecision support systemsevidential reasoningexpert systemsimperfect knowledgeinference modelsinference networknon- monotonic reasoning
Related Items
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Fusion, propagation, and structuring in belief networks
- Using approximate reasoning to represent default knowledge
- A review of fuzzy set aggregation connectives
- A logic to reason about likelihood
- Bayesian and non-Bayesian evidential updating
- Implementing Dempster's rule for hierarchical evidence
- Distributed revision of composite beliefs
- Evidential reasoning using stochastic simulation of causal models
- Independence and Bayesian updating methods
- A logic for default reasoning
- Circumscription - a form of non-monotonic reasoning
- Non-monotonic logic. I
- A probability model of medical reasoning and the MYCIN model
- Fuzzy sets as a basis for a theory of possibility
- The concept of a linguistic variable and its application to approximate reasoning. III
- An algorithm for region filling using two-dimensional grammars
- Fuzzy sets
- Upper and Lower Probabilities Induced by a Multivalued Mapping
- A method for managing evidential reasoning in a hierarchical hypothesis space: a retrospective