EMPIRICAL COMPARISON OF METHODS FOR THE HIERARCHICAL PROPAGATION OF HYBRID UNCERTAINTY IN RISK ASSESSMENT, IN PRESENCE OF DEPENDENCES
From MaRDI portal
Publication:4650067
DOI10.1142/S0218488512500250zbMath1251.62005OpenAlexW2162517559MaRDI QIDQ4650067
Publication date: 15 November 2012
Published in: International Journal of Uncertainty, Fuzziness and Knowledge-Based Systems (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1142/s0218488512500250
possibility distributionsfuzzy interval analysisepistemic uncertaintiesaleatory uncertaintiesdependency bound convolutiontwo-dimensional Monte Carlo method
Related Items
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Equivalence of methods for uncertainty propagation of real-valued random variables
- Representing parametric probabilistic models tainted with imprecision
- Computing lower and upper expectations under epistemic independence
- Probabilistic arithmetic. I: Numerical methods for calculating convolutions and dependency bounds
- Independence concepts in evidence theory
- Joint propagation of probability and possibility in risk analysis: towards a formal framework
- Risk tolerance measure for decision-making in fuzzy analysis: a health risk assessment perspective
- Possibility theory and statistical reasoning
- Practical representations of incomplete probabilistic knowledge
- A sampling-based computational strategy for the representation of epistemic uncertainty in model predictions with evidence theory
- Best-possible bounds for the distribution of a sum -- a problem of Kolmogorov
- The mean value of a fuzzy number
- Independence concepts in possibility theory. I
- Independence concepts in possibility theory: II
- Belief function independence: I. The marginal case
- Epistemic independence in numerical possibility theory.
- Belief function independence. II: The conditional case.
- Probability-possibility transformations, triangular fuzzy sets, and probabilistic inequalities
- A definition of subjective possibility
- Possibility theory: conditional independence
- Probabilistic-fuzzy health risk modeling
- 2D Monte Carlo versus 2D fuzzy Monte Carlo health risk assessment
- POSSIBILITY THEORY III: POSSIBILISTIC INDEPENDENCE
- Fuzzy randomness – a contribution to imprecise probability
- Fuzzy sets