International audienceIn information processing tasks, sets may have a conjunctive or a disjunctive reading. In the conjunctive reading, a set represents an object of interest and its elements are subparts of the object, forming a composite description. In the disjunctive reading, a set contains mutually exclusive elements and refers to the representation of incomplete knowledge. It does not model an actual object or quantity, but partial information about an underlying object or a precise quantity. This distinction between what we call ontic vs. epistemic sets remains valid for fuzzy sets, whose membership functions, in the disjunctive reading are possibility distributions, over deterministic or random values. This paper examines the impac...
I use a theorem from machine learning, called the “No Free Lunch” theorem (NFL) to support the claim...
Philosophical discourse traditionally distinguishes between ontology and epistemology and generally ...
Probabilism says an agent is rational only if her credences are probabilistic. This paper is concern...
In information processing tasks, sets may have a conjunctive or a disjunctive reading. In the conjun...
International audienceSets, hence fuzzy sets, may have a conjunctive or a disjunctive reading. In th...
DP336 (Conférencier invité)International audienceAs acknowledged for a long time, sets may have a co...
International audienceThis short paper discusses the contributions made to the featured section on L...
International audienceThe starting point of this work is the gap between two distinct traditions in ...
AbstractMany information systems capable of handling incomplete or fuzzy information manipulate obje...
A body of evidence in the sense of Shafer can be viewed as an extension of a probability measure, bu...
International audienceThe two main uncertainty representations in the literature that tolerate impre...
International audienceThis short book provides a unified view of the history and theory of random se...
We present a mathematical model allowing formally define the concepts of empirical and theoretical k...
For reasoning about uncertain situations, we have probability theory, and we have logics of knowled...
This short book provides a unified view of the history and theory of random sets and fuzzy random va...
I use a theorem from machine learning, called the “No Free Lunch” theorem (NFL) to support the claim...
Philosophical discourse traditionally distinguishes between ontology and epistemology and generally ...
Probabilism says an agent is rational only if her credences are probabilistic. This paper is concern...
In information processing tasks, sets may have a conjunctive or a disjunctive reading. In the conjun...
International audienceSets, hence fuzzy sets, may have a conjunctive or a disjunctive reading. In th...
DP336 (Conférencier invité)International audienceAs acknowledged for a long time, sets may have a co...
International audienceThis short paper discusses the contributions made to the featured section on L...
International audienceThe starting point of this work is the gap between two distinct traditions in ...
AbstractMany information systems capable of handling incomplete or fuzzy information manipulate obje...
A body of evidence in the sense of Shafer can be viewed as an extension of a probability measure, bu...
International audienceThe two main uncertainty representations in the literature that tolerate impre...
International audienceThis short book provides a unified view of the history and theory of random se...
We present a mathematical model allowing formally define the concepts of empirical and theoretical k...
For reasoning about uncertain situations, we have probability theory, and we have logics of knowled...
This short book provides a unified view of the history and theory of random sets and fuzzy random va...
I use a theorem from machine learning, called the “No Free Lunch” theorem (NFL) to support the claim...
Philosophical discourse traditionally distinguishes between ontology and epistemology and generally ...
Probabilism says an agent is rational only if her credences are probabilistic. This paper is concern...