Fuzzy Logic: Misconceptions and Clarifications
Artificial Intelligence Review
Fuzzy Inference on an Analog Fuzzy Chip
IEEE Micro
Representation of Fuzzy Shapes
IWVF-4 Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop on Visual Form
Fuzzy logic and probability applications
Virtual Analyzers: Identification Approach
Automation and Remote Control
Computational Intelligence: Concepts to Implementations
Computational Intelligence: Concepts to Implementations
Vague knowledge search in the design for outsourcing using fuzzy decision tree
Computers and Operations Research
Fuzzy Relational Compression Applied on Feature Vectors for Infant Cry Recognition
MICAI '09 Proceedings of the 8th Mexican International Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Intrinsic mechanisms and application principles of general fuzzy logic through Yin-Yang analysis
Information Sciences: an International Journal
Deconstructing the VR - data transparency, quantified uncertainty and reliability of 3D models
VAST'06 Proceedings of the 7th International conference on Virtual Reality, Archaeology and Intelligent Cultural Heritage
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From the Publisher:Fuzzy Logic is an eye-opening book - an exciting tour of a high-tech world where visionary computer scientists are inventing the future, and a disturbing lesson in shortsighted business practices. Imagine tossing your laundry into a "fuzzy" washing machine, pushing a button, and leaving thc machine to do the rest, from measuring out detergent to choosing a wash temperature. Imagine a microwave oven that watches over meals with more sensitivity than a human cook. Imagine a subway system that stops and starts so smoothly that passengers don't bother holding on to straps. Futuristic fantasy? No. In Japan, this is reality - and it's starting to explode into our marketplace. Lotfi Zadeh, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley, invented fuzzy logic in 1964. Conventional logic divides the world into yes and no, black and white. Fuzzy logic deals in shades of gray. It can thus make computers think like people. But when Zadeh tried to sell his idea to the American academic community and to American companies, he met with ridicule and scorn. Only the Japanese saw the logic of fuzzy logic, and soon such companies as Matsushita and Sony will earn billions selling it back to us. And they will have a head start on the dazzling future possibilities of fuzzy logic: software that predicts the stock market based on the daily news, cars that drive themselves, sex robots with a humanlike repertoire of behavior, computers that understand and respond to normal human language, and molecule-size soldiers of health that roam the bloodstream, killing cancer cells and slowing the aging process. Fuzzy Logic is the compelling tale of this remarkable new technology and the fascinating people who made it happen. It is also the story of what it took for American business to catch on to fuzzy logic - and how it will soon affect the lives of every one of us.