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The purpose of the Journal of Intelligent & Fuzzy Systems: Applications in Engineering and Technology is to foster advancements of knowledge and help disseminate results concerning recent applications and case studies in the areas of fuzzy logic, intelligent systems, and web-based applications among working professionals and professionals in education and research, covering a broad cross-section of technical disciplines.
The journal will publish original articles on current and potential applications, case studies, and education in intelligent systems, fuzzy systems, and web-based systems for engineering and other technical fields in science and technology. The journal focuses on the disciplines of computer science, electrical engineering, manufacturing engineering, industrial engineering, chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, civil engineering, engineering management, bioengineering, and biomedical engineering. The scope of the journal also includes developing technologies in mathematics, operations research, technology management, the hard and soft sciences, and technical, social and environmental issues.
Authors: Trappey, Charles V. | Trappey, Amy J.C.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: This article presents a model of retail buyers investing in merchandise for resale to consumers. Given a selection or portfolio of merchandise to buy for a store, the retailer must determine the optimal percentage investment in each item. Depending upon the buyer's investment objectives and tolerance of risk, the profit of the portfolio is maximized while the risk is simultaneously minimized. We first model this investment decision using mean-variance optimization and then reformulate the nonlinear programming model to include a fuzzy objective function and fuzzy constraints. Our results indicate that the fuzzy approach increases the flexibility and profitability of the …model, assisting the retailer to build portfolios of merchandise that satisfy consumer demand under conditions of uncertainty. Show more
DOI: 10.3233/IFS-1993-1301
Citation: Journal of Intelligent and Fuzzy Systems, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 189-197, 1993
Authors: Parkinson, W.J. | Shalek, P.D. | Duerre, K.H. | Luger, G.F. | Jamshidi, M.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Silicon carbide whiskers, a strong material that resembles cat's whiskers, are produced, primarily, for strengthening ceramics and metals. The current method for producing these whiskers is to use a semibatch process, extremely difficult to model mathematically. An alternative model utilizes the expertise of operators accumulated from years of experience in initializing and running the process. We designed two expert systems in which the process can be set up and run by nonexperts. One system uses crisp logic and the other fuzzy logic. In this article, we compare the two systems.
DOI: 10.3233/IFS-1993-1302
Citation: Journal of Intelligent and Fuzzy Systems, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 199-214, 1993
Authors: Yager, Ronald R.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Consonant belief structures provide a representation for fuzzy sets because their plausibility measures are possibility measures. However, in general the aggregation of these consonant belief structures are not consonant, not fuzzy sets. In this article, we attempt to overcome this problem. We first note that two belief structures are equivalent if their plausibility and belief functions are equal. This observation allows us to provide different equivalent representations for any belief structure. This allows us to induce for different consonant belief structures commensurate representations. We show that if we represent two consonant belief structures in a commensurate manner their aggregations are …also consonant if we impose the additional requirement that the underlying probability distributions satisfy the condition of synonyminity, that is, they are completely correlated. The results of this work allow us to use belief structure representations to manipulate fuzzy subsets. Show more
DOI: 10.3233/IFS-1993-1303
Citation: Journal of Intelligent and Fuzzy Systems, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 215-224, 1993
Authors: Scarpelli, Heloisa | Gomide, Fernando
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: This article presents a net-based structure to model approximate reasoning using fuzzy logic, the fuzzy Petri net model. The knowledge bases to be considered here are assumed to be fuzzy production rules. After a brief introduction of knowledge representation and fuzzy reasoning, we give a new definition of the Fuzzy Petri net model. Next, the basic net structures for complex forms of rules such as rules with conjunction in the antecedent, rules with linguistic quantifiers, and rules with certainty factors are presented. Typical rules sets like parallel rules and conflicting rules are addressed as well. Design techniques to be used …when the basic structures are mixed in the context of a large knowledge base are also included. A fuzzy reasoning algorithm is provided. Finally, an application example concerning manufacturing cells modeling is introduced to illustrate the usefulness of the approach proposed. Show more
DOI: 10.3233/IFS-1993-1304
Citation: Journal of Intelligent and Fuzzy Systems, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 225-241, 1993
Authors: Nedungadi, Ashok
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Conventional robot controllers rely on an exact inverse kinematic model to convert user-specified Cartesian trajectory commands to joint set points. These inverse kinematic equations are robot specific and form a set of highly coupled nonlinear equations that pose a considerable computational bottleneck. It is not uncommon for the host CPU to dedicate as much as 80% of its computational resources to solve the inverse kinematic equations alone. Further, the strictly mathematical nature of the inverse kinematic equations results in kinematic singularities in which the robot is uncontrollable. These drawbacks have resulted in current robot controllers being limited in flexibility with …respect to adaptive control, kinematic redundancy, and obstacle avoidance. This observation provided the impetus to investigate the applicability of fuzzy logic to resolve the computational bottleneck of the inverse kinematic module. In the following, an approach is presented based on fuzzy logic, which replaces the computationally intensive inverse kinematic equations and lays the foundation for a robot controller with a simpler architecture. A hardware implementation of a fuzzy logicbased robot controller is described in which simple fuzzy rules replace the complex inverse kinematic equations. The implemented fuzzy robot controller was tested on a planar four-degree-of-freedom lab robot. Hardware test results of the lab robot tracking arbitrary trajectories are discussed. Show more
DOI: 10.3233/IFS-1993-1305
Citation: Journal of Intelligent and Fuzzy Systems, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 243-251, 1993
Authors: Vadiee, Nader | Jamshidi, Mohammad
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Fuzzy rule-based expert systems (FRBES) models, described by a set of fuzzy conditional statements in the canonical form of (If x is Ak then yk is Bk for k = 1, 2, … , r) or a system of conjunctive or disjunctive fuzzy relational equations in the form of (yk = x · Rk for k = 1, 2, … , r) were discussed in part I of this tutorial. In Part II provides detailed descriptions of some interesting special cases of FRBES models of dynamic systems along with a number of commonly used formats …for FRBES models and their solutions. The fundamental computational processes of FRBES models such as partitioning input and output spaces into fuzzy partitions and assigning them membership functions, fuzzification, inferencing, defuzzification processes are illustrated. A number of interesting graphical techniques for the above-mentioned computational processes are also given. Finally, fuzzy associative memories tables are introduced. Show more
DOI: 10.3233/IFS-1993-1306
Citation: Journal of Intelligent and Fuzzy Systems, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 253-264, 1993
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