Overview
Fuzzy logic programming systems can be roughly classified into two groups with respect to whether they involve fuzzy sets in programs or not. Systems that do not involve fuzzy sets usually have fuzzy terms materialized as predicate symbols and formulas weighted by real numbers in the interval [0, 1], interpreted as truth or uncertainty degrees. Examples of such systems are those of Lee (1972), Ishizuka and Kanai (1985), Mukaidono, Shen and Ding (1989), Atanassov and Georgiev (1993), Dubois, Lang and Prade (1994), Klawonn (1995), Muñoz-Hernández and Vaucheret (2005), and Chortaras, Stamou and Stafylopatis (2009). Systems that involve fuzzy sets include those of Hinde (1986), Umano (1987), Li and Liu (1990), Baldwin, Martin and Pilsworth (1995), Godo and Vila (1995), Virtanen (1996), Kullmann and Sandri (2000), and Straccia (2008).
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Cao, T.H. (2010). Annotated Fuzzy Logic Programming. In: Conceptual Graphs and Fuzzy Logic. Studies in Computational Intelligence, vol 306. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-14087-7_3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-14087-7_3
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