Sciweavers

SYNTHESE
2008

Appropriateness measures: an uncertainty model for vague concepts

14 years 11 days ago
Appropriateness measures: an uncertainty model for vague concepts
Abstract We argue that in the decision making process required for selecting assertible vague descriptions of an object, it is practical that communicating agents adopt an epistemic stance. This corresponds to the assumption that there exists a set of conventions governing the appropriate use of labels, and about which an agent has only partial knowledge and hence significant uncertainty. It is then proposed that this uncertainty is quantified by a measure corresponding to an agent's subjective belief that a vague concept label can be appropriately used to describe a particular object. We then apply Bayesian networks to investigate, in the case when knowledge of labelling conventions is represented by an ordering or ranking of the labels according to their appropriateness, how measure values allocated to basic labels can be used to directly infer the appropriateness measure of compound expressions. Keywords Appropriateness
Jonathan Lawry
Added 15 Dec 2010
Updated 15 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2008
Where SYNTHESE
Authors Jonathan Lawry
Comments (0)