: James J. Buckley, University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL, USA
: Fuzzy Probability and Statistics
: Springer-Verlag
: 9783540331902
: 1
: CHF 75.50
:
: Naturwissenschaft
: English
: 296
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

This book combines material from our previous books FP (Fuzzy Probabilities: New Approach and Applications,Physica-Verlag, 2003) and FS (Fuzzy Statistics, Springer, 2004), plus has about one third new results. From FP we have material on basic fuzzy probability, discrete (fuzzy Poisson,binomial) and continuous (uniform, normal, exponential) fuzzy random variables. From FS we included chapters on fuzzy estimation and fuzzy hypothesis testing related to means, variances, proportions, correlation and regression. New material includes fuzzy estimators for arrival and service rates, and the uniform distribution, with applications in fuzzy queuing theory. Also, new to this book, is three chapters on fuzzy maximum entropy (imprecise side conditions) estimators producing fuzzy distributions and crisp discrete/continuous distributions. Other new results are: (1) two chapters on fuzzy ANOVA (one-way and two-way), (2) random fuzzy numbers with applications to fuzzy Monte Carlo studies, and (3) a fuzzy nonparametric estimator for the median.

Written for:
Engineers, researchers, and students in Fuzziness and Applied Mathematics.

Keywords:< r /> Fuzzy Probabilities
Fuzzy Statistics

Chapter 1
Introduction
(p. 1-2)

1.1 Introduction

This book is written in the following divisions: (1) the introductory chapters consisting of Chapters 1 and 2, (2) introduction to fuzzy probability in Chapters 3-5, (3) introduction to fuzzy estimation in Chapters 6-11, (4) fuzzy/crisp estimators of probability density (mass) functions based on a fuzzy maximum entropy principle in Chapters 12-14, (5) introduction to fuzzy hypothesis testing in Chapters 15-18, (6) fuzzy correlation and regression in Chapters 19-25, (7) Chapters 26 and 27 are about a fuzzy ANOVA model, (8) a fuzzy estimator of the median in nonparametric statistics in Chapter 28, and (9) random fuzzy numbers with applications to Monte Carlo studies in Chapter 29. First we need to be familiar with fuzzy sets. All you need to know about fuzzy sets for this book comprises Chapter 2. For a beginning introduction to fuzzy sets and fuzzy logic see [8]. One other item relating to fuzzy sets, needed in fuzzy hypothesis testing, is also in Chapter 2: how we will determine which of the following three possibilities is true M<, N, M>, N or M . N, for two fuzzy numbers M, N.

The introduction to fuzzy probability in Chapters 3-5 is based on the book [1] and the reader is referred to that book for more information, especially applications. What is new here is: (1) using a nonlinear optimization program in Maple [13] to solve certain optimization problems in fuzzy probability, where previously we used a graphical method, and (2) a new algorithm, suitable for using only pencil and paper, for solving some restricted fuzzy arithmetic problems.

The introduction to fuzzy estimation is based on the book [3] and we refer the interested reader to that book for more about fuzzy estimators. The fuzzy estimators omitted from this book are those forµ1 .µ2, p1 . p2, s1/s2, etc. Fuzzy estimators for arrival and service rates is from [2] and [4]. The reader should see those book for applications in queuing networks. Also, fuzzy estimators for the uniform probability density can be found in [4], but the derivation of these fuzzy estimators is new to this book. The fuzzy uniform distribution was used for arrival/service rates in queuing models in [4].

The fuzzy/crisp probability density estimators based on a fuzzy maximum entropy principle are based on the papers [5],[6] and [7] and are new to this book. In Chapter 12 we obtain fuzzy results but in Chapters 13 and 14 we determine crisp discrete and crisp continuous probability densities. The introduction to fuzzy hypothesis testing in Chapters 15-18 is based on the book [3] and the reader needs to consult that book for more fuzzy hypothesis testing. What we omitted are tests onµ1 =µ2, p1 = p2, s1 = s2, etc.

The chapters on fuzzy correlation and regression come from [3]. The results on the fuzzy ANOVA (Chapters 26 and 27) and a fuzzy estimator for the median (Chapter 28) are new and have not been published before. The chapter on random fuzzy numbers (Chapter 29) is also new to this book and these results have not been previously published. Applications of crisp random numbers to Monte Carlo studies are well known and we also plan to use random fuzzy numbers in Monte Carlo studies. Our first use of random fuzzy numbers will be to get approximate solutions to fuzzy optimization problems whose solution is unknown or computationally very difficult. However, this becomes a rather large project and will probably be the topic of a future book.

Chapter 30 contains selected Maple/Solver ([11],[13],[20]) commands used in the book to solve optimization problems or to generate the figures. The final chapter has a summary and suggestions for future research. All chapters can be read independently. This means that some material is repeated in a sequence of chapters. For example, in Chapters 15-18 on fuzzy hypothesis testing in each chapter we first review the crisp case, then fuzzify to obtain our fuzzy statistic which is then used to construct the fuzzy critical values and we finally present a numerical example. However, you should first know about fuzzy estimators (Chapters 6-11) before going on to fuzzy hypothesis testing.

A most important part of our models in fuzzy statistics is that we always start with a random sample producing crisp (non-fuzzy) data. Other authors discussing fuzzy statistics usually begin with fuzzy data. We assume we have a random sample giving real number data x1, x2, ..., xn which is then used to generate our fuzzy estimators. Using fuzzy estimators in hypothesis testing and regression obviously leads to fuzzy hypothesis testing and fuzzy regression.

Contents7
Chapter 1 Introduction14
1.1 Introduction14
1.2 Notation16
1.3 Previous Research17
1.4 Figures17
1.5 Maple/Solver Commands18
1.6 References18
Chapter 2 Fuzzy Sets20
2.1 Introduction20
2.2 Fuzzy Sets20
2.3 Fuzzy Arithmetic24
2.4 Fuzzy Functions26
2.5 Ordering Fuzzy Numbers30
2.6 References31
Chapter 3 Fuzzy Probability Theory33
3.1 Introduction33
3.2 Fuzzy Probabilities from Con . dence Intervals33
3.3 Fuzzy Probabilities from Expert Opinion35
3.4 Restricted Fuzzy Arithmetic36
3.5 Fuzzy Probability44
3.6 Fuzzy Conditional Probability48
3.7 Fuzzy Independence50
3.8 Fuzzy Bayes’ Formula52
3.9 Applications53
3.10 References60
Chapter 4 Discrete Fuzzy Random Variables62
4.1 Introduction62
4.2 Fuzzy Binomial62
4.3 Fuzzy Poisson65
4.4 Applications68
4.5 References71
Chapter 5 Continuous Fuzzy Random Variables72
5.1 Introduction72
5.2 Fuzzy Uniform72
5.3 Fuzzy Normal74
5.4 Fuzzy Negative Exponential76
5.5 Applications78
5.6 References85
Chapter 6 Estimate µ, Variance Known86
6.1 Introduction86
6.2 Fuzzy Estimation86
6.3 Fuzzy Estimator of87
6.4 References90
Chapter 7 Estimate µ, Variance Unknown91
7.1 Fuzzy Estimator of91
7.2 References93
Chapter 8 Estimate p, Binomial Population94
8.1 Fuzzy Estimator of94
8.2 References96
Chapter 9 Estimate s2 from a Normal Population97
9.1 Introduction97
9.2 Biased Fuzzy Estimator97
9.3 Unbiased Fuzzy Estimator98
9.4 References102
Chapter 10 Fuzzy Arrival/Service Rates103
10.1 Introduction103
10.2 Fuzzy Arrival Rate103
10.3 Fuzzy Service Rate105
10.4 References107
Chapter 11 Fuzzy Uniform108
11.1 Introduction108
11.2 Fuzzy Estimators108
11.3 References112
Chapter 12 Fuzzy Max Entropy Principle113
12.1 Introduction113
12.2 Maximum Entropy Principle113
12.3 Imprecise Side-Conditions117
12.4 Summary and Conclusions119
12.5 References120
Chapter 13 Max Entropy: Crisp Discrete Solutions121
13.1 Introduction121
13.2 Max Entropy: Discrete Distributions121
13.3 Max Entropy: Imprecise Side-Conditions122
13.4 Summary and Conclusions129
13.5 References129
Chapter 14 Max Entropy: Crisp Continuous Solutions131
14.1 Introduction131
14.2 Max Entropy: Probability Densities132
14.3 Max Entropy: Imprecise Side-Conditions133
14.4 E = [0,M]133
14.5 E = [0,8)141
14.6 E = (.8,8)145
14.7 Summary and Conclusions146
14.8 References146
Chapter 15 Tests on µ, Variance Known148
15.1 Introduction148
15.2 Non-Fuzzy Case148
15.3 Fuzzy Case149
15.4 One-Sided Tests153
15.5 References154
Chapter 16 Tests on µ, Variance Unknown155
16.1 Introduction155
16.2 Crisp Case155
16.3 Fuzzy Model156
16.4 References161
Chapter 17 Tests on p for a Binomial Population162
17.1 Introduction162
17.2 Non-Fuzzy Test162