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Baza reguł wiarygodności (RIMER)×Rozmyte mapy kognitywne (FCM)×Indukcja reguł (RIPPER)×
DziedzinaObliczenia miękkieObliczenia miękkieUczenie maszynowe
RodzinaMachine learningProcess / pipelineMachine learning
Rok powstania200619861995
TwórcaJian-Bo Yang et al.Bart KoskoWilliam W. Cohen
TypExpert-system inference with belief distributionsFuzzy causal/feedback network for scenario analysisSupervised rule learning algorithm
Źródło pierwotneYang, J.-B., Liu, J., Wang, J., Sii, H.-S., & Wang, H.-W. (2006). Belief rule-base inference methodology using the evidential reasoning approach—RIMER. IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics—Part A, 36(2), 266–285. DOI ↗Kosko, B. (1986). Fuzzy cognitive maps. International Journal of Man-Machine Studies, 24(1), 65–75. DOI ↗Cohen, W. W. (1995). Fast effective rule induction. Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Machine Learning, 115–123. DOI ↗
Inne nazwyRIMER, Belief Rule-Based System, BRB System, İnanç Kural Tabanlı ÇıkarımFCM, Kosko cognitive map, causal cognitive map, bulanık bilişsel haritalarRIPPER, Propositional Rule Learning, Kural Tümevarımı, Inductive Rule Learning
Pokrewne342
PodsumowanieBelief Rule Base (BRB), introduced by Yang et al. in 2006 under the RIMER framework, is an expert-system inference methodology that extends classical if-then rules by attaching belief degree distributions to rule consequents. It combines rule-based reasoning with the Evidential Reasoning (ER) approach, enabling the representation and propagation of uncertainty, incompleteness, and vagueness in complex decision problems across engineering, risk assessment, and management domains.A fuzzy cognitive map, introduced by Bart Kosko in 1986, represents a system as a network of concepts connected by signed, weighted causal links, and simulates how the concepts influence one another over time. By combining the intuitive structure of a cognitive map with fuzzy weights and iterative activation, FCMs let experts encode causal knowledge and then run what-if scenarios — making them popular for policy analysis, strategic decision-making, and modelling complex socio-technical systems.Rule Induction, and specifically the RIPPER (Repeated Incremental Pruning to Produce Error Reduction) algorithm, is a supervised machine learning method that learns a compact set of IF-THEN classification rules from labeled training data. Introduced by William W. Cohen in 1995, RIPPER applies a separate-and-conquer strategy combined with minimum description length (MDL) pruning to generate rules that are both accurate and interpretable, making it a landmark algorithm in the field of inductive rule learning.
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ScholarGatePorównaj metody: Belief Rule Base · Fuzzy Cognitive Maps · Rule Induction. Pobrano 2026-06-20 z https://scholargate.app/pl/compare