Results 201 to 210 of about 53,932 (245)

Double-quantified linguistic variable

Information Sciences, 2021
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Lisheng Jiang, Huchang Liao
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Hierarchical Linguistic Variables

NAFIPS 2009 - 2009 Annual Meeting of the North American Fuzzy Information Processing Society, 2009
The linguistic terms of a Linguistic Variable classify the numeric values of their Universe. In that sense, they are categories which are defined over a space of values. In this work a hierarchical model of a linguistic variable is analyzed from the point of view of the principles of categorization and hierarchy theory.
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Towards temporal linguistic variables

10th IEEE International Conference on Fuzzy Systems. (Cat. No.01CH37297), 2002
Although fuzzy logic has been successfully applied in many different problem domains, fuzzy solutions typically structure the problem task as one of static categorisation. This may not be appropriate for dynamic systems, especially where higher-order information is unavailable.
J. Halliwell, null Qiang Shen
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THE LINGUISTIC VARIABLES.

This study explores the concept of linguistic variables within the field of regional dialectology, focusing on how language varies across geographical areas.Linguistic variables—features of pronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary—are key to identifying and analyzing regional dialects.
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The Linguistic Variables

2019
This chapter outlines each of the linguistic variables studied in this New England English project, including r-lessness, START/PALM-fronting, “broad-a” BATH, NORTH/FORCE distinctions, MARY/MARRY/MERRY distinctions, LOT/THOUGHT distinctions, nasal short-a, and other traditional regional features.
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Second thoughts on linguistic variables

18th International Conference of the North American Fuzzy Information Processing Society - NAFIPS (Cat. No.99TH8397), 2003
Linguistic variables, as defined by L.A. Zadeh (1987), play a central role in the modelling of approximate reasoning by fuzzy sets. Graduate predicates habitually form bipolar linguistic variables by means of a predicate P and its antonym predicate aP, and, hence, in order to manage a linguistic variable V, both the principal term P (or a predicate ...
A.R. De Soto, E. Trillas
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Linguistic Variables

1993
This book for the first time reconstructs in a single theoretical framework the more important approaches to linguistic variation found in areas as different as historical linguistics, dialectology, sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics, stylistics, contrastive linguistics, language typology, so-called evaluation grammar, and current Chomskyan generative
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