The principle of possibility maximum specificity as a basis for measurement uncertainty expression | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

The principle of possibility maximum specificity as a basis for measurement uncertainty expression


Abstract:

This paper deals with the foundations of a possibility/fuzzy expression of measurement uncertainty. Indeed the notion of possibility distribution is clearly identified to...Show More

Abstract:

This paper deals with the foundations of a possibility/fuzzy expression of measurement uncertainty. Indeed the notion of possibility distribution is clearly identified to a family of probability distributions whose coverage intervals are included in the level cuts of the possibility distribution Thus the fuzzy inclusion ordering, dubbed specificity ordering, constitutes the basis of a maximal specificity principle. The latter is sounder than the maximal entropy principle to deal with cases of partial or incomplete information in a measurement context. The two approaches can be compared on some common practical measurement cases thanks to the respective coverage intervals they provide.
Date of Conference: 06-07 July 2009
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 18 August 2009
CD:978-1-4244-3593-7
Conference Location: Bucharest, Romania

I. Introduction

In very many cases, the obj ective of uncertainty evaluation is to determine a coverage interval (or coverage region) for the measurement result. Commonly, this coverage interval will be for a 95 % coverage probability, an interval that is expected to contain 95 % of the values that could be attributed to the output quantity. There is no compelling scientific reason for this choice. It almost certainly stems from the traditional use of 95 % in statistical hypothesis testing, although the reasons for the choice in that area are very different. The overriding reason for the use of 95 % in uncertainty evaluation is a practical one [1]. It has become so well established that for purpose of comparison with other results its use is almost mandated.

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References

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