Journals
Mechanical Engineering
Risk Management
Computer Science
Archives
Journal of Advanced Computational Intelligence and Intelligent Informatics
ISSN : | 1343-0130(Print) / 1883-8014(Online) |
---|---|
DOI : | 10.20965/jaciii.issn.1883-8014 |
Honorary Editor : | Lotfi A. Zadeh (University of California) |
Editors-in-Chief : | Kaoru Hirota (Beijing Institute of Technology), Toshio Fukuda (Nagoya University) |
Indexed in ESCI, Scopus, Compendex (Ei), DOAJ
- In Cooperation with :
- International Fuzzy Systems Association (IFSA), Japan Society for Fuzzy Theory and Intelligent Informatics (SOFT), Brazilian Society of Automatics (SBA), The Society of Instrument and Control Engineers (SICE), John von Neumann Computer Society (NJSZT), Vietnamese Fuzzy Systems Society (VFSS), Fuzzy Systems and Intelligent Technologies Research Society of Thailand (FIRST), Korean Institute of Intelligent Systems (KIIS), Taiwanese Association for Artificial Intelligence (TAAI)
TOPICS
2024-09-19T16:53:55+0000
Vol.11 (2007)
No.10
(Dec)
Selected Papers from InTech'05
Selected Papers from InTech'05
Editorial: | pp. 1175-1176 | |
Selected Papers from InTech'05 |
| |
Jirapun Daengdej, Pratit Santiprabhob, Hung T. Nguyen, and Vladik Kreinovich | ||
The main objective of the annual International Conference on Intelligent Technologies (InTech) is to bring together researchers and practitioners who implement intelligent and fuzzy technologies in real-world environment. The Sixth International Conference on Intelligent Technologies InTech was held in Phuket, Thailand, on December 14-16, 2005. Topics of InTech'05 included mathematical foundations of intelligent technologies, traditional Artificial Intelligent techniques, uncertainty processing and methods of soft computing, learning/adaptive systems/data mining, and applications of intelligent technologies. This special issue contains extended versions of 11 selected papers originally presented at InTech'05. These papers cover most of the topics of the conference. Several papers describe intelligent applications of traditional data processing and signal processing techniques. H. Sawada et al. use advanced signal processing techniques to separate it sounds coming from different directions and thus, to enable user to it control robots by voice in noisy environments. N. Theera-Umpon uses a techniques of selecting a Region of Interest to enhance the behavior of the signal processing techniques when it detecting buried landmines. N. Shigei et al. describe innovative vector quantization technique which improve it image compression. T. A. Duong et al. use entropy approach to automatically it detect different it chemicals in the air. A few papers describe new applications of fuzzy and computing-with-words techniques. J. Han et al. describe how fuzzy it clustering techniques can be enhanced when we take into account that different factors may have different importance and thus, must be taken with different weights. J. Y. Zhang et al. show how fuzzy techniques – specifically, fuzzy causal models – can improve the efficiency of computer systems for it e-commerce. I. Kobayashi et al. use a new techniques (similar to computing with words) that helps to it personalize help for software users. Several papers take into account that in real life, knowledge is it hierarchical, and decision making and control are also hierarc...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 1177-1183 | ||
A Robotic Auditory System that Interacts with Musical Sounds and Human Voices |
|
||
Hideyuki Sawada and Toshiya Takechi |
Paper: | pp. 1184-1188 | ||
Unexploded Ordnance Detection Using Region of Interest in Range Domain of Ground Penetrating Radar |
|
||
Nipon Theera-Umpon |
Paper: | pp. 1189-1196 | ||
Effective Multiple Vector Quantization for Image Compression |
|
||
Noritaka Shigei, Hiromi Miyajima, Michiharu Maeda, and Lixin Ma |
Paper: | pp. 1197-1203 | ||
Space Invariant Independent Component Analysis and ENose for Detection of Selective Chemicals in an Unknown Environment |
|
||
Tuan A. Duong, Margaret A. Ryan, and Vu A. Duong |
Paper: | pp. 1204-1208 | ||
An Iterative Approach for Fuzzy Clustering Based on Feature Significance |
|
||
Jianchao Han and Mohsen Beheshti |
Paper: | pp. 1209-1215 | ||
A Qualitative Model for Service Oriented Computing |
|
||
Jian Ying Zhang, Hepu Deng, and Ryszard Kowalczyk |
Paper: | pp. 1216-1223 | ||
Intelligent Help System that Synchronizes Application Software Operation: Toward Intelligent Tailor-Made Information Provision |
|
||
Ichiro Kobayashi and Tomoko Tsunawaki |
Paper: | pp. 1224-1231 | ||
Robust Non-Overshoot Time Responses Using Cascade Sliding Mode-PID Control |
|
||
Thanh H. Tran, Quang P. Ha, and Hung T. Nguyen |
Paper: | pp. 1232-1240 | ||
A Model of Hierarchical Knowledge Representation – Toward Knowware for Intelligent Systems |
|
||
Liya Ding |
Paper: | pp. 1241-1249 | ||
Distance Field Model Concept for Space Representation |
|
||
Yasuyuki Murai, Suguru Asaoka, Hiroyuki Tsuji, Hisayuki Tatsumi, and Shinji Tokumasu |
Paper: | pp. 1250-1261 | ||
State-Transition Computation Models and Program Correctness Thereon |
|
||
Kiyoshi Akama and Ekawit Nantajeewarawat |
Paper: | pp. 1262-1273 | ||
Graph/Knot Theoretical Analysis and Generation for Impossible Figures |
|
||
Kento Tarui, Fangyan Dong, Yutaka Hatakeyama, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 1274-1280 | ||
Joint Attention Between a Human Being and a Partner Robot Based on Computational Intelligence |
|
||
Naoyuki Kubota, Toshiyuki Shimizu, and Minoru Abe |
No.9
(Nov)
Special Issue on IEEE-ICCC 2006
Special Issue on IEEE-ICCC 2006
Editorial: | p. 1061 | |
IEEE-ICCC 2006 |
| |
Béla Pátkai, J. A. Tenreiro Machado, and Imre J. Rudas | ||
The study of systems and complexity has taken an intriguing route in the last hundred years, involved some of the most fascinating scientists, synthesised new fields of research and found novel applications requiring a fresh and revolutionary approach. Computational Cybernetics is a pragmatic response for the needs of engineering and social systems that integrates Cybernetics with Computational Intelligence. The IEEE International Conference on Computational Cybernetics (IEEE ICCC) has been successfully promoting the open-minded but scientifically sound integration of advanced mathematical and systems engineering methods in multidisciplinary domains since 2003. This special issue is a selection of the most characteristic and instructive papers from the previous IEEE ICCC conference, held in the summer of 2006 in Tallinn, Estonia. All of the papers in this issue represent vividly the broad scope and integrating nature of Computational Cybernetics. As Tar et al. notes in the first paper, a century-old conjecture of Hilbert solved fifty years ago can help us build new solutions in the 21st century in the field of nonlinear system control. In the same way each of the following papers represent a bridge between analogies from nature, computational methods and challenging multidisciplinary problems – helping us to convey our message to the professional audience of this journal. The special issue editors would like to thank the authors of the papers in this issue, the participants of the IEEE ICCC conferences for contributing to its stimulating, multidisciplinary environment and the professional support of the Journal editors and their staff. |
Paper: | pp. 1062-1071 | ||
Comparison of Fractional Robust- and Fixed Point Transformations- Based Adaptive Compensation of Dynamic Friction |
|
||
József K. Tar, Imre J. Rudas, and Béla Pátkai |
Paper: | pp. 1072-1078 | ||
Fractional Control of Coordinated Manipulators |
|
||
N. M. Fonseca Ferreira and J. A. Tenreiro Machado |
Paper: | pp. 1079-1085 | ||
Experimental Signal Analysis of Robot Impacts in a Fractional Calculus Perspective |
|
||
Miguel F. M. Lima, J. A. Tenreiro Machado, and Manuel Crisóstomo |
Paper: | pp. 1086-1091 | ||
Application of Fractional Calculus in the Control of Heat Systems |
|
||
Isabel S. Jesus and J. A. Tenreiro Machado |
Paper: | pp. 1092-1098 | ||
Optimization of Genetic Operators for Scheduling Problems |
|
||
António Ferrolho and Manuel Crisóstomo |
Paper: | pp. 1099-1106 | ||
Research on the Sheepdog Problem Using Cellular Automata |
|
||
Yoshinobu Adachi and Masayoshi Kakikura |
Paper: | pp. 1107-1113 | ||
Supporting Lifecycle Management of Product Data by Organized Descriptions and Behavior Definitions of Engineering Objects |
|
||
László Horváth |
Paper: | pp. 1114-1121 | ||
Feedback Control of an Inverted Pendulum by Use of Artificial Intelligence |
|
||
Webjørn Rekdalsbakken |
Paper: | pp. 1122-1127 | ||
Computational Intelligence in Circuit Synthesis |
|
||
Cecília Reis and J. A. Tenreiro Machado |
Paper: | pp. 1129-1135 | ||
Estimation of Protein Function Using Optimized Finite State Automaton Based on Accumulated Amino Acid Residue Scores |
|
||
Shinji Chiba and Ken Sugawara |
Paper: | pp. 1136-1143 | ||
Arbitrary-Shaped Cluster Separation Using One-Dimensional Data Mapping and Histogram Segmentation |
|
||
Seiji Hotta, Senya Kiyasu, and Sueharu Miyahara |
Paper: | pp. 1144-1148 | ||
Generalized Predictive Control in Flying Shear Equipment |
|
||
Jiun-Yaw Wang, Mao-Lin Chen, and Ching-Long Shih |
Paper: | pp. 1149-1158 | ||
Double-Deck Elevator Group Supervisory Control System Using Genetic Network Programming with Ant Colony Optimization with Evaporation |
|
||
Lu Yu, Jin Zhou, Shingo Mabu, Kotaro Hirasawa, Jinglu Hu, and Sandor Markon |
Paper: | pp. 1159-1164 | ||
Semi-Supervised Pattern Classification Utilizing Fuzzy Clustering and Nonlinear Mapping of Data |
|
||
Weiwei Du and Kiichi Urahama |
Paper: | pp. 1165-1172 | ||
Predictive Control of Harmonic Drive in Automotive Application |
|
||
Ádam Varga and Béla Lantos |
No.8
(Oct)
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2006 – No.3
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2006 – No.3
Editorial: | p. 883 | |
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2006 – No.3 |
| |
Yasuhisa Hasegawa | ||
This third special issue on papers from SCIS&ISIS 2006 draws its contents from a highly successful conference attracting 526 participants from 31 countries and 464 original papers, including 297 in 60 organized sessions. The invaluable contributions by the session organizers made this conference attractive and worthwhile in soft computing and advanced intelligent systems research. Having chaired the conference's organized session committee, I wish to express my gratitude for their assistance. Some 42 selected papers have already been published in Volumes 1 and 2 of this special issue (Vol.11, Nos.6 and 7). The present volume introduces 22 papers from organized sessions in extended form after preliminary selection and review by session organizers, chairs, and international SCIS&ISIS 2006 program committees. These papers cover fields related to intelligent systems, ranging from theoretical to practical issues such as self-organizing maps, neural networks, fuzzy clustering, fuzzy control, intelligent robots, secure smart spaces, data mining, and intelligent communication systems. The guest editors believe that readers will be inspired by these highly interesting papers, which contain clues to exploring new and seminal ideas for that next step in research. I thank all of the authors and reviewers for the time and effort they put into this special issue. I am grateful to Prof. Toshio Fukuda of Nagoya University and to Prof. Kaoru Hirota of the Tokyo Institute of Technology for the opportunity to take part in this work. |
Paper: | pp. 884-890 | ||
Maintaining Individual Diversity by Fuzzy c -Means Selection |
|
||
Yoshiaki Sakakura, Noriyuki Taniguchi, Yukinobu Hoshino, and Katsuari Kamei |
Paper: | pp. 891-896 | ||
A Joint-Receipt Conjoint Structure and its Additive Representation |
|
||
Yutaka Matsushita |
Paper: | pp. 897-904 | ||
Fuzzy Clustering Based on Total Uncertainty Degree |
|
||
Tomohito Esaki, Tomonori Hashiyama, and Yahachiro Tsukamoto |
Paper: | pp. 905-913 | ||
Evolution and Learning Mediated by Differences in Developmental Timing |
|
||
Kei Ohnishi, Masato Uchida, and Yuji Oie |
Paper: | pp. 914-921 | ||
Fuzzy Activity Network Method for Project Scheduling Under Resource Constraints |
|
||
Luong Duc Long and Ario Ohsato |
Paper: | pp. 922-930 | ||
Adjustability of Neural Networks with Variant Connection Weights for Obstacle Avoidance in an Intelligent Wheelchair |
|
||
Toshihiko Yasuda, Hajime Tanaka, Kazushi Nakamura, and Katsuyuki Tanaka |
Paper: | pp. 931-936 | ||
Soft-Target-Based Predictive Fuzzy Control for a Cart-Pendulum System with Dynamic Constraints |
|
||
Yougen Chen and Seiji Yasunobu |
Paper: | pp. 937-945 | ||
Hardware Feedback Self-Organizing Map and its Application to Mobile Robot Location Identification |
|
||
Hiroomi Hikawa, Kazutoshi Harada, and Takenori Hirabayashi |
Paper: | pp. 946-955 | ||
The Design of Central Pattern Generators Based on the Matsuoka Oscillator to Generate Rhythmic Human-Like Movement for Biped Robots |
|
||
Guang Lei Liu, Maki K. Habib, Keigo Watanabe, and Kiyotaka Izumi |
Paper: | pp. 956-963 | ||
Particle Swarm Optimization for Jump Height Maximization of a Serial Link Robot |
|
||
Takeshi Matsui, Masatoshi Sakawa, Takeshi Uno, Kosuke Kato, Mitsuru Higashimori, and Makoto Kaneko |
Paper: | pp. 964-971 | ||
Motion Overlap for a Mobile Robot to Express its Mind |
|
||
Kazuki Kobayashi and Seiji Yamada |
Paper: | pp. 972-978 | ||
A Hybrid Learning Strategy for Real Hardware of Swing-Up Pendulum |
|
||
Shingo Nakamura, Ryo Saegusa, and Shuji Hashimoto |
Paper: | pp. 979-988 | ||
Realization of Rapid Movement for Legged Entertainment Robots Using Two New Actuators, the Inertia Actuator and the Cam Charger |
|
||
Amir Ali Forough Nassiraei, Kazuo Ishii, Seiji Masakado, Takayuki Matsuo, Kodai Ichikawa, Hajime Fukushima, Masayuki Murata, Takashi Sonoda, Isao Takahira, and Tsutomu Miki |
Paper: | pp. 989-997 | ||
Acquisition of Behavioral Patterns Depends on Self-Embodiment Based on Robot Learning Under Multiple Instructors |
|
||
Masato Kotake, Daisuke Katagami, and Katsumi Nitta |
Paper: | pp. 998-1006 | ||
Training of Agent Positioning Using Human’s Instruction |
|
||
Hidehisa Akiyama, Daisuke Katagami, and Katsumi Nitta |
Paper: | pp. 1007-1014 | ||
Anthropomorphization Framework for Human-Object Communication |
|
||
Hirotaka Osawa, Jun Mukai, and Michita Imai |
Paper: | pp. 1015-1022 | ||
A Proposal of a Language-Based Context-Sensitive Programming System |
|
||
Toru Sugimoto, Noriko Ito, and Shino Iwashita |
Paper: | pp. 1023-1029 | ||
Towards Building Secure Smart Spaces for Information Security in the Physical World |
|
||
Shun Hattori and Katsumi Tanaka |
Paper: | pp. 1030-1042 | ||
Downsized Evolutionary Video Processing for Lips Tracking and Data Acquisition |
|
||
Takuya Akashi, Yuji Wakasa, Kanya Tanaka, Stephen Karungaru, and Minoru Fukumi |
Paper: | pp. 1043-1048 | ||
Forest and Field Fire Search System Using MODIS Data |
|
||
Eiji Nunohiro, Kei Katayama, Kenneth J. Mackin, and Jong Geol Park |
Paper: | pp. 1049-1058 | ||
Use of Fuzzy Neural Network in Diagnosing Postmenopausal Women with Osteoporosis Based on Dental Panoramic Radiographs |
|
||
Agus Zainal Arifin, Akira Asano, Akira Taguchi, Takashi Nakamoto, Masahiko Ohtsuka, Mikio Tsuda, Yoshiki Kudo, and Keiji Tanimoto |
No.7
(Sep)
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2006 – No.2
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2006 – No.2
Editorial: | p. 727 | |
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2006 – No.2 |
| |
Hajime Nobuhara | ||
As mentioned in the editorial for the special issue on selected papers from SCIS & ISIS 2006 (No.1) by Dr. Naoyuki Kubota, the 3rd International Conference on Soft Computing and Intelligent Systems (SCIS) and the 7th International Symposium on Advanced Intelligent Systems (ISIS) have been highly successful with 464 original papers accepted for presentation and participants numbering 526. We have selected approximately 50 quality papers to be published in extended form in the Special Issue of the Journal of Advanced Computational Intelligence and Intelligent Informatics, following publication of the first volume (Vol.11, No.6) comprising 23 papers. This second volume of the SCIS & ISIS 2006 special issue includes 19 papers covering the cutting edge of computational intelligence, and the guest editors believe that readers will be inspired by the highly interesting contents containing clues to the new frontier of the computational intelligence. linebreak Related areas include image processing, control, sensor fusion, data/context/ network analysis, genetic algorithms, ontology, VHDL, game theory, and robotics among others.smallskip I would like to thank all the authors and reviewers for their valuable contributions in making this volume possible. I am also grateful to Editors-in-Chief Prof. Toshio Fukuda of Nagoya University and Prof. Kaoru Hirota of the Tokyo Institute of Technology, Dr. Toshiaki Murofushi who served as general chair of SICS & ISIS 2006, Dr. Naoyuki Kubota who was the SCIS & ISIS 2006 program chair, and the SCIS & ISIS 2006 conference staff for inviting me to serve as Guest Editor of this Journal. Last, I would like to thank the Fuji Technology Press staff, especially Dr. Kazuki Ohmori. |
Paper: | pp. 728-734 | ||
Access Control and Scalable Encryption Using a Stream Cipher for JPEG 2000 Encoded Images |
|
||
Ayman Haggag, Mohamed Ghoneim, Jianming Lu, and Takashi Yahagi |
Paper: | pp. 735-744 | ||
Fuzzy Sensor Fusion for Humanitarian Demining |
|
||
Zakarya Zyada, Yasuhiro Kawai, Takayuki Matsuno, and Toshio Fukuda |
Paper: | pp. 745-750 | ||
Robust Output Feedback Guaranteed Cost Control of Uncertain Fuzzy Systems with Immeasurable Premise Variables |
|
||
Jun Yoneyama |
Paper: | pp. 751-758 | ||
A Pseudo Data Generation Method and a Two-Stage Quantitation Method for Simultaneous Determination Sensor of Nucleotide Derivatives |
|
||
Akito Fukuda, Sayaka Kondo, Kenichi Maruyama, Koji Suzuki, and Masafumi Hagiwara |
Paper: | pp. 759-766 | ||
Generation of Interesting Story from Picture Information |
|
||
Shigeru Kato and Takehisa Onisawa |
Paper: | pp. 767-771 | ||
Applying SIP VoIP to Context-Aware Telephony |
|
||
Hsien-Chang Wang, Gu-Jun Chen, and Jenq-Muh Hsu |
Paper: | pp. 772-779 | ||
Network Analysis of the Four Gospels and the Catechism of the Catholic Church |
|
||
Hajime Murai and Akifumi Tokosumi |
Paper: | pp. 780-786 | ||
Neural Network Model for Word Sense Disambiguation Using Up/Down State and Morphoelectrotonic Transform |
|
||
Norifumi Watanabe and Shun Ishizaki |
Paper: | pp. 787-792 | ||
Handwriting Recognition Applications for Tablet PCs |
|
||
Dat Tran, Wanli Ma, and Dharmendra Sharma |
Paper: | pp. 793-802 | ||
Genetic Algorithm for the Optimization of Collaborative Systems |
|
||
Tad Gonsalves, Shinichiro Baba, and Kiyoshi Itoh |
Paper: | pp. 803-816 | ||
Coincidence-Based Scoring of Mappings in Ontology Alignment |
|
||
Seyed H. Haeri (Hossein), Hassan Abolhassani, Vahed Qazvinian, and Babak Bagheri Hariri |
Paper: | pp. 817-824 | ||
Automatic Generation of VHDL for Control Logic of Air Conditioning Using Evolutionary Computation |
|
||
Kazuyuki Kojima and Keiichi Watanuki |
Paper: | pp. 825-832 | ||
A Study on Modeling Error Estimation for Mobile Robot Based on Coevolutionary Computation and Image Processing |
|
||
Halpage Chinthaka Nuwandika Premachandra, Hiroharu Kawanaka, Tomohiro Yoshikawa, Shinji Tsuruoka, and Tsuyoshi Shinogi |
Paper: | pp. 833-841 | ||
In What Sense is “the Prisoner’s Dilemma Game” a Dilemma for a Human or a Programmed Agent? |
|
||
Shihomi Wada and Keiji Suzuki |
Paper: | pp. 842-847 | ||
Knowledge Engineering and Embedded Systems Software: Educational Challenges |
|
||
Kosuke Imamura |
Paper: | pp. 848-857 | ||
Local Character Tensors for 3D Registration Method on Free-View Datasets |
|
||
Jingjing Wang, Fangyan Dong, Yutaka Hatakeyama, Hajime Nobuhara, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 858-866 | ||
Network Distributed Monitoring System for Home Service Robots Based on RT Middleware |
|
||
Songmin Jia, Harunori Gakuhari, and Kunikatsu Takase |
Paper: | pp. 867-874 | ||
Analyzing Usage of Indoor Space from Ecological Aspects Based on Constraint-Oriented Fuzzy Sets |
|
||
Tomoko Ohya, Masanori Shimamoto, Takayuki Shiose, Hiroshi Kawakami, and Osamu Katai |
Paper: | pp. 875-879 | ||
Controlling Bus Suspension Using an Optimal Fuzzy Controller |
|
||
Tadeo Armenta and Miguel Strefezza |
No.6
(Jul)
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2006 – No.1
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2006 – No.1
Editorial: | p. 535 | |
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2006 – No.1 |
| |
Naoyuki Kubota | ||
SCIS & ISIS is a biennial international joint conference in the field of soft computing and intelligent systems, including branches of researches from fuzzy systems, neural networks, evolutionary computation, multi-agent systems, artificial intelligence or robotics. SCIS & ISIS 2006 falls on the 3rd International Conference on Soft Computing and Intelligent Systems (SCIS) and the 7th International Symposium on Advanced Intelligent Systems (ISIS) held at Tokyo Institute of Technology, in Tokyo, Japan, on September 20-24, 2006. In this conference, 464 original papers were accepted for presentation and the number of attendees was 526. After preliminary selection and review made by the session chairs and the International Program Committees of SCIS & ISIS 2006, we have selected more than 50 papers to be published in extended form in the Special Issue of the Journal of Advanced Computational Intelligence and Intelligent Informatics. The accepted papers are published as the special issues in Vol.11, No.6, 7, and 8 in 2007. This current issue presents 23 papers and covers most of the topics of the conference including fuzzy theories, self-organizing maps, and the optimization of neural networks. The learning and search methods in computational intelligence and real-world applications to image processing, robotics and manufacturing systems are highlighted in this current issue. I would like to thank all the authors and reviewers for their contribution to make this special issue possible. I am also grateful to Prof. Toshio Fukuda, Nagoya University and Prof. Kaoru Hirota, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Editors-in-chief, for inviting me to serve as Guest Editor of this Journal. |
Paper: | pp. 536-545 | ||
Fuzzy Concept Lattices Constrained by Hedges |
|
||
Radim Belohlavek and Vilem Vychodil |
Paper: | pp. 546-553 | ||
Constructing Cost-Sensitive Fuzzy-Rule-Based Systems for Pattern Classification Problems |
|
||
Tomoharu Nakashima, Yasuyuki Yokota, Hisao Ishibuchi, Gerald Schaefer, Aleš Drastich, and Michal Závišek |
Paper: | pp. 554-560 | ||
Unsupervised and Semi-Supervised Graph-Spectral Algorithms for Robust Extraction of Arbitrarily Shaped Fuzzy Clusters |
|
||
Weiwei Du and Kiichi Urahama |
Paper: | pp. 561-569 | ||
Analysis of New Aggregation Operators: Mean 3Π |
|
||
Andrei Doncescu, Sebastien Regis, Katsumi Inoue, and Richard Emilion |
Paper: | pp. 570-581 | ||
A Backward Feature Selection by Creating Compact Neural Network Using Coherence Learning and Pruning |
|
||
Md. Monirul Kabir, Md. Shahjahan, and Kazuyuki Murase |
Paper: | pp. 582-592 | ||
A Minimal Neural Network Ensemble Construction Method: A Constructive Approach |
|
||
M. A. H. Akhand and Kazuyuki Murase |
Paper: | pp. 593-599 | ||
An Optimal Design Method for Artificial Neural Networks by Using the Design of Experiments |
|
||
Eiichi Inohira and Hirokazu Yokoi |
Paper: | pp. 600-609 | ||
Improved Estimation of Embedding Parameters of Nonlinear Time Series by Structural Learning of Neural Network with Fuzzy Regularizer |
|
||
Yusuke Manabe and Basabi Chakraborty |
Paper: | pp. 610-619 | ||
Self-Organizing Fusion Neural Networks |
|
||
Jung-Hua Wang, Chun-Shun Tseng, Sih-Yin Shen, and Ya-Yun Jheng |
Paper: | pp. 620-625 | ||
Neighbor Size of Initial Node Exchange and its Influence for SOM Learning |
|
||
Tsutomu Miyoshi |
Paper: | pp. 626-632 | ||
Self-Organizing Map with Generating and Moving Neurons in Visible Space |
|
||
Kanta Tachibana and Takeshi Furuhashi |
Paper: | pp. 633-640 | ||
Context Dependent Automatic Textile Image Annotation Using Networked Knowledge |
|
||
Yosuke Furukawa, Yusuke Kamoi, Tatsuya Sato, and Tomohiro Takagi |
Paper: | pp. 641-647 | ||
Dyadic Curvelet Transform (DClet) for Image Noise Reduction |
|
||
Marjan Sedighi Anaraki, Fangyan Dong, Hajime Nobuhara, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 648-654 | ||
Edge Detection Model Based on Involuntary Tremors and Drifts of the Eye |
|
||
András Róka, Ádám Csapó, Barna Reskó, and Péter Baranyi |
Paper: | pp. 655-661 | ||
A Method to Estimate the Multimedia Communication Bands Based upon Multi-Order Markov Model |
|
||
Tetsuya Kojima, Lkhamsuren Enkhtur, Akiko Fujiwara, and Masahiro Aono |
Paper: | pp. 662-667 | ||
Fuzzy Observable Markov Models for Pattern Recognition |
|
||
Dat Tran, Wanli Ma, and Dharmendra Sharma |
Paper: | pp. 668-676 | ||
Reinforcement Learning for Penalty Avoidance in Continuous State Spaces |
|
||
Kazuteru Miyazaki and Shigenobu Kobayashi |
Paper: | pp. 677-680 | ||
Advanced Genetic Algorithms Based on Adaptive Partitioning Method |
|
||
Chang-Wook Han and Hajime Nobuhara |
Paper: | pp. 681-687 | ||
Human Head Tracking Based on Particle Swarm Optimization and Genetic Algorithm |
|
||
Indra Adji Sulistijono and Naoyuki Kubota |
Paper: | pp. 688-700 | ||
Multiresolutional Fusion of Perceptions Applied to Robot Navigation |
|
||
Özer Ciftcioglu, Michael S. Bittermann, and I. Sevil Sariyildiz |
Paper: | pp. 701-708 | ||
GML Topology Data Storage Schema Design |
|
||
Yuzhen Li, Jianming Lu, Jihong Guan, Mingying Fan, Ayman Haggag, and Takashi Yahagi |
Paper: | pp. 709-714 | ||
Implementation of Fixed-Point Control Algorithms Based on the Modified Delta Operator and Form for Intelligent Systems |
|
||
Tatsu Aoki |
Paper: | pp. 715-723 | ||
Advanced Multiple Product Flexible Manufacturing System Modelling Using Coloured Petri Net |
|
||
Tauseef Aized, Koji Takahashi, and Ichiro Hagiwara |
No.5
(Jun)
Regular papers
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 445-451 | ||
Color Restoration Algorithm Based on Color Instance Under Low Illumination |
|
||
Yutaka Hatakeyama, Akimichi Mitsuta, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 452-456 | ||
Generalized Net Model of Auditory Information Processing |
|
||
Vihren E. Chakarov, Krassimir T. Atanassov , and Anthony G. Shannon |
Paper: | pp. 457-463 | ||
Unfolding of Massive Laundry and Classification Types by Dual Manipulator |
|
||
Fumiaki Osawa, Hiroaki Seki, and Yoshitsugu Kamiya |
Paper: | pp. 464-468 | ||
Key Characteristics of Hymns |
|
||
Tatsuo Kamitani and Minoru Matsuda |
Paper: | pp. 469-477 | ||
Optimization Method RasID-GA for Numerical Constrained Optimization Problems |
|
||
Dongkyu Sohn, Shingo Mabu, Kotaro Hirasawa, and Jinglu Hu |
Paper: | pp. 478-490 | ||
Expanding Transformation: A Basis for Correctness Verification of Rewriting Rules |
|
||
Ekawit Nantajeewarawat, Kiyoshi Akama, and Hidekatsu Koike |
Paper: | pp. 491-501 | ||
Discrimination of Sidewalk Surface Condition Based on Image Textures and Meteorological Information |
|
||
Handri Santoso and Kazuo Nakamura |
Paper: | pp. 502-510 | ||
A Generalized Inference Method for Fuzzy Quantified and Truth-Qualified Natural Language Propositions |
|
||
Wataru Okamoto, Shun’ichi Tano, Atsushi Inoue, and Ryosuke Fujioka |
Paper: | pp. 511-521 | ||
Classifying 3D Real-World Texture Images by Combining Maximum Response 8, 4th Order of Auto Correlation and Colortons |
|
||
Aram Kawewong and Osamu Hasegawa |
Paper: | pp. 522-532 | ||
Interpretable Fuzzy Rules Acquisition of Coupled System Using Interactive Genetic Algorithms |
|
||
Dun-Yong Lu and Takehisa Onisawa |
No.4
(Apr)
Selected Papers from TAAI2005
Selected Papers from TAAI2005
Editorial: | p. 357 | |
Selected Papers from TAAI2005 |
| |
Wen-Yang Lin, Tzung-Pei Hong, and Shyi-Ming Chen | ||
The annual Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Applications (TAAI), held in Taiwan and hosted by the Taiwanese Association of Artificial Intelligence and other academic institution, has expanded to an international forum following the success of its previous nine conferences. It hopes to bring together researchers and scholars in all areas of artificial intelligence from leading institutes and industries worldwide to exchange ideas on these hi-tech fields. Over 200 papers and 6 special issues consisting of 30 invited papers were presented, making TAAI 2005 the greatest in the TAAI series. This special issue presents 11 papers from this prestigious event, each of which has received outstanding recommendations from the reviewers and has been revised by authors for this publication. These papers detail a variety of applications of different artificial intelligent technologies, ranging from nonlinear programming, data classification, dynamic knowledge acquisition, and complex time-series prediction to liver disease classification and automatic Chinese text summarization. Some also deal with theoretical aspect of intelligent technologies, including genetic algorithms, neural networks, support vector machines, ant-colony algorithms, and pseudo-Boolean functions. This issue thus concisely summarizes recent advances in artificial intelligence and its applications. We are sure that you will find it a valuable resource in the AI research community, and hope that it will inspire our readers in the development of new applications and advanced intelligent systems. As guest editors of this special issue, we would like to express our sincere gratitude to all of the authors for contributing their work to this special issue and to thank the referees for their untiring efforts to complete reviews within a limited time. Thanks also go to Mr. Kazuki Ohmori of Fuji Technology Press for his kind assistance in the publication of this special issue. Last but not least, we thank JACIII Editor-in-Chief Kaoru Hirota for the enthusiastic hospitality with which JACIII has supported this special issue. |
Paper: | pp. 358-364 | ||
Real-Coded Genetic Algorithm for Solving Generalized Polynomial Programming Problems |
|
||
Jui-Yu Wu and Yun-Kung Chung |
Paper: | pp. 365-372 | ||
A Novel Neuro-Fuzzy Inference System with Multi-Level Membership Function for Classification Applications |
|
||
Cheng-Jian Lin, Chi-Yung Lee, and Cheng-Hung Chen |
Paper: | pp. 373-380 | ||
Capturing Evolutional Knowledge Using Time Interval Tracing |
|
||
Shun-Chieh Lin, Chia-Wen Teng, and Shian-Shyong Tseng |
Paper: | pp. 381-388 | ||
A Hybrid System ASVR/NGARCH Tuned by Quantum-Based Minimization to Improve Forecasting Accuracy |
|
||
Bao Rong Chang |
Paper: | pp. 389-395 | ||
Classification Rule Extraction Based on Relevant, Irredundant Attributes and Rule Enlargement |
|
||
George Lashkia, Laurence Anthony, and Hiroyasu Koshimizu |
Paper: | pp. 396-402 | ||
Classification of Liver Disease from CT Images Using a Support Vector Machine |
|
||
Chien-Cheng Lee, Sz-Han Chen, and Yu-Chun Chiang |
Paper: | pp. 403-409 | ||
Asymptotic Behavior of Linear Approximations of Pseudo-Boolean Functions |
|
||
Guoli Ding, Robert F. Lax, Peter Chen, and Jianhua Chen |
Paper: | pp. 410-415 | ||
Dynamically Adjusting Migration Rates for Multi-Population Genetic Algorithms |
|
||
Tzung-Pei Hong, Wen-Yang Lin, Shu-Min Liu, and Jiann-Horng Lin |
Paper: | pp. 416-422 | ||
Automatic Extraction of Key Sentences via Word Sense Identification for Chinese Text Summarization |
|
||
Yau-Hwang Kuo and Hsun-Hui Huang |
Paper: | pp. 423-432 | ||
Mining Fuzzy Association Rules on Has-A and Is-A Hierarchical Structures |
|
||
Been-Chian Chien, Ming-Huang Zhong, and Jeng-Jung Wang |
Paper: | pp. 433-442 | ||
Improving Ant Colony Optimization Algorithms for Solving Traveling Salesman Problems |
|
||
Kuo-Sheng Hung, Shun-Feng Su, and Zne-Jung Lee |
No.3
(Mar)
Special Issue on Advances in Intelligent Data Processing
Special Issue on Advances in Intelligent Data Processing
Editorial: | pp. 259-260 | |
Advances in Intelligent Data Processing |
| |
Kok Wai Wong, Tamás Gedeon, and Chun Che Fung | ||
Technological advancement using intelligent techniques has provided solutions to many applications in diverse engineering disciplines. In application areas such as web mining, image processing, medical, and robotics, just one intelligent data processing technique may be inadequate for handling a task, and a combination or hybrid of intelligent data processing techniques becomes necessary. The sharp increase in activities in the development of innovative intelligent data processing technologies also attracted the interest of many researchers in applying intelligent data processing techniques in other application domains. In this special issue, we presented 12 research papers focusing on different aspects of intelligent data processing and its applications. We start with a paper entitled "An Activity Monitor Design Based on Wavelet Analysis and Wireless Sensor Networks," which focuses on using wavelet analysis and wireless sensor networks for monitoring the human physical condition. The second paper, "An Approach in Designing Hierarchy of Fuzzy Behaviors for Mobile Robot Navigation," presents a hierarchical approach using fuzzy theory to assist in the task of mobile robot navigation. It also discusses the design of hierarchical behavior of mobile robots using sensors. The third paper, "Toward Natural Communication: Human-Robot Gestural Interaction Using Pointing," also works with robots focusing more on the interaction between users and robots in which the robot recognizes pointing by a human user through intelligent data processing. The fourth paper, "Embodied Conversational Agents for H5N1 Pandemic Crisis," examines the use of intelligent software bots as an interaction tool for crisis communication. linebreaknewpage The work is based on a novel Automated Knowledge Extraction Agent (AKEA). There are many interests of using intelligent data processing techniques for image processing and analysis, as shown in the next few papers. The fifth paper, "A Feature Vector Approach for Inter-Query Learning for Content-Based Image Retrieval," presents relevance feedback based technique for content based image retrieval. It extends ...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 261-267 | ||
An Activity Monitor Design Based on Wavelet Analysis and Wireless Sensor Networks |
|
||
Qian Tian, Long Xie, and Noriyoshi Yamauchi |
Paper: | pp. 268-275 | ||
An Approach in Designing Hierarchy of Fuzzy Behaviors for Mobile Robot Navigation |
|
||
Long Thanh Ngo, Long The Pham, Phuong Hoang Nguyen, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 276-281 | ||
Toward Natural Communication: Human-Robot Gestural Interaction Using Pointing |
|
||
Eri Sato, Aika Nakajima, Jun Nakazato, and Toru Yamaguchi |
Paper: | pp. 282-288 | ||
Embodied Conversational Agents for H5N1 Pandemic Crisis |
|
||
Ong Sing Goh, Chun Che Fung, Kok Wai Wong, and Arnold Depickere |
Paper: | pp. 289-293 | ||
A Feature Vector Approach for Inter-Query Learning for Content-Based Image Retrieval |
|
||
Kien-Ping Chung and Chun Che Fung |
Paper: | pp. 294-300 | ||
Abstract Image Generation Based on Local Similarity Pattern |
|
||
Yasufumi Takama and Keisuke Shigemori |
Paper: | pp. 301-307 | ||
Cross-Resolution Image Similarity Modeling |
|
||
Mladen Jović, Yutaka Hatakeyama, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 308-311 | ||
Bayesian Spatial Autoregressive for Reducing Blurring Effect in Image |
|
||
Siana Halim |
Paper: | pp. 312-318 | ||
Logistic GMDH-Type Neural Network and its Application to Identification of X-Ray Film Characteristic Curve |
|
||
Tadashi Kondo and Junji Ueno |
Paper: | pp. 319-326 | ||
Classification of Online Game Players Using Action Transition Probability and Kullback Leibler Entropy |
|
||
Ruck Thawonmas and Ji-Young Ho |
Paper: | pp. 327-334 | ||
Parallel Learning Model and Topological Measurement for Self-Organizing Maps |
|
||
Michiharu Maeda, Hiromi Miyajima, and Noritaka Shigei |
Paper: | pp. 335-341 | ||
Optimal Size Fuzzy Models |
|
||
Tamás D. Gedeon, László T. Kóczy, and Alessandro Zorat |
Paper: | pp. 343-353 | ||
Adaptation and Self-Adaptation Mechanisms in Genetic Network Programming for Mining Association Rules |
|
||
Karla Taboada, Eloy Gonzales, Kaoru Shimada, Shingo Mabu, Kotaro Hirasawa, and Jinglu Hu |
No.2
(Feb)
Regular papers
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 135-141 | ||
Avoidance Ability of Redundant Mobile Manipulators During Hand Trajectory Tracking |
|
||
Mamoru Minami, Hiroshi Tanaka, and Yasushi Mae |
Paper: | pp. 142-148 | ||
Adaptive Action Selection of Body Expansion Behavior in Multi-Robot System Using Communication |
|
||
Tomohisa Fujiki, Kuniaki Kawabata, and Hajime Asama |
Paper: | pp. 149-154 | ||
A Semantic Concept Operation Based on Fuzzy Document Ordering System and its Application to Reuter Database |
|
||
Tadashi Ohashi, Hajime Nobuhara, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 155-161 | ||
Reinforcement Learning Scheme for Flocking Behavior Emergence |
|
||
Koichiro Morihiro, Teijiro Isokawa, Haruhiko Nishimura, Masahito Tomimasu, Naotake Kamiura, and Nobuyuki Matsui |
Paper: | pp. 162-167 | ||
FCM-Type Fuzzy Clustering of Mixed Databases Considering Nominal Variable Quantification |
|
||
Katsuhiro Honda, Ryo Uesugi, and Hidetomo Ichihashi |
Paper: | pp. 168-175 | ||
Hierarchical Parallel Placement Using a Genetic Algorithm for Realizing Low Power Consumption |
|
||
Masaya Yoshikawa and Hidekazu Terai |
Paper: | pp. 176-186 | ||
Infinite Computation in the Equivalent Transformation Model |
|
||
Hiroshi Mabuchi, Kiyoshi Akama, Hidekatsu Koike, and Katsunori Miura |
Paper: | pp. 187-194 | ||
Image Thresholding Computation Using Atanassov’s Intuitionistic Fuzzy Sets |
|
||
H. Bustince, E. Barrenechea, M. Pagola, and R. Orduna |
Paper: | pp. 195-201 | ||
New Fast Principal Component Analysis for Face Detection |
|
||
Hazem M. El-Bakry |
Paper: | pp. 202-209 | ||
New Similarity Measures of Intuitionistic Fuzzy Sets |
|
||
Hassan Rezaei and Masao Mukaidono |
Paper: | pp. 210-219 | ||
Constraint Solving Specializations for Equality on an Interval-Variable Domain |
|
||
Hiroshi Mabuchi, Kiyoshi Akama, Katsunori Miura, and Takahiko Ishikawa |
Paper: | pp. 220-231 | ||
Genetic and Bacterial Programming for B-Spline Neural Networks Design |
|
||
János Botzheim, Cristiano Cabrita, László T. Kóczy, and Antonio E. Ruano |
Paper: | pp. 232-241 | ||
Biological Rhythm Based Wearable Sleep State Observer |
|
||
Yuki Wakuda, Akiko Noda, Yasuhisa Hasegawa, Fumihito Arai, Toshio Fukuda, and Mitsuo Kawaguchi |
Paper: | pp. 242-249 | ||
Emulating Qubits with Fuzzy Logic |
|
||
M. Skander Hannachi, Yutaka Hatakeyama, and Kaoru Hirota |
No.1
(Jan)
Special Issue on Modeling Decisions for Artificial Intelligence
Special Issue on Modeling Decisions for Artificial Intelligence
Editorial: | p. 3 | |
Modeling Decisions for Artificial Intelligence |
| |
Vicenç Torra, Yasuo Narukawa, and Sadaaki Miyamoto | ||
This special issue presents seven papers that are revised and expanded versions of papers presented at the 2nd International Conference on "Modeling Decisions for Artificial Intelligence" (MDAI). This conference, that took place in Tsukuba (Japan) in July 2005, was the second of the series of MDAI conferences that were initiated in 2004 in Barcelona (Catalonia, Spain). In April 2006, the third edition was held in Tarragona (Catalonia, Spain) and the fourth one is planned in Kitakyushu (Japan) in August 2007. These series of conferences were initiated to foster the use of decision related tools as well as information fusion technologies within artificial intelligence applications. In this issue, we present enhanced version of seven papers presented in the conference. The first paper describes a tool that uses fuzzy logic and neural networks for assigning a treatment to rheumatism. The selection of the appropriate treatment follows oriental medicine. The second paper by Wanyama and Far describes a tool for trade-off analysis to be used in those situations related with decision making in which there is no dominant solution. The third paper is devoted to autonomous mobile robots. The authors describe a multi-layered fuzzy control system for the self-localization of the robot. Two papers devoted to fuzzy clustering follow in this issue. First, one that presents a regularization approach with nonlinear membership weights. One of the proposed methods makes not only possible to perform attraction of data to clusters but also repulsion between different clusters. The second paper on clustering proposes the simultaneous application of homogeneity analysis and fuzzy clustering through the consideration of an appropriate objective function that includes two types of memberships. The sixth paper presents a tool for e-mail classification. The tool brings the name of FIS-CRM that stands for Fuzzy Interrelations and Synonymy Conceptual Representation Model. The issue finishes with a paper on meta-heuristic algorithms for a class of container loading problems. To finish this introduction, we would like t...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 4-10 | ||
Applying Fuzzy Logic and Neural Network to Rheumatism Treatment in Oriental Medicine |
|
||
Cao Thang, Eric W. Cooper, Yukinobu Hoshino, and Katsuari Kamei |
Paper: | pp. 11-20 | ||
A Qualitative Reasoning Model for Tradeoff Analysis in Multiple Objective Decision Making |
|
||
Tom Wanyama and Behrouz Homayoun Far |
Paper: | pp. 21-27 | ||
Multilayered Fuzzy Behavior Control for an Autonomous Mobile Robot with Multiple Omnidirectional Vision System: MOVIS |
|
||
Yoichiro Maeda and Wataru Shimizuhira |
Paper: | pp. 28-34 | ||
A Regularization Approach to Fuzzy Clustering with Nonlinear Membership Weights |
|
||
Katsuhiro Honda and Hidetomo Ichihashi |
Paper: | pp. 35-39 | ||
Quantification of Multivariate Categorical Data Considering Typicality of Item |
|
||
Chi-Hyon Oh, Katsuhiro Honda, and Hidetomo Ichihashi |
Paper: | pp. 40-50 | ||
FzMail: Using FIS-CRM for E-mail Classification |
|
||
Francisco P. Romero, José A. Olivas, and Pablo J. Garcés |
Paper: | pp. 51-60 | ||
Metaheuristic Algorithms for Container Loading Problems: Framework and Knowledge Utilization |
|
||
Sadaaki Miyamoto, Yasunori Endo, Koki Hanzawa, and Yukihiro Hamasuna |
Paper: | pp. 61-70 | ||
Landscape Image Retrieval with Query by Sketch and Icon |
|
||
Takahiro Hayashi, Atsushi Ishikawa, and Rikio Onai |
Paper: | pp. 71-78 | ||
An Inference Method for Fuzzy Quantified Natural Language Propositions Based on New Interpretation of Truth Qualification |
|
||
Wataru Okamoto, Shun’ichi Tano, Toshiharu Iwatani, and Atsushi Inoue |
Paper: | pp. 79-86 | ||
Genetic Network Programming with Actor-Critic |
|
||
Hiroyuki Hatakeyama, Shingo Mabu, Kotaro Hirasawa, and Jinglu Hu |
Paper: | pp. 87-95 | ||
An Incremental Neural Network for Online Supervised Learning and Topology Learning |
|
||
Youki Kamiya, Shen Furao, and Osamu Hasegawa |
Paper: | pp. 96-104 | ||
Multilayered GMDH-Type Neural Network with Radial Basis Functions and its Application to 3-Dimensional Medical Image Recognition of the Liver |
|
||
Tadashi Kondo, Junji Ueno, and Abhijit S. Pandya |
Paper: | pp. 105-110 | ||
Prior’s Three-Valued Modal Logic Q and its Possible Applications |
|
||
Seiki Akama and Yasunori Nagata |
Paper: | pp. 111-117 | ||
Evaluation of Appropriate Body Placement and Notification Modality of a Wearable Clip-on Notifier Using an Experimental Platform |
|
||
Vlaho Kostov, Eiichi Naito, Takashi Tajima, and Jun Ozawa |
Paper: | pp. 118-125 | ||
Intelligent Work-Study Support Based on Interactive Web Guide |
|
||
Masaaki Tanaka, Tokuro Matsuo, Takayuki Ito, Tadachika Ozono, and Toramatsu Shintani |
Vol.10 (2006)
No.6
(Nov)
Special Issue on Language-Based Human Intelligence and Personalization
Special Issue on Language-Based Human Intelligence and Personalization
Editorial: | pp. 771-772 | |
Language-Based Human Intelligence and Personalization |
| |
Ichiro Kobayashi | ||
At the annual conference of the Japan Society for Artificial Intelligence (JSAI), a special survival session called "Challenge for Realizing Early Profits (CREP)" is organized to support and promote excellent ideas in new AI technologies expected to be realized and contributed to society within five years. Every year at the session, researchers propose their ideas and compete in being evaluated by conference participants. The Everyday Language Computing (ELC) project, started in 2000 at the Brain Science Institute, RIKEN, and ended in 2005, participated in the CREP program in 2001 to have their project evaluated by third parties and held an organized session every year in which those interested in language-based intelligence and personalization participate. They competed with other candidates, survived the session, and achieved the session's final goal to survive for five years. Papers in this special issue selected for presentation at the session include the following: The first article, "Everyday-Language Computing Project Overview," by Ichiro Kobayashi et al., gives an overview and the basic technologies of the ELC Project. The second to sixth papers are related to the ELC Project. The second article, "Computational Models of Language Within Context and Context-Sensitive Language Understanding," by Noriko Ito et al., proposes a new database, called the "semiotic base," that compiles linguistic resources with contextual information and an algorithm for achieving natural language understanding with the semiotic base. The third article, "Systemic-Functional Context-Sensitive Text Generation in the Framework of Everyday Language Computing," by Yusuke Takahashi et al., proposes an algorithm to generate texts with the semiotic base. The fourth article, "Natural Language-Mediated Software Agentification," by Michiaki Iwazume et al., proposes a method for agentifying and verbalizing existing software applications, together with a scheme for operating/running them. The fifth article, "Smart Help for Novice Users Based on Application Software Manuals," by Shino Iwashita et al., proposes a new framework for reusing electronic sof...<more> |
Review: | pp. 773-781 | ||
Everyday-Language Computing Project Overview |
|
||
Ichiro Kobayashi, Michio Sugeno, Toru Sugimoto, Shino Iwashita, Noriko Ito, Michiaki Iwazume, and Yusuke Takahashi |
Paper: | pp. 782-790 | ||
Computational Models of Language Within Context and Context-Sensitive Language Understanding |
|
||
Noriko Ito, Toru Sugimoto, Yusuke Takahashi, Shino Iwashita, and Michio Sugeno |
Paper: | pp. 791-801 | ||
Systemic-Functional Context-Sensitive Text Generation in the Framework of Everyday Language Computing |
|
||
Yusuke Takahashi and Ichiro Kobayashi |
Paper: | pp. 802-810 | ||
Natural Language-Mediated Software Agentification |
|
||
Michiaki Iwazume, Ichiro Kobayashi, and Michio Sugeno |
Paper: | pp. 811-820 | ||
Smart Help for Novice Users Based on Application Software Manuals |
|
||
Shino Iwashita, Noriko Ito, Ichiro Kobayashi, Toru Sugimoto, and Michio Sugeno |
Paper: | pp. 821-829 | ||
Programming in Everyday Language: A Case for Email Management |
|
||
Toru Sugimoto, Noriko Ito, Shino Iwashita, and Michio Sugeno |
Paper: | pp. 830-837 | ||
Application of Paraphrasing to Programming with Linguistic Expressions |
|
||
Nozomu Kaneko and Takehisa Onisawa |
Paper: | pp. 838-849 | ||
A Human Interface Based on Linguistic Metaphor and Intention Reasoning |
|
||
Koichi Yamada, Mutsumi Tamai, and Muneyuki Unehara |
Paper: | pp. 850-858 | ||
Automatic Metadata Annotation Based on User Preference Evaluation Patterns |
|
||
Mari Saito |
Paper: | pp. 859-867 | ||
Dynamic Sense Representation Using Conceptual Fuzzy Sets |
|
||
Hiroshi Sekiya, Takeshi Kondo, Makoto Hashimoto, and Tomohiro Takagi |
Paper: | pp. 868-875 | ||
Common Sense from the Web? Naturalness of Everyday Knowledge Retrieved from WWW |
|
||
Rafal Rzepka, Yali Ge, and Kenji Araki |
Paper: | pp. 876-912 | ||
Semantic Representation for Understanding Meaning Based on Correspondence Between Meanings |
|
||
Akira Takagi, Hideki Asoh, Yukihiro Itoh, Makoto Kondo, and Ichiro Kobayashi |
Paper: | pp. 913-920 | ||
A Histogram Modification Approach for Analysis of Membership Function Relocation in Fuzzy Logic Control |
|
||
Jia Lu and Yunxia Hu |
Paper: | pp. 921-930 | ||
Adaptive Random Search with Intensification and Diversification Combined with Genetic Algorithm |
|
||
Dongkyu Sohn, Hiroyuki Hatakeyama, Shingo Mabu, Kotaro Hirasawa, and Jinglu Hu |
Paper: | pp. 931-938 | ||
An Efficient Specification for System Verification |
|
||
Chikatoshi Yamada, Yasunori Nagata, and Zensho Nakao |
Paper: | pp. 939-945 | ||
Toward a Generalization of Rough Sets Based on Active and Passive Relations |
|
||
Masashi Emoto, Rolly Intan, and Masao Mukaidono |
Paper: | pp. 946-953 | ||
New Similarity Measure Between Two Fuzzy Sets |
|
||
Hassan Rezaei, Masashi Emoto, and Masao Mukaidono |
Paper: | pp. 954-963 | ||
Alternate Genetic Network Programming with Association Rules Acquisition Mechanisms Between Attribute Families |
|
||
Kaoru Shimada, Kotaro Hirasawa, and Jinglu Hu |
No.5
(Sep)
Special Issue on Rough Sets and Granular Computing
Special Issue on Web Services Practices
Special Issue on Rough Sets and Granular Computing
Editorial: | p. 605 | |
Rough Sets and Granular Computing |
| |
Hiroshi Sakai and Masahiro Inuiguchi | ||
Rough sets and granular computing, known as new methodologies for computing technology, are now attracting great interest of researchers. This special issue presents 12 articles, and most of them were presented at the second Japanese workshop on Rough Sets held at Kyushu Institute of Technology in Tobata, Kitakyushu, Japan, on August 17-18, 2005. The first article studies the relation between rough set theory and formal concept analysis. These two frameworks are analyzed and connected by using the method of morphism. The second article introduces object-oriented paradigm into rough set theory, and object-oriented rough set models are proposed. Theoretical aspects of these new models are also examined. The third article considers relations between generalized rough sets, topologies and modal logics, and some topological properties of rough sets induced by equivalence relations are presented. The fourth article focuses on a family of polymodal systems, and theoretical aspects of these systems, like the completeness, are investigated. By means of combining polymodal logic concept and rough set theory, a new framework named multi-rough sets is established. The fifth article focuses on the information incompleteness in fuzzy relational models, and a generalized possibility-based fuzzy relational model is proposed. The sixth article presents a developed software EVALPSN (Extended Vector Annotated Logic Program with Strong Negation) and the application of this software to pipeline valve control. The seventh article presents the properties of attribute reduction in variable precision rough set models. Ten kinds of meaningful reducts are newly proposed, and hierarchical relations in these reducts are examined. The eighth article proposes attribute-value reduction for Kansei analysis using information granulation, and illustrative results for some databases in UCI Machine Learning Repository are presented. The ninth article investigates cluster analysis for data with errors tolerance. Two new clustering algorithms, which are based on the entropy regularized fuzzy c-means, are proposed. The tenth article appli...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 606-611 | ||
Rough Set Approximation as Formal Concept |
|
||
Nozomi Ytow, David R. Morse, and David McL. Roberts |
Paper: | pp. 612-620 | ||
A Theoretical Formulation of Object-Oriented Rough Set Models |
|
||
Yasuo Kudo and Tetsuya Murai |
Paper: | pp. 621-624 | ||
Topological Structures of Rough Sets Induced by Equivalence Relations |
|
||
Michiro Kondo and Wieslaw A. Dudek |
Paper: | pp. 625-632 | ||
A Family of Polymodal Systems and its Application to Generalized Possibility Measures and Multi-Rough Sets |
|
||
Sadaaki Miyamoto, Tetsuya Murai, and Yasuo Kudo |
Paper: | pp. 633-646 | ||
Generalizing Possibility-Based Fuzzy Relational Models |
|
||
Michinori Nakata |
Paper: | pp. 647-656 | ||
Pipeline Valve Control Based on EVALPSN Safety Verification |
|
||
Kazumi Nakamatsu |
Paper: | pp. 657-665 | ||
Structure-Based Attribute Reduction in Variable Precision Rough Set Models |
|
||
Masahiro Inuiguchi |
Paper: | pp. 666-672 | ||
Reduction of Attribute Values for Kansei Representation |
|
||
Yuji Muto, Mineichi Kudo, and Tetsuya Murai |
Paper: | pp. 673-681 | ||
On Fuzzy c-Means for Data with Tolerance |
|
||
Ryuichi Murata, Yasunori Endo, Hideyuki Haruyama, and Sadaaki Miyamoto |
Paper: | pp. 682-687 | ||
An Application of Binary Decision Trees to Pattern Recognition |
|
||
Noboru Takagi |
Paper: | pp. 688-694 | ||
Analysis of Specifications for Web Screen-Design Using Rough Sets |
|
||
Toshinobu Harada and Ryousuke Tanaka |
Paper: | pp. 695-702 | ||
An Application of Discernibility Functions to Generating Minimal Rules in Non-Deterministic Information Systems |
|
||
Hiroshi Sakai and Michinori Nakata |
Special Issue on Web Services Practices
Editorial: | pp. 703-704 | |
Web Services Practices |
| |
Ajith Abraham, Sung-Bae Cho, Thomas Hite, and Sang-Yong Han | ||
Web services – a new breed of self-contained, self-describing, modular applications published, located, and invoked across the Web – handle functions, from simple requests to complicated business processes. They are defined as network-based application components with a services-oriented architecture (SOA) using standard interface description languages and uniform communication protocols. SOA enables organizations to grasp and respond to changing trends and to adapt their business processes rapidly without major changes to the IT infrastructure. The Inaugural International Conference on Next-Generation Web Services Practices (NWeSP'05) attracted researchers who are also the world's most respected authorities on the semantic Web, Web-based services, and Web applications and services. NWeSP'05 was held in cooperation with the IEEE Computer Society Task Force on Electronic Commerce, the Technical Committee on Internet, and the Technical Committee on Scalable Computing. This special issue presents eight papers focused on different aspects of Web services and their applications. Papers were selected based on fundamental ideas and concepts rather than the thoroughness of techniques employed. Papers are organized as follows: Taher et al. present the first paper, on a Quality of Service Information and Computational framework (QoS-IC) supporting QoS-based service selection for SOA. The framework's functionality is expanded using a QoS constraints model that establishes an association relationship between different QoS properties and is used to govern QoS-based service selection in the underlying algorithm. Using a prototype implementation, the authors demonstrate how QoS constraints improve QoS-based service selection and save consumers valuable time. Due to the complex infrastructure of web applications, response times perceived by clients may be significantly longer than desired. To overcome some of the current problems, Vilas et al., in the second paper, propose a cache-based extension of the architecture that enhances the current web services architecture, which is mainly based on program-logic or...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 705-712 | ||
QoS Constrains Model: Establishing QoS Association for Ontology-Based Web Service Selection Mechanism |
|
||
Laila Taher, Rawshan Basha, and Hazem El Khatib |
Paper: | pp. 713-720 | ||
Optimizing Web Services Performance Using Cache |
|
||
Julio Fernández Vilas, Jose J. Pazos Arias, and Ana Fernández Vilas |
Paper: | pp. 721-727 | ||
An Efficient Authorization Mechanism for Secure XML Sources on the Web |
|
||
Sun-Moon Jo and Weon-Hee Yoo |
Paper: | pp. 728-732 | ||
Automatic Web Service Composition Based on Behavior Network |
|
||
Myung-Chul Jung and Sung-Bae Cho |
Paper: | pp. 733-737 | ||
Efficient Merging for Heterogeneous Domain Ontologies Based on WordNet |
|
||
Hyunjang Kong, Myunggwon Hwang, and Pankoo Kim |
Paper: | pp. 738-743 | ||
Efficient Processing of XML Tree Pattern Queries |
|
||
Yangjun Chen and Dunren Che |
Paper: | pp. 744-751 | ||
Minimization of XML Tree Pattern Queries in the Presence of Integrity Constraints |
|
||
Yangjun Chen and Dunren Che |
Paper: | pp. 752-760 | ||
MDVM System Concept, Paging Latency and Round-2 Randomized Leader Election Algorithm in SG |
|
||
Susmit Bagchi, Hafizur Rahaman, and Purnendu Das |
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 761-768 | ||
Visual Cortex Inspired Intelligent Contour Detection |
|
||
Barna Reskó, Zoltán Petres, András Róka, and Péter Baranyi |
No.4
(Jul)
Special Issue on the Sixth International Conference on Fuzzy Systems (AFSS' 2004)
Special Issue: Dedicated to INES 2005 and SISY 2005 Conferences
Special Issue on the Sixth International Conference on Fuzzy Systems (AFSS' 2004)
Editorial: | p. 443 | |
the Sixth International Conference on Fuzzy Systems (AFSS' 2004) |
| |
Nguyen Hoang Phuong | ||
This special issue features five papers devoted to fuzzy systems and their applications. Papers were selected from those accepted and presented at the Sixth International Conference on Fuzzy Systems (AFSS' 2004) held in Hanoi, Vietnam on December 15-17, 2004. AFSS' 2004 and Tutorials held in Hue city on December 18-19, 2004, included a wide spectrum of research topics on "fuzzy set theory", "intelligent technology", "fuzzy logic and approximate reasoning", "neural networks", "genetic algorithms", "hybrid systems" and "soft computing". Over 40 papers were accepted and presented by researchers from countries including Brazil, Canada, Taiwan, India, Korea, Malaysia, Japan and Vietnam. Five papers receiving outstanding recommendations in reviews have been selected for this issue. The topics they address include fuzzy logic for robots, data mining, neural networks in medicine, Fuzzy Constraint Satisfaction Problems, and hybrid systems. As editors of this special issue, we are sincerely grateful to the authors. Special thanks also go to the referees for their excellent work, to Mr. Kazuki Ohmori for his aid in coordinating the issue's publication, and to the JACIII Editorial Board, especially Professor Kaoru Hirota for his invaluable support and encouragement. Finally, we thank Professors Masao Mukaidono and Witold Pedrycz for their contributions to AFSS' 2004. Without their support, AFSS' 2004 and this issue would not have been possible. |
Paper: | pp. 444-450 | ||
Extending Fuzzy Directional Relationship and Applying for Mobile Robot Collision Avoidance Behavior |
|
||
Long Thanh Ngo, Long The Pham, Phuong Hoang Nguyen, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 451-457 | ||
Dual Scaling in Data Mining from Text Databases |
|
||
Junzo Watada, Keisuke Aoki, Masahiro Kawano, and Muhammad Suzuri Hitam |
Paper: | pp. 458-464 | ||
A Proposed Model of Diagnosis and Prescription in Oriental Medicine Using RBF Neural Networks |
|
||
Cao Thang, Eric W. Cooper, Yukinobu Hoshino, Katsuari Kamei, and Nguyen Hoang Phuong |
Paper: | pp. 465-471 | ||
Extending Fuzzy Constraint Satisfaction Problems |
|
||
Yasuhiro Sudo, Masahito Kurihara, and Tamotsu Mitamura |
Paper: | pp. 472-476 | ||
Hybrid Module of the IACVIRTUAL Project |
|
||
Lourdes M. Brasil, Jean C. C. Rojas, Fernando M. de Azevedo, and Carlos W. D. de Almeida |
Special Issue: Dedicated to INES 2005 and SISY 2005 Conferences
Editorial: | pp. 477-478 | |
Special Issue: Dedicated to INES 2005 and SISY 2005 Conferences |
| |
Imre J. Rudas, and János Fodor | ||
The current issue contains 12 papers presented at the IEEE 9th International Conference on Intelligent Engineering Systems (INES 2005), Cruising on the Mediterranean Sea, on September 16-19, 2005, and 3rd Serbian-Hungarian Joint Symposium on Intelligent Systems (SISY 2005), in Subotica, Serbia and Montenegro, on August 31-September 1, 2005. The topics of the two conferences are very close to each other and regard Intelligent Systems both from practical and theoretical point of view. These successful conferences brought together active participants and joined researchers from several countries working on this very quickly developing, more and more important field. After a preliminary selection made by the section chairs and the International Program Committees, we have selected 12 papers to be published in extended form in the current Special Issue of the Journal of Advanced Computational Intelligence and Intelligent Informatics. We would like to express our thanks to our sponsors, the organizers and mainly to the participants, who made these scientific events possible. Also, we express our thanks to the Editors of the Journal of Advanced Computational Intelligence and Intelligent Informatics, for publishing this Special Issue. In the following we briefly describe each paper. A. Almeida, G. Marreiros present a model to support collaborative scheduling in complex dynamic manufacturing environments. This model considers the interaction between an Agent based Scheduling Module and a Group Decision Support Module. P. Baranyi, Z. Petres, P. L. Várkonyi, P. Korondi and Y. Yam study in their paper how the Tensor Product model transformation is capable of determining different types of convex hulls of the Linear Time Invariant models. The study is conducted through the example of the prototypical aeroelastic wing section. B. Bede, H. Nobuhara, J. Fodor and K. Hirota propose the study of the problem if usual sum and product can be substituted by max and product operations in defining approximation operators. In this sense max-product Shepard approximation operators are defined...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 479-485 | ||
An Approach to Collaborative Scheduling Through Group Decision Support |
|
||
Ana Almeida, and Goreti Marreiros |
Paper: | pp. 486-493 | ||
Determination of Different Polytopic Models of the Prototypical Aeroelastic Wing Section by TP Model Transformation |
|
||
Péter Baranyi, Zoltán Petres, Péter L. Várkonyi, Péter Korondi, and Yeung Yam |
Paper: | pp. 494-497 | ||
Max-Product Shepard Approximation Operators |
|
||
Barnabás Bede, Hajime Nobuhara, János Fodor, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 498-503 | ||
Classification of Time Series Using Singular Values and Wavelet Subband Analysis with ANN and SVM Classifiers |
|
||
Balázs Benyó, Péter Somogyi, and Béla Paláncz |
Paper: | pp. 504-509 | ||
Implementation of Course Model Driven Virtual Classroom in Higher Education |
|
||
József Gáti, and Gyula Kártyás |
Paper: | pp. 510-516 | ||
Intelligent Human-Computer Communication of Engineers at Extended Companies |
|
||
László Horváth, and Imre J. Rudas |
Paper: | pp. 517-521 | ||
Incorporating Infatuation in Multi-Agent Systems |
|
||
Mirko Maleković, and Mirko Čubrilo |
Paper: | pp. 522-526 | ||
Two-Dimensional Copulas as Important Binary Aggregation Operators |
|
||
Endre Pap, and Marta Takács |
Paper: | pp. 527-533 | ||
Cognitive Vision Inspired Contour and Vertex Detection |
|
||
Barna Reskó, Ádám B. Csapó, and Péter Baranyi |
Paper: | pp. 534-541 | ||
g-Calculus-Based Compositional Rule of Inference |
|
||
Marta Takács |
Paper: | pp. 542-548 | ||
Geometric Identification and Control of Nonlinear Dynamic Systems Based on Floating Basis Vector Representation |
|
||
József K. Tar, Imre J. Rudas, and Miklós Rontó |
Paper: | pp. 549-554 | ||
Fuzzy Based Brightness Compensation for High Dynamic Range Images |
|
||
Annamária R. Várkonyi-Kóczy, András Rövid, and Péter Várlaki |
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 555-566 | ||
Realizing Functional Localization Using Genetic Network Programming with Importance Index |
|
||
Shinji Eto, Hiroyuki Hatakeyama, Shingo Mabu, Kotaro Hirasawa, and Jinglu Hu |
Paper: | pp. 567-577 | ||
Feed-Forward Neural Networks Based on the Eigenstates of the Quantum Harmonic Oscillator |
|
||
Gerasimos Rigatos |
Paper: | pp. 578-585 | ||
Opposition-Based Reinforcement Learning |
|
||
Hamid R. Tizhoosh |
Paper: | pp. 586-593 | ||
Approximate Reasoning in Supervised Classification Systems |
|
||
Hamid Seridi, Herman Akdag, Rachid Mansouri, and Mohamed Nemissi |
Paper: | pp. 594-601 | ||
Application of Fuzzy Inference Method in Printing Pressure State Expectation System |
|
||
Jianping Jing, Yasufumi Takama, and Toru Yamaguchi |
No.3
(May)
Selected Papers from InTech'04
Selected Papers from InTech'04
Editorial: | pp. 243-244 | |
Selected Papers from InTech'04 |
| |
Richard Aló, and Vladik Kreinovich | ||
The main objective of the annual International Conference on Intelligent Technologies (InTech) is to bring together researchers and practitioners who implement intelligent and fuzzy technologies in real-world environment. The Fifth International Conference on Intelligent Technologies InTech'04 was held in Houston, Texas, on December 2-4, 2004. Topics of InTech'04 included mathematical foundations of intelligent technologies, traditional Artificial Intelligent techniques, uncertainty processing and methods of soft computing, learning/adaptive systems/data mining, and applications of intelligent technologies. This special issue contains versions of 15 selected papers originally presented at InTech'04. These papers cover most of the topics of the conference. Several papers describe new applications of the existing intelligent techniques. R. Aló{o} et al. show how traditional statistical hypotheses testing techniques – originally designed for processing measurement results – need to be modified when applied to simulated data – e.g., when we compare the quality of two algorithms. Y. Frayman et al. use mathematical morphology and genetic algorithms in the design of a machine vision system for detecting surface defects in aluminum die casting. Y. Murai et al. propose a new faster entropy-based placement algorithm for VLSI circuit design and similar applications. A. P. Salvatore et al. show how expert system-type techniques can help in scheduling botox treatment for voice disorders. H. Tsuji et al. propose a new method, based on partial differential equations, for automatically identifying and extracting objects from a video. N. Ward uses Ordered Weighted Average (OWA) techniques to design a model that predicts admission of computer science students into different graduate schools. An important aspect of intelligence is ability to learn. In A. Mahaweerawat et al., neural-based machine learning is used to identify and predict software faults. J. Han et al. show that we can drastically improve the quality of machine learning if, in additi...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 245-259 | ||
Formalization of the Equivalent Transformation Computation Model |
|
||
Kiyoshi Akama, and Ekawit Nantajeewarawat |
Paper: | pp. 260-264 | ||
Testing Hypotheses on Simulated Data: Why Traditional Hypotheses-Testing Statistics Are Not Always Adequate for Simulated Data, and How to Modify Them |
|
||
Richard Aló, Vladik Kreinovich, and Scott A. Starks |
Paper: | pp. 265-269 | ||
A Framework for Robust and Resilient Critical Infrastructure Systems |
|
||
Jagdish Chandra |
Paper: | pp. 270-280 | ||
Semantic Query Optimization: Correctness and Control |
|
||
Pongtawat Chippimolchai, Kiyoshi Akama, and Vilas Wuwongse |
Paper: | pp. 281-286 | ||
Machine Vision System for Automatic Inspection of Surface Defects in Aluminum Die Casting |
|
||
Yakov Frayman, Hong Zheng, and Saeid Nahavandi |
Paper: | pp. 287-294 | ||
Discovering Both Positive and Negative Fuzzy Association Rules in Large Transaction Databases |
|
||
Jianchao Han, and Mohsen Beheshti |
Paper: | pp. 295-301 | ||
Knowledge Extraction from a Mixed Transfer Function Artificial Neural Network |
|
||
M. Imad Khan, Yakov Frayman, and Saeid Nahavandi |
Paper: | pp. 302-311 | ||
Dynamic Interaction of Syntactic and Semantic Analyses Based on the Equivalent Transformation Computation Model |
|
||
Hidekatsu Koike, Kiyoshi Akama, and Hiroshi Mabuchi |
Paper: | pp. 312-322 | ||
MASP – An Enhanced Model of Fault Type Identification in Object-Oriented Software Engineering |
|
||
Atchara Mahaweerawat, Peraphon Sophatsathit, Chidchanok Lursinsap, and Petr Musilek |
Paper: | pp. 323-331 | ||
Fast Placement Algorithm for Rectilinear Jigsaw Puzzles |
|
||
Yasuyuki Murai, Hiroyuki Tsuji, Hisayuki Tatsumi, and Shinji Tokumasu |
Paper: | pp. 332-338 | ||
Expert System-Type Approach to Voice Disorders: Scheduling Botulinum Toxin Treatment for Adductor Spasmodic Dysphonia |
|
||
Anthony P. Salvatore, Amitava Biswas, Vladik Kreinovich, Bertha Manriquez, Michael P. Cannito, and Robert J. Sinard |
Paper: | pp. 339-348 | ||
Converting Constraint Handling Rules to Equivalent Transformation Rules |
|
||
Yoshinori Shigeta, Kiyoshi Akama, Hiroshi Mabuchi, and Hidekatsu Koike |
Paper: | pp. 349-361 | ||
Design of Nondeterministic Program Termination Based on the Equivalent Transformation Computation Model |
|
||
Itaru Takarajima, Kiyoshi Akama, Ikumi Imani, and Hiroshi Mabuchi |
Paper: | pp. 362-371 | ||
Extracting Objects Using Contour Evolutions in Edge-Based Object Tracking |
|
||
Hiroyuki Tsuji, Shinji Tokumasu, Hiroki Takahashi, and Masayuki Nakajima |
Paper: | pp. 372-383 | ||
Towards a Model of Computer Science Graduate Admissions Decisions |
|
||
Nigel Ward |
Paper: | pp. 385-394 | ||
Elevator Group Supervisory Control System Using Genetic Network Programming with Functional Localization |
|
||
Toru Eguchi, Jin Zhou, Shinji Eto, Kotaro Hirasawa, Jinglu Hu, and Sandor Markon |
Paper: | pp. 395-408 | ||
Incremental Learning, Recognition, and Generation of Time-Series Patterns Based on Self-Organizing Segmentation |
|
||
Shogo Okada, and Osamu Hasegawa |
Paper: | pp. 409-418 | ||
An Efficient Algorithm for Traffic Sign Detection |
|
||
Aryuanto Soetedjo, and Koichi Yamada |
Paper: | pp. 419-431 | ||
Generic Database for Hybrid Bayesian Pattern Recognition |
|
||
Kiril I. Tenekedjiev, Carlos A. Kobashikawa, Natalia D. Nikolova, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 432-439 | ||
Q-SEE: Qualitative Simulation Support System in Economic Education |
|
||
Tokuro Matsuo, Masaki Komatsu, Takayuki Ito, and Toramatsu Shintani |
No.2
(Mar)
Selected Papers from HNICEM 2005
Selected Papers from HNICEM 2005
Editorial: | p. 135 | |
Selected Papers from HNICEM 2005 |
| |
Elmer P. Dadios | ||
HNICEM is a biennial international conference of experts in the fields of Robotics, Nanotechnology, Information Technology, Control and Communication, Environment, and Management. This special issue presents 11 articles selected from HNICEM 2005 that will provide valuable references for researchers and practitioners. The first article presents new content-based image retrieval based on the visual keys concept. Visual keys are defined as representative regions extracted from an image database and are constructed using image feature clustering. The second article presents interactive video recording and playback technique originally developed for biomedical multimedia training. The third article proposes techniques for determining motion parameters based on complex number expression of the rotation matrix. The fourth article studies the learning behavior of Genetic Algorithm and its potential in real time non-linear control. The effects of different parameters used in the GA for its learning are analyzed. The fifth article presents a Coordinated Hybrid Agent (CHA) framework for the control of Multi-Agent Systems (MASs) applied to a heterogeneous multi-agent such as a mobile robot, an overhead crane, and a robot manipulator. The sixth article presents an algorithm that emulates human inference in deducing root causes, avoiding intermediary causes and anticipating subsequent moves. The seventh article proposes a technique to create Intelligent Distributed Robotic Systems (IDRS) that show smart behavior using a wrapper-components approach. The eighth article presents an autonomous mobile robot with neural network (NN) vision that searches for and collects golf balls in an open or indoor golf driving range. The ninth article demonstrates the technological benefits of miniaturizing machine tools in the context of machine stiffness and accuracy. It also presents the design philosophy and configuration of a 4-axis miniaturized vertical machining center with a positioning accuracy of 4 to 10nm. The tenth article investigates a new type of ion exchanger for high ion exchange capacity (IEC) and rapid ion exchange velocity. Experiment...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 136-144 | ||
Designing Image Retrieval System with the Concept of Visual Keys |
|
||
Manabu Serata, Yutaka Hatakeyama, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 145-149 | ||
Interactive Reality System (IRiS): Interactive 3D Video Playback in Multimedia Applications |
|
||
Andreas Oikonomou, Saad Amin, Raouf N. G. Naguib, Alison Todman, and Hassanein Al-Omishy |
Paper: | pp. 150-154 | ||
Novel Approach to Determining Camera Motion Parameters |
|
||
Ken-ichi Sakina |
Paper: | pp. 155-160 | ||
Genetic Algorithm On Line Controller for the Flexible Inverted Pendulum Problem |
|
||
Elmer P. Dadios, Patrick S. Fernandez, and David J. Williams |
Paper: | pp. 161-167 | ||
Multi-Agent Based Control of a Heterogeneous System |
|
||
Howard Li, Fakhreddine Karray, Otman Basir, and Insop Song |
Paper: | pp. 168-172 | ||
An Inference Algorithm for Electronic System Diagnostics at the Block Diagram Level |
|
||
Celso Bation Co |
Paper: | pp. 173-180 | ||
Building Intelligent Robotics Systems with Distributed Components |
|
||
Federico Guedea-Elizalde, Rogelio Soto, Fakhreddine Karray, and Insop Song |
Paper: | pp. 181-186 | ||
Neural Network Vision-Guided Mobile Robot for Retrieving Driving-Range Golf Balls |
|
||
Elmer P. Dadios, Kaoru Hirota, Michelle L. Catigum, Albert C. Gutierrez, Danison R. Rodrigo, Christopher Allan G. San Juan, and Jeffrey T. Tan |
Paper: | pp. 187-195 | ||
Precision Machining with Micro-Scale Vertical Machining Center |
|
||
Daniel J. Cox, Glynn Newby, Hyung Wook Park, Steven Y. Liang, Wang-Lin Liu, Shang-Bin Hsieh, and Joon Hwang |
Paper: | pp. 196-200 | ||
Preparation of Cation Exchanger Using Electrospun Polystyrene Nanofiber |
|
||
Hyung-Hwan An, and Changyun Shin |
Paper: | pp. 201-206 | ||
Mapping Wireless Access Network Traffic to Multiservice Provisioning Platform |
|
||
Sandisiwe N. Ncemane, H. Anthony Chan, and Tope R. Karem |
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 207-218 | ||
A Speedup Algorithm for Repetition of Hypothetical Reasoning |
|
||
Haruhiko Kimura, Tadanobu Misawa, Koji Abe, and Yasuhiro Ogoshi |
Paper: | pp. 219-224 | ||
Fuzzy Ratings and Crisp Feedback in Fuzzy AHP for Supporting Human Decision Making |
|
||
Toshiyuki Yamashita |
Paper: | pp. 225-233 | ||
Adaptive Fuzzy Control for a Class of Nonlinear Systems with State Observer |
|
||
Hugang Han |
Paper: | pp. 234-240 | ||
Object Reconfiguration with Dextrous Robot Agents |
|
||
Gábor Vass, Béla Lantos, and Shahram Payandeh |
No.1
(Jan)
Regular papers
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 3-10 | ||
Switching Model Construction and Stability Analysis for Nonlinear Systems |
|
||
Hiroshi Ohtake, and Kazuo Tanaka |
Paper: | pp. 11-16 | ||
Voting-Based Approach to Nullspace Search for Correspondence Matching and Shape Recovery |
|
||
Kazuhiko Kawamoto, Atsushi Imiya, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 17-25 | ||
A Hybrid Neuro-Symbolic Approach for Arabic Handwritten Word Recognition |
|
||
Labiba Souici-Meslati, and Mokhtar Sellami |
Paper: | pp. 26-34 | ||
Fuzzy Configuration Space for Moving Obstacle Avoidance of Autonomous Mobile Robots |
|
||
Jorge Guerra, Hajime Nobuhara, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 35-49 | ||
Genetically Optimized Multi-Layer Fuzzy Polynomial Neural Networks: Analysis and Design |
|
||
Sung-Kwun Oh, Witold Pedrycz, and Ho-Sung Park |
Paper: | pp. 50-59 | ||
Chain Restaurant Work Scheduling Based on Genetic Algorithm with Fuzzy Logic |
|
||
Makoto Watanabe, Hajime Nobuhara, Kazuhiko Kawamoto, Fangyan Dong, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 60-68 | ||
Velocity Control Strategy for a Spider-Robot Based on Autonomous Walking Form Transition |
|
||
Takeo Ohnishi, and Toshiyuki Asakura |
Paper: | pp. 69-76 | ||
Combining the Global and Partial Information for Distance-Based Time Series Classification and Clustering |
|
||
Hui Zhang, Tu Bao Ho, Mao-Song Lin, and Wei Huang |
Paper: | pp. 77-83 | ||
Experimentally Constructing Semantic Models Based on DNA Computing |
|
||
Yusei Tsuboi, Zuwairie Ibrahim, and Osamu Ono |
Paper: | pp. 84-92 | ||
FCAPS: Fuzzy Controller with Approximated Policy Search Approach |
|
||
Agus Naba, and Kazuo Miyashita |
Paper: | pp. 93-101 | ||
Robust Face Detection for Low-Resolution Images |
|
||
Shinji Hayashi, and Osamu Hasegawa |
Paper: | pp. 102-111 | ||
Genetic Network Programming with Acquisition Mechanisms of Association Rules |
|
||
Kaoru Shimada, Kotaro Hirasawa, and Jinglu Hu |
Paper: | pp. 112-120 | ||
Dedicated Floorplanning Engine Architecture Based on Genetic Algorithm and Evaluation |
|
||
Masaya Yoshikawa, and Hidekazu Terai |
Paper: | pp. 121-131 | ||
A Proposal of Visualization Method for Interpretable Fuzzy Model on Fusion Axes |
|
||
Kosuke Yamamoto, Tomohiro Yoshikawa, and Takeshi Furuhashi |
Vol.9 (2005)
No.6
(Nov)
Special issue on Selected Papers from ISCIIA'04
Special issue on Selected Papers from ISCIIA'04
Editorial: | p. 579 | |
Selected Papers from ISCIIA'04 |
| |
Yaohong Kang, Shibin Zhao, and Kazuhiko Kawamoto | ||
This special issue contains 14 papers selected from the first International Symposium on Computational Intelligence and Industrial Applications (ISCIIA'04), held in Haikou, China, December 20-24, 2004. Of the 82 papers from 8 countries submitted to the symposium, 62 were accepted for the proceedings. Based on reviewer's recommendations and guest editor's careful consideration, the authors of 14 papers have revised and extended their symposium papers for this issue. Computational intelligence is the study of the design of "intelligent" systems, which is flexible in changing environments and changing goals with uncertainty, and covers artificial intelligence, neural networks, fuzzy systems, evolutionary computation, and hybrid systems. The objective of this special issue is to reveal current challenges, research topics, and technology solutions critical to algorithms and applications involving computational intelligence. These 14 papers cover such important research areas as neural networks, image processing, control, financial engineering, robotics, and related technologies in computational intelligence. We believe that the information in this issue will become a valuable new resource for the computational intelligence community. We thank the authors and referees whose selfless work and valuable comments have made this special issue possible and improved the overall quality of the papers. |
Paper: | pp. 580-589 | ||
Improved MLP Learning via Orthogonal Bipolar Target Vectors |
|
||
Shigueo Nomura, Keiji Yamanaka, Osamu Katai, Hiroshi Kawakami, and Takayuki Shiose |
Paper: | pp. 590-598 | ||
Competitive Learning with Fast Neuron-Insertion |
|
||
Noritaka Shigei, Hiromi Miyajima, and Michiharu Maeda |
Paper: | pp. 599-606 | ||
Adaptive Vector Quantization with Creation and Reduction Grounded in the Equinumber Principle |
|
||
Michiharu Maeda,Noritaka Shigei, and Hiromi Miyajima |
Paper: | pp. 607-614 | ||
SONIA-Based Decision Neural Network for Preference Assessment with Incomplete Comparisons |
|
||
Muhammad R. Widyanto, Kazuhiko Kawamoto, Benyamin Kusumoputro, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 615-621 | ||
Improved Debt Rating Model Using Choquet Integral |
|
||
Toshihiro Kaino, Ken Urata, Shinichi Yoshida, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 622-629 | ||
Evolutionary Optimisation for Obstacle Detection and Avoidance in Mobile Robotics |
|
||
Olivier Pauplin, Jean Louchet, Evelyne Lutton, and Arnaud de La Fortelle |
Paper: | pp. 630-636 | ||
Plant Recognition by Integrating Color and Range Data Obtained Through Stereo Vision |
|
||
Hotaka Takizawa, Nobuo Ezaki, Shinji Mizuno, and Shinji Yamamoto |
Paper: | pp. 637-642 | ||
An Interactive System with Facial Expression Recognition |
|
||
Yuyi Shang, Mie Sato, and Masao Kasuga |
Paper: | pp. 643-653 | ||
Adaptive Touch Panel User Interface by Type-Based Approach Using Particle Filters |
|
||
Norikazu Ikoma, Witold Pedrycz, Takahiro Hyakudome, and Hiroshi Maeda |
Paper: | pp. 654-660 | ||
Visual Perception for a Partner Robot Based on Computational Intelligence |
|
||
Indra Adji Sulistijono, and Naoyuki Kubota |
Paper: | pp. 661-668 | ||
Lattice Structure of D, T, and SR Fuzzy Flip-Flops Under Max-Min Logic |
|
||
Shinichi Yoshida, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 669-676 | ||
Robust Tuning of PID Controller Using Bacterial-Foraging-Based Optimization |
|
||
Dong Hwa Kim, and Jae Hoon Cho |
Paper: | pp. 677-683 | ||
Knowledge Representation of Architectural Design by Using IBIS-FRS System |
|
||
Marly Kiatake, Liang-Yee Cheng, and João R. D. Petreche |
Paper: | pp. 684-692 | ||
Definition of an Offshore Petroleum Production System by Using Fuzzy Sets and Utility Functions |
|
||
Tiago C. da Fonseca, José R. P. Mendes, Celso K. Morooka, and Ivan R. Guilherme |
Paper: | pp. 693-697 | ||
Machine Learning: Automated Knowledge Acquisition Based on Unsupervised Neural Network and Expert System Paradigms |
|
||
Nazar Elfadil |
Paper: | pp. 698-707 | ||
Multiclassification by Double-Negative Aggregation of SVM Membership |
|
||
Hidetoshi Tanaka |
No.5
(Sep)
“Heart and Mind” Evaluation
From Basic Research to Applications
“Heart and Mind” Evaluation
Editorial: | p. 439 | |
“Heart and Mind” Evaluation |
| |
Toshiaki Murofushi | ||
Special Interest Group in Evaluation (SIG Eval) of Japan Society for Fuzzy Theory and intelligent informatics was founded by Professor Hisao Shiizuka, Kogakuin University, in 1993 to facilitate the exchange of research information within Japan on evaluation problems. Since 1996, SIG Eval has held an annual workshop, the Workshop on Evaluation of Heart and Mind. In addition to the workshop, SIG Eval has edited this special issue on “Heart and Mind” Evaluation. Contributors include those who often speak at the workshop. The first article, “Feasibility Study on Marketing Research Using Eye Movement: An Investigation of Image Presentation using an Eye Camera and Data Processing,” by Shin'ya Nagasawa, Sora Yim, and Hitoshi Hongo, asserts that, in physiological experiments using an eye camera, the user's interest influences purchasing behavior. The second article, “Statistical Image Analysis of Psychological Projective Drawings,” by Kazuhisa Takemura, Iyuki Takasaki, and Yumi Iwamitsu, discusses the use of statistical image analysis to overcome the difficulty in assessing the reliability of projective drawing techniques. The third article, “Fuzzy Least Squares Regression Analysis for Social Judgment Study,” by Kazuhisa Takemura, proposes fuzzy regression analysis in which a dependent variable, independent variables, and regression parameters are represented by triangular fuzzy numbers. The fourth to sixth articles discuss fuzzy measures, or capacities, which are quite popular for their application in subjective evaluation. The fourth article, “Identification of Fuzzy Measures with Distorted Probability Measures,” by Aoi Honda and Yoshiaki Okazaki, classifies fuzzy measures by introducing the concept of order type, and proposes the method of identifying fuzzy measure μ as a distorted probability of the same, or similar, order type as μ The fifth article, “Semiatoms in Choquet Integral Models of Multiattribute Decision Making,” by Toshiaki Murofushi, characterizes the concept of the semiatom in fuzzy measure theory in the multiattribute pref...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 440-452 | ||
Feasibility Study on Marketing Research Using Eye Movement: An Investigation of Image Presentation Using an “Eye Camera” and Data Processing |
|
||
Shin'ya Nagasawa, Sora Yim, and Hitoshi Hongo |
Paper: | pp. 453-460 | ||
Statistical Image Analysis of Psychological Projective Drawings |
|
||
Kazuhisa Takemura, Iyuki Takasaki, and Yumi Iwamitsu |
Paper: | pp. 461-466 | ||
Fuzzy Least Squares Regression Analysis for Social Judgment Study |
|
||
Kazuhisa Takemura |
Paper: | pp. 467-476 | ||
Identification of Fuzzy Measures with Distorted Probability Measures |
|
||
Aoi Honda, and Yoshiaki Okazaki |
Paper: | pp. 477-483 | ||
Semiatoms in Choquet Integral Models of Multiattribute Decision Making |
|
||
Toshiaki Murofushi |
Paper: | pp. 484-495 | ||
Some Characterizations of k-Monotonicity Through the Bipolar Möbius Transform in Bi-Capacities |
|
||
Katsushige Fujimoto, and Toshiaki Murofushi |
From Basic Research to Applications
Editorial: | p. 497 | |
From Basic Research to Applications |
| |
Jorma K. Mattila | ||
Forty years have passed since Prof. Lotfi A. Zadeh introduced fuzzy set theory in his known article “Fuzzy Sets” in Information and Control, 8, 1965, sparking new development in information technology and automation. This article also formed the roots of the Fuzzy Systems Research Group, an active part of the Laboratory of Applied Mathematics, Lappeenranta University of Technology. Rough set theory, evolutionary computing, and neural computing followed, together with their combinations. This Special Issue presents 10 papers representing these areas. Many of the contributors of this Special Issue belong to the Fuzzy Systems Research Group and others work in close co-operations with this group. The first paper considers the use of linguistically expressed objectives in multicriteria decision-making in selection processes based on topological similarity M-relations between L-sets. The second presents basic ideas and fundamental concepts of rough set theory and considers properties of rough approximations. The third combines Lukasiewicz logics and modifier algebras based on Zadeh algebras, i.e., quasi-Boolean algebras of membership functions. The fourth applies Mö{o}bius transformations, known in complex analysis, to fuzzy subgroups in a topological point of view. The fifth discusses the stability of a classifier based on the Lukasiewicz structure and tests Schweizer and Sklar's implications with an extension to generalized mean to a classification task. The sixth deals with the interpretability problem of first-order Takagi-Sugeno systems and interpolation issues, developing a special two-model configuration. The seventh describes an expert system for defining an athlete's aerobic and anaerobic thresholds that successfully mimics decision-making by sport medicine professionals, with system functionality based on fuzzy comparison measures, generalized means, fuzzy membership functions, and differential evolution. The eighth applies a differential evolution algorithm-based method to training radial basis function networks with variables including centers...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 498-501 | ||
A Selection Model with Linguistically Expressed Objectives |
|
||
Jari Kortelainen |
Paper: | pp. 502-505 | ||
Properties of Rough Approximations |
|
||
Jouni Järvinen |
Paper: | pp. 506-510 | ||
On Lukasiewicz Modifier Logic |
|
||
Jorma K. Mattila |
Paper: | pp. 511-513 | ||
Level Sets as a Topological Base Applied to Subgroups of a Group of Moebius Transformations |
|
||
Paavo Kukkurainen |
Paper: | pp. 514-525 | ||
Stability Issues with Classifier Using Lukasiewicz Similarity and Modified Schweizer & Sklar Equations |
|
||
Pasi Luukka, and Jouni Sampo |
Paper: | pp. 526-533 | ||
Identification of Numerically Accurate First-Order Takagi-Sugeno Systems with Interpretable Local Models from Data |
|
||
Andri Riid, and Ennu Rüstern |
Paper: | pp. 534-539 | ||
Fuzzy Logic and Differential Evolution Based Expert System for Defining Top Athlete's Aerobic and Anaerobic Thresholds |
|
||
Kalle Saastamoinen, and Jaakko Ketola |
Paper: | pp. 540-548 | ||
Approximation by Growing Radial Basis Function Networks Using the Differential-Evolution-Based Algorithm |
|
||
Junhong Liu, and Jouni Lampinen |
Paper: | pp. 549-555 | ||
A Comparison of Differential Evolution and Generalized Generation Gap Model |
|
||
Jani Rönkkönen, Saku Kukkonen, and Jouni Lampinen |
Paper: | pp. 556-561 | ||
Case-Based Reasoning in Web Break Sensitivity Evaluation in a Paper Machine |
|
||
Timo Ahola, and Kauko Leiviskä |
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 563-569 | ||
Traces of Fuzzy Relations Under Dual Operations |
|
||
Hiroshi Hashimoto |
Paper: | pp. 570-575 | ||
Improving Text Categorization by Multicriteria Feature Selection |
|
||
Son Doan, and Susumu Horiguchi |
No.4
(Jul)
Special Issue on Computational Cybernetics
Special Issue on Computational Cybernetics
Editorial: | p. 345 | |
Computational Cybernetics |
| |
Wilfried Elmenreich, and Imre J. Rudas | ||
This issue contains selected papers from the International IEEE Conference on Computational Cybernetics that took place in Vienna 2004 in Austria at the Vienna University of Technology. Computational Cybernetics is the synergetic integration of Cybernetics and Computational Intelligence techniques. Cybernetics was defined by Wiener as "the science of control and communication, in the animal and the machine". The word "cybernetics" itself stems from the Greek "kybernetes" that means pilot or governor. While the roots of cybernetics go back to the time when James Watt equipped his steam engine with a Governor, that is a simple feedback mechanism for regulation of steam flow, the computational component was a child of the 20th century with the rise of information processing machines. The science of cybernetics and the science of computer science have in common, that both infiltrated many fields of application such as mathematics, telecommunication, regulated engines, living systems/medicine, social systems, and economical systems. Thus, on the one hand, the science of computational cybernetics encompasses a wide field, like the comparative study of automatic control systems, mechanical, biological (living), social and economical systems, communication theory, signal processing, information technology, control theory, the theory of adaptive systems, and the theory of complex systems (game theory, operational research). On the other hand, this research allows for finding common roots and common behavior among this broad field. This dichotomy between a broad overarching topic and the focus on computational cybernetics establishes the basis for interesting talks and discussions between scientists of different disciplines. We have selected 11 papers from the conference covering the fields of system design and modeling, neural networks, control theory, robotics and pattern recognition, which resemble the great variety of computational cybernetics. After the conference, each of these papers has undergone another peer review cycle in which the papers had been improved in order to fit this journal's topic and qualit...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 346-352 | ||
Fault-Tolerant Compensation of the Propagation Delay for Hard Real-Time Systems |
|
||
Thomas Losert, Martin Schlager, and Wilfried Elmenreich |
Paper: | pp. 353-360 | ||
On the Design and Structure of Artificial Eyes for Tracking Tasks |
|
||
Markus Vincze |
Paper: | pp. 361-367 | ||
Left Ventricle Wall Motion Analysis Using MRI Tagging |
|
||
Tsuneharu Morito, Susumu Kanazawa, Tetsuya Sano, and Hideki Yamamoto |
Paper: | pp. 368-371 | ||
An Island-Based Evolution Algorithm for Discrete-Continuous Scheduling with Continuous Resource Discretisation |
|
||
Piotr Jedrzejowicz, and Aleksander Skakovski |
Paper: | pp. 372-378 | ||
Utilization of Neural Networks for Error Reduction of Elastomagnetic Sensors |
|
||
Jozef Vojtko, Irena Kovácová, Ladislav Madarász, and Dobroslav Kovác |
Paper: | pp. 379-386 | ||
Fractional-Order Position/Force Robot Control |
|
||
N. M. Fonseca Ferreira, J. A. Tenreiro Machado, and J. Boaventura Cunha |
Paper: | pp. 387-394 | ||
A Unified Framework for Dynamics and Lyapunov Stability of Holonomically Constrained Rigid Bodies |
|
||
Khoder Melhem, Zhaoheng Liu, and Antonio Loría |
Paper: | pp. 395-398 | ||
About Fractional Calculus of Singular Lagrangians |
|
||
Dumitru Baleanu |
Paper: | pp. 399-408 | ||
Analogy Based Methodology for Complex Adaptive Production Network Modelling |
|
||
Béla Pátkai |
Paper: | pp. 409-414 | ||
Roby-Go, a Prototype for Cooperating MiroSOT Soccer-Playing Robots |
|
||
Gregor Novak |
Paper: | pp. 415-422 | ||
Human Intent Description in Environment Adaptive Product Model Objects |
|
||
László Horváth, and Imre J. Rudas |
Paper: | pp. 423-429 | ||
Maintenance of Building Blocks in GA Using Symbiotic Evolutionary Viruses |
|
||
Yoshiaki Sakakura, Noriyuki Taniguchi, Yukinobu Hoshino, and Katsuari Kamei |
Paper: | pp. 430-436 | ||
Genetic Network Programming for Automatic Program Generation |
|
||
Shingo Mabu, Kotaro Hirasawa, Yuko Matsuya, and Jinglu Hu |
No.3
(May)
Selected Papers in SCIS & ISIS 2004 – No.2
Selected Papers in SCIS & ISIS 2004 – No.2
Editorial: | p. 225 | |
Selected Papers in SCIS & ISIS 2004 – No.2 |
| |
Takehisa Onisawa | ||
The Joint Conference of the 2nd International Conference on Soft Computing and Intelligent Systems and the 5th International Symposium on Advanced Intelligent Systems (SCIS & ISIS 2004) held at Keio University in Yokohama, Japan, on September 21-24, 2004, attracted over 300 papers in fields such as mathematics, urban and transport planning, entertainment, intelligent control, learning, image processing, clustering, neural networks applications, evolutionary computation, system modeling, fuzzy measures, and robotics. The Program Committee requested reviewers in SCIS & ISIS 2004 to select papers for a special issue of the Journal of Advanced Computational Intelligence & Intelligent Informatics (JACIII), with 27 papers accepted for publication in a two-part SCIS & ISIS 2004 special – Vol.9, No.2, containing 13 and the second part containing 14. Paper 1 details tap-changer control using neural networks. Papers 2-5 deal with image processing and recognition – Paper 2 proposing a model of saliency-driven scene learning and recognition and applying its model to robotics, paper 3 discussing breast cancer recognition using evolutionary algorithms, paper 4 covering a revised GMDH-typed neural network model applied to medical image recognition, paper 5 presenting how to compensate for missing information in the acquisition of visual information applied to autonomous soccer robot control. Paper 6 details gene expressions networks for 4 fruit fly development stages. Paper 7 proposes an α-constrained particle swarm optimized for solving constrained optimization problem. Paper 8 develops a fuzzy-neuro multilayer perceptron using genetic algorithms for recognizing odor mixtures. Paper 9 discusses how to integrate symbols into neural networks for the fusion of computational and symbolic processing and its effectiveness demonstrated through simulations. Paper 10 proposes an electric dictionary using a set of nodes and links whose usefulness is verified in experiments. Paper 11 presents a multi-agent algorithm for a class scheduling problem, showing its feasibility through computer simulation. Paper 12 proposes inductive...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 226-234 | ||
Improved ANN Based Tap-Changer Controller Using Modified Cascade-Correlation Algorithm |
|
||
M. Fakhrul Islam, Joarder Kamruzzaman, and Guojun Lu |
Paper: | pp. 235-243 | ||
Saliency-Driven Scene Learning and Recognition Based on Competitively Growing Neural Network Using Temporal Coding |
|
||
Masayasu Atsumi |
Paper: | pp. 244-256 | ||
A Fully Automated Breast Cancer Recognition System Using Discrete-Gradient Based Clustering and Multi Category Feature Selection |
|
||
Ranadhir Ghosh, Moumita Ghosh, and John Yearwood |
Paper: | pp. 257-267 | ||
Revised GMDH-Type Neural Networks Using AIC or PSS Criterion and Their Application to Medical Image Recognition |
|
||
Tadashi Kondo, Junji Ueno, and Kazuya Kondo |
Paper: | pp. 268-276 | ||
Intelligent Control of Autonomous Soccer Robots Compensating for Missing Information |
|
||
Hikari Fujii, Nobuyuki Kurihara, and Kazuo Yoshida |
Paper: | pp. 277-281 | ||
Extraction of Developmentally Important Genes from Microarray Data |
|
||
A Reum Han, Dong-Soo Kahng, Tae Woo Ryu, Hyun S. Moon, Kwang Hyung Lee, and Doheon Lee |
Paper: | pp. 282-289 | ||
Constrained Optimization by the α Constrained Particle Swarm Optimizer |
|
||
Tetsuyuki Takahama, and Setsuko Sakai |
Paper: | pp. 290-296 | ||
Recognizing Odor Mixtures Using Optimized Fuzzy Neural Network Through Genetic Algorithms |
|
||
Benyamin Kusumoputro, and Teguh P. Arsyad |
Paper: | pp. 297-303 | ||
Analysis of Symbol Generation and Integration in a Unified Model Based on a Neural Network |
|
||
Yukari Yamauchi, and Shun'ichi Tano |
Paper: | pp. 304-313 | ||
A New Electronic Dictionary with Meaning Description of Case Frame |
|
||
Kouhei Shimizu, and Masafumi Hagiwara |
Paper: | pp. 314-320 | ||
Applying Multi-Agent Algorithm to a Class Scheduling System |
|
||
Eiji Nunohiro, and Kenneth J. Mackin |
Paper: | pp. 321-328 | ||
Inductive Temporal Formula Specifications for System Verification |
|
||
Chikatoshi Yamada, Yasunori Nagata, and Zensho Nakao |
Paper: | pp. 329-336 | ||
Dynamic Mode Choice of Commuters in an Agent-Based Simulation Model with Inductive Learning Machines |
|
||
Yos Sunitiyoso, and Shoji Matsumoto |
Paper: | pp. 337-342 | ||
Characteristics Analysis of Two-Dimensional Configuration Using Modified Box-Count Method |
|
||
Yusuke Sato, and Kiyoshi Shingu |
No.2
(Mar)
Selected Papers in SCIS & ISIS 2004 – No.1
Selected Papers in SCIS & ISIS 2004 – No.1
Editorial: | p. 91 | |
Selected Papers in SCIS & ISIS 2004 - No.1 |
| |
Takehisa Onisawa | ||
The Joint Conference of the 2nd International Conference on Soft Computing and Intelligent Systems and the 5th International Symposium on Advanced Intelligent Systems (SCIS & ISIS 2004) was held at Keio University in Yokohama, Japan, on September 21-24, 2004. Over 300 papers in various fields, for example, mathematics, urban and transport planning, entertainment, intelligent control, learning, image processing, clustering, neural networks application, evolutionary computation, system modeling, fuzzy measures, and robotics were submitted to the conference. The Program Committee required reviewers in SCIS & ISIS 2004 to select excellent papers considering publication in a special issue of the Journal of Advanced Computational Intelligence and Intelligent Informatics (JACIII). Some 45 papers were selected and some of them accepted by other reviewers will be published in a two-part special issue of SCIS & ISIS 2004. In this, the first part, 13 papers have been classified into six groups — papers 1-3 under intelligent control, paper 4 under robotics, papers 5 and 6 under neural network applications, papers 7-9 under evolutionary computation applications, paper 10 under human behavior analysis, and papers 11-13 under image processing. Remaining papers currently under review will be published in the next volume. We thank the reviewers for their time and effort in making these special issues possible so quickly, and thank the JACIII editorial board, especially Profs. Hirota and Fukuda, the Editors-in-Chief and Managing Editor Kenta Uchino for their invaluable aid and advice in putting these special issues together. This issue is dedicated to the late Prof. Toshiro Terano, who passed away on February 15, 2005. He will be greatly missed. |
Paper: | pp. 92-99 | ||
Cascaded Fuzzy Congestion Controller for TCP/IP Traffic |
|
||
Tapio Frantti |
Paper: | pp. 100-105 | ||
Self-Tuning Fuzzy Robust Control for Buildings with Sliding Bearing Isolation Under Seismic Excitation |
|
||
Ken Yeh, Chun-Chieh Chien, Cheng-Wu Chen, and Han-Hsi Liang |
Paper: | pp. 106-113 | ||
Distributed Route Guidance Systems with Self-Organized Multi-Layered Vector Fields |
|
||
Kosuke Sekiyama, and Yasuhiro Ohashi |
Paper: | pp. 114-120 | ||
Taxonomy of Atomic Actions for Home-Service Robots |
|
||
Hyunseok Kim, Yuchul Jung, and Yong K. Hwang |
Paper: | pp. 121-126 | ||
Using Attenuation Coefficient Generating Function in Parallel Execution of Neural Networks for Solving SAT |
|
||
Kairong Zhang, and Masahiro Nagamatu |
Paper: | pp. 127-133 | ||
Studies on an Electronic Analog of a Recurrent Neural Network with Retrieval Phase Weight Adaptations |
|
||
Vishwanathan Mohan, Yashwant V. Joshi, Anand Itagi, and Garipelli Gangadhar |
Paper: | pp. 134-141 | ||
Forecasting Electric Load by Support Vector Machines with Genetic Algorithms |
|
||
Ping-Feng Pai, Wei-Chiang Hong, and Chih-Shen Lin |
Paper: | pp. 142-149 | ||
Simulation of Developmental Process of Organism and Application to Structural Design |
|
||
Masato Inoue, and Yoshiyuki Matsuoka |
Paper: | pp. 150-158 | ||
Evolutionary Pose Measurement by Stereo Model Matching |
|
||
Wei Song, Yasushi Mae, and Mamoru Minami |
Paper: | pp. 159-165 | ||
Analysis and Simulation of Group Behavior Using a Dynamic Sphere of Influence |
|
||
Tsuyoshi Taki, and Junichi Hasegawa |
Paper: | pp. 166-174 | ||
A Competitive Learning Algorithm with Controlling Maximum Distortion |
|
||
Takeshi Miura, Kentaro Sano, Kenichi Suzuki, and Tadao Nakamura |
Paper: | pp. 175-180 | ||
Fingerprint Matching Algorithm Using String-Based MHC Detector Set |
|
||
Jae-Won Jeong, In-Hoon Jang, and Kwee-Bo Sim |
Paper: | pp. 181-195 | ||
Fuzzy Image Matching for Pose Recognition of Occluded Knee Implants Using Fluoroscopy Images |
|
||
Syoji Kobashi, Toshihiko Tomosada, Nao Shibanuma, Motoi Yamaguchi, Hirotsugu Muratsu, Katsuya Kondo, Shinichi Yoshiya, Yutaka Hata, and Masahiro Kurosaka |
Paper: | pp. 196-202 | ||
A Proposal of Fuzzy Modeling on Fusion Axes |
|
||
Kosuke Yamamoto, Tomohiro Yoshikawa, and Takeshi Furuhashi |
Paper: | pp. 203-210 | ||
Strategy Acquisition for Games Based on Simplified Reinforcement Learning Using a Strategy Network |
|
||
Masaaki Kanakubo, and Masafumi Hagiwara |
Paper: | pp. 211-222 | ||
Integrated Intelligence Control Based on Fuzzy and AI for Reheating Furnace |
|
||
Yingxin Liao, Min Wu, Kaoru Hirota, Fangyan Dong, and Weihua Cao |
No.1
(Jan)
Intelligent Systems: Methodology, Models, and Applications in Emerging Technologies
Intelligent Systems: Methodology, Models, and Applications in Emerging Technologies
Editorial: | pp. 3-4 | |
Intelligent Systems: Methodology, Models, and Applications in Emerging Technologies |
| |
Vassil Sgurev, Vladimir Jotsov, and Mincho Hadjiski | ||
From year to year the number of investigations on intelligent systems grows rapidly. For example this year 245 papers from 45 countries were sent for the Second International IEEE Conference on Intelligent Systems (www.ieee-is.org; www.fnts-bg.org/is) and this is an increase of more than 50% by all indicators. The presented papers on intelligent systems were marked by big audiences and they provoked a significant interest that ultimately led to the formation of vivid discussions, exchange of ideas and locally provoked the creation of working groups for different applied projects. All this reflects the worldwide tendencies for the leading role of the research on intelligent systems theoretically and practically. The greater part of the presented research dealt with traditional for the intelligent systems problems like artificial intelligence, knowledge engineering, intelligent agents, neural and fuzzy networks, intelligent data processing, intelligent control and decision making systems, and also new interdisciplinary problems like ontology and semantics in Internet, fuzzy intuitionistic logic. The majority of papers from the European and American researchers are dedicated to the theory and the applications of the intelligent systems with machine learning, fuzzy inference or uncertainty. Another big group of papers focuses on the domain of building and integrating ontologies of applications with heterogeneous multiagent systems. A great number of papers on intelligent systems deals with fuzzy sets. The papers of many other researchers underscore the significance of the contemporary perception-oriented methods and also of different applications in the intelligent systems. On the first place this is valid for the paradigm of L. A. Zadeh 'computing with words'. The Guest Editors in the present specialized journal volume would like to introduce a wealth of research with an applied and theoretical character that possesses a common characteristic and it is the conference best papers complemented and updated by the new elaborations of the authors during the last half a year. A short description of the presented in the volume pap...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 5-12 | ||
Combining Local and Global Access to Ontologies in a Multiagent System |
|
||
Ramon Brena, and Hector G. Ceballos |
Paper: | pp. 13-17 | ||
Fuzzy Querying of Evolutive Situations: Application to Driving Situations |
|
||
Sabiha Ould Yahia, and Sophie Loriette-Rougegrez |
Paper: | pp. 18-22 | ||
Remembering What You Forget in an Online Shopping Context |
|
||
Martin Halvey, and Mark T. Keane |
Paper: | pp. 23-30 | ||
Reinforcement Learning for Online Industrial Process Control |
|
||
James J. Govindhasamy, Seán F. McLoone, George W. Irwin, John J. French, and Richard. P. Doyle |
Paper: | pp. 31-38 | ||
Dynamic Visualization of Information: From Database to Dataspace |
|
||
Claude St-Jacques, and Louis-Claude Paquin |
Paper: | pp. 39-45 | ||
Towards Context-Aware Knowledge Management in e-Enterprises |
|
||
Weihong Huang |
Paper: | pp. 46-52 | ||
Block-Based Change Detection in the Presence of Ambient Illumination Variations |
|
||
Theodoros Alexandropoulos, Vassili Loumos, and Eleftherios Kayafas |
Paper: | pp. 53-60 | ||
Combining Argumentation and Web Search Technology: Towards a Qualitative Approach for Ranking Results |
|
||
Carlos Iván Chesñevar, and Ana Gabriela Maguitman |
Paper: | pp. 61-64 | ||
Modified Axiomatic Basis of Subjective Probability |
|
||
Kiril Tenekedjiev, Anastas Krushev, and Natalia Nikolova |
Paper: | pp. 65-69 | ||
Fuzzy Rationality in Quantitative Decision Analysis |
|
||
Natalia Nikolova, Aleksei Shulus, Daniela Toneva, and Kiril Tenekedjiev |
Paper: | pp. 70-79 | ||
Automated 3D Surface Display for Evaluating Meniscal Tears Aided by Fuzzy Expert System |
|
||
Yutaka Hata, Syoji Kobashi, Katsuya Kondo, and Tomoharu Nakano |
Paper: | pp. 80-88 | ||
Fractal Image Coding with Simulated Annealing Search |
|
||
Shen Furao, and Osamu Hasegawa |
Vol.8 (2004)
No.6
(Nov)
Selected Papers from InTech'03
Selected Papers from InTech'03
Editorial: | p. 565 | |
Selected Papers from InTech'03 |
| |
Pratit Santiprabhob, Nipon Theera-Umpon, and Sansanee Auephanwiriyakul | ||
On behalf of the Fuzzy systems and Intelligent technologies Research Society of Thailand (FIRST), Chiang Mai University, and Assumption University of Thailand, which have jointly organized the 4th International Conference on Intelligent Technology (InTech), we thank the editorial board of the Journal of Advanced Computational Intelligence and Intelligent Informatics for devoting part of this issue to selected papers from the Conference. The 4th InTech was held during December 17-19, 2003, in the lovely northern Thai city of Chiang Mai, becoming the most successful InTech ever, with over 110 papers accepted after stringent reviews for presentation at the Conference. Papers selected for publication in this special issue have been revised by their authors based on Journal guidelines. These papers detail a variety of applications of different intelligent technologies, ranging from data classification, system identification, and signal processing to full-text search and robotics. The technologies themselves are also varied, including fuzzy logic, genetic algorithms, regression, and data classification. We thank our reviewers, who have worked tirelessly in reviewing papers for the conference and selecting papers for this special issue. We also thank Professors Kaoru Hirota and Hung T. Nguyen for their ongoing support for InTech since its inception in 2000. |
Paper: | pp. 566-572 | ||
Application of Kernel Trick to Fuzzy c-Means with Regularization by K-L Information |
|
||
Hidetomo Ichihashi, and Katsuhiro Honda |
Paper: | pp. 573-581 | ||
A Fast Dynamic Full-Text Search Method Using Efficient Block Management Structure |
|
||
Masao Fuketa, El-Sayed Atlam, Elmarhomy Ghada, and Jun-ichi Aoe |
Paper: | pp. 582-590 | ||
Accelerated Genetic Programming for Intelligent Fuzzy Robots |
|
||
Yasuyuki Murai, Koki Matsumura, Hisayuki Tatsumi, Hiroyuki Tsuji, and Shinji Tokumasu |
Paper: | pp. 591-598 | ||
Weighted Similarity Classifier Using Differential Evolution and Genetic Algorithm in Weight Optimization |
|
||
Pasi Luukka, and Jouni Sampo |
Paper: | pp. 599-605 | ||
Comparison of Linguistic and Regular Hard C-Means in Postoperative Patient Data |
|
||
Sansanee Auephanwiriyakul, and Nipon Theera-Umpon |
Paper: | pp. 606-612 | ||
Leeway Prediction of Oceanic Disastrous Target via Support Vector Regression |
|
||
Nipon Theera-Umpon, and Udomsak Boonprasert |
Paper: | pp. 613-620 | ||
Single-Channel Noise Reduction for Multiple Background Noises Using Perceptual Wavelet Packet Transform and Fuzzy Logic |
|
||
Montri Phothisonothai, Pinit Kumhom, and Kosin Chamnongthai |
Paper: | pp. 621-626 | ||
Studies on Effects of Initialization on Structure Formationand Generalization of Structural Learning with Forgetting |
|
||
Hiroshi Shiratsuchi, Hiromu Gotanda, Katsuhiro Inoue, and Kousuke Kumamaru |
Paper: | pp. 627-632 | ||
Separability Conditions for Multilayer Nets Having Solutions and Convergent Superiority of Bipolar Nets |
|
||
Hiroshi Shiratsuchi, Hiromu Gotanda, Katsuhiro Inoue, and Kousuke Kumamaru |
Paper: | pp. 633-638 | ||
Hierarchical Concept Structures Based Data Retrieval/Mining by Fuzzy Document Ordering System |
|
||
Tadashi Ohashi, Hajime Nobuhara, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 639-648 | ||
Color Instance-Based Reasoning and its Application to Dynamic Image Restoration Under Low Luminance Conditions |
|
||
Yutaka Hatakeyama, Kazuhiko Kawamoto, Hajime Nobuhara, Shin-ichi Yoshida, and Kaoru Hirota |
No.5
(Sep)
Computational Cybernetics
Computational Cybernetics
Editorial: | p. 453 | |
Computational Cybernetics |
| |
Wilfried Elmenreich, and Imre J. Rudas | ||
This issue contains selected papers from the International IEEE Conference on Computational Cybernetics that took place in August 2003 in Hungary at the site of lake Balaton. Computational Cybernetics is the synergetic integration of Cybernetics and Computational Intelligence techniques. Cybernetics was defined by Wiener as "the science of control and communication, in the animal and the machine". The word "cybernetics" itself stems from the Greek "kybernetes" that means pilot or governor. Thus, the science of computational Cybernetics is especially concerned with the comparative study of automatic control systems. Furthermore, Computational Cybernetics covers not only mechanical, but biological (living), social and economical systems and for this uses computational intelligence based results of communication theory, signal processing, information technology, control theory, the theory of adaptive systems, the theory of complex systems (game theory, operational research), and computer science. We have selected 14 papers from the conference covering the fields of system design and modeling, neural networks, and fuzzy control, which resemble the great variety of computational cybernetics. While it is sometimes difficult to integrate over these differing fields, we expect the evolution of future intelligent systems at the service of mankind by the synergetic integration of these different areas. It is our hope that the papers in this issue will inspire and help our readers in the development of advanced intelligent systems. |
Paper: | pp. 454-459 | ||
Concept-Based Interactive Brainstorming in Engineering Design |
|
||
Gideon Avigad, Amiram Moshaiov, and Neima Brauner |
Paper: | pp. 460-468 | ||
Translated Multiplicative Neuron: An Extended Multiplicative Neuron that can Translate Decision Surfaces |
|
||
Eduardo Masato Iyoda, Hajime Nobuhara, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 469-476 | ||
Motion-Based Template Matching for Obstacle Detection |
|
||
Kazuhiko Kawamoto, Naoya Ohnishi, Atsushi Imiya, Reinhard Klette, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 477-481 | ||
Learning from Examples and Comparing Models of Human Motion |
|
||
Marek Kulbacki, Bartosz Jablonski, Ryszard Klempous, and Jakub Segen |
Paper: | pp. 482-487 | ||
Microstatistic Multi-User Detection Receiver |
|
||
Dusan Kocur, Jana Cízová, and Stanislav Marchevský |
Paper: | pp. 488-494 | ||
Anytime System Scheduler for Insufficient Resource Availability |
|
||
Annamária R. Várkonyi-Kóczy, and Gábor Samu |
Paper: | pp. 495-498 | ||
Energy-Conservative Algorithm for the Numerical Solution of Initial-Value Hamiltonian System Problems |
|
||
Edit Miletics |
Paper: | pp. 499-506 | ||
Development of Fuzzy Controllers with Dynamics Regarding Stability Conditions and Sensitivity Analysis |
|
||
Radu-Emil Precup, Stefan Preitl, and Péter Korondi |
Paper: | pp. 507-513 | ||
Evolutionary Design of Combinational Logic Circuits |
|
||
Cecília Reis, J. A. Tenreiro Machado, and J. Boaventura Cunha |
Paper: | pp. 514-522 | ||
A Combined Solution of the Inverse Kinematic Task in the Vicinity of the Singularities |
|
||
Imre J. Rudas, József K. Tar, János F. Bitó, Ágnes Szeghegyi, and Krzysztof R. Kozlowski |
Paper: | pp. 523-529 | ||
A Test Model for Hardware and Software Systems |
|
||
József Sziray |
Paper: | pp. 530-534 | ||
New Method of Program Selection in Digital TV Receivers and its Evaluation by Users |
|
||
Petr Weissar, Jiri Pinker, Miloslava Hrichova, and Jaroslav Firt |
Paper: | pp. 535-543 | ||
Kalman-Filter Based Control and Performance Monitoring Systems |
|
||
Attila L. Bencsik |
Paper: | pp. 544-552 | ||
Possibilities for Application of Associative Objects with Built-in Intelligence in Engineering Modeling |
|
||
László Horváth, and Imre J. Rudas |
Paper: | pp. 553-561 | ||
Sliding Mode Robot Control with Friction and Payload Estimation |
|
||
Lörinc Márton, and Béla Lantos |
No.4
(Jul)
Special Issue on Papers Selected in ISIS & SCIS 2003
Special Issue on Papers Selected in ISIS & SCIS 2003
Editorial: | p. 349 | |
Papers Selected in ISIS & SCIS 2003 |
| |
Yong-Soo Kim, and Kwee-Bo Sim | ||
This special issue of journal covers a broad field ranging from intelligent systems to robotics. These papers were selected among the papers that were presented at the Joint 4th International Symposium on Advanced Intelligent Systems and 2nd International Conference on Soft Computing and Intelligent Systems which was held in Jeju, Korea on September 25-28, 2003. In the above symposium, there was a wide spectrum of intelligent systems and related topics, including sessions: intelligent systems, intelligent control, fuzzy sets, fuzzy systems, neural networks, robotics, genetic algorithms, image processing, soft computing, artificial life, etc. Many interesting results were presented at the symposium. Among these various papers, this special issue offers a selection of sixteen papers that contribute to advances of intelligent systems in various aspects. The topics that the selected papers deal with are fuzzy controller for the mobile robot control, neural networks and their application to image processing, intelligent control for a robot, intelligent system for probe detection, fuzzy image processing, genetic algorithms, fuzzy clustering for incomplete categorical data, predictive fuzzy controller for an electric four-wheeled vehicle. As guest editors of this special issue, we would like to express our thanks to authors for their contribution, the anonymous referees for their review, and Prof. Kaoru Hirota for his giving the opportunity to publish this special issue. |
Paper: | pp. 350-355 | ||
Intelligent Soft Driving System for a Four-Wheeled Electric Vehicle Eluding Dynamic Obstacles |
|
||
Masaki Inoue, and Seiji Yasunobu |
Paper: | pp. 356-361 | ||
Co-Evolution of Fuzzy Controller for the Mobile Robot Control |
|
||
Kwang-Sub Byun, Chang-Hyun Park, and Kwee-Bo Sim |
Paper: | pp. 362-368 | ||
Fuzzy Descriptor System Modeling and Control of Lagrange Dynamics with Regional Pole-Placement Constraint |
|
||
Jin-Shig Kang |
Paper: | pp. 369-372 | ||
Design and Analysis of Probe Detection Systems for TCP Networks |
|
||
Se-Yul Lee, and Yong-Soo Kim |
Paper: | pp. 373-378 | ||
A Fuzzification of Morphological Wavelets Based on Fuzzy Relational Calculus and its Application to Image Compression/Reconstruction |
|
||
Hajime Nobuhara, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 379-384 | ||
Fuzzy Aggregation Method Using Fisherface and Wavelet Decomposition for Face Recognition |
|
||
Keun-Chang Kwak, Witold Pedrycz, Hyoun-Joo Go, and Myung-Geun Chun |
Paper: | pp. 385-389 | ||
Recognition of Car License Plates Using Morphological Information and SOM Algorithm |
|
||
Kwang-Baek Kim, and Dae-Su Kim |
Paper: | pp. 390-396 | ||
Intelligent Logo Watermarking Based on Independent Component Analysis |
|
||
Thai Duy Hien, Zensho Nakao, and Yen-Wei Chen |
Paper: | pp. 397-402 | ||
Simultaneous Application of Fuzzy Clustering and Quantification with Incomplete Categorical Data |
|
||
Katsuhiro Honda, Yoshihito Nakamura, and Hidetomo Ichihashi |
Paper: | pp. 403-409 | ||
Safe Mobility System Cooperating with Human in Collaboration with Cyber City |
|
||
Toru Yamaguchi, Jun Kawakatsu, Jianping Jing, Ryuji Kurosaki, and Fumio Harashima |
Paper: | pp. 410-414 | ||
Expert-Knowledge Gating Mechanism in the Hierarchical Modular System |
|
||
Jeong-Yon Shim |
Paper: | pp. 415-420 | ||
A Study on Supplier Evaluation and Selection Method Based on Dependence |
|
||
Jong-Moon Ju, and Seung-Gook Hwang |
Paper: | pp. 421-425 | ||
A Proposal of GA Using Symbiotic Evolutionary Viruses and its Virus Evaluation Techniques |
|
||
Yoshiaki Sakakura, Noriyuki Taniguchi, Yukinobu Hoshino, and Katsuari Kamei |
Paper: | pp. 426-430 | ||
Development of an Automatic Tunneling Algorithm Based on Fuzzy Logic for the Microtunneling System |
|
||
Taedong Park, Janghyun Nam, Jeong-Su Han, Jun-Hyeong Do, and Zeungnam Bien |
Paper: | pp. 431-436 | ||
Fault Detection of Induction Motors Using Fourier and Wavelet Analysis |
|
||
Hyeon Bae, Youn-Tae Kim, Sungshin Kim, Sang-Hyuk Lee, and Bo-Hyeun Wang |
Paper: | pp. 437-441 | ||
Reliability Optimization Problems Using Adaptive Hybrid Genetic Algorithms |
|
||
Minoru Mukuda, YoungSu Yun, and Mitsuo Gen |
Paper: | pp. 442-450 | ||
A Fuzzy Approach for Modelling the Effects of Noise Pollution on Human Performance |
|
||
Zaheeruddin, and V. K. Jain |
No.3
(May)
Perspectives of Computational Intelligence in Robotics and Automation
Perspectives of Computational Intelligence in Robotics and Automation
Editorial: | pp. 235-236 | |
Perspectives of Computational Intelligence in Robotics and Automation |
| |
Max Q-H Meng, and Hong Zhang | ||
As people attempt to build biomimetic robots and realize automation processes through artificial intelligence, computational intelligence plays a very important role in robotics and automation. This special issue contains several important papers that address various aspects of computational intelligence in robotics and automation. While acknowledging its limited coverage, this special issue offers a range of interesting contributions such as intelligent trajectory planning for flying and land mobile robots, fuzzy decision making, control of rigid and teleoperated robots, modeling of human sensations, and intelligent sensor fusion techniques. Let us scan through these contributions of this special issue. The first paper, "Planar Spline Trajectory Following for an Autonomous Helicopter," by Harbick et al., proposes a technique for planar trajectory following for an autonomous aerial robot. A trajectory is modeled as a planar spline. A behavior-based control system stabilizes the robot and enforces trajectory following of an autonomous helicopter with a reasonable trajectory tracking error on the order of the size of the helicopter (1.8m). In the second paper, "A Biologically Inspired Approach to Collision-Free Path Planning and Tracking Control of a Mobile Robot," by Yang et al., a novel biologically inspired neural network approach is proposed for dynamic collision-free path planning and stable tracking control of a nonholonomic mobile robot in a non-stationary environment, based on shunting equations derived from Hodgkin and Huxley's biological membrane equation. The third paper, "Composite Fuzzy Measure and Its Application to Decision Making," by Kaino and Kaoru, builds a composite fuzzy measure from fuzzy measures defined on fuzzy measurable spaces using composite fuzzy weights by the authors, with a successful application to an automobile factory capital investment decision making problem. In "Intelligent Control of a Miniature Climbing Robot," by Xiao et al., a fuzzy logic based intelligent optimal control system for a miniature climbing robot to achieve precision motion control, minimized power consumption, and versa...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 237-242 | ||
Planar Spline Trajectory Following for an Autonomous Helicopter |
|
||
Kale Harbick, James F. Montgomery, and Gaurav S. Sukhatme |
Paper: | pp. 243-251 | ||
A Biological Inspired Approach to Collision-Free Path Planning and Tracking Control of a Mobile Robot |
|
||
Simon X. Yang, Max Q.-H. Meng, Gavin X. Yuan, and Peter X. Liu |
Paper: | pp. 252-259 | ||
Composite Fuzzy Measure and its Application to Decision-Making |
|
||
Toshihiro Kaino, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 260-268 | ||
Intelligent Control of a Miniature Climbing Robot |
|
||
Jizhong Xiao, Jun Xiao, and Ning Xi |
Paper: | pp. 269-274 | ||
Incorporating Motivation in a Hybrid Robot Architecture |
|
||
Alexander Stoytchev, and Ronald C. Arkin |
Paper: | pp. 275-283 | ||
Intelligent Scaling Control for Internet-Based Teleoperation |
|
||
Peter Xiaoping Liu, Max Q-H Meng, and Jason J. Gu |
Paper: | pp. 284-294 | ||
Feature Extraction of Robot Sensor Data Using Factor Analysis for Behavior Learning |
|
||
Wai-keung Fung, and Yun-hui Liu |
Paper: | pp. 295-301 | ||
Trajectory Planning of Mobile Robots Using DNA Computing |
|
||
Kazuo Kiguchi, Keigo Watanabe, and Toshio Fukuda |
Paper: | pp. 302-312 | ||
Computational Intelligence for Modeling Human Sensations in Virtual Environments |
|
||
Ka Keung Lee, and Yangsheng Xu |
Paper: | pp. 313-323 | ||
Intelligent Sensor Fusion in Robotic Prosthetic Eye System |
|
||
Jason J. Gu, Max Meng, Albert Cook, and Peter Xiaoping Liu |
Paper: | pp. 324-331 | ||
Position Control of Direct-Drive Robot Manipulators with PMAC Motors Using Enhanced Fuzzy PD Control |
|
||
Dong Sun, Y. X. Su, and James K. Mills |
Paper: | pp. 332-335 | ||
Novel Approach to Decision-Tree Construction |
|
||
Wei Jin-Mao, Wang Shu-Qin, and Wang Ming-Yang |
Paper: | pp. 336-345 | ||
Solving Truck Delivery Problems Using Integrated Evaluation Criteria Based on Neighborhood Degree and Evolutionary Algorithm |
|
||
Fangyan Dong, Kewei Chen, Eduardo Masato Iyoda, Hajime Nobuhara, and Kaoru Hirota |
No.2
(Mar)
Special Issue on Pattern Recognition
Special Issue on Pattern Recognition
Editorial: | p. 83 | |
Pattern Recognition |
| |
Osamu Hasegawa | ||
We are pleased to publish this special JACIII issue on pattern recognition featuring 3 invited and 14 regular papers. The first and second concern support vector machines and Bayesian networks by authors who are field experts, and should serve as an introduction to beginners and a resource for researchers. In the third paper, the authors propose an artificial neural network for pattern recognition using "living" neural cells. This paper was invited because the research it deals with is considered an example of the interfield research expected to develop in the 21st century. The remaining 14 regular papers are reviewed and selected from 19 submitted papers. In reviewing and selecting the 14 regular papers, covering a broad field range from basic theory to applied systems, we focused on the originality of each paper and the viewpoints of the authors toward problems and experimental results. This wide-ranging selection should prove both innovative and enlightening to interested readers. We thank Professors Kaoru Hirota and Toshio Fukuda, editors-in-chief of this journal, for their support of this special issue. We also thank the staff of Fuji Technology Press for its invaluable assistance. |
Paper: | pp. 84-92 | ||
Support Vector Machine and Generalization |
|
||
Takio Kurita |
Review: | pp. 93-99 | ||
Bayesian Network: Probabilistic Reasoning, Statistical Learning, and Applications |
|
||
Yoichi Motomura |
Paper: | pp. 100-107 | ||
Operation of Spatiotemporal Patterns Stored in Living Neuronal Networks Cultured on a Microelectrode Array |
|
||
Suguru N. Kudoh, and Takahisa Taguchi |
Paper: | pp. 108-114 | ||
Rapid Discriminative Learning |
|
||
Jun Rokui |
Paper: | pp. 115-120 | ||
Robust Fuzzy Clustering Based on Similarity between Data |
|
||
Kohei Inoue, and Kiichi Urahama |
Paper: | pp. 121-129 | ||
A Growing Neural Network for Online Unsupervised Learning |
|
||
Shen Furao, and Osamu Hasegawa |
Paper: | pp. 130-139 | ||
A View-Invariant Face Detection Method Based on Local PCA Cells |
|
||
Kazuhiro Hotta |
Paper: | pp. 140-149 | ||
Pointing Device Based on Estimation of Trajectory and Shape of a Human Hand in a Monocular Image Sequence |
|
||
Satoru Odo, and Kiyoshi Hoshino |
Paper: | pp. 150-155 | ||
Human Limb Extraction Based on Motion Estimation Using Optical Flow and Image Registration |
|
||
Toru Tamaki |
Paper: | pp. 156-167 | ||
Tool Operation Recognition Based on Robust Optical Flow and HMM from Short-Time Sequential Image Data |
|
||
Hidetomo Sakaino, Yutaka Yanagisawa, and Tetsuji Satoh |
Paper: | pp. 168-180 | ||
Extraction of Motion Characteristics Corresponding to Sensitivity Information Using Dance Movement |
|
||
Shihoko Kamisato, Satoru Odo, Yoshino Ishikawa, and Kiyoshi Hoshino |
Paper: | pp. 181-189 | ||
Automatic Video Recording of Lecture’s Audience with Activity Analysis and Equalization of Scale for Students Observation |
|
||
Satoshi Nishiguchi, Yoshinari Kameda, Koh Kakusho, and Michihiko Minoh |
Paper: | pp. 190-199 | ||
Joint Audio-Visual Tracking Based on Dynamically Weighted Linear Combination of Probability State Density |
|
||
Masaru Tsuchida, Takahito Kawanishi, Hiroshi Murase, and Shigeru Takagi |
Paper: | pp. 200-207 | ||
Printed Japanese Character Recognition Using Multiple Commercial OCRs |
|
||
Hidetoshi Miyao, Yasuaki Nakano, Atsuhiko Tani, Hirosato Tabaru, and Toshihiro Hananoi |
Paper: | pp. 208-215 | ||
Stave Extraction for Printed Music Scores Using DP Matching |
|
||
Hidetoshi Miyao, and Masayuki Okamoto |
Paper: | pp. 216-222 | ||
Classification of Remotely Sensed Images Using Independent Component Analysis and Spatial Consistency |
|
||
Xiang-Yan Zeng, Yen-Wei Chen, and Zensho Nakao |
Paper: | pp. 223-230 | ||
Behavior Learning and Animation Synthesis of Falling Flat Objects |
|
||
Kohta Aoki, Osamu Hasegawa, and Hiroshi Nagahashi |
No.1
(Jan)
Selected Papers from Humanoid, Nanotechnology, Information Technology, Communication and Control, Environment, and Management (HNICEM'03)
Selected Papers from Humanoid, Nanotechnology, Information Technology, Communication and Control, Environment, and Management (HNICEM'03)
Editorial: | p. 1 | |
Selected Papers from Humanoid, Nanotechnology, Information Technology, Communication and Control, Environment, and Management (HNICEM'03) |
| |
Elmer P. Dadios | ||
I am happy and honored to publish a special issue on Humanoid, Nanotechnology, Information Technology, Communication and Control, Environment, and Management (HNICEM) in the JACIII. The demand for the application of HNICEM is rapidly growing. We have received many papers focused in the fields of Manufacturing, Academe, and Business during the first international conference on HNICEM. This special issue includes 11 papers carefully and evenly selected from these fields. I strongly believed that the topics in this issue encompass technologies that will play a significant role in the development of HNICEM. I am very grateful to Prof. Toshio Fukuda and Prof. Kaoru Hirota, the Chief editors of JACIII for inviting me as Guest editor in this Journal. I would like to express my warmest thanks and gratitude to the distinguished authors that have contributed to this special issue, for their outstanding contributions and cooperation. I am hoping that the JACIII will continually provide papers regarding progress of new technologies particularly in the fields of HNICEM. |
Paper: | pp. 2-6 | ||
A New Way of Discovery of Belief, Desire and Intention in the BDI Agent-Based Software Modeling |
|
||
Chang-Hyun Jo |
Paper: | pp. 7-13 | ||
Integration of Distributed Robotic Systems |
|
||
Fakhri Karray, Rogelio Soto, Federico Guedea, and Insop Song |
Paper: | pp. 14-22 | ||
A Searching and Tracking Framework for Multi-Robot Observation of Multiple Moving Targets |
|
||
Zheng Liu, Marcelo H. Ang Jr., and Winston Khoon Guan Seah |
Development Report: | pp. 23-28 | ||
Possibilistic Uncertainty Propagation and Compromise Programming in the Life Cycle Analysis of Alternative Motor Vehicle Fuels |
|
||
Raymond R. Tan, Alvin B. Culaba, and Michael R. I. Purvis |
Paper: | pp. 29-38 | ||
Dynamic Color Object Recognition Using Fuzzy Logic |
|
||
Napoleon H. Reyes and Elmer P. Dadios |
Paper: | pp. 39-44 | ||
An Optical Coordinate Measuring Machine for Nanoscale Dimensional Metrology |
|
||
Eric Kirkland, Thomas R. Kurfess, and Steven Y. Liang |
Paper: | pp. 45-55 | ||
Humanoid Robot HanSaRam: Recent Progress and Developments |
|
||
Jong-Hwan Kim, Dong-Han Kim, Yong-Jae Kim, Kui-Hong Park, Jae-Ho Park, Choon-Kyoung Moon, Jee-Hwan Ryu, Kiam Tian Seow, and Kyoung-Chul Koh |
Paper: | pp. 56-64 | ||
Generalized Associative Memory Models: Their Memory Capacities and Potential Application |
|
||
Teddy N. Yap, Jr. and Arnulfo P. Azcarraga |
Paper: | pp. 65-71 | ||
Hybrid Fuzzy Logic Strategy for Soccer Robot Game |
|
||
Elmer A. Maravillas, Napoleon H. Reyes, and Elmer P. Dadios |
Paper: | pp. 72-80 | ||
Image Compression and Reconstruction based on Fuzzy Relation and Soft Computing Technology |
|
||
Kaoru Hirota, Hajime Nobuhara, Kazuhiko Kawamoto, and Shin’ichi Yoshida |
Vol.7 (2003)
No.3
(Oct)
Intelligent Technologies, Fuzzy Systems and Applications
Intelligent Technologies, Fuzzy Systems and Applications
Editorial: | p. 251 | |
Intelligent Technologies, Fuzzy Systems and Applications |
| |
Nguyen Hoang Phuong | ||
In this issue, we are featuring fifteen papers devoted to intelligent technologies, fuzzy systems and their applications as a special issue of the journal. The papers are selected from papers accepted and presented at the joint Third International Conference on Intelligent Technologies and Third Vietnam-Japan Symposium on Fuzzy Systems and Applications (InTech/VJFuzzy'2002) that was held in Hanoi, Vietnam on December 3-5, 2002. In InTech/VJFuzzy'2002, there was a wide spectrum of research topics on artificial intelligence, fuzzy systems, soft computing, and related fields such as"fuzzy logic", "fuzzy set theory", "fuzzy systems", "AI techniques", "Bayesian networks", "genetic algorithms", "neural networks", "knowledge discovery and data mining", "speech recognition", "soft computing in medicine", among others. More than 60 papers were accepted and presented by authors from many countries, including Australia, China, India, Korea, Germany, France, Thailand, Taiwan, Japan, Vietnam, and U.S.A. Fifteen papers that received outstanding recommendations from its reviews were selected in this special issue. The topics addressed by these selected papers include fuzzy rule systems, fuzzy inference methods, fuzzy and rough models, problem solving with equivalent transformation, genetic algorithms, reinforcement learning, non–monotonic reasoning, support vector machines, Hedge algebra, intelligent control, natural language understanding, self–organizing map learning, soft computing and data mining in medicine. As editors of this special issue, we would like to express our sincere gratitude to paper's authors in this issue. Our special thanks go to the anonymous referees for their excellent job, Ms. Kumiko Sato for her help in coordinating the publication of the issue, the Editorial Board of JACIII, especially Professor Kaoru Hirota for his great support and encouragement. Finally, we wish to thank Professors Hung T. Nguyen, Michio Sugeno and Pratit Santiprabhob for their help and contribution to InTech/VJFuzzy'2002. Without their support, the InTech/VJFuzzy'2002 and this issue would not be possible. |
Paper: | pp. 252-259 | ||
Some Preliminary Results on the Stableness of Extended F-rule Systems |
|
||
Nguyen Thanh Thuy, Phan Duong Hieu, and Takahiro Yamanoi |
Paper: | pp. 260-267 | ||
How to Make Programs from Problem Descriptions in the Equivalent Transformation Paradigm |
|
||
Takahiko Ishikawa, Kiyoshi Akama, and Hiroshi Mabuchi |
Paper: | pp. 268-275 | ||
Modeling and Analysis of Genetic Algorithms Based on the Viewpoint of Mixture Systems |
|
||
Jun-ichi Imai, Hiroyuki Shioya, and Masahito Kurihara |
Paper: | pp. 276-282 | ||
Analysis of a Method Improving Reinforcement Learning Agents’ Policies |
|
||
Daisuke Kitakoshi, Hiroyuki Shioya, and Masahito Kurihara |
Paper: | pp. 283-288 | ||
A Recursively Axiomatizable Subsystem of Levesque’s Logic of Only Knowing |
|
||
Ho Ngoc Duc |
Paper: | pp. 289-293 | ||
Real Time Adaptive Color Segmentation for Mars Landing Site Identification |
|
||
Tuan A. Duong and Vu A. Duong |
Paper: | pp. 294-305 | ||
The Fuzzy Description Logic ALCFH with Hedge Algebras as Concept Modifiers |
|
||
Steffen Hölldobler, Hans-Peter Störr, and Tran Dinh Khang |
Paper: | pp. 306-314 | ||
Integration of Syntactic Analysis and Semantic Interpretation Based on Equivalent Transformation |
|
||
Hiroshi Mabuchi, Kiyoshi Akama, Takahiko Ishikawa, and Hidekatsu Koike |
Paper: | pp. 315-321 | ||
Reordering Adaptive Directed Acyclic Graphs for Multiclass Support Vector Machines |
|
||
Thimaporn Phetkaew, Wanchai Rivepiboon, and Boonserm Kijsirikul |
Paper: | pp. 322-329 | ||
Hybrid Probabilistic Models of Fuzzy and Rough Events |
|
||
Rolly Intan, Masao Mukaidono, and Hung T. Nguyen |
Paper: | pp. 330-338 | ||
Intelligent Control of Nonlinear Dynamic Systems Using Immune Fuzzy Fusion |
|
||
Dong Hwa Kim |
Paper: | pp. 339-347 | ||
Fuzzy Modeling for Modifying Standard Prescriptions of Oriental Traditional Medicine |
|
||
Nguyen Hoang Phuong, Pratit Santiprabhob, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 348-354 | ||
Temporal Abstraction for Long-Term Test Changes in the Hepatitis Domain |
|
||
Saori Kawasaki, Trong Dung Nguyen, and Tu Bao Ho |
Paper: | pp. 355-361 | ||
A Novel Parallel Model for Self-Organizing Map and its Efficient Implementation on a Data-Driven Multiprocessor |
|
||
Ruck Thawonmas, Makoto Iwata, and Satoshi Fukunaga |
Paper: | pp. 362-369 | ||
Fuzzy Inference Methods Employing T-norm with Threshold and Their Implementation |
|
||
Bui Cong Cuong, Nguyen Hoang Phuong, Ho Khanh Le, Bui Truong Son, and Koichi Yamada |
Paper: | pp. 370-376 | ||
Phase Transitions in Fuzzy Clustering Based on Fuzzy Entropy |
|
||
Makoto Yasuda, Takeshi Furuhashi, and Shigeru Okuma |
Paper: | pp. 377-385 | ||
New Error Diffusion Using Fuzzy Threshold Control |
|
||
Noriaki Suetake, and Rumiko Hashiba |
No.2
(Jun)
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2002
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2002
Editorial: | p. 71 | |
Selected Papers from SCIS & ISIS 2002 |
| |
Sadaaki Miyamoto, and Seiji Yasunobu | ||
Much work has been done recently in soft computing, reflecting the growing, widespread interest in the emerging theory and technological development in this field. Soft computing has also been the subject of a number of new scientific conferences and symposiums, including the Joint 1st International Conference on Soft Computing and Intelligent Systems (SCIS) and 3rd International Symposium on Advanced Intelligent Systems (ISIS) at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology at Tsukuba on October 21–25, 2002. The first and second ISIS were held in Korea, and the joint conference has become internationally recognized. The conference at Tsukuba featured over 200 papers and discussions and information exchange by over 250 participants interested in state–of–the–art soft computing. The 20 papers in this special issue were selected from 209 of these conference presentations. In the selection process, guest editors first requested recommendation of papers to session chairs and organizers. From the resulting list, we asked if they could submit their papers. Submitted papers were reviewed as usual for this journal based on the JACIII standard, resulting in the acceptance of these 20. Most papers have been rewritten and updated, and we are proud of their high quality–a reflection of the SCIS & ISIS conference review process. Papers come from different areas: two focus on theory, including modal logic. Several study fuzzy control. Still others deal with different aspects of robotics. They also cover data analysis, image analysis, knowledge analysis, and language studies involving soft computing. This issue thus provides a concise summary of state–of–the–art soft computing methodologies. We thank the referees for their untiring efforts to complete reviews within the limited time given. We also thank Professor Kaoru Hirota and Professor Toshio Fukuda, editors–in–chief of this journal, for their kind invitation to this special issue. Professor Hirota, who is also the International Advisory Board Chair, and Dr. Takanori Shibata, the General Chair, are la...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 72-78 | ||
Modifier Logics Based on Graded Modalities |
|
||
Jorma K. Mattila |
Paper: | pp. 79-85 | ||
Cardinal-Probabilistic Interaction Indices and their Applications: A Survey |
|
||
Katsushige Fujimoto |
Paper: | pp. 86-91 | ||
Adaptive Fuzzy Control for a SISO Nonlinear System |
|
||
Hugang Han, and Shuta Murakami |
Paper: | pp. 92-100 | ||
Adaptive Fuzzy Control of One Linear Actuator Hopping Robot |
|
||
Son Kuswadi, Mitsuji Sampei, and Shigeki Nakaura |
Paper: | pp. 101-107 | ||
Response Control of Variable Stiffness Structure Using Electromagnetic Clutch |
|
||
Toshihiro Irie, Kiyoshi Shingu, Keita Kitamura, and Yoshihiro Takagi |
Paper: | pp. 108-114 | ||
A Study on a Foraging Behavior of Interacting Simple Robots |
|
||
Ken Sugawara, Masaki Sano, and Toshinori Watanabe |
Paper: | pp. 115-123 | ||
Obstacle Avoidance for Quadruped Robots Using a Neural Network |
|
||
Tomohiro Yamaguchi, Keigo Watanabe, Kiyotaka Izumi, and Kazuo Kiguchi |
Paper: | pp. 124-129 | ||
Automatic Generation of Expressive Body Movement Based on Cohen-kestenberg Lifelike Motion Stereotypes |
|
||
Toru Nakata |
Paper: | pp. 130-138 | ||
Psychological and Social Effects of Robot-assisted Activity in the Elderly Robot-assisted at Health Service Facilities |
|
||
Kazuyoshi Wada, Takanori Shibata, Tomoko Saito, and Kazuo Tanie |
Paper: | pp. 139-146 | ||
A Powerful Neural Network Method with Digital-contract Hints for Pricing Complex Options |
|
||
Jun Lu, and Hiroshi Ohta |
Paper: | pp. 147-152 | ||
Electricity Demand and Price Analysis in California Using Possibility Regression Model |
|
||
Osamu Hirano, Masayasu Kanke, and Kazuhiro Ozawa |
Paper: | pp. 153-159 | ||
Fuzzy Microaggregation for Microdata Protection |
|
||
Josep Domingo-Ferrer, and Vicenç Torra |
Paper: | pp. 160-168 | ||
Fuzzy Information Granules: a Compact, Transparent and Efficient Representation |
|
||
Giovanna Castellano, Anna Maria Fanelli, and Corrado Mencar |
Paper: | pp. 169-177 | ||
An Indiscernibility-Based Clustering Method with Iterative Refinement of Equivalence Relations -Rough Clustering- |
|
||
Shoji Hirano and Shusaku Tsumoto |
Paper: | pp. 178-188 | ||
Synergetic Stereo Matching Algorithm for Occlusion and Reversal Position |
|
||
Tohru Irie, Hiroshi Maeda, and Norikazu Ikoma |
Paper: | pp. 189-199 | ||
Interactive 3-D Segmentation of the Frontal Lobe in 3.0T IR-FSPGR MR Images Using Fuzzy Rule-Based ACM |
|
||
Yuji Fujiki, Syoji Kobashi, Mieko Matsui, Noriko Inoue, Katsuya Kondo, Yutaka Hata, and Tohru Sawada |
Paper: | pp. 200-206 | ||
A Sequential Method for Combining Random Utility Model and Fuzzy Inference Model |
|
||
Backjin Lee, Akimasa Fujiwara, Yoriyasu Sugie, and Moon Namgung |
Paper: | pp. 207-214 | ||
Fuzzy Traffic Controller in Ramp Metering of Urban Expressway |
|
||
Masashi Okushima, Yoshiharu Takihi, and Takamasa Akiyama |
Paper: | pp. 215-222 | ||
A New Communication Method Using Natural Language as a Computer Communication Protocol |
|
||
Ichiro Kobayashi, Toru Sugimoto, Shino Iwashita, Michiaki Iwazume, Jun Ozawa, and Michio Sugeno |
Paper: | pp. 223-228 | ||
Processing Technical Daily Reports in Offshore Petroleum Engineering - An Experience |
|
||
Kazuo Miura, Ivan Rizzo Guilherme, Celso Kazuyuki Morooka, and José Ricardo Pelaquim Mendes |
Paper: | pp. 229-234 | ||
Properties of Interval Truth Values with Certainty Factor |
|
||
Masashi Emoto and Masao Mukaidono |
Paper: | pp. 235-243 | ||
High-quality Multi-level Error Diffusion Method Employing Fuzzy Inference |
|
||
Noriaki Suetake and Masanori Togashi |
No.1
(Feb)
Selected Papers FSS2002
Selected Papers FSS2002
Editorial: | p. 1 | |
Selected Papers FSS2002 |
| |
Tetsuhisa Oda | ||
Research in fuzzy system theory and its application has progressed rapidly in Japan since the first Fuzzy System Symposium (FSS) in 1985. This national meeting has been held annually for reading research papers by fuzzy system theory researchers. The Japan Society for fuzzy system theory and Systems (SOFT), set up in 1989, was made the SOFT's official annual meeting. The 18th FSS (FSS 2002), held at the Nagoya Institute of Technology, Nagoya, Japan, from August 28 to 30, attracted over 320 participants and was the site of 197 lectures. At this FSS,Kaoru Hirota, President of the Society, declared, "It is necessary for researchers in fuzzy system theory in Japan to present results of their study in English for readers overseas. I am happy to announce that our society is to publish a journal of collected papers in English 3 times a year, in addition to the society journal in Japanese, entitled the Journal of Advanced Computational Intelligence and Intelligent Informatics (JACIII).' " The initial result is this special February 2002 issue, which contains papers from preparatory papers read at FSS2002. Editing of this special issue was entrusted to the executive committee of FS2002, with the symposium chair acting as the guest editor. Other members of the editing committee are Hitoshi Yano, Nagoya City University; Moritoshi Sasaki, Aichi University of Education; Yahachiro Tsukamoto, Meijo University; Takeshi Furuhashi, Mie University; Yasuhisa Hasegawa, Nagoya University; Miho Ohsaki, Shizuoka University; Hiroto Mizunuma, Meijyo University; Tomohiro Yoshikawa, Mie University; and Tsuyoshi Nakamura, Nagoya Institute of Technology. We thank the committee members and referees for paper selection , and Kumiko Satoh of Fuji Technology Press Ltd. for clerical work associated with the preparation of the journal. Most papers have been rewritten by the authors for this publication. Two are written in English and 7 in Japanese and translated into English after selection. At least 2 referees read each paper to select the final 9. Subjects include fuzzy data base, learning, fuzzy clustering, application for marketing, industrial applicatio...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 2-5 | ||
Query Expansion Using Conceptual Fuzzy Sets for Search Engines |
|
||
Masanori Tajima, Takayuki Kawabata, Tomoe Tomiyama, and Tomohiro Takagi |
Paper: | pp. 6-9 | ||
Effective Use of Learning Knowledge by FEERL |
|
||
Yukinobu Hoshino and Katsuari Kamei |
Paper: | pp. 10-18 | ||
Acquisition of Knowledge for Gymnastic Bar Action by Active Learning Method |
|
||
Yoshitaka Sakurai, Nakaji Honda, and Junji Nishino |
Paper: | pp. 19-24 | ||
Algorithms of Hard c-Means Clustering Using Kernel Functions in Support Vector Machines |
|
||
Sadaaki Miyamoto and Youichi Nakayama |
Paper: | pp. 25-30 | ||
Fuzzy c-Means Clustering Using Kernel Functions in Support Vector Machines |
|
||
Sadaaki Miyamoto and Daisuke Suizu |
Paper: | pp. 31-39 | ||
A Fuzzy Inference System for Identifying Tissue Elasticity Using Ultrasound |
|
||
Tadashi Kimura, Kouki Nagamune, Syoji Kobashi, Katsuya Kondo, Yutaka Hata, and Kazuhiko Taniguchi |
Paper: | pp. 40-46 | ||
An Agent System Using Basic Emotions as Communication Method |
|
||
Yosuke Dendo and Katsuari Kamei |
Paper: | pp. 47-52 | ||
Fuzzy Three-valued Switching Functions Using Choquet Integral |
|
||
Eiichiro Takahagi |
Paper: | pp. 53-67 | ||
GMP Based Fuzzy Reasoning: An Application to Sonar Based Navigation |
|
||
Kudret Demirli, Burhan Türksen, and Mohammad Molhim |
Vol.6 (2002)
No.3
(Oct)
Regular papers
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 100-108 | ||
Implementing Fuzzy Learning Algorithms in a 6 DOF Hydraulic Parallel Link Manipulator: Control with Actuators’ Forces Fuzzy Compensation |
|
||
Zakarya Zyada, Yasuhisa Hasegawa and Toshio Fukuda |
Paper: | pp. 109-114 | ||
State Feedback Stabilization in Nonlinear Time-Delay Systems |
|
||
Tsuyoshi Hori and Kazuo Tanaka |
Paper: | pp. 116-125 | ||
A Method for Recognizing and Separating Trademark Image Outer Frames |
|
||
Koji Abe, Haruhiko Kimura, Hideo Nagashima and Taki Kanda |
Paper: | pp. 126-134 | ||
Sigma-Pi Cascade Extended Hybrid Neural Network |
|
||
Eduardo Masato Iyoda, Kaoru Hirota and Fernando J. Von Zuben |
Paper: | pp. 135-144 | ||
A Study on Deriving a Method for Chromosome Similarities Suitable for the Search Space |
|
||
Yoshifumi Banno, Tomohiro Yoshikawa, Hiroharu Kawanaka, Tsuyoshi Shinogi and Shinji Tsuruoka |
No.2
(Jun)
Regular papers
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 72-78 | ||
Modeling Photon Counting Experiments using Fuzzy Logic Controller |
|
||
László Nádai |
Paper: | pp. 79-83 | ||
Contribution to Creation of Complex System Macrosituations |
|
||
Eva Ocelíková and Ladislav Madarász |
Paper: | pp. 84-92 | ||
Online Neofuzzy Neuron Flux Observer for Induction Motor Drives |
|
||
Regis P. Landim, Francisco A. S. Neves, Selenio R. Silva, Walmir M. Caminhas** and Benjamim R. Menezes** |
Paper: | pp. 93-98 | ||
Kinematic Robustness of Manipulating Systems |
|
||
Alexandra M.S.F. Galhano and J. A. Tenreiro Machado |
No.1
(Jan)
Selected Papers VJFUZZY'2001
Selected Papers VJFUZZY'2001
Editorial: | p. 1 | |
Selected Papers VJFUZZY'2001 |
| |
Nguyen Hoang Phuong*and Koichi Yamada** | ||
This special issue of the journal is devoted to Fuzzy Systems and their Applications. Today's fuzzy technology is like a mighty dragon: every year, every day, new applications appear that are more and more helpful in our peaceful life. One of the main objectives of the Second International Vietnam-Japan Symposium on Fuzzy Systems and Applications (VJFUZZY'2001) is to help this powerful technology to achieve even more. VJFUZZY'2001 was held in Hanoi, Vietnam on December 7-8, 2001. In VJFUZZY'2001, there was a wide spectrum of fuzzy research and applications, including sessions: "Fuzzy Mathematics", "Fuzzy Image/Signal Processing and Pattern recognition", "Fuzzy Optimization/Programming", "Fuzzy Data Analysis and its applications", "Towards Combining Fuzzy, probability and other techniques", "Learning, Neural Networks and Applications", "Fuzzy/Intelligent Control", "Natural Language Processing" etc. Many very interesting results were presented at the symposium. Among these various and excellent papers, this special issue offers a selection of nine papers that contribute to advances of computational intelligence in various aspects. The topics that the selected papers deal with are fuzzy relation with threshold, nonlinear optimization with convex polyhedral objective function, reinforcement learning of fuzzy control rules, learning of probabilistic causal models, data querying in fuzzy relational database, case-based reasoning in medial diagnosis, analysis of human brain activities for fuzzy and crisp calculations, fuzzy robust control of a decentralized system and image processing using fuzzy mathematical morphology. As editors of this special issue, we would like to express our thanks to all of the contributors for their interesting results, the anonymous referees for their thankless job and the Editorial Board of JACI, especially Prof. Kaoru Hirora, for the enthusiastic hospitality with which JACI agreed to have this special issue. Finally, we want to thank Prof. Hung T Nguyen and Prof. Michio Sugeno - for their supports to VJFUZZY'2001. Without their help, the VJFUZZY'2001 and then this special issue would not be impossibl...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 2-6 | ||
Fuzzy Relation with Thresholds and Applications |
|
||
Bui Cong Cuong, Nguyen Hoang Phuong, Phan Hoang Anh, and Koichi Yamada |
Paper: | pp. 7-18 | ||
Effective Linear Calculational Method for Nonlinear Optimization with a Convex Polyhedral Objective Function and Linear Constraints |
|
||
Busaba Phruksaphanrat and Ario Ohsato |
Paper: | pp. 19-24 | ||
Reinforcement Leaning of Fuzzy Control Rules with Context-Specitic Segmentation of Actions |
|
||
Hideki Yamagishi, Hiroshi Kawakami, Tadashi Horiuchi, and Osamu Katai |
Paper: | pp. 25-32 | ||
Leaning Causal Models with Conditional Causal Probabilities from Data |
|
||
Koichi Yamada |
Paper: | pp. 33-40 | ||
Approximate Data Querying in Fuzzy Relational Database |
|
||
Rolly Intan, and Masao Mukaidono |
Paper: | pp. 41-50 | ||
Developing Case-based Reasoning System for Medical Consultation Using the Importance of Features |
|
||
Nguyen Hoang Phuong, Nguyen Ba Tu and Ario Ohsato |
Paper: | pp. 51-55 | ||
Difference in Areas of the Brain for Fuzzy and Crisp Calculation |
|
||
Takahiro Yamanoi, Masaaki Saito, Michio Sugeno and EIie Sanchez |
Paper: | pp. 56-61 | ||
Decentralized Robust Fuzzy Sliding Mode Control Design of Interconnected Uncertain System |
|
||
Thai Quang Vinh, and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 62-69 | ||
Application of Fuzzy Mathematical Morphology with Adaptive Structuring Elements to Seal Defect Testing |
|
||
Takuo Kikuchi and Shuta Murakami |
Vol.5 (2001)
No.6
(Nov)
Regular papers
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 307-314 | ||
Intelligent Hybrid System: A Reliability-Based Failure Management Application |
|
||
Jose Aguilar, Mariela Cerrad and Katiuska Morillo |
Paper: | pp. 315-325 | ||
Fuzzy Difference Equations: The Initial Value Problem |
|
||
James J. Buckley, Thomas Feuring and Yoichi Hayashi |
Paper: | pp. 326-332 | ||
Toward a Bioinspired Fusion of Color and Infrared Textural Image Information |
|
||
Javier Ruiz-del-Solar and Aureli Soria-Frisch |
Paper: | pp. 333-337 | ||
Application of Cooperative Control to Petroleum Plants Using Fuzzy Supervisory Control and Model Predictive Multi-variable Control |
|
||
Takahiro Kobayashi and Tetsuji Tani |
Paper: | pp. 338-345 | ||
Tracking Control of Variable Structure System Using Variable Boundary Layer |
|
||
Heejin Lee |
No.5
(Sep)
Selected Papers INES2000
Selected Papers INES2000
Editorial: | p. 247 | |
Selected Papers INES2000 |
| |
Imre J. Rudas*and Leon Zlajpah** | ||
In engineering practice we often have to deal with complex systems, where the conventional approaches for understanding and predicting the behavior of the system can prove to be inadequate. Hence, the researchers try to put some intelligence into the system. The term intelligence in this context still more or less remains a mysterious phenomenon and can be characterized by different abilities of the system or machine, such as adaptation, decision-making, learning, recognition, diagnostics, autonomy, etc. Many of the new results related to this area are published in Journals and in International Conference Proceedings. One such conference is the "IEEE International Conference on Intelligent Engineering Systems". The fourth conference in this series (INES 2000) took place in Portoroz, Slovenia, on September 17-19,2000. There were around eighty participants from eighteen countries around the world. We are glad that so many authors have contributed to ideas related to the issues at the conference. Many of the papers were about applications and design, and others on more theoretical aspects of intelligent systems. This variety made the selection of papers for this special issue very difficult. Eight papers have been selected in the end, which cover different aspects of intelligent engineering systems. It should be pointed out that the respective authors were also kind to revise and update the presented papers for this special issue. The first paper deals with the manipulation problem where the motion changes depending on the state of the system as it is the case in the finger gaiting applications. To solve it the semi-stratified control theory using smooth motion planning is used. The proposed concept combines the stratified motion planning with the unconstrained finger allocations. In the second paper a special branch of Soft Computing developed for the control of mechanical devices is described. It reduces the number of free parameters and computational complexity. For illustration of the efficiency of the proposed adaptive control, a simulation of polishing with a 3 DOF robot is given. The next paper discusses the force cont...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 248-256 | ||
Semi-stratified Motion Planning of Multi-agent Manipulation |
|
||
István Harmati, Ma Lantos and Shahram Payandeh |
Paper: | pp. 257-262 | ||
Symplectic Geometry Based Simple Algebraic Possibilities for Developing Adaptive Control for Mechanical Systems |
|
||
József K. Tar, Imre J. Rudas, János F. Bitó and Seppo J. Torvinen |
Paper: | pp. 263-268 | ||
Experiments with Force Control of Redundant Robots in Unstructured Environment Using Minimal Null-space Formulation |
|
||
Bojan Nemec and Leon Zlajpah Institute Jozef Stefan |
Paper: | pp. 269-278 | ||
Virtual Technology Based Associative Integration of Modeling of Mechanical Parts |
|
||
László Horváth and Imre J. Rudas |
Paper: | pp. 279-285 | ||
Implementing Discrete-time Fractional-order Controllers |
|
||
J. A. Tenreiro Machado |
Paper: | pp. 286-293 | ||
A HiLog Journey from a Classical Dictionary to Hypertext Structure (via the Grammar, of course) |
|
||
Mirko Cubrilo, Alen Lovrencic, and Mirko Malekovic |
Paper: | pp. 294-299 | ||
Human Versus Robotic Shoulder Motion |
|
||
Nives Klopw and Jadran Lenarcic |
Paper: | pp. 300-305 | ||
Results of Bias-variance Tests on Multi-layer Perceptron Neural Networks |
|
||
Wimpie D. Nortje, Johann E. W. Holm, Gerhard P. Hancke, Imre. J. Rudas, and Laszlo. Horvath |
No.4
(Jul)
Regular papers
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 193-200 | ||
Rule Extraction from Fuzzy Neural Networks FuNN: A Method and a Real-World Application |
|
||
Nikola Kasabov, Jaesoo Kim, Robert Kozma and Tico Cohen |
Paper: | pp. 201-212 | ||
Multiagent Architecture Combined with a Multicontract Protocol for FMS Control |
|
||
Amar Khoukhi and Adlene Moualek |
Paper: | pp. 213-219 | ||
Applying AHP to Preference Analysis by Dynamic Judgment-A Study of Adaptation and Identification of Odor |
|
||
Yoshihiro Ueda, Naotaka Kato, Haruhiko Kimura, Shinji Furukawa and Takashi Oyabu |
Paper: | pp. 220-228 | ||
Evolving Neurofuzzy System by Hybrid Soft Computing Approaches for System Identification |
|
||
Shigeyasu Kawaji and Yuehui Chen |
Paper: | pp. 229-238 | ||
Evolving Basis Function Networks for System Identification |
|
||
Yuehui Chen and Shigeyasu Kawaji |
Paper: | pp. 239-245 | ||
A Fuzzy CDS-based Scheduling Algorithm for More Than Two Machine Centers |
|
||
Tzung-Pei Hong, Tzu-Ting Wang and Shyue-Liang Wang |
No.3
(May)
Selected Papers from IFSA'99
Selected Papers from IFSA'99
Editorial: | p. 127 | |
Selected Papers from IFSA'99 |
| |
Jonathan Lee* and Hsiao-Fan Wang** | ||
The past few years we have witnessed a crystallization of soft computing as a means towards the conception and design of intelligent systems. Soft Computing is a synergetic integration of neural networks, fuzzy logic and evolutionary computation including genetic algorithms, chaotic systems, and belief networks. In this volume, we are featuting seven papers devoted to soft computing as a special issue. These papers are selected from papers submitted to the "The eighth International Fuzzy Systems Association World Congress (IFSA'99)", held in Taipei, Taiwan, in August 1999. Each paper received outstanding recommendations from its reviewers. G-H Tzeng et al. integrate fuzzy numbers, fuzzy regression, and a fuzzy DEA approach as a performance evaluation model for forecasting the productive efficiency of a set of production units when some data are fuzzy numbers. A case of Taipei City Bus Company is adopted for illustration. Y. Shi et al. adopts a fuzzy programming approach to solve a MCMDM (multiple criteria and multiple decision makers) capital budget problem. A solution procedure is proposed to systematically identify a fuzzy optimal selection of possible projects. N. Nguyen et al. propose a new formalism (Chu spaces) to describe parallelism and information flow. Chu spaces provide uniform explanations for different choices of fuzzy methodology, such as choices of fuzzy logical operations of membership functions or defuzzifications. M-C Su et al. propose a technique based on the SOM-based fuzzy systems for voltage security margin estimation. This technique was tested on 1604 simulated data randomly generated from operating conditions on the IEEE 30-bus system to indicate its high efficiency. By defining the concept of approximate dependency and a similarity measure, S-L Wang et al. present a method of using analogical reasoning to infer approximate answers for null queries on similarity-based fuzzy relational databases. K.Yeh et al. use adaptive fuzzy sliding mode control for the structural control of bridges. Combing fuzzy control and sliding mode control can reduce the complexity of fuzzy rule bases and ensure the stabili...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 128-138 | ||
Application of Fuzzy Set Theory and DEA Model to Evaluating Production Efficiency for Taipei City Bus Company |
|
||
Gwo-Hshiung Tzeng, Cheng-Min Feng and Chao-Chung Kang |
Paper: | pp. 139-148 | ||
Capital Budgeting with Multiple Criteria and Multiple Decision Makers: A Fuzzy Approach |
|
||
Yong Shi, Wikil Kwak, Heeseok Lee and Cheng-few Lee |
Paper: | pp. 149-156 | ||
Chu Spaces: Towards New Foundations for Fuzzy Logic and Fuzzy Control, with Applications to Information Flow on the World Wide Web |
|
||
Nhu Nguyen, Hung T. Nguyen, Berlin Wu, Vladik Kreinovich |
Paper: | pp. 157-162 | ||
Application of SOM-Based Fuzzy Systems in Voltage Security Margin Estimation |
|
||
Mu-Chun Su, Eugene Lai, Chee-Yuen Tew, Chih-Wen Liu and Chen-Sung Chang |
Paper: | pp. 163-171 | ||
Answering Null Queries by Analogical Reasoning on Similarity-based Fuzzy Relational Databases |
|
||
Shyue-Liang Wang, Tzung-Pei Hong, and Wen-Yang Lin |
Paper: | pp. 172-179 | ||
Application of Adaptive Fuzzy Sliding Mode Control for Bridges |
|
||
Ken Yeh and Wei-Ling Chiang |
Paper: | pp. 180-188 | ||
An Adaptive Fuzzy Clustering Technique for Traffic Prediction of Packet-switched Networks |
|
||
Yau-Hwang Kuo, Mong-Fong Horng and Jung-Hsien Chiang |
No.2
(Mar)
Regular papers
Regular Papers
Paper: | pp. 81-89 | ||
Advanced Robot Control Algorithms Based on Fuzzy, Neural and Genetic Methods |
|
||
Szilveszter Pletl and Bela Lantos |
Paper: | pp. 90-98 | ||
Fast Iterative Solving Method of Various Types of Fuzzy Relational Equations and its Application to Image Reconstruction |
|
||
Hajime Nobuhara, Yasufumi Takama and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 99-109 | ||
Fuzzification of Kolmogorov Theorem |
|
||
Angel López-Gótnez and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 110-118 | ||
Approximate Reasoning for Processing Uncertainty |
|
||
Hamid Seridi and Herman Akdag |
Paper: | pp. 119-124 | ||
Intelligent Consultant |
|
||
James J. Buckley, Thomas Feuring and Yoichi Hayashi |
No.1
(Jan)
Selected Papers WISP'99
Selected Papers WISP'99
Editorial: | p. 1 | |
Selected Papers WISP'99 |
| |
Annamária R. Várkonyi-Kóczy | ||
Today's complex industrial and engineering systems - especially with the appearance of large-scale embedded and/or real-time systems - confront researchers and engineers with completely new challenges. Measurement and signal processing systems are involved in almost all kinds of activities in that field where control problems, system identification problems, industrial technologies, etc., are to be solved, i.e., when signals, parameters, or attributes must be measured, monitored, approximated, or determined somehow. In a large number of cases, traditional information processing tools and equipment fail to handle these problems. Not only is the handling of previously unseen spatial and temporal complexity questionable but such problems have also to be addressed such as the interaction and communication of subsystems based on entirely different modeling and information expression methods, the handling of abrupt changes within the environment and/or the processing system, the possible temporal shortage of computational power and/or loss of some data due to the former. Signal processing should even in these cases provide outputs of acceptable quality to continue the operation of the complete system, producing data for qualitative evaluations and supporting decisions. It means the introduction of new ideas for specifying, designing, implementing, and operating sophisticated signal processing systems. Intelligent - artificial intelligence, soft computing, anytime, etc. - methods are serious candidates for handling many theoretical and practical problems, providing a better description, and, in many cases, are the best if not the only alternatives for emphasizing significant aspects of system behavior. These techniques, however, are relatively new methods and up until now, not widely used in the field of signal processing because some of the critical questions related to design and verification are not answered properly and because uncertainty is maintained quite differently than in classical metrology. After the initiation of the 1999 IEEE International Workshop on Intelligent Signal Processing, WISP'99, which was the first even...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 2-7 | ||
Anytime Evaluation of Regression-Type Algorithms |
|
||
Annamária R. Várkonyi-Kóczy, Tamás Kovácsházy, Orsolya Takács, and Csaba Benedescik |
Paper: | pp. 8-14 | ||
Evolutionary Nonlinear Multimodel Partitioning Filters |
|
||
G. N. Befigiannis, E. N. Demiris and S. D. Likothanassis |
Paper: | pp. 15-21 | ||
Speech Noise Cancellation Based on a Neuro-Fuzzy System: Further Improvements |
|
||
Anna Esposito, Eugene C. Ezin and Carlos A. Reyes-Garcia |
Paper: | pp. 22-30 | ||
Inference Algorithm Independent SVD Fuzzy Rule Base Complexity Reduction |
|
||
Péter Baranyi, Yeung Yamb, Chi Tin Yang, Péter Várlakic, and Pél Michelberger |
Paper: | pp. 31-36 | ||
An Innovative Way to Measure the Quality of a Neural Network Without the Use of a Test Set |
|
||
Giovanni Pilato, Filippo Sorbello and Giorgio Vassallo |
Paper: | pp. 37-43 | ||
Rank-Based Multiple Classifier Decision Combination: A Theoretical Study |
|
||
Afsar Saranli and Mubeccel Demirekler |
Paper: | pp. 44-50 | ||
Information Processing Based on Mixed - Classical and Fuzzy - Data Models |
|
||
Orsolya Takács and Annamária R. Várkonyi-Kóczy |
Paper: | pp. 51-57 | ||
Optimizing and Learning Algorithm for Feed-forward Neural Networks |
|
||
Pilar Bachiller and Julia González |
Paper: | pp. 58-70 | ||
A New Fuzzy Controller for Stabilizing Inverted Pendulums Based on Single Input Rule Modules Dynamically Connected Fuzzy Inference Model |
|
||
Jianqiang Yi, Naoyoshi Yubazaki and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 71-77 | ||
Fuzzy Control Using Piecewise Linear Membership Functions Based on Knowledge of Tuning a PID Controller |
|
||
Kenichiro Hayashi, Akifumi Otsubo and Kazuhiko Shiranita |
Vol.4 (2000)
No.6
(Nov)
Multimedia Information Compression Technologies
Multimedia Information Compression Technologies
Editorial: | pp. 401-402 | |
Multimedia Information Compression Technologies |
| |
T. D. Gedeon | ||
Introduction We are drowning in data. What kinds of data? - Text. Images. Sound. Numeric. Genome data. Text: Every day vast amounts of textual data are generated. This ranges from private corporate data, personal information, public and private government documents and so on. Much of this data needs to be accessed by many users for many tasks. For example, a corporate call centre needs fast access to documents at a semi-concept level to answer user requests. Another example: large litigations can involve 2 million documents, 200,000 of which are relevant, much fewer significant, and a handful pivotal. Techniques are desperately needer to automate the first few steps of this winnowing. Images: There are video cameras everywhere, trying to protect our safety in car parks, public places, even some lifts. There are huge and ever growing still and video archives of all aspects of our modern world. Access and indexing this data is a huge research enterprise. Much indexing is done manually. Sound: Often in concert with video in multi-media recordings. But what did the Prime Minister say on the 1st of November about the Republic? Did he sound like he meant it? These are currently not easily answered queries except if carried out by an expert human investigator. These kind of queries will need to be commonplace to access sound data in humanly meaningful ways. Numeric: Our industries generate vast amounts of valuable numeric data. In the petroleum industry geologic knowledge must be integrated with data from wells: laboratory core analysis data and on-site well logs, with seismic data generated from controlled explosions and dispersed recording devices. Then there is GIS data collected from satellites and so on. In the service industry, the stock exchange generates large amounts of hard to analyse data vital to the wellbeing of Australian companies. Genome data: The human genome project is almost complete. Researchers are finding genes by a mix of laboratory work and computerised database searches (e.g. as reported in the Weekend Australian 30 October). This is just the first step, the next will be sequencing of a number of...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 403-407 | ||
A Methodology for Developing Adaptive Fuzzy Cognitive Maps for Decision Support |
|
||
M. Shamim Khan, Alex Chong, and Tom Gedeon |
Paper: | pp. 408-411 | ||
Fuzzy Control of Back-Propagation Training |
|
||
Michael Negnevitsky and Martin J. Ringrose |
Paper: | pp. 412-416 | ||
Indexing Visual Features Using a Hybrid Neural Network |
|
||
Jesse S. Jin, Henry C. Wang and Tom Gedeon |
Paper: | pp. 417-420 | ||
Improving the Approximation Smoothness of Radial Basis Neural Networks |
|
||
Anthony Little and Leonid Reznik |
Paper: | pp. 421-427 | ||
Implementation of Fuzzy Legal Expert System FLES |
|
||
Kaoru Hirota, MingQiang Xu, Yasufumi Takama and Hajime Yoshino |
Paper: | pp. 428-436 | ||
Kansei Information Processing in Multimedia Applying Intelligent Soft Computing Techniques |
|
||
Takehisa Onisawa |
Paper: | pp. 437-442 | ||
Robotic System based on Computational Intelligence - Evolutionary Generation of Regrasping Motion |
|
||
Toshio Fukuda, Yasuhisa Hasegawa |
Paper: | pp. 443-449 | ||
Deep Fusion of Computational and Symbolic Intelligent Processing by Symbol Emergence |
|
||
Shun’ichi Tano |
Paper: | pp. 450-456 | ||
Image Retrieval using Conceptual Fuzzy Sets |
|
||
Tomohiro Takagi, Kazushi Kawase and Kazuhiko Otsuka |
Paper: | pp. 457-463 | ||
Topic-based Intelligent Support System for Information Retrieval |
|
||
Yasufumi Takama and Kaoru Hirota |
No.5
(Sep)
Fuzzy Logic and Intelligence System
Fuzzy Logic and Intelligence System
Editorial: | pp. 319-320 | |
Fuzzy Logic and Intelligence System |
| |
Hyung Lee-Kwang and Ju-Jang Lee | ||
These papers are originally published in the proceedings of Korea fuzzy logic and intelligent systems society (KFIS) fall conference in 1999. Eight papers are selected for this special issue. Major topics of them are fuzzy theory, neural network, inference system, intelligent controller, etc. In this issue, Seihwan Park and Hyung Lee-Kwang extend the concept of fuzzy hypergraph to type-2 fuzzy hypergraph using type-2 fuzzy sets. It has not only the same properties of hypergraphs but also the extended properties of them. It is also shown that interval valued fuzzy hypergraph is a special case of type-2 fuzzy hypergraph. Jung-Heum Yon, Yong-Taek Kim, Jae-Yong Seo and Hong-Tae Jeon design an efficient neural network called dynamic multidimensional wavelet neural network. It can perform an effective dynamic mapping with less dimensions of the input signal. These features show one way to compensate the weakness of the diagonal recurrent neural network and feedforward wavelet neural network. Yigon Kim, Yang Hee Jung and Young Chel Bae propose a new method for diagnosis of insulation aging using wavelet. It measures the partial discharge on-line from data acquisition system and analyses it using wavelet to acquire 21) patterns. They design a neuro-fuzzy model that diagnoses an electrical equipment using the data. Byung-Jae Choi, Seong-Woo Kwak and Byung Kook Kim develop an adaptive fuzzy logic controller. A sole input fuzzy variable is used to simplify the design procedure and the switching hyperplane of sliding mode control is used to improve the adaptability. Myung-Geun Chun, Keun-Chang Kwak and Jeong-Woong Ryu show an efficient fuzzy rule generation scheme for adaptive network-based fuzzy inference system using the conditional fuzzy c-means and fuzzy equalization methods. They apply this method to the truck backer-upper control and Box-Jenkins modeling problem. Daijin Kim proposes a new data classification method based on the tolerant rough set that extends the existing equivalent rough set. Twostage classification method is used. All data are classified by using the lower approximation at the first stage and then the non-clas...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 321-326 | ||
Design of a Single-input Adaptive Fuzzy Logic Controller using a Switching Hyperplane |
|
||
Byung-Jae Choi, Seong-Woo Kwak, Byung Kook Kim |
Paper: | pp. 327-335 | ||
IRIS Data Classification Using Tolerant Rough Sets1 |
|
||
Daijin Kim, Sung-Yang Bang |
Paper: | pp. 336-340 | ||
Dynamic Multidimensional Wavelet Neural Network and Its Application |
|
||
Jung-Heum Yon, Yong-Taek Kim, Jae-Yong Seo, and Hong-Tae Jeon |
Paper: | pp. 341-348 | ||
New 2-DOF PID Controller Tuning by Adaptive Neural Fuzzy Inference System for Gas Turbine Control System |
|
||
Dong Hwa Kim and Chang Kee Jung |
Paper: | pp. 349-354 | ||
Self-Learning Fuzzy Logic Controller using Q-Learning |
|
||
Min-Soeng Kim, Sun-Gi Hong and Ju-Jang Lee |
Paper: | pp. 355-361 | ||
A Fuzzy Rule Extraction Method for ANFIS Using CFCM and Fuzzy Equalization |
|
||
Myung-Geun Chun, Keun-Chang Kwak, Jeong-Woong Ryu and Witold Pedrycz |
Paper: | pp. 362-367 | ||
Type-2 Fuzzy Hypergraphs Using Type-2 Fuzzy Sets |
|
||
Seihwan Park and Hyung Lee-Kwang |
Paper: | pp. 368-372 | ||
Design of Diagnosis System for Insulation Degradation by Using Neurofuzzy Model |
|
||
Yigon Kim, Yang Hee Jung and Yong Chul Bae |
Paper: | pp. 373-379 | ||
Rule Reduction and Robust Control of Generalized Takagi-Sugeno Fuzzy Systems |
|
||
Tadanari Taniguchi and Kazuo Tanaka |
Paper: | pp. 380-386 | ||
Fuzzy Flip-Flops and their Applications to Fuzzy Memory Element and Circuit Design using FPGA |
|
||
Shin-ichi Yoshida, Yasufumi Takama and Kaoru Hirota |
Paper: | pp. 387-394 | ||
Support System for Multimedia Information Data Acquisition Based on Fuzzy Inference with a Fuzzy Shift |
|
||
Kabsuk Oh, Kaoru Hirota |
No.4
(Jul)
Intelligent Engineering Systems
Intelligent Engineering Systems
Editorial: | pp. 237-239 | |
Intelligent Engineering Systems |
| |
Imre J. Rudas | ||
The "information revolution" of our time affects our entire generation. While a vision of the "Information Society," with its financial, legal, business, privacy, and other aspects has emerged in the past few years, the "traditional scene" of information technology, that is, industrial automation, maintained its significance as a field of unceasing development. Since the old-fashioned concept of "Hard Automation" applicable only to industrial processes of fixed, repetitive nature and manufacturing large batches of the same product1)was thrust to the background by keen market competition, the key element of this development remained the improvement of "Machine Intelligence". In spite of the fact that L. A. Zadeh already introduced the concept of "Machine Intelligence Quotient" in 1996 to measure machine intelligence2) , this term remained more or less of a mysterious meaning best explicable on the basis of practical needs. The weak point of hard automation is that the system configuration and operations are fixed and cannot be changed without incurring considerable cost and downtime. Mainly it can be used in applications that call for fast and accurate operation in large batch production. Whenever a variety of products must be manufactured in small batches and consequently the work-cells of a production line should be quickly reconfigured to accommodate a change in products, hard automation becomes inefficient and fails due to economic reasons. In these cases, new, more flexible way of automation, so-called "Soft Automation," are expedient and suitable. The most important "ingredient" of soft automation is its adaptive ability for efficiently coping with changing, unexpected or previously unknown conditions, and working with a high degree of uncertainty and imprecision since in practice increasing precision can be very costly. This adaptation must be realized without or within limited human interference: this is one essential component of machine intelligence. Another important factor is that engineering practice often must deal with complex systems of multiple variable and multiple parameter models al...<more> |
Paper: | pp. 240-245 | ||
ARTMAP Neural Networks for Multispectral Image Classification |
|
||
Norbert Kopco, Peter Sincak and Stanislav Kaleta |
Paper: | pp. 246-250 | ||
Similarity Relations in Diagnosis Fuzzy Systems |
|
||
Ján Vascák and Ladislav Madarász |
Paper: | pp. 251-257 | ||
System Architecture for Support of Knowledge Management |
|
||
Marek Paralic, Tomás Sabol and Marian Mach |
Paper: | pp. 258-262 | ||
Cluster Analysis as a First Step in the Knowledge Discovery Process |
|
||
Andreas Rauber and Jan Paralic |
Paper: | pp. 263-267 | ||
Approach to Scheduling Problem Solution in Production Systems Using the Multiagent System |
|
||
Frankoviè, B., Labátová S. and Budinská, I. |
Paper: | pp. 268-278 | ||
Emerging Intelligent Technologies in Computer-Aided Engineering |
|
||
László Horváth and Imre J. Rudas |
Paper: | pp. 279-285 | ||
Simultaneous Optimization of the External Loop Parameters in an Adaptive Control Based on the Co-operation of Uniform Procedures |
|
||
József K. Tar, Imre J. Rudas, Ladislav Madarász and János F. Bitó |
Paper: | pp. 286-293 | ||
Complexity Minimalization of Nonsingleton-based Fuzzy-Neural Network |
|
||
Kin-fong Lei, Péter Baranyi and Yeung Yam |
Paper: | pp. 294-301 | ||
Learning M-of-N Concepts for Medical Diagnosis Using Neural Networks |
|
||
Yoichi Hayashi, Rudy Setiono and Katsumi Yoshida |
Paper: | pp. 302-312 | ||
Trajectory Tracking Control of Unconstrained Object Using the SIRMs Dynamically Connected Fuzzy Inference Model |
|
||
Jianqiang Yi, Naoyoshi Yubazaki and Kaoru Hirota |
No.3
(May)
Sampling Research on Advanced Computational Intelligence in Canada
Sampling Research on Advanced Computational Intelligence in Canada
Editorial: | p. 187 | |
Sampling Research on Advanced Computational Intelligence in Canada |
| |
Max Meng and Witold Pedrycz | ||
The 1999 IEEE Canadian Conference on Electrical and computer Engineering (CCECE'99) was held from May 9 to 12, 1999, at the Shaw Conference Centre in Edmonton. The conference was a great success with over 380 |