1 / 29

Granular Computing: A new problem Solving Paradigm

Granular Computing: A new problem Solving Paradigm. Tsau Young (T.Y.) Lin Department of Computer Science San Jose State University San Jose, CA 95192 tylin@cs.sjsu.edu. Outline. 1. Summary Rough Computing Equivalence Relation Neighborhood Concept Binary Relation 2. Details.

slade
Download Presentation

Granular Computing: A new problem Solving Paradigm

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Granular Computing: A new problem Solving Paradigm Tsau Young (T.Y.) Lin Department of Computer Science San Jose State University San Jose, CA 95192 tylin@cs.sjsu.edu

  2. Outline 1. Summary Rough Computing Equivalence Relation Neighborhood Concept Binary Relation 2. Details

  3. Rough Computing A partition is a set of (1) disjoint subsets, (2) a cover Class B i, j, k f, g, h Class C ClassA l, m, n

  4. Rough Computing • X  Y (equivalence) if and only if • both belong to the same class

  5. Rough Computing An Equivalence Relation Class B i j  k f g  h Class C ClassA l  m  n

  6. Equivalence Relation • X  X (Reflexive) • X  Y implies Y X (Symmetric) • X  Y, Y Z implies X  Z (Transitive)

  7. Neighborhood Concept • i j  k Class B i j  k Class B In spite of a technical error, • the idea was, and still is, fascinating

  8. Introduction • An aggressive model (ACWSP) was proposed by Lin the same year (1989) that keeps the same spirit and corrects the error • Lost some Strength

  9. Introduction • Lost Interests until • A practical way of construction ACWSP was introduced 2000

  10. Brewer and Nash Requirements • A set of impenetrable Chinese Great Walls • No corporate data that are in conflict can be stored in the same side of Walls

  11. Brewer and Nash -Theory • Corporate data are decomposed into Conflict of Interest Classes(CIR-classes) • Walls are built around the CIR-classes • Corporate data is called an object (tradition)

  12. BN -Theory All objects Class B i, j, k f, g, h Class C ClassA l, m, n

  13. Is CIR Transitive? • US (conflict) Russia • UK Russia • UK  ? US

  14. Is CIR Reflexive? • US (conflict) US ? • Is CIR self conflicting?

  15. Is CIR Symmetric? • US (conflict) USSR implies • USSR (conflict) US ? • YES

  16. BN -Theory BN -Theory • Can they be partitioned? France, German C US, Russia UK?

  17. CIR-classes • CIR classes do overlap (Conflict of Interests) US, UK, Iraq, . . . USSR

  18. CIR & IAR • Complement of CIR: an equivalence relation US, UK, . . . Iraq, . . . German, . . .

  19. ACWSP • CIR: Anti-reflexive, symmetric, anti-transitive IJAR-classes CIR-class IJAR-classes

  20. ACWSP • CIR: Anti-reflexive, symmetric, anti-transitive IJAR-classes CIR-class IJAR-classes

  21. ACWSP • CIR: Anti-reflexive, symmetric, anti-transitive IJAR-classes CIR-class IJAR-classes

  22. Trojan Horses Direct Information flow(DIF) Grader DIF Trojan horse(DIF) Professor CIF Students

  23. ACWSP • CIR (with three conditions) only allows information sharing within one IJAR-class • An IJAR-class is an equivalence class; so there is no danger the information will spill to outside. • No Trojan horses could occur

  24. SCWSP • Simple CWSP (SVWSP) No DIF: x  y (direct information flow) • (x, y)  CIR

  25. ACWSP • Strong CWSP(ACSWP) No CIF: x . . . y ((composite) information flow) • (x, y)  CIR

  26. ACWSP • Theorem If CIR is anti-reflexive, symmetric and anti-transitive, then • Simple CWSP  Strong CWSP

  27. ACWSP CIF =a sequence of DIFs CIF: X=X0X1 . . .  Xn=Y YCIRX • To derive a contradiction

  28. ACWSP • X=X0X1 implies X1  [X] CIRX = CIRX1 . . . Y=Xn  [X] CIRX = CIRXn = CIRY Y  CIRX Contradiction

More Related