DocumentCode
2625622
Title
Imprecise methods in measurement
Author
Várkonyi-Kòczy, Annamária R. ; Dobrowiecki, Tadeusz P.
Volume
2
fYear
1997
fDate
19-21 May 1997
Firstpage
790
Lastpage
795
Abstract
Measurement is usually characterized by its accuracy and there are certain fields where the availability of more and more precise measuring equipment is of key importance. Unfortunately additional requirements like speed, costs, etc. may strongly limit the designer in achieving the specified precision. Moreover the complexity of measurement problems of current interest has considerably increased. Recent advances in time-critical computing and new modeling techniques provide promising tools to meet these requirements. Due to some of their features hereafter these techniques will be referred as `imprecise?? computational methods. For a measurement engineer the most important knowledge is when and how to apply such new tools, what are the decisions not covered by the theory and how to characterize the final results. Based on the analysis of some measurement problems the authors discuss these questions and point out that the importance of these `imprecise ?? calculations is much higher than anticipated. The investigations are followed by an example demonstrating the application of fuzzy logic to a particular measurement problem.
Keywords
Accuracy; Availability; Information processing; Information resources; Instruments; Knowledge representation; Measurement errors; Time factors;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Instrumentation and Measurement Technology Conference, 1997. IMTC/97. Proceedings. Sensing, Processing, Networking., IEEE
Conference_Location
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
ISSN
1091-5281
Print_ISBN
0-7803-3747-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IMTC.1997.610183
Filename
610183
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