Title :
Pattern recognition and quantitative political theory
Author :
Blin, J.-M. ; King-Sun Fu ; Moberg, K.B. ; Whinston, A.B.
Author_Institution :
Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois
Abstract :
Group decision-making has been a favorite topic of discussion among economists, political scientists, philosophers and even theologians! Two opposite views of social decision problems have emerged from these discussions: the collectivist view which holds that the group exists apart from its individual members; and the pluralistic approach which emphasizes that the group is equivalent to its members, when they are taken in toto. This view, of course, leads to a natural question viz the form or procedure which the decision process is to take. The problem is one of aggregation of a number of divergent opinion patterns --e.g., total orderings of a finite set of options available to society--into a group pattern which somehow strikes a balance between all parties involved. In contrast to the precision of the concept of individual preference as expressed by a definite choice of one alternative over another, the concept of social preference appears rather elusive. Social choices are made everyday but it is seldom the case that a clear-cut social preference can be recognized behind them. In brief, fuzziness is of the very essence of this concept.
Keywords :
Decision making; Fuzzy set theory; Fuzzy sets; Fuzzy systems; Pattern recognition; Voting;
Conference_Titel :
Decision and Control, 1972 and 11th Symposium on Adaptive Processes. Proceedings of the 1972 IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
DOI :
10.1109/CDC.1972.268957