DocumentCode
3674422
Title
50 shades of partial information
Author
Alan Pearman
Author_Institution
Centre for Decision Research, University of Leeds, UK
fYear
2015
Firstpage
12
Lastpage
18
Abstract
Since their origins in the 1980´s, grey systems thinking and grey numbers have found a wide and growing range of applications. One of these is in providing decision support for multi-criteria choice. All the key elements of multi-criteria modelling are potentially infused with a lack of certainty: weights on criteria, performance levels of alternatives, choice of criteria, inter-dependence between criteria, and so on. For a long time, multi-criteria researchers have recognised that, especially from a practical point of view, their decision support models are imprecise, that they are often operating with only partial information about the problem they are seeking to solve. And, indeed, in some circumstances, especially in supporting choice between discrete alternatives, models do not need to be precise or based on full provision of information in order to be useful. This has been referred to as decision making with partial information and a wide variety of formalisations of multi-criteria decision making with partial information have been advanced. In this paper, we explore how using grey systems can provide a perspective on multi-criteria choice with partial information that potentially enhances existing thinking and directly relates to the ambiguity and uncertainty of choice - effectively the real world of decision modelling for many application contexts.
Keywords
"Analytical models","Decision analysis"
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Grey Systems and Intelligent Services (GSIS), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-8374-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/GSIS.2015.7301811
Filename
7301811
Link To Document