scholarly journals Topological approach for rough sets by using J-nearly concepts via ideals

Filomat ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 273-286
Author(s):  
Mona Hosny

Topological concepts and methods have been applied as useful tools to study computer science, information systems and rough set. Rough set was introduced by Pawlak. Its core concept is upper and lower approximation operations, which are the operations induced by an equivalent relation on a domain. They can also be seen as a closure operator and a interior operator of the topology induced by an equivalent relation on a domain. This paper explores rough set theory from the point of view of topology. I generalize the notions of rough sets based on the topological space. The set approximations are defined by using the new topological notions namely I-J-nearly open sets. The topological properties of the present approximations are introduced and compared to the previous one and shown to be more general.

Author(s):  
B. K. Tripathy

Granular Computing has emerged as a framework in which information granules are represented and manipulated by intelligent systems. Granular Computing forms a unified conceptual and computing platform. Rough set theory put forth by Pawlak is based upon single equivalence relation taken at a time. Therefore, from a granular computing point of view, it is single granular computing. In 2006, Qiang et al. introduced a multi-granular computing using rough set, which was called optimistic multigranular rough sets after the introduction of another type of multigranular computing using rough sets called pessimistic multigranular rough sets being introduced by them in 2010. Since then, several properties of multigranulations have been studied. In addition, these basic notions on multigranular rough sets have been introduced. Some of these, called the Neighborhood-Based Multigranular Rough Sets (NMGRS) and the Covering-Based Multigranular Rough Sets (CBMGRS), have been added recently. In this chapter, the authors discuss all these topics on multigranular computing and suggest some problems for further study.


2011 ◽  
Vol 187 ◽  
pp. 251-256
Author(s):  
Lei Wang ◽  
Tian Rui Li ◽  
Jun Ye

The essence of the rough set theory (RST) is to deal with the inconsistent problems by two definable subsets which are called the lower and upper approximations respectively. Asymmetric Similarity relation based Rough Sets (ASRS) model is one kind of extensions of the classical rough set model in incomplete information systems. In this paper, we propose a new matrix view of ASRS model and give the matrix representation of the lower and upper approximations of a concept under ASRS model. According to this matrix view, a new method is obtained for calculation of the lower and upper approximations under ASRS model. An example is given to illustrate processes of calculating the approximations of a concept based on the matrix point of view.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Yang ◽  
Ziqiong Lin ◽  
William Zhu

Rough set theory is an efficient and essential tool for dealing with vagueness and granularity in information systems. Covering-based rough set theory is proposed as a significant generalization of classical rough sets. Matroid theory is a vital structure with high applicability and borrows extensively from linear algebra and graph theory. In this paper, one type of covering-based approximations is studied from the viewpoint of Eulerian matroids. First, we explore the circuits of an Eulerian matroid from the perspective of coverings. Second, this type of covering-based approximations is represented by the circuits of Eulerian matroids. Moreover, the conditions under which the covering-based upper approximation operator is the closure operator of a matroid are presented. Finally, a matroidal structure of covering-based rough sets is constructed. These results show many potential connections between covering-based rough sets and matroids.


Author(s):  
S. Arjun Raj ◽  
M. Vigneshwaran

In this article we use the rough set theory to generate the set of decision concepts in order to solve a medical problem.Based on officially published data by International Diabetes Federation (IDF), rough sets have been used to diagnose Diabetes.The lower and upper approximations of decision concepts and their boundary regions have been formulated here.


Author(s):  
Yanfang Liu ◽  
Hong Zhao ◽  
William Zhu

Rough set is mainly concerned with the approximations of objects through an equivalence relation on a universe. Matroid is a generalization of linear algebra and graph theory. Recently, a matroidal structure of rough sets is established and applied to the problem of attribute reduction which is an important application of rough set theory. In this paper, we propose a new matroidal structure of rough sets and call it a parametric matroid. On the one hand, for an equivalence relation on a universe, a parametric set family, with any subset of the universe as its parameter, is defined through the lower approximation operator. This parametric set family is proved to satisfy the independent set axiom of matroids, therefore a matroid is generated, and we call it a parametric matroid of the rough set. Through the lower approximation operator, three equivalent representations of the parametric set family are obtained. Moreover, the parametric matroid of the rough set is proved to be the direct sum of a partition-circuit matroid and a free matroid. On the other hand, partition-circuit matroids are well studied through the lower approximation number, and then we use it to investigate the parametric matroid of the rough set. Several characteristics of the parametric matroid of the rough set, such as independent sets, bases, circuits, the rank function and the closure operator, are expressed by the lower approximation number.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-24
Author(s):  
Lijun Chen ◽  
Damei Luo ◽  
Pei Wang ◽  
Zhaowen Li ◽  
Ningxin Xie

 An approximation space (A-space) is the base of rough set theory and a fuzzy approximation space (FA-space) can be seen as an A-space under the fuzzy environment. A fuzzy probability approximation space (FPA-space) is obtained by putting probability distribution into an FA-space. In this way, it combines three types of uncertainty (i.e., fuzziness, probability and roughness). This article is devoted to measuring the uncertainty for an FPA-space. A fuzzy relation matrix is first proposed by introducing the probability into a given fuzzy relation matrix, and on this basis, it is expanded to an FA-space. Then, granularity measurement for an FPA-space is investigated. Next, information entropy measurement and rough entropy measurement for an FPA-space are proposed. Moreover, information amount in an FPA-space is considered. Finally, a numerical example is given to verify the feasibility of the proposed measures, and the effectiveness analysis is carried out from the point of view of statistics. Since three types of important theories (i.e., fuzzy set theory, probability theory and rough set theory) are clustered in an FPA-space, the obtained results may be useful for dealing with practice problems with a sort of uncertainty.


Author(s):  
Benjamin Griffiths

Rough Set Theory (RST), since its introduction in Pawlak (1982), continues to develop as an effective tool in data mining. Within a set theoretical structure, its remit is closely concerned with the classification of objects to decision attribute values, based on their description by a number of condition attributes. With regards to RST, this classification is through the construction of ‘if .. then ..’ decision rules. The development of RST has been in many directions, amongst the earliest was with the allowance for miss-classification in the constructed decision rules, namely the Variable Precision Rough Sets model (VPRS) (Ziarko, 1993), the recent references for this include; Beynon (2001), Mi et al. (2004), and Slezak and Ziarko (2005). Further developments of RST have included; its operation within a fuzzy environment (Greco et al., 2006), and using a dominance relation based approach (Greco et al., 2004). The regular major international conferences of ‘International Conference on Rough Sets and Current Trends in Computing’ (RSCTC, 2004) and ‘International Conference on Rough Sets, Fuzzy Sets, Data Mining and Granular Computing’ (RSFDGrC, 2005) continue to include RST research covering the varying directions of its development. This is true also for the associated book series entitled ‘Transactions on Rough Sets’ (Peters and Skowron, 2005), which further includes doctoral theses on this subject. What is true, is that RST is still evolving, with the eclectic attitude to its development meaning that the definitive concomitant RST data mining techniques are still to be realised. Grzymala-Busse and Ziarko (2000), in a defence of RST, discussed a number of points relevant to data mining, and also made comparisons between RST and other techniques. Within the area of data mining and the desire to identify relationships between condition attributes, the effectiveness of RST is particularly pertinent due to the inherent intent within RST type methodologies for data reduction and feature selection (Jensen and Shen, 2005). That is, subsets of condition attributes identified that perform the same role as all the condition attributes in a considered data set (termed ß-reducts in VPRS, see later). Chen (2001) addresses this, when discussing the original RST, they state it follows a reductionist approach and is lenient to inconsistent data (contradicting condition attributes - one aspect of underlying uncertainty). This encyclopaedia article describes and demonstrates the practical application of a RST type methodology in data mining, namely VPRS, using nascent software initially described in Griffiths and Beynon (2005). The use of VPRS, through its relative simplistic structure, outlines many of the rudiments of RST based methodologies. The software utilised is oriented towards ‘hands on’ data mining, with graphs presented that clearly elucidate ‘veins’ of possible information identified from ß-reducts, over different allowed levels of missclassification associated with the constructed decision rules (Beynon and Griffiths, 2004). Further findings are briefly reported when undertaking VPRS in a resampling environment, with leave-one-out and bootstrapping approaches adopted (Wisnowski et al., 2003). The importance of these results is in the identification of the more influential condition attributes, pertinent to accruing the most effective data mining results.


Author(s):  
Malcolm J. Beynon

Rough set theory (RST), since its introduction in Pawlak (1982), continues to develop as an effective tool in classification problems and decision support. In the majority of applications using RST based methodologies, there is the construction of ‘if .. then ..’ decision rules that are used to describe the results from an analysis. The variation of applications in management and decision making, using RST, recently includes discovering the operating rules of a Sicilian irrigation purpose reservoir (Barbagallo, Consoli, Pappalardo, Greco, & Zimbone, 2006), feature selection in customer relationship management (Tseng & Huang, 2007) and decisions that insurance companies make to satisfy customers’ needs (Shyng, Wang, Tzeng, & Wu, 2007). As a nascent symbolic machine learning technique, the popularity of RST is a direct consequence of its set theoretical operational processes, mitigating inhibiting issues associated with traditional techniques, such as within-group probability distribution assumptions (Beynon & Peel, 2001). Instead, the rudiments of the original RST are based on an indiscernibility relation, whereby objects are grouped into certain equivalence classes and inference taken from these groups. Characteristics like this mean that decision support will be built upon the underlying RST philosophy of “Let the data speak for itself” (Dunstch & Gediga, 1997). Recently, RST was viewed as being of fundamental importance in artificial intelligence and cognitive sciences, including decision analysis and decision support systems (Tseng & Huang, 2007). One of the first developments on RST was through the variable precision rough sets model (VPRSß), which allows a level of mis-classification to exist in the classification of objects, resulting in probabilistic rules (see Ziarko, 1993; Beynon, 2001; Li and Wang, 2004). VPRSß has specifically been applied as a potential decision support system with the UK Monopolies and Mergers Commission (Beynon & Driffield, 2005), predicting bank credit ratings (Griffiths & Beynon, 2005) and diffusion of medicaid home care programs (Kitchener, Beynon, & Harrington, 2004). Further developments of RST include extended variable precision rough sets (VPRSl,u), which infers asymmetric bounds on the possible classification and mis-classification of objects (Katzberg & Ziarko, 1996), dominance-based rough sets, which bases their approach around a dominance relation (Greco, Matarazzo, & Slowinski, 2004), fuzzy rough sets, which allows the grade of membership of objects to constructed sets (Greco, Inuiguchi, & Slowinski, 2006), and probabilistic bayesian rough sets model that considers an appropriate certainty gain function (Ziarko, 2005). A literal presentation of the diversity of work on RST can be viewed in the annual volumes of the Transactions on Rough Sets (most recent year 2006), also the annual conferences dedicated to RST and its developments (see for example, RSCTC, 2004). In this article, the theory underlying VPRSl,u is described, with its special case of VPRSß used in an example analysis. The utilisation of VPRSl,u, and VPRSß, is without loss of generality to other developments such as those referenced, its relative simplicity allows the non-proficient reader the opportunity to fully follow the details presented.


2011 ◽  
pp. 129-151
Author(s):  
Theresa Beaubouef ◽  
Frederick E Petry

This chapter discusses ways in which rough set theory can enhance databases by allowing for the management of uncertainty. Rough sets can be integrated into an underlying database model, relational or object oriented, and also used in design and querying of databases. Because rough sets are a versatile theory, they can also be combined with other theories. The authors discuss the rough relational database model, the rough object oriented database model, and fuzzy set and intuitionistic set extensions to each of these models. Comparisons and benefits of the various approaches are discussed, illustrating the usefulness and versatility of rough sets for uncertainty management in databases.


2009 ◽  
pp. 1127-1150
Author(s):  
Theresa Beaubouef ◽  
Frederick E. Petry

This chapter discusses ways in which rough-set theory can enhance databases by allowing for the management of uncertainty. Rough sets can be integrated into an underlying database model, relational or object oriented, and also used in the design and uerying of databases, because roughsets are a versatile theory, theories. The authors discuss the rough relational databases model, the rough object-oriented database model, and fuzzy set and intuitionistic set extensions to each of these models. Comparisons and benefits of the various approaches are discussed, illustrating the usefulness and versatility of rough sets for uncertainty management in databases.


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