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Default Reasoning for Forensic Visual Surveillance based on Subjective Logic and Its Comparison with L-Fuzzy Set Based Approaches

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  • Seunghan Han

    (Technische Universität München, Germany)

  • Walter Stechele

    (Technische Universität München, Germany)

Abstract

Default reasoning can provide a means of deriving plausible semantic conclusion under imprecise and contradictory information in forensic visual surveillance. In such reasoning under uncertainty, proper uncertainty handling formalism is required. A discrete species of Bilattice for multivalued default logic demonstrated default reasoning in visual surveillance. In this article, the authors present an approach to default reasoning using subjective logic that acts in a continuous space. As an uncertainty representation and handling formalism, subjective logic bridges Dempster Shafer belief theory and second order Bayesian, thereby making it attractive tool for artificial reasoning. For the verification of the proposed approach, the authors extend the inference scheme on the bilattice for multivalued default logic to L-fuzzy set based logics that can be modeled with continuous species of bilattice structures. The authors present some illustrative case studies in visual surveillance scenarios to contrast the proposed approach with L-fuzzy set based approaches.

Suggested Citation

  • Seunghan Han & Walter Stechele, 2011. "Default Reasoning for Forensic Visual Surveillance based on Subjective Logic and Its Comparison with L-Fuzzy Set Based Approaches," International Journal of Multimedia Data Engineering and Management (IJMDEM), IGI Global, vol. 2(1), pages 38-86, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:igg:jmdem0:v:2:y:2011:i:1:p:38-86
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