Author Topic: Evidence Theory and computer thought  (Read 1833 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline nslay

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 786
  • Giraffe meat, mmm
    • View Profile
Evidence Theory and computer thought
« on: October 23, 2006, 02:43:28 pm »
I'm reading a paper on this arcaine topic, Evidence Theory.  It's basically a way to quantify support and plausibility of a set of evidence.  This paper creates some curious relationships between the two.  I can see this as a precursor for computer thought and reason as it gives a numerical foothold to practical reasoning (e.g. Is person A lying if blah blah ... ). Now, this is unlike probability, since probability measures the liklihood of A while this measures the plausibility and support of evidence for A.  It is a superset of probability theory.
If you're curious, the paper (or perhaps its a copy from a book) is:
"A theory of statistical evidence" by Glenn Shafer.
An adorable giant isopod!