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TSMC
2008

A Geometric Approach to the Theory of Evidence

13 years 4 months ago
A Geometric Approach to the Theory of Evidence
In this paper, we propose a geometric approach to the theory of evidence based on convex geometric interpretations of its two key notions of belief function (b.f.) and Dempster's sum. On one side, we analyze the geometry of b.f.'s as points of a polytope in the Cartesian space called belief space, and discuss the intimate relationship between basic probability assignment and convex combination. On the other side, we study the global geometry of Dempster's rule by describing its action on those convex combinations. By proving that Dempster's sum and convex closure commute, we are able to depict the geometric structure of conditional subspaces, i.e., sets of b.f.'s conditioned by a given function b. Natural applications of these geometric methods to classical problems such as probabilistic approximation and canonical decomposition are outlined.
Fabio Cuzzolin
Added 15 Dec 2010
Updated 15 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2008
Where TSMC
Authors Fabio Cuzzolin
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