2007
DOI: 10.3808/jei.200700087
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Higher Order Vagueness in a Dynamic Landscape: Multi-Resolution Morphometric Analysis of a Coastal Dunefield

Abstract: ABSTRACT. Many environmental phenomena can be conceptualised as vague and so may be suitable for storage as fuzzy sets and analysis by fuzzy logic. Fuzzy sets directly address the vagueness in the information, but many consider that any statement about a vague phenomenon must itself be vague. This is known as higher order vagueness, and is handled in fuzzy set theory by type-2 and, by extension, type-n fuzzy sets. In this paper we use the recognition of, and change in, a system of coastal sand dunes as an envi… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 46 publications
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“…In practice, a complex saddle may not be perfectly enclosed by two base triangles, and thus a more rigorous saddle detection method should be developed for specific applications, e.g., the morphometric analysis of coastal dune fields [7].…”
Section: Extracting the Voronoi Skeletonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In practice, a complex saddle may not be perfectly enclosed by two base triangles, and thus a more rigorous saddle detection method should be developed for specific applications, e.g., the morphometric analysis of coastal dune fields [7].…”
Section: Extracting the Voronoi Skeletonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is also known as type 2 fuzzy set, or second order vagueness which has been extended to higher order vagueness concept by Williamson (1999) and Varzi (2003). Refer to Fisher et al (2007a) and Fisher et al (2007b) for applied example of higher order vagueness and type 2 fuzzy sets to mountain peak and coastal dune detection, respectively.…”
Section: Fuzzy Set Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Refer to Fisher et al. (,b) for an example of higher‐order vagueness and type 2 fuzzy sets applied to detection of a mountain peak (2007a) and a coastal dune (2007b).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%