“…There are many other applications of conventional fuzzy control, including robot [10], [289], [314], [319], stirred tank reactor [146], traffic junction [237], steel furnace [153], cement kilns [288], automobile [16], [218], [260], wastewater treatment [279], aircraft [58], [161], missile autopilot [73], motor [100], network traffic management and congestion control [131], [169], bioprocesses [111], fusion welding [15], and so on. In addition, fuzzy control has been widely used in various consumer electronic devices such as video cameras, washing machines, TV, and sound systems in the late 1980s and early 1990s [106], [156], [170], [172], [219], [255], [263], [311].…”