Making a diagnosis when something goes wrong with a natural or m- made system can be difficult. In many fields, such as medicine or electr- ics, a long training period and apprenticeship are required to become a skilled diagnostician. During this time a novice diagnostician is asked to assimilate a large amount of knowledge about the class of systems to be diagnosed. In contrast, the novice is not really taught how to reason with this knowledge in arriving at a conclusion or a diagnosis, except perhaps implicitly through ease examples. This would seem to indicate that many of the essential aspects of diagnostic reasoning are a type of intuiti- based, common sense reasoning. More precisely, diagnostic reasoning can be classified as a type of inf- ence known as abductive reasoning or abduction. Abduction is defined to be a process of generating a plausible explanation for a given set of obs- vations or facts. Although mentioned in Aristotle's work, the study of f- mal aspects of abduction did not really start until about a century ago.
| ISBN-13: | 9780387973432 |
| ISBN-10: | 0387973435 |
| Publisher: | Springer New York |
| Publication date: | 1990-06-26 |
| Edition description: | 1990 |
| Pages: | 285 |
| Product dimensions: | Height: 9.21 Inches, Length: 6.14 Inches, Weight: 2.9101018584 Pounds, Width: 0.69 Inches |
| Author: | Yun Peng, James A. Reggia |
| Language: | en |
| Binding: | Hardcover |
Discover more books in the same category
Be the first to review this book!