Font size: A A A

 

Research

Courses

Other

Numerical Uncertainty Management in User and Student Modeling: An Overview of Systems and Issues

By Anthony Jameson (1996)

User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction, 5, 193–251.

Abstract

A rapidly growing number of user and student modeling systems have employed numerical techniques for uncertainty management. The three major paradigms are those of Bayesian networks, the Dempster-Shafer theory of evidence, and fuzzy logic. In this overview, each of the first three main sections focuses on one of these paradigms. It first introduces the basic concepts by showing how they can be applied to a relatively simple user modeling problem. It then surveys systems that have applied techniques from the paradigm to user or student modeling, characterizing each system within a common framework. The final main section discusses several aspects of the usability of these techniques for user and student modeling, such as their knowledge engineering requirements, their need for computational resources, and the communicability of their results.

Citations

Download

Full Publication:  [PDF File]

BibTeX entry

@article{Jameson96UMUAI,
  year = {1996},
  author = {{Jameson}, Anthony},
  title = {Numerical Uncertainty Management in User and Student Modeling: An Overview of Systems and Issues},
  journal = {User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction},
  volume = {5},
  pages = {193--251}}