Abstract

This paper extends the theory of belief functions by introducing new concepts and techniques, allowing to model the situation in which the beliefs held by a rational agent may only be expressed (or are only known) with some imprecision. Central to our approach is the concept of interval-valued belief structure (IBS), defined as a set of belief structures verifying certain constraints. Starting from this definition, many other concepts of Evidence Theory (including belief and plausibility functions, pignistic probabilities, combination rules and uncertainty measures) are generalized to cope with imprecision in the belief numbers attached to each hypothesis. An application of this new framework to the classification of patterns with partially known feature values is demonstrated.

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