LOTFI ASKER ZADEH


'Lotfi Asker Zadeh' (born February 4, 1921) is a mathematician and computer scientist, and a professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley.
He was born in Baku, Azerbaijan as 'Lotfali Askerzadeh' (or 'Askar Zadeh'), to a Russian mother and an Iranian Azeri father (from Ardabil, center of Ardabil province of Iran), grew up in Iran, studied at Alborz High School and Faculty of Engineering, University of Tehran (Fanni), and moved to the United States in 1944. He received an S.M. degree in electrical engineering from MIT in 1946, and a PhD in electrical engineering from Columbia University in 1949, where he taught for ten years, and was promoted to full professor in 1957. He has taught at the University of California, Berkeley since 1959. He published his seminal work on fuzzy sets in 1965 in which he detailed the mathematics of fuzzy set theory. In 1973 he proposed his theory of fuzzy logic.
Lotfi Zadeh is noted to "quick(ly) shrug off nationalism, insisting there are much deeper issues in life", where he himself is quoted stating: "The question really isn't whether I'm American, Russian, Iranian, Azerbaijani, or anything else, I've been shaped by all these people and cultures and I feel quite comfortable among all of them."[1]
Lotfi Zadeh also admits in his interview: "Obstinacy and tenacity. Not being afraid to get embroiled in controversy. That's very much a Turkish tradition. That's part of my character, too. I can be very stubborn. That's probably been beneficial for the development of
Fuzzy Logic" [2]
Zadeh is married to Fay Zadeh and has two children, Stella Zadeh and Norman Zadeh.

Contents
Importance and Fundamental Contribution (Fuzzy Sets and Systems)
Other Contributions
Awards
References
External links

Importance and Fundamental Contribution (Fuzzy Sets and Systems)


Aristotle introduced the laws of thought, which consisted of three fundamental laws:

principle of identity

law of the excluded middle

law of contradiction
The law of the excluded middle states that for all propositions ''p'', either ''p'' or ''~p'' must be true, there being no middle true proposition between them. This should not be confused with the principle of bivalence, which states that either ''p'' must be true or false.
It was Jan Åukasiewicz who first proposed a systematic alternative to the bi-valued logic
of Aristotle and described the 3-valued logic, with the third value being ''Possible''.
Lotfi Zadeh, in his theory of fuzzy logic, proposed the making of the membership function operate over the range of real numbers [0,1]. He proposed new operations for the calculus of logic and showed that fuzzy logic was a generalisation of classical logic.

Other Contributions


Because of the importance of the retraction/relaxation of Aristotelian logic, which opens up applicability of rational methods to the majority of practical situations without dichotomous truth values, Zadeh is one of the most referenced authors in the fields of applied math and the computer sciences among others but his contributions are not limited to fuzzy sets and systems.
Zadeh is also credited, along with John R. Ragazzini, in 1952, to have pioneered the development of the z-transform method in discrete time signal processing and analysis. These methods are now standard in digital signal processing, digital control, and other discrete-time systems used in industry and research.
Zadeh's latest work includes computing with words and perceptions. His recent papers include ''From Search Engines to Question-Answering Systems—The Role of Fuzzy Logic'', Progress in Informatics, No. 1, 1-3, 2005; and ''Toward a Generalized Theory of Uncertainty (GTU)—An Outline'', Information Sciences, Elsevier, Vol. 172, 1-40, 2005.

Awards


In 1994 he was inducted as a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery. He was awarded the IEEE Medal of Honor in 1995 "For pioneering development of fuzzy logic and its many diverse applications."
Zadeh has a long list of achievements, but since 2003, Lotfi Zadeh has received the following awards.

★ Outstanding Contribution Award, Web Intelligence Consortium (WIC), Halifax, Canada, 2003.

★ Wall of Fame, Heinz Nixdorf MuseumsForum (HNF), Paderborn, Germany, 2004.

★ Civitate Honoris Causa, Budapest Tech (BT) Polytechnical Institution, Budapest, Hungary; Sept. 4, 2004.

★ Doctor Honoris Causa, Muroran Institute of Technology, Muroran, Japan; Oct. 29, 2004.

★ Doctor Honoris Causa, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, China; Nov. 9, 2004.

★ V. Kaufmann Prize and Gold Medal, International Association for Fuzzy-Set Management and Economy (SIGEF), Barcelona, Spain, Nov. 15, 2004.

★ Foreign member of the Polish Academy of Sciences, 2005.

★ Nicolaus Copernicus Medal of the Polish Academy of Sciences, 2005.

★ J. Keith Brimacombe IPMM Award in recognition of his development of fuzzy set theory and fuzzy logic, 2005.

★ Doctor Honoris Causa, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Madrid, Spain; Jan. 29, 2007.

References



★ Fuzzy Sets and Systems. The main journal of the field which contains many contributions by its founder.

Aristotle : ''Metaphysics'', Chapter 7.

★ Lotfi Zadeh : ''From computing with numbers to computing with words — from manipulation of measurements to manipulation of perceptions'' in International Journal of Applied Math and Computer Science, pp. 307-324, vol. 12, no. 3, 2002.
1. "Short Biographical Sketch", Betty Blair, Azerbaijan International, accessed August 19th, 2005
2. Azerbaijan International. Interview with Lotfi Zadeh, Creator of Fuzzy Logic


★ Fay Zadeh. "My Life and Travels with the Father of Fuzzy Logic". 1998, TSI Press, Albuquerque, NM.

External links



Academic profile – Berkeley, University of California

IEEE: Zadeh

Honorary Chair of 2nd IEEE ICCCC 2008
For Zadeh's PhD students see

Lotfi A. Zadeh on the Mathematics Genealogy Project page.

★ 1965 seminal work on Fuzzy Sets

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