Extensions of Orders to a Power Set vs. Scores of Hesitant Fuzzy Elements: Points in Common of Two Parallel Theories
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Motivation of the Manuscript
1.2. Aim and Objectives
1.3. Contents of the Manuscript
2. Preliminaries
2.1. Extension of Orderings from a Set to Its Power Set
- (i)
- Among possible extensions, the literature pays special attention to the following situations: (a) Both ≾ and are total orders; (b) both ≾ and are complete preorders; (c) ≾ is a total order, but is a complete preorder.
- (ii)
- Some authors do not consider ∅ in the extensions, so they define the extensions not on the whole power set but instead on .
- (iii)
- The most classical criteria appeared from 1950 on, mainly in several papers related to social choice and decision making (see, e.g., [1,4]). They usually consider a total order ≾ defined on a finite set X, whereas the extension can be either a total order or just a complete preorder depending on the context.
2.2. Hesitant Fuzzy Elements, Hesitant Fuzzy Sets and Scores
- -
- denotes the collection of all subsets of the unit interval ,
- -
- denotes the collection of all nonempty subsets of ,
- -
- constitutes the subset of all intervals in ,
- -
- consists of all closed intervals in ,
- -
- consist of all finite unions of intervals in ,
- -
- denotes the collection of all nonempty finite subsets of , and
- -
- denotes the collection of all nonempty subsets of with at most n elements.
- 1.
- The score assigned to the empty set is zero. That is, provided that ;
- 2.
- For all , we have that the score assigned to E must lie between the infimum and the supremum of E. That is, . (In particular, holds true for each t in the unit interval).
3. Classical Criteria to Extend Orderings from a Set to Its Power Set
4. Compatibility of Criteria of Extension of Orderings
4.1. Complete Preorders vs. Total Orders
4.2. On Kannai-Peleg Theorem
5. Scores: Definitions, Hierarchies, and Incompatibility Results
5.1. Some Background on Scores
- (i)
- Properties based on certain coherence features of the score (e.g., the addition of better elements should never decrease the score).
- (ii)
- Properties based on the specific type of HFEs for which the score will be considered (e.g., finite HFEs, interval HFEs, etc.).
5.2. On Coherence Features of Scores
5.3. Scores Defined on Special Classes of Sets
6. Comparisons and Analogies between the Theory of Extension of Orderings and the Theory of Scores on Hesitant Fuzzy Elements
6.1. From Extensions of Orderings to Scores
6.2. From Scores to Extensions of Orderings
7. Concluding Remarks and Lines for Future Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Induráin, E.; Munárriz, A.; Sara, M.S. Extensions of Orders to a Power Set vs. Scores of Hesitant Fuzzy Elements: Points in Common of Two Parallel Theories. Axioms 2024, 13, 549. https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms13080549
Induráin E, Munárriz A, Sara MS. Extensions of Orders to a Power Set vs. Scores of Hesitant Fuzzy Elements: Points in Common of Two Parallel Theories. Axioms. 2024; 13(8):549. https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms13080549
Chicago/Turabian StyleInduráin, Esteban, Ana Munárriz, and M. Sergio Sara. 2024. "Extensions of Orders to a Power Set vs. Scores of Hesitant Fuzzy Elements: Points in Common of Two Parallel Theories" Axioms 13, no. 8: 549. https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms13080549
APA StyleInduráin, E., Munárriz, A., & Sara, M. S. (2024). Extensions of Orders to a Power Set vs. Scores of Hesitant Fuzzy Elements: Points in Common of Two Parallel Theories. Axioms, 13(8), 549. https://doi.org/10.3390/axioms13080549