- Zadeh, Lotfi A.
Zadeh, Lotfi A. (Lotfi Asker) (Nombre personal)
- Earlier heading: Zadeh, Lotfi Asker
- Zadă, Lu̇tfi
- Zade, Li︠u︡tfi
- Zadeh, L. A. (Lotfi Asker)
- Заде, Лютфи
Non-Latin script reference not evaluated
His Frequency analysis of variable networks, 1950.
Fuzzy sets and decision analysis, 1983: CIP t.p. (L.A. Zadeh) book t.p. (Lotfi A. Zadeh)
LCCN 63-14581: His Linear system theory, 1963 (hdg.: Zadeh, Lotfi Asker; usage: Lotfi A. Zadeh)
Du̇ni̐a daḣilărsiz i̐ashai̐a bilmir, 2000: t.p. verso (Lu̇tfi Zadă) p. 125, etc. (Li︠u︡tfi Zade; b. 1921 in Baku, emigrated from Iran to America in 1944; discoverer of the theory of 'fuzzy logic', has been working at Berkeley University since 1959)
New York times WWW site, viewed Sept. 12, 2017 (in obituary published Sept. 11: Lotfi Zadeh; b. Lotfi Asker Zadeh, Feb. 4, 1921, Baku, Azerbaijan; his family moved across the Soviet border to Iran; during World War II he sold goods to the American Army, earning enough money to continue his education in the United States; professor at Columbia; moved to Berkeley in 1959; d. Wednesday [Sept. 6, 2017], Berkeley, Calif., aged 96; computer scientist and electrical engineer whose theories of "fuzzy logic" rippled across academia and industry, influencing everything from linguistics, economics, and medicine to air-conditioners, vacuum cleaners, and rice cookers)