fuzzy approach to continuity

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A “Fuzzy-Minded” Approach to Continuity Timothy Biehler, Professor of Mathematics, FLCC Sean Maley, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, FLCC

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Page 1: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

A “Fuzzy-Minded” Approach to Continuity

Timothy Biehler, Professor of Mathematics, FLCC

Sean Maley, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, FLCC

Page 2: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Objective

• Teach continuity and limits in an introductory Calculus course in a way that equips students with a clear sense of both the meaning and utility of these concepts.

Page 3: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Traditional Approach: The “Epsilon-Delta” Definition and Continuity

Page 4: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Modern, Intuitive Approach to Limit and Continuity:

• Limits:

• Continuity:

Page 5: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Warm up

Page 6: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Warm up

(7.5 is the right answer. 7.48 is wrong. 7.56 is wrong. Anything other than 7.5 is a wrong answer!)

Page 7: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Next problem

Tim has diabetes. The amount of insulin he needs to take before breakfast is a function of the amount of carbs his breakfast will contain (in grams).   He needs 2.5 units regardless of what he eats, and then one additional unit for each six grams of carbs.   How much insulin does he need to take if his breakfast will contain 30 grams of carbs?

Page 8: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Look familiar?

Page 9: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

In the math classroom• We tend to speak in “exact”

terms

• In math class, f(30)=7.5, and 30 grams of carbs require 7.5 units of insulin.

• Is it “exactly” 7.5 units? Or “pretty much” 7.5 units?

Page 10: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

• Here’s what an insulin syringe looks like:

• Think you can hit exactly 7.5 units?

Page 11: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Exact VS RealityGoogle says the time required to get here from Canandaigua is 4 hours and 10 minutes.

Of course no one takes that to mean the exact time it took us to get from exactly FLCC to exactly here is exactly 4hrs and 10 minutes!

Page 12: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

What does this have to do with continuity?

• In reality, Tim didn’t eat exactly 30g of carbs and take exactly 7.5 units of insulin.

• We understand the dose for around 30g of carbs is close to 7.5 units.

• Limits and continuity are what makes this OK.

Page 13: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

In math class, we say f(30)=7.5 as though the values must be exact.

Page 14: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

But we never say that.

But we really understand this as “f(30-ish)=7.5 or so”

Page 15: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

What about limits?

Because when we are around x=30, f(x) is around 7.5

Page 16: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Discontinuity

• On AT&T International Data plan, a package covering up to 120 MB of cellular data costs $30, and overages cost $0.25 per MB. A package covering 300 MB of data costs $60, and you are switched to that plan automatically once your usage reaches 300 MB.

• What is the cost of around 300 MB?

• 299MB?

• 301MB?

Page 17: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Discontinuity

• What is the cost of around 300 MB?

Page 18: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Advantages to the “Fuzzy Approach”• Appeals to students’ common sense.• Leads to more sound graphical understanding as

well.• Another way to say “small changes in input small

changes in output”

Approachable

• Easier to explain why continuity is needed for differentiability later on

Connecting Ideas

• Clearly articulates the nature of continuity in realistic applications. (Rarely do students draw this connection on their own.)

Relevant

Page 19: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

Making Epsilon and Delta Meaningful

• For any error tolerance in the output (epsilon) we can find a degree of precision in the input (delta).

• If we can measure the dose within +/- units on the syringe, how close are we on the carbohydrate target?

Page 20: Fuzzy Approach to Continuity

More to come…

• Thanks for coming! SLIDES: tiny.cc/fuzzycontinuity

• Tim Biehler, Professor of Mathematics, FLCC

[email protected]

• Sean Maley, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, FLCC

[email protected]