3,776 research outputs found
A Description Logic of Typicality for Conceptual Combination
We propose a nonmonotonic Description Logic of typicality able to
account for the phenomenon of combining prototypical concepts, an open problem
in the fields of AI and cognitive modelling. Our logic extends the logic of
typicality ALC + TR, based on the notion of rational closure, by inclusions
p :: T(C) v D (âwe have probability p that typical Cs are Dsâ), coming
from the distributed semantics of probabilistic Description Logics. Additionally,
it embeds a set of cognitive heuristics for concept combination. We show that the
complexity of reasoning in our logic is EXPTIME-complete as in ALC
PriCL: Creating a Precedent A Framework for Reasoning about Privacy Case Law
We introduce PriCL: the first framework for expressing and automatically
reasoning about privacy case law by means of precedent. PriCL is parametric in
an underlying logic for expressing world properties, and provides support for
court decisions, their justification, the circumstances in which the
justification applies as well as court hierarchies. Moreover, the framework
offers a tight connection between privacy case law and the notion of norms that
underlies existing rule-based privacy research. In terms of automation, we
identify the major reasoning tasks for privacy cases such as deducing legal
permissions or extracting norms. For solving these tasks, we provide generic
algorithms that have particularly efficient realizations within an expressive
underlying logic. Finally, we derive a definition of deducibility based on
legal concepts and subsequently propose an equivalent characterization in terms
of logic satisfiability.Comment: Extended versio
Ontology-based modelling of architectural styles
The conceptual modelling of software architectures is of central importance for the quality of a software system. A rich modelling language is required to integrate the different aspects of architecture modelling, such as architectural styles, structural and behavioural modelling, into a coherent framework. Architectural styles are often neglected in software architectures. We propose an ontological approach for architectural style modelling based on description logic as an abstract, meta-level modelling instrument. We introduce a framework for style definition and style combination. The application of the
ontological framework in the form of an integration into existing architectural description notations is illustrated
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