25,918 research outputs found
Probabilistic Default Reasoning with Conditional Constraints
We propose a combination of probabilistic reasoning from conditional
constraints with approaches to default reasoning from conditional knowledge
bases. In detail, we generalize the notions of Pearl's entailment in system Z,
Lehmann's lexicographic entailment, and Geffner's conditional entailment to
conditional constraints. We give some examples that show that the new notions
of z-, lexicographic, and conditional entailment have similar properties like
their classical counterparts. Moreover, we show that the new notions of z-,
lexicographic, and conditional entailment are proper generalizations of both
their classical counterparts and the classical notion of logical entailment for
conditional constraints.Comment: 8 pages; to appear in Proceedings of the Eighth International
Workshop on Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Special Session on Uncertainty Frameworks
in Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Breckenridge, Colorado, USA, 9-11 April 200
Nonmonotonic Probabilistic Logics between Model-Theoretic Probabilistic Logic and Probabilistic Logic under Coherence
Recently, it has been shown that probabilistic entailment under coherence is
weaker than model-theoretic probabilistic entailment. Moreover, probabilistic
entailment under coherence is a generalization of default entailment in System
P. In this paper, we continue this line of research by presenting probabilistic
generalizations of more sophisticated notions of classical default entailment
that lie between model-theoretic probabilistic entailment and probabilistic
entailment under coherence. That is, the new formalisms properly generalize
their counterparts in classical default reasoning, they are weaker than
model-theoretic probabilistic entailment, and they are stronger than
probabilistic entailment under coherence. The new formalisms are useful
especially for handling probabilistic inconsistencies related to conditioning
on zero events. They can also be applied for probabilistic belief revision.
More generally, in the same spirit as a similar previous paper, this paper
sheds light on exciting new formalisms for probabilistic reasoning beyond the
well-known standard ones.Comment: 10 pages; in Proceedings of the 9th International Workshop on
Non-Monotonic Reasoning (NMR-2002), Special Session on Uncertainty Frameworks
in Nonmonotonic Reasoning, pages 265-274, Toulouse, France, April 200
Induction of Interpretable Possibilistic Logic Theories from Relational Data
The field of Statistical Relational Learning (SRL) is concerned with learning
probabilistic models from relational data. Learned SRL models are typically
represented using some kind of weighted logical formulas, which make them
considerably more interpretable than those obtained by e.g. neural networks. In
practice, however, these models are often still difficult to interpret
correctly, as they can contain many formulas that interact in non-trivial ways
and weights do not always have an intuitive meaning. To address this, we
propose a new SRL method which uses possibilistic logic to encode relational
models. Learned models are then essentially stratified classical theories,
which explicitly encode what can be derived with a given level of certainty.
Compared to Markov Logic Networks (MLNs), our method is faster and produces
considerably more interpretable models.Comment: Longer version of a paper appearing in IJCAI 201
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