73,275 research outputs found
A temporal semantics for Nilpotent Minimum logic
In [Ban97] a connection among rough sets (in particular, pre-rough algebras)
and three-valued {\L}ukasiewicz logic {\L}3 is pointed out. In this paper we
present a temporal like semantics for Nilpotent Minimum logic NM ([Fod95,
EG01]), in which the logic of every instant is given by {\L}3: a completeness
theorem will be shown. This is the prosecution of the work initiated in [AGM08]
and [ABM09], in which the authors construct a temporal semantics for the
many-valued logics of G\"odel ([G\"od32], [Dum59]) and Basic Logic ([H\'aj98]).Comment: 19 pages, 2 table
Extension-based Semantics of Abstract Dialectical Frameworks
One of the most prominent tools for abstract argumentation is the Dung's
framework, AF for short. It is accompanied by a variety of semantics including
grounded, complete, preferred and stable. Although powerful, AFs have their
shortcomings, which led to development of numerous enrichments. Among the most
general ones are the abstract dialectical frameworks, also known as the ADFs.
They make use of the so-called acceptance conditions to represent arbitrary
relations. This level of abstraction brings not only new challenges, but also
requires addressing existing problems in the field. One of the most
controversial issues, recognized not only in argumentation, concerns the
support cycles. In this paper we introduce a new method to ensure acyclicity of
the chosen arguments and present a family of extension-based semantics built on
it. We also continue our research on the semantics that permit cycles and fill
in the gaps from the previous works. Moreover, we provide ADF versions of the
properties known from the Dung setting. Finally, we also introduce a
classification of the developed sub-semantics and relate them to the existing
labeling-based approaches.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the 15th International Workshop on
Non-Monotonic Reasoning (NMR 2014
Towards a Systematic Account of Different Semantics for Logic Programs
In [Hitzler and Wendt 2002, 2005], a new methodology has been proposed which
allows to derive uniform characterizations of different declarative semantics
for logic programs with negation. One result from this work is that the
well-founded semantics can formally be understood as a stratified version of
the Fitting (or Kripke-Kleene) semantics. The constructions leading to this
result, however, show a certain asymmetry which is not readily understood. We
will study this situation here with the result that we will obtain a coherent
picture of relations between different semantics for normal logic programs.Comment: 20 page
Revisiting Epistemic Specifications
In 1991, Michael Gelfond introduced the language of epistemic specifications.
The goal was to develop tools for modeling problems that require some form of
meta-reasoning, that is, reasoning over multiple possible worlds. Despite their
relevance to knowledge representation, epistemic specifications have received
relatively little attention so far. In this paper, we revisit the formalism of
epistemic specification. We offer a new definition of the formalism, propose
several semantics (one of which, under syntactic restrictions we assume, turns
out to be equivalent to the original semantics by Gelfond), derive some
complexity results and, finally, show the effectiveness of the formalism for
modeling problems requiring meta-reasoning considered recently by Faber and
Woltran. All these results show that epistemic specifications deserve much more
attention that has been afforded to them so far.Comment: In Marcello Balduccini and Tran Cao Son, Editors, Essays Dedicated to
Michael Gelfond on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday, Lexington, KY, USA,
October 2010, LNAI 6565, Springe
Language Emptiness of Continuous-Time Parametric Timed Automata
Parametric timed automata extend the standard timed automata with the
possibility to use parameters in the clock guards. In general, if the
parameters are real-valued, the problem of language emptiness of such automata
is undecidable even for various restricted subclasses. We thus focus on the
case where parameters are assumed to be integer-valued, while the time still
remains continuous. On the one hand, we show that the problem remains
undecidable for parametric timed automata with three clocks and one parameter.
On the other hand, for the case with arbitrary many clocks where only one of
these clocks is compared with (an arbitrary number of) parameters, we show that
the parametric language emptiness is decidable. The undecidability result
tightens the bounds of a previous result which assumed six parameters, while
the decidability result extends the existing approaches that deal with
discrete-time semantics only. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first
positive result in the case of continuous-time and unbounded integer
parameters, except for the rather simple case of single-clock automata
- …
