9 research outputs found

    Non-associative, Non-commutative Multi-modal Linear Logic

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    Adding multi-modalities (called subexponentials) to linear logic enhances its power as a logical framework, which has been extensively used in the specification of e.g. proof systems, programming languages and bigraphs. Initially, subexponentials allowed for classical, linear, affine or relevant behaviors. Recently, this framework was enhanced so to allow for commutativity as well. In this work, we close the cycle by considering associativity. We show that the resulting system (acLLΣ ) admits the (multi)cut rule, and we prove two undecidability results for fragments/variations of acLLΣ

    Explorations in Subexponential Non-associative Non-commutative Linear Logic

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    In a previous work we introduced a non-associative non-commutative logic extended by multimodalities, called subexponentials, licensing local application of structural rules. Here, we further explore this system, exhibiting a classical one-sided multi-succedent classical analogue of our intuitionistic system, following the exponential-free calculi of Buszkowski, and de Groote, Lamarche. A large fragment of the intuitionistic calculus is shown to embed faithfully into the classical fragment

    Parsing/theorem-proving for logical grammar CatLog3

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    CatLog3 is a 7000 line Prolog parser/theorem-prover for logical categorial grammar. In such logical categorial grammar syntax is universal and grammar is reduced to logic: an expression is grammatical if and only if an associated logical statement is a theorem of a fixed calculus. Since the syntactic component is invariant, being the logic of the calculus, logical categorial grammar is purely lexicalist and a particular language model is defined by just a lexical dictionary. The foundational logic of continuity was established by Lambek (Am Math Mon 65:154–170, 1958) (the Lambek calculus) while a corresponding extension including also logic of discontinuity was established by Morrill and Valentín (Linguist Anal 36(1–4):167–192, 2010) (the displacement calculus). CatLog3 implements a logic including as primitive connectives the continuous (concatenation) and discontinuous (intercalation) connectives of the displacement calculus, additives, 1st order quantifiers, normal modalities, bracket modalities, and universal and existential subexponentials. In this paper we review the rules of inference for these primitive connectives and their linguistic applications, and we survey the principles of Andreoli’s focusing, and of a generalisation of van Benthem’s count-invariance, on the basis of which CatLog3 is implemented.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Bracket induction for Lambek calculus with bracket modalities

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    Relativisation involves dependencies which, although unbounded, are constrained with respect to certain island domains. The Lambek calculus L can provide a very rudimentary account of relativisation limited to unbounded peripheral extraction; the Lambek calculus with bracket modalities Lb can further condition this account according to island domains. However in naïve parsing/theorem-proving by backward chaining sequent proof search for Lb the bracketed island domains, which can be indefinitely nested, have to be specified in the linguistic input. In realistic parsing word order is given but such hierarchical bracketing structure cannot be assumed to be given. In this paper we show how parsing can be realised which induces the bracketing structure in backward chaining sequent proof search with Lb

    Decidable Exponentials in Nonassociative Noncommutative Linear Logic

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    The use of exponentials in linear logic greatly enhances its expressive power. In this paper we focus on nonassociative noncommutative multiplicative linear logic, and systematically explore modal axioms K, T, and 4 as well as the structural rules of contraction and weakening. We give sequent systems for each subset of these axioms; these enjoy cut elimination and have analogues in more structural logics. We then appeal to work of Bulinska extending work of Buszkowski to show that several of these logics are PTIME decidable and generate context free languages as categorial grammars. This contrasts associative systems where similar logics are known to generate all recursively enumerable languages, and are thus in particular undecidable

    Parsing logical grammar: CatLog3

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    CatLog3 is a Prolog parser/theorem-prover for (type) logical (categorial) grammar. In such logical grammar, grammar is reduced to logic: a string of words is grammatical if and only if an associated logical statement is a theorem. CalLog3 implements a logic extending displacement calculus, a sublinear fragment including as primitive connectives the continuous (Lambek) and discontinuous wrapping connectives of the displacement calculus, additives, 1st order quantifiers, normal modalities, bracket modalities and subexponentials. In this paper we survey how CatLog3 is implemented on the principles of Andreoli’s focusing and a generalisation of van Benthem’s count-invariance.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Automated Reasoning

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    This volume, LNAI 13385, constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 11th International Joint Conference on Automated Reasoning, IJCAR 2022, held in Haifa, Israel, in August 2022. The 32 full research papers and 9 short papers presented together with two invited talks were carefully reviewed and selected from 85 submissions. The papers focus on the following topics: Satisfiability, SMT Solving,Arithmetic; Calculi and Orderings; Knowledge Representation and Jutsification; Choices, Invariance, Substitutions and Formalization; Modal Logics; Proofs System and Proofs Search; Evolution, Termination and Decision Prolems. This is an open access book
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