624,775 research outputs found
Preferential and Preferential-discriminative Consequence relations
The present paper investigates consequence relations that are both
non-monotonic and paraconsistent. More precisely, we put the focus on
preferential consequence relations, i.e. those relations that can be defined by
a binary preference relation on states labelled by valuations. We worked with a
general notion of valuation that covers e.g. the classical valuations as well
as certain kinds of many-valued valuations. In the many-valued cases,
preferential consequence relations are paraconsistant (in addition to be
non-monotonic), i.e. they are capable of drawing reasonable conclusions which
contain contradictions. The first purpose of this paper is to provide in our
general framework syntactic characterizations of several families of
preferential relations. The second and main purpose is to provide, again in our
general framework, characterizations of several families of preferential
discriminative consequence relations. They are defined exactly as the plain
version, but any conclusion such that its negation is also a conclusion is
rejected (these relations bring something new essentially in the many-valued
cases).Comment: team Logic and Complexity, written in 2004-200
Preferential sorption versus preferential permeability in pervaporation
Transport of liquids by pervaporation takes place by a solution—diffusion mechanism. In order to investigate the “solution part” of this transport model, preferential sorption has been compared with preferential permeability. Sorption equilibria and pervaporation experiments for the systems water—ethanol—cellulose acetate, water—ethanol—polyacrylonitrile and water—ethanol—polysulfone have been investigated. Theoretical values of preferential sorption have been derived from Flory—Huggins thermodynamics, extended with concentration dependent interaction parameters. These calculated sorption values show a reasonable agreement with experimental values. The large difference in molar volumes between water and ethanol determines the preferential sorption of water in these systems to a great extent, and this effect increases with decreasing swelling value. Comparison of preferential sorption experiments with pervaporation experiments indicates that, apart from the effect of differences in diffusivity for the permeating components, preferential sorption contributes to a major extent to selective transport
Betweenness Centrality as a Driver of Preferential Attachment in the Evolution of Research Collaboration Networks
We analyze whether preferential attachment in scientific coauthorship
networks is different for authors with different forms of centrality. Using a
complete database for the scientific specialty of research about "steel
structures," we show that betweenness centrality of an existing node is a
significantly better predictor of preferential attachment by new entrants than
degree or closeness centrality. During the growth of a network, preferential
attachment shifts from (local) degree centrality to betweenness centrality as a
global measure. An interpretation is that supervisors of PhD projects and
postdocs broker between new entrants and the already existing network, and thus
become focal to preferential attachment. Because of this mediation, scholarly
networks can be expected to develop differently from networks which are
predicated on preferential attachment to nodes with high degree centrality.Comment: Journal of Informetrics (in press
Preferential Multi-Context Systems
Multi-context systems (MCS) presented by Brewka and Eiter can be considered
as a promising way to interlink decentralized and heterogeneous knowledge
contexts. In this paper, we propose preferential multi-context systems (PMCS),
which provide a framework for incorporating a total preorder relation over
contexts in a multi-context system. In a given PMCS, its contexts are divided
into several parts according to the total preorder relation over them,
moreover, only information flows from a context to ones of the same part or
less preferred parts are allowed to occur. As such, the first preferred
parts of an PMCS always fully capture the information exchange between contexts
of these parts, and then compose another meaningful PMCS, termed the
-section of that PMCS. We generalize the equilibrium semantics for an MCS to
the (maximal) -equilibrium which represents belief states at least
acceptable for the -section of an PMCS. We also investigate inconsistency
analysis in PMCS and related computational complexity issues
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