• Title of article

    What makes propositional abduction tractable Original Research Article

  • Author/Authors

    Gustav Nordh، نويسنده , , Bruno Zanuttini، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    40
  • From page
    1245
  • To page
    1284
  • Abstract
    Abduction is a fundamental form of nonmonotonic reasoning that aims at finding explanations for observed manifestations. This process underlies many applications, from car configuration to medical diagnosis. We study here the computational complexity of deciding whether an explanation exists in the case when the application domain is described by a propositional knowledge base. Building on previous results, we classify the complexity for local restrictions on the knowledge base and under various restrictions on hypotheses and manifestations. In comparison to the many previous studies on the complexity of abduction we are able to give a much more detailed picture for the complexity of the basic problem of deciding the existence of an explanation. It turns out that depending on the restrictions, the problem in this framework is always polynomial-time solvable, NP-complete, coNP-complete, or image-complete. Based on these results, we give an a posteriori justification of what makes propositional abduction hard even for some classes of knowledge bases which allow for efficient satisfiability testing and deduction. This justification is very simple and intuitive, but it reveals that no nontrivial class of abduction problems is tractable. Indeed, tractability essentially requires that the language for knowledge bases is unable to express both causal links and conflicts between hypotheses. This generalizes a similar observation by Bylander et al. for set-covering abduction.
  • Keywords
    Abduction , Propositional logic , Computational complexity
  • Journal title
    Artificial Intelligence
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Artificial Intelligence
  • Record number

    1207626