DocumentCode
1505885
Title
Contextual Defeasible Logic and Its Application to Ambient Intelligence
Author
Bikakis, Antonis ; Antoniou, Grigoris
Author_Institution
Inst. of Comput. Sci., Found. for Res. & Technol. Hellas (FORTH), Heraklion, Greece
Volume
41
Issue
4
fYear
2011
fDate
7/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
705
Lastpage
716
Abstract
The imperfect nature of context in ambient intelligence environments, and the special characteristics of the entities that possess and share the available context information render contextual reasoning a very challenging task. The accomplishment of this task requires formal models that handle the involved entities as autonomous logic-based agents, and provide methods for handling the imperfect and distributed nature of context. We propose a solution based on the multi-context systems (MCS) formalism, in which local context knowledge of ambient agents is encoded in rule theories (contexts), and information flow between agents is achieved through mapping rules, associating concepts used by different contexts. To handle the imperfect nature of context, we extend MCS with non-monotonic features-local defeasible theories, defeasible mappings, and a preference ordering on the system contexts. In this paper, we present the novel representation model, called contextual defeasible logic, describe how its elements are used to derive distributed conclusions through a proof theory, and propose an algorithm for distributed query evaluation that implements the proof theory of contextual defeasible logic. The application of the proposed approach in a scenario from the ambient intelligence domain demonstrates how its distinct features overcome the challenges imposed by the special characteristics of ambient intelligence environments.
Keywords
nonmonotonic reasoning; theorem proving; ubiquitous computing; ambient agents; ambient intelligence environment; autonomous logic based agent; contextual defeasible logic; contextual reasoning; defeasible mappings; distributed conclusion; distributed query evaluation; formal models; information flow; local context knowledge; multi context systems formalism; non monotonic features; preference ordering; proof theory; rule theories; Ambient intelligence; Artificial intelligence; Cognition; Context; Context modeling; Mobile handsets; Portable computers; Ambient intelligence; contextual reasoning; defeasible reasoning; multi-context systems (MCS);
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1083-4427
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TSMCA.2011.2132715
Filename
5756697
Link To Document