DocumentCode :
2546863
Title :
Revising default theories
Author :
Antoniou, Grigoris ; Williams, Mary-Anne
Author_Institution :
Comput. & Inf. Technol., Griffith Univ., Nathan, Qld., Australia
fYear :
1998
fDate :
10-12 Nov 1998
Firstpage :
423
Lastpage :
430
Abstract :
Default logic is a prominent rigorous method of reasoning with incomplete information based on assumptions. It is a static reasoning approach, in the sense that it doesn´t reason about changes and their consequences. On the other hand, its nonmonotonic behaviour appears when a change to a default theory is made. This paper studies the dynamic behaviour of default logic in the face of changes, a concept that we motivate by a reference to requirements engineering. The paper defines a contraction and a revision operator, and studies their properties. This work is part of an ongoing project whose aim is to build an integrated, domain-independent toolkit of logical methods for reasoning with changing and incomplete information. The techniques described in this paper will be implemented as part of the toolkit
Keywords :
formal logic; formal specification; nonmonotonic reasoning; uncertainty handling; assumptions; changing information; contraction operator; default logic; default theories; dynamic behaviour; incomplete information; integrated domain-independent toolkit; logical methods; nonmonotonic behaviour; reasoning; requirements engineering; revision operator; static reasoning approach; Australia; Humans; Information technology; Intelligent systems; Knowledge management; Logic; Software systems;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Tools with Artificial Intelligence, 1998. Proceedings. Tenth IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Taipei
ISSN :
1082-3409
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5214-9
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/TAI.1998.744881
Filename :
744881
Link To Document :
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