Logics in AI European Workshop JELIA'92 Berlin, Germany, September 7–10, 1992 Proceedings / [electronic resource] : edited by D. Pearce, G. Wagner. - Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1992. - VIII, 412 p. online resource. - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence, 633 0302-9743 ; . - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence, 633 .

A modal theory of arrows. Arrow logics I -- Knowledge without modality: A simplified framework for chronological ignorance -- Design complete sequential calculus for continuous fixpoint temporal logic -- Logical omniscience and classical logic -- Weak implication: Theory and applications -- Deriving inference rules for terminological logics -- Linear proofs and linear logic -- Relevance and revision -- Modellings for belief change: Base contraction, multiple contraction, and epistemic entrenchment (preliminary report) -- A framework for default logics -- A conceptualization of preferences in non-monotonic proof theory -- Reasoning with defeasible arguments: Examples and applications -- About deductive generalization -- Transition systems and dynamic semantics -- Declarative semantics for inconsistent database programs -- Tableau-based theorem proving and synthesis of ?-terms in the intuitionistic logic -- A constructive type system based on data terms -- An ordered resolution and paramodulation calculus for finite many-valued logics -- An efficient constraint language for polymorphic order-sorted resolution -- Default theory for Well Founded Semantics with explicit negation -- Computing answers for disjunctive logic programs -- Expanding logic programs -- Disjunctive logic programming, constructivity and strong negation.

This volume contains the proceedings of JELIA '92, les Journ es Europ ennes sur la Logique en Intelligence Artificielle, or the Third European Workshop on Logics in Artificial Intelligence. The volume contains 2 invited addresses and 21 selected papers covering such topics as: - Logical foundations of logic programming and knowledge-based systems, - Automated theorem proving, - Partial and dynamic logics, - Systems of nonmonotonic reasoning, - Temporal and epistemic logics, - Belief revision. One invited paper, by D. Vakarelov, is on arrow logics, i.e., modal logics for representing graph information. The other, by L.M. Pereira,J.J. Alferes, and J.N. Apar cio, is on default theory for well founded semantics with explicit negation.

9783540473046

10.1007/BFb0023417 doi


Computer science.
Logic design.
Artificial intelligence.
Logic, Symbolic and mathematical.
Computer Science.
Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics).
Mathematical Logic and Formal Languages.
Logics and Meanings of Programs.
Mathematical Logic and Foundations.

Q334-342 TJ210.2-211.495

006.3
The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, India

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