Logics in Artificial Intelligence European Workshop JELIA '94 York, UK, September 5–8, 1994 Proceedings / [electronic resource] : edited by Craig MacNish, David Pearce, Luís Moniz Pereira. - Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1994. - IX, 416 p. online resource. - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence, 838 0302-9743 ; . - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence, 838 .

From Carnap's modal logic to autoepistemic logic -- Compactness properties of nonmonotonic inference operations -- Around a powerful property of circumscriptions -- The computational value of joint consistency -- Belief dynamics, abduction, and databases -- On the logic of theory base change -- Belief, provability, and logic programs -- Revision specifications by means of programs -- Revision of non-monotonic theories -- A complete connection calculus with rigid E-unification -- Equality and constrained resolution -- Efficient strategies for Automated reasoning in modal logics -- TAS-D++: Syntactic trees transformations for Automated Theorem Proving -- A unification of ordering refinements of resolution in classical logic -- Two logical dimensions -- Prioritized autoepistemic logic -- Adding priorities and specificity to default logic -- Viewing hypothesis theories as constrained graded theories -- Temporal theories of reasoning -- Reasoning about knowledge on computation trees -- Prepositional state event logic -- Description Logics with inverse roles, functional restrictions, and n-ary relations -- On the concept of generic object: A nonmonotonic reasoning approach and examples -- Autoepistemic logic of minimal beliefs -- How to use modalities and sorts in Prolog -- Towards resource handling in logic programming: The PPL framework and its semantics -- Extending Horn clause theories by reflection principles.

This book constitutes the proceedings of the 1994 European Workshop on Logics in Artificial Intelligence, held at York, UK in September 1994. The 24 papers presented were selected from a total of 79 submissions; in addition there are two abstracts of invited talks and one full paper of the invited presentation by Georg Gottlob. The papers point out that, with the depth and maturity of formalisms and methodologies available in AI today, logics provide a formal basis for the study of the whole field of AI. The volume offers sections on nonmonotonic reasoning, automated reasoning, logic programming, knowledge representation, and belief revision.

9783540486572

10.1007/BFb0021960 doi


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

Q334-342 TJ210.2-211.495

006.3
The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, India

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