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Principles of KLM-style Defeasible Description Logics

Authors :
Giovanni Casini
Thomas Meyer
Kody Moodley
Katarina Britz
Ivan Varzinczak
Uli Sattler
RS: FdR Research Group Law and Tech Lab
RS: FSE Studio Europa Maastricht
RS: FdR not Institute related
RS: FSE DACS IDS
Private Law
Institute of Data Science
Source :
ACM transactions on computational logic 22 (2020): 1–46. doi:10.1145/3420258, info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Britz K.; Casini G.; Meyer T.; Moodley K.; Sattler U.; Varzinczak I./titolo:Principles of KLM-style Defeasible Description Logics/doi:10.1145%2F3420258/rivista:ACM transactions on computational logic/anno:2020/pagina_da:1/pagina_a:46/intervallo_pagine:1–46/volume:22, Acm Transactions on Computational Logic, 22(1):1. Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), 2020.

Abstract

The past 25 years have seen many attempts to introduce defeasible-reasoning capabilities into a description logic setting. Many, if not most, of these attempts are based on preferential extensions of description logics, with a significant number of these, in turn, following the so-called KLM approach to defeasible reasoning initially advocated for propositional logic by Kraus, Lehmann, and Magidor. Each of these attempts has its own aim of investigating particular constructions and variants of the (KLM-style) preferential approach. Here our aim is to provide a comprehensive study of the formal foundations of preferential defeasible reasoning for description logics in the KLM tradition. We start by investigating a notion of defeasible subsumption in the spirit of defeasible conditionals as studied by Kraus, Lehmann, and Magidor in the propositional case. In particular, we consider a natural and intuitive semantics for defeasible subsumption, and we investigate KLM-style syntactic properties for both preferential and rational subsumption. Our contribution includes two representation results linking our semantic constructions to the set of preferential and rational properties considered. Besides showing that our semantics is appropriate, these results pave the way for more effective decision procedures for defeasible reasoning in description logics. Indeed, we also analyse the problem of non-monotonic reasoning in description logics at the level of entailment and present an algorithm for the computation of rational closure of a defeasible knowledge base. Importantly, our algorithm relies completely on classical entailment and shows that the computational complexity of reasoning over defeasible knowledge bases is no worse than that of reasoning in the underlying classical DL ALC .

Details

ISSN :
1557945X and 15293785
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACM Transactions on Computational Logic
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fc61790121cb212c297233bf0708e3fe
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1145/3420258