Bibliographic Information

Epistemic and temporal reasoning

edited by Dov M. Gabbay, C.J. Hogger and J.A. Robinson ; volume co-ordinator, Antony Galton

(Handbook of logic in artificial intelligence and logic programming / edited by Dov M. Gabbay, and C.J. Hogger and J.A. Robinson, v. 4)

Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, 1995

Available at  / 52 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Knowledge, belief, and time can all qualify statements of truth and falsity. This volume addresses the modal logics involved in such qualifications, by modelling of the changing state of knowledge and belief through time. The first three chapters survey reasoning by knowledge, and the need to update belief systems to deal with contradictory information. The next two chapters address the relationship of time and change, and include a review and comparison of existing models. An analysis of computational issues in temporal logic - executable temporal logic, temporal databases, and logic programming - and an overview of current research in non-monotonic reasoning strategies follow. The final chapter focuses on modal resolution techniques as applied to the logic of knowledge and time. This book is intended for the volume is of interest to logicians, computer scientists, philosophers, linguists and AI researchers. It is of special use to researchers in deductive databases and object oriented approaches. Volume Co-ordinator:: Galton, A. (University of Exeter);

Table of Contents

1: Reasoning about knowledge: a survey. 2: Belief revision. 3: Epistemic aspects of databases. 4: Time and change for AI. 5: Temporal logic. 6: Towards a computational treatment of time. 7: Non montonic temporal reasoning. 8: Modal deduction with applications in epistemic and temporal logic

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