Dr. Teresa Alsinet , Dr. Ramón Béjar , Dr. Lluís Godo , and Francesc Guitart , have published RP-DeLP: A weighted defeasible argumentation framework based on a recursive semantics , forthcoming in Journal of Logic and Computation .
Here is the abstract:
In this article, we propose a recursive semantics for warranted formulas in a general defeasible logic argumentation framework by formalizing a notion of collective (non-binary) conflict among arguments. The recursive semantics for warranted formulas is based on the intuitive grounds that if an argument is rejected, then further arguments built on top of it should also be rejected. The main characteristic of our recursive semantics is that an output (or extension) of a knowledge base is a pair consisting of a set of warranted and a set of blocked formulas. Arguments for both warranted and blocked formulas are recursively based on warranted formulas but, while warranted formulas do not generate any collective conflict, blocked conclusions do. Formulas that are neither warranted nor blocked correspond to rejected formulas. Then we extend the framework by attaching levels of preference to defeasible knowledge items and by providing a level-wise definition of warranted and blocked formulas. After we consider the warrant recursive semantics for the particular framework of Possibilistic Defeasible Logic Programming (RP-DeLP for short). Since RP-DeLP programmes may have multiple outputs, we define the maximal ideal output of an RP-DeLP programme as the set of conclusions which are ultimately warranted, and we present an algorithm for computing it in polynomial space and with an upper bound on complexity equal to PNP. Finally, we propose an efficient and scalable implementation of this algorithm using SAT encodings, and we provide an experimental evaluation when solving test sets of instances with single and multiple preference levels for defeasible knowledge.
In one example, the framework is applied to a parliamentary debate on economic policy, regarding which laws restricting the types of economic policies that can be implemented are treated as defeasible rules within the framework.
Filed under: Applications, Articles and papers Tagged: Defeasible legal rules, Defeasible logic argumentation frameworks, Defeasible reasoning, Defeasible reasoning in law, Journal of Logic and Computation, Legal argumentation, Legal argumentation frameworks, Legal defeasible reasoning, Modeling legal rules, Possibilistic Defeasible Logic Programming, RP-DeLP
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