Publication Date:
1992
abstract:
{\em Terminological Logics\/} are knowledge representation
formalisms of considerable applicative interest, as they are
specifically oriented to the vast class of application domains that are
describable by means of taxonomic organizations of complex objects.
Although the field of terminological logics has lately been an active
area of investigation, few researchers (if any) have addressed the
problem of extending these logics with the ability to perform {\em
default reasoning}. Such extensions would prove of paramount
applicative value, as for many application domains a formalization by
means of monotonic terminological logics may be accomplished only at
the price of oversimplification. In this paper we show how we can
effectively integrate terminological reasoning and default reasoning,
yielding a {\em terminological default logic}. The kind of default
reasoning we embed in our terminological logic is reminiscent of
Reiter's Default Logic, but overcomes some of its drawbacks by
subscribing to the ``implicit" handling of exceptions typical of the
Multiple Inheritance Networks with Exceptions proposed by Touretzky and
others.
Iris type:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
List of contributors: