Conference item
Concrete Results on Abstract Rules
- Abstract:
- There are many different notions of “rule” in the literature. A key feature and main intuition of any such notion is that rules can be “applied” to derive conclusions from certain premises. More formally, a rule is viewed as a function that, when invoked on a set of known facts, can produce new facts. In this paper, we show that this extreme simplification is still sufficient to obtain a number of useful results in concrete cases. We define abstract rules as a certain kind of functions, provide them with a semantics in terms of (abstract) stable models, and explain how concrete normal logic programming rules can be viewed as abstract rules in a variety of ways. We further analyse dependencies between abstract rules to recognise classes of logic programs for which stable models are guaranteed to be unique.
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(Preview, pdf, 213.0KB, Terms of use)
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- Host title:
- Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Logic Programming and Nonmonotonic Reasoning
- Publication date:
- 2013-09-01
- UUID:
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uuid:7a29a4db-8968-4910-bf43-e42c7b97daab
- Local pid:
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cs:7150
- Deposit date:
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2015-03-31
- ARK identifier:
Terms of use
- Copyright date:
- 2013
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