Epistemic Logic Programs: A Different World View

Michael Morak

Epistemic Logic Programs (ELPs), an extension of Answer Set Programming (ASP) with epistemic operators, have received renewed attention from the research community in recent years. Classically, evaluating an ELP yields a set of world views, with each being a set of answer sets. In this paper, we propose an alternative definition of world views that represents them as three-valued assignments, where each atom can be either always true, always false, or neither. Based on several examples, we show that this definition is natural and intuitive. We also investigate relevant computational properties of these new semantics, and explore how other notions, like strong equivalence, are affected.

In Bart Bogaerts, Esra Erdem, Paul Fodor, Andrea Formisano, Giovambattista Ianni, Daniela Inclezan, German Vidal, Alicia Villanueva, Marina De Vos and Fangkai Yang: Proceedings 35th International Conference on Logic Programming (Technical Communications) (ICLP 2019), Las Cruces, NM, USA, September 20-25, 2019, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 306, pp. 52–64.
Published: 19th September 2019.

ArXived at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.306.11 bibtex PDF
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