A general approach to temporal reasoning about action and change
Peng, Taoxin (2001) A general approach to temporal reasoning about action and change. PhD thesis, University of Greenwich.
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Abstract
Reasoning about actions and change based on common sense knowledge is one of the most important and difficult tasks in the artificial intelligence research area. A series of such tasks are identified which motivate the consideration and application of reasoning formalisms. There follows a discussion of the broad issues involved in modelling time and constructing a logical language. In general, worlds change over time. To model the dynamic world, the ability to predict what the state of the world will be after the execution of a particular sequence of actions, which take time and to explain how some given state change came about, i.e. the causality are basic requirements of any autonomous rational agent.
The research work presented herein addresses some of the fundamental concepts and the relative issues in formal reasoning about actions and change. In this thesis, we employ a new time structure, which helps to deal with the so-called intermingling problem and the dividing instant problem. Also, the issue of how to treat the relationship between a time duration and its relative time entity is examined. In addition, some key terms for representing and reasoning about actions and change, such as states, situations, actions and events are formulated. Furthermore, a new formalism for reasoning about change over time is presented. It allows more flexible temporal causal relationships than do other formalisms for reasoning about causal change, such as the situation calculus and the event calculus. It includes effects that start during, immediately after, or some time after their causes, and which end before, simultaneously with, or after their causes. The presented formalism allows the expression of common-sense causal laws at high level. Also, it is shown how these laws can be used to deduce state change over time at low level. Finally, we show that the approach provided here is expressive.
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD) |
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Additional Information: | uk.bl.ethos.327343 |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | temporal reasoning, logic, artificial intelligence, knowledge representation, calculus |
Subjects: | Q Science > Q Science (General) Q Science > QA Mathematics |
Pre-2014 Departments: | School of Computing & Mathematical Sciences School of Computing & Mathematical Sciences > Department of Computer Science |
Last Modified: | 25 Sep 2018 11:59 |
URI: | http://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/6265 |
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