Abstract
Halpern and Moses' theory on epistemic states and minimizing knowledge is a formalism with which one can infer what is known and, more importantly, what is unknown by an agent. This formalism has been used up to now in a classical two-valued framework. In this paper we formulate an extension of it when the underlying logic is many-valued, in order to deal with knowledge possibly pervaded with fuzziness. Then we apply this extension to the meta-level architecture MILORD II. The object level is an approximate reasoning component based on many-valued logics. The meta-level component makes use of some special meta-predicates to reason about the different states of knowledge of the object level. Our generalization of Halpern and Moses' theory allows us to interpret meta-level reasoning in terms of many-valued epistemic states, providing in turn a modal interpretation of MILORD II meta-predicates.
Research supported by the ESPRIT III Basic Research Action n∘ 6156 DRUMS II
Research also supported by the Spanish CICYT project ARREL TIC92-0579-c02-01
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References
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© 1995 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
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Godo, L., van der Hoek, W., Meyer, J.J.C., Sierra, C. (1995). Many-valued epistemic states. An application to a reflective architecture: Milord-II. In: Bouchon-Meunier, B., Yager, R.R., Zadeh, L.A. (eds) Advances in Intelligent Computing — IPMU '94. IPMU 1994. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 945. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/BFb0035977
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BFb0035977
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