Perspectives in deductive databases,☆☆,

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Abstract

I discuss my experiences, some of the work that I have done, and related work that influenced me, concerning deductive databases, over the last 30 years. I divide this time period into three roughly equal parts: 1957–1968, 1969–1978, 1979–present. For the first I describe how my interest started in deductive databases in 1957, at a time when the field of databases did not even exist. I describe work in the beginning years, leading to the start of deductive databases about 1968 with the work of Cordell Green and Bertram Raphael. The second period saw a great deal of work in theorem providing as well as the introduction of logic programming. The existence and importance of deductive databases as a formal and viable discipline received its impetus at a workshop held in Toulouse, France, in 1977, which culminated in the book Logic and Data Bases. The relationship of deductive databases and logic programming was recognized at that time. During the third period we have seen formal theories of databases come about as an outgrowth of that work, and the recognition that artificial intelligence and deductive databases are closely related, at least through the so-called expert database systems. I expect that the relationships between techniques from formal logic, databases, logic programming, and artificial intelligence will continue to be explored and the field of deductive databases will become a more prominent area of computer science in coming years.

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Invited paper.

☆☆

This paper is an expansion of an invited talk presented at the Principles of Database Systems Conference, San Diego,California USA, 23–25 March 1987

This paper is dedicated to Kent Curtis, Division Director, Division of Computer and Computation Research, of the National Science Foundation. Support from his activity was instrumental in my work on deductive databases. The strength of computer science in the United States is due, in large measure, to his foresight and leadership.

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Supported by Air Force Office of Scientific Research Grant AFOSR-82-0303, Army Research Office (ARO) Grant DAAG-29-85-K-0177, and National Science Foundation grant IRI-8609170.