Aviso: para depositar documentos, por favor, inicia sesión e identifícate con tu cuenta de correo institucional de la UCM con el botón MI CUENTA UCM. No emplees la opción AUTENTICACIÓN CON CONTRASEÑA
 

Multi-agent abstract argumentation frameworks with incomplete knowledge of attacks

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Full text at PDC

Publication date

2021

Advisors (or tutors)

Editors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Citations
Google Scholar

Citation

“Multi-agent Abstract Argumentation Frameworks with Incomplete Knowledge of Attacks”. International Joint Conference in Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI 21). Montreal (online), 19/8/21- 26/08/21.

Abstract

We introduce a multi-agent, dynamic extension of abstract argumentation frameworks (AFs), strongly inspired by epistemic logic, where agents have only partial information about the conflicts between arguments. These frameworks can be used to model a variety of situations. For instance, those in which agents have bounded logical resources and therefore fail to spot some of the actual attacks, or those where some arguments are not explicitly and fully stated (enthymematic argumentation). Moreover, we include second-order knowledge and common knowledge of the attack relation in our structures (where the latter accounts for the state of the debate), so as to reason about different kinds of persuasion and about strategic features. This version of multi-agent AFs, as well as their updates with public announcements of attacks (more concretely, the effects of these updates on the acceptability of an argument) can be described using S5-PAL, a well-known dynamic-epistemic logic. We also discuss how to extend our proposal to capture arbitrary higher-order attitudes and uncertainty.</jats:p>

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Description

Keywords

Collections