Using approximate reasoning to represent default knowledge
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Publication:578935
DOI10.1016/0004-3702(87)90083-XzbMath0624.68083OpenAlexW1966867162MaRDI QIDQ578935
Publication date: 1987
Published in: Artificial Intelligence (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/0004-3702(87)90083-x
nonmonotonic logicapproximate reasoningexpert systemsdefault inference rulesdefault knowledgepossibility qualification
Related Items (19)
Modelling default and likelihood reasoning as probabilistic reasoning. ⋮ Default reasoning and possibility theory ⋮ Fuzzy sets in a approximate reasoning. I: Inference with possibility distributions ⋮ Expert system models for inference with imperfect knowledge: A comparative study ⋮ A HYBRID MODEL FOR SHARING INFORMATION BETWEEN FUZZY, UNCERTAIN AND DEFAULT REASONING MODELS IN MULTI-AGENT SYSTEMS ⋮ Pluralistic evaluation of belief plausibility and its application to nonmonotonic reasoning ⋮ Default knowledge and measures of specificity ⋮ A fuzzy version of default logic ⋮ Default data generation in databases of net systems: a fuzzy set approach ⋮ On considerations of credibility of evidence ⋮ Connectives and quantifiers in fuzzy sets ⋮ A GENERALIZED VIEW OF NONMONOTONIC KNOWLEDGE: A SET OF THEORETIC PERSPECTIVE ⋮ Applause: An implementation of the Collins-Michalski theory of plausible reasoning ⋮ Reasoning with vague default ⋮ Structures for prioritized fusion of fuzzy information ⋮ Approximate reasoning and conflict resolution ⋮ REPRESENTING DEFAULTS IN THE FRAMEWORK OF POSSIBILITY THEORY∗ ⋮ Non-monotonic set theoretic operations ⋮ A prioritized information fusion method for handling fuzzy decision-making problems
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