Dynamics of argumentation systems: a division-based method

From MaRDI portal
Publication:650522

DOI10.1016/j.artint.2011.03.006zbMath1226.68101OpenAlexW1974434188MaRDI QIDQ650522

Li Jin, Beishui Liao, Robert C. Koons

Publication date: 25 November 2011

Published in: Artificial Intelligence (Search for Journal in Brave)

Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.artint.2011.03.006




Related Items (30)

Argumentation update in YALLA (yet another logic language for argumentation)Parameterized Splitting: A Simple Modification-Based ApproachToward incremental computation of argumentation semantics: a decomposition-based approachThe first international competition on computational models of argumentation: results and analysisDynamics of Fuzzy Argumentation FrameworksBelief revision and computational argumentation: a critical comparisonTopological conditions and solutions for repairing argumentation frameworksTowards a general theory of decomposability in abstract argumentationHow can you resolve a trilemma? A topological approachOn the responsibility for undecisiveness in preferred and stable labellings in abstract argumentationDynamics of argumentation systems: a division-based methodOn the input/output behavior of argumentation frameworksAn extension-based approach to belief revision in abstract argumentationOn topology-related properties of abstract argumentation semantics. A correction and extension to ``Dynamics of argumentation systems: a division-based methodAlgorithms for decision problems in argument systems under preferred semanticsVerification in incomplete argumentation frameworksStructural Analysis of Extension-Based Argumentation Semantics with Joint AcceptabilityLocal Expansion Invariant Operators in Argumentation SemanticsUpdating Argumentation Frameworks for Enforcing ExtensionsAcceptance in incomplete argumentation frameworksIncremental computation for structured argumentation over dynamic DeLP knowledge basesUsing argument strength for building dialectical bonsaiI don’t care, I don’t know … I know too much! On Incompleteness and Undecidedness in Abstract ArgumentationOpen Problems in Abstract ArgumentationInitial sets in abstract argumentation frameworksPartial Semantics of ArgumentationIncremental Computation of Deterministic Extensions for Dynamic Argumentation FrameworksA general notion of equivalence for abstract argumentationMethods for solving reasoning problems in abstract argumentation -- a surveyTowards Evidence Retrieval Cost Reduction in Abstract Argumentation Frameworks with Fallible Evidence



Cites Work


This page was built for publication: Dynamics of argumentation systems: a division-based method