Change in Abstract Argumentation Frameworks: Adding an Argument

01/16/2014
by   Claudette Cayrol, et al.
0

In this paper, we address the problem of change in an abstract argumentation system. We focus on a particular change: the addition of a new argument which interacts with previous arguments. We study the impact of such an addition on the outcome of the argumentation system, more particularly on the set of its extensions. Several properties for this change operation are defined by comparing the new set of extensions to the initial one, these properties are called structural when the comparisons are based on set-cardinality or set-inclusion relations. Several other properties are proposed where comparisons are based on the status of some particular arguments: the accepted arguments; these properties refer to the evolution of this status during the change, e.g., Monotony and Priority to Recency. All these properties may be more or less desirable according to specific applications. They are studied under two particular semantics: the grounded and preferred semantics.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
01/18/2019

Block Argumentation

We contemplate a higher-level bipolar abstract argumentation for non-ele...
research
09/11/2015

Some Supplementaries to The Counting Semantics for Abstract Argumentation

Dung's abstract argumentation framework consists of a set of interacting...
research
04/21/2022

Revisiting initial sets in abstract argumentation

We revisit the notion of initial sets by Xu and Cayrol, i.e., non-empty ...
research
07/15/2022

Fuzzy Labeling Semantics for Quantitative Argumentation

The topic of evaluating argument strength in various quantitative argume...
research
11/29/2011

Dynamics of Knowledge in DeLP through Argument Theory Change

This article is devoted to the study of methods to change defeasible log...
research
04/28/2022

The Effect of Preferences in Abstract Argumentation Under a Claim-Centric View

In this paper, we study the effect of preferences in abstract argumentat...
research
08/01/2016

Formulating Semantics of Probabilistic Argumentation by Characterizing Subgraphs: Theory and Empirical Results

In existing literature, while approximate approaches based on Monte-Carl...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset