Abstract. We study fragments of first-order logic and of least fixed point logic that allow only unary negation: negation of formulas with at most one free variable. These logics generalize many interesting known formalisms, including modal logic and the µ-calculus, as well as conjunctive queries and monadic Datalog. We show that satisfiability and finite satisfiability are decidable for both fragments, and we pinpoint the complexity of satisfiability, finite satisfiability, and model checking. We also show that the unary negation fragment of first-order logic is model-theoretically very well behaved. In particular, it enjoys Craig Interpolation and the Projective Beth Property. 1
International audienceWe consider the entailment problem in the fragment of first-order logic (FOL) ...
AbstractWe consider the entailment problem in the fragment of first-order logic (FOL) composed of ex...
We propose a unifying view of negation as failure, integrity constraints, and epistemic queries in n...
We study fragments of first-order logic and of least fixed point logic that allow only unary negatio...
We study fragments of first-order logic and of least fixed point logic thatallow only unary negation...
We study fragments of first-order logic and of least fixed point logic that allow only unary negatio...
International audienceWe study fragments of first-order logic and of least fixed point logic that al...
Abstract. We consider restrictions of first-order logic and of fixpoint logic in which all occurrenc...
We consider restrictions of first-order logic and of fixpoint logic in which all occurrences of nega...
We consider restrictions of first-order logic and of fixpoint logic in which all occurrences of nega...
Aiming to pinpoint the reasons behind the decidability of some complex extensions of modal logic, we...
Aiming to pinpoint the reasons behind the decidability of some complex extensions of modal logic, we...
Aiming to pinpoint the reasons behind the decidability of some complex extensions of modal logic, we...
AbstractNegation-free propositional logic (or first-order logic) is clearly less expressive than the...
We consider the entailment problem in the fragment of first-order logic (FOL) composed of existentia...
International audienceWe consider the entailment problem in the fragment of first-order logic (FOL) ...
AbstractWe consider the entailment problem in the fragment of first-order logic (FOL) composed of ex...
We propose a unifying view of negation as failure, integrity constraints, and epistemic queries in n...
We study fragments of first-order logic and of least fixed point logic that allow only unary negatio...
We study fragments of first-order logic and of least fixed point logic thatallow only unary negation...
We study fragments of first-order logic and of least fixed point logic that allow only unary negatio...
International audienceWe study fragments of first-order logic and of least fixed point logic that al...
Abstract. We consider restrictions of first-order logic and of fixpoint logic in which all occurrenc...
We consider restrictions of first-order logic and of fixpoint logic in which all occurrences of nega...
We consider restrictions of first-order logic and of fixpoint logic in which all occurrences of nega...
Aiming to pinpoint the reasons behind the decidability of some complex extensions of modal logic, we...
Aiming to pinpoint the reasons behind the decidability of some complex extensions of modal logic, we...
Aiming to pinpoint the reasons behind the decidability of some complex extensions of modal logic, we...
AbstractNegation-free propositional logic (or first-order logic) is clearly less expressive than the...
We consider the entailment problem in the fragment of first-order logic (FOL) composed of existentia...
International audienceWe consider the entailment problem in the fragment of first-order logic (FOL) ...
AbstractWe consider the entailment problem in the fragment of first-order logic (FOL) composed of ex...
We propose a unifying view of negation as failure, integrity constraints, and epistemic queries in n...