A policy describes the conditions under which an action is permitted or forbidden. We show that a fragment of (multi-sorted) first-order logic can be used to represent and reason about policies. Because we use first-order logic, policies have a clear syntax and semantics. We show that further restricting the fragment results in a language that is still quite expressive yet is also tractable. More precisely, questions about entailment, such as ‘May Alice access the file?’, can be answered in time that is a low-order polynomial (indeed, almost linear in some cases), as can questions about the consistency of policy sets. We also give a brief overview of a prototype that we have built whose reasoning engine is based on the logic and whose inter...
In this paper we define computationally well-behaved versions of classical first-order logic and pro...
First-order formalisations are often preferred to propositional ones because they are thought to und...
Abstract. People often need to reason about policy changes before they are adopted. For example, sup...
A policy describes the conditions under which an action is permitted or forbidden. We show that a fr...
An authorization policy states the conditions under which an action is permitted or forbidden. In th...
Knowledge Representation and Reasoning is the area of artificial intelligence that is concerned with...
Logic programs with ordered disjunction (LPODs) (Brewka 2002) generalize normal logic programs by co...
For many years, the non-monotonic reasoning community has focussed on highly expressive logics. Such...
Abstract. Authorization policies are not stand-alone objects: they are used to selectively permit ac...
Authorization policies are not stand-alone objects: they are used to selectively permit actions that...
technical reportThis dissertation begins with a logical analysis of the notion of preference. Earlie...
Abstract. Authorization policies are not stand-alone objects: they are used to selectively permit ac...
This article demonstrates that typical restrictions which are imposed in dialogical logic in order t...
The paper describes an extension of well-founded semantics for logic programs with two types of nega...
Logic programs with ordered disjunction (LPODs) (Brewka 2002) generalize normal logic programs by co...
In this paper we define computationally well-behaved versions of classical first-order logic and pro...
First-order formalisations are often preferred to propositional ones because they are thought to und...
Abstract. People often need to reason about policy changes before they are adopted. For example, sup...
A policy describes the conditions under which an action is permitted or forbidden. We show that a fr...
An authorization policy states the conditions under which an action is permitted or forbidden. In th...
Knowledge Representation and Reasoning is the area of artificial intelligence that is concerned with...
Logic programs with ordered disjunction (LPODs) (Brewka 2002) generalize normal logic programs by co...
For many years, the non-monotonic reasoning community has focussed on highly expressive logics. Such...
Abstract. Authorization policies are not stand-alone objects: they are used to selectively permit ac...
Authorization policies are not stand-alone objects: they are used to selectively permit actions that...
technical reportThis dissertation begins with a logical analysis of the notion of preference. Earlie...
Abstract. Authorization policies are not stand-alone objects: they are used to selectively permit ac...
This article demonstrates that typical restrictions which are imposed in dialogical logic in order t...
The paper describes an extension of well-founded semantics for logic programs with two types of nega...
Logic programs with ordered disjunction (LPODs) (Brewka 2002) generalize normal logic programs by co...
In this paper we define computationally well-behaved versions of classical first-order logic and pro...
First-order formalisations are often preferred to propositional ones because they are thought to und...
Abstract. People often need to reason about policy changes before they are adopted. For example, sup...