In this paper, we consider Preference Inference based on a generalised form of Pareto order. Preference Inference aims at reasoning over an incomplete specification of user preferences. We focus on two problems. The Preference Deduction Problem (PDP) asks if another preference statement can be deduced (with certainty) from a set of given preference statements. The Preference Consistency Problem (PCP) asks if a set of given preference statements is consistent, i.e., the statements are not contradicting each other. Here, preference statements are direct comparisons between alternatives (strict and non-strict). It is assumed that a set of evaluation functions is known by which all alternatives can be rated. We consider Pareto models which indu...
Today, especially in the digital world, we are asked about our preferences on many things. Modeling ...
Well-behaved preferences (e.g., total pre-orders) are a cornerstone of several areas in artificial i...
AbstractIn preference-based argumentation theory, an argument may be preferred to another one when, ...
Preference Inference involves inferring additional user preferences from elicited or observed prefer...
Preference Inference involves inferring additional user preferences from elicited or observed prefer...
In this paper, we construct and compare algorithmic approaches to solve the Preference Consistency P...
Preferences play a crucial part in decision making. When supporting a user in making a decision, it ...
peer reviewedAs systems dealing with preferences become more sophisticated, it becomes essential to ...
Well-behaved preferences (e.g., total pre-orders) are a cornerstone of several areas in artificial i...
We analyse preference inference, through consistency, for general preference languages based on lexi...
With personalisation becoming more prevalent, it can often be useful to be able to infer additional ...
This paper provides the reader with a presentation of preference modelling fundamental notions as we...
A fundamental task for reasoning with preferences is the following: given input preference informati...
In preference-based argumentation theory, an argument may be preferred to another one when, for exam...
In this paper, we give a novel theoretical analysis which explains why a setwise loss function exhib...
Today, especially in the digital world, we are asked about our preferences on many things. Modeling ...
Well-behaved preferences (e.g., total pre-orders) are a cornerstone of several areas in artificial i...
AbstractIn preference-based argumentation theory, an argument may be preferred to another one when, ...
Preference Inference involves inferring additional user preferences from elicited or observed prefer...
Preference Inference involves inferring additional user preferences from elicited or observed prefer...
In this paper, we construct and compare algorithmic approaches to solve the Preference Consistency P...
Preferences play a crucial part in decision making. When supporting a user in making a decision, it ...
peer reviewedAs systems dealing with preferences become more sophisticated, it becomes essential to ...
Well-behaved preferences (e.g., total pre-orders) are a cornerstone of several areas in artificial i...
We analyse preference inference, through consistency, for general preference languages based on lexi...
With personalisation becoming more prevalent, it can often be useful to be able to infer additional ...
This paper provides the reader with a presentation of preference modelling fundamental notions as we...
A fundamental task for reasoning with preferences is the following: given input preference informati...
In preference-based argumentation theory, an argument may be preferred to another one when, for exam...
In this paper, we give a novel theoretical analysis which explains why a setwise loss function exhib...
Today, especially in the digital world, we are asked about our preferences on many things. Modeling ...
Well-behaved preferences (e.g., total pre-orders) are a cornerstone of several areas in artificial i...
AbstractIn preference-based argumentation theory, an argument may be preferred to another one when, ...