This paper presents a new formalism for reasoning about change over time. The formalism derives a clean separation between the notion of states and situations. It allows more flexible temporal causal relationships than do other formalisms for reasoning about causal change, such as the situation calculus and the event calculus. It includes effects that start during, immediately after, or some time after their causes, and which end before, simultaneously with, or after their causes. A formal distinction between actions, action-types and events is proposed, which allows the expression of common-sense causal laws at high level. It is shown how these laws can be used to deduce state change over time at low level, when events occur under certain ...
In this paper we describe a general way of formalizing reasoning behaviour. Such a behaviour may be ...
This paper describes a knowledge-based temporal representation of state transitions for industrial r...
For many commonsense reasoning tasks associated with action domains, only a relatively simple kind o...
Reasoning about actions and change based on common sense knowledge is one of the most important and ...
In this paper we describe a framework for reasoning about temporal explanation problems, which is b...
Colloque avec actes et comité de lecture.In this paper, we introduce a new formalism based on interv...
This paper presents a discrete formalism for temporal reasoning about actions and change, which enjo...
When we reason about change over time, causation provides an implicit preference: we prefer sequence...
We introduce in this paper a formalism for representing flexible temporal causal relationships betwe...
We extend the ontology of the situation calculus to provide for the representation of time and even...
The logic of time and the way we reason about time is intrinsically connected with the way we reason...
The world in which we live changes in uncertain ways. Building intelligent machines able to interac...
In this paper we make a detailed comparison of the Situation Calculus and the Event Calculus, two lo...
This paper introduces a framework for representing versatile temporal relationships between events a...
AbstractIn this paper we make a detailed comparison of the Situation Calculus and the Event Calculus...
In this paper we describe a general way of formalizing reasoning behaviour. Such a behaviour may be ...
This paper describes a knowledge-based temporal representation of state transitions for industrial r...
For many commonsense reasoning tasks associated with action domains, only a relatively simple kind o...
Reasoning about actions and change based on common sense knowledge is one of the most important and ...
In this paper we describe a framework for reasoning about temporal explanation problems, which is b...
Colloque avec actes et comité de lecture.In this paper, we introduce a new formalism based on interv...
This paper presents a discrete formalism for temporal reasoning about actions and change, which enjo...
When we reason about change over time, causation provides an implicit preference: we prefer sequence...
We introduce in this paper a formalism for representing flexible temporal causal relationships betwe...
We extend the ontology of the situation calculus to provide for the representation of time and even...
The logic of time and the way we reason about time is intrinsically connected with the way we reason...
The world in which we live changes in uncertain ways. Building intelligent machines able to interac...
In this paper we make a detailed comparison of the Situation Calculus and the Event Calculus, two lo...
This paper introduces a framework for representing versatile temporal relationships between events a...
AbstractIn this paper we make a detailed comparison of the Situation Calculus and the Event Calculus...
In this paper we describe a general way of formalizing reasoning behaviour. Such a behaviour may be ...
This paper describes a knowledge-based temporal representation of state transitions for industrial r...
For many commonsense reasoning tasks associated with action domains, only a relatively simple kind o...