AbstractWe consider positive rules in which the conclusion may contain existentially quantified variables, which makes reasoning tasks (such as conjunctive query answering or entailment) undecidable. These rules, called ∀∃-rules, have the same logical form as tuple-generating dependencies in databases and as conceptual graph rules. The aim of this paper is to provide a clearer picture of the frontier between decidability and non-decidability of reasoning with these rules. Previous known decidable classes were based on forward chaining. On the one hand we extend these classes, on the other hand we introduce decidable classes based on backward chaining. A side result is the definition of a backward mechanism that takes the complex structure o...
Ontology-based data access (OBDA) aims at enriching query answering by taking general background kno...
International audienceIn this paper, we consider existential rules, an expressive formalism well sui...
In ∀∃-rules, the conclusion may contain existen-tially quantified variables, which makes reason-ing ...
AbstractWe consider positive rules in which the conclusion may contain existentially quantified vari...
We consider positive rules in which the conclusion may contain existentially quantified variables, w...
We consider positive rules in which the conclusion may contain existentially quantified variables, w...
International audienceWe consider existential rules (aka Datalog+) as a formalism for specifying ont...
International audienceIn the rules considered, the conclusion may contain existentially quantified v...
In this thesis we investigate the issue of querying knowledge bases composed of data and general bac...
In this thesis we investigate the issue of querying knowledge basescomposed of data and general back...
Answering conjunctive queries (CQs) over a set of facts extended with existential rules is a promine...
Existential rules, long known as tuple-generating dependencies in database theory, have been intensi...
Existential rules, i.e. Datalog extended with existential quantifiers in rule heads, are currently s...
This article deals with the combination of ontologies and rules by means of existential rules and an...
We consider existential rules (also called Tuple-Generating Dependencies or Datalog+/- rules). These...
Ontology-based data access (OBDA) aims at enriching query answering by taking general background kno...
International audienceIn this paper, we consider existential rules, an expressive formalism well sui...
In ∀∃-rules, the conclusion may contain existen-tially quantified variables, which makes reason-ing ...
AbstractWe consider positive rules in which the conclusion may contain existentially quantified vari...
We consider positive rules in which the conclusion may contain existentially quantified variables, w...
We consider positive rules in which the conclusion may contain existentially quantified variables, w...
International audienceWe consider existential rules (aka Datalog+) as a formalism for specifying ont...
International audienceIn the rules considered, the conclusion may contain existentially quantified v...
In this thesis we investigate the issue of querying knowledge bases composed of data and general bac...
In this thesis we investigate the issue of querying knowledge basescomposed of data and general back...
Answering conjunctive queries (CQs) over a set of facts extended with existential rules is a promine...
Existential rules, long known as tuple-generating dependencies in database theory, have been intensi...
Existential rules, i.e. Datalog extended with existential quantifiers in rule heads, are currently s...
This article deals with the combination of ontologies and rules by means of existential rules and an...
We consider existential rules (also called Tuple-Generating Dependencies or Datalog+/- rules). These...
Ontology-based data access (OBDA) aims at enriching query answering by taking general background kno...
International audienceIn this paper, we consider existential rules, an expressive formalism well sui...
In ∀∃-rules, the conclusion may contain existen-tially quantified variables, which makes reason-ing ...