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  • Defeasible Reasoning about Electric Consumptions

    Author(s)
    Cristani, Matteo
    Karafili, Erisa
    Olivieri, Francesco
    Tomazzoli, Claudio
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Olivieri, Francesco
    Year published
    2016
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Conflicting rules and rules with exceptions are very common in natural language specification to describe the behaviour of devices operating in a real-world context. This is common exactly because those specifications are processed by humans, and humans apply common sense and strategic reasoning about those rules. In this paper, we deal with the challenge of providing, step by step, a model of energy saving rule specification and processing methods that are used to reduce the consumptions of a system of devices. We argue that a very promising non-monotonic approach to such a problem can lie upon Defeasible Logic. Starting ...
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    Conflicting rules and rules with exceptions are very common in natural language specification to describe the behaviour of devices operating in a real-world context. This is common exactly because those specifications are processed by humans, and humans apply common sense and strategic reasoning about those rules. In this paper, we deal with the challenge of providing, step by step, a model of energy saving rule specification and processing methods that are used to reduce the consumptions of a system of devices. We argue that a very promising non-monotonic approach to such a problem can lie upon Defeasible Logic. Starting with rules specified at an abstract level, but compatibly with the natural aspects of such a specification (including temporal and power absorption constraints), we provide a formalism that generates the extension of a basic defeasible logic, which corresponds to turned on or off devices.
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    Conference Title
    2016 IEEE 30th International Conference on Advanced Information Networking and Applications (AINA)
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1109/AINA.2016.62
    Subject
    Electrical engineering
    Science & Technology
    Computer Science, Hardware & Architecture
    Computer Science, Theory & Methods
    Engineering, Electrical & Electronic
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/411972
    Collection
    • Conference outputs

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