Publication | Open Access
Revisiting the Notion of Extension over Incomplete Abstract Argumentation Frameworks
29
Citations
19
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringArgumentation AnalysisVerificationAutomated ProofSemanticsFormal VerificationVerification ProblemProof ComplexityFormal SystemLanguage StudiesArgument MiningAbstract InterpretationAlternative NotionComputer ScienceArgumentation FrameworkFundamental NotionLogical FormalismAutomated ReasoningFormal MethodsLinguistics
We revisit the notion of i-extension, i.e., the adaption of the fundamental notion of extension to the case of incomplete Abstract Argumentation Frameworks. We show that the definition of i-extension raises some concerns in the "possible" variant, e.g., it allows even conflicting arguments to be collectively considered as members of an (i-)extension. Thus, we introduce the alternative notion of i*-extension overcoming the highlighted problems, and provide a thorough complexity characterization of the corresponding verification problem. Interestingly, we show that the revisitation not only has beneficial effects for the semantics, but also for the complexity: under various semantics, the verification problem under the possible perspective moves from NP-complete to P.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1