Expressiveness of Two-Valued Semantics for Abstract Dialectical Frameworks

Abstract

We analyse the expressiveness of Brewka and Woltran's abstract dialectical frameworks for two-valued semantics. By expressiveness we mean the ability to encode a desired set of two-valued interpretations over a given propositional vocabulary A using only atoms from A. We also compare ADFs' expressiveness with that of (the two-valued semantics of) abstract argumentation frameworks, normal logic programs and propositional logic. While the computational complexity of the two-valued model existence problem for all these languages is (almost) the same, we show that the languages form a neat hierarchy with respect to their expressiveness. We then demonstrate that this hierarchy collapses once we allow to introduce a linear number of new vocabulary elements. We finally also analyse and compare the representational succinctness of ADFs (for two-valued model semantics), that is, their capability to represent two-valued interpretation sets in a space-efficient manner.

Cite

Text

Strass. "Expressiveness of Two-Valued Semantics for Abstract Dialectical Frameworks." Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research, 2015. doi:10.1613/JAIR.4879

Markdown

[Strass. "Expressiveness of Two-Valued Semantics for Abstract Dialectical Frameworks." Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research, 2015.](https://mlanthology.org/jair/2015/strass2015jair-expressiveness/) doi:10.1613/JAIR.4879

BibTeX

@article{strass2015jair-expressiveness,
  title     = {{Expressiveness of Two-Valued Semantics for Abstract Dialectical Frameworks}},
  author    = {Strass, Hannes},
  journal   = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research},
  year      = {2015},
  pages     = {193-231},
  doi       = {10.1613/JAIR.4879},
  volume    = {54},
  url       = {https://mlanthology.org/jair/2015/strass2015jair-expressiveness/}
}