The way in which the relationships between beliefs, goals, and intentions are captured by a formalism can have a significant impact on the design of a rational agent. In particular, what Rao and Georgeff underline about the relationships between goals and beliefs is that it is reasonable to require a rational agent not to allow goal-belief inconsistency, while goal-belief incompleteness can be allowed. We study a theoretical framework, grounded in possibility theory, which (i) accounts for the aspects involved in representing and changing beliefs and goals, and (ii) obeys Rao and Georgeff’s requirement. We propose a formalization of a possibilistic extension of Bratman’s asymmetry thesis to hold between goals and beliefs. Finally, we show that our formalism avoids the side-effect and the transference problems.
Belief-goal relationships in possibilistic goal generation / C. da Costa Pereira, A.G.B. Tettamanzi - In: ECAI 2010 : 19th European conference on artificial intelligence : 16-20 august 2010, Lisbon, Portugal : including Prestigious applications of artificial intelligence : proceedings / [a cura di] H. Coelho, R. Studer, M. Wooldridge. - Amsterdam : IOS press, 2010. - ISBN 9781607506058. - pp. 641-646 (( Intervento presentato al 19. convegno European Conference on Artificial Intelligence (ECAI) tenutosi a Lisbon nel 2010.
Belief-goal relationships in possibilistic goal generation
C. da Costa PereiraPrimo
;A.G.B. TettamanziUltimo
2010
Abstract
The way in which the relationships between beliefs, goals, and intentions are captured by a formalism can have a significant impact on the design of a rational agent. In particular, what Rao and Georgeff underline about the relationships between goals and beliefs is that it is reasonable to require a rational agent not to allow goal-belief inconsistency, while goal-belief incompleteness can be allowed. We study a theoretical framework, grounded in possibility theory, which (i) accounts for the aspects involved in representing and changing beliefs and goals, and (ii) obeys Rao and Georgeff’s requirement. We propose a formalization of a possibilistic extension of Bratman’s asymmetry thesis to hold between goals and beliefs. Finally, we show that our formalism avoids the side-effect and the transference problems.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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