online handbook
Online Handbook of Argumentation for AI: Volume 4
Bengel, Lars, Blümel, Lydia, Bezou-Vrakatseli, Elfia, Castagna, Federico, D'Agostino, Giulia, Kuhlmann, Isabelle, Mumford, Jack, Odekerken, Daphne, Russo, Fabrizio, Sarkadi, Stefan, Waller, Madeleine, Xydis, Andreas
This volume contains revised versions of the papers selected for the fourth volume of the Online Handbook of Argumentation for AI (OHAAI). Previously, formal theories of argument and argument interaction have been proposed and studied, and this has led to the more recent study of computational models of argument. Argumentation, as a field within artificial intelligence (AI), is highly relevant for researchers interested in symbolic representations of knowledge and defeasible reasoning. The purpose of this handbook is to provide an open access and curated anthology for the argumentation research community. OHAAI is designed to serve as a research hub to keep track of the latest and upcoming PhD-driven research on the theory and application of argumentation in all areas related to AI.
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Online Handbook of Argumentation for AI: Volume 3
Bengel, Lars, Bezou-Vrakatseli, Elfia, Blümel, Lydia, Castagna, Federico, D'Agostino, Giulia, Odekerken, Daphne, Patil, Minal Suresh, Robinson, Jordan, Wu, Hao, Xydis, Andreas
This volume contains revised versions of the papers selected for the third volume of the Online Handbook of Argumentation for AI (OHAAI). Previously, formal theories of argument and argument interaction have been proposed and studied, and this has led to the more recent study of computational models of argument. Argumentation, as a field within artificial intelligence (AI), is highly relevant for researchers interested in symbolic representations of knowledge and defeasible reasoning. The purpose of this handbook is to provide an open access and curated anthology for the argumentation research community. OHAAI is designed to serve as a research hub to keep track of the latest and upcoming PhD-driven research on the theory and application of argumentation in all areas related to AI.
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Towards Preserving Semantic Structure in Argumentative Multi-Agent via Abstract Interpretation
Over the recent twenty years, argumentation has received considerable attention in the fields of knowledge representation, reasoning, and multi-agent systems. However, argumentation in dynamic multi-agent systems encounters the problem of significant arguments generated by agents, which comes at the expense of representational complexity and computational cost. In this work, we aim to investigate the notion of abstraction from the model-checking perspective, where several arguments are trying to defend the same position from various points of view, thereby reducing the size of the argumentation framework whilst preserving the semantic flow structure in the system.
Online Handbook of Argumentation for AI: Volume 2
OHAAI Collaboration, null, Brannstrom, Andreas, Castagna, Federico, Duchatelle, Theo, Foulis, Matt, Kampik, Timotheus, Kuhlmann, Isabelle, Malmqvist, Lars, Morveli-Espinoza, Mariela, Mumford, Jack, Pandzic, Stipe, Schaefer, Robin, Thorburn, Luke, Xydis, Andreas, Yuste-Ginel, Antonio, Zheng, Heng
This volume contains revised versions of the papers selected for the second volume of the Online Handbook of Argumentation for AI (OHAAI). Previously, formal theories of argument and argument interaction have been proposed and studied, and this has led to the more recent study of computational models of argument. Argumentation, as a field within artificial intelligence (AI), is highly relevant for researchers interested in symbolic representations of knowledge and defeasible reasoning. The purpose of this handbook is to provide an open access and curated anthology for the argumentation research community. OHAAI is designed to serve as a research hub to keep track of the latest and upcoming PhD-driven research on the theory and application of argumentation in all areas related to AI.
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Online Handbook of Argumentation for AI: Volume 1
OHAAI Collaboration, null, Castagna, Federico, Kampik, Timotheus, Zafarghandi, Atefeh Keshavarzi, Lafages, Mickaël, Mumford, Jack, Rodosthenous, Christos T., Sá, Samy, Sarkadi, Stefan, Singleton, Joseph, Skiba, Kenneth, Xydis, Andreas
This volume contains revised versions of the papers selected for the first volume of the Online Handbook of Argumentation for AI (OHAAI). Previously, formal theories of argument and argument interaction have been proposed and studied, and this has led to the more recent study of computational models of argument. Argumentation, as a field within artificial intelligence (AI), is highly relevant for researchers interested in symbolic representations of knowledge and defeasible reasoning. The purpose of this handbook is to provide an open access and curated anthology for the argumentation research community. OHAAI is designed to serve as a research hub to keep track of the latest and upcoming PhD-driven research on the theory and application of argumentation in all areas related to AI.
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