% Bibliography of Work in Philosophy of Language, % Semantics, Artificial Intelligence, and Assorted % Related Topics. % % Author: R.H. Thomason % Date of this version: September 10, 2023 % % Send additions, corrections, and comments to % rthomaso@umich.edu % % Note: I am always interested in BibTeX formated % bibligraphies on related topics. % % Thanks to the following people for material: Jon Doyle, % Jeff Horty, Matthew Stone, Nate Charlow, Dustin Tucker, % Damian Wassel % % Notes: % 1. The following LaTeX macro appears in some references. % \newcommand{\user}{\raisebox{-.3ex}{{\~{}}}} % 2. The following package is needed for \rotatebox command, used % in one title: \usepackage{graphicx} @book{ aaker_da:1981a, author = {David A. Aaker}, title = {Multivariate Analysis in Marketing}, edition = {2}, publisher = {The Scientific Press}, year = {1981}, address = {Palo Alto}, topic = {multivariate-statistics;market-research;} } @inproceedings{ aamer_h-etal:2020a, author = {Heba Aamer and Bart Bogaerts and Dimitri Surinx and Eugenia Ternovska and Jan Van den Bussche}, title = {Inputs, Outputs, and Composition in the Logic of Information Flows}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {2--11}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {The logic of information flows (LIF) is a general framework in which tasks of a procedural nature can be modeled in a declarative, logic-based fashion. The first contribution of this paper is to propose semantic and syntactic definitions of inputs and outputs of LIF expressions. We study how the two relate and show that our syntactic definition is optimal in a sense that is made precise. The second contribution of this paper is a systematic study of the expressive power of sequential composition in LIF. ... }, topic = {reasoning-about-actions;reasoning-about-change;} } @unpublished{ aaronson_s:2011a, author = {Scott Aaronson}, title = {P=?NP}, year = {2011}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Texas.\\ https://www.scottaaronson.com/papers/pnp.pdf }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {complexity-theory;P=NP-problem;} } @incollection{ aaronson_s:2015a, author = {Scott Aaronson}, title = {Why Philosophers Should Care about Computational Complexity}, booktitle = {Computability: {T}uring, {C}hurch, and Beyond}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {B. Jack Copeland and Carl J. Posy and Oron Shagrir}, pages = {261--327}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap18}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. "Aaronson"}, topic = {algorithmic-complexity;philosophy-of-computation;} } @incollection{ abb_b-etal:1996a, author = {Bernd Abb and Carsten G\"unther and Michael Herweg and Kai Lebeth and Claudia Maienborn and Andrea Schopp}, title = {Incremental Grammatical Encoding---An Outline of the Synphonics Formulator}, booktitle = {Trends in Natural Language Generation, An Artificial Intelligence Perspective, Fourth {E}uropean Workshop, {EWNLG} '93, Pisa, Italy, April 28-30, 1993, Selected Papers}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science}, volume = {1036}, year = {1996}, editor = {Giovanni Adorni and Michael Zock}, pages = {277--299}, address = {New York}, topic = {nl-generation;nl-realization;} } @inproceedings{ abbate_m-thiel_u:2003a, author = {Marcello L'Abbate and Ulrich Thiel}, title = {The Use of Contextual Information in a Proactivity Model for Conversational Agents}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {459--466}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;HCI;} } @unpublished{ abbott_b:1974a1, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Some Problems in Giving an Adequate Model-Theoretical Account of {CAUSE}}, year = {1974}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "B Abbott"}, xref = {Publication: abbott_b:1974a2}, note = {Manuscript, Michigan State University}, topic = {causality;} } @incollection{ abbott_b:1974a2, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Some Problems in Giving an Adequate Model-Theoretical Account of {CAUSE}}, booktitle = {Berkeley Studies in Syntax and Semantics, Volume 1}, publisher = {Department of Linguistics and Institute of Human Learning, University of California}, year = {1974}, editor = {Charles Fillmore and George Lakoff and Robin Tolmach Lakoff}, pages = {1--14}, address = {Berkeley, California}, topic = {causality;} } @unpublished{ abbott_b:1974b, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Some Remarks Concerning {H}intikka's Theory of Propositional Attitudes}, year = {1974}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @phdthesis{ abbott_b:1976a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {A Study of Referential Opacity}, school = {Linguistics Department, University of California at Berkeley}, year = {1976}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Berkeley, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess}, topic = {intensionality;} } @article{ abbott_b:1979a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Remarks on `Belief-Contexts{'}}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, volume = {10}, year = {1979}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ abbott_b:1989a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Nondescriptionality and Natural Kind Terms}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1989}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {269--291}, topic = {natural-kinds;sense-reference;common-nouns;} } @article{ abbott_b:1997a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Models, Truth, and Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {117--138}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;nl-semantics-and-cognition;} } @article{ abbott_b:1999a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {The Formal Approach to Meaning: Formal Semantics and its Recent Developments}, journal = {Journal of Foreign Languages}, year = {1999}, volume = {119}, number = {1}, pages = {2--20}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ abbott_b:1999b, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Support for a Unique Theory of Definites}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IX}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1999}, editor = {Tanya Matthews and Devon Strolovitch}, pages = {1--15}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;definiteness;} } @article{ abbott_b:2000a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Fodor and {L}epore on Meaning Similarity and {C}ompositionality}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2000}, volume = {97}, number = {8}, pages = {454--455}, xref = {Comment on fodor_ja-lepore_e:1996c.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;synonymy; cognitive-semantics;state-space-semantics; conceptual-role-semantics;} } @article{ abbott_b:2002a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Donkey Demonstratives}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {285--298}, topic = {nl-semantics;pronouns;donkey-anaphora;} } @article{ abbott_b:2002b, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Discussion Note: Definiteness and Proper Names: Some Bad News for the Description Theory}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2002}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {191--201}, abstract = {This paper addresses some data put forward by Geurts (1997) in support of his metalinguistic or quotation theory of proper names, according to which a name N means the individual named N. The data illustrate ten linguistic behaviours claimed to be shared by proper names and definite descriptions. I argue that in some cases the behaviours have a common explanation which is based on a property independent of Geurts' analysis, and that in the remaining cases the behaviours are not actually shared. Thus these behaviours do not actually support the metalinguistic theory. }, xref = {Commentary on: geurts_b:1997a}, xref = {Reply: geurts_b:2002a}, topic = {definiteness;proper-names;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ abbott_b:2003a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Some Notes on Quotation}, journal = {Belgian Journal of Linguistics}, year = {2003}, volume = {17}, pages = {13--26}, missinginfo = {number}, url = {http://www.msu.edu/user/abbottb/notequot.pdf}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @article{ abbott_b:2003b, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {A Reply to {S}zab\'o's `Descriptions and Uniqueness{'}}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {113}, volume = {2003}, number = {3}, pages = {223--231}, doi = {10.1023/A:1024063903859}, xref = {See szabo_zg:2000a, szabo_zg:2004a}, topic = {definite-descriptions;uniqueness;} } @incollection{ abbott_b:2005a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Definiteness and Indefiniteness}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {122--150}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {definiteness;indefiniteness;} } @unpublished{ abbott_b:2007a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Support for Individual Concepts}, year = {2007}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Michigan State University}, rtnote = {See webpage for 2007 LPW}, topic = {nl-semantics;individual-concepts;} } @article{ abbott_b:2008a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Presuppositions and Common Ground}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {31}, number = {5}, pages = {523--538}, topic = {presupposition;accommodation;conversational-record;} } @incollection{ abbott_b:2011a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Reference: Foundational Issues}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {48--73}, address = {The Hague}, abstract = {This chapter reviews issues surrounding theories of reference. The simplest theory is the "Fido"-Fido theory ... Although Frege's theory of sense, and Russell's quantifi ca- tional analysis, seem to solve these [direct reference] problems for definite descriptions, they do not work well for proper names, as Kripke shows. And Donnellan and Strawson have other objections to Russell's theory. Indexical expressions like "I" and "here" create their own issues ... . The final section looks at indefinite descriptions, and some more recent theories that make them appear more similar to definite descriptions than was previously thought.}, topic = {reference;philosophy-of-language;definite-descriptions;anaphora;} } @incollection{ abbott_b:2011b, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Attitudes toward Quotation}, booktitle = {Understanding Quotation}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Elke Brendel and J\"org Meibauer and Markus Steinbach}, pages = {35--46}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ abbott_b:2012a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Names}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Companion to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Gillian Russell and Delia Graff Fara}, pages = {307--317}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;proper-names;} } @incollection{ abbott_b:2013a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Linguistic Solutions to Philosophical Problems: The Case of Knowing How}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 27: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2013}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {1--21}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {knowing-how;} } @incollection{ abbott_b:2019a, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {Definiteness and Familiarity}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Reference}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Jeannette Gundel and Barbara Abbott}, pages = {117--129}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reference;philosophy-of-language;definiteness;} } @incollection{ abbott_b:2019b, author = {Barbara Abbott}, title = {The Indefiniteness of Definiteness}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Reference}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Jeannette Gundel and Barbara Abbott}, pages = {130--145}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reference;philosophy-of-language;indefiniteness;} } @article{ abbott_b-hudson_g:1981a, author = {Barbara Abbott and Grover Hudson}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}aking Sense}, by {G}eoffrey {S}ampson}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1981}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {437--451}, xref = {Review of sampson_g:1980a.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;foundations-of-linguistics; language-universals;philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @article{ abbott_bp-etal:2016a, author = {Benjamin P. Abbott et al.}, title = {Observation of Gravitational Waves from a Binary Black Hole Merger}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, year = {2016}, volume = {116}, number = {6}, pages = {061102}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe16}, topic = {physics;} } @unpublished{ abbott_cc:1979a, author = {Carolyn C. Abbott}, title = {Problems of Rule Ordering in Transformational Generative Syntax}, year = {1979}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Linguistics Department, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;rule-ordering;} } @inproceedings{ abboud_r-etal:2020a, author = {Ralph Abboud and \.Ismail \.Ilkan Ceylan and Radoslav Dimitrov}, title = {On the Approximability of Weighted Model Integration on {DNF} Structures}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {828--837}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we study weighted model integration, a generalization of weighted model counting which involves real variables in addition to propositional variables, and pose the following question: Does weighted model integration on DNF structures admit an FPRAS? ... we show that weighted model integration on DNF structures can indeed be approximated for a class of weight functions. ...}, topic = {AI-algorithms;} } @book{ abdallah_ae-etal:2003a, editor = {Ali E. Abdallah and Peter Ryan and Steve Schneider}, title = {Formal Aspects of Security}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2003}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {computer-security;} } @article{ abdallah_an-vanemden_mh:2013a, author = {A. Nait Abdallah and Maartin H. van Emden}, title = {Constraint Propagation as Information Maximization}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {197}, pages = {25--38}, topic = {constraint-propagation;} } @article{ abdelbar_am:1998a, author = {Ashraf M. Abdelbar}, title = {An Algorithm for Finding {MAPS} for Belief Networks through Cost-Based Abduction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {104}, number = {1--2}, pages = {331--338}, topic = {abduction;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @article{ abdelbar_am:2004a, author = {Ashraf M. Abdelbar}, title = {Approximating Cost-Based Abduction is {NP}-Hard}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {159}, number = {1--2}, pages = {231--239}, topic = {abduction;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ abdelbar_am-etal:2000a, author = {Ashraf M. Abdelbar and Stephen T. Hedetniemi and Sandra M. Hedetniemi}, title = {The Complexity of Approximating {MAP}s for Belief Networks with Bounded Probabilities}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {124}, number = {2}, pages = {283--288}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ abdelbar_am-hedetniemi_sm:1998a, author = {Ashraf M. Abdelbar and Sandra M. Hedetniemi}, title = {Approximating {MAP}s for Belief Networks is {NP}-Hard and Other Theorems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {102}, number = {1}, pages = {21--38}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;complexity-in-AI;} } @book{ abdelhafiz-basili:1996a, author = {Salwa K. Abd-El-Hafiz and Victor R. Basili}, title = {Process-Centered Requirements Engineering}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1996}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0863801935 (Research Studies Press)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.76 .D47 P581 1996.}, topic = {software-engineering;} } @incollection{ abdellaoui_m:2009a, author = {Mohammed Abdellaoui}, title = {Rank-dependent Utility}, booktitle = {Handbook of Rational and Social Choice}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Paul Anand and Prasanta Pattanaik and Clemens Puppe}, pages = {69--89}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {Rank-dependent utility (RDu) is among the most popular generalizations of the standard model of expected utility. It takes into account the main violations of expected utility (Allais paradox, Ellsberg paradox). Furthermore, the replacement of probabilities by decision weights allows us to capture what may be called 'chance attitude' in addition to attitude towards outcomes. This chapter aims to bring into focus the main violations of expected utility that opened the way to rank-dependent utility. Then, it presents the main preference conditions behind rank-dependence. The chapter concludes with a few experimental results as regards the elicitation of cumulative prospect theory, the most compelling version of Rank-dependent utility.}, topic = {utility;preferences;} } @techreport{ abdullah_an:1991a, author = {Areski Nait Abdullah}, title = {Kernel Knowledge Versus Belt Knowledge in Default Reasoning: a Logical Approach}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, University of Western Ontario}, number = {292}, year = {1991}, address = {London, Ontario}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;nonmonotonic-prioritization;} } @book{ abdullah_an:1995a, author = {Areski Nait Abdullah}, title = {The Logic of Partial Information}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1995}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Introduction 2. Partial Propositional Logic 3. Syntax of the Language with Partial Information Ions 4. Reasoning with Partial Information Ions 5. Semantics of Partial Information of Rank 1 6. Semantics of Partial Information of Infinite Rank 7. Algebraic Properties 8. Beth Tableaux 9. Applications; the statics of logic systems 10. Naive Axiomatics and proof theory of propositional partial information ionic logic 11. Soundness 12. Formal axiomatics 13. Extension and justification closure approach 14. Partial first order logic 15. Syntax and semantics of first-order partial information ions 16. Beth Tableaux 17. Axiomatics and proof theory of first-order partial information ionic logic 18. Partial information ionic logic programming 19. Syntactic and semantic paths; applications to defeasible inheritance 20. The frame problem; the dynamics of logic systems 21. Reasoning about actions: projection problem 22. Reasoning about actions: explanation problem }, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;partial-logic;theories-of-information;} } @article{ abdullah_pa:2010a, author = {Parosh Aziz Abdullah}, title = {Well (and Better) Quasi-Ordered Transition Systems}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {16}, number = {4}, pages = {457--515}, topic = {quasi-ordered-transition-systems;program-verification;} } @inproceedings{ abe_n-li_h:1996a, author = {Naoki Abe and Hang Li}, title = {Learning Word Association Norms Using Tree Cut Pair Models}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Machine Learning}, year = {1996}, url = {http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/cmp-lg/9605029}, missinginfo = {publisher, editor, pages}, topic = {machine-language-learning;semantic-similarity; wordnet;} } @incollection{ abels_k:2003a, author = {Klaus Abels}, title = {Who Gives a Damn about Minimizers in Questions?}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XIII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2003}, editor = {Robert B. Young and Yuping Zhou}, pages = {1--18}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {interrogatives;nl-semantics;polarity;} } @article{ abelson_h-etal:1989a1, author = {Harold Abelson and Michael Eisenberg and Matthew Halfant and Jacob Katzenelson and Elisha Sachs and Gerald J. Sussman and Jack Wisdom and Kenneth Yip}, title = {Intelligence in Scientific Computing}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, year = {1989}, volume = {32}, pages = {546--562}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Republication: abelson_h-etal:1989a2.}, topic = {computer-assisted-science;qualitative-reasoning;} } @incollection{ abelson_h-etal:1989a2, author = {Harold Abelson and Michael Eisenberg and Matthew Halfant and Jacob Katzenelson and Elisha Sachs and Gerald J. Sussman and Jack Wisdom and Kenneth Yip}, title = {Intelligence in Scientific Computing}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {453--469}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: abelson_h-etal:1989a1.}, topic = {computer-assisted-science;qualitative-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ aberdeen_j-etal:1999a, author = {John Aberdeen and Samuel Bayer and Sasha Caskey and Laurie Damianos and Alan Goldschen and Lynette Hirschman and Dan Loehr and Hugo Trapper}, title = {Implementing Practical Dialogue Systems with the {DARPA} Communicator Architecture}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Knowledge and Reasoning in Practical Dialogue Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jan Alexandersson}, pages = {81--86}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;spoken-dialogue-systems;} } @incollection{ aberdein_a-read_s:2009a, author = {Andrew Aberdein and Stephen Read}, title = {The Philosophy of Alternative Logics}, booktitle = {The Development of Modern Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Leila Haaparanta}, pages = {613--723}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {history-of-logic;intuitionistic-logic;quantum-logic; relevance-logic;paraconsistent-logic;} } @book{ aberth_o:2001a, author = {Oliver Aberth}, title = {Computable Calculus}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {2001}, address = {San Diego}, note = {CR\_ROM included.}, xref = {Review: bridges:2002a.}, topic = {constructive-mathematics;automated-algebra;} } @incollection{ abiteboul_s:1988a, author = {Serge Abiteboul}, title = {Updates: A New Frontier}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Database Theory}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1988}, pages = {1--18}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, editor.}, topic = {databases;database-update;} } @book{ abiteboul_s-etal:1995a, author = {Serge Abiteboul and Richard Hull and Victor Vianu}, title = {Foundations of Databases}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley Publishing Co.}, year = {1995}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0201537710}, rtnote = {Umich Media Union Library QA 76.9 .D3 A18 1995}, topic = {databases;} } @techreport{ abiteboul_s-kanekkakis_pc:1989a, author = {Serge Abiteboul and Paris C. Kanekkakis}, title = {Object Identity as a Query Language Primitive}, institution = {Institute National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique}, number = {1022}, year = {1991}, address = {78153 Le Chesnay Cedex, France}, topic = {object-oriented-databases;} } @incollection{ abney_k:2012a, author = {Keith Abney}, title = {Robotics, Ethical Theory, and Metaethics: A Guide for the Perplexed}, booktitle = {Robot Ethics: Mapping the Issues for a Mechanized World}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Patrick Lin and Keith Abney and George Bekey}, pages = {35--52}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @phdthesis{ abney_s:1987a, author = {Steven Abney}, title = {The {E}nglish Noun Phrase in Its Sentential Aspect}, school = {Department of Linguistics, MIT}, year = {1987}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {government-binding-theory;noun-phrases;} } @incollection{ abney_s:1996a, author = {Steven Abney}, title = {Statistical Methods and Linguistics}, booktitle = {The Balancing Act: Combining Symbolic and Statistical Approaches to Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Judith Klavans and Philip Resnik}, pages = {1--26}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;corpus-statistics;statistical-nlp;} } @article{ abney_s:2002a, author = {Steven Abney}, title = {Review of \emph{{E}mpirical Linguistics}, by {G}eoffrey {S}ampson}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2002}, volume = {28}, number = {4}, pages = {570--575}, xref = {Review of: sampson_g:2001a.}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;} } @incollection{ abney_s:2002b, author = {Steven Abney}, title = {Bootstrapping}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fortieth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Eugene Charniak and Dekang Lin}, pages = {360--367}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @article{ abney_s:2004a, author = {Steven Abney}, title = {Understanding the {Y}arowsky Algorithm}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {3}, pages = {365--395}, topic = {machine-learning;bootstrapping;} } @article{ abney_s:2011a, author = {Steven Abney}, title = {Data-Intensive Experimental Linguistics}, journal = {Linguistic Issues in Language Technology}, year = {2011}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {1--27}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {nl-processing;corpus-linguistics;} } @unpublished{ abney_s:2018a, author = {Steven Abney}, title = {Inductive General Grammar}, year = {2018}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Michigan}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl18}, topic = {linguistics-methodology;universal-grammar;} } @incollection{ abney_s-etal:1999a, author = {Steven Abney and Robert E. Schapire and Yoram Singer}, title = {Boosting Applied to Tagging and {PP} Attachment}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1999 Joint {SIGDAT} Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, editor = {Pascale Fung and Joe Zhou}, pages = {38--45}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-learning;corpus-tagging;prepositional-attachment;} } @unpublished{ abney_s-keshet_e:2013a, author = {Steven Abney and Ezra Keshet}, title = {Using Conjunctive Normal Form for Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2013}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Michigan}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se13}, topic = {nl-interpretation;CNF;} } @article{ abraham_l:1923a, author = {Leo Abraham}, title = {Implication, Modality, and Intension in Symbolic Logic}, journal = {The Monist}, year = {1923}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {119--133}, topic = {intensionality;modal-logic;} } @incollection{ abraham_m-etal:2018a, author = {Michael Abraham and Dov M. Gabbay and Uri J. Schild}, title = {Principles of {T}almudic Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume 18}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2018}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {133--371}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-and-law;deontic-logic;} } @book{ abraham_s-kiefer_f:1966a, author = {Samuel Abraham and Ferenc Kiefer}, title = {A Theory of Structural Semantics}, publisher = {De Gruyter}, year = {1966}, address = {The Hague}, ISBN = {9783110997835}, topic = {structural-semantics;} } @book{ abraham_w:1991a, editor = {Werner Abraham}, title = {Discourse Particles: Descriptive and Theoretical Investigations on the Logical, Syntactic and Pragmatic Properties of Discourse Particles in {G}erman}, publisher = {J. Benjamins Publishing Co.}, year = {1991}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {discourse-cue-words;pragmatics;German-language;} } @article{ abraham_we:1962a, author = {W.E. Abraham}, title = {Is the Concept of Necessary Existence Self-Contradictory?}, journal = {Inquiry}, year = {1962}, volume = {5}, number = {1--4}, pages = {143--157}, topic = {(non)existence;ontological-argument;} } @unpublished{ abrams-frisch_am:1991a, author = {Charlene Bloch Abrams and Alan M. Frisch}, title = {An Examination of the Efficiency of Sorted Deduction}, year = {1991}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {theorem-proving;taxonomic-reasoning;knowledge-retrieval;} } @book{ abramsky_s:1988a, author = {Samson Abramsky}, title = {Domain Theory in Logical Form}, publisher = {University of London}, year = {1988]}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0-7923-6350-7 hardcover.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P106 .M3541 1987.}, topic = {higher-order-logic;} } @incollection{ abramsky_s:2009a, author = {Samson Abramsky}, title = {Semantics of Interaction: An Introduction to Game Semantics}, booktitle = {Semantics and Logics of Computation}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Andrew M. Pitts and Peter Dybjer}, pages = {1--31}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, contentnote = {Abramsky proposes an approach he calls "intensional semantics" to the interpretation of computation, and illustrates the ideas with game theory.}, topic = {denotational-semantics;game-semantics;} } @article{ abramsky_s:2013a, author = {Samson Abramsky}, title = {Relational Hidden Variables and Non-Locality}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2013}, volume = {101}, number = {2}, pages = {411--452}, topic = {dependence-logic;quantum-logic;} } @book{ abramsky_s-etal:1992a, editor = {Samson Abramsky and Dov M. Gabbay and and T.S.E. Maibaum}, title = {Handbook of Logic in Computer Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198537611 (v. 2)}, rtnote = {UMich MEDIA UNION LIBRARY, QA 76 .H27851 1992.}, topic = {logic-and-computer-science;} } @book{ abramsky_s-hankin:1987a, editor = {Samson Abramsky and Chris Hankin}, title = {Abstract Interpretation of Declarative Languages}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood}, year = {1987}, address = {Chichester}, ISBN = {0745801099}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA76.7 .A21 1987.}, topic = {abstract-model-theory;} } @book{ abramsky_s-ong_chl:1992a, author = {Samson Abramsky and C.-H. Luke Ong}, title = {Full Abstraction In The Lazy Lambda Calculus}, publisher = {University of Cambridge, Computer Laboratory}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {lambda-calculus;} } @book{ abramsky_s-vickers_s:1990a, author = {Samson Abramsky and Steven Vickers}, title = {Quantales, Observational Logic, and Process Semantics}, publisher = {University of London, Imperial College of Science and Technology, Dept. of Computing}, year = {1990}, address = {London}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @book{ abramsky_s-vickers_s:1992a, editor = {Samson Abramsky and Steven Vickers}, title = {Proceedings of {JELIA}: Logics in {AI}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library Q 334 .E9851}, topic = {logic-programming;logic-in-AI;} } @article{ abramson_d:2008a, author = {Darren Abramson}, title = {Turing's Responses to Two Objections}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {2}, pages = {147--167}, abstract = {In this paper I argue that Turing's responses to the mathematical objection are straightforward, despite recent claims to the contrary. I then go on to show that by understanding the importance of learning machines for Turing as related not to the mathematical objection, but to Lady Lovelace's objection, we can better understand Turing's response to Lady Lovelace's objection. Finally, I argue that by understanding Turing's responses to these objections more clearly, we discover a hitherto unrecognized, substantive thesis in his philosophical thinking about the nature of mind. }, topic = {Turing;machine-intelligence;} } @article{ abramson_d:2011a, author = {Darren Abramson}, title = {Philosophy of Mind Is (in Part) Philosophy of Computer Science}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {203--219}, abstract = {In this paper I argue that whether or not a computer can be built that passes the Turing test is a central question in the philosophy of mind. Then I show that the possibility of building such a computer depends on open questions in the philosophy of computer science: the physical Church-Turing thesis and the extended Church-Turing thesis. I use the link between the issues identified in philosophy of mind and philosophy of computer science to respond to a prominent argument against the possibility of building a machine that passes the Turing test. Finally, I respond to objections against the proposed link between questions in the philosophy of mind and philosophy of computer science. }, topic = {Turing-test;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ abramson_h-rogers_mh:1989a, editor = {Harvey Abramson and M.H. Rogers}, title = {Meta-Programming in Logic Programming: Proceedings of {META}--88, Bristol, 1988}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262510472}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.63 .M471 1989.}, topic = {metaprogramming;logic-programming;} } @article{ abreu-gemund:2010a, author = {Rui Abreu and Arjan J.C. van Gemund}, title = {Diagnosing Multiple Intermittent Failures using Maximum Likelihood Estimation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {18}, pages = {1481--1497}, topic = {diagnosis;} } @inproceedings{ abriola_s-etal:2016a, author = {Sergio Abriola and Pablo Barcel\'o and Diego Figueira and Santiago Figueira}, title = {Bisimulations on Data Graphs}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, pages = {309--318}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {The present work constitutes a first investigation of 'data aware' bisimulations on data graphs. We study the problem of computing such bisimulations, based on the observational indistinguishability for XPath---a language that extends modal logic with tests for data equality. We show that in general the problem is pspace-complete, but identify several restrictions that yield better complexity bounds (coNP, ptime) by controlling suitable parameters of the problem; namely, the amount of em non-locality allowed, and the class of models considered (graph, DAG, tree). In particular, this analysis yields a hierarchy of tractable fragments. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {data-graphs;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ abrusan_m:2011a, author = {M\'arta Abrus\'an}, title = {Presuppositional and Negative Islands: A Semantic Account}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2011}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {257--321}, topic = {presupposition;negation;syntactic-islands;} } @article{ abrusan_m:2011b, author = {M\'arta Abrus\'an}, title = {Predicting the Presuppositions of Soft Triggers}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2011}, volume = {34}, number = {6}, pages = {491--535}, abstract = {The central idea behind this paper is that presuppositions of soft triggers arise from the way our attention structures the informational content of a sentence. Some aspects of the information conveyed are such that we pay attention to them by default, even in the absence of contextual information. On the other hand, contextual cues or conversational goals can divert attention to types of information that we would not pay attention to by default. $\ldots$}, topic = {presupposition;information-structure;} } @article{ abrusan_m:2021a, author = {M\'arta Abrus\'an}, title = {The Spectrum of Perspective Shift: Protagonist Projection Versus Free Indirect Discourse}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2021}, volume = {44}, number = {4}, pages = {839--873}, abstract = {This paper examines a little studied type of perspective shift that I call protagonist projection ... Similarly to its better known cousin free indirect discourse (FID), the shift in perspective is achieved without an overt operator. Unlike FID, PP is not based on a presumed (possibly silent) speech-act of a protagonist. Rather, it gives a linguistic form to pre-verbal perceptual content, sensations, feelings or implicit beliefs. Under the resulting analysis, Free Indirect Discourse and PP are two instances of a more general category of perspective shift. }, topic = {perspective-sensitive-constructions;indirect-discourse;} } @inproceedings{ abrusan_m-etal:2018a, author = {M\'arta Abrus\'an and Nicholas Asher and Tim Van de Cruys}, title = {Content Vs. Function Words: The View from Distributional Semantics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 22}, editor = {Uli Sauerl and and Stephanie Solt}, year = {2018}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {Leibniz-Centre General Linguistics}, address = {Berlin}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/GE4MWViN/SuB22-twovolume.pdf}, pages = {1--22}, abstract = {Counter to the often assumed division of labour between content and function words, we argue that both types of words have lexical content in addition to their logical content. We propose that the difference between the two types of words is a difference in degree. We conducted a preliminary study of quantificational determiners with methods from Distributional Semantics, a computational approach to natural language semantics. ... pervasive context-sensitivity has profound implications for how we think about meaning in natural language.}, topic = {lexical-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ abrusci_vm:2002a, author = {V. Michele Abrusci}, title = {Classical Conservative Extensions of {L}ambek Calculus}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2002}, volume = {71}, number = {3}, pages = {277--324}, topic = {Lambek-calculus;linear-logic;} } @incollection{ abrusci_vm-etal:1997a, author = {V. Michele Abrusci and Christophe Fouquer\'e and Jacqueline Vauzeilles}, title = {Tree Adjoining Grammars in Non-Commutative Linear Logic}, booktitle = {{LACL}'96: First International Conference on Logical Aspects of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1997}, editor = {Christian Retor/'e}, pages = {96--117}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-and-nl-processing;linear-logic; TAG-grammar;} } @article{ abrusci_vm-etal:1999a, author = {V. Michele Abrusci and Christophe FOuquer\'e and Jacqueline Vauzeilles}, title = {Tree Adjoining Grammars in a Fragment of the {L}ambek Calculus}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {209--2236}, topic = {TAG-grammar;Lambek-calculus;} } @article{ abrusci_vm-maringelli:1998a, author = {V. Michele Abrusci and Elena Maringelli}, title = {A New Correctness Criterion for Cyclic Proof Nets}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1998}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {449--502}, topic = {proof-nets;} } @phdthesis{ abusch_d:1985a, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {On Verbs and Time}, school = {Linguistics Department, University of Massachusetts}, year = {1985}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, topic = {causality;tense-aspect;lexical-semantics;} } @techreport{ abusch_d:1986a, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {Verbs of Change, Causation, and Time}, institution = {Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University}, number = {CSLI--86--50}, year = {1986}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Abusch"}, topic = {causality;tense-aspect;lexical-semantics;nl-causatives;} } @inproceedings{ abusch_d:1988a, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {Sequence of Tense, Intensionality and Scope}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {S}eventh {W}est {C}oast {C}onference on {F}ormal {L}inguistics}, year = {1988}, pages = {1--14}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {sequence-of-tense;} } @article{ abusch_d:1992a, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {The Scope of Indefinites}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1993--1994}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {83--135}, topic = {nl-quantifer-scope;indefiniteness;nl-semantics;} } @article{ abusch_d:1994a, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {The Scope of Indefinites}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1994}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {83--136}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;indefiniteness;} } @article{ abusch_d:1997a, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {Sequence of Tense and Temporal {\em De Re}}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {1--50}, topic = {nl-tense;} } @article{ abusch_d:1997b, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {Remarks on the State Formulation of {\it de re} Present Tense}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1997}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {303--313}, topic = {nl-tense;} } @incollection{ abusch_d:1998a, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {Generalizing Tense Semantics for Future Contexts}, booktitle = {Events and Grammar}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Susan D. Rothstein}, pages = {13--33}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-tense;sequence-of-tense;} } @inproceedings{ abusch_d:2002a, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {Lexical Alternatives as a Source of Pragmatic Presuppositions}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2002}, editor = {Brendan Jackson}, pages = {1--19}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, ure = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/jJkYjM3O/Abusch-Triggering.pdf}, topic = {nl-semantics;presupposition;pragmatics;} } @unpublished{ abusch_d:2005a, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {Triggering from Alternative Sets and Projection of Pragmatic Presuppositions}, year = {2005}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Cornell University. Available at http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/jJkYjM3O/Abusch-Triggering.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {presupposition;} } @article{ abusch_d:2012a, author = {Dorit Abusch}, title = {Circumstantial and Temporal Dependence in Counterfactual Modals}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2012}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {273--297}, topic = {nl-modals;branching-time;subjunctive-mood;} } @inproceedings{ abusch_d-rooth_m:1997a, author = {Dorit Abusch and Mats Rooth}, title = {Epistemic {NP} Modifiers}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1997}, editor = {Aaron Lawson}, pages = {1--18}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;adjectives;} } @incollection{ abusch_d-rooth_m:2002a, author = {Dorit Abusch and Mats Rooth}, title = {Empty-Domain Effects for Presuppositional and Non-Presuppositional Determiners}, booktitle = {Context-Dependence in the Analysis of Linguistic Meaning}, publisher = {Brill Publishing}, year = {2002}, editor = {Hans Kamp and Barbara Partee}, pages = {7--27}, address = {Leiden}, topic = {presupposition;(non)existence;} } @inproceedings{ abusch_d-rooth_m:2022a, author = {Dorit Abusch and Mats Rooth}, title = {Temporal and Intensional Pictorial Conflation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 26}, year = {2022}, editor = {Daniel Gutzmann and Sophie Repp}, pages = {1--19}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Cologne}, address = {Cologne}, abstract = {This paper proposes accounts in possible worlds semantics of temporally conflated pictorial narratives, and intensionally conflated pictorial narratives. The semantics for film shots and panels in comics that are embedded under attitudes such as imagining and dreaming uses de se interpretation and existential modality, strengthened by a normality condition.}, url = {https://bit.ly/Proceedings-of-SuB-26}, topic = {narrative-representation;imagination;temporal-reasoning;} } @article{ abusch_d-rooth_m:2023a, author = {Dorit Abusch and Mats Rooth}, title = {Pictorial Free Perception}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {4}, pages = {747--798}, abstract = {Pictorial free perception reports are sequences in comics or film of one unit that depicts an agent who is looking, and a following unit that depicts what they see. This paper proposes an analysis in possible worlds semantics and event semantics of such sequences. ... The semantics proposed here employs an account of anaphora using discourse referents, a formalized possible worlds semantics for pictorial narratives, and, to model the epistemic consequences of perceptual events, the event alternative construction from dynamic epistemic logic. }, topic = {pictoral-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ acar_e-penaloza_r:2020a, author = {Erman Acar and Rafael Pe\~naloza}, title = {Reasoning with Contextual Knowledge and Influence Diagrams}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {12--21}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we complement IDs with the light-weight description logic (DL) EL ... We consider a setup where DL axioms hold in some contexts, yet the actual context is uncertain. The framework benefits from the convenience of using DL as a domain knowledge representation language and the modelling strength of IDs to deal with decisions over contexts in the presence of contextual uncertainty. We define related reasoning problems and study their computational complexity. }, topic = {influence-diagrams;description-logics;reasoning-about-context;} } @incollection{ acharya_bd-joshi_s:2013a, author = {B.D. Acharya and S. Joshi}, title = {Some Reflections on Discrete Mathematical Models in Behavioral, Cognitive and Social Sciences}, booktitle = {Logic at the Crossroads. Volume {I}: Proof, Computation, and Agency}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amitabha Gupta and Rohit Parikh and Johan van Benthem and Eric Pacuit}, pages = {277--307}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {network-models;multiagent-systems;} } @article{ achinstein_p:1964a, author = {Peter Achinstein}, title = {On the Meaning of Scientific Terms}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1964}, volume = {62}, number = {20}, pages = {497--509}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophy-of-science;holism;} } @article{ achinstein_p:1964b, author = {Peter Achinstein}, title = {Models, Analogies, and Theories}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1964}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {328--350}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;scientific-models;analogy;} } @article{ achinstein_p:1965a, author = {Peter Achinstein}, title = {\,`Defeasible' Problems}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1965}, volume = {62}, number = {21}, pages = {629--633}, xref = {Commentary on: clark_r1:1965a.}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;natural-laws;causality; nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @book{ achinstein_p:1971a, author = {Peter Achinstein}, title = {Law and Explanation: An Essay in the Philosophy of Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1971}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198582080}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Q 175 .A1794}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;explanation;natural-laws;} } @incollection{ achinstein_p:1979a, author = {Peter Achinstein}, title = {The Causal Relation}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {V}: Studies in Metaphysics}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {369--386}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {causality;focus;} } @book{ achinstein_p:1982a, author = {Peter Achinstein}, title = {The Nature Of Explanation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1982}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0195032152}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD237 .A251 1983.}, topic = {explanation;} } @book{ achinstein_p:1983a, editor = {Peter Achinstein}, title = {The Concept of Evidence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198750625 (pbk.)}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Carl A. Hempel, "Studies in the Logic of Confirmation" 2. Richard B. Braithwaite, " The Structure of a Scientific System" 3. Norwood Russell Hanson, "The logic of Discovery " 4. Nelson Goodman, "Prospects for a Theory of Projection" 5. Rudolf Carnap, "The Concept of Confirming Evidence" 6. Wesley C. Salmon, "Confirmation and Relevance", pp. 7. Clark Glymour, "Relevant Evidence" 8. Peter Achinstein, "Concepts of Evidence" }, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BC 173 .C661 1983.}, topic = {evidence;philosophy-of-science;confirmation-theory;} } @incollection{ achinstein_p:1984a, author = {Peter Achinstein}, title = {A Type of Non-Causal Explanation}, booktitle = {Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. Uehling, Jr. and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {221--243}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;explanation;} } @incollection{ achinstein_p:2000a, author = {Peter Achinstein}, title = {Why Philosophical Theories of Evidence Are (and Ought to Be) Ignored by Scientists}, booktitle = {{PSA}'1998: Proceedings of the 1998 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2000}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {S180--S192}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;evidence;} } @book{ achinstein_p-barker_sf:1969a, editor = {Peter Achinstein and Stephen F. Barker}, title = {The Legacy of Logical Positivism: Studies in the Philosophy of Science}, publisher = {Johns Hopkins Press}, year = {1969}, address = {Baltimore}, rtnote = {Graduate Library B 824.6 .L49}, topic = {logical-positivism;analytic-philosophy;} } @book{ achinstein_p-snyder_lj:1994a, editor = {Peter Achinstein and Laura J. Snyder}, title = {Scientific Methods: Conceptual and Historical Problems}, publisher = {Krieger Pub. Co.}, year = {1994}, address = {Malabar, Florida}, ISBN = {0894648225}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, Q 174.8 .S361 1994.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;scientific-reasoning;} } @article{ achourioti-lambalgan:2011a, author = {Theodora Achourioti and Michiel van Lambalgan}, title = {A Formalization of {K}ant's Transcendental Logic}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {254--289}, topic = {Kant;transcendental-logic;} } @incollection{ acid-etal:1991a, author = {S. Acid and L.M. de Campos and A. Gonz\'alez and R. Molina and N. P\'erez de la Blanca}, title = {Learning with {CASTLE}}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {99--106}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {machine-learning;causality;} } @article{ ackerman_f1-moore_j2:1999a, author = {Farrell Ackerman and John Moore}, title = {Syntagmatic and Paradigmatic Dimensions of Causee Encodings}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {1--44}, topic = {nl-causatives;thematic-roles;} } @incollection{ ackerman_f2:1994a, author = {Felicia Ackerman}, title = {Roots and Consequences of Vagueness}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 8: Logic and Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {129--136}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ ackerman_r:1969a, author = {Robert Ackerman}, title = {Sortal Predicates and Confirmation}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1969}, volume = {20}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--4}, topic = {induction;(un)natural-predicates;} } @book{ ackermann_rj:1966a, author = {Robert J. Ackermann}, title = {Nondeductive Inference}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1966}, address = {London and New York}, topic = {inductive-inference;inductive-logic;} } @article{ ackermann_w:1951a, author = {Willhelm Ackermann}, title = {Review of `{A}n Algebraic Characterization of Quantifiers', by {L}eon {H}enkin}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1951}, volume = {16}, number = {4}, pages = {290--291}, xref = {Review of: henkin_l:1951a}, topic = {algebraic-logic;quantifiers;} } @article{ ackrill:1964a, author = {J.L. Ackrill}, title = {Comments}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1964}, volume = {62}, number = {20}, pages = {610--613}, xref = {Comments on; demos:1964a}, topic = {Plato;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ acock_m-jackson_hg:1976a, author = {Malcolm Acock and Howard G. Jackson}, title = {Seems}, journal = {Revue Internationale de Philosophie}, year = {1976}, volume = {30}, pages = {304--330}, number = {3/4}, topic = {intensional-logic;logic-of-perception;} } @article{ acock_m-jackson_hj:1976a, author = {Malcolm Acock and Howard J. Jackson}, title = {{`}Seems{'}}, journal = {Revue Internationale de Philosophie}, year = {1976}, volume = {30}, number = {117}, pages = {304--330}, topic = {perceptual-language;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ aczel_p:1977a, author = {Peter Aczel}, title = {An Introduction to Inductive Definitions}, booktitle = {Handbook of Mathematical Logic}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1977}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {739--782}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {inductive-definitions;} } @incollection{ aczel_p:1980a, author = {Peter Aczel}, title = {Frege Structures and the Notion of Proposition, Truth and Set}, booktitle = {The {K}leene Symposium}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1980}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise and H.J. Keisler and K. Kunen}, pages = {31--59}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, topic = {Frege-structures;propositions;truth;foudnations-of-set-theory;} } @book{ aczel_p:1983a, author = {Peter Aczel}, title = {Non-Well-Founded Sets}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, year = {1983}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic Shelves.}, topic = {set-theory;nonwellfounded-sets;} } @incollection{ aczel_p:1994a, author = {Peter Aczel}, title = {Schematic Consequence}, booktitle = {What is a Logical System?}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Dov Gabbay}, pages = {261--272}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {proof-theory;philosophy-of-logic;} } @article{ adali-subrahmanian_vs:1996a, author = {Sibel Adali and V.S. Subrahmanian}, title = {Amalgamating Knowledge Bases {III}: Algorithms, Data Structures, and Query Processing}, journal = {Journal of Logic Programming}, year = {1996}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {45--88}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {knowledge-integration;} } @article{ adam_a1-laurent:1980a, author = {Anne Adam and Jean-Pierre Laurent}, title = {{LAURA}, A System to Debug Student Programs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1980}, volume = {15}, number = {1--2}, pages = {75--122}, contentnote = {Abstract: An effort to automate the debugging of real programs is presented. We discuss possible choices in conceiving a debugging system. In order to detect all the semantic errors, it must have a knowledge of what the program is intended to achieve. Strategies and results are very dependent on the way of giving this knowledge. In the LAURA system that we have designed, the program's task is given by means of a `program model'. Automatic debugging is then viewed as a comparison of programs. The main characteristics of LAURA are the representation of programs by graphs, which gets rid of many syntactical variations, the use of program transformations, realized on the graphs, and its heuristic strategy to identify step by step the elements of the graphs. It has been tested with about a hundred programs writen by students to solve eight different problems in various fields. It is able to recognize correct programs even if their structures are very different from the structure of the program model. It is also able to express exact diagnostics of errors, or at least to localize them. It could be an effective tool for students programmers. }, topic = {program-transformations;automatic-debugging; software-engineering;graph-based-reasoning;diagnosis;} } @incollection{ adam_a2:2002a, author = {Alison Adam}, title = {Cyborgs in the {C}hinese Room: Boundaries Transgressed and BOundaries Blurred}, booktitle = {Views into the {C}hinese Room: New Essays on {S}earle and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {John Preston and Mark Bishop}, pages = {319--337}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-AI;} } @book{ adami:1998a, author = {Christoph Adami}, title = {Introduction to Artificial Life}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0-387-94646-2}, xref = {Review: taylor_t:2001a.}, topic = {artificial-life;} } @article{ adamowicz-bigorajska:2001a, author = {Zofia Adamowicz and Teresa Bigorajska}, title = {Existentially Closed Structures and {G}\"odel's Second Incompleteness Theorem}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {66}, number = {1}, pages = {349--356}, topic = {model-theory;goedels-second-theorem;} } @article{ adams_ew:1965a, author = {Ernest Adams}, title = {The Logic of Conditionals}, journal = {Inquiry}, year = {1965}, volume = {8}, pages = {166--197}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr20}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ adams_ew:1970a, author = {Ernest Adams}, title = {Subjunctive and Indicative Conditionals}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1970}, volume = {6}, pages = {89--94}, number = {1}, topic = {conditionals;nl-mood;subjunctive-mood;} } @article{ adams_ew:1974a, author = {Ernest Adams}, title = {The Logic of `Almost All'\, }, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1974}, volume = {3}, number = {1--2}, pages = {3--17}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;exception-constructions;} } @book{ adams_ew:1975a, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {The Logic of Conditionals}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, xref = {Review: nute_d-mitcheltree:1981a, carlstrom_if-hill_cs:1978a}, topic = {conditionals;probability-semantics;} } @article{ adams_ew:1978a, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {A Note on Comparing Probabilistic and Modal Semantics for Conditionals}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1978}, volume = {43}, pages = {186--194}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {conditionals;probability-semantics;} } @article{ adams_ew:1981a, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {Transmissible Improbabilities and Marginal Essentialness of Premises in Inferences Involving Indicative Condtionals}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {149--177}, topic = {conditionals;probability-semantics;} } @article{ adams_ew:1981b, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {Truth, Proof, and Conditionals}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1981}, volume = {62}, pages = {323--339}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {conditionals;causality;} } @article{ adams_ew:1983b, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {Probabilistic Enthymemes}, journal = {Journal of Pragmatics}, year = {1983}, volume = {7}, pages = {283--295}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {probability-semantics;} } @incollection{ adams_ew:1986a, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {Remarks on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Conditionals}, booktitle = {On Conditionals}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Elizabeth Traugott and Alice {ter Meulen} and Judy Reilly}, pages = {169--179}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ adams_ew:1986b, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {Continuity and Idealizability}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1986}, volume = {67}, number = {3}, pages = {439--476}, topic = {fractional-quantifiers;} } @article{ adams_ew:1987a, author = {Ernest Adams}, title = {On the Meaning of the Conditional}, journal = {Philosophical Topics}, year = {1987}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {5--45}, topic = {conditionals;indicative-conditionals;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ adams_ew:1988a, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {Consistency and Decision: Variations on {R}amseyan Themes}, booktitle = {Causation in Decision, Belief Change, and Statistics, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1988}, editor = {William L. Harper and Brian Skyrms}, pages = {49--69}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @article{ adams_ew:1988b, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {Modus Tollens Revisited}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1988}, volume = {48}, number = {3}, pages = {122--128}, xref = {Commentary: dale_aj:1989a, sinnottarmstrong_w-etal:1990a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ adams_ew:1989a, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {On the Logic of High Probability}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1989}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {255--279}, topic = {probability-semantics;} } @article{ adams_ew:1995a, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {Remarks on a Theorem of {M}c{G}ee}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {24}, number = {4}, pages = {343--348}, topic = {conditionals;finite-matrix-property;} } @article{ adams_ew:1996a, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {Four Probability Preserving Properties of Inferences}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {1--24}, topic = {conditionals;probabilities;} } @book{ adams_ew:1997a, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {A Primer of Probability Logic}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {probability-semantics;conditionals;} } @article{ adams_ew:1998a, author = {Ernest W. Adams}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Geneology of Disjunction}, by {R}.{E}. {J}ennings}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1998}, volume = {105}, number = {1}, pages = {87--88}, xref = {Review of jennings_re1:1994a.}, topic = {disjunction;disjunction-in-nl;} } @article{ adams_ew-carlstrom_if:1979a, author = {Ernest W. Adams and Ian F. Carlstrom}, title = {Representing Approximate Ordering and Equivalence Relations}, journal = {Journal of Mathematical Psychology}, year = {1979}, volume = {1979}, number = {2}, pages = {182--207}, topic = {approximate-truth;} } @article{ adams_ew-levine_hp:1975b, author = {Ernest Adams and Howard P. Levine}, title = {On the Uncertainties Transmitted from Premisses to Conclusions in Deductive Inferences}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1975}, volume = {30}, pages = {429--460}, topic = {probability-semantics;} } @article{ adams_f:1986a, author = {Frederick Adams}, title = {Intention and Intentional Action: The Simple View}, journal = {Mind and Language}, year = {1986}, volume = {1}, number = {4}, pages = {281--301}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc21}, topic = {intention;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ adams_f-steadman_a:2004a, author = {Frederick Adams and Annie Steadman}, title = {Intentional Action in Ordinary Language: Core Concept or Pragmatic Understanding?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {2}, pages = {173--181}, xref = {Commenrary on: knobe_j:2003a}, xref = {Reply: knobe_j:2004a}, topic = {intention;experimental-philosophy;} } @article{ adams_f-steadman_a:2004b, author = {Fred Adams and Annie Steadman}, title = {Intentional Action and Moral Considerations: Still Pragmatic}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {3}, pages = {268--276}, xref = {Reply to: knobe_j:2004a}, topic = {intention;experimental-philosophy;} } @article{ adams_fr:1986a, author = {Frederick R. Adams}, title = {Intention and Intentional Action: The Simple View}, journal = {Mind and Language}, year = {1986}, volume = {1}, number = {4}, pages = {281--301}, topic = {intention;action;} } @article{ adams_fr:2003a, author = {Frederick R. Adams}, title = {The Informational Turn in Philosophy}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2003}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {471--501}, abstract = {This paper traces the application of information theory to philosophical problems of mind and meaning from the earliest days of the creation of the mathematical theory of communication. $\ldots$ }, topic = {information-theory;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ adams_fr:2012a, author = {Frederick R. Adams}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}hilosophy, Neuroscience and Consciousness}, edited by {R}ex {W}elshon}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {3}, pages = {629--632}, xref = {Review of: welshon_r:2011a}, topic = {cognitive-neuroscience;consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ adams_fr-aizawa_k:1992a, author = {Frederick R. Adams and Kenneth Aizawa}, title = {{`}X' means X: Semantics {F}odor-style}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1992}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {175--183}, abstract = {In Psychosemantics Jerry Fodor offered a list of sufficient conditions for a symbol `X' to mean something X. $\ldots$ we argue that Fodor's conditions still do not work. They are open to objections of two different varieties: they are too strong and too weak. We develop these objections and indicate why Fodor's new, improved list of conditions still do not work to naturalize meaning. }, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ adams_fr-aizawa_k:1993a, author = {Frederick R. Adams and Kenneth Aizawa}, title = {Fodorian Semantics, Pathologies, and `{B}lock's Problem{'}}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {97--104}, abstract = {In two recent books, Jerry Fodor has developed a set of sufficient conditions for an object `X' to non-naturally and non-derivatively mean X. $\ldots$ In response to queries concerning the relationship between the Pathologies Problem and what Fodor calls `Block's Problem', we argue that, while Block's Problem does not threaten Fodor's view, the Pathologies Problem does. }, xref = {Commentary: warfield_ta:1994a.}, topic = {symbol-meaning;} } @article{ adams_fr-aizawa_k:1994a, author = {Frederick R. Adams and Kenneth Aizawa}, title = {{`}X' means X: {F}odor/{W}arfield Semantics}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {215--231}, xref = {Response to: warfield_ta:1994a.}, topic = {symbol-meaning;} } @incollection{ adams_g-resnik_p:1997a, author = {Gary Adams and Philip Resnik}, title = {A Language Identification Application Built on the {J}ava Client-Server Platform}, booktitle = {From Research to Commercial Applications: Making {NLP} Work in Practice}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Jill C. Burstein and Claudia Leacock}, pages = {43--47}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {language-identification;} } @article{ adams_ja:2001a, author = {Julie A. Adams}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}ultiagent Systems: A Modern Approach to Distributed Artificial Intelligence}, by {M}ichael {J}. {W}ooldridge}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {105--108}, xref = {Review of: wooldridge_mj:1999a.}, topic = {distributed-AI;distributed-systems;} } @incollection{ adams_rm:1979a, author = {Robert Merrihew Adams}, title = {Theories of Actuality}, booktitle = {The Possible and the Actual: Readings in the Metaphysics of Modality}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Michael J. Loux}, pages = {190--209}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {metaphysics;essentialism;modality;philosophy-of-possible-worlds;} } @article{ adams_rm:1981a, author = {Robert Merrihew Adams}, title = {Actualism and Thisness}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1981}, volume = {49}, number = {1}, pages = {3--41}, topic = {actuality;haecceity;} } @article{ adams_ss-etal:2012a, author = {Sam S. Adams and Itamar Arel and Joscha Bach and Robert Coop and Rod Furlan and Ben Goertzel and J. Storrs Hall and Alexei Samsonovich and Matthias Scheutz and Matthew Shelesinger and Stuart C. Shapiro and John F. Sowa}, title = {Mapping the Landscape of Human-Level Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2012}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {25--41}, topic = {AI-editorial;} } @inproceedings{ adams_wa:2001a, author = {William A. Adams}, title = {The Motivational Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {409--412}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;contextual-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ adaricheva_k-etal:2012a, author = {Kira Adaricheva and Robert H. Sloan and Bal\'asz Sz\"or\'enyi and Gy\"orgy Tur\'an}, title = {Horn Belief Contraction: Remainders, Envelopes and Complexity}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {107--115}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... In the past several years, there has been considerable work in belief revision theory on developing a theory of belief contraction for knowledge represented in Horn form. Our main focus here is the computational complexity of belief contraction, and, in particular, of various methods and approaches suggested in the literature. ... using the Horn framework for belief contraction does not by itself give us computational efficiency. Further work is required to explore the possibilities for efficient belief change methods. }, topic = {belief-revision;AI-algorithms;Horn-theories;} } @inproceedings{ addanki-etal:1989a1, author = {Sanjaya Addanki and Roberto Cremonini and J. Scott Pemberthy}, title = {Reasoning about Assumptions in Graphs of Models}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, pages = {1432--1438}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, CA}, xref = {Republication: addanki-etal:1989a2.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;model-based-reasoning;} } @incollection{ addanki-etal:1989a2, author = {Sanjaya Addanki and Roberto Cremonini and J. Scott Pemberthy}, title = {Reasoning about Assumptions in Graphs of Models}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {546--552}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: addanki-etal:1989a1.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;model-based-reasoning;} } @article{ addanki-etal:1991a, author = {Sanjaya Addanki and Roberto Cremonini and J. Scott Penberthy}, title = {Graphs of Models}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {51}, number = {1--3}, pages = {145--177}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Solving analysis problems in physical worlds requires the representation of large amounts of knowledge. Recently, there has been much interest in using multiple models, in the engineering sense of the word, to capture the complex and diverse knowledge required during analysis. In this paper we represent physical domains as graphs of models, where the nodes of the graph are models and the edges are the assumptions that have to be changed in going from one model to the other. We introduce new, qualitative methods that automatically select and switch models during analysis. Our approach has been successfully used for three implementations in the fields of mechanics, thermodynamics, and fluid dynamics. }, topic = {model-based-reasoning;kr;qualitative-physics;thermodynamics;} } @incollection{ addis_l:1984a, author = {Laird Addis}, title = {Parallelism, Interaction, and Causation}, booktitle = {Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. Uehling, Jr. and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {329--344}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {causality;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ addison-etal:1965a, editor = {J.W. Addison and Leon Henkin and Alfred Tarski}, title = {The Theory of Models}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Co.}, year = {1965}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic shelves.}, topic = {model-theory;set-theory;} } @book{ adelman-riedel:1997a, author = {Leonard Adelman and Sharon Riedel}, title = {Handbook for Evaluating Knowledge-Based Systems}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {AI-system-evaluation;knowledge-base-verification; knowledge-engineering;} } @article{ adelsonvelskiy-etal:1975a, author = {G.M. Adelson-Velskiy and V.L. Arlazarov and M.V. Donskoy}, title = {Some Methods of Controlling the Tree Search in Chess Programs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1975}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {361--371}, topic = {computer-chess;search;} } @article{ ades-steedman_m:1982a, author = {Anthony F. Ades and Mark J. Steedman}, title = {On the Order of Words}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1982}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {517--558}, topic = {categorial-grammar;word-order;nl-syntax;} } @article{ adger:2003a, author = {David Adger}, title = {Predicaton and Equation}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {2003}, volume = {33}, number = {3}, pages = {325--359}, topic = {predication;Gaelic-language;} } @incollection{ adiba-lopez:1987a, author = {Michel Adiba and Mauricio Lopez}, title = {Data Bases and Office Automation}, booktitle = {Databases}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {J. Paradaens}, pages = {1--44}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed with hull:1987a.}, topic = {databases;} } @article{ adjukiewicz_k:1934a, author = {Kasimir Adjukiewicz}, title = {Sprache und Sinn}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {1934}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {100--138}, topic = {sense-reference;} } @book{ adler_hpl:2018a, author = {Huaping-Lu Adler}, title = {Kant and the Science of Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: blecher_i:2021a}, topic = {Kant;history-of-logic;} } @incollection{ adler_j-armourgarb_b:2007a, author = {Jonathan Adler and Bradley Armour-Garb}, title = {Moore's Paradox and the Transparency of Belief}, booktitle = {Moore's Paradox: New Essays on Belief, Rationality, and the First Person}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, editor = {Mitchell S. Green and John N. Williams}, pages = {146--162}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ adler_je:1987a, author = {Jonathan E. Adler}, title = {Comparisons with {G}rice}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1987}, volume = {10}, pages = {710--711}, topic = {implicature;pragmatics;} } @article{ adler_je:1997a, author = {Jonathan E. Adler}, title = {Lying, Deceiving, or Falsely Implicating}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {94}, number = {9}, pages = {435--452}, topic = {deception;implicature;pragmatics;} } @article{ adler_je:2006a, author = {Jonathan E. Adler}, title = {Withdrawal and Contextualism}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2006}, volume = {66}, number = {4}, pages = {280--285}, xref = {Commentary: armourgarb_b:2011a}, topic = {knowledge;contextualism;} } @article{ adler_je:2009a, author = {Jonathan E. Adler}, title = {Another Argument for the Knowledge Norm}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2009}, volume = {69}, number = {3}, pages = {407--411}, doi = {10.1093/analys/anp060}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn11}, topic = {knowledge;assertion;} } @article{ adler_je:2009b, author = {Jonathan E. Adler}, title = {Resisting the Force of Argument}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2009}, volume = {106}, number = {6}, pages = {339--364}, contentnote = {This article is about the persuasiveness of (defeasible?) argument, but the author doesn't know about NM reasoning.}, topic = {belief;rationality;argument;} } @article{ adler_je:2012a, author = {Jonathan E. Adler}, title = {Pragmatic Encroachment, Methods and Contextualism}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {3}, pages = {526--534}, xref = {Reply to: armourgarb_b:2011a}, topic = {knowledge;contextualism;} } @book{ adler_je-rips:2008a, editor = {Jonathan E. Adler and Lance J. Rips}, title = {Reasoning: Studies in Human Inference and Its Foundations}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {978-0-521-61274-6 (pbk)}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Psych.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Jonathan E. Adler, "Philosophical Foundations", pp. 1--34 2. Gilbert Harman, "Change in View: Principles of Reasoning", pp. 35--46 3. Bas C. van Fraassen, "Belief and the Will", pp. 47--59 4. Bernard Williams, "Internal and External Reasons", pp. 60--66 5. R.M. Sainsbury, "Paradoxes", pp. 67--93 6. Jon Elster, "When Rationality Fails", pp. 94--113 7. Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman, "Extensional Versus Intuitive Reasoning: The Conjunction Fallacy in Probability Judgment", pp. 114--135 8. L. Jonathan Cohen, "Can Human Irrationality Be Experimentally Demonstrated?", pp. 136--155 9. George Ainslie, "Breakdown of Will", pp. 156--186 10. Lance J. Rips, Logical Approaches to Human Deductive Reasoning", pp. 187--205 11. Philip N. Johnson-Laird, "Mental Models and Deductive Reasoning", pp. 206--222 12. Keith Stenning and Michiel van Lambalgen, "Interpretation, Representation, and Deductive Reasoning", pp. 223--248 13. Bart Geurts, "Reasoning with Quantifiers", pp. 249--268 14. Robert C. Stalnaker, "The Problem of Deduction", pp. 269--281 15. Achille C. Varzi, "Patterns, Rules, and Inferences", pp. 282--290 16. Henry E. Kyburg, Jr., "Inductive Logic and Inductive Reasoning", pp. 291--301 17. Peter G\"ardenfors, "Reasoning in Conceptual Spaces", pp. 302--320 18. Daniel N. Osherson, Edward E. Smith, Ormond Wilkie, Alejandro Lopez, and Eldar Shafir, "Category-Based Induction", pp. 321--342 19. Steven A. Sloman, "18 When Explanations Compete: The Role of Explanatory Coherence on Judgments of Likelihood", pp. 343--352 20. Evan Heit, "Properties of Inductive Reasoning", pp. 353--382 21. Mike Oaksford, Nick Chater, and Ulrike Hahn, "Human Reasoning and Argumentation: The Probabilistic Approach", pp. 383--413 22. Keith E. Stanovich, "Distinction in Cognitive Science", pp. 414--436 23. Jonathan St. B. T. Evans, David E. Over, and Ken I. Manktelow, "Reasoning, Decision Making, and Rationality", pp. 437--450 24. John L. Pollock, "Defeasible Reasoning", pp. 451--470 25. Paul Thagard, "Explanatory Coherence", pp. 471--513 26. Hans Rott, "Belief Revision", pp. 514--534 27. Isaac Levi, "Belief, Doubt, and Evidentialism", pp. 535--547 28. Jamin Halberstadt and Timothy D. Wilson, "Reflections on Conscious Reflection: Mechanisms of Impairment by Reasons Analysis", pp. 548--565 29. Renee Elio and Francis Jeffry Pelletier, "Belief Change as Propositional Update", pp. 566--596 30. Lance J. Rips, "Causal Thinking", pp. 597--631 31. David K. Lewis, "Causation", pp. 632--638 32. Daniel Kahneman and Carol A. Varey, "Propensities and Counterfactuals: The Loser That Almost Won", pp. 639--651 33. Stephen Edelston Toulmin, "The Layout of Arguments", pp. 652--677 34. Deanna Kuhn, "The Skills of Argument", pp. 678--693 35. Lance J. Rips, "Reasoning and Conversation", pp. 694--730 36. Elijah Millgram "Specificationism", pp. 731--747 37. Jonathan E. Adler, "Presupposition, Attention, and Why-Questions", pp. 748--764 38. H. Paul Grice, "Further Notes on Logic and Conversation", pp. 765--773 39. Denis J. Hilton, "The Social Context of Reasoning: Conversational Inference and Rational Judgment", pp. 774--806 40. Susan Carey and Elizabeth Spelke, "Domain-Specific Knowledge and Conceptual Change", pp. 807--826 41. Patricia W. Cheng and Keith J. Holyoak, "Pragmatic Reasoning Schemas", pp. 827--842 42. Leda Cosmides and John Tooby, "Beyond Intuition and Instinct Blindness: Toward an Evolutionarily Rigorous Cognitive Science", pp. 843--865 43. Dan Sperber and Vittorio Girotto, "Use or Misuse of the Selection Task? Rejoinder to Fiddick, Cosmides, and Tooby", pp. 866--874 44. Jerry A. Fodor, "Why We Are So Good at Catching Cheaters", pp. 875--877 45. Jerry A. Fodor, "The Modularity of Mind: An Essay on Faculty Psychology", pp. 878--914 46. Brian Skyrms, "Commitment", pp. 915--826 47. Brian Skyrms, "Evolution of Inference", pp. 927--933 48. Russell C. Burnett and Douglas L. Medin, "Reasoning across Cultures", pp. 934--955 49. Richard E. Nisbett, Kaiping Peng, Incheol Choi, and Ara Norenzayan, "Culture and Systems of Thought: Holistic versus Analytic Cognition", pp. 956--985 50. Donald Davidson, "On the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme", pp. 986--994 51. Bernard Williams, "The Truth in Relativism", pp. 995--1001 52. Ronald de Sousa, "Logic and Biology: Emotional Inference and Emotions in Reasoning", pp. 1002--1015 53. Daniel N. Osherson, Daniela Perani, Stefano Cappa, Tatiana Schnur, Franco Grassi, and Ferruccio Fazio, "Distinct Brain Loci in Deductive versus Probabilistic Reasoning", pp. 1016--1023 54. Jonathan Haidt, "The Emotional Dog and Its Rational Tail: A Social Intuitionist Approach to Moral Judgment", pp. 1024--1052 }, topic = {reasoning;} } @incollection{ adler_r:1980a, author = {Richard Adler}, title = {Possible Worlds Counterfactuals}, booktitle = {New Essays in Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Canadian Association for Publishing in Philosophy}, year = {1980}, editor = {Jeffrey Pelletier and Calvin G. Normore}, pages = {119--138}, address = {Guelph}, topic = {reference;modal-logic;philosophy-of-language; proper-names;} } @book{ adler_sl:2004a, author = {Stephen L. Adler}, title = {Quantum Theory as an Emergent Phenomenon: The Statistical Mechanics of Matrix Models as the Precursor of Quantum Field Theory}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: ghirardi:2005a.}, topic = {foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @incollection{ adolphs:2005a, author = {Ralph Adolphs}, title = {Could a Robot Have Emotions? Theoretical Perspectives from Social Cognitive Neuroscience}, booktitle = {Who Needs Emotions? The Brain Meets the Robot}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Jean-Marc Fellous and Michael A. Arbib}, pages = {9--25}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr13}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @book{ adorni-zock:1993a, editor = {Giovanni Adorni and Michael Zock}, title = {Trends in Natural Language Generation, An Artificial Intelligence Perspective, Fourth {E}uropean Workshop, {EWNLG} '93, Pisa, Italy, April 28-30, 1993, Selected Papers}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science}, volume = {1036}, year = {1996}, ISBN = {3-540-60800-1}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Michael Zock and Giovanni Adorni, "Introduction", pp. 1--16 2. Koenraad De Smedt and Helmut Horacek and Michael Zock, "Architectures for Natural Language Generation: Problems and Perspectives", pp. 17--46 3. Alistair Knott and Robert Dale, "Choosing a Set of Coherence Relations for Text Generation: A Data-Driven Approach", pp. 47--67 4. Elisabeth Maier, "Textual Relations as Part of Multiple Links Between Text Segments", pp. 68--87 5. Hercules Dalianis and Eduard H. Hovy, "Aggregation in Natural Language Generation", pp. 88--105 6. Thanasis Daradoumis, "Towards a Representation of the Rhetorical Structure of Interrupted Exchanges", pp. 106--124 7. Stephen J. Green and Chrysanne DiMarco, "Stylistic Decision-Making in Natural Language Generation", pp. 125--143 8. Susan M. Haller and Stuart C. Shapiro, "{IDP}---An Interactive Discourse Planner", pp. 144--167 9. Kristiina Jokinen, "Reasoning about Coherent and Cooperative System Responses", pp. 168--187 10. Jens-Uwe Moeller, "Domain Related Focus-Shifting Constraints in Dialogues with Knowledge Based Systems", pp. 188--204 11. Elsa Pascual, "Integrating Text Formatting and Text Generation", pp. 205--221 12. Manfred Stede, "Lexical Options in Multilingual Generation from a Knowledge Base", pp. 222--237 13. Michel Gagnon and Guy Lapalme, "Pr\`etexte: A Generator for the Expression of Temporal Information", pp. 238--259 14. Leila Kosseim and Agn\`es Tutin and Richard I. Kittredge and Guy Lapalme, "Generating Grammatical and Lexical Anaphora in Assembly Instructional Texts", pp. 260--276 15. Bernd Abb and Carsten G\"unther and Michael Herweg and Kai Lebeth and Claudia Maienborn and Andrea Schopp, "Incremental Grammatical Encoding---An Outline of the Synphonics Formulator", pp. 277--299 16. Masahiko Haruno and Yasuharu Den and Yuji Matsumoto, "A Chart-Based Semantic Head Driven Generation Algorithm", pp. 300--313 17. Simon C. Dik and Peter Kahrel, "Generating Sentences Using ProfGlot", pp. 314--330 18. Elke Teich and Liesbeth Degand and John A. Bateman, "Multilingual Textuality: Some Experiences from Multilingual Text Generation", pp.331--349 19. Liesbeth Degand, "A {D}utch Component for a Multilingual Systemic Text Generation System", pp. 350--367 20. Chris Mellish and Ehud Reiter and John Levine, "Natural Language Generation Applications to Technical Documentation: A View Through IDAS", pp. 368--382}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @article{ adorno:1990a, author = {Theodor W. Adorno}, title = {Punctuation Marks}, journal = {Antioch Review}, year = {1990}, volume = {48}, number = {3}, pages = {300--305}, topic = {punctuation;} } @incollection{ adriaans_p-haas_e:2000a, author = {Pieter Adriaans and Erik de Haas}, title = {Learning from a Substructural Perspective}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {176--183}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;substructural-logics;} } @book{ adriaans_p-zantinge_d:1996a, author = {Pieter Adriaans and Dolf Zantinge}, title = {Data Mining}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley}, year = {1996}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: flach:2001a.}, topic = {data-mining;machine-learning;} } @book{ adriaens_g-hahn_u1:1994a, editor = {Geert Adriaens and Udo Hahn}, title = {Parallel Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Corp.}, year = {1994}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0893918695}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .N38 P371 1994.}, topic = {nl-processing;parallel-processing;} } @article{ afrati_f-etal:1988a, author = {F. Afrati and C.H. Papadimitriou and G. Papageorgiou}, title = {The Synthesis of Communication Protocols}, journal = {Algorithmica}, year = {1988}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {451--472}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {communication-protocols;} } @incollection{ afzal_s-robinson_p:2015a, author = {Shazia Afzal and Peter Robinson}, title = {Emotion Data Collection and Its Implications for Affective Computing}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {359--370}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;} } @incollection{ agarwal:1997a, author = {Rajeev Agarwal}, title = {Towards a {PURE} System for Information Access}, booktitle = {Interactive Spoken Dialog Systems: Bridging Speech and {NLP} Together in Real Applications}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Julia Hirschberg and Candace Kamm and Marilyn Walker}, pages = {90--97}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;information-retrieval;} } @incollection{ agassi:1976a, author = {Joseph Agassi}, title = {Can Adults Become Genuinely Bilingual?}, booktitle = {Language in Focus}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Asa Kasher}, pages = {473--484}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {L2-language-learning;} } @book{ agazzi_e:1981a, editor = {Evandro Agazzi}, title = {Modern Logic--A Survey: Historical, Philosophical, and Mathematical Aspects of Modern Logic and its Applications}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1981}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {9027711372}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate BC38 .M541}, rtnote = {Quality of the chapters looks low, but there is a chapter by Stalnaker.}, topic = {logic-general;history-of-logic;} } @incollection{ agerri-korta_k:2001a, author = {Rodrigo Agerri and Kepa Korta}, title = {Pragmatically Determined Aspects of Meaning: Explicature, Impliciture or Implicature}, booktitle = {Meaning and Logic: Disjunction/Implicatures}, publisher = {Institute for Logic, Cognition, Language, and Information, University of the Basque Country}, year = {2001}, editor = {Isabel G\'omez Txurruka and Rodrigo Agerri and Kepa Korta}, pages = {13--21}, address = {Donostia}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under "Txurruka"}, topic = {pragmatics;implicature;} } @article{ aghael-ardeshir:2001a, author = {Mojtaba Aghael and Mohammed Ardeshir}, title = {Gentzen-Style Axiomatizations of Some Conservative Extensions of Basic Propositional Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {263--285}, topic = {proof-theory;modal-logic;} } @book{ agirre_e-edmonds_p:2006a, editor = {Eneko Agirre and Philip Edmonds}, title = {Word Sense Disambiguation: Algorithms and Applications}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2006}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {1-4020-4804-4}, xref = {Review: mccarthy_d1:2007a}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;} } @inproceedings{ agirre_e-etal:1998a, author = {Eneko Agirre and Koldo Gojenola and Kepa Sarasola and Atro Voutilainen}, title = {Towards a Single Proposal in Spelling Correction}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {22--28}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {spelling-correction;} } @inproceedings{ agirre_e-etal:2000a, author = {Eneko Agirre and Olatz Ansa and Eduard Hovy and David Martinez}, title = {Enriching Very Large Ontologies Using the {WWW}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ontology Learning {ECAI} 2000 Workshop}, year = {2000}, editor = {Steffen Staab and Alexander Maedche and Claire Nedellec and Peter Wiemer-Hastings}, organization = {ECAI}, address = {Berlin}, url = {http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.68.7695&rep=rep1&type=pdf}, abstract = {This paper explores the possibility to exploit text on the world wide web in order to enrich the concepts in existing ontologies. First, a method to retrieve documents from the WWW related to a concept is described. These document collections are used 1) to construct topic signatures (lists of topically related words) for each concept in WordNet, and 2) to build hierarchical clusters of the concepts (the word senses) that lexicalize a given word. The overall goal is to overcome two shortcomings of WordNet: the lack of topical links among concepts, and the proliferation of senses. Topic signatures are validated on a word sense disambiguation task with good results, which are improved when the hierarchical clusters are used.}, topic = {computational-ontology;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ agirre_e-etal:2001a, author = {Eneko Agirre and Olatz Ansa and Eduard Hovy and David Martinez}, title = {Enriching {W}ord{N}et Concepts with Topic Signatures}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {NAACL} Workshop on {W}ord{N}et and Other Lexical Resources: Applications, Extensions and Customizations}, year = {2001}, organization = {ACL}, publisher = {ACL}, topic = {WordNet;} } @inproceedings{ agirre_e-rigau:1996a, author = {Eneko Agirre and German Rigau}, title = {A Proposal for Word Sense Disambiguation Using Conceptual Distance}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Recent Advances in Natural Language Processing}, year = {1996}, missinginfo = {publisher, editor, pages}, url = {http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/cmp-lg/9510003}, topic = {wordnet;lexical-disambiguation;distance-metrics;} } @inproceedings{ agirre_e-rigau:1996b, author = {Eneko Agirre and German Rigau}, title = {Word Sense Disambiguation Using Conceptual Density}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, missinginfo = {publisher, editor, pages}, url = {http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/cmp-lg/9606007}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;wordnet;} } @incollection{ agotnes_t-alechina_n:2006a, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Natasha Alechina}, title = {Semantics for Dynamic Syntactic Epistemic Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {411--419}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {limited-rationality;epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality; syntactic-modality;pr-course;} } @article{ agotnes_t-alechina_n:2007a, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Natasha Alechina}, title = {The Dynamics of Syntactic Knowledge}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2007}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {83--116}, abstract = {... We use two syntactic epistemic modalities: 'knowing at least' a set of formulae and 'knowing at most' a set of formulae. We are particularly interested in models restricting the set of formulae known by an agent at a point in time to be finite. The resulting systems are investigated from the point of view of axiomatization and complexity. We show how these logics can be used to formalise non-omniscient agents who know some inference rules, and study their relationship to other systems of syntactic epistemic logics , such as agotnes_t-walicki_m:2004a, duc_h:1997a, alechina_n-etal:2004a}, topic = {limited-rationality;epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality; syntactic-modality;pr-course;} } @article{ agotnes_t-alechina_n:2014a, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Natasha Alechina}, title = {Formal Models of Awareness}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2014}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {105--106}, topic = {hyperintensionality;} } @article{ agotnes_t-alechina_n:2014b, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Natasha Alechina}, title = {A Logic for Reasoning about Knowledge of Unawareness}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2014}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {197--217}, topic = {hyperintensionality;awareness;modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ agotnes_t-etal:2007a, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Wiebe van der Hoek and Michael Wooldridge. }, title = {Quantified Coalition Logic}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twentieth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, editor = {Manuela Veloso}, pages = {1181--1186}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {multi-agent-systems;coalitional-games;} } @article{ agotnes_t-etal:2009a, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Wiebe van der Hoek and Michael Wooldridge}, title = {Reasoning about Coalitional Games}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {1}, pages = {45--79}, topic = {modal-logic;coalitional-games;} } @article{ agotnes_t-etal:2009b, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Wiebe van der Hoek and Juan A. Rodr\'iguez-Aguilar, Carles Sierra, Michael Wooldridge}, title = {Multi-Modal {CTL}: Completeness, Complexity, and an Application}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2009}, volume = {92}, number = {1}, pages = {1--26}, topic = {computation-tree-logic;branching-time;} } @book{ agotnes_t-etal:2012a, editor = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Jan Broersen and Dag Elgesem}, title = {Deontic Logic in Computer Science: 11th International Conference, {DEON} 2012}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2012}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-3-642-31570-1}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Robert Demolombe, "Causality in the Context of Multiple Agents", pp. 1--15 2. Silvano Colombo Tosatto and Guido Boella and Leendert van der Torre and Serena Villata, "Visualizing Normative Systems: An Abstract Approach", pp. 16--30 3. Paolo Turrini, "Agreements as Norms", pp. 31--45 4. Guido Governatori and Antonino Rotolo and Erica Calardo, "Possible World Semantics for Defeasible Deontic Logic", pp. 46--60 5. Ricardo Gon\c{c}alves and Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes, "An Embedding of Input-Output Logic in Deontic Logic Programs", pp. 61--75 6. Louwe B. Kuijer, "Sanction Semantics and Contrary-to-Duty Obligations", pp. 76--90 7. Dov Gabbay, "Temporal Deontic Logic for the Generalised Chisholm Set of Contrary to Duty Obligations", pp. 91--107 8. Emiliano Lorini, "On the logical foundations of moral agency", pp. 108--122 9. R\'egis Riveret and Antonino Rotolo and Giovanni Sartor, "Norms and Learning in Probabilistic Logic--Based Agents", pp. 123--138 10. Olivier Roy and Albert J. J. Anglberger and Norbert Gratzl, "The Logic of Obligation as Weakest Permission", pp. 139--150 11. Christian Stra{\ss}er and Mathieu Beirlaen, "An {A}ndersonian Deontic Logic with Contextualized Sanctions", pp. 151--169 12. Andreas Herzig and Tiago de Lima and Emiliano Lorini and Nicolas Troquard, "A Computationally Grounded Dynamic Logic of Agency, with an Application to Legal Actions", pp. 170--183 13. Piotr Kulicki and Robert Trypuz, "A Deontic Action Logic with Sequential Composition of Actions", pp. 184--198 14. Jan Broersen and Dov Gabbay and Leendert van der Torre, "Discussion Paper: Changing Norms Is Changing Obligation Change", pp. 199--214 } , topic = {deontic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ agotnes_t-walicki_m:2004a, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Michal Walicki}, title = {Syntactic Knowledge: A Logic of Reasoning, Communication and Cooperation}, booktitle = {In Proceedings of the 2nd European Workshop on Multiagent Systems (EUMAS)}, year = {2004}, editor = {Chiara Ghidini and P. Giorgini and Wiebe van der Hoek}, pages = {1--10}, organization = {European Association for Multi-Agent Systems}, address = {Barcelona}, topic = {limited-rationality;epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality; syntactic-modality;pr-course;} } @article{ agotnes_t-walicki_m:2008a, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Michal Walicki}, title = {Complete Axiomatisations of Properties of Finite Sets}, journal = {Logic Journal of the {IGPL}}, year = {2008}, volume = {16}, number = {3}, pages = {293--313}, topic = {set-theory;finite-sets;} } @incollection{ agotnes_t-wang_yn:2015a, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Yi N. Wang}, title = {Resolving Distributed Knowledge}, booktitle = {{TARK} 2015: Proceedings of the 15th Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge}, publisher = {TARK.org}, year = {2015}, editor = {Ramaswamy Ramanujam}, pages = {43--56}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, abstract = {... In this paper we introduce an operator RG, such that RG\phi means that \phi is true after G have shared all their information with each other -- after G's distributed knowledge has been resolved. The RG operators are called resolution operators. ... Of particular interest is the relationship between distributed and common knowledge. The main results are sound and complete axiomatizations.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;group-attitudes;} } @inproceedings{ agotnes_t-wang_yn:2021a, author = {Thomas \o{A}gotnes and Y\'i N. Wang}, title = {Somebody Knows}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {2--11}, abstract = {... we study a natural notion of group knowledge between general and distributed knowledge: somebody-knows. While something is general knowledge if and only if it is known by everyone, this notion holds if and only if it is known by someone. ... We introduce a modality for somebody-knows in the style of standard group knowledge modalities, and study its properties. Unlike the other mentioned group knowledge modalities, somebody-knows ... lacks the conjunctive closure property. We provide an equivalent neighbourhood semantics for the language with a single somebody-knows modality, together with a completeness result: the somebody-knows modalities are completely characterised by the modal logic EMN extended with a particular weak conjunctive closure axiom. We also show that the satisfiability problem for this logic is PSPACE-complete. ...}, topic = {epistemic-logic;group-attitudes;} } @article{ agotnes_t-wang_yn:2021b, author = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Yi N. Wang}, title = {Group belief}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2021}, volume = {21}, number = {8}, pages = {1959--1978}, abstract = {... we ... map out (lack of) preservation of belief properties against different standard definitions of group belief. It turns out that what is called group belief most often is not actually belief, i.e. does not have the properties of belief. ... There has been some confusion in the literature regarding soundness of proposed axiomatizations of logics with distributed knowledge, related to the mentioned lack of preservation. ... we also present detailed completeness proofs of sound and complete axiomatizations of KD45 with distributed belief, both with and without common belief.}, topic = {group-attitudes;modal-logic;completeness-proofs;} } @article{ agrawal-etal:2004a, author = {Marindra Agrawal and Neeraj Kayal and Nitin Saxena}, title = {{\sc primes} Is in {P}}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics}, year = {2004}, volume = {160}, number = {2}, pages = {781--793}, topic = {algorithmic-complexity;number-theory;} } @article{ agre_pe:1993a, author = {Philip E. Agre}, title = {Interview with {A}llen {N}ewell}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {415--449}, topic = {SOAR;cognitive-architectures;history-of-AI;} } @article{ agre_pe:1995a, author = {Philip E. Agre}, title = {Computational Research on Interaction and Agency}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {72}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--52}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Recent research in artificial intelligence has developed computational theories of agents' involvements in their environments. Although inspired by a great diversity of formalisms and architectures, these research projects are unified by a common concern: using principled characterizations of agents' interactions with their environments to guide analysis of living agents and design of artificial ones. This article offers a conceptual framework for such theories, surveys several other fields of research that hold the potential for dialogue with these new computational projects, and summarizes the principal contributions of the articles in this special double volume. It also briefly describes a case study in these ideas--a computer program called Toast that acts as a short-order breakfast cook. Because its designers have discovered useful structures in the world it inhabits, Toast can employ an extremely simple mechanism to decide what to do next. }, topic = {agent-architectures;agent-environment-interaction;} } @book{ agre_pe:1997a, author = {Phillip Agre}, title = {Computation and Human Experience}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-38432-X}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate Library, Q336.A37zde.}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;philosophy-AI;philosophy-of-mind; consciousness;} } @inproceedings{ agre_pe-chapman_d:1987a, author = {Philip E. Agre and David Chapman}, title = {{PENGI}: An Implementation of a Theory of Activity}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, editor = {Kenneth D. Forbus and Howard Shrobe}, pages = {268--272}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, topic = {planning;action;} } @book{ agre_pe-rosenschein_sj:1996a, editor = {Philip E. Agre and Stanley J. Rosenschein}, title = {Computational Theories of Interaction and Agency}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {agency;communication-protocols;distributed-systems;} } @article{ agudelo_jc-carnielli_wa:2011a, author = {Juan C. Agudelo and Walter A. Carnielli}, title = {Polynomial Ring Calculus for Modal Logics: A New Semantics and Proof Method for Modalities}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {150--170}, topic = {modal-logic;polynomial-ring-calculus;} } @article{ aguilar_j:2005a, author = {Jes\'us H. Aguilar}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}ow We Act: Causes, Reasons and Intentions}, by {B}erent {E}n\c{c}}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2005}, volume = {114}, number = {4}, pages = {548--550}, xref = {Review of: enc_b:2003a}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;causality;intention;} } @incollection{ aguilar_j:2012a, author = {Jes\'us Aguilar}, title = {Basic Causal Deviance, Action Repertoires, and Reliability}, booktitle = {Action Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {1--19}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {action;causality;} } @incollection{ aguilar_jh-buckareff_aa:2022a, author = {Jes\'us H. Aguilar and Andrei A. Buckareff}, title = {Agency and Causation}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Handbook of Philosophy of Agency}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2022}, editor = {Luca Ferrero}, pages = {27--36}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-agency;agency;mental-causation;reasons-for-action;} } @book{ aguilarguevara_a-etal:2014a, editor = {Ana Aguilar-Guevara and Bert Le Bruyn and Joost Zwarts}, title = {Weak Referentiality}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {2014}, address = {Amsterdam}, abstract = {This volume brings together studies in the domain of weak referentiality, the phenomenon that a definite or indefinite noun phrase lacks its usual referential force.}, ISBN = {9789027257024}, topic = {weak-referentiality;} } @book{ aguilarguevara_a-etal:2019a, editor = {Ana Aguilar-Guevara and Julia Pozo Loyo and Violeta V\'azquez-Rojas Maldonado}, title = {Definiteness across languages}, publisher = {Language Science Press}, year = {2019}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3-96110-192-2}, topic = {definiteness;univeral-grammar;} } @incollection{ aguilera_jp-etal:2022a, author = {Juan Pablo Aguilera and Mart\'in Di\'eguez and David Fern\'andez-Duque and Brett McLean}, title = {A {G}\"odel Calculus for Linear Temporal Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {2--11}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We consider GTL, a variant of linear temporal logic based on G\"odel-Dummett propositional logic. In recent work, we have shown this logic to enjoy natural semantics both as a fuzzy logic and as a superintuitionistic logic. Using semantical methods, the logic was shown to be PSPACE-complete. In this paper we provide a deductive calculus for GTL, and show this calculus to be sound and complete for the above-mentioned semantics.}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {temporal-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ aguzzoli-ciabattoni:2000a, author = {Stefano Aguzzoli and Agata Ciabattoni}, title = {Finiteness in Infinite-Valued {\L}ukasiewicz Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {5--29}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ aha_dw:2018a, author = {David W. Aha}, title = {Goal Reasoning: Foundations, Emerging Applications, and Prospects}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2018}, volume = {39}, number = {2}, pages = {3--24}, topic = {reasoning-about-goals;goal-formation;goals;} } @incollection{ aharonov_d-vazirani_uv:2015a, author = {Dorit Aharonov and Umesh V. Vazirani}, title = {Is Quantum Mechanics Falsifiable? A Computational Perspective on the Foundations of Quantum Mechanics}, booktitle = {Computability: {T}uring, {C}hurch, and Beyond}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {B. Jack Copeland and Carl J. Posy and Oron Shagrir}, pages = {329--349}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {quantum-mechanics;foundations-of-computation;} } @inproceedings{ aher_m-groenendijk_j:2015a, author = {Martin Aher and Jeroen Groenendijk}, title = {Deontic and Epistemic Modals in Suppositional [Inquisitive] Semantics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 19}, editor = {Eva Csipak and Hedde Zeijlstra}, year = {2015}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TVlN2I2Z/}, address = {Konstanz}, pages = {2--19}, abstract = {In Groenendijk and Roelofsen (2015) a suppositional semantics for implication is proposed within the general framework of inquisitive semantics. Our aim is to extend this semantic approach to epistemic and deontic modals, but, for the purposes of this short paper, we bracketed off inquisitive aspects of meaning. To illustrate the semantics we discuss a semantic solution to a Jackson inspired puzzle which involves the interaction of implication and both types of modals.}, topic = {deontic-modals;epistemic-modala;} } @incollection{ ahlstromvij_k:2013a, author = {Kristoffer Ahlstrom-Vij}, title = {Why We Cannot Rely On Ourselves for Epistemic Improvement}, booktitle = {Epistemic Agency}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2013}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Baron Reed}, pages = {276--296}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {epistemology;agency;} } @incollection{ ahlstromvij_k:2016a, author = {Kristoffer Ahlstrom-Vij}, title = {Is There a Problem with Cognitive Outsourcing?}, booktitle = {Knowledge and Mind}, publisher = {Wiley Blackwell}, year = {2016}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {7--24}, address = {Boston and Oxford}, topic = {externalism;} } @article{ ahlstromvij_k:2018a, author = {Kristoffer Ahlstrom-Vij}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} Luxury of Understanding: On the Value of True Belief}, by {A}llen {H}azlett}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2018}, volume = {127}, number = {2}, pages = {237--240}, xref = {Review of: hazlett_a:2013a}, topic = {belief;truth;} } @article{ ahmed:2005a, author = {Tarek Sayed Ahmed}, title = {Algebraic Logic: Where Does it Stand Today?}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2005}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {465--516}, topic = {algebraic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ ahmetaj_s-etal:2021a, author = {Shqiponja Ahmetaj and Robert David and Magdalena Ortiz and Axel Polleres and Bojken Shehu and Mantas \v{S}imkus}, title = {Reasoning about Explanations for Non-Validation in {SHACL}}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {12--21}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... inspired by works on logic-based abduction and database repairs, we study the problem of explaining non-validation of SHACL constraints. In particular, in our framework non-validation is explained using the notion of a repair, i.e., a collection of additions and deletions whose application on an input graph results in a repaired graph that does satisfy the given SHACL constraints. ... We provide a detailed characterization of the computational complexity of those reasoning tasks, including the combined and the data complexity.}, topic = {explainable-AI;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ ahn_d:2003a, author = {David Ahn}, title = {Presupposition Incorporation in Adverbial Quantification}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {1--14}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {presupposition;nl-semantics;context;adverbs;nl-quantifiers;} } @article{ ahn_d:2022a, author = {Dorothy Ahn}, title = {Indirectly Direct: An Account of Demonstratives and Pointing}, Journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {6}, pages = {1345--1393}, abstract = {There has been a long debate on whether demonstratives are directly referential as Kaplan originally argued, or indirectly referential like a definite description. I propose a new analysis of demonstratives that combines intuitions from both direct and indirect approaches. The demonstrative is analyzed as an indirectly referential expression with a binary maximality operator that takes two arguments, where the second argument can be a deictic pointing, an anaphoric index, or a relative clause. Direct reference is encoded not in the meaning of the demonstrative but in the meaning contributed by the pointing gesture, thus capturing both direct and indirect uses. ...}, topic = {demonstratives;reference;} } @incollection{ ahn_r:1994a, author = {Ren\'e Ahn}, title = {Communicating Contexts: A Pragmatic Approach to Information Exchange}, booktitle = {Types for Proofs and Programs: International Workshop {TYPES}'94, {B}estad, {S}weden, June 6--10}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Peter Dybjer and Bengt Nordstr\"om and Jan Smith}, pages = {1--13}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;communication;} } @article{ ahn_r-etal:1994a, author = {Ren\'e Ahn and R.J. Beun and T. Borghuis and Harry C. Bunt and C. van Overveld}, title = {The {DenK} Architecture: A Fundamental Approach to User Interfaces}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence Review}, year = {1994}, volume = {8}, pages = {431--445}, missinginfo = {A's 1st names, number}, topic = {computational-dialogue;HCI;} } @inproceedings{ aho_av-etal:1979a, author = {A.V. Aho and J.D. Ullman and A.D. Wyner and M. Yannakakis}, title = {Modeling Communication Protocols by Automata}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twentieth {IEEE} Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science}, year = {1979}, pages = {267--273}, organization = {IEEE}, missinginfo = {A's 1st names.}, topic = {communication-protocols;} } @article{ aho_av-etal:1982a, author = {A.V. Aho and J.D. Ullman and A.D. Wyner and M. Yannakakis}, title = {Bounds on the Size and Transmission Rate of Communication Protocols}, journal = {Computers and Mathematics with Applications}, year = {1982}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {205--214}, xref = {Later version of aho-etal:1979a.}, missinginfo = {A's 1st names.}, topic = {communication-protocols;} } @book{ aho_t:1994a, author = {Tuomo Aho}, title = {On the Philosophy of Attitude Logic}, publisher = {The Philosophical Society of Finland}, year = {1994}, series = {Acta Philosophica {F}ennica}, address = {Helsinki}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;agent-attitudes;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ aho_t-yronsuuri:2009a, author = {Tuomo Aho and Mikko Yr\"onsuuri}, title = {Late Medieval Logic}, booktitle = {The Development of Modern Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Leila Haaparanta}, pages = {11--77}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {history-of-logic;medieval-logic;} } @inproceedings{ ahrenberg-etal:1998a, author = {Lars Ahrenberg and Mikael Andersson and Magnus Merkel}, title = {A Simple Hybrid Aligner for Generating Lexical Correspondences in Parallel Texts}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {29--35}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {text-alignment;} } @incollection{ ahrendt-al:1998a, author = {W. Ahrendt et al.}, title = {Integrating Automated and Interactive Theorem Proving}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {II}, Systems and Implementation Techniques}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, other authors, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @article{ ahuja-horaud:1995a, author = {Narendra Ahuja and Radu Horaud}, title = {Introduction to the Special Volume on Computer Vision}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {78}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--3}, topic = {computer-vision;} } @book{ aiello_lc-etal:1996a, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, title = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, address = {San Francisco}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Raymond Reiter, "Natural Actions, Concurrency and Continuous Time in the Situation Calculus", pp. 2--13 2. Gerhard Lakemeyer, "Only Knowing in the Situation Calculus", pp. 14--25 3. Todd G. Kelley, "Modeling Complex Systems in the Situation Calculus: A Case Study Using the Dagstuhl Steam Boiler Problem", pp. 26--37 4. Andreas Herzig, "The {PMA} Revisited", pp. 40--50 5. Michael Thielsche, "Causality and the Qualification Problem", pp. 51--62 6. Rob Miller and Murray Shanahan, "Reasoning about Discontinuities in the Event Calculus", pp. 63--74 7. Enrico Giunchiglia, "Determining Ramifications in the Situation Calculus", pp. 76--86 8. Joakim Gustafsson and Patrick Doherty, "Embracing Occlusion in Specifying the Indirect Effects of Actions", pp. 87--98 9. Erik Sandewall, "Comparative Assessments of Ramification Methods that Use Static Domain Constraints", pp. 99--110 10. Karen L. Myers, "Strategic Advice for Hierarchical Planners", pp. 112--123 11. Yury V. Smirnov and Manuela M. Veloso, "Representation Changes in Combinatorial Problems: Pigeonhole Principle Versus Integer Programming Relaxation", pp. 124--134 12. Subbarao Kambhampati and Xiuping Yang, "On the Role of Disjunctive Representations and Constraint Propagation in Refinement Planning", pp. 135--146 13. James M. Crawford and Matthew L. Ginsberg and Eugene Luck and Amitabha Roy, "Symmetry-Breaking Predicates for Search Problems", pp. 148--159 14. Ari K. J\"onsson and Matthew L. Ginsberg, "Procedural Reasoning in Constraint Satisfaction", pp. 160--171 15. Keith Golden and Daniel Weld, "Representing Sensing Actions: The Middle Ground Revisited", pp. 174--185 16. Matthew L. Ginsberg, "A New Algorithm for Generative Planning", pp. 186--197 17. Giuseppe {De Giacomo} and Luca Iocchi and Daniele Nardi and Riccardo Rosati, "Moving a Robot: The {KR\&R} Approach at Work", pp. 198--209 18. Oliver J. Lemon, "Semantical Foundations of Spatial Logics", pp. 212--219 19. Stefano Borgo and Nicola Guarino and Claudio Masolo, "A Pointless Theory of Space Based on Strong Connection and Congruence", pp. 220--229 20. Anthony G. Cohn and Nicholas Mark Gotts, "Representing Spatial Vagueness: A Mereological Approach", pp. 230--241 21. Neal Lesh and Oren Etzioni, "Scaling up Goal Recognition", pp. 244--255 22. Annette ten Teije and Frank {van Harmelen}, "Computing Approximate Diagnoses by Using Approximate Entailment", pp. 256--265 23. Leora Morgenstern, "Inheriting Well-formed Formulae in a Formula-Augmented Semantic Network", pp. 268--279 24. Nirad Sharma, "Partial Orders of Sorts and Inheritances (or Placing Inheritance in Context)", pp. 280--290 25. Diego Calvanese, "Finite Model Reasoning in Description Logics", pp. 292--303 26. Fausto Giunchiglia and Roberto Sebastiani, "A {SAT}-Based Decision Procedure for {ALC}", pp. 304--314 27. Giuseppe {De Giacomo} and Maurizio Lenzerini, "{TB}ox and {AB}ox Reasoning in Expressive Description Logics", pp. 316--327 28. Franz Baader and Ulrike Sattler, "Number Restrictions on Complex Roles in Description Logics: A Preliminary Report", pp. 328--339 29. Alex Borgida and Deborah L. McGuinness, "Asking Queries about Frames", pp. 340--349 30. Peter Jonsson and Thomas Drakengren and Christer B\"ackstr\"om, "Tractable Subclasses of the Point-Interval Algebra: A Complete Classification", pp. 352--363 31. Marco Cadoli and Francesco M. Donini and Paolo Liberatore and Marco Schaerf, "Comparing Space Efficiency of Propositional Knowledge Representation Formalisms", pp. 364--373 32. Henry Kautz and David McAllester and Bart Selman, "Encoding Plans in Propositional Logic", pp. 374--384 33. David A. Basin and Se\'an Matthews and Luca Vigan\`a, "Implementing Modal and Relevance Logics in a Logical Framework", pp. 386--397 34. Ronen I. Brafman, "\,`Statistical' First Order Conditionals", pp. 398--409 35. {Mary-{A}nne} Williams, "Towards a Practical Approach to Belief Revision: Reason-based Change", pp. 412--420 36. Nir Friedman and Joseph Y. Halpern, "Belief Revision: A Critique", pp. 421--431 37. Tom Costello, "Modeling Belief Change Using Counterfactuals", pp. 432--443 38. Ana Maria Monteiro and Jacques Wainer, "Preferential Multi-Agent Nonmonotonic Logics", pp. 446--452 39. Pierre Siegel and Lionel Forget, "A Representation Theorem for Preferential Logics", pp. 453--460 40. Manfred Jaeger, "Representation Independence of Nonmonotonic Inference Relations", pp. 461--472 41. Chitta Baral and Alfredo Gabaldon and Alessandro Provetti, "Value Minimization in Circumscription", pp. 474--481 42. Alexander Bochman, "Biconsequence Relations for Nonmonotonic Reasoning", pp. 482--492 43. Giuseppe Amati and Fiora Pirri, "Is There a Logic of Provability for Nonmonotonic Reasoning?", pp. 493--503 44. Phan Minh Dung and Tran Cao Son, "An Argumentation-Theoretic Approach to Reasoning with Specificity", pp. 506--517 45. Pawe{\l} Cholewi\'nski and Victor W. Marek and Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski, "Default Reasoning System {DeReS}", pp. 518--528 46. Stefan Brass and J\"urgen Dix and Teodor C. Przymusinski, "Super Logic Programs", pp. 529--539 47. Fahiem Bacchus and Adam Grove, "Utility Independence in Qualitative Decision Theory", pp. 542--552 48. Moshe Tennenholtz, "On Stable Social Laws and Qualitative Equilibrium for Risk-Averse Agents", pp. 553--561 49. Tze-Yun Leong, "Multiple Perspective Reasoning", pp. 562--573 50. Eunice (Yugyun) Lee and James Geller, "Parallel Transitive Reasoning in Mixed Relational Hierarchies", pp. 576--587 51. Nestor Rychtyckyj, "{DLMS}: An Extension of {KL-ONE} in the Automobile Industry", pp. 588--596 52. Malik Ghallib, "On Chronicles: Representations, On-Line Recognition and Learning", pp. 597--606 53. Carl Vogel and Judith Tonhauser, "Psychological Constraints on Plausible Default Inheritance Reasoning", pp. 608--619 54. Matthew L. Ginsberg, "Do Computers Need Common Sense?", pp. 620--626 55. Aaron Sloman, "Actual Possibilities", pp. 627--638 56. John McCarthy, "From Here to Human-Level {AI}", pp. 640--646 57. Georg Gottlob, "Complexity and Power of {KR} Formalisms (Abstract)", pp. 647--649 58. Richard E. Fikes, "Ontologies: What are They, and Where's the Research?", pp. 652--653 59. William S. Mark, "Ontologies as the Representation (and Re-Representation) of Agreement", pp. 654--655 60. Robert M. MacGregor, "Implementations and Research: Discussions at the Boundary (Position Statement)", pp. 656--658 61. James Hendler, "Implementations and Research: Discussions at the Boundary (Position Statement)", pp. 659--660 62. Lenhart Schubert, "Implementations and Research: Discussions at the Boundary (Position Statement)", pp. 661--662 63. Stuart C. Shapiro, "Implementations and Research: Discussions at the Boundary (Position Statement)", pp. 663--664 }, topic = {kr;} } @article{ aiello_lc-wheeler_p:1995a, author = {Leslie C. Aiello and Peter Wheeler}, title = {The Expensive-Tissue Hypothesis: The Brain and the Digestive System in Human and Primate Evolution}, journal = {Current Anthropology}, year = {1995}, volume = {36}, number = {2}, pages = {199-121}, doi = {http://doi.org/10.1086/204350}, topic = {human-evolution;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ aiello_m:2000a, author = {Marco Aiello}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}arts and Places: The Structures of Spatial Representation}, by {R}oberto {C}asati and {A}chille {V}arzi}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {269--272}, xref = {Review of: casati_r-varzi_ac:1999a.}, topic = {spatial-representation;philosophical-ontology;mereology;} } @article{ aiello_m-etal:2003a, author = {Marco Aiello and Johan van Benthem and Guram Bezhanishvili}, title = {Reasoning about Spsce: The Modal Way}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2003}, volume = {13}, number = {6}, pages = {889--920}, abstract = {We investigate the topological interpretation of modal logic in modern terms, using a new notion of bisimulation. We look at modal logics with interesting topological content, presenting, among others, a new proof of McKinsey and Tarski's theorem on completeness of S4 with respect to the real line, and a completeness proof for the logic of finite unions of convex sets of reals. We conclude with a broader picture of extended modal languages of space, for which the main logical questions are still wide open.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {modal-logic;topology;} } @book{ aiello_m-etal:2007a, editor = {Marco Aiello and Ian Pratt-Hartmenn and Johan van Benthem}, title = {Handbook of Spatial Logics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2007}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {spatial-logic;} } @book{ aikhenvald_ay:2004a, author = {Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald}, title = {Evidentiality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199263882}, topic = {evidential-constructions;} } @article{ aikins:1983a, author = {Janice S. Aikins}, title = {Prototypical Knowledge for Expert Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {163--210}, abstract = {Knowledge of situations typically encountered in performing a task is an important and useful source of information for solving that task. This paper presents a system that uses a representation of prototypical knowledge to guide computer consultations, and to focus the application of production rules used to represent inferential knowledge in the domain. The explicit representation of control knowledge for each prototypical situation is also emphasized. }, topic = {expert-systems;procedural-control;rule-based-reasoning; prototypical-knowledge;} } @article{ aikins:1993a, author = {Jan S. Aikins}, title = {Prototypical Knowledge for Expert Systems: A Retrospective Analysis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {205--211}, xref = {Retrospective commentary on aikins:1983a.}, topic = {expert-systems;procedural-control;rule-based-reasoning; prototypical-knowledge;} } @inproceedings{ aineto_d-etal:2021a, author = {Diego Aineto and Sergio Jimenez and Eva Onaindia}, title = {Generalized Temporal Inference via Planning}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {22--31}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {This paper introduces the Temporal Inference Problem (TIP), a general formulation for a family of inference problems that reason about the past, present or future state of some observed agent. A TIP builds on the models of an actor and of an observer. Observations of the actor are gathered at arbitrary times and a TIP encodes hypothesis on unobserved segments of the actor's trajectory. Regarding the last observation as the present time, a TIP enables to hypothesize about the past trajectory, future trajectory or current state of the actor. ...}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;abduction;} } @incollection{ ainslie_g:1985a, author = {George Ainslie}, title = {Beyond Microeconomics: Conflict among Interests in a Multiple Self as a Determinant of Value}, booktitle = {The Multiple Self}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, editor = {Jon Elster}, pages = {133--176}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {self-deception;practical-reasoning;reasoning-with-conflict; society-of-mind;} } @book{ ainslie_g:1992a, author = {George Ainslie}, title = {Picoeconomics: The Strategic Interaction of Successive Motivational States within the Person}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521260930}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate BF 503 .A461 1992}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Ecomonics shelves.}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;emotions;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @book{ ainslie_g:2001a, author = {George Ainslie}, title = {Breakdown of Will}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052159300X (hbk.), 0521596947 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate BF 611 .A2951 2001}, topic = {self-defeating-behavior;cognitive-psychology;} } @incollection{ ainslie_g:2009a, author = {George Ainslie}, title = {Recursive Self-Revision in Self-Control and Its Failure}, booktitle = {Preference Change: Approaches from Philosophy, Economics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Till Gr\"une-Yadoff and Sven O. Hansson}, pages = {139--158}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {preference-change;preference-discounting;} } @article{ ainsworth:2012a, author = {Peter M. Ainsworth}, title = {The {G}ibbs Paradox and the Definition of Entropy in Statistical Mechanics}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2012}, volume = {79}, number = {4}, pages = {542--560}, topic = {Gibbs-paradox;thermodynamics;philosophy-of-physics;} } @article{ aiolli-sperduti:2002a, author = {Fabio Aiolli and Alessandro Sperduti}, title = {A Re-Weighting Strategy for Improving Margins}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {137}, number = {1--2}, pages = {197--216}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @article{ aisbet-gibbon_g:2001a, author = {Janet Aisbet and Greg Gibbon}, title = {A General Formulation of Conceptual Spaces as a Meso Level Representation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {133}, number = {1--2}, pages = {189--232}, topic = {conceptual-spaces;} } @incollection{ aisbett-carlson_g:2000a, author = {Janet Aisbett and Greg Carlson}, title = {Epistemic Utility in Commonsense Reasoning}, booktitle = {Logic, Language, and Computation, Volume 3}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2000}, editor = {Lawrence Cavedon and Patrick Blackburn and Nick Braisby and Atushi Shimojina}, pages = {1--21}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {limited-rationality;pr-course;} } @article{ aisbett-gibbon_g:1994a, author = {Janet Aisbett and Greg Gibbon}, title = {A Tunable Distance Measure for Coloured Solid Models}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {65}, number = {1}, pages = {143--164}, acontentnote = {Abstract: People are willing to rank simple objects of different shape and colour on the basis of "similarity". If machines are to reason about structure, this comparison process must be formalized. That is, a distance measure between formal object representations must be defined. If the machine is reasoning with information to be presented to a human, the distance measure needs to accord with human notions of object similarity. Since our perception of similarity is subjective and strongly influenced by situation, the measure should be tunable to particular users and contexts. This paper describes a distance measure between solid models which incorporates heuristics of the mental mappings humans use to compare objects. The first step is to formally represent objects in a way that reflects human visual segmentations. We use a modified boundary representation scheme in colour+physical space. The next step is to define a family of maps between these representations, motivated by considerations of how humans match shapes. The distance between two objects is essentially the cost of the lowest-cost map between them. The cost of a map incorporates a geometric measure of the smooth deformation required of edges and faces, a feature measure based on visually significant singular points, and a topological measure based on correspondence of visually significant vertices, edges and faces. Tunable features of the match are: the relative cost of ignoring parts of objects; the treatment of colour; and whether or not the distance measure is required to be rotation invariant. An important application for such distance measures is to the development of user-friendly query of CAD and image databases. Query-by-example depends on implementation of a concept of likeness between object models in the database which, to be useful, must reflect the user's concepts. Another important application for distance measures is in automatic recognition of objects into classes whose members are not identical, so that the concept that ``this object is like object X'' is required. In the common situation that classes are based on human perceptions of visual similarity, the distance measure between the class prototype and the object to be classified should reflect those human perceptions. }, topic = {visual-similarity;visual-reasoning;context;CAD;distance-metrics;} } @inproceedings{ aist-mostow:1997a, author = {Gregory Aist and Jack Mostow}, title = {A Time to Be Silent and a Time to Speak: Time-Sensitive Communicative Actions in a Reading Tutor that Listens}, booktitle = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Communicative Action in Humans and Machines}, year = {1997}, pages = {1--5}, organization = {{AAAI}}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, editor = {David R. Traum}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {speech-acts;nl-generation;intelligent-tutoring;pragmatics;} } @book{ aitchenson:1987a, author = {J. Aitchenson}, title = {Words in the Mind. An Introduction to the Mental Lexicon}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1987}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {cognitive-semantics;lexical-semantics;semantic-primitives;} } @article{ aitkaci_h:1986a, author = {Hassan A\"it-Kaci}, title = {An Algebraic Semantics Approach to the Effective Resolution of Type Equations}, journal = {Theoretical Computer Science}, year = {1986}, volume = {45}, number = {3}, pages = {293--351}, topic = {kr;description-logics;kr-course;} } @article{ aitken-barrett_ja:2004a, author = {Wayne Aitken and Jeffrey A. Barrett}, title = {Computer Implication and the {C}urry Paradox}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {33}, number = {6}, pages = {631--637}, topic = {Curry-paradox;computability;natural-deduction;} } @article{ aitken-barrett_ja:2007a, author = {Wayne Aitken and Jeffrey A. Barrett}, title = {Stability and Paradox in Algorithmic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {36}, number = {1}, pages = {61--95}, topic = {Curry-paradox;type-free-theories;algorithmic-logic;} } @article{ aitken-barrett_ja:2008a, author = {Wayne Aitken and Jeffrey A. Barrett}, title = {Abstraction in Algorithmic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {37}, number = {1}, pages = {23--43}, topic = {algorithmic-logic;lambda-calculus;Curry-paradox;} } @incollection{ aitmokhtar-chanod:1997a, author = {Salah A\"it-Mokhtar and Jean-Pierre Chanod}, title = {Subject and Object Dependency Extraction Using Finite-State Transducers}, booktitle = {Automatic Information Extraction and Building of Lexical Semantic Resources for {NLP} Applications}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Piek Vossen and Geert Adriaens and Nicoletta Calzolari and Antonio Sanfilippo and Yorick Wilks}, pages = {71--77}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {finite-state-nlp;part-of-speech-tagging;grammatical-relations;} } @article{ aizawa_k:1991a, author = {Kenneth Aizawa}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}onnectionism and the Philosophy of Psychology}, by {T}erence {H}organ and {J}ohn {T}ienson}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1991}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {270--273}, xref = {Review of: horgan_t-tienson:1996a.}, topic = {connectionism;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @article{ aizawa_k:1995a, author = {Kenneth Aizawa}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}ssociative Engines: Connectionism, Concepts, and Representational Change}, by {A}ndy {C}lark}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1995}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {417--420}, xref = {Review of: clark_a1:1993a.}, topic = {connectionism;concepts;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ aizawa_k:1996a, author = {Kenneth Aizawa}, title = {Review of \emph{{N}aturalizing the Mind}, by {F}red {D}retske}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {425--430}, xref = {Review of: dretske_fi:1995a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ aizawa_k:1997a, author = {Kenneth Aizawa}, title = {Exhibiting versus Explaining Systematicity: A Reply to {H}adley and {H}ayward}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {39--55}, xref = {Reply to: hadley_rf-hayward_mb:1997a}, xref = {Reply: hadley_rf:1997a.}, topic = {C-systematicity;} } @book{ aizawa_k:2002a, author = {Kenneth Aizawa}, title = {The Systematicity Arguments}, publisher = {Kluwewr Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {1-4020-7271-6}, xref = {Review: phillips_s:2007a}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;C-systematicity;} } @article{ aizawa_k-gillett_c:2009a, author = {Kenneth Aizawa and Carl Gillett}, title = {The (Multiple) Realization of Psychological and Other Properties in the Sciences}, journal = {Mind and Language}, year = {2009}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {181--208}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;multiple-realizations;} } @article{ ajdukiewicz_k:1935a1, author = {Kasimir Ajdukiewicz}, title = {Die Wissenschaftliche Weltperspektiv}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {1935}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {22--30}, xref = {Republication: ajdukiewicz_k:1935a2}, topic = {conceptual-frameworks;} } @incollection{ ajdukiewicz_k:1935a2, author = {Kasimir Ajdukiewicz}, title = {The Scientific World Perspective}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {182--188}, address = {New York}, note = {Translated by Wilfrid Sellars}, xref = {Republication of: ajdukiewicz_k:1935a1}, topic = {conceptual-frameworks;} } @article{ ajdukiewicz_k:1958a, author = {Kasimir Ajdukiewicz}, title = {Three Concepts of Definition}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1958}, volume = {1}, number = {3/4}, pages = {115--126}, topic = {definitions;} } @article{ akama:1988a, author = {Seiki Akama}, title = {On the Proof Method for Constructive Falsity}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"ur Mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik}, year = {1988}, volume = {34}, pages = {385--392}, topic = {constructive-falsity;} } @article{ akama:1990a, author = {Seiki Akama}, title = {Subformula Semantics for Strong Negation Systems}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1990}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {217--226}, topic = {constructive-falsity;} } @article{ akama:1996a, author = {Seiki Akama}, title = {Curry's Paradox in Contractionless Constructive Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {135--150}, topic = {paradoxes;foundations-of-mathematics;Curry-paradox;} } @book{ akama:1997a, editor = {Seiki Akama}, title = {Logic, Language, and Computation}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {079234376X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, PK 1933 .D391 1996.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Seiki Akama, "Recent Issues in Logic, Language and Computation" 2. Max J. Cresswell, "Restricted Quantification" 3. B.H. Slater, "The Epsilon Calculus' Problematic" 4. Klaus Von Heusinger, "Definite Descriptions and Choice Functions" 5. Nicholas Asher, "Spatio-Temporal Structure in Text" 6. Y. Nakayama, "DRT and Many-Valued Logics" 7. Heinrich Wansing, "Displaying as Temporalizing: Sequent Systems for Subintuitionistic Logic 8. Luis Far~\nias del Cerro and V. Lugardon, "Quantification and Dependence Logics" 9. Richard Sylvan, "Relevant Conditionals, and Relevant Application Thereof" }, ISBN = {0792360559}, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @article{ akama-etal:2008a, author = {Seiki Akama and Yasunori Nagata and Chikatoshi Yamada}, title = {Three-Valued Temporal Logic $Q_t$ and Future Contingents}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2008}, volume = {88}, number = {2}, pages = {215--231}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;multivalued-logic;} } @inproceedings{ akbar-caelen:1998a, author = {Mohammed Akbar and Jean Caelen}, title = {Parole er Traduction Automatique: Le Module de Reconaissance {RAPHAEL}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {36--40}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {speech-to-speech-machine-translation;} } @incollection{ akerman_j:2009a, author = {Jonas {\AA}kerman}, title = {Hold the Context Fixed---Vagueness Still Remains}, booktitle = {Cuts and Clouds: Vaguenesss, its Nature and its Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi}, pages = {275--288}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ akers-etal:2001a, author = {Robert L. Akers and Ion Bica and Elaine Kant and Curt Randall and Robert L. Young}, title = {Sci{F}inance: A Program Synthesis Tool for Financial Modeling}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {27--41}, topic = {AI-and-economics;financial-modeling;} } @article{ akiba_k:1998a, author = {Ken Akiba}, title = {Nominalistic Metalogic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {27}, number = {1}, pages = {35--47}, topic = {formalizations-of-nominalism;} } @article{ akiba_k:2004a, author = {Ken Akiba}, title = {Vagueness in the World}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2004}, volume = {38}, number = {3}, pages = {407--429}, topic = {vagueness;metaphysics;} } @article{ akiba_k:2017a, author = {Ken Akiba}, title = {A Unification of Two Approaches to Vagueness: The Boolean Many-Valued Approach and the Modal-Precisificational Approach}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {4}, pages = {419--441}, topic = {vagueness;} } @book{ akins:1986a, editor = {Kathleen Akins}, title = {Perception}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Kathleen A. Akins, "Introduction" 2. Kirk Ludwig, "Explaining Why Things Look the Way They Do" 3. Paul M. Churchland, "A Feedforward Network for Fast Stereo Vision with Movable Fusion Plane" 4. John Grimes, "On the Failure to Detect Changes in Scenes across Saccades" 5. Dana Ballard, "On the Function of Visual Representation" 6. P.S. Churchland and V.S. Ramachandran, "Filling In: Why Dennett Is Wrong" 7. Daniel C. Dennett, "Seeing Is Believing -- Or Is It?" 10. Kathleen A. Akins and Steven Winger, "Ships in the Night: Churchland and Ramachandran on Dennett's Theory of Consciousness" 11. Brian P. McLaughlin, "Lewis on What Distinguishes Perception from Hallucination" 12. Frances Egan, "Intentionality and the Theory of Vision" 13. Sarah Patterson, "Success-Orientation and Individualism in Marr's Theory of Vision" 14. John Haugeland, "Objective Perception" 15. John M. Henderson, "Visual Attention and the Attention-Action Interface" 16. C. Randy Gallistel, "The Perception of Time" }, ISBN = {0-19-508462-4 (paper), 0-19-508461-6 (cloth)}, topic = {psychology-of-perception;} } @inproceedings{ akintunde_m-etal:2018a, author = {Michael Akintunde and Alessio Lomuscio and Lalit Maganti and Edoardo Pirovano}, title = {Reachability Analysis for Neural Agent-Environment Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {184--193}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We develop a novel model for studying agent-environment systems, where the agents are implemented via feed-forward ReLU neural networks. We provide a semantics and develop a method to verify automatically that no unwanted states are reached by the system during its evolution. ... We present an implementation and discuss the experimental results obtained on a range of test cases. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {embedded-systems;program-verification;} } @inproceedings{ akintunde_me-etal:2020a, author = {Michael E. Akintunde and Elena Botoeva and Panagiotis Kouvaros and Alessio Lomuscio}, title = {Verifying Strategic Abilities of Neural-symbolic Multi-agent Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {22--32}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We investigate the problem of verifying the strategic properties of multi-agent systems equipped with machine learning-based perception units. We introduce a novel model of agents comprising both a perception system implemented via feed-forward neural networks and an action selection mechanism implemented via traditional control logic. We define the verification problem for these systems against a bounded fragment of alternating-time temporal logic. ... We present a tool implementing the compilation and evaluate the experimental results obtained on a complex scenario of multiple aircraft operating a recently proposed prototype for air-traffic collision avoidance.}, topic = {program-verification;multiagent-systems;machine-learning;} } @book{ akkerman-etal:1985a, author = {Erik Akkerman and Pieter Masereeuw and Willem Meijs}, title = {Designing a Computerized Lexicon For Linguistic Purposes}, publisher = {Rodopi}, year = {1985}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {9062037674 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, 820.6 C842 n.s. v.51.}, miscnote = {Distributed in the U.S.A. by Humanities Press.}, topic = {computational-lexicography;} } @book{ akmajian:1974a, author = {Adrian Akmajian}, title = {Pronominalization, Relativization, and Thematization: Interrelated Systems of Coreference in {E}nglish and {J}apanese}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1971}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {pronouns;anaphora;relative-clauses;Japanese-language;} } @book{ akmajian:1979a, author = {Adrian Akmajian}, title = {Aspects of the Grammar of Focus in {E}nglish}, publisher = {Garland Publishing}, year = {1979}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0824096916}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, 820.5 A315as 1979.}, topic = {s-focus;} } @book{ akmajian-etal:1979a, author = {Adrian Akmajian and Richard Demers and Robert M. Harnish}, title = {Linguistics: An Introduction to Language and Communication}, edition = {1}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1979}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {linguistics-intro;} } @book{ akmajian-etal:2001a, author = {Adrian Akmajian and Richard A. Demers and Ann K. Farmer and Robert M. Harnish}, title = {Linguistics: An Introduction to Language and Communication}, edition = {5}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262011859}, rtnote = {Umich Undergraduate, P 121 .A43841 2001.}, topic = {linguistics-intro;} } @book{ akmajian-heny_f:1975a, author = {Adrian Akmajian and Frank Heny}, title = {An Introduction to the Principles of Transformational Syntax}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1975}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {syntax-intro;} } @article{ akmajian-wasow:1975a, author = {Adrian Akmajian and Tom Wasow}, title = {The Constituent Structure of {VP} and {AUX} and the Position of the Verb {BE}}, journal = {Linguistic Analysis}, year = {1975}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {205--245}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;auxiliary-verbs;} } @article{ akman:1995a, author = {Varol Akman}, title = {Review of \emph{{F}ormalizing Common Sense: Papers by {J}ohn {M}c{C}arthy}, edited by {V}ladimir {L}ifschitz}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {77}, number = {2}, pages = {359--369}, xref = {Review of: lifschitz_v:1990d.}, topic = {J-McCarthy;common-sense;kr;} } @article{ akman:1995b, author = {Varol Akman}, title = {Review of \emph{{F}rom Discourse to Logic: Introduction to Modeltheoretic Semantics in Natural Language, Formal Logic and Discourse Representation Theory, Vols. 1 and 2}, by {H}ans {K}amp and {U}we {R}eyle}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1995}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {265--268}, xref = {Review of kamp_jaw-reyle:1993ai, kamp_jaw-reyle:1993aii.}, topic = {nl-semantics;discourse-representation-theory;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ akman:1997a, author = {Varol Akman}, title = {Context as a Social Construct}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Context in Knowledge Representation and Natural Language}, year = {1997}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and {\L}ucia Iwa\'nska}, pages = {1--6}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;contextual-reasoning;} } @article{ akman:1999a, author = {Varol Akman}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}urvey of the State of the Art in Human Language Technology}, edited by {G}iovanni {B}attista {V}arile and {A}ntonio {Z}ampolli}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {161--164}, xref = {Review of varile-zampolli:1997a.}, topic = {nlp-technology;} } @article{ akman:2003a, author = {Varol Akman}, title = {Reading {M}c{D}ermott: Review of \emph{{M}ind and Mechanism}, by {D}rew {M}c{D}ermott}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {151}, number = {1--2}, pages = {227--235}, xref = {Review of mcdermott_d:2001a.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;mind-body-problem;consciousness;} } @incollection{ akman:2007a, author = {Varol Akman}, title = {On a Proposal of {S}trawson Concerning Context vs. `What is Said'}, booktitle = {Perspectives on Context}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2007}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {79--94}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {context;assertion;} } @incollection{ akman-alpaslan:1999a, author = {Varol Akman and Ferda Nur Alpaslan}, title = {Strawson on Intended Meaning and Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {1--14}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;speaker-meaning;} } @article{ akman-blackburn_p:2000a, author = {Varol Akman and Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Editorial: {A}lan {T}uring and Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {391--395}, topic = {Turing;foundations-of-AI;history-of-AI;} } @book{ akman-etal:2001a, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, title = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Horacio Arlo-Costa, "Trade-Offs between Inductive Power and Logical Omniscience in Modeling Context", pp. 1--14 2. John A. Barnden, "Uncertainty and Conflict Handling in the {ATT}-Meta Context-Based System for Metaphorical Reasoning", pp. 15--29 3. Travis Bauer and David B. Leake, "{W}ord{S}eive: A Method for Real-Time Context Extraction", pp. 30--44 4. John Bell, "Pragmatic Reasoning: Pragmatic Semantics and Semantic Pragmatics", pp. 45--58 5. Massimo Beneceretti and Paolo Bouquet and Chiara Ghidini, "On the Dimensions of Context Dependence: Partiality, Approximation, and Perspective", pp. 59--72 6. Claudia Bianchi, "Context of Utterance and Intended Context", pp. 73--66 7. Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini, "Two Formalizations of Context: A Comparison", pp. 87--101 8. Jocelyn Cohan, "Consider the Alternatives: Focus in Contrast and Context", pp. 102--115 9. John H. Connolly, "Context in the Study of Human Languages and Computer Programming Languages: A Comparison", pp. 116--128 10. Mehdi Dastani and Bipin Indurkhya, "Modeling Context Effect in Perceptual Domains", pp. 129--142 11. Bruce Edmonds, "Learning Appropriate Contexts", pp. 143--155 12. Hamid R. Ekbia and Ana G. Maguitman, "Context and Relevance: A Pragmatic Approach", pp. 156--169 13. Roberta Ferrario, "Counterfactual Reasoning", pp. 170--183 14. Martin Romacker and Udo Hahn, "Context-Based Ambiguity Management for Natural Language Processing", pp. 184--197 15. Amy E. Henninger and Avelino J.Gonzalez and Michael Georgiopoulos and Michael De{M}aro, "A Connectionist-Symbolic Approach to Modeling Agent Behavior: Neural Networks Grouped by Contexts", pp. 198--209 16. Martin Juettner and Ingo Rentschler, "Context Dependency of Pattern-Category Learning", pp. 210--220 17. Boicho Kokinov and Maurice Grinberg, "Simulating Context Effects in Problem Solving with {AMBR}", pp. 221--234 18. David Langlois and Kamel Smaili and Jean-Paul Haton, "A New Method Based on Context for Combining Statistical Language Models", pp. 235--247 19. Tomoko Matsui, "Experimental Pragmatics: Towards Testing Relevance-Based Predictions about Anaphoric Bridging Inferences", pp. 248--260 20. Heiko Maus, "Workflow Context as a Means for Intelligent Information Support", pp. 261--274 21. Renate Motschnig-Pitrik and Ladislav Nykl, "The Role and Modeling of Context in a Cognitive Model of {R}oger's Person-Centred Approach", pp. 275--289 22. Carlo Penco, "Local Holism", pp. 290--303 23. Isodora Stojanovic, "Whom is the Problem of the Essential Indexical a Problem for?", pp. 304--315 24. Charles Tijus, "Contextual Categorization and Cognitive Phenomena", pp. 316--329 25. Elise H. Turner and Roy M. Turner, "Representing the Graphics Context to Support Understanding Plural Anaphora in Multi-Modal Interfaces", pp. 330--342 26. Roy M. Turner and Elise H. Turner and Thomas A. Wagner and Thomas J. Wheeler and Nancy E. Ogle, "Using Explicit, A Priori Contextual Knowledge in an Intelligent Web Search Agent", pp. 343--352 27. Nicla Vassallo, "Contexts and Philosophical Problems of Knowledge", pp. 353--366 28. Holger Wache, "Practical Context Transformation for Information System Interoperability", pp. 367--380 29. Roger A. Young, "Explanation as Contextual", pp. 381--394 30. Elisabetta Zibetti and Vicen\c{c} Quera and Francesc Salvador Beltran and Charles Tijus, "Contextual Categorization: A Mechanism Linking Perception and Knowledge in Modeling and Simulating Perceived Events as Actions", pp. 395--408 31. William A. Adams, "The Motivational Context", pp. 409--412 32. Guido Boella and Leonardo Lesmo, "An Approach to Anaphora Based on Mental Models", pp. 413--416 33. Cristina Bosco and Carla Bazzanella, "Context and Multi-Media Corpora, pp. 417--420 34. Luc Bovens and Stephan Hartmann, "Belief Expansion, Contextual Fit and the Reliability of Information Sources", pp. 421--424 35. Aline Chevalier and Laure Martinex, "The Role of Context in the Acquisition and in the Organization of Knowledge: Studies from Adults and from Children", pp. 425--428 36. Piotr Ciskowski, "{VC}-Dimension of a Context-Dependent Perception", pp. 429--432 37. Christo Dichev, "A Framework for a Context-Driven Web Resource Directory", pp. 433--436 38. Patrick Etcheverry and Phillipe Lopist\'eguy and Pantxika Dagorret, "Specifying Contexts for Coordination Patterns", pp. 437--440 39. Anne-Laure Fayard and Austin Henderson, "Looking at `Situated' Technology: Differences in Pattern of Interaction Reflect Differences in Context", pp. 441-444 40. J.T. Fern\'andez-Breis and Rafael Valencia-Garcia and Rodrigo Martinez-B\'ejar and Pascual Cantos-G\`omez, "A Context-Driven Approach for Knowledge Acquisition: Application to a Leukemia Domain", pp. 445--448 41. Anita Fetzer, "Context in Natural-Language Communication: Presupposed or Co-Supposed?", pp. 449--452 42. Avelino J. Gonzalez and Shinya Sacki, "Using Contexts Competition to Model Tactical Human Behavior in a Simulation", pp. 453--456 43. Roland Klemke and Achim Nick, "Case Studies in Developing Contextualizing Information Systems", pp. 457--460 44. Jean-Charles Pomerol and Patrick br\'ezillon, "About Some Relationships between Knowledge and Context", pp. 461--464 45. Debbie Richards, "Combining Cases and Rules to Provide Contextualized Knowledge Based Systems", pp. 465--469 }, ISBN = {3-540-42379-6}, topic = {context;} } @article{ akman-etal:2004a, author = {Varol Akman and Selim T. Erdo\v{g}an and Joohyung Lee and Vladimir Lifschitz and Hudson Turner}, title = {Representing the Zoo World and the Traffic World in the Language of the Causal Calculator}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {153}, number = {1--2}, pages = {105--140}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;action-formalisms;causality;} } @inproceedings{ akman-surav:1995a, author = {Varol Akman and Mehmet Surav}, title = {Contexts, Oracles, and Relevance}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Formalizing Context}, year = {1995}, pages = {23--30}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;contextual-reasoning;} } @article{ akman-surav:1996a, author = {Varol Akman and Mehmet Surav}, title = {Steps Toward Formalizing Context}, journal = {{AI} Magazine}, year = {1996}, volume = {17}, number = {3}, pages = {55--72}, topic = {context;} } @article{ akman-surav:1997a, author = {Varol Akman and Mehmet Surav}, title = {The Use of Situation Theory in Context Modeling}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {427--438}, topic = {context;situation-theory;} } @inproceedings{ akman-tin:1990a, author = {Varol Akman and E. T{\i}n}, title = {What Is in a Context?}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1990 Bilkent Intlernational Conference on New Trends in Communication, Control, and Signal Processing, Volume {II}}, year = {1990}, editor = {E. Ar{\i}kan}, pages = {1670--1676}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ akman-tin:1990b, author = {Varol Akman and E. T{\i}n}, title = {Causal Theories, Contexts, and Design}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Eurographics Workshop on Intelligent {CAD} Systems: Added Value of Intelligence to {CAD}}, year = {1990}, pages = {114--119}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, publisher, organization}, topic = {causality;context;} } @incollection{ akras:2005a, author = {Fabio N. Akras}, title = {Modelling the Context of Learning Interactions in Intelligent Learning Environments}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {1--14}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;cognitive-psychology;learning;} } @article{ aktunc:2014a, author = {M. Emrah Aktunc}, title = {Severe Tests in Neuroimaging: What We Can Learn and How We Can Learn It}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2014}, volume = {81}, number = {5}, pages = {961--973}, topic = {philosophy-of-psychology;neuroimaging;} } @book{ alagar-periyasamy:1998a, author = {V.S. Alagar and K. Periyasamy}, title = {Specification of Software Systems}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0387984305 (hardcover: alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.758 .A421 1998.}, topic = {software-engineering;} } @inproceedings{ alahverdzhieva_k-lascarides_a:2011a, author = {Katya Alahverdzhieva and Alex Lascarides}, title = {An {HPSG} Approach to Synchronous Deixis and Speech}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 18th International Conference on Head-Driven Phase Structure Grammar}, year = {2011}, editor = {Stefan Muller}, pages = {6--24}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {HPSG;gesture;} } @article{ alai:2004a, author = {Mario Alai}, title = {A.I., Scientific Discovery and Realism}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2004}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {21--42}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;automated-scientific-discovery;} } @incollection{ alama:2015a, author = {Jesse Alama}, title = {The Lambda Calculus}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, note = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2015/entries/lambda-calculus/}, year = {2015}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, edition = {Spring 2015}, topic = {lambda-calculus;} } @inproceedings{ alasady_r:1992a, author = {Raad Al-Asady}, title = {A Unified Approach to Inheritance with Conflicts}, booktitle = {{AI} and Cognitive Science '92}, year = {1992}, editor = {Kevin Ryan and Richard F.E. Sutcliffe}, pages = {291--294}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {...In this paper we investigate and describe a new approach for multiple inheritance with conflict, which concentrates on finding the degree of plausibility of the statement and of its negation. We identify a new implicit default measure simultaneously between the conflict classes and their shared property which we call default correlation (DC). ... This approach produces unambiguous results when applied to any inheritance hierarchy with exceptions.}, topic = {inheritance-theory;conflict-resolution;} } @book{ alasady_r:1995a, author = {Raad Al-Asady}, title = {Inheritance Theory: An Artificial Intelligence Approach}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Corp.}, year = {1995}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, ISBN = {1-56750-155-9}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Introduction 2. Inheritance Hierarchies 3. Current Approach to Nonmonotonic Reasoning 4. The Problem: A Clash of Intuitions 5. ETR: An Exception-Based Approach to Nonmonotonic Reasoning 6. Default Correlation: An Approach to Inheritance with Conflict 7. Application: Causal Reasoning and ETR 10. Application: Analogical Reasoning and ETR 11. Conclusion }, rtnote = {UMich Media Library Q338.85 .A43 1995}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @inproceedings{ alasady_r-narayanan_a:1993a, author = {Raad Al-Asady and Ajit Narayanan}, title = {More Notes on `A Clash of Intuitions'}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {682--687}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files "Al-Asady".}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @article{ alberdi-sleeman:1997a, author = {Eugenio Alberdi and Derek H. Sleeman}, title = {Re{TAX}: A Step in the Automation of Taxonomic Revision}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {91}, number = {2}, pages = {257--279}, topic = {automated-scientific-discovery;taxonomic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ alberg-shahmehri:2001a, author = {Johan Alberg and Nahid Shahmehri}, title = {An Empirical Study of Human Web Assistants: Implications for User Support in Web Information Systems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of ACM CHI 2001 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems }, year = {2001}, editor = {Julie A. Jacko and Andrew Sears and Jonathan Arnowitz}, organization = {Association for Computing Machinery}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, missinginfo = {pages}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {HCI;web-assistants;} } @incollection{ albers:2002a, author = {Wulf Albers}, title = {Prominence Theory as a Tool to Model Boundedly Rational Decisions}, booktitle = {Bounded Rationality: The Adaptive Toolbox}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Gerd Gigerenzer and Reinhard Selten}, pages = {297--317}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {limited-rationality;qualitative-utility;pr-course;} } @incollection{ albers_w-albers_g:1983a, author = {Wulf Albers and Gisela Albers}, title = {On the Prominence Structure in the Decimal System}, booktitle = {Decision Making under Uncertainty: Cognitive Decision Research, Social Interaction, Development and Epistemology}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1983}, editor = {Robert W. Scholz}, pages = {271--287}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {estimated-quantities;} } @article{ albert_r:2007a, author = {R\'eka Albert}, title = {Network Inference, Analysis, and Modeling in Systems Biology}, journal = {The Plant Cell}, year = {2007}, volume = {19}, number = {11}, pages = {3327-3338}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de21}, topic = {systems-biloogy;} } @book{ albertazzi-etal:2011a, editor = {Liliana Albertazzi and Gert J. van Tonder and Dhanraj Vishwanath}, title = {Perception Beyond Inference: The Information Content of Visual Processes}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {978-0262015028}, xref = {Review: magnani:2012a}, topic = {vision;visual-attention;visual-reasoning;} } @article{ alberti_m-etal:2006a, author = {Marco Alberti and Marco Gavanelli. and Evelina Lamma. and Paola Mello and Paoulo Torroni and Giovanni Sartor}, title = {Mapping Deontic Operators to Abductive Expectations}, journal = {Computational and Mathematical Organization Theory,}, year = {2006}, volume = {12}, number = {2--3}, pages = {205--225}, topic = {abductive-logic-progranning;deontic-logic;} } @article{ alberucci-facchine:2009a, author = {Luca Alberucci and Alessandro Facchine}, title = {On Modal $\mu$-Calculus and {G}\"odel-{L}\"ob Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2009}, volume = {91}, number = {2}, pages = {145--169}, topic = {mu-calculus;provability-logic;} } @article{ alberucci-salipante:2004a, author = {Luca Alberucci and Vincenzo Salipante}, title = {On Modal $\mu$-Calculus and Non-Well-Founded Set Theory}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {33}, number = {4}, pages = {343--360}, topic = {modal-logic;nonwellfounded-sets;} } @book{ albeverio-etal:1986a, author = {Sergio Albeverio and Jens Erik Fenstad and Raphael H{\o}egh-Krohn and Tom Lingstr{\o}m}, title = {Nonstandard Methods in Stochastic Analysis and Mathematical Physics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1986}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under "Fenstad".}, topic = {nonstandard-analysis;} } @article{ albrecht-etal:1998a, author = {David Albrecht and Frank A B\"auerle and John N. Crossley}, title = {Currey-{H}oward terms for Linear Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1998}, volume = {61}, number = {2}, pages = {223--235}, topic = {proof-theory;linear-llgic;} } @article{ albritton:1957a, author = {Rogers Albritton}, title = {Present Truth and Future Contingency}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1957}, volume = {1957}, number = {66}, pages = {29--46}, contentnote = {Reply to Taylor. Denies that FA implies Nec FA.}, xref = {Review: gale_rm:1968a}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;} } @article{ albritton:1964a, author = {Rogers Albritton}, title = {Comments}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1964}, volume = {62}, number = {21}, pages = {691--694}, xref = {Commentary on: putnam_h:1964a1.}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ albritton:2011a, author = {Rogers Albritton}, title = {On a Form of Skeptical Argument from Possibility}, booktitle = {The Epistemology of Perception}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2011}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Berit Brogard}, pages = {1--24}, address = {Oxford}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {skepticism;knowledge;possibility;} } @inproceedings{ albritton-moore_jd:1999a, author = {David Albritton and Johanna D. Moore}, title = {Discourse Cues in Narrative Text: Using Production to Predict Conversation}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Psychological Models of Communication in Collaborative Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Susan E. Brennan and Alain Giboin and David R. Traum}, pages = {1--8}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {discourse;discourse-cue-words;} } @book{ albus:1981a, author = {James S. Albus}, title = {Brains, Behavior and Robotics}, publisher = {Byte Books}, address = {Peterborough, New Hampshire}, year = {1985}, topic = {AI-survey;} } @article{ alchourron:1972a, author = {Carlos E. Alchourr\'on}, title = {The Intuitive Background of Normal Legal Discourse and its Formalization}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1972}, volume = {1}, number = {3--4}, missinginfo = {pages = {447--}}, topic = {legal-reasoning;deontic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ alchourron:1991a, author = {Carlos E. Alchourr\'on}, title = {Philosophical Foundations of Deontic Logic and the Logic of Defeasible Conditionals}, booktitle = {Workshop on Deontic Logic in Computer Science}, year = {1991}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {editor, publisher, pages}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ alchourron:1994a, author = {Carlos E. Alchourr\'on}, title = {Philosophical Foundations of Deontic Logic and the Logic of Defeasible Conditionals}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic in Computer Science: Normative System Specification}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1994}, editor = {J.J. Meyer and R.J. Wieringa}, pages = {43--84}, address = {New York}, topic = {deontic-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;conditionals; nonmonotonic-conditionals;} } @incollection{ alchourron:1995a, author = {Carlos E. Alchourr\'on}, title = {Defeasible Logics: Demarcation and Affinities}, booktitle = {Conditionals: From Philosophy to Computer Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Gabriella Crocco and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig}, pages = {67--102}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ alchourron:1996a, author = {Carlos Alchourr\'on}, title = {Detachment and Defeasibility in Deontic Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1996}, volume = {57}, number = {1}, pages = {5--18}, topic = {deontic-logic;prima-facie-obligation;} } @incollection{ alchourron-bulygin:1981a, author = {Carlos E. Alchourr\'on and Eugenio Bulygin}, title = {The Expressive Conception of Norms}, booktitle = {New Studies in Deontic Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1981}, editor = {Risto Hilpinen}, pages = {95--125}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {normative-systems;permission;deontic-logic;} } @article{ alchourron-etal:1985a, author = {Carlos E. Alchourr\'on and Peter G\"ardenfors and David C. Makinson}, title = {On the Logic of Theory Change: Partial Meet Contraction Functions and Their Associated Revision Functions}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1985}, volume = {50}, pages = {510--530}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @incollection{ alchourron-makinson_dc:1981a, author = {Carlos E. Alchourr\'on and David C. Makinson}, title = {Hierarchies of Regulations and Their Logic}, booktitle = {New Studies in Deontic Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1981}, editor = {Risto Hilpinen}, pages = {125--148}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {deontic-logic;normative-systems;rules-and-regulations;} } @article{ alchourron-makinson_dc:1982a, author = {Carlos E. Alchourr\'on and David C. Makinson}, title = {On the Logic of Theory Change: Contraction Functions and Their Associated Revision Functions}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1982}, volume = {48}, pages = {14--37}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers. "Alchourron"}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ alchourron-makinson_dc:1985a, author = {Carlos E. Alchourr\'on and David C. Makinson}, title = {On the Logic of Theory Change: Safe Contraction}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1985}, volume = {44}, pages = {405--422}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ alderete-etal:1999a, author = {John Alderete and Jill Beckman and Laura Benula and Amalia Gnanadesikan and John McCarthy and Suzanne Urbanczyk}, title = {Reduplication with Fixed Segmentation}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1999}, volume = {30}, number = {3}, pages = {327--364}, topic = {reduplication;morphology;phonology; optimality-theory;} } @incollection{ aldrich_vc:1938a, author = {Virgil C. Aldrich}, title = {Messrs. {S}chlick and {A}yer on Immortality}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {171--174}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: aldrich_va:1938a1}, topic = {logical-positivisnm;} } @article{ aldrich_vc:1938b1, author = {Virgil C. Aldrich}, title = {Pictorial Meaning and Picture Thinking}, journal = {The Kenyon Review}, year = {1943}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {403--412}, xref = {Republication: aldrich_vc:1938a2}, topic = {logical-positivism;visual-reasoning;} } @incollection{ aldrich_vc:1938b2, author = {Virgil C. Aldrich}, title = {Pictorial Meaning and Picture Thinking}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {175--181}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: aldrich_vc:1938a1}, topic = {logical-positivism;visual-reasoning;} } @article{ aldrich_vc:1970a, author = {Virgil C. Aldrich}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}eeing and Knowing}, by {F}red {I}. {D}retske}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1970}, volume = {67}, number = {23}, pages = {995--1006}, xref = {Review of dretske_fi:1969a.}, topic = {logic-of-perception;epistemology;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ alechina_n:1992a, author = {Natasha Alechina}, title = {On a Decidable Generalized Quantifier Logic Corresponding to a Decidable Fragment of First-Order Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1992}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {177--189}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;} } @techreport{ alechina_n:1993a, author = {Natasha Alechina}, title = {Binary Quantifiers and Relational Semantics}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP-93-13}, year = {1993}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland }, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, url = {https://eprints.illc.uva.nl/1200/}, topic = {quantifiers;nonmonotonic-reasoning;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ alechina_n:1997a, author = {Natasha Alechina}, title = {Review of \emph{{Q}uantifiers: Logic, Models, and Computation}, edited by {M}. {K}rynicki, {M}. {M}ostowski, and {L}.{W}. {S}zczerba}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1997}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {342--344}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;} } @article{ alechina_n:2005a, author = {Natasha Alechina}, title = {Editorial}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2005}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {261--262}, topic = {guarded-fragments;decidability;subtheories-of-FOL;} } @inproceedings{ alechina_n-etal:2004a, author = {Natasha Alechina and Brian S. Logan and Mark Whitsey}, title = {A Complete and Decidable Logic for Resource-Bounded Agents}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 3rd International Joint Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems (AAMAS 2004)}, year = {2004}, editor = {Nicholas R. Jennings and Carles Sierra and Liz Sonenberg and Milind Tambe}, pages = {606--613}, organization = {ACM}, publisher = {ACM Press}, address = {New York}, topic = {limited-rationality;epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality; syntactic-modality;pr-course;} } @incollection{ alechina_n-etal:2006a, author = {Natasha Alechina and Mehdi Dastani and Brian S. Logan and John-Jules Ch. Meyer}, title = {Reasoning about Agent Deliberation}, booktitle = {Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference (KR2008)}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {16--26}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {We present a family of sound and complete logics for reasoning about deliberation strategies for SimpleAPL programs. SimpleAPL is a fragment of the agent programming language 3APL designed for the implementation of cognitive agents with beliefs, goals and plans. The logics are variants of PDL, and allow us to prove safety and liveness properties of SimpleAPL agent programs under different deliberation strategies. We show how to axiomatize different deliberation strategies for SimpleAPL programs, and, for each strategy we consider, prove a correspondence between the operational semantics of SimpleAPL and the models of the corresponding logic. We illustrate the utility of our approach with an example in which we show how to verify correctness properties for a simple agent program under different deliberation strategies. }, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;BDI-architectures;} } @incollection{ alechina_n-etal:2008a, author = {Natasha Alechina and Mehdi Dastani and Brian S. Logan and John-Jules Ch. Meyer}, title = {Reasoning about Agent Deliberation}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {16--26 }, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {BDI-architectures;problem-specification;} } @article{ alechina_n-etal:2009a, author = {Natasha Alechina and Brian Logan and Hoang N. Nguyen and Abdur Rakib1}, title = {Verifying Time, Memory and Communication Bounds in Systems of Reasoning Agents}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2009}, volume = {169}, number = {2}, pages = {385--403}, abstract = {We present a framework for verifying systems composed of heterogeneous reasoning agents, in which each agent may have differing knowledge and inferential capabilities, and where the resources each agent is prepared to commit to a goal (time, memory and communication bandwidth) are bounded. ... We present a novel temporal epistemic logic, BMCL-CTL, which allows us to describe a set of reasoning agents with bounds on time, memory and the number of messages they can exchange....}, topic = {program-verification;temporal-logic;epistemic-logic; resource-limited-reasoning;multiagent-systems;} } @article{ alechina_n-etal:2011a, author = {Natasha Alechina and Mehdi Dastani and Brian Logan and John-Jules Meyer}, title = {Reasoning about Plan Revision in {BDI} Agent Programs}, journal = {Theoretical Computer Science}, year = {2011}, volume = {412}, number = {4}, pages = {6115--6134}, topic = {BDI-architectures;plan-maintenance;} } @article{ alechina_n-etal:2011b, author = {Natasha Alechina and Mehdi Dastani and Brian Logan and John-Jules Meyer}, title = {Reasoning about Agent Deliberation}, journal = {International Journal of Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems}, year = {2011}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {356--381}, topic = {agent-architectures;metareasoning;plan-verification;} } @incollection{ alechina_n-etal:2018a, author = {Natasha Alechina and Mehdi Dastani and Brian Logan}, title = {Norm Specification and Verification in Multi-Agent Systems}, booktitle = {Handbook of Normative Multiagent Systems}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2018}, editor = {Amit Chopra and Leon van der Torre and Harko Verhagen and Serena Villata}, pages = {29-55}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\chopra.pdf}, topic = {multiagent-systems;} } @incollection{ alechina_n-etal:2022a, author = {Natasha Alechina and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Brian Logan and Giuseppe Perelli}, title = {Automatic Synthesis of Dynamic Norms for Multi-Agent Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {12--21}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Norms have been widely proposed to coordinate and regulate multi-agent systems (MAS) behaviour. We consider the problem of synthesising and revising the set of norms in a normative MAS to satisfy a design objective expressed in Alternating Time Temporal Logic (ATL*). ATL* is a well-established language for strategic reasoning, which allows the specification of norms that constrain the strategic behaviour of agents. We focus on dynamic norms, that is, norms corresponding to Mealy machines, that allow us to place different constraints on the agents' behaviour depending on the state of the norm and the state of the underlying MAS. We show that synthesising dynamic norms is (k + 1)-EXPTIME, where k is the alternation depth of quantifiers in the ATL* specification. ...}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {deontic-logic;multiagent-systems;} } @article{ aleferes-etal:2002a, author = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Aleferes and J.A. Leite and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Halina Przymusinska and Teodor C. Przymucinski}, title = {{LUPS}---A Language for Updating Logic Programs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {138}, number = {1--2}, pages = {87--116}, topic = {logic-programming;program-revision-rules;} } @incollection{ aleksander_i:2002a, author = {Igor Aleksander}, title = {Neural Depictions of `World' and `Self': Bringing Computational Understanding to the {C}hinese Room}, booktitle = {Views into the {C}hinese Room: New Essays on {S}earle and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {John Preston and Mark Bishop}, pages = {250--268}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;} } @article{ aleksander_i-dunmall_b:2003a, author = {Igor Aleksander and B. Dunmall}, title = {Axioms and Tests for the Presence of Minimal Consciousness in Agents {I}: Preamble}, journal = {Journal of Consciousness Studies}, year = {2005}, volume = {10}, number = {4--5}, pages = {7--19}, topic = {consciousness;} } @incollection{ aleksander_i-etal:2005a, author = {Igor Aleksander and Mercedes Lahnstein and Rabinder Lee}, title = {Will and Emotions: A Machine Model that Shuns Illusions}, booktitle = {{AISB}'05: Social Intelligence and Interaction in Animals, Robots and Agents: Proceedings of the Symposium on Next Generation Approaches to Machine Consciousness Imagination, Development, Intersubjectivity and Embodiment}, publisher = {The Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and the Simulation of Behaviour}, year = {2005}, editor = {Ron Chrisley and Rob Clowes and Steve Torrance}, pages = {110--116}, address = {Bath, England}, abstract = {Benjamin Libet discovered a neo-cortical 'readiness potential' associated with the spontaneous movement of a finger (Libet et al, 1983). ... This paper suggests that the readiness potential is emotional in nature and appropriately unconscious, removing the need to evoke illusions. A machine model is developed which shows how an emotional readiness potential might relate to a legitimate sensation of causation}, topic = {motor-control;cognitive-robotics;} } @incollection{ aleliunas:1990a, author = {Romas Aleliunas}, title = {A New Normative Theory of Probabilistic Logic}, booktitle = {Knowledge Representation and Defeasible Reasoning}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1990}, editor = {Henry Kyburg and Ronald Loui and Greg Carlson}, pages = {387--403}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {abstract-probability;probability-semantics;} } @article{ aler-etal:2002a, author = {Ricardo Aler and Daniel Borrajo and Pedro Isasi}, title = {Using Genetic Programming to Leanr and Improve Control Knowledge}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {141}, number = {1--2}, pages = {29--56}, topic = {genetic-algorithms;procedural-control;} } @article{ aleven:2003a, author = {Vinvent Aleven}, title = {Using Background Knowledge in Case-Based Legal Reasoning: A Computational Model and an Intelligent Learning Environment}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {150}, number = {1-2}, pages = {183--237}, topic = {AI-and-law;case-based-reasoning;intelligent-tutoring-systems;} } @book{ alexander_hg:1988a, author = {Hubert G. Alexander}, title = {The Language and Logic of Philosophy}, publisher = {University Press of America}, year = {1988}, address = {Lanham, Maryland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, rtnote = {The idea is good, but the execution of it appears to be fairly superficial in this work.}, topic = {philosophical-reasoning;} } @article{ alexander_i:1985a, author = {Ivor Alexander}, title = {{`}If' and Quantification}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1985}, volume = {45}, number = {4}, pages = {186--190}, xref = {Commentary on: dudman_vh:1984b}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ alexander_j-skyrms_b:1999a, author = {Jason Alexander and Brian Skyrms}, title = {Bargaining with Neighbors: Is Justice Contagious?}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {96}, number = {11}, pages = {588--508}, topic = {evolutionary-game-theory;distributive-justice;} } @book{ alexander_l-sherwin_e:2008a, author = {Larry Alexander and Emily Sherwin}, title = {Demystifying Legal Reasoning}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {978-0-521-70395-6}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate K 247.6 .A431 2001}, topic = {legal-reasoning;philosophy-of-law;} } @unpublished{ alexander_sa:2013a, author = {Samuel A. Alexander}, title = {Self-Referential Theories}, year = {2013}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Mathematics, The Ohio State University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn13}, abstract = {We study the structure of families of theories in the language of arithmetic extended to allow these families to refer to one another and to themselves. If a theory contains schemata expressing its own truth and expressing a specific Turing index for itself, and contains some other mild axioms, then that theory is untrue. We exhibit some families of true self-referential theories that barely avoid this forbidden pattern.}, topic = {epistemic-arithmetic;Church's-thesis;} } @phdthesis{ alexander_sa:2013b, author = {Samuel A. Alexander}, title = {The Theory of Several Knowing Machines}, school = {The Ohio State University}, year = {2013}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Columbus, Ohio}, topic = {epistemic-arithmetic;Church's-thesis;} } @article{ alexander_sa:2014a, author = {Samuel A. Alexander}, title = {A Machine that Knows its Own Code}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2014}, volume = {102}, number = {3}, pages = {567--576}, topic = {epistemic-arithmetic;mechanistic-thesis;} } @article{ alexander_sa:2020a, author = {Samual A. Alexander}, title = {Self-Referential Theories}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {85}, number = {1}, pages = {1687--1716}, topic = {self-reference;metalinguistic-hierarchies;semantic-paradoxes;} } @book{ alexanderofaphrodisias-quaestiones:1983a1, author = {Alexander of Aphrodisias}, title = {Quaestiones}, publisher = {Duckworth}, year = {1983}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0715623729}, note = {Translated by R. W. Sharples, with an introduction and commentary.}, xref = {Republication: alexanderofaphrodisias-quaestiones:1983a2}, rtnote = {UMich GRADUATE LIBRARY, B 535 .A63 Q343 1992.}, topic = {(in)determinism;Aristotle;} } @book{ alexanderofaphrodisias-quaestiones:1983a2, author = {Alexander of Aphrodisias}, title = {Quaestiones}, publisher = {Duckworth}, year = {1992}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0715623729}, note = {Translated by R. W. Sharples.}, rtnote = {UMich GRADUATE LIBRARY, B 535 .A63 Q343 1992.}, topic = {(in)determinism;} } @inproceedings{ alexandersson:1996a, author = {Jan Alexandersson}, title = {Some Ideas for the Automatic Acquisition of Dialogue Structure}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 11th {T}wente Workshop on Language Technology}, year = {1996}, pages = {149--158}, organization = {University of Twente}, address = {Entschede}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, editor, publisher}, topic = {machine-language-learning;discourse-structure;} } @book{ alexandersson:1999a, editor = {Jan Alexandersson}, title = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Knowledge and Reasoning in Practical Dialogue Systems}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Masahiro Araki and Kazunoru Komatani and Taishi Hirata and Shuji Doshita, "A Dialogue Library for Task-Oriented Spoken Dialogue Systems" 2. Maria Aretoulaki and Bernd Ludwig, "Automation-Descriptions and Theorem-Proving: A Marriage Made in Heaven?" 3. Johan Boye and Mats Wir\'en and Manny Rayner and Ian Lewin and David Carter and Ralph Becket, "Language-Proccessing Strategies for Mixed-Initiative Dialogues" 4. Peter Bohlin and Robin Cooper and Elizabet Engdahl and Staffan Larsson, Information States and Dialogue Move Engines" 5. Matthias Denecke and Alex Waibel, "Integrating Knowledge Sources for the Specification of a Task-Oriented Dialogue System" 6. Annika Flycht-Eriksson, "A Survey of Knowledge Sources in Dialogue Systems" 7. Joris Hulstijn, "Modeling Usability: Development Methods for Dialogue Systems" 8. Michael Kipp and Jan Alexandersson and Norbert Reithinger, "Understanding Spontaneous Negotiation Dialogue" 9. Anke K\"olzer, "Universal Dialogue Specification for Conversational Systems" 10. Diane J. Litman and Marilyn A. Walker and Michael S. Kearns, "Acquiring Knowledge of System Performance for Spoken Dialogue" 11. John Aberdeen and Samuel Bayer and Sasha Caskey and Laurie Damianos and Alan Goldschen and Lynette Hirschman and Dan Loehr and Hugo Trapper, "Implementing Practical Dialogue Systems with the {DARPA} Communicator Architecture" 12. Richard McConachy and Ingrid Zukerman, "Dialogue Requirements for Argumentation Systems" 13. Susan McRoy and Syed S. Ali, "A Practical, Declarative Theory of Dialogue" 14. Mark Seligman and Jan Alexandersson and Kristiina Jokinen, "Tracking Morphological and Semantic Co-Occurrences in Spontaneous Dialogues" 15. David R. Traum and Carl Andersen, "Representations of Dialogue State for Domain and Task Independent Meta-Dialogue" }, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ alexandersson-heisterkamp_jaw:2000a, author = {Jan Alexandersson and Paul Heisterkamp}, title = {Some Notes on the Complexity of Dialogues}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First {SIGdial} Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Laila Dybkjaer and Koiti Hasida and David R. Traum}, pages = {160--169}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ alexandersson-poller:1998a, author = {Jan Alexandersson and Peter Poller}, title = {Toward Multilingual Protocol Generation for Spontaneous Speech Dialogues}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Natural Language Generation}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Eduard Hovy}, pages = {198--207}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-generation;machine-translation;} } @incollection{ alexandriou_a-etal:2003a, author = {Artemis Alexandriou and Monika Rathert and Arnim von Stechow}, title = {Introduction: The Modules of Perfect Constructions}, booktitle = {Perfect Explorations}, year = {2003}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, editor = {Artemis Alexandriou and Monika Rathert and Arnim von Stechow}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {perfective-aspect;} } @article{ alexandrova:2008a, author = {Anna Alexandrova}, title = {Making Models Count}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2008}, volume = {75}, number = {3}, pages = {383--404}, topic = {scientific-models;philosophy-of-economics;explanation; auction-protocols;} } @inproceedings{ alexeyenko_s:2018a, author = {Sascha Alexeyenko}, title = {Quantification in Event Semantics: Generalized Quantifiers Vs. Sub-Events}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 22}, editor = {Uli Sauerl and and Stephanie Solt}, year = {2018}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {Leibniz-Centre General Linguistics}, address = {Berlin}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/GE4MWViN/SuB22-twovolume.pdf}, pages = {39--54}, abstract = {The goal of this paper is to evaluate two approaches to quantification in event semantics, namely the analysis of quantificational DPs in terms of generalized quantifiers and the analysis proposed in Schein (1993) according to which quantifiers over individuals contain an existential quantifier over sub-events in their scope. ... This paper shows that the sub-events analysis also provides a better account of the Event Type Principle if a broader range of data is considered ...}, topic = {event-semantics;nl-quantifiers;} } @book{ alexiadou_a-etal:2003a, editor = {Artemis Alexiadou and Monika Rathert and Arnim von Stechow}, title = {Perfect Explorations}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {2003}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {9783110172294}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Elena Anagnostopoulou, "Participles and Voice", pp. 1--36 2. Fabrizio Arosio, "Temporal Homogeneity and the {I}talian Perfect", pp. 37--68 3. Abdelkader Fassi Fehri, "Arabie Perfect and Temporal Adverbs", pp. 69--100 4 Anastasia Giannakidou, "A Puzzle about Until and the Present Perfect", pp. 101--132 5. Sabine Iatridou, "A little bit more on the English Perfect", pp. 133--152 6. Sabine Iatridou and Elena Anagnostopoulou and Roumyana Izvorski, "Observations about the Form and Meaning of the Perfect", pp. 153--204 7. Graham Katz, "On the Stativity of the English Perfect", pp. 205--234 8. Amalia Moser, "Tense, Aspect, and the {G}reek Perfect", pp. 235--252 9. Renate Musan, "Seit-Adverbials in Perfect Constructions", pp. 253--276 10. Roumyana Pancheva, "The Aspectual Makeup of Perfect Participles and the Interpretations of the Perfect", pp. 277--306 11. Alia Paslawska and Arnim von Stechow, "Perfect Readings in Russian", pp. 307--362 12. Monika Rathert, "Universal-Existential Puzzles", pp. 363--380 13. Ioannis Veloudis, "Possession and Conversation: the Case of the Category Perfect", pp. 381--400 } , topic = {perfective-aspect;} } @incollection{ alexiadou_a-etal:2003b, author = {Artemis Alexiadou and Monika Rathert and Arnim von Stechow}, title = {Introduction: The Modules of Perfect Constructions}, booktitle = {Perfect Explorations}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {2003}, editor = {Artemis Alexiadou and Monika Rathert and Arnim von Stechow}, pages = {v--xxxviii}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {perfective-aspect;} } @inproceedings{ alfano_g-etal:2018a, author = {Gianvincenzo Alfano and Sergio Greco and Francesco Parisi and Gerardo Ignacio Simari and Guillermo Ricardo Simari}, title = {An Incremental Approach to Structured Argumentation over Dynamic Knowledge Bases}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {78--87}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We study the case of updates consisting of both additions and removals of pieces of knowledge in the Defeasible Logic Programming (DeLP) framework, first analyzing the complexity of the problem and then identifying conditions under which we can avoid unnecessary computations---central to this is the development of data structures to keep track of which results can potentially be affected by a given update. We also present experiments showing that our incremental algorithm yields significantly lower running times in practice, as well as overall fewer recomputations. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {defeasible-logic-programming;} } @inproceedings{ alfano_g-etal:2020a, author = {Gianvincenzo Alfano and Marco Calautti and Sergio Greco and Francesco Parisi and Irina Trubitsyna}, title = {Explainable Acceptance in Probabilistic Abstract Argumentation: Complexity and Approximation}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {33--43}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {Recently there has been an increasing interest in probabilistic abstract argumentation, an extension of Dung's abstract argumentation framework with probability theory. In this setting, we address the problem of computing the probability that a given argument is accepted. ... We show that the complexity of the problem is FP^#P-hard and propose polynomial approximation algorithms with bounded additive error for probabilistic argumentation frameworks where odd-length cycles are forbidden. This is quite surprising since, as we show, such kind of approximation algorithm does not exist for the related FP^#P-hard problem of computing the probability of the credulous acceptance of an argument, even for the special class of argumentation frameworks considered in the paper.}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;reasoning-about-probabilities;complexity-in-AI;} } @book{ alferes_jj-etal:1996a, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Eva Orlowska}, title = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence European Workshop: Proceedings of {JELIA} '96, Evora, Portugal, September 30 - October 3, 1996}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540616306}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Peter Baumgartner and Ulrich Furbach and Ilkka Niemeld, "Hyper Tableaux", pp. 1--17 2. Hans de Nivelle, "An Algorithm for the Retrieval of Unifiers from Discrimination Trees", pp. 18--33 3. Christophe Bourely and Gilles Difourneaux and Nicolas Peltier, "Building Proofs or Counterexamples by Analogy in a Resoluton Framework", pp. 34--49 4. Anatoli Degtyarev and Andrei Voronkov, "What You Always Wanted to Know About Rigid E-Unification", pp. 50--69 5. Alberto Artosi and Paola Benassi and Guido Governatori and Antonino Rotolo, "Labelled Proofs for Quantified Modal Logic", pp. 70--86 6. Francesco M. Donini and Fabio Massacci and Daniele Nardi and Riccardo Rosati, "A Uniform Tableaux Method for Nonmonotonic Modal Logics", pp. 87--103 7. Peter Fr\"ohlich and Wolfgang Nejdl and Michael Schroeder, "Design and Implementation of Diagnostic Strategies Using Modal Logic", pp. 104--118 8. Filipe Santos and Jos\'e Carmo, "A Modal Action Logic Based Framework for Organization Specification and Analysis", pp. 119--133 9. Michael R. Genesereth, "Mc{C}arthy's Idea", pp. 134--142 10. Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\"is Moniz Pereira and Teodor C. Przymusinski, "Strong and Explicit Negation in Non--Monotonic Reasoning and Logic Programming", pp. 143--163 11. Joeri Engelfriet, "Only Persistence Makes Nonmonotonicity Monotonous", pp. 164--175 12. Konstantinos Georgatos, "Ordering-Based Representations of Rational Inference", pp. 176--191 13. Artur Mikitiuk, "Semi-Representability of Default Theories in Rational Default Logic", pp. 192--207 14. Viorica Ciorba, "A Query Answering Algorithm for {L}ukaszewicz' General Open Default Theory", pp. 208--223 15. Joeri Engelfriet and V. Wiktor Marek and Jan Treur and Miroslaw Truszczynski, "Infinitary Default Logic for Specification of Nonmonotonic Reasoning", pp. 224--236 16. Grigoris Antoniou and Allen P. Courtney and J\"urg Ernst and Mary-Anne Williams, "A System for Computing Constrained Default Logic Extensions", pp. 237--250 17. Chandrabose Aravindan, "An Abductive Framework for Negation in Disjunctive Logic Programming", pp. 252--267 18. Stefan Brass and J\"urgen Dix, "Characterizing D-WFS: Confluence and Iterated {GCWA}", pp. 268--283 19. Vasco Pedro and Lums Monteiro, "Modules and Specifications", pp.284--300 20. Manuel Enciso and Inman P. de Guzman and Carlos Rossi, "Temporal Reasoning over Linear Discrete Time", pp. 303--319 21. Regimantas Pliuskevicius, "Similarity Saturation for First Order Linear Temporal Logic with {UNLESS}", pp. 320--336 22. Brandon Bennett, "Carving Up Space: Steps Towards Construction of an Absolutely Complete Theory of Spatial Regions", pp. 337--353 23. Paola Forcheri and Paola Gentilini and Maria Teresa Molfino, "Informational Logic for Automated Reasoning", pp. 354--372 24. Michael Kaminski and Johann A. Makowsky and Michael L. Tiomkin, "Extensions for Open Default Theories via the Domain Closure Assumption", pp. 373--387 25. Cees Witteveen and Wiebe van der Hoek, "Revising and Updating Using a Back-Up Semantics", pp. 388--403 26. Philippe Besnard and Torsten Schaub, "A Simple Signed System for Paraconsistent Reasoning", pp. 404--416 }, topic = {logic-in-AI;} } @incollection{ alferes_jj-etal:1998a, author = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Aleferes and J.A. Leite and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Halina Przymusinska and Teodor C. Przymucinski}, title = {Dynamic Logic Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {98--109}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;logic-programming;belief-revision;kr-course;} } @article{ alferes_jj-etal:2005a, author = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Federico Banti and Antonio Brogi and Jo\~ao Alexandre Leite}, title = {The Refined Extension Principle for Semantics of Dynamic Logic Programming}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2005}, volume = {79}, number = {1}, pages = {7--32}, topic = {action-formalisms;logic-programming;} } @inproceedings{ alferes_jj-pereira_lm:1992a, author = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira}, title = {On Logic Program Semantics with Two Kinds of Negation}, booktitle = {Logic Programming: Proceedings of the 1992 Joint International Conference and Symposium}, year = {1992}, pages = {574--589}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {logic-programming;negation;negation-as-failure;} } @inproceedings{ alferes_jj-pereira_lm:1992b, author = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira}, title = {Belief, Provability, and Logic Programs}, booktitle = {{JELIA}'94}, year = {1994}, pages = {106--121}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @book{ alferes_jj-pereira_lm:1996a, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira}, title = {Reasoning with Logic Programming}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Review: tanaka_k2:2001a.}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @incollection{ alhalimi-kazman:1989a, author = {Reem Al-Halimi and Rick Kazman}, title = {Temporal Indexing through Lexical Chaining}, booktitle = {Word{N}et: An Electronic Lexical Database}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, editor = {Christine Fellbaum}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {wordnet;temporal-representation;} } @book{ alhibri_a:1978a, author = {Azizah Al-Hibri}, title = {Deontic Logic: A Comprehensive Appraisal and a New Proposal}, publisher = {University Press of America}, year = {1978}, address = {Washington, District of Columbia}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ alhibri_a:1979a, author = {Azizah Al-Hibri}, title = {Understanding {R}oss's Paradox}, journal = {Southwestern Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {163--170}, topic = {deontic-logic;Ross'-paradox;} } @article{ alhibri_a:1980a, author = {Azizah Al-Hibri}, title = {Conditionality and {R}oss's Deontic Distinction}, journal = {Southwestern Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {79--88}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ ali-shapiro_sc:1993a, author = {Syed S. Ali and Stuart C. Shapiro}, title = {Natural Language Processing Using a Propositional Semantic Network with Structured Variables}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {4}, pages = {421--451}, topic = {semantic-nets;nl-processing;} } @inproceedings{ aliferis-cooper_gf:1994a, author = {Constantine F. Aliferis and Gregory F. Cooper}, title = {An Evaluation of an Algorithm for Inductive Learning of {B}ayesian Belief Networks Using Simulated Data Sets}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 10th Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence (UAI94)}, year = {1994}, pages = {8--14}, missinginfo = {Editor, Organization, Address}, topic = {machine-learning;Bayesian-networks;} } @book{ aliseda:2006a, author = {Atocha Aliseda}, title = {Abductive Reasoning: Logical Investigations into Discovery and Explanation}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2006}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN-13 = {978-1-4020-3906-5 (Hardback)}, topic = {abduction;} } @book{ aliseda-etal:1998a, editor = {Atocha Aliseda and Rob {van Glabbeek} and Dag Westerst{\aa}hl}, title = {Computing Natural Language}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1998}, address = {Stanford, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. John Perry, "Indexicals, Contexts, and Unarticulated Constituents", pp. 1--11 2. John McCarthy and Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}, "Formalizing Context (Expanded Notes)", pp. 13--50 3. Johan van Benthem, "Changing Contexts and Shifting Assertions", pp. 51--65 4. Jan Jaspars and Megumi Kameyama, "Discourse Preferences and Dynamic Logic", pp. 67--96 5. Victor S\'anchez Valencia, "Polarity, Predicates, and Monotonicity", pp. 97--117 6. M. Andrew Moshier, "HPSG as a Type Theory", pp. 119--139 7. Patrick Suppes, Michael B\"ottner and Lin Liang, "Machine Learning of Physics Word Problems", pp. 141--154 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LL Collections Shelves.}, topic = {context;grammar-formalisms;nl-processing;} } @article{ alissandrakis-etal:2002a, author = {Aris Alissandrakis and Chrystopher L. Nehaniv and Kerstin Dautenhahn}, title = {Imitation With {ALICE}: Learning to Imitate Corresponding Actions Across Dissimilar Embodiments}, journal = {{IEEE} Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics, Part {A}: Systems and Humans}, year = {2002}, volume = {32}, number = {4}, pages = {482--495}, topic = {learning-by-imitation;machine-learning;} } @article{ alizadeh-etal:2014a, author = {Majid Alizadeh and Farzaneh Derakhshan and Hiroakira Ono}, title = {Uniform Interpolation in Substructural Logics}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {455--483}, topic = {proof-theory;substructural-logics;} } @article{ aljazzar-leue:2011a, author = {Husain Aljazzar and Stefan Leue}, title = {{K}: A Heuristic Search Algorithm for Finding the k Shortest Paths}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {18}, pages = {2129--2154}, topic = {search;} } @techreport{ allegranza-bech:1989a, author = {Valerio Allegranza and Annelise Bech}, title = {A Versatile Tool for Treating Unbounded Dependency Constructions in {NLP} and {MT} Systems}, institution = {Gruppo Dima, Sviluppo di Sistimi Linguistica Computazionale, Torino}, year = {1989}, address = {Torino, Italy}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {unbounded-dependency;parsing-algorithms;nl-processing;} } @inproceedings{ allemang-etal:1987a, author = {D. Allemang and M. Tanner and T. Bylander and J. Josephson}, title = {Computational Complexity of Hypothesis Assembly}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, editor = {John McDermott}, pages = {1112--1117}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;abduction;} } @inproceedings{ allen_b:1990a, author = {Beth Allen}, title = {Costly Acquisition of (Differentiated) Information}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Third Conference ({TARK} 1990)}, year = {1990}, editor = {Rohit Parikh}, pages = {169--184}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {communications-modeling;decision-theory;} } @incollection{ allen_c:2006a, author = {Colin Allen}, title = {Deciphering Animal Pain}, booktitle = {Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Muryat Aydede}, pages = {351--366}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-cogsci;animal-cognition;} } @book{ allen_c-bekoff:1997a, editor = {Colin Allen and Marc Bekoff}, title = {Species of Mind}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-01163-8}, topic = {animal-cognition;} } @incollection{ allen_c-etal:2011a, author = {Colin Allen and Wendell Wallach and Iva Smit}, title = {Why Machine Ethics?}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {51--61}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ allen_c-etal:2012a, author = {Collin Allen and Peter M. Todd and Jonathan M. Weinberg}, title = {Reasoning and Rationality}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Eric Margolis and Richard Samuels and Stephen P. Stich}, pages = {41--59}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {rationality;practical-reasoning;} } @book{ allen_j-etal:1987a, author = {John Allen and Sharon Hunnicut and Dennis H. Klatt}, title = {From Text to Speech: The {MIT}alk System}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {speech-generation;} } @phdthesis{ allen_jf:1979a, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {A Plan-Based Approach to Speech Act Recognition}, school = {University of Toronto}, year = {1979}, address = {Toronto, Ontario, Canada}, topic = {pragmatics;speech-acts;speech-act-recognition; plan-recognition;} } @article{ allen_jf:1983a1, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Maintaining Knowledge about Temporal Intervals}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, year = {1983}, volume = {26}, number = {11}, pages = {832--843}, xref = {Several republications. Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems allen:1983a3. Brachman & Levesque Readings in Knowledge Representation allen:1983a2.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;qualitative-reasoning;kr-course;} } @incollection{ allen_jf:1983a2, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Maintaining Knowledge about Temporal Intervals}, booktitle = {Readings in Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1995}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque}, address = {Los Altos, California}, pages = {509--522}, xref = {Originally appeared in Communications of the ACM; 1983; 832--843; allen:1983a. Republished in Brachman & Levesque; Readings in KR}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;qualitative-reasoning;kr-course;} } @incollection{ allen_jf:1983a3, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Maintaining Knowledge about Temporal Intervals}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {361--372}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Originally appeared in Communications of the ACM 1983 832--843 see allen:1983a. Republished in Brachman & Levesque; Readings in KR}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;qualitative-reasoning;kr-course;} } @incollection{ allen_jf:1983b, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Recognizing Intentions from Natural Language Utterances}, booktitle = {Computational Models of Discourse}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1983}, editor = {Michael Brady and Robert C. Berwick}, pages = {107--166}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {plan-recognition;nl-interpretation; pragmatics;} } @article{ allen_jf:1984a1, author = {James Allen}, title = {Towards a General Theory of Action and Time}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {123--154}, year = {1984}, topic = {kr;foundations-of-planning;action;kr-course;} } @incollection{ allen_jf:1984a2, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Towards a General Theory of Action and Time}, booktitle = {Readings in Planning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {James F. Allen and James Hendler and Austin Tate}, pages = {464--479}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Originally in AI 23; 1984; 123--154}, topic = {kr;foundations-of-planning;action;kr-course;} } @incollection{ allen_jf:1990a, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Two Views of Intention: Comments on {B}ratman and on {C}ohen and {L}evesque}, booktitle = {Intentions in Communication}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Jerry Morgan and Martha Pollack}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, year = {1990}, pages = {71--75}, topic = {intention;practical-reasoning;pr-course;foundations-of-planning;} } @incollection{ allen_jf:1990b, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Formal Models of Planning}, booktitle = {Readings in Planning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {James F. Allen and James Hendler and Austin Tate}, pages = {50--54}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;foundations-of-planning;action;kr-course;} } @incollection{ allen_jf:1991a, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Planning as Temporal Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {3--14}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;kr-course;planning;planning-formalisms;temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ allen_jf:1991b, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Temporal Reasoning and Planning}, booktitle = {Reasoning about Plans}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Henry A. Kautz and Richard Pelavin and Joshua Tennenberg}, address = {San Francisco, California}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {kr;planning;action;temporal-reasoning;kr-course;} } @article{ allen_jf:1991c, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Time and Time Again: The Many Ways to Represent Time}, journal = {International Journal of Intelligent Systems}, year = {1991}, volume = {6}, pages = {341--355}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;krcourse;} } @book{ allen_jf:1999a, author = {James F. Allen}, title = {Natural Language Understanding}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley Publishing Company}, year = {1999}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, topic = {nlp-intro;} } @book{ allen_jf-etal:1990a, editor = {James Allen and James Hendler and Austin Tate}, title = {Readings in Planning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {planning;foundations-of-planning;action;} } @book{ allen_jf-etal:1991a, editor = {James F. Allen and Henry A. Kautz and Richard Pelavin and Joshua Tennenberg}, title = {Reasoning about Plans}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {planning;action;temporal-reasoning;} } @book{ allen_jf-etal:1991b, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, title = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, address = {San Francisco, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. James F. Allen, "Planning as Temporal Reasoning", pp. 3--14 2. Jonathan Amsterdam, "Temporal Reasoning and Narrative Conventions", pp. 15--21 3. Giuseppe Attardi and Maria Simi, "Reflections about Reflection", pp. 22--31 4. Christian Balkenius and Peter G\"ardenfors, "Nonmonotonic Inferences in Neural Networks", pp. 32--39 5. Howard Barringer and Michael Fisher and Dov Gabbay and Anthony Hunter, "Meta-Reasoning in Executable Temporal Logic", pp. 40--49 6. John Bell, "Pragmatic Logics", pp. 50--60 7. Antonio Brogi and Franco Turini, "Metalogic for Knowledge Representation", pp. 61--69 8. Tom Bylander, "The Monotonic Abduction Problem: A Functional Characterization on the Edge of Tractability", pp. 70--77 9. Jacqueline Castaing, "A New Formalisation of Subsumption in Frame-Based Representation Systems", pp. 78--87 10. Prasad Chalasani and Oren Etzioni and John Mount, "Integrating Efficient Model-Learning and Problem-Solving Algorithms in Permutation Environments", pp. 89--98 11. Timothy S-C Chou and Marriane Winslett, "Immortal: A Model-Based Belief Revision System", pp. 99--110 12. William S. Davis and James R. Carnes, "Clustering Temporal Intervals to Generate Reference Hierarchies", pp. 111--117 13. James P. Delgrande and W. Ken Jackson, "Default Logic Revisited", pp. 118--127 14. Premkumar Devanbu and Diane J. Litman, "Plan-Based Terminological Reasoning", pp. 128--138 15. Charles Dierbach and Daniel L. Chester, "A Formal Basis for Analogical Reasoning", pp. 139--150 16. Francesco M. Donini and Maurizio Lenzerini and Daniele Nardi and Werner Nutt, "The Complexity of Concept Languages", pp. 151--162 17. Jon Doyle, "Rational Belief Revision", pp. 163--174 18. Didier Dubois and Henri Prade, "Conditional Objects and Non-Monotonic Reasoning", pp. 175--185 19. Eugene C. Freuder, "Completeable Representations of Constraint Satisfaction Problems", pp. 186--195 20. Alan M. Frisch and Richard B. Scherl, "A General Framework for Modal Deduction", pp. 196--207 21. H\'ector Geffner, "Beyond Negation as Failure", pp. 218--229 22. Michael L. Gelfond and Halina Przymusinska and Vladimir Lifschitz and Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski, "Disjunctive Defaults", pp. 230--237 20. Michael Genesereth and Jane Yungjen Hsu, "Partial Programs", pp. 238--249 21. Matthew L. Ginsberg, "Computational Considerations in Reasoning about Action", pp. 250--261 22. G\"osta Grahne, "Updates and Counterfactuals", pp. 269--276 22. Russell Greiner and Pekka Orponen, "Probably Approximately Optimal Derivation Strategies", pp. 277--288 23. Benjamin N. Grosof, "Generalizing Prioritization", pp. 289--300 23. Adam J. Grove and Joseph Y. Halpern, "Naming and Identity in a Multi-Agent Epistemic Logic", pp. 301--312 24. Peter Haddawy, "A Temporal Probability Logic for Representing Actions", pp. 313--324 25. Joseph Y. Halpern and Moshe Y. Vardi, "Model Checking Versus Theorem Proving: A Manifesto", pp. 325--334 26. Bernhard Hollunder and Franz Baader, "Qualifying Number Restrictions in Concept Languages", pp. 335--346 27. Stephen G. Kaufman, "A Formal Theory of Spatial Reasoning", pp. 347--356 28. Philippe Lamarre, "S4 as the Conditional Logic of Nonmonotonicity", pp. 357--367 29. Gerhard Lakemeyer, "On the Relation between Explicit and Implicit Belief", pp. 368--375 30. Vladimir Lifschitz, "Toward a Metatheory of Action", pp. 376--386 31. Hirofumi Katsuno and Alberto Mendelzon, "On the Difference Between Updating a Knowledge Base and Revising It", pp. 387--394 32. Wictor Marek and Grigori Shvarts and Miroslaw Truszcy\'nski, "Modal Nonmonotonic Logics: Ranges, Characterization, Computation", pp. 395--404 33. Karen L. Myers, "Universal Attachment: An Integration Method for Logic Hybrids", pp. 405--416 34. Bernhard Nebel, "Belief Revision and Default Reasoning: Syntax-Based Approaches", pp. 417--428 35. C. David Page, Jr. and Alan M. Frisch, "Generalizing Constraint Atoms in Constraint Logic", pp. 429--440 36. Judea Pearl and Tom S. Verma, "A Theory of Inferred Causation", pp. 441--452 37. Tarcisio Pequeno and Arthur Buchsbaum, "The Logic of Epistemic Inconsistency", pp. 453--460 38. Gregory M. Provan and David L. Poole, "The Utility of Consistency-Based Diagnostic Techniques", pp. 461--472 39. Anand S. Rao and Michael P. Georgeff, "Modeling Rational Agents within a {BDI}-Architecture", pp. 473--484 40. William L. Rodi and Stephen G. Pimentel, "A Nonmonotonic Assumption-Based {TMS} Using Stable Bases", pp. 485--495 41. Torsten Schaub, "Assertional Default Theories: A Semantical View", pp. 496--506 42. Paul Schweizer, "A Metalinguistic Treatment of Epistemic Contexts", pp. 507--513 43. Jeffrey van Baalen, "The Completeness of {DRAT}, A Technique for Automatic Design of Satisfiability Procedures", pp. 514--525 44. Gerard A.W. Vreeswijk, "The Feasibility of Defeat in Default Reasoning", pp. 526--534 45. Michael P. Wellman and Max Henrion, "Qualitative Intercausal Relations, or Explaining `Explaining Away' ", pp. 535--546 46. Michael P. Wellman, "Qualitative Simulation with Multivariate Constraints", pp. 547--557 47. Robert Wilensky, "The Ontology and Representation of Situations", pp. 558--569 48. Cees Witteveen, "Skeptical Reason Maintenance Is Tractable", pp. 570--581 49. Peter G\"ardenfors, "Nonmonotonic Inferences Based on Expectations: A Preliminary Report", pp. 585--590 50. Charles Rich, "Implemented Knowledge Representation and Reasoning Systems: An Endangered Species", pp. 591--592 51. William Mark, "Panel: Achieving Large Scale Knowledge Sharing", pp. 595--596 52. Giuseppe Attardi, "Knowledge Sharing: A Feasible Dream", pp. 597--598 53. Michael R. Genesereth, "Knowledge Interchange Format", pp. 599--600 54. Thomas R. Gruber, "The Role of Common Ontology in Achieving Sharable, Reusable Knowledge Bases", pp. 601--602 }, topic = {kr;kr-course;} } @article{ allen_jf-etal:1995a, author = {James F. Allen and Lenhart K. Schubert and George Ferguson, Peter Heeman and Chung Hee Hwang and Tsuneaki Kato and Marc Light and Nathaniel G. Martin and Bradford W. Miller and Massimo Poesio and David R. Traum}, title = {A Formalization of Viewpoints}, journal = {Journal of Experimental and Theoretical {AI}}, year = {1995}, volume = {7}, pages = {7--48}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {perspective-sensitive-reasoning;context;} } @inproceedings{ allen_jf-etal:1996a, author = {James F. Allen and Bradford W. Miller and Eric K. Ringger and Teresa Sikorski}, title = {A Robust System for Natural Spoken Dialogue}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {62--70}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {speech-recognition;discourse;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ allen_jf-etal:2000a, author = {James F. Allen and Donna Byron and Dave Costello and Myroslava Dzikovska and George Ferguson and Lucian Galescu and Amanda Stent}, title = {{TRIPS}-911 System Demonstration}, booktitle = {Conversational Systems}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Candace Sidner and James Allen and Phil Cohen and Justine Cassell and Laila Dybkjaer and X.D. Huang and Masato Ishizaki and Candace Kamm and Lin-Shan Lee and Susann Luperfoy and Patti Price and Owen Rambow and Norbert Reithinger and Alex Rudnicky and Stephanie Seneff and Dave Stallard and David R. Traum and Marilyn Walker and Wayne Ward}, pages = {33--35}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @inproceedings{ allen_jf-etal:2001a, author = {James F. Allen and George Ferguson and Amanda Stent}, title = {An Architecture for More Realistic Conversational Systems}, booktitle = {{IUI-01}: Proceedings of Intelligent User Interfaces 2001}, year = {2001}, editor = {Candy Sidner and Johanna Moore}, pages = {1--8}, organization = {Association for Computing Machinery}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @article{ allen_jf-etal:2020a, author = {James F. Allen and Lucian Galescu and Cho Man Teng and Ian Perent}, title = {Conversational Agents for Complex Conversational Tasks}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2020}, volume = {41}, number = {4}, pages = {54--78}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @article{ allen_jf-ferguson_g:1994a1, author = {James F. Allen and George Ferguson}, title = {Actions and Events in Interval Temporal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {5}, pages = {531--579}, xref = {Republication: allen_jf-ferguson_g:1994a2}, topic = {temporal-logic;events;action;action-formalisms;} } @incollection{ allen_jf-ferguson_g:1994a2, author = {James F. Allen and George Ferguson}, title = {Actions and Events in Interval Temporal Logic}, booktitle = {Spatial and Temporal Reasoning}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {Oliviero Stock}, pages = {203--245}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Republication of: allen_jf-ferguson_g:1994a1}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;actions;events;} } @article{ allen_jf-kautz:1987a, author = {James F. Allen and Henry A. Kautz}, title = {Logicism Is Alive and Well}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {3}, issue = {3}, pages = {161--162}, xref = {kr;foundations-of-kr;logic-in-AI;} } @incollection{ allen_jf-kautz:1988a, author = {James F. Allen and Henry A. Kautz}, title = {A Model of Naive Temporal Reasoning}, booktitle = {Formal Theories of the Commonsense World}, editor = {Jerry R. Hobbs and Robert C. Moore}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Corporation}, year = {1988}, pages = {251--268}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, topic = {kr;temporal-reasoning;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ allen_jf-koomen:1983a, author = {James F. Allen and Johannes Koomen}, title = {Planning Using a Temporal World Model}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, editor = {Alan Bundy}, pages = {741--747}, publisher = {William Kaufmann, Inc.}, address = {Los Altos, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;planning;} } @unpublished{ allen_jf-litman_dj:1986a, author = {James F. Allen and Diane J. Litman}, title = {Plans, Goals, and Natural Language}, year = {1986}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Computer Science, University of Rochester.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Note says to appear in IEEE, 1986.}, topic = {planning;nl-processing;plan-recognition;} } @article{ allen_jf-perrault_cr:1980a, author = {James F. Allen and C. Raymond Perrault}, title = {Analyzing Intention in Utterances}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1980}, volume = {15}, pages = {143--178}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no11}, topic = {discourse;nl-interpretation; plan-recognition;communicative-intentions;pragmatics;} } @book{ allen_jv:2001a, author = {James V. Allen}, title = {Inference from Signs: Ancient Debates about the Nature of Evidence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198250940 (alk. paper)}, contentsnote = {Aristotle on sign-inference and related forms of argument -- Rationalism, empiricism, and scepticism: Sextus Empircus' treatment of sign-inference -- The stoics on sign-inference and demonstration -- Epicurean sign-inference in Philodemus}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate BC 29 .I6 A551 2001.}, topic = {ancient-philosophy;Stoic-philosophy;epistemology; philosophy-of-language;} } @unpublished{ allen_jv:undateda, author = {James V. Allen}, title = {Signs and Probability}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript. Said to be part appendix to doctoral dissertation.}, missinginfo = {year}, rtnote = {Discarded.}, contentnote = {Has a discussion of default reasoning in ancient philosophy. --RT}, xref = {Superseded by allen_jv:2001a.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;ancient-philosophy;} } @article{ allen_k:2001a, author = {Keith Allen}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}oward a Cognitive Semantics} Volume 1 and {\it Toward a Cognitive Semantics} Volume 2, by {L}eonard {T}almy}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2001}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {309--315}, xref = {Review of: talmy_l:2000a, talmy_l:2000b}, topic = {cognitive-semantics;lexical-semantics;} } @article{ allen_le-engholm:1978a, author = {Layman E. Allen and C. Rudy Engholm}, title = {Normalized Legal Drafting and the Query Method}, journal = {Journal of Legal Education}, year = {1978}, volume = {29}, pages = {380--412}, topic = {legal-language;} } @inproceedings{ allen_le-saxon:1987a, author = {Layman E. Allen and Charles S. Saxon}, year = {1987}, title = {Some Problems in Designing Expert Systems to Aid Legal Reasoning}, booktitle = {First International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law}, pages = {94--103}, address = {Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts}, topic = {legal-AI;} } @article{ allen_p-greaves_m:2011a, author = {Paul Allen and Mark Greaves}, title = {The Singularity Isn't Near}, journal = {{MIT} Technology Review}, year = {2011}, url = {https://www.technologyreview.com/2011/10/12/190773/paul-allen-the-singularity-isnt-near/}, pages = {7--65}, topic = {technological-singularity;} } @article{ allen_rj-etal:2001a, author = {Robert J. Allen and David Garlan James Ivers}, title = {Formal Modeling and Analysis of the {HLA} Component Integration Standard}, journal = {{ACM SIGSOFT} Software Engineering Notes }, year = {2001}, volume = {23}, number = {6}, pages = {70--79}, topic = {software-engineering;software-architecture;} } @book{ allen_s:1989a, editor = {Sture All\'en}, title = {Possible Worlds in Humanities, Arts and Sciences}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1989}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LL Collections shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-possible-worlds;possible-worlds-semantics; literary-criticism;foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @article{ allenhermanson:2005a, author = {Sean Allen-Hermanson}, title = {Morgan's Canon Revisited}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2005}, volume = {72}, number = {4}, pages = {608--631}, topic = {Morgan's-canon;ethology;} } @article{ allenhermanson:2008a, author = {Sean Allen-Hermanson}, title = {Insects and the Problem of Simple Minds: Are Bees Natural Zombies?}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {105}, number = {8}, pages = {389--415}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \m&m\resource}, rtnote = {Rtrnote: Reading notes on file. Research Notes. "Allen-Hermanson"}, topic = {animal-cognition;consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ allis-etal:1994a, author = {L. Victor Allis and Maarten van der Meulen and H. Jaap van den Herik}, title = {Proof-Number Search}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {66}, number = {1}, pages = {91--124}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Proof-number search (pn-search) is designed for finding the game-theoretical value in game trees. It is based on ideas derived from conspiracy-number search and its variants, such as applied cn-search and [alpha][beta]-cn search. While in cn-search the purpose is to continue searching until it is unlikely that the minimax value of the root will change, pn-search aims at proving the true value of the root. Therefore, pn-search does not consider interim minimax values. Pn-search selects the next node to be expanded using two criteria: the potential range of subtree values and the number of nodes which must conspire to prove or disprove that range of potential values. These two criteria enable pn-search to treat efficiently game trees with a non-uniform branching factor. It is shown that in non-uniform trees pn-search outperforms other types of search, such as [alpha]-[beta] iterative-deepening search, even when enhanced with transposition tables, move ordering for the full principal variation, etc. Pn-search has been used to establish the game-theoretical values of Connect-Four, Qubic, and Go-Moku. There pn-search was able to find a forced win for the player to move first. The experiments described here are in the domain of Awari, a game which has not yet been solved. The experiments are repeatable for other games with a non-uniform branching factor. This article describes the underlying principles of pn-search, presents an appropriate implementation, and provides an analysis of its strengths and weaknesses. }, topic = {game-trees;search;conspiracy-number-search;} } @incollection{ allman-woodward_j1:2008a, author = {John Allman and Jim Woodward}, title = {What are Moral Intuitions and What Should We Do about Them? A Neurobiological Perspective}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {164--185}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {moral-intuitions;} } @article{ allo:2006a, author = {Patrick Allo}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}odels of a Man: Essays in Memory of {H}erbert {S}imon}, edited by {M}ie {A}ugier and {J}ames {G}. {M}arch}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2006}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {221--224}, xref = {Review of: augier-march:2004a}, topic = {limited-rationality;Herbert-Simon;pr-course;} } @article{ allo:2007a, author = {Patrick Allo}, title = {Logical Pluralism and Semantic Information}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {36}, number = {6}, pages = {659--694}, topic = {substructural-logics;} } @article{ allo:2012a, author = {Patrick Allo}, title = {Review of \emph{{N}ot Exactly: In Praise of Vagueness}, by {K}ees van {D}eemter}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2012}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {41--45}, xref = {Review of: vandeemter_k:2010a}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @article{ allo:2013a, author = {Patrick Allo}, title = {Adaptive Logic as a Modal Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2013}, volume = {101}, number = {5}, pages = {933--958}, topic = {adaptive-logic;} } @article{ allo:2013b, author = {Patrick Allo}, title = {The Many Faces of Closure and Introspection}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {42}, number = {1}, pages = {91--124}, topic = {epistemic-logic;} } @article{ allori_v:2018a, author = {Valia Allori}, title = {Review of \emph{{Q}uantum Ontology: A Guide to the Metaphysics of Quantum Mechanics}, by {P}eter {J}. {L}ewis}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2018}, volume = {85}, number = {4}, pages = {735--738}, xref = {Review of: lewis_pj:2016a}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @incollection{ allport:1989a, author = {Alan Allport}, title = {Visual Attention}, booktitle = {Foundations of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, editor = {Michael I. Posner}, chapter = {16}, pages = {631--682}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {attention;human-vision;cognitive-psychology;} } @book{ allwein-barwise_kj:1996a, editor = {Gerard Allwein and Jon Barwise}, title = {Logical Reasoning With Diagrams}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Shelf. Loaned to JT. 2/97. Read this.}, xref = {Review: derijke_m:1999a.}, topic = {diagrams;reasoning-with-diagrams; logical-reasoning;visual-reasoning;} } @book{ allwein-etal:1999a, author = {Gerhard Allwein and Dave Barker-Plummer and Jon Barwise and John Etchemendy}, title = {{LPL} Software Manual}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1999}, address = {Stanford, California}, note = {CD-Rom}, missinginfo = {platform, version}, xref = {Accompanies barwise_kj-etchemendy_j:1999a.}, xref = {Review: grim:1999a.}, topic = {logic-intro;logic-courseware;kr-course;} } @article{ allwein-etal:2004a, author = {Gerald Allwein and Hilmi Demir and Lee Spike}, title = {Logics for Classes of {B}oolean Monoids}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2004}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {241--266}, topic = {boolean-monoids;modal-logic;} } @article{ allwein-maccaull:2001a, author = {Gerard Allwein and Wendy MacCaull}, title = {A {K}ripke Semantics for the Logic of {G}elfand Quantales}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {173--228}, topic = {quantales;modal-logic;} } @incollection{ allwood_j:1972a1, author = {Jens Allwood}, title = {Negation and the Strength of Presuppositions}, booktitle = {Logic, Pragmatics and Grammar}, publisher = {Department of Linguistics, University of Gothenberg}, year = {1972}, editor = {\"Osten Dahl}, pages = {11--52}, address = {Gothenberg}, xref = {See allwood:1972a2}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @techreport{ allwood_j:1972a2, author = {Jens Allwood}, title = {Negation and the Strength of Presuppositions}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of Gothenberg}, number = {Logical Grammar Report 2}, year = {1972}, address = {Gothenberg, Sweden}, xref = {Also in dahl:1972a; see allwood:1972a1.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @techreport{ allwood_j:1973a, author = {Jens Allwood}, title = {Truth, Appropriateness, and Stress}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of Gothenberg}, number = {Gothenburg Papers in Theoretical Linguistics 16}, year = {1973}, address = {Gothenberg, Sweden}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {sentence-focus;discourse;prosody;intonation;pragmatics;} } @techreport{ allwood_j:1974a, author = {Jens Allwood}, title = {Intensity, Pitch, Duration}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of Gothenberg}, number = {Logical Grammar Report 11}, year = {1974}, address = {Gothenberg, Sweden}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {sentence-focus;discourse;prosody;intonation;pragmatics;} } @techreport{ allwood_j:1976a, author = {Jens Allwood}, title = {Linguistic Communication in Action and Co-Operation: A Study in Pragmatics}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of Gothenberg}, publisher = {Department of Linguistics, University of Gothenberg, Gothenberg Monographs in Linguistics}, number = {2}, year = {1976}, address = {Gothenberg}, topic = {pragmatics;speech-acts;} } @incollection{ allwood_j:1977a, author = {Jens Allwood}, title = {A Critical Look at Speech Act Theory}, booktitle = {Logic, Pragmatics and Grammar}, publisher = {Department of Linguistics, University of Gothenberg}, year = {1977}, editor = {\"Osten Dahl}, pages = {53--69}, address = {Gothenberg}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @article{ allwood_j:1978a, author = {Jens Allwood}, title = {On the Analysis of Communicative Action}, journal = {Gothenburg Papers in Theoretical Linguistics}, year = {1978}, volume = {38}, topic = {pragmatics;speech-acts;} } @article{ allwood_j:1982a, author = {Jens Allwood}, title = {Review of \emph{Speech Act Classification: A Study in the Lexical Analysis of {E}nglish Speech Activity Verbs}, by {T}homas {T}. {B}allmer and {W}altraud {B}rennenstuhl}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1982}, volume = {1}, number = {3--4}, pages = {287--290}, xref = {Review of: ballmer-brennenstuhl:1981a}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @incollection{ allwood_j:1985a, author = {Jens Allwood}, title = {Logic and Spoken Interaction}, booktitle = {Reasoning and Discourse Processes}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1985}, editor = {Terry Myers and Keith Brown and Brendan McGonigle}, pages = {67--91}, address = {New York}, topic = {pragmatic-reasoning;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ allwood_j:1997a, author = {Jens Allwood}, title = {An Activity-Based Approach to Pragmatics}, booktitle = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Communicative Action in Humans and Machines}, year = {1997}, pages = {6--11}, organization = {{AAAI}}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, editor = {David R. Traum}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {speech-acts;discourse;pragmatics;} } @book{ allwood_j-etal:1977a, author = {Jens Allwood and Lars-Gunnar Andersson and \"Osten Dahl}, title = {Logic in Linguistics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1977}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {logic-and-linguistics;modal-logic;intensional-logic; categorial-grammar;} } @article{ allwood_j-etal:1992a, author = {Jens Allwood and Joakim Nivre and Elizabeth Ahls\'en}, title = {On the Semantics and Pragmatics of Linguistic Feedback}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1992}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {1--26}, topic = {pragmatics;linguistic-feedback;interpersonal-communication;} } @incollection{ allwood_j-etal:2004a, author = {Jens Allwood and Leif Gronqvist and Elisabeth Ahlsen and Magnus Gunnarsson}, title = {Annotations and Tools for an Activity Based Spoken Language Corpus}, booktitle = {Current and New Directions in Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Jan van Kuppevelt and Ronnie W. Smith}, pages = {1--18}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {computational-dialogue;dialogue-corpora;} } @article{ almang:2014a, author = {Jan Alm\"ang}, title = {Tense as a Feature of Perceptual Content}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2014}, volume = {111}, number = {7}, pages = {361--378}, abstract = {In recent years the idea that perceptual content is tensed in the sense that we can perceive objects as present or as past has come under attack. In this paper the notion of tensed content is to the contrary defended. The paper argues that assuming that something like an intentionalistic theory of perception is correct, it is very reasonable to suppose that perceptual content is tensed, and that a denial of this notion requires a denial of some intuitively very plausible principles. $\ldots$}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;perception;logic-of-perception;} } @article{ almeder:1990a, author = {Robert Almeder}, title = {Vacuous Truth}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1990}, volume = {84}, number = {3}, pages = {507--524}, topic = {truth;correspondence-theory-of-truth;} } @article{ almer-westerstahl_d:2010a, author = {Alexander Alm\'er and Dag Westerst{\aa}hl}, title = {Review of \emph{Relativism and Monadic Truth}, by {H}erman {C}appelen and {J}ohn {H}awthorne}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2010}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {37--50}, xref = {Review of: cappelen_h-hawthorne_j2:2009a}, topic = {propositions;relativism;context;} } @article{ almog_j:1980a, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {Semantical Considerations on Modal Counterfactual Logic with Corollaries on Decidability, Completeness and Consistency Questions}, journal = {Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {467--479}, topic = {conditionals;fuzzy-loguc;} } @incollection{ almog_j:1984a, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {Semantical Anthropology}, booktitle = {Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. Uehling, Jr. and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {479--489}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {reference;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ almog_j:1984b, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {Would You Believe That?}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1984}, volume = {58}, number = {1}, pages = {1--37}, topic = {intensionality;hyperintensionality;} } @article{ almog_j:1984c, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {Believe It or Not: It Is a Puzzle}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1984}, volume = {58}, number = {1}, pages = {51--61}, topic = {intensionality;hyperintensionality;} } @article{ almog_j:1989a, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {Logic and the World}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1989}, volume = {18}, number = {2}, pages = {197--220}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;logical-form;logical-consequence;} } @article{ almog_j:1997a, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {The Complexity of Marketplace Logic}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {20}, number = {5}, pages = {545--569}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;} } @incollection{ almog_j:1998a, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {The Subject Verb Object Class {I}}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 12: Language, Mind, and Ontology}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {39-- 76}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {logical-form;syntax-semantics-interface;Montague-grammar; foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ almog_j:1998b, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {The Subject Verb Object Class {II}}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 12: Language, Mind, and Ontology}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {77--104}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {logical-form;syntax-semantics-interface;Montague-grammar; foundations-of-semantics;indefiniteness;} } @article{ almog_j:1999a, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {Nothing, Something, Infinity}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {96}, number = {9}, pages = {462--478}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ almog_j:2005a, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {Is a Unified Theory of Language-and-Thought Possible?}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2005}, volume = {102}, number = {10}, pages = {493--531}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;foundations-of-semantics; philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ almog_j:2008a, author = {Joseph Almog}, title = {Frege Puzzles?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {37}, number = {1}, pages = {549--574}, topic = {Frege;sense-reference;intensionality;} } @book{ almog_j-etal:1989a, editor = {Joseph Almog and John Perry and Howard Wettstein}, title = {Themes from {K}aplan}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 106 .T4771 1989.}, topic = {analytic-philosophy-collection;demonstratives;reference;} } @unpublished{ almog_j-kamp_jaw:1983a, author = {Joseph Almog and Hans Kamp}, title = {Game-Theoretical Semantics: Some Critical Reflections on the Contributions of {J}. {H}intikka, {L}. {C}arlsson and {E}. {S}aarinen}, year = {1983}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Stuttgart.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Hans Kamp"}, topic = {game-theoretic-semantics;} } @article{ almuallim:1996a, author = {Hussein Almuallim}, title = {An Efficient Algorithm for Optimal Pruning of Decision Trees}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {83}, number = {2}, pages = {347--362}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Pruning decision trees is a useful technique for improving the generalization performance in decision tree induction, and for trading accuracy for simplicity in other applications. In this paper, a new algorithm called OPT-2 for optimal pruning of decision trees is introduced. The algorithm is based on dynamic programming. In its most basic form, the time and space complexities of OPT-2 are both [Theta](nC), where n is the number of test nodes in the initial decision tree, and C is the number of leaves in the target (pruned) decision tree. This is an improvement over the recently published OPT algorithm of Bohanec and Bratko (which is the only known algorithm for optimal decision tree pruning) especially in the case of heavy pruning and when the tests of the given decision tree have many outcomes. If so desired, the space required by OPT-2 can further be reduced by a factor of r at the cost of increasing the execution time by a factor that is bounded above by (r+1)/2 (this is a considerable overestimate, however). From a practical point of view, OPT-2 enjoys considerable flexibility in various aspects, and is easy to implement. }, topic = {machine-induction;decision-trees;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ almuallim-dietterich_tg:1994a, author = {Hussein Almuallim and Thomas G. Dietterich}, title = {Learning {B}oolean Concepts in the Presence of Many Irrelevant Features}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {69}, number = {1--2}, pages = {279--305}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In many domains, an appropriate inductive bias is the MIN-FEATURES bias, which prefers consistent hypotheses definable over as few features as possible. This paper defines and studies this bias in Boolean domains. First, it is shown that any learning algorithm implementing the MIN-FEATURES bias requires Theta((ln (1/[delta]) + [ 2p + p ln n])/ [epsilon]) training examples to guarantee PAC-learning a concept having p relevant features out of n available features. This bound is only logarithmic in the number of irrelevant features. For implementing the MIN-FEATURES bias, the paper presents five algorithms that identify a subset of features sufficient to construct a hypothesis consistent with the training examples. FOCUS-1 is a straightforward algorithm that returns a minimal and sufficient subset of features in quasi-polynomial time. FOCUS-2 does the same task as FOCUS-1 but is empirically shown to be substantially faster than FOCUS-1. Finally, the Simple-Greedy, Mutual-Information-Greedy and Weighted-Greedy algorithms are three greedy heuristics that trade optimality for computational efficiency. Experimental studies are presented that compare these exact and approximate algorithms to two well-known algorithms, ID3 and FRINGE, in learning situations where many irrelevant features are present. These experiments show that-contrary to expectations-the ID3 and FRINGE algorithms do not implement good approximations of MIN-FEATURES. The sample complexity and generalization performance of the FOCUS algorithms is substantially better than either ID3 or FRINGE on learning problems where the MIN-FEATURES bias is appropriate. These experiments also show that, among our three heuristics, the Weighted-Greedy algorithm provides an excellent approximation to the FOCUS algorithms. }, topic = {machine-learning;PAC-learning;experimental-AI; polynomial-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ alomari_m-etal:2016a, author = {Muhannad Alomari and Eris Chinellato and Yiannis Gatsoulis and David C. Hogg and Anthony G. Cohn}, title = {Unsupervised Grounding of Textual Descriptions of Object Features and Actions in Video}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {505--508}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We propose a novel method for learning visual concepts and their correspondence to the words of a natural language. ...}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {visual-language;machine-learning;} } @book{ alon_u:2006a, author = {Uri Alon}, title = {An Introduction to Systems Biology: Design Principles of Biological Circuits, Volume 1}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Taylor and Francis}, year = {2020}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {978-1-4398-3717-7}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de21}, topic = {systems-biology;} } @incollection{ aloni_m:2000a, author = {Maria Aloni}, title = {Conceptual Covers in Dynamic Semantics}, booktitle = {Logic, Language, and Computation, Volume 3}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2000}, editor = {Lawrence Cavedon and Patrick Blackburn and Nick Braisby and Atushi Shimojina}, pages = {23--45}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;} } @phdthesis{ aloni_m:2001a, author = {Maria Aloni}, title = {Quantification under Conceptual Covers}, school = {University of Amsterdam}, year = {2001}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au15}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {nl-semantics;interrogatives;dynamic-semantics; propositional-attitudes;knowing-who;individuation;} } @inproceedings{ aloni_m:2003a, author = {Maria Aloni}, title = {Free Choice in Modal Contexts}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 7}, editor = {Matthias Weisgerber}, year = {2003}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz, Arbeitspapier 114}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TE3NGVlY/}, pages = {25--37}, abstract = {This article proposes a new analysis of modal expressions which (i) explains the difference between necessity and possibility modals with respect to the licensing of Free Choice any and (ii) accounts for the related phenomena of Free Choice disjunction in permissions and other possibility statements. Any and or are analyzed as operators introducing sets of alternative propositions. Modals are treated as quantifiers over these sets of alternatives. In this way they can be sensitive to the alternatives any and or introduce in their scope}, topic = {nl-modality;free-choice-disjunction;free-choice-permission;alternatives;} } @article{ aloni_m:2005a, author = {Maria Aloni}, title = {Individual Concepts in Modal Predicate Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2005}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {1--64}, topic = {modal-logic;propositional-attitudes;individuation;} } @article{ aloni_m:2007a, author = {Maria Aloni}, title = {Free Choice, Modals, and Imperatives}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2007}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {65--94}, topic = {imperatives;free-choice-`any/or';nl-modality;modal-auxiliaries;} } @article{ aloni_m:2016a, author = {Maria Aloni}, title = {{`}You' and `I' in Modal Logic}, journal = {Grazer Philosophische Studien}, year = {2016}, volume = {93}, number = {3}, pages = {334--362}, topic = {personal-pronouns;modal-logic;indexicals;} } @book{ aloni_m-dekker_p:2016a, editor = {Maria Aloni and Paul Dekker}, title = {Cambridge Handbook of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9781139236157}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Barbara H. Partee, "Formal Semantics", pp. 3--32 2. James Pustejovsky, "Lexical Semanics", pp. 33--64 3. Peter Pagin, "Sentential Semantics", pp. 65--105 4. Nicholas Asher, "Discourse Semantics", pp. 106--129 5. Jonathan Ginzburg, "Semantics of Dialogue", pp. 130--170 6. Paul Dekker and Thomas Ede Zimmermann, "Reference", pp. 173--205 7. Dag Westerst{\aa}hl, "Generalized Quantifiers", pp. 206--237 8. Adrian Brasoveanu and Donka F. Farkas, "Indefinites", pp. 238--266 9. Rick Nouwen, "Plurality", pp. 267--284 10. Ariel Cohen, "Genericity", pp. 285--310 11. Atle Gr{\o}n, "Tense", pp. 313--341 12. Susan Rothstein, "Aspect", pp. 342--368 13. Lucas Champollion and Manfred Krifka, "Mereology", pp. 369--388 14. Hans Kamp and Galit W. Sassoon, "Vagueness", pp. 389--441 15. Louise McNally, "Modification", pp. 442--464 16. Henri\"ette de Swart, "Negation", pp. 467--489 17. Paul Egr\'e, "Conditionals", pp. 490--524 18. Lisa Matthewson, "Modality", pp. 525--559 19. Paul Dekker and Maria Aloni, "Questions", pp. 560--592 20. Paul Portner, "Imperatives", pp. 593-626 21. Manfred Sailer, "The Syntax-Semantics Interface", pp. 629--63 22. Philippe Schlenker, "The Semantics-Pragmatics Interface", pp. 664--727 23. Enric Vallduv\'i, Formation -Tructure, pppp. 728--755 24. Giosu\`e Baggio, "Semantics and Cognition", pp. 756--774 25. Matthew Stone, Semantics and Computation, pp. 775--800 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Handbooks}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ aloni_m-etal:1999a, author = {Maria Aloni and David I. Beaver and Brady Zack Clark}, title = {Focus and Topic Sensitive Operators}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {55--61}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {focus;topic;dynamic-logic;} } @book{ aloni_m-etal:2012a, editor = {Maria Aloni and Vadim Kimmelman and Floris Roelofsen and Galit Sassoon and Katrin Schulz and Matthijs Westera}, title = {Logic, Language, and Meaning: Proceedings of the 18th {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2012}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-3-642-31482-7}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-pragmatics;} } @incollection{ aloni_m-jacinto_b:2013a, author = {Maria Aloni and Bruno Jacinto}, title = {Knowing Who: How Perspectives and Context Interact}, booktitle = {Epistemology, Context, Formalism}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Franck Lihoreau and Manuel Rebuschi}, pages = {79--106}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {knowing-who;context;} } @article{ aloni_m-roelofsen_f:2011a, author = {Maria Aloni and Floris Roelofsen}, title = {Interpreting Concealed Questions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2011}, volume = {34}, number = {5}, pages = {443--478}, abstract = {Concealed questions are determiner phrases that are naturally paraphrased as embedded questions (e.g., John knows the capital of Italy = John knows what the capital of Italy is). This paper offers a novel account of the interpretation of concealed questions, which assumes that an entity-denoting expression \alpha may be type-shifted into an expression \lambda z.P(\alpha), where P is a contextually determined property, and z ranges over a contextually determined domain of individual concepts. Different resolutions of P and the domain of z yield a wide range of concealed question interpretations, some of which were not noted previously. On the other hand, principled constraints on the resolution process prevent overgeneration.}, topic = {interrogatives;type-shifting;} } @inproceedings{ aloni_m-vanrooy:2002a, author = {Maria Aloni and Robert van Rooy}, title = {The Dynamics of Questions and Focus}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2002}, editor = {Brendan Jackson}, pages = {20--39}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;interrogatives;dynamic-semantics;s-focus; information-structure;} } @article{ alonso_e:2002a, author = {Eduardo Alonso}, title = {{AI} and Agents: State of the Art}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {23}, number = {3}, pages = {25--29}, topic = {agent-architectures;multiagent-systems;} } @incollection{ alonso_fw:2017a, author = {Facundo M. Alonso}, title = {Reductive Views of Shared Intention}, booktitle = {The Routledge Handbook of Collective Intentionality}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2017}, editor = {Marija Jankovic and Kirk Ludwig}, pages = {34--44}, address = {New York}, topic = {group-attitudes;} } @incollection{ alonsoovalle:2007a, author = {Luis Alonso-Ovalle}, title = {Alternatives in the Disjunctive Antecedents Problem}, booktitle = {WCCFL 26: Proceedings of the 26th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics}, publisher = {Cascadilla Press}, year = {2007}, editor = {Charles B. Chang and Hannah J. Haynie}, pages = {42--50}, address = {Somerville, Massachusetts}, url = {http://alonso-ovalle.net/wp-content/uploads/conditionalswccfl07.pdf}, topic = {conditionals;disjunction;} } @article{ alonsoovalle:2008a, author = {Luis Alonso-Ovalle}, title = {Innocent Exclusion in an Alternative Semantics}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2008}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {115--128}, topic = {nl-semantics;disjunction;alternatives;scalar-implicature;} } @article{ alonsoovalle:2009a, author = {Luis Alonso-Ovalle}, title = {Counterfactuals, Correlatives, and Disjunction}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2009}, volume = {32}, number = {2}, pages = {185--244}, topic = {conditionals;disjunction;} } @article{ alonsoovalle-menendezbenito:2010a, author = {Luis Alonso-Ovalle and Paula Men\'endez-Benito}, title = {Modal Indefinites}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2010}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {1--31}, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;free-choice-`any/or';} } @incollection{ alonsoovalle-menendezbenito:2013a, author = {Luis Alonso-Ovalle and Paula Men\'endez-Benito}, title = {A Note on the Derivation of the Epistemic Effect of {S}panish}, booktitle = {Alternatives in Semantics}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amanira F\v{a}l\v{a}u\c{s}}, pages = {36--49}, address = {New York}, topic = {evidentials;indefinites;Spanish-language;} } @incollection{ alosferrer_c-schlag_k:2009a, author = {Carlos Al\'os-Ferrer and Karl Schlag}, title = {Imitation and Learning}, booktitle = {Handbook of Rational and Social Choice}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Paul Anand and Prasanta Pattanaik and Clemens Puppe}, pages = {271--297}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {As a learning rule in the context of bounded rationality, imitation is both common and plausible. ... This chapter demonstrates, for a variety of different environments, which forms of imitation can be individually or socially desirable. One basic intuition is that when agents within a population face similar choices under uncertainty, imitation can lead to a form of information aggregation. ... Long-run predictions of imitative behavior are presented in pure decision problems and strategic settings and related to benchmarks such as evolutionary stability.}, topic = {learning;} } @book{ alpaydin_e:2014a, author = {Ethem Alpaydin}, title = {Introduction to Machine Learning}, edition = {3}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-02818-9}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @book{ alpaydin_e:2016a, author = {Ethem Alpaydin}, title = {Machine Learning: The New {AI}}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2016}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-52951-8}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @book{ alshawi:1987a, author = {Hiyan Alshawi}, title = {Memory and Context for Language Interpretaion}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: guerts:1996a.}, topic = {memory-models;memory;context;nl-interpretation;} } @incollection{ alshawi:1996a, author = {Hiyan Alshawi}, title = {Qualitative and Quantitative Models of Speech Translation}, booktitle = {The Balancing Act: Combining Symbolic and Statistical Approaches to Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Judith Klavans and Philip Resnik}, pages = {27--48}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {word-sequence-probabilities;statistical-nlp; speech-to-speech-machine-translation;} } @inproceedings{ alshawi:1996b, author = {Hiyan Alshawi}, title = {Head Automata and Bilingual Tiling: Translation with Mininal Representations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {167--176}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {machine-translation;} } @incollection{ alshawi:1996c, author = {Hiyan Alshawi}, title = {Semantic Ambiguity and Perceived Ambiguity}, booktitle = {Semantic Ambiguity and Underspecification}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Kees {van Deemter} and Stanley Peters}, address = {Cambridge, England}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {ambiguity;} } @incollection{ alshawi:1996d, author = {Hiyan Alshawi}, title = {Underspecified First Order Logics}, booktitle = {Semantic Ambiguity and Underspecification}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, England}, editor = {Kees {van Deemter} and Stanley Peters}, pages = {145--158}, topic = {semantic-underspecification;logic-of-ambiguity;} } @inproceedings{ alshawi:1997a, author = {Hiyan Alshawi and Adam L. Buchsbaum and Fei Xia}, title = {A Comparison of Head Transducers and Transfer for a Limited Domain Translation Application}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {360--365}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-tranalslation;} } @incollection{ alshawi-douglas_s:2004a, author = {Hiyan Alshawi and Shona Douglas}, title = {Using Direct Variant Transduction for Rapid Development of Natural Spoken Interfaces}, booktitle = {Current and New Directions in Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Jan van Kuppevelt and Ronnie W. Smith}, pages = {19--34}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @inproceedings{ alshawi-etal:1998a, author = {Hiyan Alshawi and Srinivas Bangalore and Shona Douglas}, title = {Automatic Acquisition of Hierarchical Transduction Models for Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {41--47}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {machine-translation;machine-learning;} } @article{ alshawi-etal:2000a, author = {Hiyan Alshawi and Srinivas Bangalore and Shona Douglas}, title = {Learning Dependency Translation Models as Collections of Finite-State Head Transducers}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {45--60}, topic = {finite-state-nlp;machine-learning;} } @book{ alsina-etal:1997a, editor = {Alex Alsina and Joan Bresnan and Peter Sells}, title = {Complex Predicates}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1997}, address = {Stanford, California}, xref = {Review: gunkel:1998a}, topic = {complex-predicates;morphology;syntax;} } @article{ alspecto_jr-dietterich_tg:2020a, author = {Joshua Alspector and Thomas G. Dietterich}, title = {{DARPA}'s Role in Machine Learning}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2020}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {22--35}, topic = {AI-history;machine-learning;} } @article{ alston_wp:1958a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Ontological Commitments}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1958}, volume = {9}, number = {1/2}, pages = {8--17}, topic = {ontological-commitment;} } @article{ alston_wp:1958b, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Mr. Quine on Meaning, Naming, and Purporting to Name}, journal = {Philosphical Studies}, year = {1958}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {17--28}, topic = {Quine;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ alston_wp:1960a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {The Ontological Argument Revisited}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1960}, volume = {69}, number = {4}, pages = {452--474}, topic = {ontological-argument;} } @article{ alston_wp:1963a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Meaning and Use}, journal = {The Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1963}, volume = {13}, number = {51}, pages = {107--124}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Misc 3"}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ alston_wp:1964a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Linguistic Acts}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1964}, volume = {1}, pages = {138--146}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {JL-Austin;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @book{ alston_wp:1964b, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1964}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jeersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ alston_wp:1964c, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Foundations of Speech Act Theory}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1964}, address = {London}, ISBN = {9780203206478}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @incollection{ alston_wp:1967a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Vagueness}, booktitle = {The Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {MacMillan}, year = {1967}, editor = {Paul Edwards}, pages = {218--221}, address = {New York}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ alston_wp:1971a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {How Does One Tell Whether a Word Has One, Several, Or Many Senses?}, booktitle = {Semantics: An Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1971}, editor = {Danny D. Steinberg and Leon A. Jacobovits}, pages = {35--47}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {word-sense;philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;ambiguity;} } @article{ alston_wp:1971b, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Dispositions and Occurrences}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1971}, volume = {1}, pages = {125--154}, topic = {dispositions;} } @incollection{ alston_wp:1972a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Philosophical Analysis and Structural Linguistics}, booktitle = {Philosophy and Linguistics}, publisher = {St. Martin's Press}, year = {1972}, editor = {Colin Lyas}, pages = {284--296}, address = {New York}, topic = {philosophy-and-linguistics;} } @incollection{ alston_wp:1974a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Semantic Rules}, booktitle = {Semantics and Philosophy}, publisher = {New York University Press}, year = {1974}, editor = {Milton K. Munitz and Peter K. Unger}, pages = {17--48}, address = {New York}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;speech-acts;} } @incollection{ alston_wp:1986a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {{Q}uine on Meaning}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {W}.{V}. {Q}uine}, publisher = {Open Court}, year = {1986}, editor = {Lewis E. Hahn and Paul A. Schilpp}, pages = {49--72}, address = {La Salle, Illinois}, topic = {Quine;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ alston_wp:1994a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Illocutionary Acts and Linguistic Meaning}, booktitle = {Foundations of Speech Act Theory: Philosophical and Linguistic Perspectives}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1994}, editor = {Savas L. Tsohatzidis}, pages = {29--49}, address = {London}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @book{ alston_wp:2000a, author = {William P. Alston}, title = {Illocutionary Acts and Sentence Meaning}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @article{ alter_t:2011a, author = {Torin Alter}, title = {Tye's New Take on the Puzzles of Consciousness}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {4}, pages = {765--775}, xref = {Review of: tye_m:2009a}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ alter_t-nagasawa:2015a, editor = {Torin Alter and Yujin Nagasawa}, title = {Consciousness in the Physical World: Perspectives on {R}usselian Monism}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {976-0-19-992735-7}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;mind-body-problem;} } @book{ alter_t-walter_s:2007a, editor = {Torin Alter and Sven Walter}, title = {Phenomenal Concepts and Phenomenal Knowledge: New Essays on Consciousness and Physicalism}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {9780195171655}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @inproceedings{ alterman:1985a, author = {Richard Alterman}, title = {Adaptive Planning: Refitting Old Plans to New Situations}, booktitle = {Proceedings 7th Cognitive Science Society}, year = {1985}, missinginfo = {editor, pages}, topic = {plan-reuse;} } @article{ alterman:1985b, author = {Richard Alterman}, title = {A Dictionary Based on Concept Coherence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {153--186}, acontentnote = {Abstract: NEXUS is a computational system which uses a dictionary of 100 to 150 event/state concepts to construct representations of narrative text. Associated with each event/state concept are its deep case relations and their default values. Concepts in the dictionary are related by one of seven event/state concept coherence relations. Relationships between concepts include a list of constraints on the matching of case arguments between the two concepts. NEXUS has been successfully applied to eight paragraph-length samples of text, including ``A Restaurant Story'', ``The Margie Story'', and ``Robbing a Liquor Store''. The resulting discourse representations have been used successfully to answer questions and compute summaries for these texts. The organization of this paper is as follows. After introducing the notion of event/state concept coherence, the paper proceeds by discussing the structure of the dictionary. This includes detailed descriptions of how individual concepts are represented and related, and some discussion of issues concerning causality and property inheritance. Then, after giving some brief examples of the representations produced by NEXUS, the NEXUS program is described. NEXUS was programmed in procedural logic in LISP, so this section will include Horn clause specifications. The fourth section of the paper shows a subportion of the dictionary and, in detail, describes NEXUS processing of five samples of text. Included in the appendix are examples of NEXUS' input and output. }, topic = {text-understanding;computational-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ alterman:1986a, author = {Richard Alterman}, title = {Adaptive Planning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, editor = {Tom Kehler and Stan Rosenschein}, pages = {65--69}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {plan-reuse;} } @article{ alterman:2000a, author = {Richard Alterman}, title = {Rethinking Autonomy}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {15--30}, topic = {autonomous-agents;machine-intelligence;} } @article{ alterman-etal:1988a, author = {Richard Alterman and R. Zito-Wolf and T. Carpenter}, title = {Adaptive Planning}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1988}, volume = {12}, pages = {361--398}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {plan-reuse;} } @article{ alterovitz-etal:2016a, author = {Ron Alterovitz and Sven Koenig and Maxim Likhachev}, title = {Robot Planning in the Real World; Research Challenges and Opportunities}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2016}, volume = {37}, number = {2}, pages = {76--84}, topic = {planning;robotics;} } @book{ altham_jej:1971a, author = {James E.J. Altham}, title = {The Logic of Plurality}, publisher = {Methuen \& Co.}, year = {1971}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {plural;nl-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ altham_jej:1975a, author = {James E.J. Altham}, title = {Sortal Quantification}, booktitle = {Formal Semantics of Natural Language}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Edward L. Keenan}, pages = {46--58}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {sortal-quantification;} } @article{ althofer:1990a, author = {Ingo Alth\"ofer}, title = {An Incremental Negamax Algorithm}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {57--65}, topic = {game-playing;search;} } @article{ althofer:1991a, author = {Ingo Alth\"ofer}, title = {Data Compression Using an Intelligent Generator: The Storage of Chess Games as an Example}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {52}, number = {1}, pages = {109--113}, topic = {data-compression;} } @article{ althofer-balkenhol:1991a, author = {Ingo Alth\"ofer and Bernhard Balkenhol}, title = {A Game Tree with Distinct Leaf Values Which Is Easy for The Alpha-Beta Algorithm}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2991}, volume = {52}, number = {2}, pages = {183--190}, topic = {game-playing;search;game-trees;} } @article{ altman_a-etal:2005a, author = {Alon Altman and Ya'acov Peterzil and Yoad Winter}, title = {Scope Dominance with upward Monotone Quantifiers}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2005}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {445--455}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;} } @book{ altman_i:1997a, author = {Ira Altman}, title = {The Concept of Intelligence: A Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {University Press of America}, year = {1997}, address = {Lanham, Maryland}, ISBN = {0761807365 (hbk)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate BD 418.3 .A481 1997}, topic = {intelligence;} } @article{ altmann_gtm:1988a, author = {Gerry T.M. Altmann}, title = {Ambiguity, Parsing Strategies, and Computational Models}, journal = {Language and Cognitive Processes}, year = {1988}, volume = {3}, pages = {73--97}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {cognitive-modularity;parsing-psychology;} } @article{ altmann_gtm:1989a, author = {Gerry T.M. Altmann}, title = {Parsing and Interpretation: An Introduction}, journal = {Language and Cognitive Processes}, year = {1989}, volume = {4}, pages = {1--19}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {cognitive-modularity;parsing-psychology;} } @book{ altmann_gtm:1998a, author = {Gerry T.M. Altman}, title = {The Ascent of {B}abel}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-852377-7 (paperback), 0-19-852378-5 (hardback)}, rtnote = {An introduction to psycholinguistics.}, topic = {psycholinguistics;} } @article{ altmann_gtm-steedman_m:1988a, author = {Gerry T.M. Altmann and Mark Steedman}, title = {Interaction with Context During Human Sentence Processing}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {1988}, volume = {30}, pages = {191--238}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {cognitive-modularity;parsing-psychology;context;} } @article{ altmann_rb:1999a, author = {Ross B. Altmann}, title = {{AI} in Medicine---The Spectrum of Challenges from Managed Care to Molecular Medicine}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {67--77}, topic = {medical-AI;} } @article{ altrichter:1985a, author = {Ferenc Altrichter}, title = {Belief and Possibility}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {82}, number = {7}, pages = {364--382}, topic = {Pierre-puzzle;belief;} } @inproceedings{ altshuler_d-schwarzschild_r:2012a, author = {Daniel Altshuler and Roger Schwarzschild}, title = {Moment of Change, Cessation Implicatures and Simultaneous Readings}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 16}, editor = {Ana Aguilar Guevara and Anna Chernilovskaya and Rick Nouwen}, year = {2012}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/issue/view/10}, pages = {45--62}, abstract = {This paper makes a hypothesis about the truth of a stative clause at a moment explicit: if a tenseless stative clause itis true at moment m, then there is a moment m' preceding m at which it is true and there is a moment m' following m at which it is true. ...}, topic = {nl-tense;} } @incollection{ altuna:2007a, author = {Ander Altuna}, title = {A Mereological Semantics of Contexts}, editor = {Max Bramer and Frans Coenen and Miltos Petridis}, booktitle = {Research and Development in Intelligent Systems {XXIV}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, year = {2007}, pages = {375--380}, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ altuna:2007b, author = {Ander Altuna}, title = {Imagining Contexts}, booktitle = {{FAInt}: Foundations of Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, editor = {Pascal Hitzler and Thomas Roth-Berghofer and Sebastian Rudolph}, url = {http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-277/paper4.pdf}, rtnote = {Presents a formalization.}, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ altuna:2008a, author = {Ander Altuna}, title = {Embodied Context Semantics}, booktitle = {SDKB}, year = {2008}, pages = {113--125}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-88594-8_6}, abstract = {It is a desirable feature of knowledge bases that they are able to accommodate and reason across the different perspectives that may exist on a particular theory or situation. With the aim of obtaining an adequate logic for this problem, the knowledge representation community has extensively researched into the formalization of contexts as first-class citizens. However, most of the proposed logics of context only deal with the propositional case, which for many applications is not enough, and those tackling the quantificational case face many counterintuitive restrictions. In this paper, we present a model-theoretic semantics that, based on a cognitive approach to the notions of context and meaning, succeeds in addressing the quantificational case in a flexible manner that overcomes the limitations of the previous initiatives. The expressive power of the system will be evaluated in the paper by formalizing some of the benchmark examples that can be found in the literature.}, topic = {context;} } @book{ alur_r:2015a, author = {Rajeev Alur}, title = {Principles of Cyber-Physical Systems}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-02911-7}, topic = {cyber-physical-systems;} } @article{ alur_r-dill:1994a, author = {Rajeef Alur and David L. Dill}, title = {A Theory of Timed Automata}, journal = {Theoretical Computer Science}, year = {1994}, volume = {126}, number = {2}, pages = {183--235}, doi = {10.1016/0304-3975(94)90010-8}, topic = {timed-automata;} } @article{ alur_r-etal:2001a, author = {Rajeev Alur and Kousha Etessami and Salvatore La Torre and Doron Peled}, title = {Parametric Temporal Logic for Model Measuring}, journal = {{ACM} Transactions on Computational Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {388--407}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, abstract = {We extend the standard model checking paradigm of linear temporal logic, LTL, to a 'model measuring' paradigm where one can obtain more quantitative information beyond a 'Yes/No' answer. ... we define a parametric temporal logic, PLTL, which allows statements such as 'a request p is followed in at most x steps by a response q', where x is a free variable. We show how one can, given a formula \phi(x1,...,xk) of PLTL and a system model K, not only determine whether there exists a valuation of x1...xk under which the system K satisfies the property \phi, but if so find valuations which satisfy various optimality criteria. ... }, contentnote = {This is the original parametric LTL paper.}, topic = {temporal-logic;model-checking;} } @article{ alur_r-etal:2002a, author = {Rajeev Alur and Thomas A. Henzinger and Orna Kupferman}, title = {Alternating-Time Temporal Logic}, journal = {Journal of the {ACM}}, year = {2002}, volume = {49}, number = {5}, pages = {672--713}, rtnote = {This is the original ATM paper}, topic = {alternating-time-logic;} } @article{ alur_r-henzinger:1994a, author = {Rajeef Alur and Thomas A. Henzinger}, title = {A Really Temporal Logic}, journal = {Journal of the {ACM}}, year = {1994}, volume = {41}, number = {1}, pages = {164--169}, abstract = {We introduce a temporal logic for the specification of real-time systems. Our logic, TPTL, employs a novel quantifier construct for referencing time: the freeze quantifier binds a variable to the time of the local temporal context. TPTL is both a natural language for specification and a suitable formalism for verification. We present a tableau-based decision procedure and a model checking algorithm for TPTL. Several generalizations of TPTL are shown to be highly undecidable.}, topic = {real-time-systems;temporal-logic;} } @incollection{ alvarez:2022a, author = {Maria Alvarez}, title = {Agency, Reasons and Rationality}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Handbook of Philosophy of Agency}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2022}, editor = {Luca Ferrero}, pages = {403--411}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-agency;agency;reasons-for-action;} } @incollection{ alvarez_m:2016a, author = {Maria Alvarez}, title = {Reasons for Action: Justification, Motivation, Explanation}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2016/entries/reasons-just-vs-expl/}, year = {2016}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {reasons-for-action;} } @article{ alviano-etal:2012a, author = {Mario Alviano and Wolfgang Faber and Gianluigi Greco and Nicola Leone}, title = {Magic Sets for disjunctive Datalog programs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {187--188}, pages = {156--192}, topic = {logic-programming;stable-models;answer-sets;} } @inproceedings{ alviano_m:2020a, author = {Mario Alviano}, title = {Answer Set Programming with Composed Predicate Names}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {44--48}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... This paper suggests to move some arguments in predicate names, so that the declarative semantics of Answer Set Programming is preserved, but non-stratified negation is possibly avoided thanks to symbolic rule instantiation. A proof of concept is given in terms of Jinja templates for arguments with a clear range.}, topic = {answer-sets;} } @inproceedings{ alviano_m-etal:2018a, author = {Mario Alviano and Javier Romero and Torsten Schaub}, title = {Preference Relations by Approximation}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {2--11}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We introduce the notion of approximation for replacing preference relations with stronger preference relations, that is, relations comparing more pairs of interpretations. ... We implement our approach in Answer Set Programming (ASP), where problems involving quantitative and qualitative preference relations can be addressed by ASPRIN, implementing a generic optimization algorithm. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {reasoning-about-representations;} } @article{ alwood_a:2010a, author = {Andrew Alwood}, title = {Imperative Clauses and the {F}rege-{G}each Problem}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2010}, volume = {70}, number = {1}, pages = {105--117}, xref = {Commentary on: schroeder_m:2008e}, xref = {Reply: schroeder_m:2010c}, topic = {imperatives;expressivism;Frege-Geach-problem;} } @article{ alxatib-etal:2013a, author = {Sam Alxatib and Peter Pagin and Uli Sauerland}, title = {Acceptable Contradictions: Pragmatics or Semantics? A Reply to {C}obreros et al.}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {42}, number = {4}, pages = {619--634}, xref = {Commentary on: coberos-etal:2012a.}, topic = {vagueness;inconsistency;} } @incollection{ alxatib_s-sauerland_u:2020a, author = {Sam Alxatib and Uli Sauerland}, title = {Vagueness}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Experimental Semantics and Pragmatics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2020}, editor = {Chris Cummins and Katsos Napoleon}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {experimental-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ amar-mcilraith_sa:2000a, author = {Eyal Amar and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Partition-Based Logical Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {389--400}, topic = {logics-of-context;theorem-proving;modularized-logics;} } @article{ amaral_p-delprete_f:2010a, author = {Patr\'icia Amaral and Fabio del Prete}, title = {Approximating the Limit: The Interaction between \emph{Quasi} `Almost' and Some Temporal Connectives in {I}talian}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2010}, volume = {33}, number = {2}, pages = {51--115}, topic = {tense-aspect;Italian-language;} } @article{ amaral_p-etal:2007a, author = {Patricia Amaral and Craige Roberts and E. Allyn Smith}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Logic of Conventional Implicatures}, by {C}hristopher Potts}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2007}, volume = {30}, number = {6}, pages = {707--749}, xref = {Review of: potts_c:2005a}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-pragmatics;conventional-implicature;} } @incollection{ amarel_s:1968a1, author = {Saul Amarel}, title = {On Representations of Problems of Reasoning about Actions}, editor = {Donald Mitchie}, booktitle = {Machine Intelligence 3}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood}, address = {Chichester, England}, pages = {131--171}, year = {1968}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name}, xref = {Republication: amarel:1968a2.}, topic = {foundations-of-planning;action;} } @incollection{ amarel_s:1968a2, author = {Saul Amarel}, title = {On Representations of Problems of Reasoning about Actions}, booktitle = {Readings in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1981}, editor = {Bonnie Webber and Nils J. Nilsson}, pages = {2--22}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: amarel:1968a1.}, topic = {foundations-of-planning;action;} } @incollection{ amarger_s-etal:1991a, author = {St\'ephanie Amarger and Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Imprecise Quantifiers and Conditional Probabilities}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {33--37}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {fuzzy-logic;quantifiers;probability;} } @article{ amati-etal:1995a, author = {Fianni Amati and Luigia Aiello and Fiora Pirri}, title = {Defaults as Restrictions on Classical {H}ilbert-Style Proofs}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1995}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {303--326}, contentnote= {Uses idea of coherence constraints on proofs to provide a general formulation of default logic.}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic;kr-course;} } @article{ amati-etal:1996b, author = {Fianni Amati and Luigia Aiello and Dov M. Gabbay and Fiora Pirri}, title = {A Proof-Theoretical Approach to Default Reasoning {I}: Tableaux for Default Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {205--231}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic;proof-theory;} } @article{ amati-etal:1997a, author = {Gianni Amati and Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Fiora Pirri}, title = {Definability and Commonsense Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {93}, number = {1--2}, pages = {169--199}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;definitions;nonmonotonic-reasoning ;} } @article{ amati-etal:1997b, author = {Giambattista Amati and Luigi Carlucci-Aiello and Fiora Pirri}, title = {Intuitionistic Autoepistemic Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1997}, volume = {59}, number = {1}, pages = {103--120}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;autoepistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ amati-pirri:1996a, author = {Giuseppe Amati and Fiora Pirri}, title = {Is There a Logic of Provability for Nonmonotonic Reasoning?}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {493--503}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;proof-theory;nonmonotonic-logic;provability-logic;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ amati-pirri:1997a, author = {Gianni Amati and Fiora Pirri}, title = {Contexts as Relativized Definitions: A Formalization Via Fixed Points}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Context in Knowledge Representation and Natural Language}, year = {1997}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and {\L}ucia Iwa\'nska}, pages = {7--14}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;modal-logic;fixpoints;logic-of-context;} } @incollection{ amaya-benedi:2000a, author = {F. Amaya and J.M. Bened\'i}, title = {Using Perfect Sampling in Parameter Estimation of a Whole Sentence Maximum Entropy Language Model}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {79--82}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {statistical-nlp;n-gram-models;maximum-entropy;} } @incollection{ amaya_s:2022a, author = {Santiago Amaya}, title = {Agency and Mistakes}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Handbook of Philosophy of Agency}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2022}, editor = {Luca Ferrero}, pages = {149--158}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-agency;agency;mistakes;;} } @article{ ambite-knoblock_c:2000a, author = {Jos\'e Luis Ambite and Craig A. Knoblock}, title = {Flexible and Scalable Cost-Based Query Planning in Mediators: A Transformational Approach}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {118}, number = {1--2}, pages = {115--161}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The Internet provides access to a wealth of information. For any given topic or application domain there are a variety of available information sources. However, current systems, such as search engines or topic directories in the World Wide Web, offer only very limited capabilities for locating, combining, and organizing information. Mediators, systems that provide integrated access and database-like query capabilities to information distributed over heterogeneous sources, are critical to realize the full potential of meaningful access to networked information. Query planning, the task of generating a cost-efficient plan that computes a user query from the relevant information sources, is central to mediator systems. However, query planning is a computationally hard problem due to the large number of possible sources and possible orderings on the operations to process the data. Moreover, the choice of sources, data processing operations, and their ordering, strongly affects the plan cost. In this paper, we present an approach to query planning in mediators based on a general planning paradigm called Planning by Rewriting (PbR) (Ambite and Knoblock, 1997). Our work yields several contributions. First, our PbR-based query planner combines both the selection of the sources and the ordering of the operations into a single search space in which to optimize the plan quality. Second, by using local search techniques our planner explores the combined search space efficiently and produces high-quality plans. Third, because our query planner is an instantiation of a domain-independent framework it is very flexible and can be extended in a principled way. Fourth, our planner has an anytime behavior. Finally, we provide empirical results showing that our PbR-based query planner compares favorably on scalability and plan quality over previous approaches, which include both classical AI planning and dynamic-programming query optimization techniques. }, topic = {information-retrieval;query-planning; AI-and-the-internet;} } @article{ ambler-popplestone:1975a, author = {A.P. Ambler and R.J. Popplestone}, title = {Inferring the Positions of Bodies from Specified Spatial Relationships}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1975}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {157--174}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A program has been developed which takes a specification of a set of bodies and of spatial relations that are to hold between them in some goal state, and produces expressions denoting the positions of the bodies in the goal state together with residual equations linking the variables in these expressions. }, topic = {spatial-reasoning;} } @incollection{ ambosspies_k-fejer_pa:2014a, author = {Klaus Ambos-Spies and Peter A. Fejer}, title = {Degrees of Unsolvability}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 9: Computational Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2014}, editor = {J\"org H. Siekmann}, pages = {443--494}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;degrees-of-unsolvability;} } @phdthesis{ ambros-ingerson:1987a, author = {Jose Ambros-Ingerson}, title = {Integrated Planning, Execution, and Monitoring}, school = {Department of Computer Science, University of Essex}, year = {1987}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Essex, England}, topic = {plan-monitoring;} } @article{ ambrose:1952a, author = {Alice Ambrose}, title = {Linguistic Approaches to Philosophical Problems}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1952}, volume = {49}, number = {9}, pages = {289--301}, xref = {Commentary: chisholm_rm:1952b}, xref = {Review: baylis_ca:1959a}, topic = {philosophy-and-language;} } @article{ ambrose:1953a, author = {Alice Ambrose}, title = {Review of `{A}ctuality, Possibility, and Being', by {F}rederic {B}. {F}itch}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1953}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {89--90}, xref = {Review of: fitch_fb:1950b.}, topic = {metaphysics;ontology;} } @article{ ambrose_a:1956a, author = {Alice Ambrose}, title = {On Entailment and Logical Necessity}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1956}, volume = {56}, pages = {241--258}, contentnote = {A's question is whether a necessary proposition entails the proposition that it is necessary. Mainly of historical interest.}, topic = {analyticityt;} } @inproceedings{ amendola_g-etal:2018a, author = {Giovanni Amendola and Francesco Ricca and Mirek Truszczynski}, title = {A Generator of Hard {2QBF} Formulas and {ASP} Programs}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {52--56}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {The availability of generators of random instances of boolean formulas has had a major impact on solver technology for KR formalisms such as SAT, QBF and ASP. ... Here, we present a tool that generates formulas/programs from the new models in a variety of output formats including (Q)DIMACS, QCIR, and ASPCore 2.0.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {answer-sets;model-checking;} } @article{ amershi-etal:2014a, author = {Saleema Amershi and Maya Cakmak and William Bradley Knox and Todd Kulesza}, title = {Power to the People: The Role of Humans in Interactive Machine Learning}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2014}, volume = {35}, number = {4}, pages = {105--120}, topic = {interactive-machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ amgoud_l-bennaim_j:2016a, author = {Leila Amgoud and Jonathan Ben-Naim}, title = {Axiomatic Foundations of Acceptability Semantics}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, pages = {2--11}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {An argument is a reason or justification of a claim. It has an intrinsic strength and may be attacked by other arguments. Hence, the evaluation of its overall strength becomes mandatory, especially for judging the reliability of its claim. Such an evaluation is done by acceptability semantics. The aim of this paper is to set up the foundations of acceptability semantics. Foundations are important not only for a better understanding of the evaluation process in general, but also for clarifying the basic assumptions underlying semantics, for comparing different (families of) semantics and identifying families of semantics that have not been explored yet. The paper defines the building blocks of a semantics. It introduces key concepts and principles on which an evaluation is based. Each concept (principle) is described by an axiom. We investigate properties of semantics that satisfy the axioms, show the foundations of the two crucial notions of reinstatement and defence, and analyse some existing semantics against the axioms.}, topic = {kr;abstract-argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ amgoud_l-beuselinck_v:2021a, author = {Leila Amgoud and Vivien Beuselinck}, title = {Equivalence of Semantics in Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {32--41}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {A large number of evaluation methods, called semantics, have been proposed in the literature for assessing strength of arguments. This paper investigates their equivalence. ...}, topic = {abstract-argumention;argument-strength;} } @incollection{ amgoud_l-cayrol:2004a, author = {Leila Amgoud and Claudette Cayrol}, title = {On the Use of an {ATMS} for Handling Conflicting Desires}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {194--201}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {truth-maintenance;desire;} } @inproceedings{ amgoud_l-david_v:2018a, author = {Leila Amgoud and Victor David}, title = {Measuring Similarity between Logical Arguments}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {98--107}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... This paper studies ... the impact of similarity (i.e., when pairs of arguments are related) in the context of gradual evaluation in abstract argumentation. ...}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;ranking-based-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ amgoud_l-doder_d:2018a, author = {Leila Amgoud and Dragan Doder}, title = {Gradual Semantics for Weighted Graphs: An Unifying Approach}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {613--614}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {The paper bridges the gap between two general settings of gradual semantics for weighted argumentation graphs: the evaluation method setting (EMS) and the principle-based one (PBS). The former defines a semantics by three aggregation functions, each of which satisfies specific properties. The latter considers a semantics as any function that follows some high-level principles. The paper shows that (EMS) is one way of defining semantics that satisfy principles. Indeed, some principles follow from properties of aggregation functions.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no22}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;aggregation;} } @incollection{ amgoud_l-etal:2008a, author = {Leila Amgoud and Yannis Dimopoulos and Pavlos Moraitis}, title = {Making Decisions through Preference-Based Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {113--123}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {Decision making is usually based on the comparative evaluation of different alternatives by means of a decision criterion. The whole decision process is compacted into a criterion formula on the basis of which alternatives are compared. It is thus, impossible for an end user to understand why an alternative is good, or better than another. Recently, some decision criteria were articulated in terms of a two-steps argumentation process: (i) an inference step in which arguments in favor/against each option are built and evaluated, and (ii) a comparison step in which pairs of alternatives are compared on the basis of ``accepted'' arguments. Thus, not only the best alternative is provided to the user but also the reasons justifying this recommendation. However, a two steps approach is not in accordance with the principle of an argumentation system, whose accepted arguments are intended to support the 'good' options. Moreover, with such an approach it is difficult to define proof procedures for testing directly whether a given option may be the best one without computing the whole ordering. Finally, it is difficult to analyze how an ordering is revised in light of a new argument. This paper proposes a novel approach for argumentation-based decision making. We propose a Dung style system that takes as input different arguments and a defeat relation among them, and returns as outputs a status for each option, and a total preordering on a set of options. The status is defined on the basis of different inference mechanisms. The total preordering privileges the option that is supported by the strongest argument, provided that this argument survives to the attacks. The properties of the system are investigated. }, topic = {abstract-argumentation;preference;practical-reasoning; reasoning-about-preferences;} } @inproceedings{ amgoud_l-etal:2016b, author = {Leila Amgoud and Jonathan Ben-Naim and Dragan Doder and Srdjan Vesic}, title = {Ranking Arguments With Compensation-Based Semantics}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, pages = {12--21}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In almost all existing semantics in argumentation, a strong attack has a lethal effect on its target that a set of several weak attacks may not have. This paper investigates the case where several weak attacks may compensate one strong attack. It defines a broad class of ranking semantics, called alpha-OBBS, which satisfy compensation. alpha-OBBS assign a burden number to each argument and order the arguments with respect to those numbers. We study formal properties of alpha-OBBS, implement an algorithm that calculates the ranking, and perform experiments that show that the approach computes the ranking very quickly. Moreover, an approximation of the ranking can be provided at any time. }, topic = {kr;abstract-argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ amgoud_l-etal:2018a, author = {Leila Amgoud and Elise Bonzon and J\'er\v{o}me Delobelle and Dragan Doder and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Nicolas Maudet}, title = {Gradual Semantics Accounting for Similarity between Arguments}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {88--97}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We present principles that a semantics accounting for similarities should satisfy, and show how to extend gradual semantics for this purpose. We propose three original methods to do so, and study their properties. In particular, the new semantics are evaluated with respect to the new principles, and others from the literature. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;ranking-based-semantics;} } @incollection{ amgoud_l-prade_h:2004a, author = {Leila Amgoud and Henri Prade}, title = {Reaching Agreement through Argumentation: A Possibilistic Approach}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {175--182}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {negotiation;possibilistic-logic;argumentation;} } @article{ amgoud_l-prade_h:2009a, author = {Leila Amgoud and Henri Prade}, title = {Using Arguments for Making and Explaining Decisions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {3-4}, pages = {413--436}, topic = {argumentation;decision-making;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @inproceedings{ amigo-etal:2005a, author = {Enrique Amig\'{o} and Julio Gonzalo and Anselmo Pe\~{n}as and Felisa Verdejo}, title = {{QARLA}: A Framework for the Evaluation of Text Summarization Systems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {280--289}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1035}, topic = {text-summary;software-evaluation;} } @article{ amilhastre-etal:2002a, author = {J\'erome Amilhastre and H\'el\`ene Fargier and Pierre Marquis}, title = {Consistency Restoration and Explanations in Dynamic {CSP}s---Application to Configuration}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {135}, number = {1--2}, pages = {199--234}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;explanation;reasoning-about-consistency;} } @inproceedings{ amino_b-etal:2021a, author = {Benjamin Amino and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Alessio Lomuscio and Aniello Murano and Sasha Rubin}, title = {Synthesizing Best-effort Strategies under Multiple Environment Specifications}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {42--51}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We formally introduce and solve the synthesis problem for LTL goals in the case of multiple, even contradicting, assumptions about the environment. ... We study an important case in which the environment specifications are increasingly indeterminate, and show that as in the case of a single environment, best-effort strategies always exist for this setting. ...}, topic = {planning-algorrithnms;} } @inproceedings{ aminof_b-etal:2016a, author = {Benjamin Aminof and Aniello Murano and Sasha Rubin and Florian Zuleger}, title = {Prompt Alternating-Time Epistemic Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, pages = {258--267}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Prompt-LTL ... extends LTL with the operator FP ('prompt eventually'). We extend this work by studying alternating-time epistemic temporal logics extended with FP. We study the model-checking problem of the logic Prompt- KATL*, which is ATL* extended with epistemic operators and prompt eventually. We also obtain results for the model-checking problem of some of its fragments. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;temporal-reasoning;epistemic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ aminof_b-etal:2018a, author = {Benjamin Aminof and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Aniello Murano and Sasha Rubin}, title = {Synthesis under Assumptions}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {615--616}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We consider the following elusive question which has generated a lot of ad hoc research: In synthesis/planning, which constraints on traces are environment assumptions? We propose to view assumptions as sets of strategies and not, as is typical, as sets of traces, even for assumptions expressed as linear-temporal formulas on traces. This shift in perspective allows us to give a principled and conceptually clear answer to this question, as well as to reuse results and techniques for synthesis in order to solve synthesis under assumptions. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {foundations-of-planning;} } @inproceedings{ amir_e:1997a, author = {Eyal Amir}, title = {Applications of Context to Elaboration Tolerance (Abstract)}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Context in Knowledge Representation and Natural Language}, year = {1997}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and {\L}ucia Iwa\'nska}, pages = {15--16}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;elaboration-tolerance;} } @incollection{ amir_e:1998a, author = {Eyal Amir}, title = {Pointwise Circumscription Revisited}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {202--210}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-logic;circumscription;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ amir_e:1998b, author = {Eyal Amir}, title = {Towards a Formalization of Elaboration Tolerance: Adding and Deleting Axioms}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Symposium on Abstraction, Reformulation, and Approximation}, year = {1998}, editor = {Tom Elman and Fausto Giunchiglia}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {elaboration-tolerance;} } @inproceedings{ amir_e:1999a, author = {Eyal Amir}, title = {Object-Oriented First-Order Logic}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Action and Change}, year = {1999}, editor = {Michael Thielscher}, pages = {1--8}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {context;logics-of-context;object-oriented-formalisms;} } @incollection{ amir_e:2002a, author = {Eyal Amir}, title = {Projection in Decomposed Situation Calculus}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {315--326}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;frame-problem;temporal-reasoming;reasoning-about-actions; situation-calculus;problem-decomposition;} } @inproceedings{ amir_e:2005a, author = {Eyal Amir}, title = {Learning Partially Observable Deterministic Action Models}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Nineeenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, editor = {Leslie Pack Kaelbling and Alessandro Saffiotti}, pages = {1433--1439}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {action-models;machine-learning;} } @article{ amir_e-maynardzhang:2001a, author = {Eyal Amir and Pedrito Maynard-Zhang}, title = {Logic-Based Subsumption Architecture}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {153}, number = {5--6}, pages = {167--237}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;} } @incollection{ amir_e-mcilraith_sa:2000a, author = {Eyal Amir and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Partition-Based Logical Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {389--400}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {In this paper we show how tree decomposition can be applied to reasoning with first-order and propositional logic theories. ...To this end, we provide algorithms for partitioning and reasoning with related logical axioms in propositional and first-order logic. Many of the reasoning algorithms we present are based on the idea of passing messages between partitions. ... We provide a greedy algorithm that automatically decomposes a set of logical axioms into partitions, following this analysis. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {theorem-proving;distributed-systems;} } @article{ amir_e-mcilraith_sa:2005a, author = {Eyal Amir and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Partition-Based Logical Reasoning for First-Order and Propositional Theories}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {162}, number = {1--2}, pages = {49--88}, topic = {problem-reformulation;theorem-proving;} } @inproceedings{ amir_e-russell_sj:2003a, author = {Eyal Amir and Stuart J. Russell}, title = {Logical Filtering}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, editor = {Georg Gottlob and Toby Walsh}, pages = {75--82}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {belief-revision;temporal-reasoning;reasoning-about-actions;} } @book{ ammerman_rr:1965a, editor = {Robert R. Ammerman}, title = {Classics of Analytic Philosophy}, publisher = {McGraw-Hill}, year = {a965}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Edited Shelves.}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ ammon:1993a, author = {Kurt Ammon}, title = {An Automatic Proof of {G}\"odel's Incompleteness Theorem}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {61}, number = {2}, pages = {291--306}, topic = {theorem-proving;goedels-first-theorem;} } @article{ ammon:1997a, author = {Kurt Ammon}, title = {An Automatic Proof of {G}\"odel's Incompleteness Theorem}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {95}, number = {1}, pages = {203--207}, topic = {theorem-proving;goedels-first-theorem;} } @phdthesis{ ammon_msh:1980a, author = {Mary S.H. Ammon}, title = {Development in the Linguistic Expression of Causal Relations: Comprehension of Features of Lexical and Periphrastic Causatives}, school = {University of California at Berkeley}, year = {1980}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Berkeley, California}, topic = {nl-causatives;} } @article{ ammon_msh-slobin_di:1979a, author = {Mary S.H. Ammon and Dan I. Slobin}, title = {A Cross-Linguistic Study of the Processing of Causative Sentences}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {1979}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {3--17}, topic = {nl-causatives;crosslinguistics;psycholinguistics;} } @unpublished{ amodei_d-etal:2016a, author = {Dario Amodei and Chris Olah and Jacob Steinhardt and Paul Christiano and John Schulman and Dan Man}, title = {Concrete Problems in {AI} Safety}, year = {2016}, note = {https://arxiv.org/pdf/1606.06565v2.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr17}, topic = {reinforcement-learning;AI-safety;computational-ethics;} } @inproceedings{ amor-etal:2000a, author = {N. Ben Amor and Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and H\'ector Geffner and Henri Prade}, title = {Independence in Qualitative Uncertainty Networks}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {235--246}, topic = {qualitative-probability;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ amores:2013a, author = {Jaume Amores}, title = {Multiple Instance Classification: Review, Taxonomy and Comparative Study}, journal = {Artifcial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {201}, pages = {81-105}, topic = {pattern-matching;machine-learning;} } @incollection{ amores-quesada:2002a, author = {J. Gabriel Amores and Jos\'e Quesada}, title = {Cooperation and Collaboration in Natural Language Command Dialogues}, booktitle = {{EDILOG} 2002: Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Centre, University of Edinburgh}, year = {2002}, editor = {Johan Bos and Mary Ellen Foster and Colin Mathesin}, pages = {5--11}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {cooperation;computational-dialogue;} } @inproceedings{ amsili-rossari:1998a, author = {Pascal Amsili and Corinne Rossari}, title = {Tense and Connective Constraints on The Expression of Causality}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {48--54}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {nl-tense;nl-causality;} } @incollection{ amsler:1994a, author = {Robert A. Amsler}, title = {Research Toward the Development of a Lexical Knowledge Base for Natural Language Translation}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Computational Linguistics: Essays in Honour of {D}on {W}alker}, publisher = {Giardini Editori e Stampatori and Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {Antonio Zampolli and Nicoletta Calzolari and Martha Palmer}, pages = {155--175}, address = {Pisa and Dordrecht}, topic = {computational-lexicography;machine-translation;} } @incollection{ amsterdam:1991a, author = {Jonathan Amsterdam}, title = {Temporal Reasoning and Narrative Conventions}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {15--21}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;kr-course;narrative-representation;narrative-understanding;} } @inproceedings{ amtrup-weber_v:1998a, author = {Jan W. Amtrup and Volker Weber}, title = {Time Mapping with Hypergraphs}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {55--61}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;} } @article{ anagnostopoulou:1999a, author = {Elena Anagnostopoulou}, title = {Toward a More Complete Typology of Anaphoric Expressions}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1999}, volume = {30}, number = {1}, pages = {97--119}, topic = {anaphora;} } @incollection{ analyti-etal:2008a, author = {Anastasia Analyti and Grigoris Antoniou and Carlos Viegas Damsio}, title = {A Principled Framework for Modular Web Rule Bases and Its Semantics}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {390--400}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {We present a principled framework for modular web rule bases, called MWeb. According to this framework, each predicate defined in a rule base is characterized by its defining reasoning mode, scope, and exporting rule base list. Each predicate used in a rule base is characterized by its requesting reasoning mode and importing rule base list. For valid MWeb modular rule bases S, the MWebAS and MWebWFS semantics of each rule base s in S w.r.t. S are defined, model-theoretically. These semantics extend the answer set semantics (AS) and the well-founded semantics with explicit negation (WFSX) on ELPs, respectively, keeping all of their semantical and computational characteristics. Our framework supports: (i) local semantics and different points of view, (ii) local closed-world and open-world assumptions, (iii) scoped negation-as-failure, (iv)restricted propagation of local inconsistencies, and (v)monotonicity of reasoning, for "fully shared" predicates. }, topic = {semantic-web;answer-sets;} } @inproceedings{ anand_p-korotkova_n:2018a, author = {Pranav Anand and Natasha Korotkova}, title = {Acquaintance Content and Obviation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 22}, editor = {Uli Sauerl and and Stephanie Solt}, year = {2018}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {Leibniz-Centre General Linguistics}, address = {Berlin}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/GE4MWViN/SuB22-twovolume.pdf}, pages = {55--72}, abstract = {This paper is about what Ninan (2014) (following Wollheim 1980) calls the Acquaintance Inference (AI): a firsthand experience requirement imposed by several subjective expressions such as Predicates of Personal Taste (PPTs) (delicious). In general, one is entitled to calling something delicious only upon having tried it. This requirement can be lifted, disappearing in scope of elements that we will call obviators. The paper investigates the patterns of AI obviation for PPTs and similar constructions (e.g., psych predicates and subjective attitudes)....}, topic = {predicates-of-taste;} } @article{ anand_p-korotkova_n:2022a, author = {Pranav Anand and Natasha Korotkova}, title = {How to Theorize about Subjective Language: A Lesson from 'De Re'}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {3}, pages = {619--681}, abstract = {Most current theories argue that Subjective Predicates (SPs), which express matters of opinion, semantically differ from ordinary predicates, which express matters of fact. We will call this view 'SP exceptionalism'. This paper addresses SP exceptionalism by scrutinizing the behavior of SPs in attitude reports, which, as we will argue, significantly constrains the space of analytical options and rules out some of the existing theories. ... We demonstrate that the behavior of SPs in attitude reports does not differ from that of ordinary predicates: it follows from general constraints on intersective modification and intensional quantification ... We argue that this unexceptional behavior of SPs in fact has unexpected consequences for SP exceptionalism. ... Out of the currently available theories, only relativist accounts ... predict the right interpretation We thus present a novel empirical argument for relativism, and, more generally, formulate a constraint that has to be taken into consideration by any view that advocates SP exceptionalism.}, topic = {predicates-of-taste;relativism;} } @incollection{ anand_p-nevins_a:2004a, author = {Pranav Anand and Andrew Nevins}, title = {Shifty Operators in Changing Contexts}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XIV}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2021}, editor = {Kazuha Watanabe and Robert Young}, pages = {235--252}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, abstract = {... Based on data from two additional indexical-shifting languages, Zazaki1 and Slave,2 we argue that the interpretive possibilities of shifting indexicals are highly constrained. Our data come from three environments: cases with more than one embedded indexical, cases with different types of attitude verbs, and cases with more than one embedded speech-report.}, url = {https://doi.org/10.3765/salt.v14i0.2913}, topic = {nl-semantics;indexicals;propositional-attitudes;} } @book{ anand_p1:1993a, author = {Paul Anand}, title = {Foundations of Rational Choice under Risk}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-823303-5}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Economics shelves.}, topic = {foundations-of-decision-theory;foundations-of-utility;} } @incollection{ anand_p1:2009a, author = {Paul Anand}, title = {The Rationality of Intransitive Preference: Foundations for the Modern View}, booktitle = {Handbook of Rational and Social Choice}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Paul Anand and Prasanta Pattanaik and Clemens Puppe}, pages = {156--172}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {preferences;rationality;} } @incollection{ anand_p1-etal:2009b, author = {Paul Anand and Clemens Puppe and Prasanta Pattanaik}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Handbook of Rational and Social Choice}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Paul Anand and Prasanta Pattanaik and Clemens Puppe}, pages = {1--19}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {practical-reasoning;decision-making;decision-making-under-uncertainty; social-choice-theory;} } @phdthesis{ anand_p2:2006a, author = {Pranav Anand}, title = {De De Se}, school = {Linguistics, MIT}, year = {2006}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {self-locating-constructions;epistemic-logic;} } @unpublished{ anand_p2:2011a, author = {Pranav Anand}, title = {Suppositional Projects and Subjectivity}, year = {2011}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, USC}, rtnote = {LPW 11}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Misc 4"}, topic = {judging;predicates-of-taste;perspective-sensitive-constructions;} } @book{ ananiadou-mcnaught:2006a, editor = {Sophia Ananiadou and John McNaught}, title = {Text Mining for Biology and Biomedicine}, publisher = {Artech House}, year = {2006}, address = {Boston}, ISBN = {1-58053-984-X}, xref = {Review: karamanis:2007a}, topic = {data-mining;bioinformatics;} } @article{ anantharaman-etal:1990a, author = {Thomas Anantharaman and Murray S. Campbell and Feng-hsiung Hsu}, title = {Singular Extensions: Adding Selectivity to Brute-Force Searching}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {99--109}, topic = {search;} } @article{ andersen_h:2012a, author = {Holly Andersen}, title = {Mechanisms: What Are They Evidence for in Evidence-Based Medicine?}, journal = {Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice}, year = {2012}, volume = {18}, number = {5}, pages = {992--999}, abstract = {... In this paper, I examine the connections between Evidence-Based-Medicine and mechanisms from several angles. I diagnose what went wrong in two examples where mechanistic reasoning failed to generate accurate predictions for how a dysfunctional mechanism would respond to intervention. I then use these examples to explain why we should expect this kind of mechanistic reasoning to fail in systematic ways, by situating these failures in terms of evolved complexity of the causal system(s) in question. I argue that there is still a different role in which mechanisms continue to figure as evidence in EBM:...}, topic = {medical-reasoning;mechanisms;} } @article{ andersen_h:2014a, author = {Holly Andersen}, title = {A Field Guide to Mechanisms, Parts 1 and 2}, journal = {Philosophy Compass}, year = {2014}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {274--83, 284--93}, abstract = {In this field guide, I distinguishfive separate senses with which the term 'mechanism' is used in contem-porary philosophy of science. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se19\Andersen1.pdf,\se19\Andersen2.pdf }, topic = {philosophy-of-science;mechanisms;} } @article{ andersen_h:2014b, author = {Holly Andersen}, title = {A Field Guide to Mechanisms, Part 2}, journal = {Philosophy Compass}, year = {2014}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {284--93}, abstract = {... I conclude that there is no substantive coremeaning shared by all senses, and that debates in contemporary philosophy of science can benefit from clarification regarding precisely which sense of mechanism is at stake.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se19\Andersen1.pdf}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;mechanisms;} } @article{ andersen_sk:1991a, author = {Stig K{\ae}r Andersen}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}robabilistic Reasoning in Intelligent Systems: Networks of Plausible Inference}, by {J}udea {P}earl}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {48}, number = {1}, pages = {117--124}, xref = {Review of pearl_j:1988a.}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;reasoning-about-uncertainty; uncertainty-in-AI;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ anderson_ah:1999a, author = {A.H. Anderson and J. Mullin and E. Katsavras and R. McEwan and E. Grattan and P. Brundell}, title = {Understanding Multiparty Multimedia Interactions}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Psychological Models of Communication in Collaborative Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Susan E. Brennan and Alain Giboin and David R. Traum}, pages = {9--16}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {discourse;multimodal-communication;collaboration;} } @incollection{ anderson_ah-howarth:2002a, author = {Anne H. Anderson and Barbara Howarth}, title = {Referential Form and Word Duration in Video-Mediated and Face-to-Face Dialogues}, booktitle = {{EDILOG} 2002: Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Centre, University of Edinburgh}, year = {2002}, editor = {Johan Bos and Mary Ellen Foster and Colin Mathesin}, pages = {13--28}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1951a, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {A Note on Subjunctive and Counterfactual Conditionals}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1951}, volume = {12}, pages = {35--38}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {conditionals;subjunctive-mood;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1954a, author = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {Review of `Recent Discussions on Subjunctive Conditionals', by {E}rna {S}chneider}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1954}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {68}, xref = {Review of: schneider_e:1953a.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1954b, author = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {Review of `Counterfactual Conditionals', by {B}.{J}. {D}iggs}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1954}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {68}, xref = {Review of: diggs:1952a.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1954c, author = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {Review of `Contrary-to-Fact Conditionals', by {J}ulius {R}. {W}einberg}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1954}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {69--70}, xref = {Review of: weinberg_jr:1964a.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1954d, author = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {Review of `{C}ounterfactual Conditionals' and `{H}ypothetical Statements and Phenomenalism', by {R}obert {B}rown and {J}ohn {W}atling}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1954}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {70--71}, xref = {Review of: .}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1954e, author = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {Improved Decision Procedures for {L}ewis' Calculus {S4} and von {W}right's Calculus {M}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1954}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {201--214}, topic = {modal-logic;decidability;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1956a, author = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {Review of `{R}eduction Theorem in {L}ewis Sentential Calculi', by {K}azuo {M}atsumoto}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1956}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {1956}, xref = {Review of: matsumoto_k:1955a.}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1957a, author = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {Review of `{O}ntology and the Theory of Meaning', by {R}ichard {C}artwright}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1957}, volume = {22}, number = {4}, pages = {393--394}, xref = {Review of: cartwright_r:1954}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;ontological-commitment;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1958a, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {A Reduction of Deontic Logic to Alethic Modal Logic}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1958}, volume = {67}, pages = {100--103}, number = {265}, xref = {Criticism: berg_j1:1960a}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1958b, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {The Logic of Norms}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1958}, volume = {1}, pages = {84--91}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1959a, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {Church on Ontological Commitment}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1959}, volume = {56}, number = {10}, pages = {448--452}, topic = {ontological-commitment;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1959b, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {On The Logic of `Commitment{'}}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1959}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {23--27}, xref = {Review: lemmon_ej:1960a}, xref = {Criticism of rescher_n:1962a}, topic = {deontic-logic;commitment;conditional-obligation;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1959c, author = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {Review of `{O}ntology and the Hierarchy of Languages', by {B}everly {R}obbins}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1959}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {268}, xref = {Review of: robbins_b:1958a.}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;ontological-commitment;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1959d, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {Review of `The Ontological Operator', by {H}erbert {H}ochberg, `Comments on Dr. Hochberg's Paper', by {R}ichard {L}. {C}artwright, and `Professor {Q}uine, Pegasus, and {D}r. {C}artwright' by {H}erbert {H}ochberg }, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1959}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {183--184}, xref = {Review of: hochberg_h:1956a, cartwright_r1:1956a, hochberg_h:1957a.}, topic = {ontological-commitment;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1962a, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {Logic, Norms, and Roles}, journal = {Ratio}, volume = {4}, year = {1962}, pages = {32--49}, topic = {deontic-logic;Hohfeld;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1962b, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {Reply to {M}r. {R}escher}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1962}, volume = {13}, number = {1--2}, pages = {6--8}, xref = {Reply to: rescher_n:1962a}, topic = {conditional-obligation;deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ anderson_ar:1963a, author = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {Some Open Problems Concerning the System {E} of Entailment}, booktitle = {Proceedings of a Colloquium on Modal and Many-Valued Logics}, publisher = {Societas Philosophica Fennica}, year = {1963}, editor = {Georg Henrik {Von Wright} and Oiva T. Ketonen and Jaako Hintikka}, pages = {7--18}, address = {Helsinki}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @book{ anderson_ar:1964a, editor = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {Minds and Machines}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1964}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library: Q 335.5 A545.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Cogsci shelf.}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1964b, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {Review of `{C}ounterfactuals and Causal Laws', by {J}ohn {L}. {M}ackie}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1964}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {139}, xref = {Review of: mackie_jl:1962a.}, topic = {causality;conditionals;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1964c, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {Review of `{P}ropositions', by {R}ichard {C}artwright}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1964}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {139--140}, xref = {Review of: cartwright_r1:1962a.}, topic = {propositions;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1964d, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {Review of `{N}onentities', by {A}rthur {P}rior}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1964}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {140--141}, xref = {Review of: prior_an:1961b2.}, topic = {(non)existence;} } @incollection{ anderson_ar:1966a, author = {Alan Ross Anderson}, title = {The Formal Analysis of Normative Systems}, booktitle = {The Logic of Decisions and Actions}, publisher = {University of Pittsburgh Press}, year = {1966}, editor = {Nicholas Rescher}, pages = {147--213}, address = {Pittsburgh}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1967a, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {Some Nasty Problems in the Formal Logic of Ethics}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1967}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {345--360}, topic = {deontic-logic;relevance-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1970a, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {The Logic of {H}ofeldian Propositions}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1970}, volume = {12}, missinginfo = {pages, number}, topic = {logic-and-law;deontic-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1971a, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {The Logic of {H}ohfeldian Propositons}, journal = {University of Pittsburgh Law Review}, year = {1971}, volume = {33}, pages = {29--38}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. "AR Anderson"}, topic = {deontic-logic;Hohfeld;} } @article{ anderson_ar:1977a, author = {Alan R. Anderson}, title = {Ought, Time, and Deontic Paradoxes}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {74}, number = {12}, pages = {775--791}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ar-belnap_nd:1962b, author = {Alan R. Anderson and Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Tautological Entailments}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, volume = {1--2}, year = {1962}, pages = {9--49}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @book{ anderson_ar-belnap_nd:1975a, author = {Alan R. Anderson and Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Entailment: The Logic of Relevance and Necessity}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {1975}, volume = {1}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @book{ anderson_ar-etal:1969a, editor = {Alan Ross Anderson and Paul Benacerraf and Adolf Gr\"unbaum and Gerald J. Massey and Nicjolas Rescher and Richard S. Rudner}, title = {Essays in Honor of {C}arl {G}. {H}empel}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1969}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-90-481-8332-6}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;philosophy-of-science;} } @book{ anderson_ar-etal:1992a, author = {Alan R. Anderson and Nuel Belnap and J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Entailment: The Logic of Relevance and Necessity}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, volume = {2}, year = {1992}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LL authored shelves.}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @phdthesis{ anderson_ca:1977a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Some Models for the Logic of Sense and Denotation with an Application to Alternative (0)}, school = {Philosophy Department, UCLA}, year = {1977}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Los Angeles}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {Frege;intensional-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1980a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Some New Axioms for the Logic of Sense and Denotation: Alternative (0)}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1980}, volume = {14}, number = {2}, pages = {217--234}, topic = {Frege;intensional-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1980b, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Some Difficulties Concerning {R}ussellian Intensional Logic}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1980}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {35--43}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {Russell;intensionality;} } @unpublished{ anderson_ca:1981a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Synonymous Isomorphism and the Logic of Sense and Denotation}, year = {1981}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Minnesota.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, topic = {logic-of-sense-and-denotation;hyperintensionality;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1984a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {The Paradox of the Knower}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1984}, volume = {80}, pages = {338--355}, number = {6}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;} } @incollection{ anderson_ca:1984b, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {General Intensional Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {II}: Extensions of Classical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther}, pages = {355--385}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {modal-logic;higher-order-logic;intensional-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1984c, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Divine Omnipotence and Impossible Tasks: An Intensional Analysis}, journal = {International Journal of Philosophy and Religion}, year = {1984}, volume = {15}, pages = {109--124}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {omnipotence;paradoxes;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1986a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Some Difficulties Concerning {R}ussellian Intensional Logic}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1986}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {35--43}, topic = {Russell;intensionality;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1987a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Bealer's {\it Quality and Concept}}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1987}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {115--164}, topic = {intensionality;hyperintensionality;epistemic-logic; property-theory;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1987b, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Semantical Antinomies in the Logic of Sense and Denotation}, journal = {Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1987}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {99--114}, topic = {logic-of-sense-and-denotation;semantic-paradoxes; intensional-paradoxes;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1987c, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Review of \emph{Oblique Contexts}, by {L}eonard {L}insky}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1987}, volume = {48}, number = {1}, pages = {153--159}, xref = {Review of: linsky_l:1983a}, topic = {intensionality;} } @incollection{ anderson_ca:1989a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Russell on Order in Time}, booktitle = {Reading {R}ussell: Essays on {B}ertrand {R}ussell's Metaphysics and Epistemology}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1989}, editor = {C. Wade Savage and C. Anthony Anderson}, pages = {249--263}, address = {Minneapolis}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl14}, topic = {events;philosophy-of-time;temporal-ontology; temporal-logic;temporal-representation;interval-logic;} } @incollection{ anderson_ca:1989b, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Russellian Intensional Logic}, booktitle = {Themes from {K}aplan}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1989}, editor = {Joseph Almog and John Perry and Howard Wettstein}, pages = {67--103}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files}, topic = {intensionality;type-theory;Russell;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1990a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Some Emendations of {G}\"odel's Ontological Proof}, journal = {Faith and Philosophy}, volume = {7}, year = {1990}, topic = {ontological-argument;Goedel;} } @incollection{ anderson_ca:1990b, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Logical Analysis and Natural Language; THe Problem of Multiple Analyses}, booktitle = {Praktische Logic}, publisher = {Candenhoeck and Ruprecht}, year = {1990}, editor = {Peter Klein}, pages = {169--179}, address = {G\"ottingen}, topic = {philosophical-analysis;philosophical-methodology;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1991a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Review of \emph{Structured Meanings}, by {M}ax {J}. {C}resswell}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1991}, volume = {50}, number = {3}, xref = {Review of: cresswell_mj:1985a}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;propositional-attitudes; structured-propositions;} } @incollection{ anderson_ca:1991b, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Alonzo Church}, booktitle = {Handbook of Metaphysics and Ontology}, publisher = {Philosophia Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {H. Burkhardt and B. Smith}, address = {Munich}, missinginfo = {pages.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {Church;history-of-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1993a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Toward a Logic of A Priori Knowledge}, journal = {Philosophical Topics}, year = {1994}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {1--20}, topic = {a-priori;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ca:1998a, author = {C. Anthony Anderson}, title = {Alonzo {C}hurch's Contributions to Philosophy and Intensional Logic}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {129--171}, topic = {intensionality;Church;history-of-logic;} } @book{ anderson_ca-owens_j2:1990a, editor = {C. Anthony Anderson and Joseph Owens}, title = {Propositional Attitudes: The Role of Content in Logic, Language, and Mind}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, year = {1990}, address = {Stanford, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Kit Fine, "Quine on Quantifying In", pp. 1--25 2. Hans Kamp, "Prolegomena to a Structural Theory of Belief and other Attitudes", pp. 27--90 3. Ernest LePore and Barry Loewer, "A Study in Comparative Semantics", pp. 91--111 4. Tyler Burge, "Wherein is Language Social?", pp. 113--130 5. Robert Stalnaker, "Narrow Content", pp. 131--145 6. Joseph Owens, "Cognitive Access and Semantic Puzzles", pp. 147--173 7. John Wallace and H.E. Mason, "On some Thought Experiments about Mind and Meaning", pp. 175--199 10. Keith S. Donnellan, "Belief and the Identity of Reference", pp. 201--214 11. Nathan Salmon, "A {M}illian Heir Rejects the Wages of {S}inn", pp. 215--247 12. Stephen Schiffer, "The Mode-of-Presentation Problem", pp. 249--268 13. John R. Searle, "Consciousness, Unconsciousness and Intentionality", pp. 269--284 14. Keith Gunderson, "Consciousness and Intentionality: Robots with and without the Right Stuff", pp. 285--324 }, ISBN = {0937073512}, xref = {Review: forbes_g:1992a.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BC 57 .P761 1990.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ anderson_dj-zalta_em:2004a, author = {David J. Anderson and Edward M. Zalta}, title = {Frege, {B}oolos, and Logical Objects}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {1--26}, topic = {Frege;philosophical-ontology;foundations-of-mathematics; foundations-of-logic;} } @book{ anderson_dr:1987a, author = {Douglas R. Anderson}, title = {Creativity and the Philosophy of {C}.{S}. {P}eirce}, publisher = {Reidel}, year = {1987}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {Peirce;creativity;} } @book{ anderson_e:1993a, author = {Elizabeth Anderson}, title = {Value in Ethics and Economics}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {UMich Grad BD 232 .A481 1993}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {foundations-of-utility;rationality;} } @incollection{ anderson_e:1997a, author = {Elizabeth Anderson}, title = {Practical Reason and Incommensurable Goods}, booktitle = {Incommensurability, Incomparability, and Practical Reason}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Ruth Chang}, pages = {90--109}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {incommensurability-in-ethics;practical-reasoning;rationality;} } @article{ anderson_j1:1938a, author = {John Anderson}, title = {The Problem of Causation}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1938}, volume = {16}, pages = {127--142}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {causality;} } @book{ anderson_j1:1971a, author = {John Anderson}, title = {The Grammar of Case: Towards a Localistic Theory}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1971}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {case-grammar;thematic-roles;} } @book{ anderson_j1:1979a, author = {John Anderson}, title = {On Being without a Subject}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1979}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, topic = {case-grammar;grammatical-relations;} } @incollection{ anderson_ja:1998a, author = {James A. Anderson}, title = {Learning Arithmetic with a Neural Network: Seven Times Seven Is About Fifty}, booktitle = {An Invitation to Cognitive Science: Methods, Models, and Conceptual Issues}, volume = {2}, edition = {2}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Don Scarborough and Saul Sternberg and Daniel N. Osherson}, chapter = {7}, pages = {255--299}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc17}, topic = {neural-networks;symbolic-reasoning;} } @book{ anderson_ja-rosenfeld_e:1998a, editor = {James A. Anderson and Edward Rosenfeld}, title = {Talking Nets: An Oral History of Neural Networks}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262011670}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.87 .T371 1998.}, xref = {Reviews: sharkey:2000a, wurtz:2000a.}, topic = {history-of-AI;connectionism;} } @book{ anderson_jr:1983a1, author = {John R. Anderson}, title = {The Architecture of Cognition}, edition = {1}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0674044258}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF311 .A58941 1983.}, xref = {Review: vanlehn:1986a.}, topic = {cognitive-architectures;foundations-of-cogsci; cognitive-psychology;} } @book{ anderson_jr:1983a, author = {John R. Anderson}, title = {The Architecture of Cognition}, edition = {1}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0674044258}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF311 .A58941 1983.}, xref = {Review: vanlehn:1986a.}, topic = {cognitive-architectures;foundations-of-cogsci; cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ anderson_jr:1983b, author = {John R. Anderson}, title = {A Spreading Activation Theory of Memory}, journal = {Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior}, year = {1983}, volume = {22}, pages = {261--295}, topic = {memory;memory-models;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ anderson_jr:1989a, author = {John R. Anderson}, title = {A Theory of the Origins of Human Knowledge}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {40}, number = {1--3}, pages = {313--351}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The PUPS theory and its ACT* predecessor are computational embodiments of psychology's effort to develop a theory of the origins of knowledge. The theories contain proposals for extraction of knowledge from the environment, a strength-based prioritization of knowledge, knowledge compilation mechanisms for forming use-specific versions of knowledge, and induction mechanisms for extending knowledge. PUPS differs from ACT* basically in its principles of induction which include analogy-based generalization, a discrimination mechanism, and principles of making causal inferences. The knowledge in these theories can be classified into the knowledge level, algorithm level, and implementation level. Knowledge at the knowledge level consists of information acquired from the environment and innate principles of induction and problem solving. Knowledge at the algorithm level consists of internal deductions, inductions, and compilation. Knowledge at the implementation level takes the form of setting strengths for the encoding of specific pieces of information. }, topic = {cognitive-architecture;machine-learning;induction;} } @book{ anderson_jr:1990a, author = {John R. Anderson}, title = {Cognitive Psychology and Its Implications}, edition = {3}, publisher = {W.H. Freeman}, year = {1990}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {071672085X}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Bf 311 .A58951 1990.}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;} } @book{ anderson_jr:1995a, author = {John R. Anderson}, title = {Cognitive Psychology and Its Implications}, edition = {4}, publisher = {W.H. Freeman}, year = {1995}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0716723859}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Bf 311 .A58951 1995}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;} } @book{ anderson_jr:2000a, author = {John R. Anderson}, title = {Learning and Memory: An Integrated Approach}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Wiley}, year = {2000}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0471249254}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate BF 318 .A531 2000}, topic = {cognitive-architectures;cognitive-psychology;} } @book{ anderson_jr:2007a, author = {John R. Anderson}, title = {How Can the Human Mind Occur in the Physical Universe?}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-53245-9}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. CogSci area.}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;cognitive-architectures;} } @book{ anderson_jr-bower:1973a, author = {John R. Anderson and Gordon H. Bower}, title = {Human Associative Memory}, publisher = {V.H. Winston}, year = {1973}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {memory;memory-models;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ anderson_jr-etal:1990a, author = {John R. Anderson and C. Franklin Boyle and Albert T. Corbett and Matthew W. Lewis}, title = {Cognitive Modeling and Intelligent Tutoring}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {42}, number = {1}, pages = {7--49}, topic = {cognitive-modelling;intelligent-tutoring;} } @article{ anderson_jr-etal:2004a, author = {John R. Anderson and Daniel Bothell and Michael D. Byrne}, title = {An Integrated Theory of the Mind}, journal = {Psychological Review}, year = {2004}, volume = {111}, number = {4}, pages = {1036--1060}, url = {http://act-r.psy.cmu.edu/papers/403/IntegratedTheory.pdf}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;cognitive-architectures; cognitive-modeling;ACT-R;} } @book{ anderson_jr-lebiere:1998a, author = {John R. Anderson and Christian J. Lebiere}, title = {The Atomic Components of Thought}, publisher = {Lawrence Earlbaum}, year = {1998}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, topic = {cognitive-architectures;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ anderson_l:2013c, author = {Luvell Anderson}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Structure of Values and Norms}, by {S}ven {O}. {H}ansson}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Philosophical Reviews}, year = {2013}, url = {http://ndpr.nd.edu/news/40949-lying-misleading-and-what-is-said-an-exploration-in-philosophy-of-language-and-in-ethics/}, topic = {misleading;lying;} } @article{ anderson_lv:1985a, author = {Lyle V. Anderson}, title = {Moral Dilemmas, Deliberation, and Choice}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {82}, number = {3}, pages = {139--162}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ anderson_m-anderson_sl:2007a, author = {Michael Anderson and Susan Leigh Anderson}, title = {Machine Ethics: Creating an Ethical Intelligent Agent}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2007}, volume = {28}, number = {4}, pages = {15--26}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @article{ anderson_m-anderson_sl:2007b, author = {Michael Anderson and Susan Leigh Anderson}, title = {The Status of Machine Ethics: A Report from the {AAAI} Symposium}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2007}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {1--10}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn12.}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @inproceedings{ anderson_m-etal:2005a, author = {Michael Anderson and Susan Leigh Anderson and Chris Armen}, title = {Towards Machine Ethics: Implementing Two Action-Based Ethical Theories}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Machine Ethics}, year = {2005}, editor = {G. Michael Anderson and Susan Leigh Anderson and Chris Arme}, pages = {1--7}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Machine ethics, in contrast to computer ethics, is concerned with the behavior of machines towards human users and other machines. It involves adding an ethical dimension to machines. Our increasing reliance on machine intelligence that effects change in the world can be dangerous without some restraint. We explore the implementation of two action-based ethical theories that might serve as a foundation for machine ethics and present details of prototype systems based upon them.}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @article{ anderson_m-mccartney:2003a, author = {Michael Anderson and Robert McCartney}, title = {Diagram Processing: Computing with Diagrams}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {145}, number = {1--2}, pages = {181--226}, topic = {reasoning-with-diagrams;} } @article{ anderson_ml:2003a, author = {Michael L. Anderson}, title = {Representations, Symbols, and Embodiment}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {149}, number = {1}, pages = {151--156}, xref = {Response to: chrisley:2003a.}, topic = {embodiment;foundations-of-cognition;} } @article{ anderson_ml:2005a, author = {Michael L. Anderson}, title = {Why is {AI} So Scary?}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {169}, number = {2}, pages = {201--208}, xref = {Review of: foerst:2004a, helmreich_s:2000a, georges_tm:2004a}, topic = {AI-and-culture;cultural-anthropology;AI-and-religion;} } @article{ anderson_ml:2006a, author = {Michael L. Anderson}, title = {Strike While the Iron Is: a Review of \emph{{R}econstructing the Cognitive World}, by {M}ichael {W}heeler}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {18}, pages = {1213--1217}, xref = {Review of: wheeler_m:2005a}, topic = {Heidegger;Descartes;foundations-of-AI;embedded-cognition; philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ anderson_ml:2009a, author = {Michael L. Anderson}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}ow the Body Shapes the Way We Think: {A} New View of Intelligence}, by {R}olf {P}feifer and {J}osh {B}ongard}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {174}, number = {2}, pages = {152--154}, xref = {Review of: pfeifer-bongard:2007a}, topic = {embodiment;robotics;} } @incollection{ anderson_ml-etal:2002a, author = {Michael L. Anderson and Yoshi A. Okamoto and Darsana Josyula and Don Perlis}, title = {The Use-Mention Distinction and its Importance to {HCI}}, booktitle = {{EDILOG} 2002: Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Centre, University of Edinburgh}, year = {2002}, editor = {Johan Bos and Mary Ellen Foster and Colin Mathesin}, pages = {21--28}, address = {Edinburgh}, rtnote = {The idea is that in order to explain "Move the Chicago train to Baltimore" [System moves train from Chicago to Baltimore] "No---move the _Chicago_ train to Baltimore" [System moves train to Chicago to Baltimore] you need metalinguistic reasoning. }, topic = {HCI;} } @article{ anderson_ml-etal:2008a, author = {Michael L. Anderson and Walid Gomaa and John Grant and Don Perlis}, title = {Active Logic Semantics for A Single Agent in a Static World}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {8--9}, pages = {1045--1063}, rtnote = {In RT collection. \fe11\perlis3.pdf}, topic = {active-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ anderson_ml-oates:2007a, author = {Michael L. Anderson and Tim Oates}, title = {A Review of Recent Research in Metareasoning and Metalearning}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2007}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {12--16}, topic = {metacognition;} } @article{ anderson_rc-etal:1977a, author = {R.C. Anderson and R.E. Reynolds and D.L. Schallert and E.T. Goetz}, title = {Frameworks for Comprehending Discourse}, journal = {American Educational Research Journal}, year = {1977}, volume = {14}, pages = {367--381}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @article{ anderson_rc-ortony:1975a, author = {R.C. Anderson and Andrew Ortony}, title = {On Putting Apples into Bottles: A Problem of Polysemy}, journal = {Cognitive Psychology}, year = {1975}, volume = {7}, pages = {167--180}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {polysemy;} } @inproceedings{ anderson_sl:2005a, author = {Susan Leigh Anderson}, title = {Asimov's "Three Laws of Robotics" and Machine Metaethics}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Machine Ethics}, year = {2005}, editor = {G. Michael Anderson and Susan Leigh Anderson and Chris Arme}, pages = {8--16}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Using Asimov's "Bicentennial Man" as a springboard, a number of metaethical issues concerning the emerging field of Machine Ethics are discussed. Although the ultimate goal of Machine Ethics is to create autonomous ethical machines, this presents a number of challenges. A good way to begin the task of making ethics computable is to create a program that enables a machine to act an ethical advisor to human beings. This project, unlike creating an autonomous ethical machine, will not require that we make a judgment about the ethical status of the machine itself, a judgment that will be particularly difficult to make. Finally, it is argued that Asimov's "Three Laws of Robotics" are an unsatisfactory basis for Machine Ethics, regardless of the status of the machine. }, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ anderson_sl:2011a, author = {Susan Leigh Anderson}, title = {Machine Metaethics}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {21--28}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {I have looked quickly at this article and it does not seem very interesting.}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ anderson_sl:2011b, author = {Susan Leigh Anderson}, title = {Philosophical Concerns with Machine Ethics}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {162--167}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ anderson_sl:2011c, author = {Susan Leigh Anderson}, title = {The Unacceptability of {A}simov's Three Laws of Robotics as a Basis for Machine Ethics}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {285--296}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ anderson_sl:2011d, author = {Susan Leigh Anderson}, title = {How Machines Might Help Us Achieve Breakthroughs in Ethical Theory and Inspire Us to Behave Better}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {524--550}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ anderson_sl-anderson_m:2011a, author = {Susan Leigh Anderson and Michael Anderson}, title = {A Prima Facie Duty Approach to Machine Ethics: Machine Learning of Features of Ethical Dilemmas, Prima Facie Duties, and Decision Principles through a Dialogue with Ethicists}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {476--498}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @book{ anderson_sr:1971a, author = {Steven R. Anderson}, title = {On the Linguistic Status of the Performative/Constative Distinction}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1971}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @article{ anderson_sr:1972a, author = {Steven R. Anderson}, title = {How to Get `Even'}, journal = {Language}, year = {1972}, volume = {48}, pages = {893--906}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {sentence-focus;`even';pragmatics;} } @book{ anderson_sr:1972b, author = {Steven R. Anderson}, title = {Pro-Sentential Forms and Their Implications for {E}nglish Sentence Structure}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1972}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {pro-forms;} } @incollection{ anderson_sr:1981a, author = {Stephen R. Anderson}, title = {Topicalization in Breton}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society}, publisher = {Berkeley Linguistics Society}, year = {1981}, address = {University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {s-topic;Breton-language;} } @book{ anderson_sr:1985a, author = {Stephen R. Anderson}, title = {Phonology in the Twentieth Century}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Chicago}, topic = {phonology;history-of-phonology;} } @article{ anderson_sr:2008a, author = {Stephen R. Anderson}, title = {The Logical Structure of Linguistic Theory}, journal = {Language}, year = {2008}, volume = {84}, number = {4}, pages = {795--814}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @incollection{ anderson_sr-keenan_el:1985a, author = {Steven R. Anderson and Edward L. Keenan}, title = {Deixis}, booktitle = {Language Typology and Syntactic Description: Grammatical Categories and the Lexicon}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, editor = {Timothy Shopen}, pages = {259-308}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {deixis;} } @book{ anderson_sr-kiparsky_p:1973a, editor = {Stephen R. Anderson and Paul Kiparsky}, title = {A {F}estschrift for {M}orris {H}alle}, publisher = {Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc.}, year = {1973}, address = {New York}, topic = {linguistics-general;} } @article{ anderson_t-etal:2001a, author = {Tony Anderson and Rebecca Soden and Simon C. Hunter}, title = {Evidence Evaluation and Use in Undergraduates' Everyday Reasoning}, journal = {Scottish Educational Review}, year = {2001}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {57--71}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no14\anderson.pdf}, topic = {educational-psychology;critical-thinking;} } @book{ anderson_wt:1990a, author = {Walter Truett Anderson}, title = {Reality Isn't What it Used to Be}, publisher = {Harper San Francisco}, year = {1990}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {popular-culture;postmodernism;philosophical-realism;} } @techreport{ andersson_ab:1974b, author = {Aners-B\"orje Andersson}, title = {The {NP} Status of {\em that\/}-Clauses and Infinitives}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of {G}\"oteborg}, number = {1}, year = {1974}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Logical Grammar Reports}, topic = {complementation;} } @techreport{ andersson_lg:1973a, author = {Lars-Gunnar Andersson}, title = {{\"an vad som}---A Note on Comparative Clauses in {S}wedish}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of G\"oteborg}, number = {22}, year = {1973}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Logical Grammar Reports}, topic = {comparative-constructions;Swedish-language;} } @techreport{ andersson_lg:1973b, author = {Lars-Gunnar Andersson}, title = {A Note on Comparative Clauses in {S}wedish}, institution = {Gothenburg Papers in Theoretical Linguistics, Dept. of Linguistics, Univ. of G\"oteborg}, year = {1973}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {comparative-constructions;Swedish-language;} } @techreport{ andersson_lg:1973c, author = {Lars-Gunnar Andersson}, title = {On the Comp-{S} Analysis}, institution = {Gothenburg Papers in Theoretical Linguistics, Dept. of Linguistics, Univ. of G\"oteborg}, year = {1973}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {nl-syntax;complementation;} } @techreport{ andersson_lg:1973d, author = {Lars-Gunnar Andersson}, title = {Presuppositional Structure in Temporal Clauses}, institution = {Research Project for Logical Grammar, Department of Linguistics, Univ. of G\"oteborg}, year = {1973}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers}, topic = {presupposition;nl-tense;} } @techreport{ andersson_lg:1973e, author = {Lars-Gunnar Andersson}, title = {Presuppositional Structure in Temporal Clauses}, institution = {Research Project for Logical Grammar, Department of Linguistics, Univ. of G\"oteborg}, year = {1973}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {presupposition;} } @techreport{ andersson_lg:1974a, author = {Lars-Gunnar Andersson}, title = {Questions and Other Open Structures}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of G\"oteborg}, number = {9}, year = {1974}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Logical Grammar Reports}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @article{ andler:1993a, author = {Daniel Andler}, title = {Is Context a Problem?}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1993}, volume = {93}, note = {Supplementary Series.}, pages ={279--296}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja14}, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ ando-zhang_t:2005a, author = {Rie Ando and Tong Zhang}, title = {A High-Performance Semi-Supervised Learning Method for Text Chunking}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {1--9}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1001}, topic = {text-chunking;machine-learning;} } @article{ andow_j:2016a, author = {James Andow}, title = {Intuitions}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2016}, volume = {76}, number = {2}, pages = {232--246}, DOI = {doi:10.1093/analys/anv062}, topic = {intuitions;analytic-philosophy;} } @incollection{ andre_e:2003a, author = {Elisabeth Andr\'e}, title = {Natural Language in Multimodal and Multimedia Systems}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {650--669}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-processing;multimedia-interpretation;multimodal-interpretation; multimedia-generation;multimodal-communication;} } @incollection{ andre_e:2015a, author = {Elisabeth Andr\'e}, title = {Preparing Emotional Agents for Intercultural Communication}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {309-- 321}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;emotional-computing;} } @article{ andre_e-etal:2000a, author = {Elizabeth Andr\'e and Kim Binsted and Kumito Tanaka-Ishii and Sean Luke and Gerd Herzog and Thomas Rist}, title = {Three {R}obo{C}up Simulation League Commentator Systems}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {57--65}, topic = {nl-generation;animation;embodied-nlp;} } @techreport{ andre_e-rist:1991a, author = {Elisabeth Andr\'e and Thomas Rist}, title = {Synthesizing Illustrated Documents: a Plan-Based Approach}, institution = {DFKI --- German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence, Saarbruecken, Germany}, year = {1991}, number = {DFKI-RR-91-06}, topic = {nl-generation;multimedia-generation;} } @article{ andreas_h:2010a, author = {Holger Andreas}, title = {Semantic Holism in Scientific Languages}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2010}, volume = {77}, number = {4}, pages = {524--543}, topic = {compositionality;holism;philosophy-od-science;} } @article{ andreas_h:2011a, author = {Holger Andreas}, title = {A Structuralist Theory of Belief Revision}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2011}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {205--232}, topic = {default-logic;belief-revision;prioritized-default-logic;} } @article{ andreas_h:2018a, author = {Holger Andreas}, title = {Modular Semantics for Theories: An Approach to Paraconsistent Reasoning}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {5}, pages = {877--912}, topic = {paraconsistency;} } @incollection{ andreas_h:2019a, author = {Holger Andreas}, title = {Explanatory Conditionals}, booktitle = {{PSA}'18: Proceedings of the 2018 Biennial Meeting of the {P}hilosophy of {S}cience {A}ssociation, Volume {II}: Contributed Papers}, publisher = {The University of Chicago Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Kevin Elliott}, pages = {993--1004}, address = {Chicago}, topic = {conditionals;explanation;CCCP;} } @incollection{ andreasen:2000a, author = {Robin O. Andreasen}, title = {Race: Biological Reality or Social Construct?}, booktitle = {{PSA}'1998: Proceedings of the 1998 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2000}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {S653--S666}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {natural-kinds;philosophy-of-social-science;racial-stereotypes;} } @article{ andreka_h-etal:1982a, author = {Hajnal Andr\'eka and Istv\'an N\'emeti and Ildik\'o Sain}, title = {A Complete Logic for Reasoning about Programs Via Nonstandard Model Theory {I}}, journal = {Theoretical Computer Science}, year = {1982}, volume = {17}, pages = {192--212}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {dynamic-logic;nonstandard-models;} } @incollection{ andreka_h-etal:1996a, author = {Hajnal Andr\'eka and \'Agnes Kurucz and Istv\'an N\'emeti Ildik\'o Sain and Andr\'as Simon}, title = {Investigations in Arrow Logic}, booktitle = {Arrow Logic and Multimodal Logic}, publisher = {{CLSI} Publications}, year = {1996}, editor = {Maarten Marx and L\'azl\'o P\'olos and Michael Masuch}, pages = {63--99}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {arrow-logic;} } @article{ andreka_h-etal:1998a, author = {Hajnal Andr\'eka and Istv\'an N\'emeti and Johan {van Benthem}}, title = {Modal Logic and Bounded Fragments of Predicate Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {217--274}, rtnote = {Rtrnote: Reading notes on file. Rnotes files "andreka"}, topic = {modal-logic;model-theory;} } @incollection{ andreka_h-etal:2001a, author = {Hajnal Andr\'eka, Istvan N\'emeti and Ildiko Sain}, title = {Algebraic Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {II}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2001}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {133--248}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {algebraic-logic;} } @article{ andreka_h-etal:2017a, author = {Hajnal Andr\'eka and Johan van Benthem and Istv\'an N\'emeti}, title = {On A New Semantics for First-Order Predicate Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {3}, pages = {259--267}, xref = {Commentary on: antonelli_ga:2017a}, topic = {completeness-theorems;guarded-fragments;nonstandard-models;} } @article{ andreka_h-etal:2017b, author = {Hanal Andr\'eka and Steven Givant and Peter Jipsen and Istv\'an N\'emeti}, title = {On {T}arski's Axiomatic Foundations of the Calculus of Relations}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {82}, number = {3}, pages = {966--994}, contentnote = {Mainly, axiomatic independence results.}, topic = {relation-algebras;Tarski;} } @article{ andreka_h-etal:2020a, author = {Hajnal Andr\'eka and Istv\'an N\'emetiand Steven Givant}, title = {Nonrepresentable Relation Algebras from Groups}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, pages = {861--881}, abstract = {A series of nonrepresentable relation algebras is constructed from groups. We use them to prove that there are continuum many subvarieties between the variety of representable relation algebras and the variety of coset relation algebras. We present our main construction in terms of polygroupoids}, topic = {category-theory;} } @article{ andreka_h-mikulas:1994a, author = {Hajnal Andr\'eka and Szabolcs Mikul\'as}, title = {Lambek calculus and its Relational Semantics: Completeness and Incompleteness}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1994}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {1--37}, topic = {Lambek-calculus;} } @article{ andreka_h-schobbens_py:2002a, author = {Hajnal Andr\'eka and Pierre-Yves Schobbens}, title = {Operators and Laws for Combining Preference Relations}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {13--53}, abstract = {The paper is a theoretical study of a generalization of the lexicographic rule for combining ordering relations. We define the concept of priority operator: a priority operator maps a family of relations to a single relation which represents their lexicographic combination according to a certain priority on the family of relations. We present four kinds of results.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;aggregation;} } @incollection{ andreou:2012a, author = {Chrisoula Andreou}, title = {Self-Defeating Self-Governance}, booktitle = {Action Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {20--34}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {volition;} } @article{ andreou:2015a, author = {Chrisoula Andreou}, title = {Parity, Comparability, and Choice}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2015}, volume = {112}, number = {1}, pages = {5--22}, topic = {preferences;comparison-classes;incommensurability-in-preference;} } @article{ andrews_ad:2010a, author = {Avery D. Andrews}, title = {Propositional Glue and the Projection Architecture of {LFG}}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2010}, volume = {33}, number = {3}, pages = {141--170}, topic = {nl-semantics;LFG;glue-semantics;} } @incollection{ andrews_e:2012a, author = {Edna Andrews}, title = {Markedness}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {212--236}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;markedness;} } @article{ andrews_jh:2007a, author = {James H. Andrews}, title = {Review of \emph{Logicism Renewed}, by {P}aul {C}. {G}ilmore}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {104--106}, xref = {Review of: gilmore_pc:2005a}, topic = {logicism;formalizations-of-nominalism;nominalism;} } @incollection{ andrews_k:2014a, author = {Kristen Andrews}, title = {Animal Cognition}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2014/entries/cognition-animal/}, year = {2014}, edition = {Winter 2014}, topic = {animal-cognition;} } @book{ andrews_pb:2002a, author = {Peter B. Andrews}, title = {An Introduction to Mathematical Logic and Type Theory}, edition = {2nd}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Review: yasuhara:2003a.}, topic = {logic-intro;type-theory;} } @article{ andrews_u-sorbi_a:2021a, author = {Uri Andrews and Andrea Sorbi}, title = {Effective Inseparability, Lattices, and Preordering Relations}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {838--865}, topic = {lattice-theory;} } @article{ andrist_s-etal:2016a, author = {Sean Andrist and Dan Bohus and Bilge Mutlu and David Schlangen}, title = {Introduction: Turn-Taking and Coordination in Human-Machine Interaction}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2016}, volume = {37}, number = {4}, pages = {5--7}, topic = {coord-in-conversation;turn-taking;HCI;} } @incollection{ androutsopoulos-anetoulari:2003a, author = {Jon Androutsopoulos and Maria Anetoulari}, title = {Natural Language Interaction}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {629--649}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-processing;nl-interfaces;spoken-dialogue-systems;} } @incollection{ androutsopoulos-aretoulaki:2003a, author = {Ion Androutsopoulos and Maria Aretoulaki}, title = {Natural Language Interaction}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {629--649}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-processing;computational-dialogue;} } @article{ angelberger_a-korbmacher_j:2020a, author = {Albert Angelberger and Johannes Korbmacher}, title = {Truthmakers and Normative Conflicts}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2020}, volume = {108}, number = {1}, pages = {49--84}, abstract = {By building on work by Kit Fine, we develop a sound and complete truthmaker semantics for Lou Goble's conflict tolerant deontic logic BDL.}, topic = {deontic-logic;moral-conflict;truthmaking;} } @incollection{ angelini:1998a, author = {Bianca Angelini and Daliele Falavigna and Maurizio Onologi and Renato de Mori}, title = {Basic Speech Sounds, their Analysis and Features}, booktitle = {Spoken Dialogues with Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Renato de Mori}, pages = {69--121}, address = {New York}, topic = {phonetics;speech-recognition;} } @article{ angell:1962a, author = {Richard B. Angell}, title = {A Propositional Logic with Subjunctive Conditionals}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1962}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {327--343}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ angelov-etal:2010a, author = {Krasimir Angelov and Bj\"orn Bringert and Aarne Ranra}, title = {PGF: A Portable Run-Time Format for Type-Theoretical Grammars}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2010}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {201--228}, topic = {categorial-grammar;grammar-formalisms;} } @article{ angere:2015a, author = {Staffan Angere}, title = {The Logical Structure of Truthmaking}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {4}, pages = {351--374}, topic = {truthmaking;} } @article{ angiulli-etal:2008a, author = {Fabrizio Angiulli and Rachel Ben-Eliyahu Zohary and Luigi Palopoli}, title = {Outlier Detection Using Default Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {16--17}, pages = {1837--1872}, topic = {default-logic;data-mining;} } @article{ angiulli-etal:2010a, author = {Fabrizio Angiulli and Rachel Ben-Eliyahu-Zohary and Luigi Palopoli}, title = {Outlier Detection for Simple Default Theories}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {15}, pages = {1247--1253}, topic = {default-logic;outlier-detection;} } @article{ angius-tamburrini:2011a, author = {Nicola Angius and Guglielmo Tamburrini}, title = {Scientific Theories of Computational Systems in Model Checking}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {323--336}, abstract = {Model checking, a prominent formal method used to predict and explain the behaviour of software and hardware systems, is examined on the basis of reflective work in the philosophy of science concerning the ontology of scientific theories and model-based reasoning. The empirical theories of computational systems that model checking techniques enable one to build are identified, in the light of the semantic conception of scientific theories, with families of models that are interconnected by simulation relations. And the mappings between these scientific theories and computational systems in their scope are analyzed in terms of suitable specializations of the notions of model of experiment and model of data. Furthermore, the extensively mechanized character of model-based reasoning in model checking is highlighted by a comparison with proof procedures adopted by other formal methods in computer science. Finally, potential epistemic benefits flowing from the application of model checking in other areas of scientific inquiry are emphasized in the context of computer simulation studies of biological information processing. }, topic = {philosophy-of-computer-science;model-checking;} } @article{ anglbberger-etal:2014a, author = {Albert J.J. Anglbberger and Nobert Gratzl and Olivier Roy}, title = {Obligation, Free Choice, and the Logic of Weakest Permissions}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {807--827}, topic = {deontic-logic;`ought';permission;free-choice-`any/or';} } @article{ anglberger:2008a, author = {Albert J.J. Anglberger}, title = {Dynamic Deontic Logic and its Paradoxes}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2008}, volume = {89}, number = {3}, pages = {427--435}, topic = {deontic-logic;dynamic-logic;} } @incollection{ anglberger-etal:2014a, author = {Albert J.J. Anglberger and Huimin Dong and Olivier Roy}, title = {Open Reading without Free Choice}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic and Normative Systems: {DEON} 2014}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2014}, editor = {Fabrizio Cariani and Davide Grossi and Joke Mehens and Xavier Parent}, pages = {19--32}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {deontic-logic;free-choice-`any/or';} } @article{ angner_e:2018a, author = {Erik Angner}, title = {What Preferences Really Are}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2018}, volume = {85}, number = {4}, pages = {660--681}, topic = {preferences;} } @book{ ankersmit-mooij:1992a, editor = {Franklin R. Ankersmit and J.J.A. Mooij}, title = {Metaphor and Knowledge}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1992}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-7923-1888-9.}, xref = {Review: parker_sg:1998a.}, topic = {metaphor;} } @book{ ankersmit-mooij:1993a, editor = {F.R. Ankersmit and J.J.A. Mooij}, title = {Knowledge and Language: Volume {III}, Metaphor and Knowledge}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1993}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {metaphor;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ ankersmit-mooij:1993b, author = {F.R. Ankersmit and J.J.A. Mooij}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Knowledge and Language: Volume {III}, Metaphor and Knowledge}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {F.R. Ankersmit and J.J.A. Mooij}, pages = {1--17}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {metaphor;pragmatics;} } @book{ annas-barnes_j:2000a, editor = {Julia Annas and Jonathan Barnes}, title = {Sextus {E}mpiricus: Outlines of Scepticism}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052177139-0}, topic = {Hellenistic-philosophy;skepticism;Sextus-Empiricus;} } @incollection{ annika_h-steinbach_m:2012a, author = {Annika Herrmann and Markus Steinbach}, title = {Quotation in Sign Languages---A Visible Context Shift}, booktitle = {Quotatives: Cross-Linguistic and Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {2012}, editor = {Isabelle Buchstaller and Ingrid van Alphen}, pages = {203--229}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @article{ annis_d:1969a, author = {David Annis}, title = {A Note on {L}ehrer's Proof that Knowledge Entails Belief}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1969}, volume = {29}, number = {6}, pages = {207--208}, xref = {Discussion: lehrer_k:1968a}, topic = {knowledge;belief;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ annis_d-annis_l:1979a, author = {David Annis and Linda Annis}, title = {Does Philosophy Improve Critical Thinking?}, journal = {Teaching Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {145--152}, topic = {philosophy-instruction;critical-thinking;} } @book{ anonymous:1978a, title = {{NELS 8}: Proceedings of the Eighth Conference of the {N}orth {E}ast {L}inguistic {S}ociety}, publisher = {GLSA Publications}, year = {1978}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, note = {URL FOR GLSA Publications: http://www.umass.edu/linguist/glsa-pubs.html.}, topic = {linguistics-proceedings;nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @book{ anonymous:1981a, title = {{NELS 11}: Proceedings of the Eleventh Conference of the {N}orth {E}ast {L}inguistic {S}ociety}, publisher = {GLSA Publications}, year = {1981}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, note = {URL FOR GLSA Publications: http://www.umass.edu/linguist/glsa-pubs.html.}, topic = {linguistics-proceedings;nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @book{ anonymous:1984a, noneditor = {Anonymous}, title = {Non-Monotonic Reasoning Workshop: October 17--19, 1984, Mohonk Mountain House, New Paltz, New York}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, missinginfo = {editor}, rtnote = {Umich Media Union Library Call No: Q334 .N82x 1984}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS MS shelves.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;} } @book{ anonymous:1991a, title = {Logic Programming and Non-Monotonic Reasoning: Proceedings of the International Workshop}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, missinginfo = {editor}, rtnote = {Media Union Library Call No: QA 76.63 .L632}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @corpus{ anonymous:1995a, author = {Anonymous}, title = {The Penn Treebank Project, Release 2}, publisher = {Linguistic Data Consortium}, year = {1995}, address = {Philadelphia}, media = {1 computer laser optical disc, 4 3/4 in.}, contentnote = {Description: Contains 1 million words of 1989 Wall Street Journal material annotated in Treebank II style, which is designed to allow the extraction of simple predicate/argument structure, plus more.}, topic = {corpus;} } @book{ anonymous:1996b, editor = {Anonymous}, title = {Frontiers of Combining Systems 1}, publisher = {Research Studies Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {UMich Science QA 9 .A1 F761}, topic = {combining-logics;combining-systems;} } @corpus{ anonymous:1999a, author = {Anonymous}, title = {The Penn Treebank Project, Release 3}, publisher = {Linguistic Data Consortium}, year = {1999}, address = {Philadelphia}, media = {1 computer laser optical disc, 4 3/4 in.}, ISBN = {1585631639}, contentnote = {Description: The corpus consists of 1 million words of 1989 Wall Street Journal material annotated in Treebank II style, a small sample of ATIS-3 material annotated in Treebank II style, a fully tagged version of the Brown corpus.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, 820 C738.}, topic = {corpus;} } @incollection{ ansari-hirst_g:1998a, author = {Daniel Ansari and Graeme Hirst}, title = {Generating Warning Instructions by Planning Accidents and Injuries}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Natural Language Generation}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Eduard Hovy}, pages = {118--127}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-generation;nl-instructions;} } @article{ anscombe_gem:1953a, author = {G.E.M. Anscombe}, title = {The Principle of Individuation}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society, Supplementary Volume}, year = {1953}, volume = {27}, pages = {83--96}, topic = {Aristotle;individuation;} } @article{ anscombe_gem:1956a, author = {Elizabeth Anscombe}, title = {Aristotle and the Sea Battle}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1956}, volume = {65}, number = {257}, pages = {1--15}, topic = {Aristotle;future-contingent-propositions;} } @book{ anscombe_gem:1958a1, author = {G.E.M. Anscombe}, title = {Intention}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1958}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Anscombe".}, topic = {intention;action;} } @book{ anscombe_gem:1958a2, author = {G.E.M. Anscombe}, title = {Intention}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1963}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {intention;action;} } @book{ anscombe_gem:1959a, author = {G.E.M. Anscombe}, title = {An Introduction to {W}ittgenstein's Tractatus}, publisher = {St. Augustine's Press}, year = {1959}, address = {London}, ISBN = {189031854X}, topic = {Wittgenstein;} } @article{ anscombe_gem:1964a, author = {Elizabeth Anscombe}, title = {Before and After}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1964}, volume = {74}, pages = {3--24}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {temporal-adverbials;} } @incollection{ anscombe_gem:1965a, author = {G.E.M. Anscombe}, title = {The Intentionality of Sensation: A Grammatical Feature}, booktitle = {Analytical Philosophy, Second Series}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell}, year = {1965}, editor = {Ronald J. Butler}, pages = {158--180}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {intensionality;logic-of-perception;} } @incollection{ anscombe_gem:1965b, author = {Elizabeth Anscombe}, title = {Thought and Action in {A}ristotle}, booktitle = {New Essays on {P}lato and {A}ristotle}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1965}, editor = {R Bambrough}, pages = {143--158}, address = {London}, topic = {Aristotle;philosophy-of-mind;practical-reasoning;} } @book{ anscombe_gem:1971a, author = {G.E.M. Anscombe}, title = {Causality and Determination}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1971}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {causality;(in)determinism;} } @book{ anscombe_gem:1971b, author = {Elizabeth Anscombe}, title = {An Introduction to {W}ittgenstein's {T}ractatus}, publisher = {Hutchinson}, year = {1971}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0090511301 009051131X}, topic = {Wittgenstein;} } @incollection{ anscombe_gem:1978a, author = {G.E.M. Anscombe}, title = {On Practical Reasoning}, booktitle = {Practical Reasoning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Joseph Raz}, pages = {46--62}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja13}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ anscombe_gem:1979a, author = {Elizabeth Anscombe}, title = {Under a Description}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1979}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {219--233}, topic = {events;individuation;} } @incollection{ anscombe_gem:1993a, author = {G.E.M. Anscombe}, title = {Causality and Determination}, booktitle = {Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Michael Tooley}, pages = {75--87}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {causation;} } @article{ anshelevich:2002a, author = {Vadim V. Anshelevich}, title = {A Hierarchical Approach to Computer Hex}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {134}, number = {1--2}, pages = {101--120}, topic = {theorem-proving;game-playing;} } @article{ ansotegui-etal:2013a, author = {Carlos Ans\'otegui and Maria Luisa Bonet and Jordi Levy}, title = {{SAT}-based Max{SAT} Algorithms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {196}, pages = {77--105}, topic = {model-checking;} } @book{ antaki:1994a, author = {Charles Antaki}, title = {Explaining and Arguing: The Social Organization of Accounts}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1994}, address = {Thousand Oaks, California}, topic = {argumentation;explanation;} } @incollection{ anthony:2011a, author = {Louise Anthony}, title = {The Openness of Illusions}, booktitle = {The Epistemology of Perception}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2011}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Berit Brogard}, pages = {5--44}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {epistemologyillusions;} } @book{ anthony-bartlett:1999a, author = {Martin Anthony and Peter L. Bartlett}, title = {Neural Network Learning: Theoretical Foundations}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-57353-X}, topic = {connectionist-models;} } @book{ anthony-briggs_n:1992a, author = {Martin Anthony and Norman Biggs}, title = {Computational Learning Theory: An Introduction}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {learning-theory;} } @incollection{ antonelli_a:2000a, author = {Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Virtuous Circles. From Fixed Points to Revision Rules}, booktitle = {Circularity, Definition, and Truth}, publisher = {Indian Council of Philosophical Research}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anil Gupta and Andr\'e Chapuis}, pages = {1--27}, address = {New Dehli}, topic = {definitions;fixpoints;} } @unpublished{ antonelli_ga:1991a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Pure Well-Founded Symmetric Models of Set Theory: The Independence of the Axiom of Choice Without Forcing}, year = {1991}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Philosophy, University of Pittsburgh.}, topic = {axiom-of-choice;independence-proofs;} } @phdthesis{ antonelli_ga:1992a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Revision Rules: An Investigation into Non-Monotonic Inductive Definitions}, school = {Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh}, year = {1992}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;fixpoints;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:1994a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Non-Well-Founded Sets Via Revision Rules}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1994}, volume = {23}, number = {6}, pages = {633--679}, topic = {nonwellfounded-sets;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:1994b, author = {Aldo Antonelli}, title = {A Revision-Theoretic Analysis of the Arithmetical Hierarchy}, journal = {Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1994}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {204--218}, topic = {truth-hierarchies;} } @unpublished{ antonelli_ga:1996a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {General Extensions for Default Logic}, year = {1996}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Yale University, 1996.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Probable revised and extended version: antonelli_ga:1999a}, topic = {default-logic;} } @unpublished{ antonelli_ga:1996b, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Defeasible Reasoning as a Cognitive Model}, year = {1996}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Stanford University, 1996.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @unpublished{ antonelli_ga:1996c, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Existensional Quotients for Type Theory and the Consistency Problem for {NF}}, year = {1996}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, 1996.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Forthcoming, JSL.}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {set-theory;higher-order-logic;} } @unpublished{ antonelli_ga:1996d, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {On Extensions for Default Logic}, year = {1996}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, 1996.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files, "Antonelli".}, topic = {default-logic;} } @unpublished{ antonelli_ga:1997a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {A Theory of Cautious Consequence for Default Logic: Via the Notion of General Extension}, year = {1997}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, 1997.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files, "Antonelli".}, topic = {default-logic;} } @unpublished{ antonelli_ga:1997b, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Free Set Algebras Satisfying Systems of Equations}, year = {1997}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Philosophy, Stanford University.}, topic = {nonwellfounded-sets;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:1997c, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Defeasible Inheritance on Cyclic Networks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {92}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--23}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:1998a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Existential Quotients for Type Theoey and The Consistency Problem for {NF}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {63}, number = {1}, pages = {247--261}, contentnote = {Proves the consistency of Quine's NF set theory.}, topic = {set-theory;consistency-proofs;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:1999a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {A Directly Cautious Theory of Defeasible Consequence for Default Logic Via the Notion of General Extension}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {109}, number = {1--2}, pages = {71--109}, xref = {Probably antonelli_ga:1996a is an earlier version}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:1999b, author = {Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Conceptions and Paradoxes of Sets}, journal = {Philosophia Mathematica}, year = {1994}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {136--163}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:2000a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Proto-Semantics for Positive Free Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {277--294}, topic = {reference-gaps;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:2000b, author = {G. Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}andbook of Logic in Artificial Intelligence and Logic Programming, Volume 3: Volume 3: Nonmonotonic Reasoning and Uncertain Reasoning}, edited by {D}ov {G}abbay, {C}hristopher {H}ogger, and {J}.{A}. {R}obinson}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {480--484}, xref = {Review of gabbay-etal:1994a.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:2001a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}n the Light of Logic}, by {S}olomon {F}eferman}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {270--277}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;proof-theory;} } @book{ antonelli_ga:2005a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Grounded Consequence for Defeasible Logic}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521842050}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Logic Shelves}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;inheritance-theory;default-logic;} } @incollection{ antonelli_ga:2012a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Non-Monotonic Logic}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2012/entries/logic-nonmonotonic/}, year = {2012}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:2013a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli}, title = {On the General Interpretation of First-Order Quantifiers}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {637--658}, topic = {quantifiers;} } @article{ antonelli_ga:2017a, author = {Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Completeness and Decidability of General First-Order Logic (with a Detour Through the Guarded Fragment)}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {3}, pages = {233--257}, xref = {Commentary: andreka_h-etal:2017a}, topic = {completeness-theorems;guarded-fragments;nonstandard-models;} } @incollection{ antonelli_ga-bicchieri_c:1994a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli and Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {Backwards-Forward Induction}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fifth Conference ({TARK} 1994)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Ronald Fagin}, pages = {24--43}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {game-theory;backward-induction;} } @unpublished{ antonelli_ga-bicchieri_c:1994b, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli and Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {Game Theory and Default Logic}, year = {1994}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Yale University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Antonelli"}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess}, rtnote = {This is an interesting paper, apparently though the ideas weren't pursued.}, topic = {game-theory;default-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ antonelli_ga-bicchieri_c:1995a, author = {Aldo Antonelli and Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {Game-Theoretic Axioms for Local Rationality and Bounded Knowledge}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language and Information}, year = {1995}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {145--167}, topic = {game-theory;multiagent-systems;rationality;} } @article{ antonelli_ga-may_r:2000a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli and Robert May}, title = {Frege's New Science}, journal = {Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {41}, number = {3}, pages = {242--270}, abstract = {... we explore Fregean metatheory, what Frege called the New Science. The New Science arises in the context of Frege's debate with Hilbert over independence proofs in geometry and we begin by considering their dispute. We propose that Frege's critique rests on his view that language is a set of propositions, each immutably equipped with a truth value (as determined by the thought it expresses), so to Frege it was inconceivable that axioms could even be considered to be other than true. ...}, topic = {Frege;foundations-of-mathematics;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ antonelli_ga-thomason_rh:2002a, author = {Gian Aldo Antonelli and Richmond H. Thomason}, title = {Representability in Second-Order Propositional Poly-Modal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {67}, number = {3}, pages = {1039--1054}, topic = {modal-logic;(in)completeness;propositional-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ antoniol-etal:1998a, author = {Giuliano Antoniol and Roberto Fiutem and Gianni Lazzari and Renato de Mori}, title = {System Architectures and Applications}, booktitle = {Spoken Dialogues with Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Renato de Mori}, pages = {583--609}, address = {New York}, topic = {spoken-dialogue-systems;} } @incollection{ antoniou_g:1996a, author = {Grigoris Antoniou}, title = {A Comparative Survey of Default Logic Variants}, booktitle = {Practical Reasoning: International Conference on Formal and Applied Practical Reasoning, FAPR'96}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Hans J\"urgen Olbach}, pages = {15--28}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {default-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @book{ antoniou_g:1997a, author = {Grigoris Antoniou}, title = {Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-011157-3}, xref = {Reviews: parsons_s:1999a, vanderhoek_w:2000b,suchenek:2000a}, rtnote = {2 copies. In RHT collection. AI Shelves.}, topic = {default-logic;autoepistemic-logic;circumscription; nonmonotonic-reasoning;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ antoniou_g:1997b, author = {Grigoris Antoniou}, title = {A Comparison of Two Approaches to Splitting Default Theories}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {424--429}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, url = {www.aaai.org/Papers/AAAI/1997/AAAI97-065.pdf}, topic = {default-logic;applied-nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ antoniou_g:1999a, author = {Grigoris Antoniou}, title = {Splitting Finite Default Theories: A Comparison of Two Approaches}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1999}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {205--216}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic;} } @incollection{ antoniou_g-etal:1996a, author = {Grigoris Antoniou and Allen P. Courtney and J\"org Ernst and Mary-Anne Williams}, title = {A System for Computing Constrained Default Logic Extensions}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence: European Workshop, {Jelia}'96, Ivora, Portugal, September 30 - October 3, 1996.}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Ewa Orlowska}, pages = {237--250}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {default-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning; nonmonotonic-reasoning-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ antoniou_g-etal:2000a, author = {Grigoris Antoniou and David Billington and Guido Governatori and Michael J. Maher}, title = {A Flexible Framework for Defeasible Logics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventeenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, editor = {Henry A. Kautz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {405--410}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, abstract = {... In general [an eclectic] approach results in a very difficult problem of combination. However, if we can choose the logics from a uniform framework then the problem of combining them is greatly simplified. In this paper, we develop such a framework for defeasible logics. It supports all defeasible logics that satisfy a strong negation principle. We use logic meta-programs as the basis for the framework. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ antoniou_g-etal:2001a, author = {Grigoris Antoniou and David Billington, Guido Governatori and Michael J. Maher}, title = {Representation Results for Defeasible Logic}, journal = {{ACM} Transactions on Computational Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {255--287}, abstract = {... This paper investigates transformations and normal forms in the context of Defeasible Logic, a simple but efficient formalism for nonmonotonic reasoning based on rules and priorities. The transformations described in this paper have two main benefits: on one hand they can be used as a theoretical tool that leads to a deeper understanding of the formalism, and on the other hand they have been used in the development of an efficient implementation of defeasible logic.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning-algorithms;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ antoniou_g-etal:2010a, author = {Grigoris Antoniou and Constantinos Papatheodorou and Antonis Bikakis}, title = {Reasoning about Context in Ambient Intelligence Environments: A Report from the Field}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {557--559}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we outline the architecture of the Mobile CDL Application, analyze the specifics of our generic implementation, and discuss the choices and associated motivation of the technologies adopted ...}, topic = {contextual-reasoning;} } @book{ antoniou_g-vanharmelen:2004a, author = {Grigoris Antoniou and Frank van Harmelen}, title = {A Semantic Web Primer}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-021210-3}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS General shelves.}, xref = {Review: patelschneider:2007a.}, topic = {semantic-web;} } @incollection{ antoniou_g-wang_kw:2007a, author = {Grigoris Antoniou and Kewen Wang}, title = {Default Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic, Volume 8: The Many Valued and Nonmonotonic Turn in Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {2007}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {517--555}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {default-logic;history-of-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ antonsen_r-nakkerud_a:2018a, author = {Roger Antonsen and Andreas Nakkerud}, title = {Review of \emph{{E}lements of Logical Reasoning}, by }, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2018}, volume = {106}, number = {1}, pages = {215--218}, xref = {Review of: vonplato:2014a}, topic = {logic-intro;proof-theory;} } @article{ antony:1991a, author = {Michael V. Antony}, title = {Fodor and {P}ylyshyn on Connectionism}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1991}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {321--341}, abstract = {Fodor and Pylyshyn (1988) have argued that the cognitive architecture is not Connectionist. $\ldots$ The upshot is that, while Fodor and Pylyshyn have presented Connectionists with the important empirical challenge of explaining systematicity, they have failed to provide sufficient reason for inferring that the cognitive architecture is Classical and not Connectionist. }, topic = {connectionism;C-systematicity;} } @incollection{ antony:2003a, author = {Louise M. Antony}, title = {Who's Afraid of Disjunctive Properties?}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {1--21}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {disjunctive-properties;} } @incollection{ antony-levine_j2:1997a, author = {Louise M. Antony and Joseph Levine}, title = {Reduction with Autonomy}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 11: Mind, Causation, and World}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {83--105}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @article{ antos_c-etal:2021a, author = {Carolin Antos and Neil Barton and Sy-David Friedman}, title = {Universism and Extensions of {V}}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {112--154}, abstract = {... This paper informs this debate [over a maximal universe of set theory] by developing a way for a Universist to interpret talk that seems to necessitate the addition of sets to V. We argue that, despite the prima facie incoherence of such talk for the Universist, she nonetheless has reason to try and provide interpretation of this discourse. We present a method of interpreting extension-talk (V-logic), and show how it captures satisfaction in 'ideal' outer models and relates to impredicative class theories. We provide some reasons to regard the technique as philosophically virtuous, and argue that it opens new doors to philosophical and mathematical discussions for the Universist.}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;} } @incollection{ anttila:1994a, author = {Arto Anttila}, title = {How to Recognize Subjects in {E}nglish}, editor = {Fred Karlsson et al.}, booktitle = {Constraint Grammar: A Language-Independent System for Parsing Unrestricted Text}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {1994}, missinginfo = {editors, other authors}, pages = {315--358}, topic = {grammatical-relations;corpus-linguistics;} } @article{ antunes_h-etal:2022a, author = {Henrique Antunes and Abilio Rodrigues and Marcello E. Coniglio}, title = {Valuation Semantics for First-Order Logics of Evidence and Truth}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {5}, pages = {1141--1173}, abstract = {LETF is a paraconsistent and paracomplete sentential logic that extends the logic of first-degree entailment (FDE) with a classicality operator {}and a non-classicality operator ., dual to each other: ... By providing sound and complete semantics for first-order extensions of FDE, K3, and LP, we show how these tools, which we call here the method of anti-extensions + valuations, can be naturally applied to a number of non-classical logics.}, topic = {relevence-logic;} } @book{ antworth:1990a, author = {Evan L. Antworth}, title = {{PC}-{K}immo: A Two-Level Processor for Morphological Analysis}, publisher = {Summer Institute of Linguistics}, year = {1990}, address = {Dallas}, ISBN = {0-88312-639-7}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Shelves.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Research files.}, topic = {computational-morphology;finite-state-morphology;} } @incollection{ antworth-valentyne:1998a, author = {Evan L. Antworth and J. Randolph Valentine}, title = {Software for Doing Field Linguistics}, booktitle = {Using Computers in Linguistics: A Practical Guide}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1998}, editor = {John Lawler and Aristar Dry}, pages = {170--196}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files.}, topic = {computational-field-linguistics;} } @book{ aoki_m:2001a, author = {Masahiko Aoki}, title = {Toward a Comparative Institutional Analysis}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780262011877}, abstract = {... uses modern game theory to develop a conceptual and analytical framework for understanding issues related to economic institutions. The wide-ranging discussion considers how institutions evolve, why their overall arrangements are robust and diverse across economies, and why they do or do not change in response to environmental factors such as technological progress, global market integration, and demographic change.}, topic = {game-theory;social-institutions;} } @inproceedings{ aone-etal:1998a, author = {Chinatsu Aone and Mary Ellen Okurowski and James Gorlinsky}, title = {Trainable, Scalable Summarization Using Robust {NLP} and Machine Learning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {62--66}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {text-summary;machine-learning;} } @incollection{ aone-maloney_j:1997a, author = {Chinatsu Aone and John Maloney}, title = {Re-Use of a Proper Noun Recognition System in Commercial and Operational {NLP} Applications}, booktitle = {From Research to Commercial Applications: Making {NLP} Work in Practice}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Jill C. Burstein and Claudia Leacock}, pages = {1--6}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {personal-name-recognition;} } @article{ aoto:1999a, author = {Takahito Aoto}, title = {Uniqueness of Normal Proofs in Implicational Intuitionistic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1999}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {217--242}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;proof-theory;} } @book{ aoun:1985a, author = {Joseph Aoun}, title = {The Grammar of Anaphora}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {026201075-2}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {anaphora;government-binding-theory;} } @article{ aoun-etal:1981a, author = {Joseph Aoun and Norbert Hornstein and D. Sportliche}, title = {Some Aspects of Wide Scope Quantification}, journal = {Journal of Linguistic Research}, year = {1981}, volume = {1}, pages = {69--95}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nl-quantification;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @book{ aoun-li_yh:1993a, author = {Joseph Aoun and Yen-Hui A. Li}, title = {Syntax of Scope}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ aoyama_h:1994a, author = {Hiroshi Aoyama}, title = {The Strong Completeness of a System Based on {K}leene's Strong Three-Valued Logic}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1994}, volume = {35}, number = {3}, pages = {355--368}, topic = {multivalued-logic;completeness-theorems;truth-definitions;} } @book{ apel_ko:1967a, author = {Karl-Otto Apel}, title = {Der {D}enkweg des {C}harles {S}anders {P}eirce}, publisher = {Suhrkamp}, year = {1967}, address = {Frankfurt}, topic = {Peirce;} } @book{ apel_ko:1967b, author = {Karl-Otto Apel}, title = {Analytic Philosophy of Mathematics and the {G}eisteswissenschaften}, publisher = {Reidel}, year = {1967}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @book{ apel_ko:1980a, author = {Karl-Otto Apel}, title = {Towards a Transformation of Philosophy}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1980}, address = {London}, contentnote = {Has a chapter on Chomsky.}, ISBN = {0-7100-04036}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ apostel_l:1960a, author = {Leo Apostel}, title = {Game Theory and the Interpretation of Deontic Logic}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1960}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {70--90}, topic = {game-theory;deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ apostel_l:1971a, author = {Leo Apostel}, title = {Further Remarks on the Pragmatics of Natural Language}, booktitle = {Pragmatics of Natural Language}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1971}, editor = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, pages = {1--34}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {pragmatics;} } @article{ apostel_l:1972a, author = {Leo Apostel}, title = {Illocutionary Forces and the Logic of Change}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1972}, volume = {81}, number = {322}, pages = {208--224}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @article{ apostoli:1997a, author = {Peter Apostoli}, title = {On the Completeness of First Degree Weakly Aggregative Modal Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1997}, volume = {26}, number = {2}, pages = {169--180}, topic = {modal-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ apostoli:2000a, author = {Peter Apostoli}, title = {The Analytic Conception of Truth and the Foundations of Arithmetic}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {65}, number = {1}, pages = {33--102}, topic = {foundations-of-mathematics;analyticity;logicism;Frege;} } @article{ apostoli-brown_b:1995a, author = {Peter Apostoli and Bryson Brown}, title = {A Solution to the Completeness Problem for Weakly Aggretive Modal Logic}, journal = {The Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {60}, number = {3}, pages = {832}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ appelt_d:1983a, author = {Douglas Appelt}, title = {Telegram: A Grammar Formalism for Language Planning}, booktitle = {Eighth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, pages = {595--599}, missinginfo = {Editor}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @article{ appelt_d:1985a, author = {Douglas Appelt}, title = {Planning {E}nglish Referring Expressions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {1--33}, xref = {Also in {\em Readings in Natural Language Processing}, Grosz, Sparck Jones and Webber eds., Morgan-Kaufmann, 1986}, topic = {nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @book{ appelt_d:1985b, author = {Douglas Appelt}, title = {Planning {E}nglish Sentences}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, series = {Studies in Natural Language Processing}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @article{ appelt_d:1985c, author = {Douglas Appelt}, title = {Planning {E}nglish Sentences}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {1--33}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @inproceedings{ appelt_d:1990a, author = {Douglas Appelt}, title = {A Theory of Abduction Based on Model Preference}, booktitle = {Working Notes, {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Automated Deduction}, year = {1990}, editor = {P. O'Rorke}, pages = {67--71}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {abduction;} } @inproceedings{ appelt_d-etal:1993a, author = {Douglas E. Appelt and Jerry R. Hobbs and John Bear and David Israel and Mabry Tyson}, title = {{FASTUS}: A Finite-State Processor for Information Extraction from Real-World Text}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {1172--1178}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers. "Appelt"}, topic = {nl-processing;finite-state-nlp;} } @unpublished{ appelt_d-israel_dj:1999a, author = {Douglas E. Appelt and David J. Israel}, title = {Introduction to Information Extraction Technology: A Tutorial Prepared for {IJCAI}-99}, year = {1999}, note = {Available at http://www.ai.sri.com/{\user}appelt/ie-tutorial/}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {information-extraction;finite-state-parsing;} } @inproceedings{ appelt_d-konolige_k:1988a, author = {Douglas Appelt and Kurt Konolige}, title = {A Practical Nonmonotonic Theory For Reasoning about Speech Acts}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 26th Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1988}, pages = {170--178}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, missinginfo = {editor}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Reprint Files and Prags Course Files.}, abstract = {A prerequisite to a theory of the way agents understand speech acts is a theory of how their beliefs and intentions are revised as a consequence of events. This process of attitude revision is an interesting domain for the application of nonmonotonic reasoning because speech acts have a conventional aspect that is readily represented by defaults, but that interacts with an agent's beliefs and intentions in many complex ways that may override the defaults. Perrault has developed a theory of speech acts, based on Rieter's default logic, that captures the conventional aspect; it does not, however, adequately account for certain easily observed facts about attitude revision resulting from speech acts. A natural theory of attitude revision seems to require a method of stating preferences among competing defaults. We present here a speech act theory, formalized in hierarchic autoepistemic logic (a refinement of Moore's autoepistemic logic), in which revision of both the speaker's and hearer's attitudes can be adequately described. As a collateral benefit, efficient automatic reasoning methods for the formalism exist. The theory has been implemented and is now being employed by an utterance-planning system. }, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ appelt_d-kronfeld:1987a, author = {Douglas Appelt and Amichai Kronfeld}, title = {A Computational Model of Referring}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, editor = {John McDermott}, pages = {640--647}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files.}, topic = {referring-expressions;} } @techreport{ appelt_d-kronfeld:1988a, author = {Douglas Appelt and Amichai Kronfeld}, year = {1988}, title = {A Descriptive Model of Reference Using Defaults}, institution = {SRI International}, number = {440}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Appelt" }, topic = {nm-ling;referring-expressions;nl-generation;} } @techreport{ appelt_d-pollack_me:1990a1, author = {Douglas E. Appelt and Martha E. Pollack}, title = {Weighted Abduction for Plan Ascription}, institution = {SRI International}, number = {491}, year = {1990}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, xref = {Published as article; see appelt_d-pollack_me:1990a2.}, topic = {abduction;} } @article{ appelt_d-pollack_me:1991a2, author = {Douglas Appelt and Martha Pollack}, title = {Weighted Abduction for Plan Ascription}, journal = {User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction}, year = {1991}, volume = {1}, number = {4}, missinginfo = {pages}, xref = {See appelt_d-pollack_me:1990a1 for tech report.}, topic = {abduction;plan-recognition;} } @article{ appiah_a:1987a, author = {Anthony Appiah}, title = {{`}If again{'}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1987}, volume = {47}, number = {4}, pages = {193--199}, xref = {Reply to: dudman_vh:1987a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ appiah_ka:1984a, author = {K. Anthony Appiah}, title = {Generalizing the Probabilistic Semantics of Conditionals}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1984}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, pages = {351--372}, topic = {probability-semantics;conditionals;} } @book{ appiah_ka:1985a, author = {K. Anthony Appiah}, title = {Assertion and Conditionals}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN-13 = {978-0521071291}, ISBN-10 = {0521071291}, xref = {Commentary: dudman_vh:1987a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @book{ appiah_ka:1986a, author = {K. Anthony Appiah}, title = {For Truth in Semantics}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1986}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: williamson_t:1990b.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophical-realism;truth;} } @article{ appiah_ka:1986b, author = {K. Anthony Appiah}, title = {The Importance of Triviality}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1986}, volume = {95}, number = {2}, pages = {209--231}, topic = {conditionals;indicative-conditionals;CCCP;} } @incollection{ appiah_ka:1993a, author = {K. Anthony Appiah}, title = {'Only-Ifs'}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 7: Language and Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {397--410}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {conditionals;`only-if';`only';} } @techreport{ apt_kr:1987a, author = {Krzysztof R. Apt}, title = {Introduction to Logic Programming}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at Austin}, number = {TR-87-35}, year = {1987}, address = {Austin, Texas}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @incollection{ apt_kr:1990a, author = {Krzysztof R. Apt}, title = {Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Handbook of Theoretical Computer Science, Vol. B}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1990}, pages = {493--574}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {Editor.}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @book{ apt_kr:1991a, author = {Krzysztof R. Apt}, title = {Verification of Sequential and Concurrent Programs}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0387975322}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.76 .V47 A671 1991.}, topic = {program-verification;} } @book{ apt_kr:1992a, editor = {Krzysztof Apt}, title = {Logic Programming: Proceedings of the Joint International Conference and Symposium on Logic Programming}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262510642}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.63 .J65 1992.}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @inproceedings{ apt_kr:1999a, author = {Krzysztof R. Apt}, title = {Formulas as Programs: A Computational Interpretation of First-Order Logic}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {procedural-semantics;} } @book{ apt_kr:2003a, author = {Krzysztof Apt}, title = {Principles of Constraint Programming}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: chen_h:2006a.}, topic = {constraint-programming;} } @article{ apt_kr-blair_a:1990a, author = {Krzysztof R. Apt and A. Blair}, title = {Arithmetic Classification of Perfect Models of Stratified Logic Programs}, journal = {Fundamenta Informaticae}, year = {1990}, volume = {13}, pages = {1--17}, note = {Addenda in Vol. 14, pp. 339--441, 1991.}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {stratified-logic-programs;} } @incollection{ apt_kr-etal:1988a, author = {Krzysztof R. Apt and A. Blair and A. Walker}, title = {Towards a Theory of Declarative Knowledge}, booktitle = {Foundations of Deductive Databases and Logic Programming}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1987}, editor = {Jack Minker}, address = {Los Altos, California}, pages = {89--148}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @book{ apt_kr-etal:1999a, editor = {Krysztof R. Apt and Victor W. Marek and Marek Truszczy\'nski and David S. Warren}, title = {The Logic Programming Paradigm: A Twenty-Five Year Perspective}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3-540-65463-1}, xref = {Review: reynolds_m:2002a}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @article{ apt_kr-pedreschi:1993a, author = {Krzysztof R. Apt and D. Pedreschi}, title = {Reasoning about Termination of Pure Prolog Programs}, journal = {Information and Computation}, year = {1993}, volume = {106}, number = {1}, pages = {109--157}, topic = {logic-programs;program-termination;} } @techreport{ apt_kr-pugin:1987a, author = {Krzysztof R. Apt and Jean-Marc Pugin}, title = {Management of Stratified Data Bases}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at Austin}, number = {TR-87-41}, year = {1987}, address = {Austin, Texas}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library QA 76.63 .M461 1995}, topic = {metareasoning;logic-programming;} } @book{ apt_kr-turini_f:1995a, editor = {Krzysztof R. Apt and Franco Turini}, title = {Meta-Logics and Logic Programming}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780262011525}, topic = {logic-programming;metaprogramming;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1959a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Notes to a Recent Discussion on Descriptions}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1959}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {29--30}, topic = {definite-descriptions;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1963a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Deontic Logic Based on a Logic of `Better{'}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of a Colloquium on Modal and Many-Valued Logics}, publisher = {Societas Philosophica Fennica}, year = {1963}, editor = {Georg Henrik {Von Wright} and Oiva T. Ketonen and Jaako Hintikka}, pages = {285--289}, address = {Helsinki}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1963b, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Postulate Sets and Decision Procedures for Some Systems of Deontic Logic}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1963}, volume = {29}, number = {2}, pages = {154--175}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1964a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Interpretations of Deontic Logic}, journal = {Mind}, pages = {246--253}, volume = {73}, year = {1964}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1964b, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {A Solution to {M}oore's Paradox}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1964}, volume = {15}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--5}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my11}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1966a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {{`}Next' and `Ought': Alternative Foundations for von Wright's Tense-Logic, with an Application to Deontic Logic}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1966}, volume = {9}, number = {34}, pages = {231--251}, topic = {deontic-logic;temporal-logic;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1967a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Good {S}amaritans, Contrary-to-Duty Imperatives, and Epistemic Obligations}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1967}, volume = {1}, pages = {361--379}, number ={4}, topic = {deontic-logic;prima-facie-obligation;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1967b, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Semantic and Pragmatic Charactreristics of Linguistic Usage}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1967}, volume = {17}, pages = {281--291}, topic = {imperatives;interrogatives;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1969a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Improved Formulations of Act-Utilitarianism}, journal = {No\^us}, volume = {3}, year = {1969}, pages = {299--323}, topic = {utilitarianism;} } @techreport{ aqvist_l:1971a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Modal Logic with Subjunctive Conditionals and Dispositional Predicates}, institution = {Filosofiska Institutionen, Uppsala Universitet}, number = {12}, year = {1971}, address = {Uppsala}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {modal-logic;conditionals;dispositions;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1971b, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Causation by Agents: The Set-Theoretic Analysis of Music as the Basis of the Logic of Agency}, booktitle = {Festskrift till {S}tig {S}tr\"omholm}, year = {1971}, editor = {{\AA}ke Fr\"andberg and U. G\"oransen and T. H{\aa}sted}, pages = {867--882}, publisher = {Iustus V\"orlag}, address = {Uppsala}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {stit;branching-time;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1973a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Modal Logic with Subjunctive Conditionals and Dispositional Predicates}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1973}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {1--76}, topic = {modal-logic;conditionals;dispositions;} } @unpublished{ aqvist_l:1973b, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {A New Approach to the Logical Theory of Actions and Causality}, year = {1973}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Uppsala University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {game-theory;action;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1974a, author = {Lennart {\AA}quist}, title = {A New Approach to the Logical Theory of Actions and Causality}, booktitle = {Logical Theory and Semantic Analysis}, editor = {S{\o}ren Stenlund}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1974}, pages = {73--91}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {action;game-theory;action-models;causality;} } @unpublished{ aqvist_l:1975a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Definite and Indefinite Descriptions in Modal Quantification Theory with Transworld Identity}, year = {1975}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Uppsala University}, rtnote = {Date is a guess.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;individuation;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1976a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Formal Semantics for Verb Tenses as Analyzed by {R}eichenbach}, booktitle = {Pragmatics of Language and Literature}, publisher = {North Holland}, year = {1976}, editor = {Teun A. {Van Dijk}}, pages = {229--236}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {nl-tense;temporal-logic;Reichenbach;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1977a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {'Soon' and 'Recently'}, booktitle = {On the Logical Analysis of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Narr Verlag}, year = {1977}, editor = {Christian Rohrer}, pages = {67--81}, address = {T\"ubingen}, topic = {nl-tense;adverbs;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1978a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {A System of Chronological Tense Logic}, booktitle = {Formal Semantics and Pragmatics for Natural Languages}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1978}, editor = {Franz Guenthner and S.J. Schmidt}, pages = {223--254}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;temporal-logic;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1978b, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {A Conjectured Axiomatization of Two-Dimensional {R}eichenbachian Tense Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1978}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {1--45}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1978c, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Analysis of Action Sentences Based on a 'Tree' System of Modal Tense Logic}, booktitle = {Papers on Tense, Aspect and Verb Classification}, publisher = {Narr Verlag}, year = {1978}, editor = {Christian Rohrer}, pages = {111--161}, address = {T\"ubingen}, topic = {action;branching-time;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1981a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Predicate Calculi with Adjectives and Nouns}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {1--26}, topic = {semantics-of-adjectives;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1984a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Deontic Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {II}: Extensions of Classical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther}, pages = {605--714}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1985a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {The {P}rotagoras Case: An Exercise in Elementary Logic for Lawyers}, booktitle = {Time, Law, and Society}, publisher = {Franz Steiner Verlag}, year = {1985}, address = {Stuttgart}, missinginfo = {editor, pages}, topic = {Protagoras-vs-Euathlus-paradox;deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1990a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Deontic Tense Logic: Restricted Equivalence of Certain forms of Conditional Obligation and a Solution to {C}hisholm's Paradox}, booktitle = {Advances in Scientific Philosophy: Essays in Honor of {P}aul {W}eingartner}, publisher = {Rodopi}, year = {1990}, editor = {Gerhard Schuts and Georg L.W. Dorn}, pages = {129--141}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers. "Aqvist"}, topic = {deontic-logic;branching-time;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1991a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Systematic Frame Constraints in Defeasible Deontic Logic}, booktitle = {Essays in Defeasible Deontic Logic}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Donald Nute}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {pages}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {deontic-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1991b, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Deontic Tense Logic: Restricted Equivalence of Certain Forms of Conditional Obligation and a Solution to {C}hisholm's Paradox}, booktitle = {Advances in Scientific Philosophy: Essays in Honour of {P}aul {W}eingartner on the Occasion of the 60th Anniversary of his Birthday}, publisher = {Rodopi}, year = {1991}, editor = {Gerhard Schurz and Georg J.W. Dorn}, pages = {127--141}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {Uses branching time and dyadic O.}, topic = {deontic-logic;conditional-obligation;} } @unpublished{ aqvist_l:1992a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Prima Facie Obligations in Deontic Logic: A {C}hisholmian Analysis Based on Normative Preference Structures}, year = {1992}, note = {Manuscript, Department of Law, Uppsala University, Sweden}, topic = {prima-facie-obligation;deontic-logic;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1996a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Discrete Tense Logic with Infinitary Inference Rules and Systematic Frame Constraints: A {H}ilbert-style Axiomatization}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {45--100}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @unpublished{ aqvist_l:1996b, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Equivalence of Two Approaches to the Study of Historical Necessity}, year = {1996}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Law, Uppsala University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {branching-time;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1997a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Branching Time in Deontic Logic: Remarks on an Example by Alchourr\'on and Bulygin}, booktitle = {Normative Systems in Legal and Moral Theory}, publisher = {Duncker \&\ Humboldt}, year = {1977}, editor = {Ernesto Garz\'on Vald\'es and Werner Krawietz and Georg Henrik von Wright and Ruth Zimmerling}, pages = {439--447}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {deontic-logic;branching-time;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:1997b, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {On Certain Extensions of von {K}utshera's Preference-Based Dyadic Deontic Logic}, booktitle = {Das weite {S}pektrum der analytischen {P}hilosophie}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1971}, editor = {Wolfgang Lenzen}, pages = {8--23}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {deontic-logic;preferences;} } @article{ aqvist_l:1999a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {The Logic of Historical Necessity as Founded on Two-Dimensional Modal Tense Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {28}, number = {4}, pages = {329--369}, Note = {Erratum in {\it JPL} 25:5, 2000, pp. 541--542.}, } @incollection{ aqvist_l:2002a, author = {Lennart {\AA}quist}, title = {Deontic Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {VIII}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {147--264}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ aqvist_l:2003a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Future Contingents and Determinism in {A}ristotle's \emph{De Interpretatione} IX: Some Logical Aspects of the So-Called Second Oldest Interpretation}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {2003}, volume = {181}, pages = {13--48}, topic = {Aristotle;branching-time;future-contingent-propositions;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l:2004a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Combinations of Tense and Deontic Modality}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic in Computer Science}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2004}, editor = {Alessio Lomuscio and Donald Nute}, pages = {1--28}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Lomuscio.pdf}, topic = {deontic-logic;temporal-logic;} } @article{ aqvist_l:2005a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist}, title = {Combinations of Tense and Modality: On the $R_t$ Approach to Temporal Logic with Tense and Conditional Obligation}, journal = {Journal of Applied Logic}, year = {2005}, volume = {3}, pages = {421--460}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {branching-time;deontic-logic;conditional-obligation; tmix-project;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l-guenthner_f:1978a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist and Franz Guenthner}, title = {Fundamentals of a Theory of Verb Aspect and Events within the Setting of an Improved Tense-Logic}, booktitle = {Studies in Formal Semantics}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1978}, editor = {Franz Guenthner and Christian Rohrer}, pages = {167--199}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files}, topic = {nl-tense-aspect;temporal-logic;} } @incollection{ aqvist_l-hoepelman_j:1981a, author = {Lennart {\AA}qvist and Jaap Hoepelman}, title = {Some Theorems about a Tree System of Deontic Tense Logic}, booktitle = {New Studies in Deontic Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1981}, editor = {Risto Hilpinen}, pages = {187--221}, topic = {deontic-logic;temporal-logic;} } @book{ aqvist_l-pauli_t:1982a, editor = {{L}ennart {\AA}qvist and Tom Pauli}, title = {Philosophical Essays Dedicated To {L}ennart {\AA}qvist on his Fiftieth Birthday}, publisher = {Philosophy Department, Universoty of Uppsala}, year = {1982}, address = {Uppsala}, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @article{ arai_t:2000a, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}andbook of Proof Theory}, by {S}amuel {R}. {B}uss}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {463--477}, xref = {Review of: buss_sr:1998a.}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @article{ arai_t:2000b, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}n Introduction to Proof Theory}, by {S}amuel {R}. {B}uss}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {464--465}, xref = {Review of: buss_sr:1998b.}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @article{ arai_t:2000c, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{F}irst-Order Proof Theory of Arithmetic}, by {S}amuel {R}. {B}uss}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {465--466}, xref = {Review of: buss_sr:1998c.}, topic = {proof-theory;formalizations-of-arithmetic;} } @article{ arai_t:2000d, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}ierarchies of Provably Recursive Functions}, by Matt Fairtlough and Stanley S. {W}ainer}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {466--467}, xref = {Review of: fairtlough-wainer_ss:1998a.}, topic = {proof-theory;recursion-theory;} } @article{ arai_t:2000e, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}ubsystems of Set Theory and Second-Order Number Theory}, by {W}olfram {P}ohlers}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {467--469}, xref = {Review of: pohlers:1998a.}, topic = {proof-theory;set-theory;formalizations-of-arithmetic;} } @article{ arai_t:2000f, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{G}\"odel's Functional (`Dialectica') Interpretation}, by {J}eremy {A}vigad and {S}olomon {F}eferman}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {469--471}, xref = {Review of: avigad_jd-feferman_s:1998a.}, topic = {proof-theory;intuitionistic-logic;recursion-theory;} } @article{ arai_t:2000g, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}ealizability}, by A.S. {T}roelstra}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {470--471}, xref = {Review of: troelstra:1998a.}, topic = {proof-theory;realizability;} } @article{ arai_t:2000h, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Logic of Provability}, by Giorgi Japaridze and Dick de {J}ongh}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {472--473}, xref = {Review of: japaridze-dejongh_d:1998a.}, topic = {provability-logic;modal-logic;} } @article{ arai_t:2000i, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Length of Proofs}, by Pavel Pudl\'{a}k}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {473--475}, xref = {Review of: padlak:1998a.}, topic = {proof-complexity;} } @article{ arai_t:2000j, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} Proof-Theoretic Framework for Logic Programming}, by Gerhard J\"ager and Robert F. St\"{a}rk}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {475--476}, xref = {Review of: jager_g-stark_rf:1998a.}, topic = {proof-theory;logic-programming;} } @article{ arai_t:2000k, author = {Toshiyasu Arai}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}ypes in Logic, Mathematics, and Programming}, by {R}.{L}. {C}onstable}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {476--477}, xref = {Review of: constable:1998a.}, topic = {proof-theory;type-theory;} } @inproceedings{ araki_m-etal:1999a, author = {Masahiro Araki and Kazunoru Komatani and Taishi Hirata and Shuji Doshita}, title = {A Dialogue Library for Task-Oriented Spoken Dialogue Systems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Knowledge and Reasoning in Practical Dialogue Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jan Alexandersson}, pages = {1--7}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @article{ arana_a:2020a, author = {Andrew Arana}, title = {Review of \emph{Philosophy and Model Theory}, by {T}im {B}utton and {S}ean {W}alsh}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {26}, number = {3--4}, pages = {287--292}, xref = {Review of: button_t-walsh_s:2018a}, topic = {logic-and-philosophy;model-theory;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ aranyosi_i:2019a, author = {Istvain Aranyosi}, title = {Review of \emph{{E}nactivist Interventions: Rethinking the Mind}, by {S}haun {G}allagher}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2019}, volume = {128}, number = {1}, pages = {138--141}, xref = {Review of: gallagher_s:2017a}, topic = {situated-cognition;philosophy-of-mind;consciousness; philosophy-of-mind;embodiment;} } @article{ arapinis_a:2015a, author = {Alexandra Arapinis}, title = {Whole-for-Part Metonymy, Classification, and Grounding}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2015}, volume = {38}, number = {1}, pages = {1--29}, abstract = {$\ldots$ Acknowledging that metonymy is ultimately cognitive in nature, this paper proposes to consider metonymy from its multiple levels of manifestation, integrating cognitive, pragmatic, semantic, but also ontological angles of approach. $\ldots$}, topic = {metonymy;} } @article{ aravind_a-etal:2023a, author = {Athulya Aravind and Danny Fox and Martin Hackl}, title = {Principles of Presupposition in Development}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {2}, pages = {291--332}, abstract = {This paper brings a developmental perspective to the discussion of a longstanding issue surrounding the proper characterization of presuppositions. ... In a series of behavioral experiments, we show that young children generate a default expectation that the presuppositions of an asserted sentence have common ground status prior to utterance. ... }, topic = {developmental-psychology;presupposition;} } @incollection{ aravindan:1996a, author = {Chandrabose Aravindan}, title = {An Abductive Framework for Negation in Disjunctive Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence: European Workshop, {Jelia}'96, Ivora, Portugal, September 30 - October 3, 1996.}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Ewa Orlowska}, pages = {252--267}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {abduction;negation;disjunctive-logic-programming;} } @proceedings{ aravindin:1996a, author = {Chandrabrose Aravindan}, title = {An Abductive Framework for Negation in Disjunctive Logic Programming}, booktitle = {{JELIA}'96}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and and Eva Orlowska}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {abduction;negation;disjunctive-logic-programming;} } @incollection{ aravindin-dung_pm:1994a, author = {Chandrabrose Aravindan and Phan Minh Dung}, title = {Belief Dynamics, Abduction, and Databases}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Craig Mac{N}ish and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and David F. Pearce}, pages = {66--85}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {belief-revision;abduction;} } @article{ aravindin-dung_pm:1994b, author = {Chandrabrose Aravindan and Phan Minh Dung}, title = {Partial Deduction of Logic Programs wrt Well-Founded Semantics}, journal = {New Generation Computing}, year = {1994}, volume = {13}, pages = {45--74}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {logic-programming;well-founded-semantics;} } @article{ aravindin-dung_pm:1995a, author = {Chandrabrose Aravindan and Phan Minh Dung}, title = {On the Correctness of the Fold/Unford Transformations of Normal and Extended Logic Programs}, journal = {Journal of Logic Programming}, year = {1995}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {201--218}, topic = {logic-programming;extended-logic-programming;} } @book{ arbib_ma:1964a, author = {Michael A. Arbib}, title = {Brains, Machines, and Mathematics}, publisher = {McGraw-Hill}, year = {1964}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;automata-theory; connectionist-models;information-theory;goedels-first-theorem;} } @incollection{ arbib_ma:1988a, author = {Michael A. Arbib}, title = {From Universal {T}uring Machines to Self-Reproduction}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {177--189}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Turing;history-of-theory-of-computation; self-reproducing-automata;} } @article{ arbib_ma:1992a, author = {Michael A. Arbib}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Cognitive Structure of Emotions}, by {G}erald {L}. {C}lore and {A}llan {C}ollins}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {54}, number = {1--2}, pages = {229--240}, xref = {Review of ortony-etal:1988a.}, topic = {emotion;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ arbib_ma:1993a, author = {Michael A. Arbib}, title = {Book Review of `Unified Theories of Cognition' ({A}llen {N}ewell)}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {265--265}, xref = {Review of newell_a:1992a.}, topic = {SOAR;cognitive-architectures;} } @article{ arbib_ma:2003a, author = {Michael A. Arbib}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}inguistic Evolution through Language Acquisition: Formal and Computational Models}, edited by {T}ed {B}riscoe}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2003}, volume = {28}, number = {3}, pages = {503--506}, xref = {Review of: briscoe:2002a}, topic = {language-learning;language-and-evolution;} } @incollection{ arbib_ma:2005a, author = {Michael A. Arbib}, title = {Beware the Passionate Robot}, booktitle = {Who Needs Emotions? The Brain Meets the Robot}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Jean-Marc Fellous and Michael A. Arbib}, pages = {333--383}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {emotions;neurocognition;simulated-emotions;} } @incollection{ arbib_ma:2012a, author = {Michael A. Arbib}, title = {Compositionality and Beyond: Embodied Meaning in Language and Protolanguage}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Compositionality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Markus Werning and Wolfram Hinzen and Edouard Machery}, pages = {475--492}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {This article mentions that a formal view of compositional semantics is helpful both for what it reveals about the structure of language and also for what it deletes, including context, the use of compositionality to index rather than define meaning, and the role of idioms. It also discusses how Construction Grammar (CG) allows one to incorporate idioms into a framework in which compositionality may sometimes use familiar sequences of words as atoms when the meanings of single words do not themselves contribute to the meaning of the whole. ...}, topic = {compositionality;idioms;construction-grammar;cognitive-grammar;} } @article{ arbib_ma-liaw:1995a, author = {Michael A. Arbib and Jim-Shih Liaw}, title = {Sensorimotor Transformations in the Worlds of Frogs and Robots}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {72}, number = {1--2}, pages = {53--79}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The paper develops a multilevel approach to the design and analysis of systems with "action-oriented perception", situating various robot and animal ``designs'' in an evolutionary perspective. We present a set of biological design principles within a broader perspective that shows their relevance for robot design. We introduce schemas to provide a coarse-grain analysis of ``cooperative computation'' in the brains of animals and the ``brains'' of robots, starting with an analysis of approach, avoidance, detour behavior, and path planning in frogs. An explicit account of neural mechanism of avoidance behavior in the frog illustrates how schemas may be implemented in neural networks. The focus of the rest of the article is on the relation of instinctive to reflective behavior. We generalize an analysis of the interaction of perceptual schemas in the VISIONS system for computer vision to a view of the interaction of perceptual and motor schemas in distributed planning which, we argue, has great promise for integrating mechanisms for action and perception in both animal and robot. We conclude with general observations on the lessons on relating structure and function which can be carried from biology to technology. }, topic = {computer-vision;active-perception;neural-computation;} } @article{ arbin:1973a, author = {Ronald Arbin}, title = {On Explanations of Linguistic Competence}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1973}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {59--83}, topic = {competence;philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @book{ arcais-jarvella:1983a, editor = {G.B. Flores d'Arcais and R.J. Jarvella}, title = {The Process of Language Understanding}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1983}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0471901296}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P37 .P731 1983.}, topic = {psycholinguistics;nl-comprehension-psychology;} } @article{ archangeli:1988a, author = {Diana Archangeli}, title = {Aspects of Underspecification Theory}, journal = {Phonology}, year = {1988}, volume = {5}, pages = {183--207}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {phonology;underspecification-theory;} } @article{ archibald-etal:2010a, author = {Christopher Archibald and Alon Altman and Michael Greenspan and Yoav Shoham}, title = {Computational Pool: A New Challenge for Game Theory Pragmatics}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2010}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {33--41}, topic = {algorithmic-game-theory;pool-playing;game-playing;} } @book{ archimedes:2008a, author = {Archimedes}, title = {The Sand Reckoner}, publisher = {Forgotten Books}, year = {2008}, url = {www.forgottonbooks.org}, note = {Translation, by Thomas Heath, in 1897 of a MS written before 212BC.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. History of mathematics.}, topic = {ancient-mathematics;} } @book{ ard:1977a, author = {William Josh Ard}, title = {Methodological Problems in The Use of Typologies in Diachronic Syntax}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, topic = {historical-linguistics;linguistic-typology;} } @article{ ardeshir:1999a, author = {Mohammed Ardeshir}, title = {A Translation of Intuitionistic Predicate Logic into Basic Predicate Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1999}, volume = {62}, number = {2}, pages = {331--352}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;} } @article{ areces-bernardi_r:2004a, author = {Carlos Areces and Raffaella Bernardi}, title = {Analyzing the Core of Categorical Grammar}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2004}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {121--137}, topic = {proof-theory;Lambek-calculus;categorial-grammar;} } @incollection{ areces-etal:2000a, author = {Carlos Areces and Ver\'onica Becher and Sebastian Ferro}, title = {Characterization Results for d-{H}orn Formulas, or on Formulas that Are True on Dual Reduced Products}, booktitle = {Logic, Language, and Computation, Volume 3}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2000}, editor = {Lawrence Cavedon and Patrick Blackburn and Nick Braisby and Atushi Shimojina}, pages = {49--66}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {subtheories-of-FOL;} } @article{ areces-etal:2001a, author = {Carlos Areces and Patrick Blackburn and Maarten Marx}, title = {Hybrid Logics: Characterization, Interpolation, and Complexity}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {66}, number = {3}, pages = {977--1010}, topic = {modal-logic;hybrid-modal-logics;} } @article{ areces-etal:2011a, author = {Carlos Areces and Diego Figueira and Santiago Figueira and Sergio Mera}, title = {The Expressive Power of Memory Logics}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {290--317}, topic = {modal-logic;memory-logics;} } @article{ areces-etal:2014a, author = {Carlos Areces and Patrick Blackburn and Antonia Huertas}, title = {Completeness in Hybrid Type Theory}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {2--3}, pages = {209--238}, topic = {hybrid-modal-logics;type-theory;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ areces-orbe:2015a, author = {Carlos Areces and Ezequiel Orbe}, title = {Symmetries in Modal Logics}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {373--401}, topic = {modal-logic;symmetry;duality;} } @incollection{ areces-tencate:2006a, author = {Carlos Areces and Balder ten Cate}, title = {Hybrid Logics}, booktitle = {Handbook of Modal Logic}, year = {2006}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Inc.}, address = {New York}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan van Benthem and Frank Wolter}, pages = {821--868}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. "Areces".}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @phdthesis{ arehart:2003a, author = {Mark D. Arehart}, title = {Noun Compound Semantics: Linguistic and General-Purpose Reasoning}, school = {University of Michigan}, year = {2001}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {compound-nouns;} } @incollection{ arel_i:2012a, author = {Itamar Arel}, title = {The Threat of a Reward-Driven Adversarial Artificial General Intelligence}, booktitle = {Singularity Hypotheses: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2012}, editor = {Amnon H. Eden and James H. Moor and Johnny H. S{\o}raker and Eric Steinhart}, pages = {43--60}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {technological-singularity;} } @inproceedings{ arenas_m-etal:2012a, author = {Marcelo Arenas and Elena Botoeva and Diego Calvanese and Vladislav Ryzhikov and Evgeny Sherkhonov}, title = {Exchanging Description Logic Knowledge Bases}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {563--567}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In this paper, we study the problem of exchanging knowledge between a source and a target knowledge base (KB), connected through mappings. Differently from the traditional database exchange setting, which considers only the exchange of data, we are interested in exchanging implicit knowledge. ... }, topic = {descpription-logics;knowledge-exchange;} } @inproceedings{ arenas_m-etal:2018a, author = {Marcelo Arenas and Jorge A. Baier and Juan S. Navarro and Sebastian Sardi\~na}, title = {On the Progression of Situation Calculus Universal Theories with Constants}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {484--493}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we provide a thorough study of the progression of situation calculus UTCs. First, we prove that progression of a (possibly infinite) [universal theories with constants] UTC is always first-order definable and results in a UTC. ... This comprehensive analysis contributes to a better understanding of progression in action theories, both in terms of feasibility and difficulty. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {progression;situation-calculus;} } @incollection{ arens_v-etal:1992a, author = {V. Arens and Robert Dale and Stephen Kerpedjiev and Kathleen R. McKeown and Oliviero Stock and Wolfgang Wahlster}, title = {Panel Statements on: Extending Language Generation to Multiple Media}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth International Workshop on Natural Language Generation, Trento, Italy}, year = {1992}, editor = {Robert Dale and Eduard Hovy and Dieter Roesner and Oliviero Stock}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, pages = {277--292}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-generation;multimedia-generation;} } @article{ arens_v-etal:1993a, author = {V. Arens and C.Y. Chee and C.N. Hsu and C.A. Knoblock}, title = {Retrieving and Integrating Data from Multiple Information Sources}, journal = {International Journal on Intelligent and Cooperative Information Systems}, year = {1993}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {45--88}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {knowledge-integration;distributed-databases;} } @incollection{ arens_y:1992a, author = {Yigal Arens}, title = {Multimedia Presentation Planning as an Extension of Text Planning}, booktitle = {Aspects of Automated Natural Language Generation: 6th International Workshop on Natural Language Generation, {T}rento, {I}taly, April 5--7, 1992}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, editor = {Robert Dale and Eduard Hovy and Dietmar R\"ossner and Oliviero Stock}, pages = {278--280}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {UMich MEDIA UNION LIBRARY Call No: QA 76.9 .N38 I58 1992}, topic = {nl-generation;multimedia-generation;document-planning;} } @inproceedings{ arens_y-etal:1987a, author = {Yigal Arens and John J. Granacki and Alice C. Parker}, title = {Phrasal Analysis of Long Noun Sequences}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, editor = {Candy Sidner}, year = {1987}, pages = {59--64}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/981175.981184}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Morristown, NJ, USA}, topic = {compound-nouns;} } @inproceedings{ aretoulaki-ludwig_b:1999a, author = {Maria Aretoulaki and Bernd Ludwig}, title = {Automation-Descriptions and Theorem-Proving: A Marriage Made in Heaven?}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Knowledge and Reasoning in Practical Dialogue Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jan Alexandersson}, pages = {9--16}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {finite-state-automata;theorem-proving; computational-dialogue;} } @article{ arfaee-etal:2011a, author = {Shahab Jabbari Arfaee and Sandra Zilles and Robert C. Holte}, title = {Learning Heuristic Functions for Large State Spaces}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {16--17}, pages = {2075--2098}, topic = {heuristics;machine-learning;} } @article{ argall_bd-etal:2009a, author = {Brenna D. Argall and Sonia Chernova and Manuela Veloso and Brett Browninga}, title = {A Survey of Robot Learning from Demonstration}, journal = {Robotics and Autonomous Systems}, year = {2009}, volume = {57}, number = {5}, pages = {469--483}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {learning-apprentices;learning-by-imitation;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ argamon-etal:1998a, author = {Shlomo Argamon and Ido Dagan and Yuval Krymolowski}, title = {A Memory-Based Approach Learning Shallow Natural Language Patterns}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {67--73}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {machine-language-learning;} } @article{ argamonengenson-etal:1998a, author = {Shlomo Argamon-Engenson and Sarit Kraus and Sigalit Sina}, title = {Utility-Based On-Line Exploration for Repeated Navigation in an Embedded Graph}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {101}, number = {1--2}, pages = {267--284}, topic = {utlity-based-search;route-planning;} } @book{ argyle:1975a, author = {Michael Argyle}, title = {Bodily Communication}, publisher = {Methuen}, year = {1975}, address = {London}, ISBN = {041667450X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF637.C45 A69 1975.}, topic = {facial-expression;gestures;} } @book{ argyle:1975b, author = {Michael Argyle}, title = {The Anatomy of Relationships: And the Rules and Skills Needed to Manage Them Successfully}, publisher = {Methuen}, year = {1975}, address = {London}, ISBN = {041667450X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF637.C45 A69 1975.}, topic = {social-psychology;interpersonal-reasoning;} } @book{ argyle:1985a, author = {Michael Argyle}, title = {The Anatomy of Relationships: And the Rules and Skills Needed to Manage Them Successfully}, publisher = {Heinemann}, year = {1985}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0434025003}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library HM132 .A69x 1985}, topic = {interpersonal-communication;} } @book{ argyle:1991a, author = {Michael Argyle}, title = {Cooperation, the Basis of Sociability}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1991}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0415035457}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, HM 132 .A6951 1991}, topic = {cooperation;social-psychology;} } @book{ argyle:1992a, author = {Michael Argyle}, title = {The Social Psychology of Everyday Life}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1992}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0415010713}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, HM 251 .A7821 1992.}, topic = {social-psychology;} } @book{ argyle-cook_m1:1976a, author = {Michael Argyle and Mark Cook}, title = {Gaze and Mutual Gaze}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, year = {1976}, ISBN = {0521208653}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF637.C45 A72.}, topic = {gaze;mutuality;discourse;} } @book{ argyle-trower:1979a, author = {Michael Argyle and Peter Trower}, title = {Person to Person: Ways of Communicating}, publisher = {Harper and Row}, year = {1979}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0063847469}, rtnote = {UMich Social Work, BF637.C45 A73.}, topic = {gestures;interpersonal-communication;} } @article{ arieli_o:2007a, author = {Ofer Arieli}, title = {Paraconsistent Reasoning and Preferential Entailments by Signed Quantified Boolean Formulae}, journal = {{ACM} Transactions on Computational Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, topic = {paraconsistency;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ arieli_o:2010a, author = {Ofer Arieli}, title = {On the Application of the Disjunctive Syllogism in Paraconsistent Logics Based on Four States of Information}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {302--309}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We identify three classes of four-state paraconsistent logics according to their different approaches towards the disjunctive syllogism, and investigate three representatives of these approaches: Quasi-classical logic, which always accepts this principle, Belnap's logic, that rejects the disjunctive syllogism altogether, and a logic of inconsistency minimization that restricts its application to consistent fragments only. ...}, topic = {computational-ontology;bilattices;} } @article{ arieli_o-avron_a:1996a, author = {Ofer Arieli and Arnon Avron}, title = {Reasoning With Logical Bilattices}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1996}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {25--63}, topic = {relevance-logic;bilattices;} } @article{ arieli_o-avron_a:1998a, author = {Ofer Arieli and Arnon Avron}, title = {The Value of the Four Values}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {102}, number = {1}, pages = {97--141}, topic = {bilattices;reasoning-about-uncertainty;paraconsistency; preferential-semantics;} } @article{ arieli_o-denecker_m:2003a, author = {Ofer Arieli and Marc Denecker}, title = {Reducing Preferential Paraconsistent Reasoning to Classical Entailment}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2003}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, pages = {557--580}, abstract = {... A standard technique for paraconsistent reasoning on inconsistent classical theories is by shifting to multiple-valued logics. We show how these multiple-valued theories can be 'shifted back' to two-valued classical theories through a polynomial transformation, and how preferential reasoning based on multiple-valued logic can be represented by classical circumscription-like axioms. By applying this process we provide new ways of implementing multiple-valued paraconsistent reasoning. Standard multiple-valued reasoning can thus be performed through theorem provers for classical logic, and multiple-valued preferential reasoning can be implemented using algorithms for processing circumscriptive theories (such as DLS and SCAN).}, topic = {reasoning-about-inconsistency;paraconsistency;} } @inproceedings{ arieli_o-etal:2010a, author = {Ofer Arieli and Arnon Avron and Anna Zamansky}, title = {Maximally Paraconsistent Three-Valued Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {310--318}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we introduce the strongest possible notion of maximal paraconsistency, and investigate it in the context of logics that are based on deterministic or non-deterministic three-valued matrices. ... }, topic = {paraconsistency;multivalued-logic;} } @inproceedings{ arieli_o-etal:2021a, author = {Ofer Arieli and AnneMarie Borg and Christian Stra{\ss}er}, title = {Characterizations and Classifications of Argumentative Entailments}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {52--62}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {n this paper we provide a detailed analysis of the inference process induced by logical argumentation frameworks. ... We show that, ultimately, for characterizing the inference process with respect to a given framework, extension-based semantics may be divided into two types: single-extension and multiple-extension, which induce respective kinds of entailment relations. These entailments are further classified by the way they tolerate new information (nonmonotonicity-related properties) and maintain conflicts among arguments (inconsistency-related properties).}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de22}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;nonmonotonic-reasoning;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ arieli_o-strasser_c:2015a, author = {Ofer Arieli and Christian Stra{\ss}er}, title = {Sequent-Based Logical Argumentation}, journal = {Journal of Argument and Computation}, year = {2015}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {73--99}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {proof-theory;abstract-argumentation;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ arieli_o-strasser_c:2016a, author = {Ofer Arieli and Christian Strasser}, title = {Argumentative Approaches to Reasoning with Maximal Consistency}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, pages = {509--512}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Reasoning with the maximally consistent subsets (MCS) of the premises is a well-known approach for handling contradictory information. We introduce two argumentation-based methods for doing so: a declarative approach that is related to Dung-style semantics for abstract argumentation, and a computational approach that is based on extensions of Gentzen-type proofs systems. This brings about a new perspective on reasoning with MCS which shows a strong link between the latter and argumentation systems, and which can be extended to related formalisms. A by-product of this is the introduction of a dynamic proof system for classical logic and rebuttal attacks, which is sound and complete with respect to Dung's stable semantics for the associated argumentation framework. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no22}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;reasoning-about-inconsistency;} } @book{ ariely_d:2008a, author = {Dan Ariely}, title = {Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces that Shape Our Decisions}, publisher = {HarperCollins}, year = {2008}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Out for reading.}, topic = {behavioral-economics;irrationality;} } @article{ ariely_d-wertenbroch_k:2002a, author = {Dan Ariely and Klaus Wertenbroch}, title = {Procrastination, Deadlines, and Performance: Self-control by Precommitment}, journal = {Psychological Science}, year = {2002}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {219--224}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no21}, abstract = {People have self-control problems, they recognize them, and they try to control them by self-imposing costly deadlines. These deadlines help people control procrastination, but they are not as effective as some externally imposed deadlines in improving task performance}, topic = {procrastination;self-control;} } @article{ arioso:2010a, author = {Fabrizio Arioso}, title = {Infectum and Perfectum: Two Faces of Tense Selection in Romance Languages}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2010}, volume = {33}, number = {3}, pages = {171--214}, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;Romance-languages;} } @book{ aristotle-categoriesanddeint:bc, author = {Aristotle}, title = {Categories and De Interpretatione}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1963}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library: B 438 .A5 A18}, note = {Translated with notes by J.L. Ackrill.}, topic = {philosophy-classics;logic-classics;} } @misc{ aristotle-deanima:bc, author = {Aristotle}, title = {De Anima}, topic = {philosophy-classics;} } @book{ aristotle-deint:bc, author = {Aristotle}, title = {Peri Hermeneias}, publisher = {Akademie-Verlag}, year = {1994}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Translated with interpretation by Hermann Weidemann.}, xref = {Reviews: gaskin:1996a, frede_d:1998a.}, ISBN = {3050019190}, topic = {philosophy-classics;logic-classics; future-contingent-propositions;} } @misc{ aristotle-metaphysics:bc, author = {Aristotle}, title = {Metaphysics}, topic = {philosophy-classics;} } @misc{ aristotle-nicomacheanethics:bc, author = {Aristotle}, title = {Nicomachean Ethics}, topic = {philosophy-classics;ethics;} } @misc{ aristotle-physics:bc, author = {Aristotle}, title = {Physics}, topic = {philosophy-classics;} } @misc{ aristotle-posterioranalytics:bc, author = {Aristotle}, title = {Posterior Analytics}, topic = {philosophy-classics;} } @misc{ aristotle-prioranalytics:bc, author = {Aristotle}, title = {Prior Analytics}, topic = {philosophy-classics;} } @unpublished{ arjab:1987a, author = {Bijan Arjab}, title = {A Formal Language for Representation and Reasoning about Indirect Context}, year = {1987}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Computer Science Department, UCLA.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;intensionality;hyperintensionality;} } @article{ arkes-ayton:1999a, author = {Hal R. Arkes and Peter Ayton}, title = {The Sunk Cst and {C}oncorde Effects: Are Humans Less Rational Than Lower Animals?}, journal = {Psychological Bulletin}, year = {1999}, volume = {125}, number = {5}, pages = {591--600}, abstract = {The sunk cost effect is a maladaptive economic behavior that is manifested in a greater tendency to continue an endeavor once an investment in money, effort, or time has been made. The Concorde fallacy is another name for the sunk cost effect, except that the former term has been applied strictly to lower animals, whereas the latter has been applied solely to humans. The authors contend that there are no unambiguous instances of the Concorde fallacy in lower animals and also present evidence that young children, when placed in an economic situation akin to a sunk cost one, exhibit more normatively correct behavior than do adults. $\ldots$}, topic = {behavioral-economics;sunk-costs;} } @book{ arkin_rc:1998a, author = {Ronald C. Arkin}, title = {Behavior-Based Robots}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-19398-1}, topic = {robotics;} } @incollection{ arkin_rc:2005a, author = {Ronald C. Arkin}, title = {Moving up the Food Chain: Motivation and Emotion in Behavior-Based Robots}, booktitle = {Who Needs Emotions? The Brain Meets the Robot}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Jean-Marc Fellous and Michael A. Arbib}, pages = {245--269}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {emotion;ethology;synthesized-emotions;} } @book{ arkin_rc:2009a, author = {Ronald C. Arkin}, title = {Governing Lethal Behavior in Autonomous Robots}, publisher = {CRC Press}, year = {2009}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {Chapters in RHT collection. \oc17 }, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @article{ arkin_rc:2016a, author = {Ronald C. Arkin}, title = {Ethics and Autonomous Systems: Perils and Promises}, journal = {Proceedings of the {IEEE}}, year = {2016}, volume = {104}, number = {10}, pages = {1779--1781}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja17}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ arkin_rc-moshkina_l:2015a, author = {Ronald C. Arkin and Lilia Moshkina}, title = {Affect in Human-Robot Interaction}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {493--502}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;} } @article{ arkoudas_k-bringsjord_s:2009a, author = {Konstantine Arkoudas and Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {Vivid: A Framework for Heterogeneous Problem Solving}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {15}, pages = {1367--1405}, topic = {heterogeneous-reasoning;reasoning-with-diagrams; symbolic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ arkoudas_k-etal:2005a, author = {Konstantine Arkoudas and Selmer Bringsjord and Paul Bello }, title = {Toward Ethical Robots via Mechanized Deontic Logic}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Machine Ethics}, year = {2005}, editor = {G. Michael Anderson and Susan Leigh Anderson and Chris Armen}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap12}, abstract = {We suggest that mechanized multi-agent deontic logics might be appropriate vehicles for engineering trustworthy robots. Mechanically checked proofs in such logics can serve to establish the permissibility (or obligatoriness) of agent actions, and such proofs, when translated into English, can also explain the rationale behind those actions. We use the logical framework Athena to encode a natural deduction system for a deontic logic recently proposed by Horty for reasoning about what agents ought to do. We present the syntax and semantics of the logic, discuss its encoding in Athena, and illustrate with an example of a mechanized proof. }, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @book{ arkoudas_k-musser_dr:2017a, author = {Konstantine Arkoudas and David R. Musser}, title = {Fundamental Proof Methods in Computer Science: A Computer-Based Approach}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-03553-8}, abstract = {Proof is the primary vehicle for knowledge generation in mathematics. In computer science, proof has found an additional use: verifying that a particular system (or component, or algorithm) has certain desirable properties. This book teaches students how to read and write proofs using Athena, a freely downloadable computer language. Athena proofs are machine-checkable and written in an intuitive natural-deduction style. The book contains more than 300 exercises, most with full solutions. By putting proofs into practice, it demonstrates the fundamental role of logic and proof in computer science as no other existing text does. Guided by examples and exercises, students are quickly immersed in the most useful high-level proof methods, including equational reasoning, several forms of induction, case analysis, proof by contradiction, and abstraction/specialization. The book includes auxiliary material on SAT and SMT solving, automated theorem proving, and logic programming.}, topic = {computer-assisted-proof;} } @incollection{ arlocosta_hl:1995a, author = {Horacio L. Arl\'o Costa}, title = {Epistemic Logic, Snakes, and Stars}, booktitle = {Conditionals: From Philosophy to Computer Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Gabriella Crocco and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig}, pages = {193--239}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {conditionals;belief-revision;CCCP;} } @article{ arlocosta_hl:1999a, author = {Horacio Arl\'{o}-Costa}, title = {Belief Revision Conditionals: Basic Iterated Systems}, journal = {Annals of Pure and Applied Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {96}, pages = {3--28}, number = {1}, topic = {conditionals;belief-revision;} } @incollection{ arlocosta_hl:1999b, author = {Horacio Arl\'o Costa}, title = {Epistemic Context, Defeasible Inference, and Conversational Implicature}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {15--27}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;autoepistemic-logic;implicature;} } @inproceedings{ arlocosta_hl:1999c, author = {Horacio Arl\'o-Costa}, title = {Qualitative and Probabilistic Models of Full Belief}, booktitle = {Proceedings of Logic Colloquim'98}, year = {1999}, editor = {Samuel R. Buss and P. H\'ajek and P. Pudl\'ak}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, pages = {25--43}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {belief;probability;} } @inproceedings{ arlocosta_hl:2000a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o-Costa}, title = {Hypothetical Revision and Matter-of-Fact Supposition}, booktitle = {Eighth International Workshop on Non-Monotonic Reasoning (NMR'2000). Special Session, {\em Belief Change, Theory and Practice}}, year = {2000}, note = {Computer Research Repository, Los Alamos e-Print Archive, ACM and NCSTRL}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ arlocosta_hl:2000b, author = {Horacio Arlo-Costa}, title = {Review of \emph{{E}pistemic Logic and the Theory of Games and Decisions}, edited by M.O.L. Bacharach and L.A. G\'erard-Varet and P. Mongin and H.S. Shin}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2000}, volume = {64}, number = {3}, pages = {431--435}, xref = {Review of bacharach_mol-etal:1997a.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;game-theory;decision-theory;} } @inproceedings{ arlocosta_hl:2001a, author = {Horacio Arlo-Costa}, title = {Trade-Offs between Inductive Power and Logical Omniscience in Modeling Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {1--14}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {bounded-agents;hyperintensionality;} } @article{ arlocosta_hl:2001b, author = {Horacio L. Arlo-Costa}, title = {Review of \emph{{D}efeasible Deontic Logic}, edited by {D}onald {N}ute}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {67}, number = {1}, pages = {129--139}, xref = {Review of nute_d:1997a.}, topic = {deontic-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ arlocosta_hl:2001c, author = {Horacio Arl\'o-Costa}, title = {Bayesian Epistemology and Epistemic Conditionals: On the Status of the Export-Import Laws}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2001}, volume = {98}, number = {11}, pages = {555--593}, topic = {conditionals;probability-kinematics;} } @article{ arlocosta_hl:2002a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o Costa}, title = {First Order Extensions of Classical Systems of Modal Logic. The Role of the {B}arcan Schemas}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2002}, volume = {71}, number = {1}, pages = {87--118}, topic = {modal-logic;epistemic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ arlocosta_hl:2003a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o Costa}, title = {A Theory of Contextual Propositions for Indicatives}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {15--28}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;} } @incollection{ arlocosta_hl:2005a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o Costa and William Taysom}, title = {Contextual Modals}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {15--28}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;modal-logic;nl-modality;} } @incollection{ arlocosta_hl:2007a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o Costa}, title = {Epistemological Foundations for the Representation of Discourse Context}, booktitle = {Perspectives on Context}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2007}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {95--140}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {context;discourse;pragmatics;presupposition;} } @incollection{ arlocosta_hl:2009a, author = {Horacio Arlo-Costa}, title = {The Logic of Conditionals}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2009/entries/logic-conditionals/}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, year = {2009}, topic = {conditionals;} } @incollection{ arlocosta_hl:2011a, author = {Horacio L. Arl\'o-Costa}, title = {Indeterminacy and Belief Change}, booktitle = {Dynamic Formal Epistemology}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2011}, editor = {Patrick Girard and Mathieu Marion and Olivier Roy }, pages = {173--195}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ arlocosta_hl-bicchieri_c:1998a, author = {Horacio Arlo-Costa and Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {Games and Conditionals}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Seventh Conference ({TARK} 1998)}, year = {1998}, editor = {Itzhak Gilboa}, pages = {187--200}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;epistemic-logic; foundations-of-game-theory;conditionals;} } @article{ arlocosta_hl-bicchieri_c:2007a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o-Costa and Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {Knowing and Supposing in Games of Perfect Information}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {86}, number = {2}, pages = {353--373}, topic = {epistemic-logic;knowledge;game-theory;} } @incollection{ arlocosta_hl-egre_p:2016a, author = {Horacio Arlo-Costa and Paul Egr\'e}, title = {The Logic of Conditionals}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2016/entries/logic-conditionals/}, year = {2016}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ arlocosta_hl-levi_i:1996a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o-Costa and Isaac Levi}, title = {Two Notions of Epistemic Validity}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1996}, volume = {109}, pages = {217--262}, topic = {probability-semantics;} } @article{ arlocosta_hl-liu_hl:2018a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o Costa and Hailin Liu}, title = {A Representation Result for Value-based Contraction}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {6}, pages = {965--989}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ arlocosta_hl-pacuit_e:2006a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o-Costa and Eric Pacuit}, title = {First-Order Classical Modal Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2006}, volume = {84}, number = {2}, pages = {171--210}, topic = {modal-logic;neighborhood-semantics;quantifying-in-modality; completeness-theorems;first-order-modal-logic;} } @unpublished{ arlocosta_hl-parikh_r:1998a, author = {Horacio Arlo-Costa and Rohit Parihk}, title = {On the Inadequacy of (C2)}, year = {1998}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, topic = {conditionals;belief-revision;} } @incollection{ arlocosta_hl-parikh_r:1999a, author = {Horacio Arlo-Costa and Rohit Parikh}, title = {Two Place Probabilities, Full Belief and Belief Revision}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {1--6}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {primitive-conditional-probability;} } @unpublished{ arlocosta_hl-parikh_r:2000a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o-Costa and Rohit Parikh}, title = {Two place Probabilities, Beliefs and Belief Revision}, year = {2000}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, Carnegie Mellon University. See \cite{arlocosta-parikh_r:1999a} for an extended abstract.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, } @article{ arlocosta_hl-parikh_r:2005a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o Costa and Rohit Parikh}, title = {Conditional Probability and Defeasible Inference}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2005}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {97--119}, topic = {probability-semantics;belief-revision;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ arlocosta_hl-pedersen_ap:2013a, author = {Horacio L. Arl\'o Costa and Arthur Paul Pedersen}, title = {Bounded Rationality: Models for Some Fast and Frugal Heuristics}, booktitle = {Logic at the Crossroads. Volume {II}: Games, Norms, and Reasons}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Johan van Benthem and Amitabha Gupta and Eric Pacuit}, pages = {1--21}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {We generalize two versions of Gerd Gigerenzer's 'Take The Best' algorithm to the case of non-binary choice and we study choice functions that completely characterize the algorithm. One of the versions of the algorithm allows for failures of transitivity and acyclicity of the preference relation induced by the algorithm. So, the corresponding choice function has a descriptive interpretation (it violates the usual constraint that choices over non-empty sets yield non-empty outputs).}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, topic = {limited-rationality;AI-algorithms;} } @incollection{ arlocosta_hl-shapiro_s3:1992a, author = {Horacio Arlo-Costa and Scott Shapiro}, title = {Maps between Nonmonotonic Logic and Conditional Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {553--564}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-logic;conditionals;kr-course;} } @article{ arlocosta_hl-thomason_rh:2001a, author = {Horacio Arl\'o-Costa and Richmond H. Thomason}, title = {Iterative Probability Kinematics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {30}, number = {5}, pages = {479--524}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;primitive-conditional-probability; nonstandard-probability;probability-kinematics;} } @inproceedings{ armado-ranise:1998a, author = {Alessandro Armado and Silvio Ranise}, title = {From Integrated Reasoning Specialists to `Plug and Play' Reasoning Components}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation: Proceedings of {AISC'98}}, year = {1998}, editor = {Jacques Calmet and Jan Plaza}, pages = {42--54}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {hybrid-kr-architectures;combining-systems;} } @article{ armendt_b:1986a, author = {Brad Armendt}, title = {A Foundation for Causal Decision Theory}, journal = {Topoi}, year = {1986}, volume = {5}, pages = {3--19}, topic = {causal-decision-theory;} } @incollection{ armendt_b:1988a, author = {Brad Armendt}, title = {Conditional Preference and Causal Expected Utility}, booktitle = {Causation in Decision, Belief Change, and Statistics, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1988}, editor = {William L. Harper and Brian Skyrms}, pages = {3--24}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {preference;qualitative-utility;causal-decision-theory;} } @inproceedings{ armendt_b:1992a, author = {Brad Armendt}, title = {Dutch Strategies for Diachronic Rules: When Believers See the Sure Loss Coming}, booktitle = {{PSA} 1992: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Volume 1}, year = {1992}, editor = {David Hull and Micky Forbes and Kathleen Okruhlik}, pages = {217--229}, organization = {Philosophy of Science Association}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, address = {East Lansing, Michigan}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {probability-kinematics;} } @article{ armendt_b:1993a, author = {Brad Armendt}, title = {Dutch Books, Additivity, and Utility}, journal = {Philosophical Topics}, year = {1994}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {1--20}, topic = {decision-theory;Dutch-book-argument;foundations-of-utility;} } @article{ armendt_b:2008a, author = {Brad Armendt}, title = {Stake-Invariant Belief}, journal = {Acta Analytica}, year = {2008}, volume = {23}, pages = {29--43}, note = {Available at http://www.public.asu.edu/~armendtb/docs/Stake-Invariant%20Belief%20to%20post.pdf}, abstract = {What can rational deliberation indicate about belief? Belief clearly influences deliberation. The principle that rational belief is stake-invariant rules out at least one way that deliberation might influence belief. The principle is widely, if implicitly, held in work on the epistemology of categorical belief, and it is built into the model of choice-guiding degrees of belief that comes to us from Ramsey and de Finetti. Criticisms of subjective probabilism include challenges to the assumption of additive values (the package principle) employed by defenses of probabilism. But the value-interaction phenomena often cited in such challenges are excluded by stake-invariance. A comparison with treatments of categorical belief suggests that the appeal to stake-invariance is not ad hoc. Whether or not to model belief as stake-invariant is a question not settled here. }, topic = {stake-sensitivity;belief;subjective-probability;} } @article{ armendt_b:2010a, author = {Brad Armendt}, title = {Stakes and Beliefs}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2010}, volume = {147}, number = {1}, pages = {71--87}, doi = {DOI: 10.1007/s11098-009-9451-1}, contentnote = {Abstract: The idea that beliefs may be stake-sensitive is explored. This is the idea that the strength with which a single, persistent belief is held may vary and depend upon what the believer takes to be at stake. The stakes in question are tied to the truth of the belief -- not, as in Pascals wager and other cases, to the belief's presence. Categorical beliefs and degrees of belief are considered; both kinds of account typically exclude the idea and treat belief as stake-invariant, though an exception is briefly described. The role of the assumption of stake-invariance in familiar accounts of degrees of belief is also discussed, and morals are drawn concerning finite and countable Dutch book arguments. }, url = {http://www.public.asu.edu/~armendtb/docs/Armendt-StakesandBeliefs.pdf}, topic = {belief;stake-sensitivity;} } @incollection{ armendt_b:2018a, author = {Brad Armendt}, title = {Causal Decision Theory}, booktitle = {Introduction to Formal Philosophy}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2018}, editor = {Sven Ove Hansson and Vincent F. Hendricks}, pages = {669--691}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {causal-decision-theory;} } @article{ armourgarb_b:2001a, author = {Bradley Armour-Garb}, title = {Deflationism and the Meaningless Strategy}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2001}, volume = {61}, number = {4}, pages = {280--289}, topic = {deflationary-analyses;semantic-paradoxes;truth;} } @article{ armourgarb_b:2005a, author = {Bradley Armour-Garb}, title = {Standing on Common Ground}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2005}, volume = {102}, number = {10}, pages = {545--544}, topic = {paraconsistency;foundations-of-logic;} } @article{ armourgarb_b:2011a, author = {Bradley Armour-Garb}, title = {Contextualism without Pragmatic Encroachment}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {4}, pages = {667--676}, xref = {Commentary on: adler_je:2006a}, xref = {Reply: adler_je:2012a}, topic = {knowledge;contextualism;} } @article{ armourgarb_b:2012a, author = {Bradley Armour-Garb}, title = {No Consistent Way with Paradox}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {1}, pages = {66--75}, xref = {Commentary on: goldstein_l:2009a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;truth-value-gaps;} } @book{ armourgarb_b:2017a, editor = {Bradley Armour-Garb}, title = {Reflections on the {L}iar}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199896042}, xref = {Review: epstein_eg:2019a}, topic = {semantic-oaradoxes;} } @article{ armourgarb_b-beall_jc:2001a, author = {Bradley Armour-Garb and J.C. Beall}, title = {Can Deflationists be Dialethists?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {30}, number = {6}, pages = {593--608}, topic = {truth;deflationary-analyses;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ armourgarb_b-goldstein_l:2010a, author = {Bradley Armour-Garb and Laurence Goldstein}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}pandrels of Truth}, by {J}.{C}. {B}eall}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2010}, volume = {70}, number = {3}, pages = {586--589}, xref = {Review of: beall_jc:2009a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;paraconsistency;deflationary-analyses;} } @article{ armourgarb_b-woodbridge_ja:2006a, author = {Bradley Armour-Garb and James A. Woodbridge}, title = {Dialethism, Semantic Paradox, and the Open Pair}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2006}, volume = {84}, number = {3}, pages = {395--416}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;paraconsistency;} } @article{ armourgarb_b-woodbridge_ja:2010a, author = {Bradley Armour-Garb and James A. Woodbridge}, title = {Truthmakers, Paradox and Plausibility}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2010}, volume = {70}, number = {1}, pages = {11--23}, xref = {Commentary on: lopezdesa_d-zardini_e:2006a, lopezdesa_d-zardini_e:2007a, sorensen_ra:2001a}, topic = {truthmaking;paradoxes;} } @article{ armourgarb_b-woodbridge_ja:2012a, author = {Bradley Armour-Garb and James A. Woodbridge}, title = {The Story about Propositions}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2012}, volume = {45}, number = {4}, pages = {635--674}, topic = {propositions;} } @book{ armstrong_d:1968a, author = {David Armstrong}, title = {A Materialist Theory of the Mind}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1968}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0415100313, 9780415100311}, topic = {mind-body-problem;} } @incollection{ armstrong_d:1978a, author = {David Armstrong}, title = {The Ancient {G}reek Aorist as the Aspect of Countable Action}, booktitle = {Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Philip Tedeschi and Annie Zaenen}, pages = {1--12}, address = {New York}, topic = {tense-aspect;Greek-language;} } @incollection{ armstrong_d:1981a, author = {David Armstrong}, title = {The Ancient {G}reek Aorist as the Aspect of Countable Action}, booktitle = {Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Philip Tedeschi and Annie Zaenen}, pages = {1--12}, address = {New York}, topic = {Aktionmsarten;Greek-language;} } @book{ armstrong_df:1999a, author = {David F. Armstrong}, title = {Original Signs: Gesture, Sign, and the Sources of Language}, publisher = {Galludet University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Washington}, ISBN = {1563680750}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, P 116 .A7541 1999.}, topic = {gestures;} } @book{ armstrong_df-etal:1995a, author = {David F. Armstrong and William C. Stokoe and Sherman E. Wilcox}, title = {Gesture and the Nature of Language}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521462134}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, P 117 .A751 1995.}, topic = {gesture;} } @article{ armstrong_dm:1969a, author = {David Malet Armstrong}, title = {Dispositions Are Causes}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1969}, volume = {29}, number = {6}, pages = {23--36}, url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/3327203}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ armstrong_dm:1970a, author = {David Malet Armstrong}, title = {Meaning and Communication}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1970}, volume = {80}, pages = {427--447}, rtnote = {This paper starts with Locke on signs and communication and proposes an alternative to Grice's acct of speaker meaning. If there are major departures or new ideas here, I don't see them.}, topic = {speaker-meaning;speech-acts;} } @article{ armstrong_dm:1971a, author = {David Malet Armstrong}, title = {Meaning and Communication}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1971}, volume = {80}, pages = {427--447}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {speaker-meaning;} } @book{ armstrong_dm:1983a, author = {David Malet Armstrong}, title = {What Is a Law of Nature?}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Cambridge}, ISBN = {0521253438}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD581 .A751 1983.}, topic = {natural-laws;dispositions;} } @incollection{ armstrong_dm:1993a, author = {David Malet Armstrong}, title = {A World of States of Affairs}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 7: Language and Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {429--440}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {metaphysics;philosophical-realism;property-theory; philosophical-ontology;} } @book{ armstrong_dm:1997a, author = {David M. Armstrong}, title = {A World of States of Affairs}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: oliver_a:1998a.}, topic = {metaphysics;philosophical-realism;property-theory; philosophical-ontology;} } @book{ armstrong_dm:1999a, author = {David Malet Armstrong}, title = {The Mind-Body Problem: An Opinionated Introduction}, publisher = {Westview Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Boulder, Colorado}, ISBN = {0813390567 (hardcover)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD 418.3 .A751 1999}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;mind-body-problem;} } @article{ armstrong_dm:2001a, author = {David M. Armstrong}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}apers in Metaphysics and Epistemology}, by {D}avid {K}. {L}ewis}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {1}, pages = {77--79}, xref = {Review of lewis_dk:1999a.}, topic = {metaphysics;epistemplogy;} } @incollection{ armstrong_dm:2004a, author = {D.M. Armstrong}, title = {Going through the Open Door Again: Counterfactual versus Singularist}, booktitle = {Causation and Counterfactuals}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {John Collins and Ned Hall and Laurie A. Paul}, pages = {445--457}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {causality;conditionals;} } @article{ armstrong_j:2016a, author = {Josh Armstrong}, title = {The Problem of Lexical Innovation}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2016}, volume = {39}, number = {2}, pages = {87--118}, abstract = {In a series of papers, Donald Davidson developed a powerful argument against the claim that linguistic conventions provide any explanatory purchase on an account of linguistic meaning and communication. This argument, as I shall develop it, turns on cases of what I call lexical innovation: cases in which a speaker uses a sentence containing a novel expression-meaning pair, but nevertheless successfully communicates her intended meaning to her audience. I will argue that cases of lexical innovation motivate a dynamic conception of linguistic conventions according to which background linguistic conventions may be rapidly expanded to incorporate new word meanings or shifted to revise the meanings of words already in circulation. I argue that this dynamic account of conventions both resolves the problem raised by cases of lexical innovation and that it does so in a way that is preferable to those who -- Davidson -- deny important explanatory roles for linguistic conventions.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16}, topic = {lexical-innovation;convention;Davidson;} } @incollection{ armstrong_j:2018a, author = {Josh Armstrong}, title = {Provincialism in Pragmatics}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 32: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2018}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {5--40}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {pragmatics;mutual-attitudes;animal-cognition;} } @article{ armstrong_jhc:1953a, author = {J.H. Scobell Armstrong}, title = {Knowledge and Belief}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1953}, volume = {13}, number = {5}, pages = {111--117}, xref = {Discussion of: malcolm_n:1959b}, topic = {reflective-knowledge;} } @book{ armstrong_s:1994a, editor = {Susan Armstrong}, title = {Using Large Corpora}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1949}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS General shelves.}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;} } @book{ armstrong_s:1999a, editor = {Susan Armstrong}, title = {Natural Language Processing Using Very Large Corpora}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1999}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0792360559 (hb)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 98 .N3551 1999.}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;} } @article{ armstrong_s-etal:2012a, author = {Stuart Armstrong and Anders Sandberg and Nick Bostrom}, title = {Thinking Inside the Box: Controlling and Using an Oracle {AI}}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2012}, volume = {22}, number = {4}, pages = {299--324}, abstract = {There is no strong reason to believe that human-level intelligence represents an upper limit of the capacity of artificial intelligence, should it be realized. This poses serious safety issues, since a superintelligent system would have great power to direct the future according to its possibly flawed motivation system. Solving this issue in general has proven to be considerably harder than expected. This paper looks at one particular approach, Oracle AI. An Oracle AI is an AI that does not act in the world except by answering questions. Even this narrow approach presents considerable challenges. In this paper, we analyse and critique various methods of controlling the AI. In general an Oracle AI might be safer than unrestricted AI, but still remains potentially dangerous. }, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ armstrongwarwic:1994a, author = {Susan Armstrong-Warwic}, title = {Acquisition and Exploitation of Textual Resources for {NLP}}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Computational Linguistics: Essays in Honour of {D}on {W}alker}, publisher = {Giardini Editori e Stampatori and Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {Antonio Zampolli and Nicoletta Calzolari and Martha Palmer}, pages = {451--465}, address = {Pisa and Dordrecht}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;} } @book{ arnauld-nicole:1662a2, author = {A. Arnauld and P. Nicole}, title = {Logic, or the Art of Thinking}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, England}, note = {First published in 1662. Translated and edited by J.V. Buroker.}, topic = {logic-classic;foundations-of-semantics;} } @book{ arnauld-nicole:1662a, author = {Antoine Arnauld and Pierre Nicole}, title = {La Logique ou l'Art de Penser. Paris: , 1662.Logic or the Art of Thinking}, publisher = {Jean Guignart, Charles Savreux, \&\ Jean de Lavnay}, year = {1662}, address = {Paris}, xref = {English translation: arnauld-nicole:1662b.}, topic = {logic-classics;} } @book{ arnauld-nicole:1662b, author = {Antoine Arnauld and Pierre Nicole}, title = {Logic or the Art of Thinking}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, England}, note = {Translated by Jill Vance Buroker}, ISBN-13 = {978-0521483940}, ISBN-10 = {0521483948}, topic = {logic-classics;} } @article{ arndt_m:2020a, author = {Michael Arndt}, title = {The Explosion Calculus}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2020}, volume = {108}, number = {3}, pages = {509--547}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @book{ arnold_a-niwinski_d:2001a, author = {Andr\'e Arnold and Damian Niwinski}, title = {Rudiments of $\mu$-Calculus}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {2001}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN-13 = {978-0444506207}, topic = {mu-calculus;} } @book{ arnold_dj-etal:1994a, author = {D.J. Arnold and L. Balkan and R. Lee Humphreys and S. Meijer and L. Sadler}, title = {Machine Translation: An Introductory Guide}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1994}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {1-85554-246-3 (hardbound), 1-85554-217-X (pbk)}, xref = {Review: heizmann:1995a.}, topic = {machine-translation;} } @article{ arnon:1988a, author = {Dennis S. Arnon}, title = {Geometric Reasoning with Logic and Algebra}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {37}, number = {1--3}, pages = {37--60}, topic = {geometrical-reasoning;} } @article{ arntzenius_f:2003a, author = {Frank Arntzenius}, title = {Some Problems for Conditionalization and Reflection}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {100}, number = {7}, pages = {356--370}, topic = {probability-kinematics;} } @article{ arntzenius_f-mccarthy_d2:1997a, author = {Frank Arntzenius and David McCarthy}, title = {The Two Envelope Paradox and Infinite Expectations}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1997}, volume = {57}, number = {1}, pages = {42--50}, topic = {two-envelope-paradox;} } @incollection{ arom:1994a, author = {Simha Arom}, title = {Intelligence in Traditional Music}, booktitle = {What is Intelligence?}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jean Khalfa}, pages = {137--160}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {musicology;} } @techreport{ aronis:1993a, author = {John M. Aronis}, title = {Implementing Inheritance on the Connection Machine}, institution = {Intelligent Systems Program, University of Pittsburgh}, number = {ISP 93-1}, year = {1993}, address = {Pittsburgh, PA 15260}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Another copy in file drawers.}, topic = {inheritance-theory;parallel-processing;} } @unpublished{ aronis-provost_fj:1995a, author = {John M. Aronis and Foster J. Provost}, title = {Efficiently Constructing Relational Features from Background Knowledge for Inductive Machine Learning}, year = {1959}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished MS, Computer Science Department, University of Pittsburgh.}, missinginfo = {Date is guess.}, topic = {machine-learning;inheritance;relational-reasoning;} } @phdthesis{ aronoff_m:1974a, author = {Mark Aronoff}, title = {Word-Structure}, school = {Linguistics Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology}, year = {1974}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {morphology;} } @book{ aronoff_m:1976a, author = {Mark Aronoff}, title = {Word Formation in Generative Grammar}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1976}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {morphology;} } @article{ aronoff_m:1981a, author = {Mark Aronoff}, title = {Automobile Semantics}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1981}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {329--397}, topic = {structural-semantics;conceptual-frameworks;} } @book{ aronoff_m:1993a, author = {Mark Aronoff}, title = {Morphology by Itself}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {morphology;} } @book{ aronoff_m-etal:1984a, editor = {Mark Aronoff and Richard Oehrle and Frances Kelley and Bonnie Wilker Stephens}, title = {Language Sound Structure: Studies in Phonology}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262010747}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P217 .L331 1984.}, topic = {phonology;} } @article{ aronszain:1988a, author = {Mark Aronszain}, title = {Thought and Circumstance}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1988}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {271--307}, abstract = {I argue that objects of thought are not circumstantial in character. So the view that they are propositions, standardly conceived, cannot be right. The argument centers on the case of non-doxastic thoughts - wonderings and wishings, in particular. The bulk of this paper, then, is devoted to laying out an alternative conception of the objects of thought. This conception supports the traditional idea that objects of thought are what we express by our utterance of sentences. Moreover, on this new view, a partial account is afforded of what things are expressed by non-assertoric sentences - by sentences in moods other than the indicative. }, topic = {propositions;} } @article{ aroyo-welty:2015a, author = {Lora Aroyo and Chris Welty}, title = {Truth Is a Lie: Crowd Truth and the Seven Myths of Human Annotation}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2015}, volume = {36}, number = {1}, pages = {15--24}, topic = {corpus-annotation;AI-editorial;} } @article{ arpaly_n-schroeder_t:2012a, author = {Noma Arpaly and Timothy Schroeder}, title = {Deliberation and Acting for Reasons}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2012}, volume = {121}, number = {2}, pages = {209--239}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;deliberation;} } @book{ arpaly_n-schroeder_t:2013a, author = {Nomy Arpaly and Timothy Schroeder}, title = {In Praise of Desire}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2013}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {9780199348169}, abstract = {... other moral-psychological theories put Reason ahead of desires or give desires roles only when managed and contained, In Praise of Desire gives a full defence of the central role intrinsic desires have in our moral lives.}, topic = {desire;ethics;practical-reasobing;} } @article{ arregi_k:2003a, author = {Karlos Arregi}, title = {Clausal Pied Piping}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2003}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {115--143}, topic = {syntactic-movement-rules;Basque-language;presupposition;} } @phdthesis{ arregui_a:2005a, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {On the Accessibility of Possible Worlds: The Role of Tense and Aspect}, school = {University of Massachusetts at Amherst}, year = {2005}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, url = {http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~aarregui/ana_arregui_files/Arregui2004DissLetter1Up.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11\arregui2.pdf}, topic = {conditionals;nl-tense;perfective-aspect;events;} } @inproceedings{ arregui_a:2005b, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {On the Role of the Perfect in `Would' Conditionals}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2005 annual conference of the {C}anadian Linguistic Association}, year = {2005}, editor = {Claire Gurski}, organization = {}, publisher = {Canadian Linguistic Association}, address = {Ottawa}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11\arregui9.pdf}, topic = {conditionals;perfective-aspect;subjunctive-mood;} } @inproceedings{ arregui_a:2006a, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {On the Consequences of Event Quantification in Counterfactual Conditionals}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 25th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics}, year = {2006}, editor = {Donald Baumer and David Montero and Michael Scanlon}, pages = {67--75}, publisher = {Cascadilla Proceedings Project}, address = {Somerville, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11\arregui8.pdf}, url = {http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~aarregui/ana_arregui_files/on%20consequences.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11\arregui9.pdf}, topic = {conditionals;subjunctive-mood;tense-aspect;} } @article{ arregui_a:2007a, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {When Aspect Matters: The Case of \emph{Would}-Conditionals}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2007}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {221--264}, url = {http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~aarregui/ana_arregui_files/when-aspect.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11\arregui7.pdf}, topic = {conditionals;subjunctive-mood;} } @inproceedings{ arregui_a:2007b, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {Being Me, Being You: Pronoun Puzzles in Modal Contexts}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 11}, year = {2007}, editor = {Estela Puig-Waldm\"uller}, publisher = {Universitat Pompeu Fabra}, address = {Barcelona}, url = {http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~aarregui/ana_arregui_files/being-me.pdf}, topic = {personal-pronouns;nl-modality;} } @inproceedings{ arregui_a:2008a, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {On the Role of Past-Tense in Resolving Similarity in Counterfactuals}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 12}, year = {2008}, editor = {Atle Gr{\o}nn}, pages = {17--31}, publisher = {University of Oslo}, address = {Oslo}, url = {http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~aarregui/ana_arregui_files/on%20role%20of%20past%20tense%20in%20resolving%20similarity.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11\arregui4.pdf}, abstract = {In this paper I investigate the semantics of counterfactual conditionals. I propose a generalized de re analysis according to which counterfactuals are predicated de re of situations in the actual world. I compare the resulting local view of similarity with the global view found in Lewis-Stalnaker style proposals, presenting arguments in favor of the former. In the de re analysis, past tense identifies the actual world situation the counterfactual is about.}, topic = {conditionals;nl-tense;} } @inproceedings{ arregui_a:2008b, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {Some Remarks on Domain Widening}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 27th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics}, year = {2008}, editor = {Natasha Abner and Jason Bishop}, pages = {45--53}, publisher = {Cascadia Publishing}, address = {Somerville, Massachusetts}, url = {http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~aarregui/ana_arregui_files/some%20remarks%20on%20domain%20widening.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11\arregui5.pdf}, contentnote = {This paper disusses `any'.}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;domain-dynamics;} } @inproceedings{ arregui_a:2008c, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {Chisholm's Paradox: On Detaching Obligations from Deontic Conditionals}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XVIII}}, year = {2008}, editor = {Rajesh Bhatt and Kyle Johnson and Angelika Kratzer and Christopher Potts}, publisher = {CLC Publications}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, url = {http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~aarregui/ana_arregui_files/chisholm%27s%20paradox.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11\arregui6.pdf}, topic = {conditional-obligation;} } @article{ arregui_a:2009a, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {On Similarity in Counterfactuals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2009}, volume = {32}, number = {3}, pages = {245--248}, topic = {conditionals;tense;} } @inproceedings{ arregui_a:2009b, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {On Negative Antecedents in Deontic Conditionals}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 14}, year = {2009}, editor = {Friedrich Neubarth and Martin Prinzhorn and Viola Schmitt and Sarah Zobel}, publisher = {University of Vienna}, address = {Vienna}, url = {http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~aarregui/ana_arregui_files/suB14-final.pdf}, missinginfo = {pages}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11\arregui3.pdf}, topic = {conditional-obligation;reparational-obligations;deontic-modals; conditionals;} } @article{ arregui_a:2010a, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {Detaching `If'-Clauses from `Should'}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2010}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {241--293}, url = {http://aix1.uottawa.ca/~aarregui/ana_arregui_files/detaching%20if-finalfinal.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11\arregu1.pdf}, rtnote = {Discusses Chisholm's paradox.}, topic = {conditionals;conditional-obligation;reparational-obligations; deontic-modals;} } @article{ arregui_a:2011a, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {Counterfactual-Style Revisions in the Semantics of Deontic Modals}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2011}, volume = {28}, number = {2}, pages = {171--210}, abstract = {The article argues for a parallelism between the interpretation of deontic modals and the interpretation of counterfactuals. The main claim is that dependencies between facts play a role in the resolution of both types of modality: in both cases, facts 'stand and fall' together. The article provides two types of evidence supporting this claim: (i) evidence that comes from the interaction between primary and secondary duties (as presented in contrary-to-duty imperatives) and (ii) evidence that comes from the possibility of reproducing well-known counterfactual puzzles in the domain of deontic statements. The article argues that the semantics of deontic modals needs to be stated in a way that pays attention to dependencies between facts and illustrates this with a proposal building on work on counterfactuals by Kratzer and Veltman. }, doi = {10.1093/jos/ffq017}, topic = {deontic-modals;subjunctive-mood;conditionals;} } @unpublished{ arregui_a:2012a, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {On Indexical Anchoring in Conditionals}, year = {2012}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Ottawa}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no12}, topic = {conditionals;tense-aspect;} } @incollection{ arregui_a:2020a, author = {Ana Arregui}, title = {Counterfactuals: `If Kangaroos Had No Tails{'}}, booktitle = {The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Semantics}, publisher = {Wiley Online Library}, year = {2020}, editor = {Daniel Gutzmann and Lisa Matthewson and C\'ecile Meier and Hotze Rullmann and Thomas Ede Zimmerman}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de21}, topic = {conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ arregui_a-biezma_m:2015a, author = {Ana Arregui and María Biezma}, title = {Discourse Rationality and the Counterfactuality Implicature in Backtracking Conditionals}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 20}, year = {2015}, editor = {Nadine Bade and Polina Berezovskaya and Anthea Sch\"oller}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, pages = {91--108}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/issue/view/7}, abstract = {This paper contributes to current discussions of counterfactuality implicatures in would-conditionals. The empirical focus is on the contrast between forward looking and backtracking examples in Anderson-style 'detective reasoning'y sequences. We show that differences regarding the cancellability of counterfactuality in these examples follow from general principles of discourse rationality and can be extended to provide a more general account of the cancellability of counterfactuality implicatures (e.g. in future-shifted examples).}, topic = {conditionals;counterfactuals;implicature;} } @inproceedings{ arregui_a-kusumoto:1998a, author = {Ana Arregui and Kiyomi Kusumoto}, title = {Tense in Temporal Adjunct Clauses}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VIII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1998}, editor = {Devon Strolovitch and Aaron Lawson}, pages = {1--18}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-tense;subordinate-clauses;} } @inproceedings{ arregui_a-matthewson_l:2001a, author = {Ana Arregui and Lisa Matthewson}, title = {A Cross-Linguistic Perspective on the Expression of Manner}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2001}, editor = {Rachel Hastings and Brendan Jackson and Zsofia Zvolenszky}, pages = {1--19}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {manner-adverbials;} } @article{ arrigoni_t:2011a, author = {Tatiana Arrigoni}, title = {$V=L$ and Intuitive Plausibility in Set Theory}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {17}, number = {3}, pages = {337--360}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @inproceedings{ arrit-turner_rm:2003a, author = {Robert P. Arrit and Roy M. Turner}, title = {Context-Sensitive Weights for a Neural Network}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {29--39}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;connectionist-models;} } @article{ arrow:1959a, author = {Kenneth J. Arrow}, title = {Rational Choice Functions and Orderings}, journal = {Econometrica}, year = {1959}, volume = {26}, pages = {121--127}, contentnote = {Arrow's theorem.}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {welfare-economics;social-choice-theory;} } @book{ arrow:1963a, author = {Kenneth J. Arrow}, edition = {2}, title = {Social Choice and Individual Values}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1963}, address = {New York}, topic = {social-choice-theory;} } @incollection{ arrow:1972a, author = {Kenneth J. Arrow}, title = {Exposition of the Theory of Choice Under Conditions of Uncertainty}, booktitle = {Decision and Organization}, publisher = {North Holland}, year = {1972}, editor = {C.B. McGuire and R. Radner}, pages = {19--55}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {decision-theory;} } @book{ arrow:1974a, author = {Kenneth J. Arrow}, title = {The Limits of Organization}, publisher = {Norton}, year = {1974}, address = {New York}, topic = {theory-of-orgaanizatioons;} } @article{ arrow:1986a, author = {Kenneth J. Arrow}, title = {Rationality of Self and Others in an Economic System}, journal = {The Journal of Business}, year = {1986}, volume = {59}, number = {4}, pages = {S385--S399}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja14}, topic = {rationality;foundations-of-economics;} } @book{ arrow-raynaud:1986a, author = {Kenneth J. Arrow and Herv\'e Raynaud}, title = {Social Choice and Multicriterion Decision-Making}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1986}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Economics shelves.}, topic = {social-choice-theory;multiattribute-utility;} } @incollection{ arrozola:2000a, author = {Xabier Arrozola}, title = {Many-Valued Modal Logics in the 50's: {P}rior's Interpretation of the {\L}-Modal Logic of {\L}ukasiewicz}, booktitle = {Three Papers on Logic (Communication, Natural Language Connectives, Many-Valued Modalities)}, publisher = {Institute for Logic, Cognition, Language, and Information, University of the Basque Country}, year = {2000}, editor = {Xabier Arrozola and Bego\~na Carrascal and Kepa Korta and Isabel G\'omez Txurruka}, pages = {1--10}, address = {Donostia}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under "Arrozola"}, topic = {modal-logic;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ arruda_ct:2014a, author = {Caroline T. Arruda}, title = {Review of \emph{{J}oint Commitment: How We Make the Social World}, by {M}argaret {G}ilbert}, journal = {Ethics}, year = {2014}, volume = {125}, number = {1}, pages = {258--262}, xref = {Review of: gilbert_m:2013a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja20}, topic = {foundations-of-sociology;mutual-attitudes;group-action;} } @article{ arsenijevic:2002a, author = {Milo\v{s} Arsenijevi\v{c}}, title = {Determinism, Indeterminism and the Flow of Time}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2002}, volume = {56}, number = {2}, pages = {123--150}, abstract = {A set of axioms implicitly defining the standard, though not instant-based but interval-based, time topology is used as a basis to build a temporal modal logic of events. The whole apparatus contains neither past, present, and future operators nor indexicals, but only B-series relations and modal operators interpreted in the standard way. Determinism and indeterminism are then introduced into the logic of events via corresponding axioms. It is shown that, if determinism and indeterminism are understood in accordance with their core meaning, the way in which they are formally introduced here represents the only right way to do this, given that we restrict ourselves to one real world and make no use of the many real worlds assumption. But then the result is that the very truth conditions for sentences about indeterministic events imply the existence of tensed truths, in spite of the fact that these conditions are formulated (in the indeterministic axiom) in terms of tenseless language. The tenseless theory of time implies determinism, while indeterminism requires the flow of time assumption.}, topic = {temporal-logic;events;(in)determinism;interval-logic;} } @incollection{ arsenijevic:2003a, author = {Milo\v{s} Arsenijevi\'c}, title = {Real Tenses}, booktitle = {Time, Tense, and Reference}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Alexander Joki\'c and Quentin Smith}, pages = {325--354}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;metaphysics;} } @book{ arstila-lloyd_d:2014a, editor = {Valtteri Arstila and Dan Lloyd}, title = {Subjective Time}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-01994-1}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;continental-philosophy;} } @inproceedings{ artale-etal:1997a, author = {Alessandro Artale and Bernardo Magnini and Carlo Strapparava}, title = {Lexical Discrimination with the {I}talian Version of {W}ord{N}et}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {ACL}/{EACL} Workshop on Automatic Extraction and Building of Lexical Semantic Resources for Natural Language Applications}, year = {1997}, editor = {Piek Vossen and Geert Adriaens and Nicoletta Calzolari and Antonio Sanfilippo and Yorick Wilks}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {wordnet;Italian-language;disambiguation;} } @inproceedings{ artale-etal:1997b, author = {Alessandro Artale and Bernardo Magnini and Carlo Strapparava}, title = {{W}ord{N}et for {I}talian and its Use for Lexical Discrimination}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 5th Congresso della {A}ssociazione {I}taliana per l'{I}ntelligenza {A}rtificiale}, year = {1997}, missinginfo = {publisher, editor, pages}, topic = {wordnet;lexical-disambiguation;Italian-language;} } @incollection{ artale-etal:2008a, author = {Alessandro Artale and Nicola Guarino and C. Maria Keet}, title = {Formalising Temporal Constraints on Part-Whole Relations}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {673--683}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {Representing part-whole relations and effectively using them in domain ontologies and conceptual data models poses multiple challenges. In this paper we face the issue of imposing temporal constraints on part-whole relationships, introducing a way to account for "essential" and "immutable" parts (and wholes) in addition to the usual "mandatory" parts (and wholes). Our approach is based on i) an explicit temporalization of the part-whole relation, which allows us to introduce a novel notion of "status" for part-whole relationships; ii) an explicit account of the ontological nature of the classes involved in a part-whole relationships, which distinguishes between "rigid" and "anti-rigid" classes. The main novelty in this paper is to resort to a temporal logic approach to capture the above mentioned notions. The formalization proposed here is grounded on the temporal description logic DLRUS and is based on previous successful efforts to formalize temporal conceptual models. }, topic = {mereology;temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ artale-franconi:1994a, author = {Alessandro Artale and Enrico Franconi}, title = {A Computational Account for a Description Logic of Time and Action}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {3--14}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;description-logics;temporal-reasoning;action-formalisms; kr-course;} } @article{ artale-franconi:1998a, author = {Alessandro Artale and Enrico Franconi}, title = {A Temporal Description Logic for Reasoning about Actions and Plans}, journal = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research}, year = {1998}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {463--506}, abstract = {A class of interval-based temporal languages for uniformly representing and reasoning about actions and plans is presented. $\ldots$ The subsumption problem for a class of temporal Description Logics is investigated and sound and complete decision procedures are given. $\ldots$}, topic = {action-formalisms;description-logics;} } @inproceedings{ artale_a-etal:2021a, author = {Alessandro Artale and Andrea Mazzullo and Ana Ozaki and Frank Wolter}, title = {On Free Description Logics with Definite Descriptions}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {63--73}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... We investigate free description logics with both individual names and definite descriptions as terms of the language, while also accounting for their possible lack of denotation. We focus on the extensions of ALC and, respectively, EL with nominals, the universal role, and definite descriptions. We show that standard reasoning in these extensions is not harder than in the original languages, and we characterise the expressive power of concepts relative to first-order formulas using a suitable notion of bisimulation. ...}, topic = {description;logics;definite-descriptions;free-logic;} } @inproceedings{ artemov-kuznets:2010a, author = {Sergei N. Artemov and R Kuznets}, title = {Logical Omniscience via Proof Complexity}, booktitle = {24th International Workshop, Computer Science Logic 2010, 19th Annual Conference of the {EACSL}}, year = {2010}, editor = {Anuj Dawar and Helmut Veith}, pages = {135--149}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {... We show that justification logic systems are logically omniscient w.r.t. the usual knowledge and are not logically omniscient w.r.t. the evidence-based knowledge.}, topic = {hyperintensionality;complexity-theory;justification-logic;} } @incollection{ artemov_s:2013a, author = {Sergei Artemov}, title = {Why Do We Need Justification Logic}, booktitle = {Logic at the Crossroads. Volume {II}: Games, Norms, and Reasons}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Johan van Benthem and Amitabha Gupta and Eric Pacuit}, pages = {23--38}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20\artemov2.pdf}, topic = {justifiction-logic;} } @incollection{ artemov_s-fitting_m:2021a, author = {Sergei Artemov and Melvin Fitting}, title = {Justification Logic}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, note = {https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/logic-justification/}, year = {2021}, edition = {Spring, 2021}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {justification-logic;} } @techreport{ artemov_sm:1995a, author = {Sergei M. Atemov}, title = {Operational Modal Logic}, institution = {Cornell University}, number = {MSI 95-29}, year = {1995}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, abstract = {A new axiomatization S4 as a provability logic which uses 'proof expressions' and is related to propositions-as-types. The logic is proved complete in two senses.}, topic = {provability-logic;justification-logic;logic-of-proofs;} } @incollection{ artemov_sm-fitting_m:2016a, author = {Sergei M. Artemov and Melvin Fitting}, title = {Justification Logic}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, publisher = {{S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, url = {https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2016/entries/logic-justification/}, year = {2016}, edition = {Winter 2016}, topic = {epistemic-logic;reasons-for-knowledge;justification-logic;} } @techreport{ artemov_sm-kuznets_r:2006a1, author = {Sergei M. Artemov and Roman Kuznets}, title = {Logical Omniscience via Proof Complexity}, institution = {CIty University of New York}, number = {TR--2006005}, year = {2006}, address = {New York}, xref = {Conference Publication: artemov_sm-kuznets_r:2006a2}, topic = {hyperintensionality;complexity-theory;} } @inproceedings{ artemov_sm-kuznets_r:2006a2, author = {Sergei N. Artemov and Roman Kuznets}, title = {Logical Omniscience via Proof Complexity}, booktitle = {20th International Workshop, CSL 2006, 15th Annual Conference of the {EACSL}}, year = {2006}, editor = {Zont\'an \'Esik}, pages = {135--149}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Conference Publication of: artemov_sm-kuznets_r:2006a1}, topic = {hyperintensionality;complexity-theory;} } @inproceedings{ artemov_sm-nogina_e:2006a, author = {Sergei M. Artemov and Elena Nogina}, title = {On Epistemic Logic with Justification}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Tenth Conference ({TARK} 2005)}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ron van der Meyden}, pages = {279--294}, publisher = {Univerity of Singapore}, address = {S294ingapore}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, topic = {epistemic-logic;reasons-for-knowledge;justification-logic;} } @inproceedings{ artemov_sn:1990a, author = {Sergei N. Artemov}, title = {Kolmogorov's Logic of Problems and a Provability Interpretation of Intuitionistic Logic}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Third Conference ({TARK} 1990)}, year = {1990}, editor = {Rohit Parikh}, pages = {257--272}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;} } @article{ artemov_sn:2000a, author = {Sergei N. Artemov}, title = {Explicit Provability and Constructive Semantics}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {1--36}, xref = {Review: avigad_jd:2002a.}, topic = {logic-of-proofs;} } @incollection{ artemov_sn:2006a, author = {Sergei N. Artemov}, title = {Modal Logic in Mathematics}, booktitle = {Handbook of Modal Logic}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan van Benthem and Frank Wolter}, pages = {927--969}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Inc.}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Artemov"}, topic = {modal-logic;provability-logic;spatial-logic;} } @article{ artemov_sn:2008a, author = {Sergei N. Artemov}, title = {The Logic of Justification}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {1}, number = {4}, pages = {477--513}, topic = {justification;justification-logic;reasons-for-knowledge;} } @incollection{ artemov_sn-beklemishev:2005a, author = {Sergei N. Artemov and Lev D. Beklemishev}, title = {Provability Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {XIII}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {181--360}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {provability-logic;} } @article{ artemov_sn-nogina_e:2005a, author = {Sergei N. Artemov and Elena Nogina}, title = {Introducing Justification into Epistemic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2005}, volume = {15}, number = {6}, pages = {1059--1073}, abstract = {... This paper introduces the notion of justification into formal epistemology. Epistemic logic with justification, along with the usual knowledge operator []F (F is known), contains assertions t:F (t is a justification for F). We study two basic systems, S4LP and S4LPN, of epistemic logic with justification and show completeness with respect to natural epistemic semantics, which augments Kripke models with a natural Fitting-style treatment of justification assertions t:F. Some new specific properties of epistemic logic with justification are established.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;reasons-for-knowledge;justification-logic;} } @article{ artemov_sn-protopopescu_t:2016a, author = {Sergei N. Artemov and Tudor Protopopescu}, title = {Intuitionistic Epistemic Logic}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2016}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {266--298}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;epistemic-logic;knowability-paradox;} } @article{ arthur_wb:1994a, author = {W. Brian Arthur}, title = {Inductive Reasoning and Bounded Rationality}, journal = {American Economic Review}, year = {1994}, volume = {84}, number = {2}, pages = {406--411}, topic = {limited-rationality;} } @article{ artiga_m:2016a, author = {Marc Artiga}, title = {New Perspectives on Artifactual and Biological Functiond}, journal = {Applied Ontology}, year = {2016}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {89--102}, abstract = {In this essay I introduce the question of artifactual functions in the context of the recent debate on the notion of function. I discuss some of the desiderata a satisfactory account should fulfill and compare them to the desiderata for a theory of biological functions. Finally, within this general framework, I briefly present the three papers included in this volume. }, topic = {function;philosophy-of-biology;} } @article{ artikis-etal:2007a, author = {Alexander Artikis and Marek Sergot and Jeremy Pitt}, title = {An Executable Specification of a Formal Argumentation Protocol}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {10--15}, pages = {776--804}, topic = {argumentation;action-formalisms;} } @article{ artikis_a-etal:2008a, author = {Alexander Artikis and Marek Sergot and Jeremy Pitt}, title = {Specifying Norm-Governed Computational Societies}, journal = {{ACM} Transactions on Computational Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {1--42}, topic = {multiagent-systems;AI-implementations;event-calculus;} } @incollection{ artosi-etal:1990a, author = {Alberto Artosi and Paola Benassi and Guido GOvernatori and Antonio Rotolo}, title = {Shakespearian Modal Logic: A Labeled Treatment of Modal Identity}, booktitle = {Advances in Modal Logic, Volume 1}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1998}, editor = {Marcus Kracht and Maarten de Rijke and Heinrich Wansing}, pages = {1--21}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {modal-logic;identity;} } @incollection{ artosi-etal:1996a, author = {Alberto Artosi and Paola Benassi and Guido Governatori and Antonino Rotolo}, title = {Labelled Proofs for Quantified Modal Logic}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence: European Workshop, {Jelia}'96, Ivora, Portugal, September 30 - October 3, 1996.}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Ewa Orlowska}, pages = {70--86}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {modal-logic;theorem-proving;} } @article{ artstein:2003a, author = {Ron Artstein}, title = {Focus Below the Word Level}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2004}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {1--11}, topic = {sentence-focus;} } @article{ artstein:2005a, author = {Ron Artstein}, title = {Quantificational Arguments in Temporal Adjunct Clauses}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2005}, volume = {28}, number = {5}, pages = {541--597}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantification;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ artstein-francez_n:2006a, author = {Ron Artstein and Nissm Francez}, title = {Plurality and Temporal Modification}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2006}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {251--276}, topic = {nl-tense;plural;nl-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ arun-keller_f:2005a, author = {Abhishek Arun and Frank Keller}, title = {Lexicalization in Crosslinguistic Probabilistic Parsing: The Case of {F}rench}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {306--313}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1038}, topic = {probabilistic-parsers;{F}rench-language;} } @article{ arvon:1992a, author = {Arnon Arvon}, title = {Whither Relevance Logic?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1992}, volume = {21}, number = {3}, pages = {243--281}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ arzigonczarowski-lehmann_d:1998a, author = {Z. Arzi-Gonczarowski and Daniel Lehmann}, title = {From Environments to Representations---A Mathematical Theory of Artificial Perceptions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {102}, number = {2}, pages = {187--247}, topic = {logic-of-perception;cognitive-robotics;} } @article{ asada-etal:1999a, author = {Minoru Asada and Hiroaki Kitano and Itsuki Noda and Manuela Veloso}, title = {{R}obo{C}up Today and Tomorrow---What We Have Learned}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {110}, number = {2}, pages = {193--214}, topic = {robotics;RoboCup;} } @article{ asada-etal:1999b, author = {Minoru Asada and Eiji Uchibe and Koh Hosoda}, title = {Cooperative Behavior Acquisition for Mobile Robots in Dynamically Changing real Worlds Via Vision-Based Reinforcement Learning and Development}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {110}, number = {2}, pages = {275--292}, topic = {multiagent-learning;RoboCup;visual-reasoning;} } @article{ asada-etal:2000a, author = {Minoru Asada and Manuela M. Veloso and Milind Tambe and Itsuki Noda and Hiroaki Kitano and Gerard K. Kraetzschmar}, title = {Overview of {R}obo{C}up-98}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {9--19}, topic = {robotics;RoboCup;} } @article{ asarnow_s:2017a, author = {Samuel Asarnow}, title = {The Reasoning View and Defeasible Practical Reasoning}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {2017}, volume = {95}, number = {3}, pages = {614--636}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr20}, abstract = {According to the Reasoning View about normative reasons, facts about normative reasons for action can be understood in terms of facts about the norms of practical reasoning. I argue that this view is subject to an overlooked class of counterexamples, familiar from debates about Subjectivist theories of normative reasons. ... I argue that the norms of practical reasoning, like the norms of theoretical reasoning, are characteristically defeasible, in a sense I make precise. Recognizing this property of those norms makes space for a solution to the problem. The resulting view is in a way analogous to the familiar defeasibility theory of knowledge, but it avoids a standard objection to that theory.}, topic = {reasons-for-action;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ asaro_pm:2001a, author = {Peter M. Asaro}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}obot: Mere Machine to Transcendent Mind}, by {H}ans {M}oravec}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {133--137}, xref = {Review of: moravec:1999a.}, topic = {robotics;AI-editorial;popular-AI;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ asaro_pm:2008a, author = {Peter M. Asaro}, title = {From Mechanisms of Adaptation to Intelligence Amplifiers: The Philosophy of {W}. {R}oss {A}shby}, booktitle = {The Mechanical Mind in History}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Phil Husbands and Owen Holland and Michael Wheeler}, pages = {149--184}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @book{ ash_c-knight_jf:2000a, author = {Chris Ash and Julia F. Knight}, title = {Computatble Structures and the Hyperarithmetical Hierarchy}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2000}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Review: harizanov:2000a.}, topic = {hyperarithmetical-hierarchy;computable-model-theory;} } @book{ ash_dw-dabija:2000a, author = {David W. Ash and Vlad G. Dabija}, title = {Planning for Real-Time Event Response Management}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {2000}, address = {Upper Saddle River, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0-13-095192-7}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Shelves.}, topic = {planning-applications;plan-execution;plan-monitoring; plan-maintenance;} } @article{ ash_dw-hayesroth_b:1996a, author = {David Ash and Barbara Hayes-Roth}, title = {Using Action-Based Hierarchies for Real-Time Diagnosis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {88}, number = {1--2}, pages = {317--347}, acontentnote = {Abstract: An intelligent agent diagnoses perceived problems so that it can respond to them appropriately. Basically, the agent performs a series of tests whose results discriminate among competing hypotheses. Given a specific diagnosis, the agent performs the associated action. Using the traditional information-theoretic heuristic to order diagnostic tests in a decision tree, the agent can maximize the information obtained from each successive test and thereby minimize the average time (number of tests) required to complete a diagnosis and perform the appropriate action. However, in real-time domains, even the optimal sequence of tests cannot always be performed in the time available. Nonetheless, the agent must respond. For agents operating in real-time domains, we propose an alternative action-based approach in which: (a) each node in the diagnosis tree is augmented to include an ordered set of actions, each of which has positive utility for all of its children in the tree; and (b) the tree is structured to maximize the expected utility of the action available at each node. Upon perceiving a problem, the agent works its way through the tree, performing tests that discriminate among successively smaller subsets of potential faults. When a deadline occurs, the agent performs the best available action associated with the most specific node it has reached so far. Although the action-based approach does not minimize the time required to complete a specific diagnosis, it provides positive utility responses, with step-wise improvements in expected utility, throughout the diagnosis process. We present theoretical and empirical results contrasting the advantages and disadvantages of the information-theoretic and action-based approaches. }, topic = {diagosis;reactive-plannng;limited-rationality;decision-trees; heuristics;pr-course;} } @incollection{ ashby_wr:1950a, author = {W. Ross Ashby}, title = {Cerebral Mechanisms of Intelligent Action}, booktitle = {Perspectives in Neuropsychiatry}, publisher = {H.K. Lewis}, year = {1950}, editor = {Derek Richter}, missinginfo = {pages}, address = {London}, topic = {cognitive-neuroscience;} } @incollection{ ashby_wr:1956a, author = {W. Ross Ashby}, title = {Design for an Intelligehce Amplifier}, booktitle = {Automata Studies: (AM-34), Volume 34}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {1956}, editor = {Claude E. Shannon and John McCarthy}, pages = {215--234}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, topic = {AI-classics;} } @book{ ashby_wr:1970a, author = {William Ross Ashby}, title = {An Introduction to Cybernetics.}, publisher = {Ohio State University Press}, year = {1970}, address = {Columbus}, ISBN = {1127197703}, rtnote = {UMich MEDIA UNION LIBRARY, QH 301 .P79.}, topic = {AI-classics;} } @article{ ashenhurst:1996a, author = {Robert L. Ashenhurst}, title = {Ontological Aspects of Information Modeling}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {287--394}, topic = {information-modeling;computational-ontology;} } @article{ asher_n:1984a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Meanings Don't Grow on Trees}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1984}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {229--247}, abstract = {In `Meanings don't grow on Trees', I investigate Lewis's proposal for using syntactical information to distinguish between intensions. Lewis's proposal, if it succeeds, would eliminate certain deficiencies in the predictions made by possible world semantics concerning synonymy. I provide two criteria for judging semantic theories: descriptive adequacy and explanatory adequacy. I argue that Lewis's proposal concerning synonymy fails on both counts. I then offer a different approach to problems with synonymy. Synonymy judgments involve two different kinds of meaning: truth conditional content, provided by model theoretic semantics, and `information content', provided by a semantics in terms of conceptual role. In developing the notion of information content, I show how it solves some of the problems Lewis's proposal addresses. }, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;hyperintensionality;} } @article{ asher_n:1986a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Belief in Discourse Representation Theory}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1986}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {127--189}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;discourse-representation-theory; belief;epistemic-logic;pragmatics;} } @article{ asher_n:1987a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {A Typology for Attitude Verbs and Their Anaphoric Properties}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1987}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {125--197}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;anaphora;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n:1988a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Reasoning about Belief and Knowledge with Self-Reference and Time}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge}, year = {1988}, editor = {Moshe Y. Vardi}, pages = {61--81}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;intensional-paradoxes;} } @article{ asher_n:1988b, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Semantic Competence, Linguistic Understanding, and a Theory of Concepts}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1988}, volume = {53}, number = {1}, pages = {1--36}, topic = {psychological-reality;nl-semantics-and-cognition;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ asher_n:1989a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Discourse Representation Theory and Belief Dynamics}, booktitle = {The Logic of Theory Change}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1989}, editor = {Andr\'e Fuhrmann and Michael Morreau}, pages = {282--321}, abstract = {I have sketched a model of belief updating and belief revision motivated by concerns about the logic of belief and belief reports. In this model beliefs are assumed to have a complex structure and to be related together within the cognitive state in quite intricate ways. The structure is built up modified during belief updating and during revision. The model of beliefs is much more complex than that presupposed in the classical theory of belief revision such as propounded by Alchourron, Makinson and Gardenfors. Nevertheless, at least some of the developments of the classical theory may be carried over to this more complex model.}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ asher_n:1989b, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Beief, Acceptance, and Belief Reports}, journal = {Canadial Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1989}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {327--362}, topic = {belief;discourse-representation-theory;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n:1990a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Intentional Paradoxes and an Inductive Theory of Propositional Quantification}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Third Conference ({TARK} 1990)}, year = {1990}, editor = {Rohit Parikh}, pages = {11--28}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {propositional-quantifiers;intensional-paradoxes;} } @techreport{ asher_n:1991a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Two Theories of Propositional Quantification/ Abstract Entity Anaphora, Parallelism and Contrast}, institution = {University of T\"ubingen, {A}rbeitspapierem des {S}onderforschungsbereichs 340}, number = {13}, year = {1991}, address = {T\"ubingen}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files, "Asher"}, topic = {propositions;} } @article{ asher_n:1992a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {A Default, Truth Conditional Semantics for the Progressive}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1992}, volume = {15}, pages = {469--508}, number = {5}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;progressive-aspect;imperfective-paradox;} } @book{ asher_n:1993a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Reference to Abstract Objects in Discourse}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1993}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Authored Shelves}, topic = {discourse-representation-theory;philosophical-ontology; pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n:1994a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Reasoning about Action and Time With Epistemic Conditionals}, booktitle = {Methodologies for Intelligent Systems: 8th International Symposium, ISMIS '94}, year = {1994}, editor = {Zbigniew W. Ras and Maria Zemankova}, pages = {458--467}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {action-formalisms;temporal-reasoning;nonmonotonic-reasoning; reasoning-about-actions;conditionals;} } @incollection{ asher_n:1995a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Commonsense Entailment: A Conditional Logic for Some Generics}, booktitle = {Conditionals: From Philosophy to Computer Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Gabriella Crocco and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig}, pages = {103--145}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;common-sense-entailment;conditionals; nonmonotonic-conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n:1997a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Context in Discourse Semantics for Dialogue}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Context in Knowledge Representation and Natural Language}, year = {1997}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and {\L}ucia Iwa\'nska}, pages = {17--29}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;discourse-representation-theory;discourse-relations; presupposition;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ asher_n:1999a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Discourse and the Focus/Background Distinction}, booktitle = {Focus: Linguistic, Cognitive, and Computational Perspectives}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {Peter Bosch and Rob {van der Sandt}}, pages = {247--267}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {pragmatics;sentence-focus;} } @incollection{ asher_n:2000a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Events, Facts, Propositions, and Evolvative Anaphora}, booktitle = {Speaking of Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2000}, editor = {James Higginbotham and Fabio Pianesi and Achille C. Varzi}, pages = {123--151}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {events;nl-semantics;event-semantics;anaphora;} } @article{ asher_n:2000b, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Truth Conditional Discourse Semantics for Parentheticals}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2000}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {31--50}, abstract = {It has been often argued that parentheticals, discourse adverbials and certain parts of speech like interjections do not contribute to the truth conditional content of the assertions of which they are part. In this paper I argue that many of these constructions do contribute a truth conditional content, and I propose a semantics for parentheticals and discourse adverbials that treats these constructions similarly to SDRT's treatment of presuppositions. I also point out differences between standard presupposition triggers on the one hand and parentheticals or discourse adverbials on the other. }, topic = {parentheticals;} } @incollection{ asher_n:2002a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Discourse Structure and the Logic of Conversation}, booktitle = {Current Research in the Semantics-Pragmatics Interface, vol. 1}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2000}, editor = {Ken Turner}, pages = {1--28}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {discourse-structure;} } @incollection{ asher_n:2002b, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {From Discourse Macro-Structure to Micro-Structure and Back Again: Discourse Semantics and the Focus/Background Distinction}, booktitle = {Context-Dependence in the Analysis of Linguistic Meaning}, publisher = {Brill Publishing}, year = {2002}, editor = {Hans Kamp and Barbara Partee}, pages = {29--60}, address = {Leiden}, topic = {sentence-focus;context;} } @incollection{ asher_n:2003a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Bias, Tone, and Questions in Dialogue (Abstract)}, booktitle = {Diabruck 2003: Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Universit\"at des Saarlandes}, year = {2003}, pages = {1}, address = {Saarbr\"ucken}, topic = {pragmatics;bias;intonation;} } @incollection{ asher_n:2006a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Things and Their Aspects}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {1--23 }, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {This is the first attempt to give an interpretation of the "qua" construction.}, topic = {intensionaliy;predication;metaphysics;`as'; foundations-of-semantics;} } @book{ asher_n:2011a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Lexical Meaning in Context. A Web of Words}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {978-1-107-00539-6}, abstract = {This is a book about the meanings of words and how they can combine to form larger meaningful units, as well as how they can fail to combine when the amalgamation of a predicate and argument would produce what the philosopher Gilbert Ryle called a 'category mistake'. It argues for a theory in which words get assigned both an intension and a type. The book develops a rich system of types and investigates its philosophical and formal implications, for example the abandonment of the classic Church analysis of types that has been used by linguists since Montague. The author integrates fascinating and puzzling observations about lexical meaning into a compositional semantic framework. Adjustments in types are a feature of the compositional process and account for various phenomena including coercion and copredication. This book will be of interest to semanticists, philosophers, logicians and computer scientists alike.}, topic = {lexical-semantics;nl-semantic-types;semantic-coercion;} } @incollection{ asher_n:2012a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Context in Content Composition}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Linguistics}, publisher = {North Holland}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruth Kempson and Tim Fernando and Nicholas Asher}, pages = {229--270}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {lexical-semantics;discourse-representation-theory;} } @incollection{ asher_n:2016a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Discourse Semantics}, booktitle = {Cambridge Handbook of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Maria Aloni and Paul Dekker}, pages = {106--129}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-semantics;discourse;discourse-structure;} } @article{ asher_n:2018a, author = {Nicholas Asher}, title = {Strategic Considerations under Umperfect Information: Epistemic Message Semantics Relation}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2018}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {343--385}, topic = {game-theory;discourse-representation-theory;} } @article{ asher_n-bonevac_d:1985a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Daniel Bonevac}, title = {How Extensional Is Extensional Perception?}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {203--228}, topic = {logic-of-perception;} } @article{ asher_n-bonevac_d:1987a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Daniel Bonevac}, title = {Determiners and Resource Situations}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1987}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {567--596}, topic = {situation-semantics;nl-quantifiers;} } @unpublished{ asher_n-bonevac_d:1992a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Daniel Bonevac}, title = {Two Theories of Prima Facie Obligation}, year = {1992}, note = {Manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Texas at Austin}, topic = {deontic-logic;prima-facie-obligation;} } @article{ asher_n-bonevac_d:1996a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Daniel Bonevac}, title = {{\it Prima Facie} Obligation}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1996}, volume = {57}, number = {1}, pages = {19--45}, topic = {deontic-logic;prima-facie-obligation;} } @article{ asher_n-bonevac_d:2005a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Daniel Bonevac}, title = {Free Choice Permission Is Strong Permission}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2005}, volume = {145}, number = {3}, pages = {303--323}, topic = {free-choice-permission;} } @incollection{ asher_n-denis_p:2004a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Pascal Denis}, title = {Dynamic Typing for Lexical Semantics. A Case Study: The Genitive Construction}, booktitle = {Formal Ontology in Information Systems: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {IOS Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Achille C. Varzi and Laure Vieu}, pages = {165--176}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {underspecification;possessives;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-etal:1997a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Daniel Hardt and Joan Busquets}, title = {Discourse Parallelism, Scope, and Ellipsis}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1997}, editor = {Aaron Lawson}, pages = {19--36}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;ellipsis;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ asher_n-etal:2001a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Daniel Hardt and Joan Busquets}, title = {Discourse Parallelism, Ellipsis, and Ambiguity}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {1--25}, abstract = {In this paper we combine a simple recovery mechanism for ellipsis with a general, discourse account of parallelism to account for a variety of phenomena concerning ellipsis, including Sag's wide scope puzzle and complex examples concerning sloppy identity. Our recovery mechanism requires an identity of logical structure between the recovered material and antecedent in the ellipsis. The recovered material and the antecedent are then interpreted independently in their respective contexts, subject only to the general discourse constraints on parallelism. These constraints give a uniform account of parallelism facts, whether or not there is ellipsis. }, topic = {discourse;ellipsis;} } @incollection{ asher_n-etal:2002a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Itai Sher and Madison Williams}, title = {Game Theoretic Foundations for {G}ricean Constraints}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2001 {A}msterdam Colloquium on Formal Semantics}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {2002}, editor = {Robert van Rooy and Martin Stokhof}, pages = {31--37}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Asher"}, topic = {game-theory;pragmatics;} } @article{ asher_n-etal:2017a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Soumya Paul and Antoine Venant}, title = {Message Exchange Games in Strategic Contexts}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {4}, pages = {355--405}, xref = {Correction: asher_n-etal:2018a}, topic = {game-theory;conversation;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-etal:2017b, author = {Nicholas Asher and Julie Hunter and Soumya Paul}, title = {Games in linguistics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 21}, editor = {Robert Truswell and Chris Cummins and Caroline Heycock and Brian Rabern and Hannah Rohde}, year = {2017}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {Universoty of Edinburgh}, address = {Edinburgh}, abstract = {In this paper we set out three consequences of a game-theoretic model for conver- sation, Message Exchange (ME) Games (Asher et al., 2016), which we think are of linguistic interest. We develop a notion of conversational success, explain subjectivity and bias in interpretation using concepts from epistemic game theory, and characterize the strategic usefulness of using so called expressions of "not at issue" content using ME games}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/DRjNjViN/}, topic = {game-theory;pragmatics;} } @article{ asher_n-etal:2018a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Soumya Paul and Antoine Venant}, title = {Correction to: Message Exchange Games in Strategic Contexts}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {6}, pages = {1085}, xref = {Correction to: asher_n-etal:2017a}, topic = {game-theory;conversation;} } @article{ asher_n-etal:2022a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Julie Hunter and Soumya Paul}, title = {Bias in Semantic and Discourse Interpretation}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {3}, pages = {393--429}, abstract = {In this paper, we show how game theoretic work on conversation combined with a theory of discourse structure provides a framework for studying interpretive bias and how bias affects the production and interpretation of linguistic content. ... We develop three types of games to understand and to analyze a range of interpretive biases, the factors that contribute to them, and their strategic effects.}, topic = {game-theory;nl-interpretation;ptagmatics;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-kamp_jaw:1986a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Johan A.W. Kamp}, title = {The Knower's Paradox and Representational Theories of Attitudes}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the First Conference}, year = {1986}, editor = {Joseph Y. Halpern}, pages = {131--147}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc.}, address = {Los Altos, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;epistemic-logic;} } @unpublished{ asher_n-kamp_jaw:1986b1, author = {Nicholas Asher and Johan A.W. Kamp}, title = {Self-Reference, Attitudes, and Paradox}, year = {1986}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Texas at Austin.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ asher_n-kamp_jaw:1986b2, author = {Nicholas Asher and Johan A.W. Kamp}, title = {Self-Reference, Attitudes, and Paradox}, booktitle = {Properties, Types and Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1988}, editor = {Gennaro Chierchia and Barbara Partee and Raymond Turner}, pages = {85--88}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;epistemic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-lascarides_a:1994a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Intentions and Information in Discourse}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Second Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1994}, editor = {James Pustejovsky}, pages = {35--41}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {discourse;pragmatics;} } @unpublished{ asher_n-lascarides_a:1995a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Questions in Dialogue}, year = {1995}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. L&P, forthcoming.}, note = {Unpublished Manuscript.}, topic = {discourse-representation-theory;discourse-structure; interrogatives;pragmatics;} } @article{ asher_n-lascarides_a:1995b1, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Lexical Disambiguation in a Discourse Context}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1995}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {69--108}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Republication: asher_n-lascarides_a:1995b2.}, abstract = {In this paper we investigate how discourse structure affects the meanings of words, and how the meanings of words affect discourse structure. We integrate three ingredients: a theory of discourse structure called SDRT, which represents discourse in terms of rhetorical relations that glue together the propositions introduced by the text segments; an accompanying theory of discourse attachment called DICE, which computes which rhetorical relations hold between the constituents, on the basis of the reader's background information; and a formal language for specifying the lexical knowledge -- both syntactic and semantic -- called the LKB. Through this integration, we can model the information flow from words to discourse, and discourse to words. From words to discourse, we show how the LKE permits the rules for computing rhetorical relations in DICE to be generalized and simplified, so that a single law applies to several semantically related lexical items. From discourse to words, we encode two novel heuristics for lexical disambiguation: disambiguate words so that discourse incoherence is avoided, and disambiguate words so that rhetorical connections are reinforced. These heuristics enable us to tackle several cases of lexical disambiguation that have until now been outside the scope of theories of lexical processing. }, topic = {discourse;lexical-disambiguation;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ asher_n-lascarides_a:1995b2, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Lexical Disambiguation in a Discourse Context}, booktitle = {Lexical Semantics: The Problem of Polysemy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {James Pustejovsky and Branamir Boguraev}, pages = {69--108}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: asher_n-lascarides_a:1995b1.}, topic = {discourse;lexical-disambiguation;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-lascarides_a:1995c, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Metaphor in Discourse}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Representation and Acquisition of Lexical Knowledge: Polysemy, Ambiguity and Generativity}, year = {1995}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publication = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, pages = {3--7}, missinginfo = {editor}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {metaphor;discourse;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ asher_n-lascarides_a:1998a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {The Semantics and Pragmatics of Metaphor}, booktitle = {Semantic Parameters and Lexical Universals}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {James Pustejovsky and F. Busa}, address = {Cambridge, England}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {metaphor;semantics;pragmatics;} } @article{ asher_n-lascarides_a:1998b, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Questions in Dialogue}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1998}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {237--309}, topic = {discourse-representation-theory;discourse-structure; interrogatives;pragmatics;} } @article{ asher_n-lascarides_a:1998c, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Bridging}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1999}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {83--113}, contentnote = {"Bridging" is the process of constructing an anaphoric reference using world knowledge. E.g. "Bill's car wouldn't run. The fuel line was clogged." The term is apparently due to clark_hh:1075a.}, abstract = {In this paper, we offer a novel analysis of bridging, paying particular attention to definite descriptions. We argue that extant theories don't do justice to the way different knowledge resources interact. In line with Hobbs (1979), we claim that the rhetorical connections between the propositions introduced in the text play an important part. But our work is distinct from his in that we model how this source of information interacts with compositional and lexical semantics. We formalize bridging in a framework known as SDRT (Asher 1993). We demonstrate that this provides a richer, more accurate interpretation of definite descriptions than has been offered so far. }, topic = {definite-descriptions;discourse;discourse-structure; nm-ling;pragmatics;bridging-anaphora;} } @article{ asher_n-lascarides_a:1998d, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {The Semantics and Pragmatics of Presupposition}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1999}, volume = {15}, pages = {239--300}, abstract = {In this paper, we offer a novel analysis of presuppositions, paying particular attention to the interaction between the knowledge resources that are required to The analysis has two main features. First, we capture an analogy between presuppositions, anaphora and scope ambiguity (cf. van der Sandt 1992), by utilizing semantic under-specification (cf. Reyle 1993). Second, resolving this underspecification requires reasoning about how the presupposition is rhetorically connected to the discourse context. This has several consequences. First, since pragmatic information plays a role in computing the rhetorical relation, it also constrains the interpretation of presuppositions. Our account therefore provides a formal framework for analysing problematic data, which require pragmatic reasoning. Second, binding presuppositions to the context via rhetorical links replaces accommodating them, in the sense of adding them to the context (cf. Lewis 1979). The treatment of presupposition is thus generalized and integrated into the discourse update procedure. We formalize this approach in SDRT (Asher 1993; Lascarides & Asher 1993), and demonstrate that it provides a rich framework for interpreting presuppositions, where semantic and pragmatic constraints are integrated. }, topic = {presupposition;nm-ling;pragmatics;} } @article{ asher_n-lascarides_a:2001a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Indirect Speech Acts}, journal = {Synthese}, pages = {183--228}, volume = {128}, year = {2001}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;indirect-speech-acts;} } @book{ asher_n-lascarides_a:2003a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Logics of Conversation}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0 521 65058 5}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {pragmatics;implicature;discourse-interpretation;} } @unpublished{ asher_n-lascarides_a:2008a1, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Making the Right Commitments in Dialogue}, year = {2008}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Universit\'e Paul Sabatier}, address = {Toulouse}, rtnote = {See LPW 2008}, xref = {Conference Publication: asher_n-lascarides_a:2008a1}, topic = {discourse;cooperation;conflict;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-lascarides_a:2008a2, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Commitments, Beliefs and Intentions in Dialogue}, booktitle = {Londial 2008: the 12th Workshop on the Pragmatics and Semantics of Dialogue}, year = {2008}, editor = {Jonathan Ginzburg and Pat Healey}, pages = {35--42}, publisher = {Kings College}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr19\Asher1.pdf}, xref = {Conference Publication of: asher_n-lascarides_a:2008a1}, abstract = {We define grounding in terms of shared public commitments, and link public commitments to other, private, attitudes within a decidable dynamic logic for computing implicatures and predicting an agent's next dialogue move.}, topic = {discourse;cooperation;conflict;} } @unpublished{ asher_n-lascarides_a:2008b, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Making the Right Commitments in Dialogue}, year = {2008}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Universit\'e Paul Sabatier, Toulouse}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr19\Asher2.pdf}, topic = {implicature;coord-in-conversation;cooperation;} } @article{ asher_n-lascarides_a:2011a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Reasoning Dynamically about What One Says}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2011}, volume = {183}, number = {Supplement 1}, pages = {5--31}, abstract = {In this article we make SDRT's glue logic for computing logical form dynamic. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {discourse-interpretation;dynamic-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-luo_zh:2013a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Zhaohui Luo}, title = {Formalization of Coercions in Lexical Semantics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 17}, year = {2013}, editor = {Emmanuel Chemla and Vincent Homer and Gregoire Winterstein}, pages = {63--80}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja20}, abstract = {Coercions are not all alike. Container/contents coercions make standard and coerced content avail- able for future discourse exploitation. But eventuality based coercions and others don't. The typology of coercions with respect to their behavior on discourse continuations seems rich and in need of investigation, especially cross-linguistically. ...}, topic = {lexical-semantics;semantic-coercion;} } @article{ asher_n-mccready_e:2007a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Eric McCready}, title = {Were, Would, Might and a Compositional Account of Counterfactuals}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2007}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {93--129}, abstract = {This paper has two purposes. We first give a new dynamic account of epistemic modal operators that account for both their test-like behaviour with respect to whole information states and their capacity to induce quantificational dependencies across worlds (modal subordination). We then use this theory, together with an analysis of conditionals and irrealis moods, to give a fully compositional semantics of indicative and counterfactual conditionals. In our analysis, the distinction between counterfactual and indicative conditionals follows directly from the interaction between the semantics of the conditional and irrealis operators and the semantics of the particular modals involved in the conditional consequent. We indicate some theoretical and logical consequences of our approach. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se10}, topic = {conditionals;dynamic-semantics;indicative-conditionas;subjunctive-mood; nl-mood;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-morreau_m:1990a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Michael Morreau}, title = {A Dynamic Modal Semantics for Default Reasoning and Generics }, booktitle = {{GMD} Workshop on Non-Monotonic Logic}, year = {1990}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and Dayne Freitag}, address = {Sankt Augustin}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;generics;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-morreau_m:1991a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Michael Morreau}, title = {Commonsense Entailment: a Modal Theory of Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {John Mylopoulos and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {387--392}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, rtnote = {Extended Version in RHT collection.}, address = {Los Altos, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap21}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-logic;common-sense-entailment;conditionals; nonmonotonic-conditionals;} } @incollection{ asher_n-morreau_m:1995a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Michael Morreau}, title = {What Some Generic Sentences Mean}, booktitle = {The Generic Book}, publisher = {Chicago University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Gregory Carlson and Francis Jeffry Pelletier}, pages = {300--338}, address = {Chicago, IL}, topic = {generics;nonmonotonic-conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-paul_s:2016a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Soumya Paul}, title = {Evaluating Conversational Success: Weighted Message Exchange Games}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 20th Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue---Full Papers}, year = {2016}, editor = {Julie Hunter, Mandy Simmons, Matthew Stone}, publisher = {SEMDIAL}, address = {New Brunswick, NJ}, url = {http://semdial.org/anthology/Z16-Asher_semdial_0010.pdf}, abstract = {We analyze evaluations of conversational success and how such evaluations relate to notions of discourse content and structure [by exending] Message Exchange (ME) games by adding weights or scores to the players' moves and then accumulating these weights using discounting to evaluate a conversationalist's performance. We illustrate our analysis on a fragment of a recent political debate.}, topic = {nlp-evaluation;computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ asher_n-pelletier_fj:2012a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Francis Jeffry Pelletier}, title = {More Truths about Generic Truth}, booktitle = {Genericity}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Alda Mari and Claire Beyssade and Fabio Del Prete}, pages = {312--351}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {generics;} } @unpublished{ asher_n-pustejovsky_j:2000a, author = {Nicholas Asher and James Pustejovsky}, title = {The Metaphysics of Words in Context}, year = {2000}, note = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TgxMDNkM/}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {type-theory;lexicon;lexical-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-sablarolles:1994a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Pierre Sablarolles}, title = {A Compositional Spatio-Temporal Semantics for {F}rench Motion Verbs and Spatial {PP}s}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IV}}, year = {1994}, editor = {Mandy Harvey and Lynn Santelmann}, pages = {1--15}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-semantics;French-language;motion-verbs;} } @article{ asher_n-sablayrolles:1995a1, author = {Nicholas Asher and Pierre Sablayrolles}, title = {A Typology and Discourse Semantics for Motion Verbs and Spatial {PP}s in {F}rench}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1995}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {163--209}, abstract = {In this paper we offer a semantic study of motion verbs and motion verb complexes determined by motion verbs and spatial prepositional phrase adjuncts. We propose a classification of motion verbs and of motion verb complexes. Unlike other semantic or syntactic studies, we build up the spatioremporal semantic properties of motion verb complexes compositionally, on the basis of the semantic properties of the verbs, their arguments and adjuncts. We show how to combine this lexical information with discourse information to determine the spatiotemporal structure of text and to help with exical disambiguation. }, xref = {Republication: asher_n-sablayrolles:1995a2}, topic = {nl-semantics;French-language;motion-verbs;} } @incollection{ asher_n-sablayrolles:1995a2, author = {Nicholas Asher and Pierre Sablayrolles}, title = {A Typology and Discourse Semantics for Motion Verbs and Spatial {PP}s in {F}rench}, booktitle = {Lexical Semantics: The Problem of Polysemy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {James Pustejovsky and Branamir Boguraev}, pages = {163--209}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: asher_n-sablayrolles:1995a1}, topic = {lexical-semantics;motion-verbs;polysemy;pragmatics;} } @article{ asher_n-singh_mp:1993a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Munidar P. Singh}, title = {A Logic of Intentions and Beliefs}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1993}, volume = {22}, number = {5}, pages = {513--544}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;intention;belief;} } @inproceedings{ asher_n-vieu_l:1995a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Laure Vieu}, title = {Toward a Geometry for Common Sense: A Semantics and a Complete Axiomatization for Mereotopology}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {846--852}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;mereology;spatial-reasoning;} } @article{ asher_n-wada:1988a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Hajime Wada}, title = {A Computational Account of Syntactic, Semantic and Discourse Principles for Anaphora Resolution}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1988}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {309--344}, abstract = {We present a unified framework for the computational implementation of syntactic, semantic, pragmatic and even `stylistic' constraints on anaphora. We build on our BUILDERS implementation of Discourse Representation (DR) Theory and Lexical Functional Grammar (LFG) discussed in Wada & Asher (1986). We develop and argue for a semantically based processing model for anaphora resolution that exploits a number of desirable features: (1) the partial semantics provided by the discourse representation structures (DRSs) of DR theory, (2) the use of syntactic and lexical features to filter out unacceptable potential anaphoric antecedents from the set of logically possible antecedents determined by the logical structure of the DRS, (3) the use of pragmatic or discourse constraints, noted by those working on focus, to impose a salience ordering on the set of grammatically acceptable potential antecedents. Only where there is a marked difference in the degree of salience among the possible antecedents does the salience ranking allow us to make predictions on preferred readings. In cases where the difference is extreme, we predict the discourse to be infelicitous if, because of other constraints, one of the markedly less salient antecedents must be linked with the pronoun. We also briefly consider the applications of our processing model to other definite noun phrases besides anaphoric pronouns. }, topic = {anaphora;discourse-representation-theory;} } @incollection{ asher_n-wang_l:2003a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Linton Wang}, title = {Ambiguity and Anaphora with Plurals in Discourse}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XIII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2003}, editor = {Robert B. Young and Yuping Zhou}, pages = {19--36}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {plural;nl-semantics;anaphora;} } @incollection{ asher_n-williams_m1:2006a, author = {Nicholas Asher and Madison Williams}, title = {Pragmatic Reasoning, Defaults, and Discourse Structure}, booktitle = {Game Theory and Pragmatics}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan UK}, year = {2006}, editor = {Anton Benz and Gerhard J\"ager and Robert van Rooij}, pages = {176--194}, address = {London}, topic = {pragmatics;implicature;nm-ling;nonmonotonic-logic; game-theory;} } @article{ ashlagi-etal:2009a, author = {Itai Ashlagi and Dov Monderer and Moshe Tennenholtz}, title = {Two-Terminal Routing Games with Unknown Active Players}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {15}, pages = {1441--1455}, topic = {routing-games;} } @inproceedings{ ashley_kd:1989a, author = {Kevin Ashley}, title = {Toward a Computational Theory of Arguing with Precedents: Accommodating Multiple Interpretations of Cases}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law (ICAIL-89)}, publisher = {The Association for Computing Machinery}, year = {1989}, pages = {93--110}, topic = {legal-AI;} } @book{ ashley_kd:1990a, author = {Kevin Ashley}, title = {Modeling Legal Argument: Reasoning With Cases and Hypotheticals}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, isbn = {0-262-01114-X}, xref = {Review: berman_dh:1995a.}, topic = {case-based-reasoning;legal-reasoning;legal-AI;} } @article{ ashley_kd:1993a, author = {Kevin D. Ashley}, title = {Case-Based Reasoning and its Implications for Legal Expert Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence and Law}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer}, address = {Dordrecht, Neth.}, year = {1993}, topic = {case-based-reasoning;legal-AI;} } @book{ ashley_kd:2017a, author = {Kevin D. Ashley}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Legal Analytics: New Tools for Law Practice in the Digital Age}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {978-1-316-62281-0}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Shelves}, topic = {AI-and-Law;} } @inproceedings{ ashley_kd-aleven:1993a, author = {Kevin D. Ashley and Vincent Aleven}, title = {Using Logic to Reason with Cases}, booktitle = {In Proceedings of First European Workshop on Case-Based Reasoning (EWCBR-93)}, year = {1993}, pages = {373--378}, organization = {Fachbereich Informatik, Universitat Kaiserslautern}, address = {Kaiserslautern}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {legal-AI;logic-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ ashley_kd-etal:2002a, author = {Kevin D. Ashley and Ravi Desai and John M. Levine}, title = {Teaching Case-Based Argumentation Concepts Using Dialectic Arguments vs. Didactic Explanations}, booktitle = {Intelligent Tutoring Systems}, editor = {Stefano A. Cerri and Guy Gouard{\`e}res and F{\'a}bio Paragua\c{c}u}, year = {2002}, pages = {574--584}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {intelligent-tutoring;argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ ashley_kd-keefer:1996a, author = {Kevin Ashley and Matthew Keefer}, title = {Ethical Reasoning Strategies and Their Relation to Case-Based Instruction}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1996 Cognitive Science Society Meeting}, year = {1996}, organization = {Cognitive Science Society}, missinginfo = {editor, publisher, pages}, topic = {case-based-reasoning;intelligent-tutoring; automated-ethical-reasoning;} } @incollection{ ashley_kd-mclaren_bm:1995a, author = {Kevin D. Ashley and Bruce M. McLaren}, title = {Reasoning with Reasons in Case-Based Comparisons}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning (ICCBR-95)}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1995}, editor = {Manuela Veloso and Agnar Aamodt}, pages = {133--144}, address = {Berlin}, url = {https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~bmclaren/pubs/AshleyMcLaren-ReasoningWithReasons-ICCBR95.pdf}, abstract = {In this work, we are interested in how rational decision makers reason with and about reasons in a domain, practical ethics, where they appear to reason about reasons symbolically in terms of both abstract moral principles and case comparisons. The challenge for reasoners, human and artificial, is to use abstract knowledge of reasons and principles to inform decisions about the salience of similarities and differences among cases while still accounting for a case's or problem's specific contextual circumstances. TRUTH-TELLER is a program we have developed and tested that compares pairs of cases presenting ethical dilemmas about whether to tell the truth. The program's methods for reasoning about reasons help it to make context sensitive assessments of the salience of similarities and differences.}, topic = {case-based-reasoning;legal-reasoning;automated-ethical-reasoning;} } @article{ ashley_kd-rissland:2003a, author = {Kevin D. Ashley and Edwina L. Rissland}, title = {Law, Learning and Representation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {150}, number = {1-2}, pages = {17--58}, topic = {AI-and-law;legal-reasoning;} } @book{ ashworth_ej:1974a, author = {E. Jennifer Ashworth}, title = {Language and Logic in the Post-Medieval Period}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1974}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {9027704643}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BC 38 .A83.}, topic = {history-of-philosophy;history-of-logic;} } @book{ ashworth_ej:1985a, editor = {E. Jennifer Ashworth}, title = {Studies in Post-Medieval Semantics}, publisher = {Variorum Reprints}, year = {1985}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0860781755}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, 800 A831st.}, topic = {history-of-philosophy;history-of-logic;} } @article{ ashworth_ej:2006a, author = {E. Jennifer Ashworth}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}ocke's Philosophy of Language}, by {W}alter {R}. {O}tt}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2006}, volume = {115}, number = {4}, pages = {530--532}, xref = {Review of: ott:2004a}, topic = {Locke;philosophy-of-languagel;nominalism;} } @incollection{ ashworth_ej:2008a, author = {E. Jennifer Ashworth}, title = {Developments in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 2: Mediaeval and Renaissance Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2008}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {609--643}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;medieval-logic;} } @inproceedings{ aslandogan:1997a, author = {Y. A. Aslandogan and C. Their and C. T. Yu and J. Zou and N. Rishe}, title = {Using Semantic Contents and {W}ord{N}et in Image Retrieval}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 20th Annual {ACM} {SIGIR} Conference on Research and Development in Information Retrieval}, year = {1997}, missinginfo = {publisher, editor, pages, A's 1st name}, topic = {wordnet;image-retrieval;} } @article{ asmus_cm:2009a, author = {Conrad M. Asmus}, title = {Restricted Arrow}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {38}, number = {4}, pages = {405--431}, topic = {relevance-logic;substructural-logics;} } @incollection{ asmus_cm-restall_g:2012a, author = {Conrad M. Asmus and Greg Restall}, title = {A History of The Consequence Relations}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 11: Logic, a History of its Central Concepts}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2012}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Francis Jeffry Pelletier and John Woods}, pages = {11--61}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @article{ aspeitia-etal:2010a, author = {Axel Arturo Barcel\'o Aspeitia and \'Angeles Era\~na and Robert Stainton}, title = {The Contribution of Domain Specificity in the Highly Modular Mind}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {19--27}, abstract = {Is there a notion of domain specificity which affords genuine insight in the context of the highly modular mind, i.e. a mind which has not only input modules, but also central `conceptual' modules? Our answer to this question is no. The main argument is simple enough: we lay out some constraints that a theoretically useful notion of domain specificity, in the context of the highly modular mind, would need to meet. We then survey a host of accounts of what domain specificity is, based on the intuitive idea that a domain specific mechanism is restricted in the kind of information that it processes, and show that each fails at least one of those constraints. }, topic = {cognitive-modularity;} } @article{ aspero_d-karagila_a:2021a, author = {David Asper\o and Asaf Karagila}, title = {Dependent Choice, Properness, and Generic Absoluteness}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {225--249}, abstract = {We show that Dependent Choice is a sufficient choice principle for developing the basic theory of proper forcing, and for deriving generic absoluteness for the Chang model in the presence of large cardinals, even with respect to -preserving symmetric submodels of forcing extensions. Hence, not only provides the right framework for developing classical analysis, but is also the right base theory over which to safeguard truth in analysis from the independence phenomenon in the presence of large cardinals. ...}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;forcing;} } @inproceedings{ aspis_y-etal:2020a, author = {Yaniv Aspis and Krysia Broda and Alessandra Russo and Jorge Lobo}, title = {Stable and Supported Semantics in Continuous Vector Spaces}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {59--68}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We introduce a novel approach for the computation of stable and supported models of normal logic programs in continuous vector spaces by a gradient-based search method. ... As supported and stable models of a normal logic program can now be seen as fixed points in a continuous space, non-monotonic deduction can be performed using an optimisation process such as Newton's method. We report the results of several experiments using synthetically generated programs that demonstrate the feasibility of the approach and highlight how different parameter values can affect the behaviour of the system.}, topic = {logic-programming;AI-algorithms;} } @incollection{ aspis_y-etal:2022a, author = {Yaniv Aspis and Krysia Broda and Jorge Lobo and Alessandra Russo}, title = {Embed2Sym---Scalable Neuro-Symbolic Reasoning via Clustered Embeddings}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {421--431}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we propose a scalable neuro-symbolic approach, called Embed2Sym. We complement a two-stage (perception and reasoning) neural network architecture designed to solve a downstream task end-to-end with a symbolic optimisation method for extracting learned latent concepts. Specifically, the trained perception network generates clusters in embedding space that are identified and labelled using symbolic knowledge and a symbolic solver. With the latent concepts identified, a neuro-symbolic model is constructed by combining the perception network with the symbolic knowledge of the downstream task, resulting in a model that is interpretable and transferable. ...}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {connectionist-plus-symbolic-architectures;} } @unpublished{ aspray:1989a, author = {William Aspray}, title = {An Interview with {J}ohn {M}c{C}arthy}, year = {1989}, note = {Available at http://www.cbi.umn.edu/oh/display.phtml?id=92}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under McCarthy}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @inproceedings{ assadi:1997a, author = {Houssem Assadi}, title = {Knowledge Acquisition from Texts: Using an Automatic Clustering Method Based on Noun-Modifier Method}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {504--509}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {information-extraction;} } @article{ asser:1956a, author = {Gunther Asser}, title = {Theorie der {L}ogischen {A}uswahlfunktionen}, journal = {{Z}eitschrift {f}\"ur {M}athematische {L}ogik and {G}rundlagen {d}er {M}athematik}, year = {1956}, volume = {3}, pages = {30--68}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Asser.}, topic = {Hilbert's-epsilon-function;} } @incollection{ asta:2017a, author = {\'Asta}, title = {Social Kinds}, booktitle = {The Routledge Handbook of Collective Intentionality}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2017}, editor = {Marija Jankovic and Kirk Ludwig}, pages = {290--299}, address = {New York}, topic = {social-institutions;group-action;group-attitudes;} } @article{ asta:2018a, author = {\'Asta}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Ant Trap: Rebuilding the Foundations of Social Science}, by {B}rian {E}pstein}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2018}, volume = {127}, number = {2}, pages = {247--251}, xref = {epstein_b:2015a}, topic = {philosophy-and-social-science;social-philosophy;collectivism;} } @article{ astefanoaei-etal:2009a, author = {Lacramioara Astefanoaei and Mehdi Dastani and John-Jules Meyer and Frank de Boer}, title = {On the Semantics and Verification of Normative Multi-Agent Systems}, journal = {International Journal of Universal Computer Science}, year = {2009}, volume = {15}, number = {13}, pages = {2629--2652}, topic = {multiagent-systems;programming-languages;} } @book{ aston-burchard:1998a, author = {Guy Aston and Lou Burchard}, title = {The {BNC} Handbook}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Edinburgh}, ISBN = {0 7486 1055 3}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;} } @techreport{ astrachan-stickel_me:1991a, author = {Owen L. Astrachan and Mark E. Stickel}, title = {Caching and Lemmaizing in Model Elimination Theorem Provers}, institution = {AI Center, SRI International}, address = {333 Ravenswood Ave., Menlo Park, CA 94025}, number = {513}, year = {1991}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Theorem provers based on the model elimination theorem-proving procedure have exhibited extremely high inference rates but have lacked a redundancy control mechanism such as subsumption. In this paper we report on work done to modify a model elimination theorem prover using two techniques, caching and lemmaizing, that have reduced by more than an order of magnitude the time required to find proofs of several problems and that have enabled the prover to prove theorems previously unobtained.}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @book{ astrom_kj-murray_rm:2008a, author = {Karl Johan {\AA}str\"om and Richard M. Murray}, title = {Feedback Systems: An Introduction for Scientists and Engineers}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Princeton University Press}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-691-13576-2 (alk. paper)}, ISBN-10 = {0-691-13576-2 (alk. paper)}, url = {http://www.cds.caltech.edu/~murray/books/AM08/pdf/am08-complete_30Aug11.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17}, topic = {feedback-systems;control-theory;} } @article{ asudeh:2005a, author = {Ash Asudeh}, title = {Relational Nouns, Pronouns, and Resumption}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2005}, volume = {28}, number = {4}, pages = {375--446}, topic = {nl-semantics;relational-nouns;LFG;} } @incollection{ asudeh_a:2002a, author = {Ash Asudeh}, title = {A Resource-Sensitive Semantics for Equi and Raising}, booktitle = {The Construction of Meaning}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2002}, editor = {David Beaver and Luis de Casillas Mart\'inez and Brady Z. Clark and Stefan Kaufmann}, pages = {1--22 }, address = {Stanford University}, topic = {nl-semantics;resource-aware-logics;} } @article{ asuncion_v-etal:2010a, author = {Vernon Asuncion and Fangzhen Lin and Yan Zhang and Yi Zhou}, title = {Ordered Completion for First-Order Logic Programs on Finite Structures}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {177--179}, pages = {1--24}, topic = {answer-sets;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ asuncion_v-etal:2014a, author = {Vernon Asuncion and Yan Zhang and Heng Zhang}, title = {Logic Programs with Ordered Disjunction: First-Order Semantics and Expressiveness}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {2--11}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Logic programs with ordered disjunction (LPODs) (Brewka 2002) generalize normal logic programs by combining alternative and ranked options in the heads of rules. It has been showed that LPODs are useful in a number of areas including game theory, policy languages, planning and argumentations. In this paper, we extend propositional LPODs to the first-order case, where a classical second-order formula is defined to capture the stable model semantics of the underlying first-order LPODs. We then develop a progression semantics that is equivalent to the stable model semantics but naturally represents the reasoning procedure of LPODs. We show that on finite structures, every LPOD can be translated to a first-order sentence, which provides a basis for computing stable models of LPODs. We further study the complexity and expressiveness of LPODs and prove that almost positive LPODs precisely capture first-order normal logic programs, which indicates that ordered disjunction itself and constraints are sufficient to represent negation as failure. }, topic = {kr;disjunctive-logic-programming;} } @inproceedings{ asuncion_v-etal:2018a, author = {Vernon Asuncion and Yan Zhang and Heng Zhang and Yun Bai and Weisheng Si}, title = {Loop Restricted Existential Rules and First-Order Rewritability for Query Answering}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {619--620}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we introduce a new language called loop restricted (LR) TGDs (existential rules), which are TGDs with certain restrictions on the loops embedded in the underlying rule set. We study the complexity of this new language. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {kb-query-processing;complexity-in-AI;existential-rules;} } @article{ aszic_m-dosen_k:2016a, author = {Milos As\v{z}i\/'c and Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {G\"odel's {N}otre {D}ame Course}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2016}, volume = {22}, number = {4}, pages = {469--481}, topic = {history-of-logic;Goedel;} } @article{ atherton-schwartz_r:1974a, author = {Margaret Atherton and Robert Schwartz}, title = {Linguistic Innateness and Its Evidence}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1974}, volume = {71}, number = {6}, pages = {155--168}, topic = {innateness-of-language-ability;philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @incollection{ atkin_a:2013a, author = {Albert Atkin}, title = {Peirce's Theory of Signs}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, publisher = {{S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, url ={http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2013/entries/peirce-semiotics/}, year = {2013}, edition = {Summer 2013}, topic = {Peirce;semiotics;} } @article{ atkin_w-barrett_ja:2004a, author = {Wayne Atkin and Jeffrey A. Barrett}, title = {Computer Implication and the {C}urry Paradox}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {33}, number = {6}, pages = {631--637}, topic = {Curry-paradox;(un)decidability;algorithmic-logic;} } @incollection{ atkins_bts:1993a, author = {Beryl T. Atkins}, title = {The Contribution of Lexicography}, booktitle = {Challenges in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Madeleine Bates and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {37--75}, address = {Cambridge, England}, contentnote = {Concentrates on how to extract info from corpora and online dictionaries.}, topic = {computational-lexical-semantics;polysemy; machine-readable-dictionaries;} } @incollection{ atkins_bts-etal:1994a, author = {Beryl T.S. Atkins and Judy Kegl and Beth C. Levin}, title = {Anatomy of a Verb Entry: From Linguistic Theory to Lexicographic Practice}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Computational Linguistics: Essays in Honour of Don Walker}, publisher = {Giardini Editori e Stampatori and Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {Antonio Zampolli and Nicoletta Calzolari and Martha Palmer}, pages = {237--266}, address = {Pisa and Dordrecht}, xref = {Revised version of ``Anatomy of a Verb Entry: From Linguistic Theory to Lexicographic Practice'', International Journal of Lexicography 1, 1988, pp. 84--126.}, topic = {lexicography;verb-classes;verb-semantics; computational-lexicography;} } @book{ atkins_bts-zampolli:1994a, editor = {Beryl T.S. Atkins and A. Zampolli}, title = {Computational Approaches to the Lexicon}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198239793}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 326 .C591 1994.}, topic = {computational-lexicography;} } @inproceedings{ atkins_em-etal:1997a, author = {Ella M. Atkins and Edmund H. Durfee and Kang G. Shin}, title = {Detecting and Reacting to Unplanned-for World States}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {571--576}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {plan-maintenance;} } @article{ atkins_p:2016a, author = {Philip Atkins}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Inessential Indexical: On the Philosophical Insignificance of Perspective and the First Person}, by {H}erman {C}appelen and {J}osh {D}ever}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2016}, volume = {76}, number = {1}, pages = {99---102}, DOI = {https://doi.org/10.1093/analys/anv077}, xref = {Review of: cappelen_h-dever_j:2013a}, topic = {indexicals;first-person;context;contextualism;} } @book{ atkinson_jm-heritage:1984a, editor = {J.M. Atkinson and J. Heritage}, title = {Structures of Social Action}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Cambridge}, missinginfo = {A's 1st names.}, rtnote = {Hillman P95.45 S86 1984}, topic = {conversation-analysis;discourse;pragmatics;} } @article{ atkinson_k-benchcapon_t:2007a, author = {Katie Atkinson and Trevor Bench-Capon}, title = {Practical Reasoning as Presumptive Argumentation using Action Based Alternating Transition Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {10--15}, pages = {855--874}, topic = {argumentation;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ atkinson_k-etal:2017a, author = {Katie Atkinson and Pietro Baroni and Massimiliano Giacomin and Anthony Hunter and Henry Prakken and Chris Reed and Guillermo Simari and Matthias Thimm and Serena Villata}, title = {Toward Artificial Argumentation}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2017}, volume = {38}, number = {3}, pages = {25--36}, topic = {argumentation;} } @incollection{ atkinson_m:1992a, author = {Martin Atkinson}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Thematic Structure: Its Role in Grammar}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1992}, editor = {Iggy M. Roca}, pages = {1--22}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files, "M Atkinson"}, topic = {thematic-roles;argument-structure;} } @article{ atlan_h-koppel_m:1990a, author = {Henri Atlan and Moshe Koppel}, title = {The Cellular Computer {DNA}: Program or Data}, journal = {Bulletin of Mathematical Biology}, year = {1990}, volume = {52}, number = {3}, pages = {335--348}, topic = {genetic-code;computational-complexity;} } @unpublished{ atlas_jd:1972a, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Some Remarks on {G}eorge {L}akoff's `Performative Antinomies{'}}, year = {1972}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Pomona College.}, topic = {pragmatics;} } @unpublished{ atlas_jd:1973a, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Some Remarks on Presupposition}, year = {1974}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Pomona College}, topic = {presupposition;} } @unpublished{ atlas_jd:1974a, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Presupposition, Ambiguity, and Generality: A Coda to the {R}ussell-{S}trawson Debate on Referring}, year = {1974}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Pomona College}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {presupposition;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ atlas_jd:1975a, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Frege's Polymorphous Concept of Presupposition and Its Role in the Theory of Meaning}, journal = {Semantikos}, year = {1975}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {29--44}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. "Atlas"}, topic = {presuppositon;} } @article{ atlas_jd:1975b, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Presupposition: A Semantico-Pragmatic Account}, journal = {Pragmatics Microfiche}, year = {1975}, volume = {1}, number = {4}, pages = {D13--G14}, topic = {presupposition;} } @unpublished{ atlas_jd:1975c, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {On Presupposition, Generality, and Informativeness: Historical Remarks and Theoretical Suggestions}, year = {1975}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Pomona College.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {presuppositon;} } @unpublished{ atlas_jd:1975d, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {On Pragmatic Presupposition and Some Counter-Examples to the {V}an {F}raassen Theory of Semantic Presupposition: A Reply to {S}chwartz}, year = {1975}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Pomona College.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @unpublished{ atlas_jd:1975e, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {More on {A}.{J} {K}enny's Logic of Practical Inference}, year = {1975}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Pomona College.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ atlas_jd:1977a, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Negation, Ambiguity, and Presupposition}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {321--336}, topic = {nl-negation;presuppositon;ambiguity;} } @unpublished{ atlas_jd:1977b, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Presupposition, Negation, and the Anti-Realist Theory of Meaning}, year = {1977}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Pomona College.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {presupposition;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ atlas_jd:1979a, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {How Linguistics Matters to Philosophy: Presupposition, Truth, and Meaning}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics 11: Presupposition}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {ChoonKyo Oh and David A. Dineen}, pages = {265--281}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @article{ atlas_jd:1980a, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {A Note on a Confusion of Pragmatic and Semantic Aspects of Negation}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {411--414}, topic = {negation;presupposition;pragmatics;} } @unpublished{ atlas_jd:1983a, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {On What There Isn't: Quantifying {Q}uine Out}, year = {1983}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {logic-and-ontology;} } @article{ atlas_jd:1984a, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Comparative Adjectives and Adverbials of Degree: an Introduction to Radically Radical Pragmatics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1984}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {347--377}, topic = {scalar-implicature;degree-modifiers;pragmatics;implicature;} } @article{ atlas_jd:1984b, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Grammatical Non-Specification: The Mistaken Disjunction Theory}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1984}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {433--443}, topic = {ambiguity/generality;lexical-semantics;} } @article{ atlas_jd:1984c, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Topic/Comment, Presupposition, Logical Form and Focal Stress Implicatures: the Case of Focal Particles `Only' and `Also'}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1991}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {127--147}, topic = {s-topic;sentence-focus;presupposition;`only';pragmatics;} } @article{ atlas_jd:1988a, author = {Jay David Atlas}, title = {What are Negative Existence Statements About?}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1988}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {373--394}, topic = {logic-of-existence;(non)existence;} } @book{ atlas_jd:1989c, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {Philosophy Without Ambiguity: A Logico-Linguistic Essay}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, ISBN = {9780198244547}, abstract = {... argues that the sense of a sense-general sentence radically underdetermines (independently of indexicality) its truth-conditional content. ... In particular, he demonstrates how the concept of ambiguity has been misused and confused with other concepts of meaning, and how the interface between semantics and pragmatics has been misunderstood. ...}, topic = {ambiguity;} } @article{ atlas_jd:1991a, author = {Jay David Atlas}, title = {Topic/Comment, Presupposition, Logical Form and Focus Stress Implicatures: The Case of Focal Particles `only' and `also'}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1991}, volume = {8}, number = {1--2}, pages = {127--147}, abstract = {In this paper I shall argue that neither Sherwood, with his conjunction analysis of Only x is F, nor Geach, with his conjunctive analysis, nor Horn, with his presuppositional analysis, nor Taglicht, with his conjunction analysis of only and his conventional implicature analysis of also and even, have accounted for the semantic and pragmatic facts, for their analyses have failed to integrate linguistic facts about topic and focus, about entailments, and about Gricean (1975, 1989) nonimplicatures. By reconsidering their views I hope to show how a more coherent account can be achieved. In the course of this paper I will offer my own analysis, building on what I have learned from theirs and, I hope, improving on them. }, rtnote = {In RT collection. \se10}, topic = {`only';presupposition;sentenct-focus;implicature;} } @article{ atlas_jd:1993a, author = {Jay David Atlas}, title = {The Importance of Being `Only'; Testing the Neo-{G}ricean Versus Neo-Entailment Paradigms}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1993}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {301--318}, topic = {`only';implicature;} } @book{ atlas_jd:2000a, author = {Jay David Atlas}, title = {Logic, Meaning, and Conversation: Semantical Underdeterminacy, Implicature, and Their Interface}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0195133005}, abstract = {... focuses on the interface between a theory of literal meaning and pragmatics... develops the contrast between verbal ambiguity and verbal generality, works out a detailed theory of conversational inference using the work of Paul Grice on Implicature as a starting point, and gives an account of their interface as an example of the relationship between Chomsky's Internalist Semantics and Language Performance. Atlas then discusses consequences of his theory of the Interface for the distinction between metaphorical and literal language, for Grice's account of meaning, for the Analytic/Synthetic distinction, for Meaning Holism, and for Formal Semantics of Natural Language.}, topic = {pragmatics;implicature;language-use;metaphor;semantic-holism;} } @incollection{ atlas_jd:2005a, author = {Jay David Atlas}, title = {Presupposition}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {29--52}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr16}, topic = {presupposition;} } @incollection{ atlas_jd:2007a, author = {Jay D. Atlas}, title = {What Reflexive Pronouns Tell Us about Belief---A New Moore's Paradox: De Se, Rationality, and Privileged Access}, booktitle = {Moore's Paradox: New Essays on Belief, Rationality, and the First Person}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, editor = {Mitchell S. Green and John N. Williams}, pages = {117--145}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;} } @incollection{ atlas_jd:2010a, author = {Jay David Atlas}, title = {Intuition, the Paradigm Case Argument, and the Two Dogmas of {K}ant'otelianism}, booktitle = {Meaning and Analysis: New Essays on {G}rice}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2010}, editor = {Klaus Petrus}, pages = {47--74}, address = {New York}, topic = {analyticity;} } @incollection{ atlas_jd-levinson_sc:1981a, author = {Jay D. Atlas and Stephen C. Levinson}, title = {{\em It-}Clefts, Informativeness and Logical Form: Radical Pragmatics (Revised Standard Version)}, booktitle = {Radical Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Peter Cole}, pages = {1--61}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {pragmatics;presupposition;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ atserias-etal:1997a, author = {Jordi Atserias and Salvador Climent and Xavier Farreres and German Rigau and Horacio Rodr\'iguez}, title = {Combining Multiple Methods for the Automatic Construction of Multilingual {W}ord{N}ets}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Conference on Recent Advances in Natural Language Processing}, year = {1997}, missinginfo = {publisher, editor, pages}, url = {http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/cmp-lg/9709003}, topic = {wordnet;multilingual-lexicons;} } @incollection{ attardi:1991a, author = {Giuseppe Attardi}, title = {Knowledge Sharing: A Feasible Dream}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {597--598}, address = {San Mateo, California}, contentnote = {This is a position statement, prepared in connection with a conference panel. There is no bibliography.}, topic = {kr;kr-course;knowledge-sharing;large-kr-systems;} } @incollection{ attardi-simi:1991a, author = {Giuseppe Attardi and Maria Simi}, title = {Reflections about Reflection}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {22--31}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;kr-course;semantic-reflection;syntactic-attitudes;} } @incollection{ attardi-simi:1994a, author = {Giuseppe Attardi and Maria Simi}, title = {Building Proofs in Context}, booktitle = {Logic Programming Synthesis and Transformation, Meta-Programming in Logic: Fourth International Workshops, {LOBSTR}'94 and {META}'94, Pisa, Italy}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Laurent Fribourg and Franco Turini}, pages = {410--424}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {kr;context;} } @inproceedings{ attardi-simi:1994b, author = {Giuseppe Attardi and Maria Simi}, title = {Proofs in Context}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {16--26}, topic = {kr;context;kr-course;} } @article{ attardi-simi:1995a, author = {Giuseppe Attardi and Maria Simi}, title = {A Formalisation of Viewpoints}, journal = {Fundamenta Informaticae}, year = {1995}, volume = {23}, number = {2--4}, pages = {149--174}, topic = {kr;context;kr-course;logic-of-context;} } @inproceedings{ attardi-simi:1995b, author = {Giuseppe Attardi and Maria Simi}, title = {Beppo Had a Dream}, booktitle = {Formalizing Context}, year = {1995}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, pages = {9--22}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;propositional-attitudes;individuation;} } @article{ attardi-simi:1998a, author = {Giuseppe Attardi and Maria Simi}, title = {Communication across Viewpoints}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1998}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {53--75}, topic = {context;semantic-reflection;reasoning-about-knowledge;} } @book{ aubenque_p:1966a, author = {Pierre Aubenque}, title = {Le Probl\'eme de l'Etre Chez {A}ristotle: Essai Sur la Probl\'ematique {A}ristot\'elicienne}, publisher = {Presses Universitaires de France}, year = {1966}, address = {Paris}, topic = {Aristotle;metaphysics;} } @article{ aucher_g:2007a, author = {Guillaume Aucher}, title = {Interpreting an Action from What We Perceive and What We Expect}, journal = {Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {9--38}, abstract = {In update logic as studied by Baltag, Moss, Solecki and van Benthem, little attention is paid to the interpretation of an action by an agent, which is just assumed to depend on the situation. ... In this paper, we tackle this topic. ... we propose a formalism to accurately represent an agent's epistemic state based on hyperreal numbers. ... we use infinitesimals to express what would surprise the agents (and by how much) by contradicting their beliefs. ... It turns out that our probabilistic update mechanism satisfies the AGM postulates of belief revision.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;belief-revision;nonstandard-probability; nonmonotonic-logic;belief;} } @inproceedings{ aucher_g:2010a, author = {Guillaume Aucher}, title = {Characterizing Updates in Dynamic Epistemic Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {135--142}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;knowledge-base-revision;} } @inproceedings{ aucher_g:2014a, author = {Guillaume Aucher}, title = {Axioms .2 and .4 as Interaction Axioms}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {579--582}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In epistemic logic, some axioms dealing with the notion of knowledge are rather convoluted and it is difficult to give them an intuitive interpretation ... We show that they can be characterized in terms of understandable interaction axioms relating knowledge and belief. In order to show it, we first present a theory dealing with the characterization of axioms in terms of interaction axioms in modal logic. We then apply the main results and methods of this theory to obtain our results related to epistemic logic.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no22}, topic = {foundations-of-modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ aucher_g-herzig_a:2007a, author = {Guillaume Aucher and Andreas Herzig}, title = {From {DEL} to {EDL}: Exploring the Power of Converse Events}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 9th European Conference on Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches to Reasoning with Uncertainty}, year = {2007}, editor = {Khaled Mellouli}, pages = {199--209}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Republication: aucher_g-herzig_a:2011a}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;dynamic-logic;} } @incollection{ aucher_g-herzig_a:2011a, author = {Guillaume Aucher and Andreas Herzig}, title = {Exploring the Power of Converse Events}, booktitle = {Dynamic Formal Epistemology}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2011}, editor = {Patrick Girard and Mathieu Marion and Olivier Roy }, pages = {51--74}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Repiblication of: aucher_g-herzig_a:2007a}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;dynamic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ audemard_g-etal:2020a, author = {Gilles Audemard and Fr\'ed\'eric Koriche and Pierre Marquis}, title = {On Tractable {XAI} Queries based on Compiled Representations}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {838--849}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we define new explanation and/or verification queries about classifiers. We show how they can be addressed by combining queries and transformations about the associated Boolean circuits. Taking advantage of previous results from the knowledge compilation map, this allows us to identify a number of XAI queries that are tractable provided that the circuit has been first turned into a compiled representation.}, topic = {exlainable-AI;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ audemard_g-etal:2021a, author = {Gilles Audemard and Steve Bellart and Louenas Bounia and Fr\'ed\'eric KoricheeJean-Marie Lagniez and Pierre Marquis}, title = {On the Computational Intelligibility of Boolean Classifiers}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {74--86}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {In this paper, we investigate the computational intelligibility of Boolean classifiers, characterized by their ability to answer XAI queries in polynomial time. The classifiers under consideration are decision trees, DNF formulae, decision lists, decision rules, tree ensembles, and Boolean neural nets.}, topic = {boolean-classifiers;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ audi_r:1973a, author = {Robert Audi}, title = {Intending}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1973}, volume = {70}, number = {13}, pages = {387--403}, topic = {intention;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ audi_r:1973b, author = {Robert Audi}, title = {The Concept of Wanting}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1973}, volume = {24}, number = {1}, pages = {1--21}, doi = {10.1007/BF00376353}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn10}, topic = {desire;philosophy-of-action;} } @article{ audi_r:1979a, author = {Robert Audi}, title = {Wants and Intentions in the Explanation of Action}, journal = {Journal for the Theory of Social Behavior}, year = {1979}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {227--249}, topic = {desire;intention;agent-attitudes;} } @article{ audi_r:1979b, author = {Robert Audi}, title = {Weakness of Will and Practical Judgement}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1979}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {173--196}, topic = {akrasia;} } @article{ audi_r:1980a, author = {Robert Audi}, title = {The Structure of Motivation}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1980}, volume = {61}, number = {3}, pages = {258--275}, topic = {motives;philosophical-psychology;} } @book{ audi_r:1986a, editor = {Robert Audi}, title = {Action, Decision, and Intention: Studies in the Foundation of Action Theory as an Approach to Understanding Rationality and Decision}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1986}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @incollection{ audi_r:1986b, author = {Robert Audi}, title = {Intending Intentional Action, and Desire}, booktitle = {The Ways of Desire: New Essays in Philosophical Psychology on the Concept of Wanting}, publisher = {Precedent Publishing, Inc.}, year = {1986}, editor = {Joel Marks}, pages = {17--38}, address = {Chicago}, topic = {intention;action;desire;} } @article{ audi_r:1991a, author = {Robert Audi}, title = {Intention, Cognitive Commitment, and Planning}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1991}, volume = {86}, number = {3}, pages = {361--378}, contentnote = {Defends the philosophical view that intention is definable in terms of belief and desire.}, xref = {See garcia_jla:1991a.}, topic = {intention;belief;desire;agent-attitudes;} } @incollection{ audi_r:1993a, author = {Robert Audi}, title = {Mental Causation: Sustaining and Dynamic}, booktitle = {Mental Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {John Heil and Alfred R. Mele}, pages = {53--74}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {mind-body-problem;causality;} } @book{ audi_r:2001a, author = {Robert Audi}, title = {The Architecture of Reason: The Structure and Substance of Rationality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: gunnarsson:2003a.}, topic = {rationality;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @book{ auer:1998a, editor = {Peter Auer}, title = {Code-Switching in Conversation: Language, Interaction and Identity}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1998}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0415158311}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 115.3 .C651 1998.}, topic = {code-switching;bilingualism;} } @book{ auer-diluzio:1991a, editor = {Peter Auer and Aldo DiLuzio}, title = {The Contextualization of Language}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {1991}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {1556192908 (paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 325.5 .C65 C661 1992.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Peter Auer, "Introduction: John Gumperz' Approach to Contextualization", pp. 1--38 2. John J. Gumperz, "Contextualization Revisited", pp. 39--54 3. Michael Silverstein, "The Indeterminacy of Contextualization: When Is Enough Enough", pp. 55--76 4. Charles Goodwin and Marjorie Harness Goodwin, "Context, Activity and Participation", pp. 77--100 5. Christian Heath, "Gesture's Discreet Tasks: Multiple Relevancies in Visual Conduct and in the Contextualisation of Language", pp. 101--128 6. Volker Hinnenkamp, "Comments", pp. 129--133 7. J\"urgen Streeck and Ulrike Hartge, "Previews: Gestures at the Transition Place", pp. 135--158 8. Michel De Fornel, "The Return Gesture: Some Remarks on Context, Inference, and Iconic Gesture", pp. 159--175 9. Jenny Cook-Gumperz, "Gendered Contexts", pp. 177--198 10. Klaus M\"uller, "Theatrical Moments: On Contextualizing Funny and Dramatic Moods in the Course of Telling a Story in Conversation", pp. 199--222 11. Susanne G\"unthner, "Comments", pp. 223--232 12. Margret Selting, "Intonation as a Contextualization Device: Case Studies on the Role of Prosody, Especially Intonation, in Contextualizing Story Telling in Conversation", pp. 233--258 13. Johannes Schwitalla, "Comments", pp. 259--272 14. John Local, "Continuing and Restarting", pp. 273--296 15. Susanne Uhmann, "Contextualizing Relevance: On Some Forms and Functions of Speech Rate Changes in Everyday Conversation", pp. 297--336 16. Elizabeth Couper-KUHLEN, "Contextualizing Discourse: The Prosody of Interactive Repair", pp. 337--364 17. Frederick Erickson, "They Know All the Lines: Rhythmic Organization and Contextualization in a Conversational Listing Routine", pp. 365--397 }, topic = {context;sociolinguistics;pragmatics;} } @book{ augier-march:2004a, editor = {Mie Augier and James G. March}, title = {Models of a Man: Essays in Memory of {H}erbert {S}imon}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-01208-1}, topic = {limited-rationality;Herbert-Simon;pr-course;} } @article{ auguste:1985a, author = {Donna Auguste}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}ntelligent Tutoring Systems}, by {D}erek {H}. {S}leeman and {J}ohn {S}. {B}rown}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {26}, number = {2}, pages = {233--238}, xref = {Review of sleeman-brown_js:1982a.}, topic = {intelligent-tutoring;} } @book{ augustine:1995a, author = {Augustine of Hippo}, title = {De Doctrina Christiana}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Originally published 397--426 CE. Translated by R.P.H.~Green}, ISBN = {978-0-19-826334-0}, topic = {theology;ancient-philosophy;} } @article{ aumann_rj:1974a, author = {Robert J. Aumann}, title = {Subjectivity and Correlation in Randomized Strategies}, journal = {Journal of Mathematical Economics}, year = {1974}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {67--96}, topic = {game-theory;subjective-probability;} } @article{ aumann_rj:1976a, author = {Robert J. Aumann}, title = {Agreeing to Disagree}, journal = {Annals of Statistics}, year = {1976}, volume = {4}, number = {6}, pages = {1236--1239}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de11\aumann1.pdf}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;bargaining-theory;mutual-belief;} } @article{ aumann_rj:1987a, author = {Robert J. Aumann}, title = {Correlated Equilibrium as an Expression of {B}ayesian Rationality}, journal = {Econometrica}, year = {1987}, volume = {55}, number = {1}, pages = {1--18}, abstract = {If it is common knowledge that the players in a game are Bayesian utility maximizers who treat uncertainty about other players' actions like any other uncertainty, then the outcome is necessarily a correlated equilibrium. Random strategies appear as an expression of each player's uncertainty about what the others will do, not as the result of willful randomization. Use is made of the common prior assumption, according to which differences in probability assessments by different individuals are due to the different information that they have (where "information" may be interpreted broadly, to include experience, upbringing, and genetic makeup).}, topic = {mutual-belief;game-theory;Nash-equilibria;} } @incollection{ aumann_rj:1992a, author = {Robert J. Aumann}, title = {Perspectives on Bounded Rationality}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fourth Conference ({TARK} 1992)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Yoram Moses}, pages = {108--117}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {game-theory;limited-rationality;pr-course;} } @unpublished{ aumann_rj:1992b, author = {Robert J. Aumann}, title = {Interactive Epistemology}, year = {1992}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Hebrew University, Jerusalem.}, xref = {Publications: aumann_rj:1999a, aumann_rj:1999b}, topic = {epistemic-logic;rationality;game-theory;mutual-belief;} } @article{ aumann_rj:1995a, author = {Robert J. Aumann}, title = {Backward Induction and Common Knowledge of Rationality}, journal = {Games and Economic Behavior}, year = {1995}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {6--19}, topic = {game-theory;backward-induction;mutual-belief;} } @article{ aumann_rj:1999a, author = {Robert J. Aumann}, title = {Interactive Epistemology {I}: Knowledge}, journal = {International Journal of Game Theory}, year = {1999}, volume = {28}, number = {3}, pages = {263--300}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de11\aumann2.pdf}, xref = {Publication of: aumann_rj:1995a}, abstract = {... In game theory and economics, the semantic approach has heretofore been most prevalent. A question that often arises in this connection is whether, in what sense, and why the space \Omega and the partitions Fi can be taken as given and commonly known by the players. An answer to this question is provided by the syntactic approach.}, topic = {foundations-of-game-theory;epistemic-logic;mutual-belief;} } @article{ aumann_rj:1999b, author = {Robert J. Aumann}, title = {Interactive Epistemology {II}: Probability}, journal = {Hebrew {U}niversity of {J}erusalem International Journal of Game Theory}, year = {1999}, volume = {28}, number = {3}, pages = {301--314}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de11\aumann3.pdf}, xref = {Publication of: aumann_rj:1995a}, topic = {foundations-of-game-theory;} } @article{ aumann_rj-borin_s:1989a, author = {Robert J. Aumann and Sylvain Borin}, title = {Cooperation and Bounded Recall}, journal = {Games and Economic Behavior}, year = {1989}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {5--39}, topic = {game-theory;limited-rationality;} } @incollection{ aumann_rj-etal:1996a1, author = {Robert J. Aumann and Serigiu Hart and Motty Perry}, title = {The Absent-Minded Driver}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge: Proceedings of the Sixth Conference ({TARK} 1996)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Yoav Shoham}, pages = {97--116}, address = {San Francisco}, xref = {Journal publication: aumann_rj-etal:1996a1}, topic = {game-theory;resource-limited-reasoning; absent-minded-driver-problem;} } @article{ aumann_rj-etal:1996a2, author = {Robert Aumann and Serigiu Hart and Motty Perry}, title = {The Forgetful Passenger}, journal = {Games and Economic Behavior}, year = {1997}, volume = {20}, pages = {117--120}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Conference publication: aumann_rj-etal:1996a2}, topic = {game-theory;resource-limited-reasoning; absent-minded-driver-problem;} } @book{ aumann_rj-hart_s:1992a, editor = {Robert J. Aumann and Sergiu Hart}, title = {Handbook of Game Theory with Economic Applications, Vol. 1}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1992}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN-10 = {0444880984 (v. 1))}, rtnote = {UMich Stacks, HB144 .H23.}, topic = {game-theory;} } @book{ aumann_rj-hart_s:1994a, editor = {Robert J. Aumann and Sergiu Hart}, title = {Handbook of Game Theory, with Economic Applications, Vol. 2}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1994}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {0444894276}, rtnote = {Not in UMich ?}, topic = {game-theory;} } @book{ aumann_rj-machsler:1995a, author = {Robert Aumann and Michael B. Machsler}, title = {Repeated Games with Incomplete Information}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, note = {With the collaboration of Richard E. Stearns}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;repeated-games;} } @article{ aune_b:1962a, author = {Bruce Aune}, title = {Abilities, Modalities, and Free-Will}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1962}, volume = {23}, pages = {397--413}, number = {6}, topic = {freedom;ability;conditionals;} } @article{ aune_b:1967a, author = {Bruce Aune}, title = {Hypotheticals and `Can': Another Look}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1967}, volume = {27}, number = {6}, pages = {191--195}, topic = {conditionals;ability;} } @article{ aune_b:1968a, author = {Bruce Aune}, title = {Hypotheticals and `Can': Another Look}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1968}, volume = {27}, number = {6}, pages = {191--195}, xref = {Reply: lehrer_k:1968a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc16\aune1.pdf}, topic = {conditionals;ability;JL-Austin;} } @article{ aune_b:1968b, author = {Bruce Aune}, title = {Statements and Propositions}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1968}, volume = {1}, pages = {215--229}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {Strawson;propositions;indexicality;truth-bearers;} } @article{ aune_b:1970a, author = {Bruce Aune}, title = {Free Will, `Can', and Ethics: A Reply to {L}ehrer}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1970}, volume = {30}, number = {3}, pages = {77--83}, xref = {Reply to: lehrer_k:1968a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc16\aune2.pdf}, topic = {ability;conditionals;freedom;JL-Austin;} } @incollection{ aune_b:1975a, author = {Bruce Aune}, title = {Vendler on Knowledge and Belief}, booktitle = {Language, Mind, and Knowledge. {M}innesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 7}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Keith Gunderson}, pages = {391--399}, address = {Minneapolis, Minnesota}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;interrogatives;} } @book{ aune_b:1977a, author = {Bruce Aune}, title = {Reason and Action}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1977}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {HILLMAN BD450 .A86}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @incollection{ aune_b:1978a, author = {Bruce Aune}, title = {Root on {Q}uine}, booktitle = {Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {290--293}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {intensionality;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ aune_b:1986a, author = {Bruce Aune}, title = {Other Minds after Twenty Years}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {X}: Studies in the Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {559--574}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ auschi:1991a, author = {Michele Auschi}, title = {Phase Semantics and Sequent Calculus for Pure Noncommutative Classical Linear Logic}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1991}, volume = {56}, number = {4}, pages = {1403--1451}, topic = {linear-logic;monoid-semantics;proof-theory;} } @inproceedings{ ausensi_j:2021a, author = {Josep Ausensi}, title = {The semantics of roots determines argument structure}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 25}, year = {2021}, editor = {Patrick Grosz and Luisa Marti and Hazel Pearson and Yasutada Sudo and Sarah Zobel}, pages = {95--111}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/issue/view/29}, abstract = {... Here, I show that the two main approaches to argument structure either undergenerate (Rappaport Hovav and Levin, 1998; Alexiadou et al., 2015) or overgenerate (Borer, 2005; Acedo-Matell´an and Mateu, 2014). In particular, I provide empirical data that show that so-called result verbs enjoy a certain degree of elasticity, contra Rappaport Hovav and Levin (1998); Alexiadou et al.(2015), yet there are cases of lack of verbal elasticity, contra Borer (2005); Acedo-Matell´an and Mateu (2014), i.a. To this end, I propose a root-sensitive approach to event structure in which the semantics of distinct classes of roots can determine the syntactic contexts roots can appear in. Under the present approach, cases of ungrammaticality are argued to result from clashes between the semantics of roots and the semantics of the event structure.}, topic = {;} } @article{ austin_ak:1979a, author = {A.K. Austin}, title = {The Unexpected Examination}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1979}, volume = {39}, number = {1}, pages = {63--64}, topic = {surprise-examination-paradox;} } @book{ austin_df:1988a, editor = {David F. Austin}, title = {Philosophical Analysis: A Defense By Example}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1988}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {9027726744}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B 808.5 .P481 1988.}, topic = {analytical-philosophy;} } @book{ austin_df:1990a, author = {David F. Austin}, title = {What's the Meaning of "This"?: A Puzzle About Demonstrative Belief}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Ithaca}, ISBN = {0801424097}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD 215 .A971 1990.}, topic = {demonstratives;reference;} } @article{ austin_jl:1946a, author = {John L. Austin}, title = {Other Minds}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1946}, volume = {20}, pages = {148--187}, note = {Supplementary Volume}, xref = {Reprinted in austin_jl:1961a.}, topic = {JLAustin;} } @article{ austin_jl:1950a, author = {John L. Austin}, title = {Truth}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1950}, volume = {24}, pages = {111--128}, note = {Supplementary Volume}, topic = {truth;propositional-attitudes;truth-bearers; correspondence-theory-of-truth;} } @article{ austin_jl:1956a, author = {John L. Austin}, title = {Ifs and Cans}, journal = {Proceedings of the British Academy}, year = {1956}, pages = {109--132}, volume = {42}, xref = {Review: watling_j:1958a.}, xref = {Commentary: lehrer_k:1959a, thalberg_i:1962a, dore_c:1962a}, topic = {ability;conditionals;freedom;} } @article{ austin_jl:1956b1, author = {John L. Austin}, title = {A Plea for Excuses}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian {S}ociety}, year = {1956--57}, volume = {57}, pages = {1--30}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Austin.}, xref = {Republication: austin_jl:1956b2}, topic = {excuses;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @incollection{ austin_jl:1956b2, author = {John L. Austin}, title = {A Plea for Excuses}, booktitle = {Ordinary Language}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1964}, editor = {Vere C. Chappell}, pages = {41--63}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, xref = {Republication of: austin_jl:1956b1}, topic = {excuses;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @article{ austin_jl:1958a, author = {John L. Austin}, title = {Pretending}, journal = {Aristotelian {S}ociety Supplementary Series}, year = {1958}, volume = {32}, pages = {261--278}, topic = {pretense;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @book{ austin_jl:1961a, author = {John L. Austin}, title = {Philosophical Papers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, year = {1961}, note = {Edited by {J.O.} {U}rmson and {G.J.} {W}arnock}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @incollection{ austin_jl:1961b, author = {John L. Austin}, title = {Performative Utterances}, booktitle = {Philosophical Papers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1961}, editor = {J.O. Urmson and G.J. Warnock}, address = {Oxford}, pages = {220--239}, note = {Edited transcript of an unscripted 1956 radio talk produced by the BBC}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se19\Austin.pdf}, rtnote = {Reading notes on file: OFR Fall, 2020}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @book{ austin_jl:1962a, author = {John L. Austin}, title = {Sense and Sensibilia}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1962}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {epistemology;phenomenalism;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @book{ austin_jl:1962b, author = {John L. Austin}, note = {Edited by J.O. Urmson and G.J. Warnock}, title = {How to Do Things With Words}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1962}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, xref = {Reviews: cerf:1966a1, cerf:1966a2, sayre_km:1963a}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @article{ austin_jw:1978a, author = {James W. Austin}, title = {Russell's Cryptic Response to {S}trawson}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1978}, volume = {38}, number = {4}, pages = {531--537}, rtnote = {Austin erroneously characterizes R's response as hasty and rambling, though he acknowledges that R has a "skeletal rebuttal."}, topic = {Russell;Strawson;definite-descriptions;} } @book{ auxier_rf-etal:2015a, editor = {Randall E. Auxier and Douglas R. Anderson and Lewis Edwin Hahn}, title = {The Philosophy of {H}ilary {P}utnam}, publisher = {Open Court}, year = {2015}, address = {Chicago}, xref = {Review: chang_h:2018a}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @incollection{ auyang:2000a, author = {Sunny Y. Auyang}, title = {Mathematics and Reality: Two Notions of Spacetime in the Analytic and Constructivist Views of Gauge Field Theories}, booktitle = {{PSA}'1998: Proceedings of the 1998 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2000}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {S482--S494}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;gauge-theory;} } @book{ auyang:2000b, author = {Sunny Y. Auyang}, title = {Mind in Everyday Life and Cognitive Science}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-26201-181-6}, xref = {Review: radenovic:2004a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;foundations-of-cogsci;emergence; phenomenology;} } @book{ auyang:2001a, author = {Sunny Y. Auyang}, title = {Mind in Everyday Life and Cognitive Science}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-01181-6}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ avenhaus:1998a, author = {J. Avenhaus}, title = {Introduction (To Part {IV}: Comparison and Cooperation of Theorem Provers)}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {II}, Systems and Implementation Techniques}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @article{ avigad_j:2019a, author = {Jeremy Avigad}, title = {Modularity in Mathematics}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {47--79}, abstract = {In a wide range of fields, the word 'modular' is used to describe complex systems that can be decomposed into smaller systems with limited interactions between them. This essay argues that mathematical knowledge can fruitfully be understood as having a modular structure and explores the ways in which modularity in mathematics is epistemically advantageous.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;modularity;} } @incollection{ avigad_j-feferman_s:1998a, author = {Jeremy Avigad and Solomon Feferman}, title = {G\"odel's Functional ("Dialectica") Interpretation}, booktitle = {Handbook of Proof Theory}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1998}, editor = {Samuel R. Buss}, pages = {337--405}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Introduction 2 2. The Dialectica interpretation of arithmetic 5 3. Consequences and benefits of the interpretation 15 4. Models of T , type structures, and normalizability 20 5. The interpretation of fragments of arithmetic 26 6. The interpretation of analysis 29 7. Conservation results for weak K\"oonig's lemma 35 8. Non-constructive interpretations and applications 41 9. The interpretation of theories of ordinals 50 10. Interpretations based on polymorphism 57 } , rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja22}, topic = {intuistic-logic;constructivity;recursion-theory;formalizations-of-arithmetic;} } @article{ avigad_jd:1999a, author = {Jeremy Avigad}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}n the Light of Logic}, by {S}olomon {F}eferman}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {96}, number = {12}, pages = {638--642}, xref = {Review of: feferman_s:1998a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;proof-theory;} } @article{ avigad_jd:2000a, author = {Jeremy Avigad}, title = {Interpreting Classical Theories in Constructive Ones}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {65}, number = {4}, pages = {1785--1812}, topic = {constructive-logics;} } @article{ avigad_jd:2002a, author = {Jeremy D. Avigad}, title = {Review of `Explicit Provability and Constructive Semantics', by {S}ergei {N}. {A}rtemov}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {432--433}, xref = {Review of: artemov:2000a.}, topic = {provability-logic;} } @incollection{ avigad_jd:2018a, author = {Jeremy D. Avigad}, title = {Proof Theory}, booktitle = {Introduction to Formal Philosophy}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2018}, editor = {Sven Ove Hansson and Vincent F. Hendricks}, pages = {177--190}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @incollection{ avigad_jd-feferman_s:1998a, author = {Jeremy D. Avigad and Solomon Feferman}, title = {{G}\"odel's Functional (`Dialectica') Interpretation}, booktitle = {Handbook of Proof Theory}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Samuel R. Buss}, pages = {337--405}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Review: arai_t:1998f.}, topic = {proof-theory;intuitionistic-logic;recursion-theory;} } @article{ avrahami_j-kareev_y:1994a, author = {Judith Avrahami and Yaakov Kareev}, title = {The Emergence of Events}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {1994}, volume = {53}, number = {3}, pages = {239--261}, topic = {developmental-psychology;event-recognition;} } @book{ avramides_a:1989a, author = {Anita Avramides}, title = {Meaning and Mind: An Examination of a {G}ricean Account of Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves. }, topic = {speaker-meaning;philosophy-of-language;Grice; foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ avramides_a:1997a, author = {Anita Avramides}, title = {Intention and Convention}, booktitle = {A Companion to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {1997}, editor = {Bob Hale and Crispin Wright}, pages = {60--86}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {speaker-meaning;philosophy-of-language;Grice; foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ avron_a:1991a, author = {Arnon Avron}, title = {A Note on Provability, Truth, and Existence}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1991}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, pages = {403--409}, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ avron_a:1994a, author = {Arnon Avron}, title = {What is a Logical System?}, booktitle = {What is a Logical System?}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Dov Gabbay}, pages = {217--238}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;logical-consequence;} } @incollection{ avron_a:2002a, author = {Arnon Avron}, title = {On Negation, Completeness and Consistency}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {IX}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {287--320}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {negation;(in)consistency;} } @article{ avron_a:2009a, author = {Arnon Avron}, title = {Review of \emph{An Introduction to {G}\"odel's Theorems}, by {P}eter {S}mith}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {218--222}, xref = {Review of: smith_p:2007a}, topic = {Goedel;goedels-first-theorem;goedels-second-theorem;} } @article{ avron_a-konikowska:2009a, author = {Arnon Avron and B. Konikowska}, title = {Proof Systems for Reasoning about Computation Errors}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2009}, volume = {91}, number = {2}, pages = {273--293}, topic = {program-verification;multivalued-logic;} } @inproceedings{ avron_a-lev:2001a, author = {Arnon Avron and Iddo Lev}, title = {A Formula-Preferential Base for Paraconsistent and Plausible Reasoning Systems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Inconsistency in Data and Knowledge workshop (KRR-4) at the 17th International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI'01)}, year = {2001}, editor = {Leo Bertossi and Jan Chomicki }, missinginfo = {pages}, url = {https://www.cs.tau.ac.il/~aa/articles/plausible-11p.pdf}, topic = {paraconsistency;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ avron_a-zamansky:2011a, author = {Arnon Avron and Anna Zamansky}, title = {Non-Deterministic Semantics for Logical Systems}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {XVI}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2011}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {227--304}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja16}, topic = {nondeterministic-semantics;} } @article{ avron_a-zohar_y:2019a, author = {Arnon Avron and Yoni Zohar}, title = {Rexpansions of Nondeterministic Matrices and Their Applications in Nonclassical Logics}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {173--200}, topic = {nondeterministic-matrices;multivalued-logic;paraconsistency;} } @book{ awodey:2006a, author = {Steve Awodey}, title = {Category Theory}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-19-856861-2}, xref = {Review: rosicky:2007a}, topic = {category-theory;} } @article{ awodey:2008a, author = {Steve Awodey}, title = {A Brief Introduction to Algebraic Set Atheory}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {281--298}, topic = {algebraic-set-theory;} } @article{ awodey-kishida:2008a, author = {Steve Awodey and Koshei Kishida}, title = {Topology and Modality: The Topological Interpretation of First-Order Modal Logic}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {143--166}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;topology;first-order-modal-logic;} } @unpublished{ ax:1971a, author = {James Ax}, title = {Group-Theoretic Treatment of the Axioms of Quantum Mechanics}, year = {1971}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Mathematics, State University of New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, topic = {foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;formalizations-of-physics;} } @book{ axelrod_r:1984a, author = {Robert Axelrod}, title = {The Evolution of Cooperation}, publisher = {Basic Books}, year = {1984}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci shelves.}, topic = {cooperation;evolutionary-psychology;} } @book{ axelrod_r:1998a, author = {Robert Axelrod}, title = {The Complexity of Cooperation: Agent-Based Models of Competition and Collaboration}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, ISBN = {9780691015675}, topic = {cooperation;evolutionary-psychology;} } @inproceedings{ axelrod_s:2000a, author = {Scott Axelrod}, title = {Natural Language Generation in the {IBM} Flight Reservation System}, booktitle = {Conversational Systems}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Candace Sidner and James Allen and Phil Cohen and Justine Cassell and Laila Dybkjaer and X.D. Huang and Masato Ishizaki and Candace Kamm and Lin-Shan Lee and Susann Luperfoy and Patti Price and Owen Rambow and Norbert Reithinger and Alex Rudnicky and Stephanie Seneff and Dave Stallard and David R. Traum and Marilyn Walker and Wayne Ward}, pages = {21--26}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;nl-generation;nl-interfaces;} } @article{ axon:2015a, author = {Logan M. Axon}, title = {Martin-{L}\"of randomness in Spaces of Closed Sets}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {80}, number = {2}, pages = {359--383}, topic = {randomness;} } @article{ aydede_m:1997a, author = {Murat Aydede}, title = {Language of Thought: The Connectionist Contribution}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {57--101}, abstract = {Fodor and Pylyshyn's critique of connectionism has posed a challenge to connectionists: Adequately explain such nomological regularities as systematicity and productivity without postulating a "language of thought" (LOT). Some connectionists like Smolensky took the challenge very seriously, and attempted to meet it by developing models that were supposed to be non-classical. At the core of these attempts lies the claim that connectionist models can provide a representational system with a combinatorial syntax and processes sensitive to syntactic structure. They are not implementation models because, it is claimed, the way they obtain syntax and structure sensitivity is not "concatenative," hence "radically different" from the way classicists handle them. $\ldots$ }, topic = {connectionism;mental-language;} } @incollection{ aydede_m:2004a, author = {Murat Aydede}, title = {The Language of Thought Hypothesis}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {Stanford University}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = { http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2004/entries/language-thought/}, year = {Fall 2004}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {mental-language;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @book{ aydede_m:2006a, editor = {Muryat Aydede}, title = {Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780-262-51188-9}, contentsnote = { 1. Murat Aydede, "Introduction: A Critical and Quasi-Historical Essay on Theories of Pain", pp. 1--58 2. Fred Dretske, "The Epistemology of Pain", pp. 59--73 3. Christopher S. Hill, "Ow! The Paradox of Pain", pp. 75--98 4. Michael Tye, "Another Look at Representationalism about Pain", pp. 99--120 5. Murat Aydede, "The Main Difficulty with Pain", pp. 123--142 6. Ned Block, "Bodily Sensations as an Obstacle for Representationism", pp. 137--142 7. Barry Maund, "Michael Tye on Pain and Representational Content", pp. 143--149 8. Paul Noordhof, "In a State of Pain", pp. 151--162 9. Michael Tye, "In Defense of Representationalism: Reply to Commentaries", pp. 163--175 10. Austen Clark, "Painfulness Is Not a Quale", pp. 177--197 11. Moreland Perkins, "An Indirectly Realistic, Representational Account of Pain(ed) Perception", pp. 199--218 12. Don Gustafson, "Categorizing Pain", pp. 219--241 13. Donald D. Price and Murat Aydede, "The Experimental Use of Introspection in the Scientific Study of Pain and Its Integration with Third-Person Methodologies: The Experiential-Phenomenological Approach", pp. 243--273 14. Shaun Gallagher and Morten Overgaard, "Introspections without Introspeculations", pp. 277--289 15. Robert D'Amico, "Sensations and Methodology", pp. 291--305 16. Robert C. Coghill, "Pain: Making the Private Experience Public", pp. 299-314 17. Eddy Nahmias, "The Problem of Pain", pp. 307--314 18. Murat Aydede and Donald D. Price, "Introspection and Unrevisability: Reply to Commentaries", pp. 315--324 19. Thomas W. Polger and Kenneth J. Sufka, "Closing the Gap on Pain: Mechanism, Theory, and Fit", pp. 325--350 20. Colin Allen, Perry N. Fuchs, Adam Shriver, and Hilary D. Wilson, "Deciphering Animal Pain", pp. 351--366 21. Jaak Panksepp, "On the Neuro-Evolutionary Nature of Social Pain, Support, and Empathy", pp. 367--387 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci shelves.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no18 ???}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ aydede_m:2006b, author = {Murat Aydede}, title = {Introduction: A Critical and Quasi-Historical Essay on Theories of Pain}, booktitle = {Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Muryat Aydede}, pages = {1--58}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ aydede_m:2006c, author = {Murat Aydede}, title = {The Main Difficulty with Pain}, booktitle = {Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Muryat Aydede}, pages = {123--142}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @article{ aydede_m-guzeldere_g:2005a, author = {Murat Aydede and G\"uven G\"uzeldere}, title = {Cognitive Architecture, Concepts, and Introspection: An Information-Theoretic Solution to the Problem of Phenomenal Consciousness}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2005}, volume = {39}, number = {2}, pages = {197--255}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ aydede_m-price_dd:2006a, author = {Murat Aydede and Donald D. Price}, title = {Introspection and Unrevisability: Reply to Commentaries}, booktitle = {Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Muryat Aydede}, pages = {315--324}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-cogsci;introspection;} } @book{ ayer_aj:1936a1, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {Language, Truth and Logic}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, year = {1936}, address = {London}, topic = {logical-positivism;} } @book{ ayer_aj:1936a2, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, edition = {Revised}, title = {Language, Truth and Logic}, publisher = {Dover Books}, year = {1946}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Single Authored shelves.}, topic = {logical-positivism;} } @book{ ayer_aj:1940a, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {The Foundations of Empirical Knowledge}, publisher = {The Macmillan Company}, year = {1940}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {epistemology;logical-positivism;} } @book{ ayer_aj:1952a, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {Language, Truth and Logic}, publisher = {Dover Publications}, year = {1952}, address = {New York}, note = {Originally published in 1936}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Summer, 2015}, topic = {logical-positivism;} } @book{ ayer_aj:1954a, author = {A.J. Ayer}, title = {Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {St. Martin's Press}, year = {1954}, address = {New York}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @incollection{ ayer_aj:1954b, author = {A.J. Ayer}, title = {Freedom and Necessity}, booktitle = {Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {St. Martin's Press}, year = {1954}, address = {New York}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {freedom;} } @article{ ayer_aj:1954c, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {Can There be a Private Language?}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian {S}ociety, Supplementary Volume}, year = {1954}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {63--76}, topic = {Wittgenstein;philosophy-of-language;private-language;} } @book{ ayer_aj:1958a, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {The Problem of Knowledge}, publisher = {The Macmillan Company}, year = {1958}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP single authored shelves.}, topic = {epistemology;} } @book{ ayer_aj:1959a, editor = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {Logical Positivism}, publisher = {The Free Press}, year = {1959}, address = {New York}, topic = {logical-positivism;} } @article{ ayer_aj:1962a, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {Names and Descriptions}, journal = {Loqique et Analyse, New Series}, year = {1962}, volume = {5}, number = {20}, pages = {199--202}, topic = {reference;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ ayer_aj:1963a1, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {Names and Descriptions}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1963}, volume = {5}, number = {20}, pages = {199--202}, xref = {Review: thomson_jf:1964a}, xref = {Republication: ayer_aj:1963a2}, topic = {definite-descriptions;Russell;} } @incollection{ ayer_aj:1963a2, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {Names and Descriptions}, booktitle = {The Concept of a Person and Other Essays}, publisher = {Macmillan}, year = {1963}, editor = {Alfred J. Ayer}, pages = {121--161}, address = {London}, xref = {Republication of: ayer_aj:1963a1}, topic = {definite-descriptions;Russell;} } @book{ ayer_aj:1963a, author = {Alfred Jules Ayer}, title = {The Concept of a Person, and Other Essays}, publisher = {St. Martin's Press}, year = {1963}, address = {London}, ISBN = {3540671900 (softcover)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library B 1618 .A983 C7 Undergraduate B 1618 .A983 C7}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;personal-identity; ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @incollection{ ayer_aj:1969a, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {Has {A}ustin Refuted Sense-Data?}, booktitle = {Symposium on {J}.{L}. {A}ustin}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1969}, editor = {Kuang T. Fann}, pages = {284--308}, address = {London}, topic = {JL-Austin;phenomenalism;} } @incollection{ ayer_aj:1969b, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {Rejoinder to Professor {F}orguson}, booktitle = {Symposium on J.L. Austin}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1969}, editor = {Kuang T. Fann}, pages = {342--348}, address = {London}, topic = {JL-Austin;phenomenalism;} } @book{ ayer_aj:1972a, author = {Alfred Jules Ayer}, title = {Bertrand Russell}, publisher = {Viking Press}, year = {1972}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0670158992}, topic = {Russell;} } @incollection{ ayer_aj:1976a, author = {Alfred J. Ayer}, title = {Identity and Reference}, booktitle = {Language in Focus}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Asa Kasher}, pages = {3--24}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {identity;} } @article{ ayers:1965a, author = {Michael R. Ayers}, title = {Counterfactuals and Subjunctive Conditionals}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1965}, volume = {74}, number = {295}, pages = {347--364}, topic = {conditionals;subjunctive-mood;} } @article{ ayers:1966a, author = {M.R. Ayers}, title = {Austin on `Could' and `Could Have'\, }, journal = {Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1966}, volume = {16}, pages = {113--120}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {JL-Austin;ability;conditionals;counterfactual-past;} } @article{ ayhan_s:2021a, author = {Sara Ayhan}, title = {What is the Meaning of Proofs?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {3}, pages = {571--591}, abstract = {... what if we go a step further and ask about the meaning of a proof as a whole? In this paper we address this question and lay out a framework to distinguish sense and denotation of proofs. ... In our framework it will be possible to identify denotation as well as sense of proofs not only within one proof system but also between different kinds of proof systems. Thus, we give an account to distinguish a mere syntactic divergence from a divergence in meaning and a divergence in meaning from a divergence of proof objects analogous to Frege's distinction for singular terms and sentences. }, topic = {proofs;sense-reference;} } @inproceedings{ azarewicz-etal:1986a, author = {Jerone Azarewicz and Glenn Fala and Christof Heithecker}, title = {Plan Recognition for Airbourne Tactical Decision Making}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1986}, editor = {Tom Kehler and Stan Rosenschein}, pages = {805--811}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {plan-recognition;} } @article{ aziz_h-etal:2013a, author = {Haris Aziz and Felix Brandt and Hans Georg Seedig}, title = {Computing Desirable Partitions in Additively Separable Hedonic Games}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {195}, pages = {316--334}, topic = {computational-game-theory;} } @inproceedings{ aziz_h-etal:2016a, author = {Haris Aziz and Paul Harrenstein and Jerome Lang and Michael Wooldridge}, title = {Boolean Hedonic Games}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {166--175}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... Hedonic games are cooperative games in which players desire to form coalitions, but only care about the makeup of the coalitions of which they are members; they are indifferent about the makeup of other coalitions. The assumption of dichotomous preferences means that, additionally, each player's preference relation partitions the set of coalitions of which that player is a member into just two equivalence classes: satisfactory and unsatisfactory. ... We develop a succinct representation for such games, in which each player's preference relation is represented by a propositional formula. We show how solution concepts for hedonic games with dichotomous preferences are characterised by propositional formulas. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {coalitional-games;reasoning-about-preferences;} } @inproceedings{ azzam:1996a, author = {Saliha Azzam}, title = {Resolving Anaphors in Embedded Sentences}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {263--269}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {anaphora;parsing-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ azzam-etal:1998a, author = {Saliha Azzam and Kevin Humphreys and Robert Gaizauskas}, title = {Evaluating a Focus-Based Approach to Anaphora Resolution}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {74--78}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {anaphora-resolution;} } @article{ azzouni_j:2001a, author = {Jody Azzouni}, title = {Truth Via Anaphorically Unrestricted Quantifiers}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {30}, number = {4}, pages = {329--354}, topic = {truth;propositional-quantifiers;} } @book{ azzouni_j:2006a, author = {Jody Azzouni}, title = {Deflating Existential Consequence: A Case for Nominalism}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {9780195159882}, abstract = {What in our theoretical pronouncements commits us to objects? The Quinean standard for ontological commitment involves (nearly enough) commitments when we utter "there is" or "there are" statements without hope of eliminating these by paraphrase. ... Azzouni offers a way around the Quinean straitjacket: ontological commitment turns on how theories are (nearly enough) nailed to the world. The specifics of how theories are applied indicates which among the posits of a theory are mere mathematical garb and which are genuine connections to items out there. ... Along the way, old philosophical issues about absolute space and time versus relative space and time, the status of mathematical posits, such as spatial and temporal points, and so on, are illuminated.}, topic = {philosophiucal-ontology;} } @incollection{ azzouni_j:2008a, author = {Jody Azzouni}, title = {Alternative Logics and the Role of Truth in the Interpretation of Languages}, booktitle = {New Essays on {T}arski and Philosophy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Douglas Patterson}, pages = {390--429}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Tarski;truth;philosophy-of-logic;} } @book{ azzouni_j:2012a, author = {Jody Azzouni}, title = {Talking About Nothing: Numbers, Hallucinations and Fictions}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199738946}, abstract = {/dots/ This book reconfigures metaphysics and semantics in a radical way to allow the accommodation of our ordinary ways of speaking of what does not exist while retaining the absolutely crucial assumption that such objects exist in no way at all, have no properties, and so are not the truth-makers for the truths and falsities that are about them.}, topic = {(non)existence;} } @book{ azzouni_j:2013a, author = {Jody Azzouni}, title = {Semantic Perception: How the Illusion of a Common Language Arises and Persists}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2013}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-3-319-49061-8}, abstract = {Humans involuntarily experience certain physical items, products of human actions, and human actions themselves, as having meaning-properties: for example, as possessing meaning, as referring, or as having truth values.. So too with language, written sentences: We experience the meaning-properties -- the meanings -- of language artifacts as independent of the intentions of their makers in exactly the same way that we experience the shape of an object as a property of it that's independent of the color it has.. This book explores this experience of language in great depth, and shows how the resulting phenomenology can be brought to bear as evidence for and against competing theories of language -- for example, the very popular Gricean approaches to language.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @book{ azzouni_j:2015a, author = {Jody Azzouni}, title = {Semantic Perception: How the Illusion of a Common Language Arises and Persists}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-872219-9}, abstract = {Jody Azzouni argues that we involuntarily experience certain physical items, certain products of human actions, and certain human actions themselves as having meaning-properties. ... Azzouni does not suggest that we don't recognize the expectations or intentions of speakers (including ourselves); we do recognize that the person pointing in a certain direction intends for us to understand her gesture's significance. Nevertheless, Azzouni asserts that we experience that gesture as having significance independent of her intentions. ... We experience the meanings of language artifacts as independent of their makers' intentions in the same way that we experience an object's shape as a property independent of the object's color. There is a distinctive phenomenology to the experience of understanding language, and Semantic Perception shows how this phenomenology can be brought to bear as evidence for and against competing theories of language.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;phenomenology;} } @book{ azzouni_j:2017a, author = {Jody Azzouni}, title = {Ontology without Borders}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {978-0190622558}, ISBN-10 = {0190622555}, xref = {Review: gan_n:2018a}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;metaphysics;} } @book{ azzouni_j:2017b, author = {Jody Azzouni}, title = {The Rule-Following Paradox and Its Implications for Metaphysics}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2017}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-3-319-49060-1}, xref = {Review: colomina_jj:2019a}, abstract = {Azzouni summarizes and develops Kripke's original version of Wittgenstein's rule-following paradox to make salient the linchpin assumptions of the paradox.. No straight solution (a solution that denies an assumption of the paradox) can be made to work.. an overlooked sceptical solution is still available ... Assouni describes a series of disposition-meaning' private languages that he shows can be successfully used by a population of speakers to communicate with one another despite their ideolectical character. ...}, topic = {rule-following;private-language;} } @inproceedings{ baader-f:2014a, author = {Franz Baader}, title = {Ontology-Based Monitoring of Dynamic Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {678--681}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... In this paper, we will review some of our recent work that can be seen as instances of this general framework of ontology-based monitoring of dynamic systems. We will also mention possible extensions towards probabilistic reasoning and the integration of mathematical modeling of dynamical systems. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {kr;dynamic-systems;} } @incollection{ baader_f:1999a, author = {Franz Baader}, title = {Logic-Based Knowledge Representation}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence Today}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Michael Wooldridge and Manuela Veloso}, pages = {13--41}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {knowledge-representation;AI-and-logic;} } @incollection{ baader_f:2003a, author = {Franz Baader}, title = {Description Logic Terminology}, booktitle = {The Description Logic Handbook: Theory, Implementation and Applications}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Franz Baader and Diego Calvanese and Deborah L. McGuinness and Daniele Nardi and Peter Patel-Schneider}, pages = {485--495}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {description-logics;} } @article{ baader_f-etal:1993a, author = {Franz Baader and Hans-J\"urgen B\"urckert and Bernhard Nebel and Werner Nutt and Gert Smolka}, title = {On the Expressivity of Feature Logics with Negation, Functional Uncertainty, and Sort Equations}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1993}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {1--18}, contentnote = {Functionality is a feature logic construct proposed by Kaplan to get long distance dependencies. They prove that satisfiability is undecidable.}, topic = {feature-structure-logic;kr-complexity-analysis;} } @article{ baader_f-etal:1996a, author = {Franz Baader and Martin Buchheit and Bernhard Hollunder}, title = {Cardinality Restrictions on Concepts}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {88}, number = {1--2}, pages = {195--213}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The concept description formalisms of existing description logics systems allow the user to express local cardinality restrictions on the fillers of a particular role. It is not possible, however, to introduce global restrictions on the number of instances of a given concept. This article argues that such cardinality restrictions on concepts are of importance in applications such as configuration of technical systems, an application domain of description logics systems that is currently gaining in interest. It shows that including such restrictions in the description language leaves the important inference problems such as instance testing decidable. The algorithm combines and simplifies the ideas developed for the treatment of qualified number restrictions and of general terminological axioms. }, topic = {kr;description-logics;cardinality-restrictions;} } @incollection{ baader_f-etal:2000a, author = {Franz Baader and Ralf K\"usters and Ralf Molitor}, title = {Rewriting Concepts Using Terminologies}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {297--308}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {... given a terminology T (i.e., a set of concept definitions) and a concept description C that does not contain concept names defined in T, can this description be rewritten into a 'related better' description E by using (some of) the names defined in T? We investigate the complexity of the decision problem induced by the minimal rewriting problem for the languages FL0, ALN, ALE, and ALC, and then introduce an algorithm for computing (minimal) rewritings for the languages ALE and ALN. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {description-logics;concept-definitions;} } @book{ baader_f-etal:2003a, editor = {Franz Baader and Diego Calvanese and Deborah L. McGuinness and Daniele Nardi and Peter Patel-Schneider}, title = {The Description Logic Handbook: Theory, Implementation and Applications}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521 78176 0 (hbk)}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Daniele Nardi and Ronald J. Brachman, "An Introduction to Description Logics", pp. 1--40 2. Franz Baader and Werner Nutt, "Basic Description Logics", pp. 43--95 3. Francesco M. Domini, "Complexity of Reasoning", pp. 96--136 4. Ulrike Sattler and Diego Calvanese and Ralf Molitor, "Relationships with Other Formalisms", pp. 137--177 5. Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe de Giacomo, "Expressive Description Logics", pp. 178--218 6. Franz Baader and Ralf K\"usters and Frank Wolter, "Extensions to Description Logics", pp. 219--261 7. Deborah L. McGuinness and Peter F. Patel-Schneider, "From Description Logic Provers to Knowledge Representation Systems", pp. 265--281 8. Ralf M\oller and V\"olker Haarslev, "Description Logic Systems", pp. 282--305 9. Ian Horrocks, "Implementation and Optimization Techniques", pp. 306--346 10. Alex Borgida and Ronald J. Brachman, "Conceptual Modeling with Description Logics", pp. 349--372 11. Christopher A. Welty, "Software Engineering", pp. 373--385 12. Deborah L. McGuinness, "Configuration", pp. 388--405 13. Alan Rector, "Medical Informatics", pp. 406--426 14. Ian Horrocks and Deborah L. McGuinness and Christopher A. Welty, "Digital Libraries and Information Systems", pp. 427--449 15. Enrico Franconi, "Natural Language Processing", pp. 450--461 16. Alex Borgida and Maurizio Lenzerini and Riccardo Rosati, "Description Logics for Databases", pp. 462--484 17. Franz Baader, "Description Logic Terminology", pp. 485--495 }, xref = {Review: bremer:2005b.}, topic = {description-logics;} } @incollection{ baader_f-etal:2008a, author = {Franz Baader and Silvio Ghilardi and Carsten Lutz}, title = {{LTL} over Description Logic Axioms}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {684--694}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {linear-temporal-logic;description-logics;} } @incollection{ baader_f-etal:2008b, author = {Franz Baader and Ian Horrocks and Ulrike Sattler}, title = {Description Logics}, booktitle = {Handbook of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2008}, editor = {Frank van Harmelen and Vladimir Lifschitz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {135--179}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {description-logics;} } @inproceedings{ baader_f-etal:2010a, author = {Franz Baader and Meghyn Bienvenu and Carsten Lutz and Frank Wolter}, title = {Query and Predicate Emptiness in Description Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {192--202}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... Query emptiness asks whether a given query has an empty answer over all data sets formulated in a given signature. Predicate emptiness is defined analogously ... we determine the computational complexity of query emptiness and predicate emptiness in the EL, DL-Lite, and ALC-families of description logics, investigate the connection to ontology modules, and perform a practical case study to evaluate the new reasoning services.}, topic = {dl-lite;description-logics;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ baader_f-etal:2012a, author = {Franz Baader and Stefan Borgwardt and Barbara Morawska}, title = {Extending Unification in {EL} towards General {TB}oxes}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {568--572}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Unification in Description Logics (DLs) has been proposed as an inference service that can, for example, be used to detect redundancies in ontologies. ... This paper makes a considerable step towards addressing this problem, but the GCIs our new unification algorithm can deal with still need to satisfy a certain cycle restriction. }, topic = {description-logics;unification-of-FSs;} } @article{ baader_f-etal:2015a, author = {Franz Baader and Stefan Borgwardt and Rafael Pe\~naloza}, title = {On the Decidability Status of Fuzzy {ALC} with General Concept Inclusions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {2}, pages = {117--146}, topic = {fuzzy-logic;description-logics;decidability;} } @inproceedings{ baader_f-etal:2018a, author = {Franz Baader and Francesco Kriegel and Adrian Nuradiansyah and Rafael Pe\~naloza}, title = {Making Repairs in Description Logics More Gentle}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {319--328}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {The classical approach for repairing a Description Logic ontology O in the sense of removing an unwanted consequence c is to delete a minimal number of axioms from O such that the resulting ontology O' does not have the consequence c. ... we propose a more gentle notion of repair in which axioms are not deleted, but only weakened. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {description-logics;knowledge-base-revision;} } @inproceedings{ baader_f-hollunder_b:1992a, author = {Franz Baader and Bernhard Hollunder}, title = {Embedding Defaults into Terminological Knowledge Representation Formalisms}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {306--317}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;description-logics;inheritance-theory;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ baader_f-hollunder_b:1993a, author = {Franz Baader and Bernhard Hollunder}, title = {How to Prefer More Specific Defaults in Terminological Default Logic}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {669--675}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. "Baader"}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-prioritization;description-logics;kr-course;} } @article{ baader_f-hollunder_b:1995a, author = {Franz Baader and Bernhard Hollunder}, title = {Embedding Defaults into Terminological Knowledge Representation Systems}, journal = {Journal of Automated Reasoning}, year = {1995}, volume = {14}, pages = {149--180}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {kr;description-logics;inheritance-theory;kr-course;} } @article{ baader_f-hollunder_b:1995b, author = {Franz Baader and Bernhard Hollunder}, title = {Priorities on Defaults with Prerequisites, and their Application in Treating Specificity in Terminological Default Logic}, journal = {Journal of Automated Reasoning}, year = {1995}, volume = {15}, pages = {41--68}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-prioritization;description-logics;kr-course;} } @incollection{ baader_f-kriegel_f:2022a, author = {Franz Baader and Francesco Kriegel}, title = {Pushing Optimal {AB}ox Repair from {EL} Towards More Expressive {H}orn-{DL}s}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {22--32}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Ontologies based on Description Logic (DL) represent general background knowledge in a terminology (TBox) and the actual data in an ABox. DL systems can then be used to compute consequences (such as answers to certain queries) from an ontology consisting of a TBox and an ABox. ... In a series of papers, we have developed an approach for computing optimal repairs ... Here, we extend the expressivity of the underlying DL considerably, by adding nominals, inverse roles, regular role inclusions and the bottom concept to EL, which yields a fragment of the well-known DL Horn-SROIQ. }, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {description-logics;repairing-KR-systems;} } @incollection{ baader_f-kusters_r:2000a, author = {Franz Baader and Ralf K\"usters}, title = {Matching Concept Descriptions with Existential Restrictions}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {261--272}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = { ... this paper investigates the matching problem in Description Logics with existential restrictions. It turns out that existential restrictions make matching more complex in two respects. First, whereas matching in sublanguages of Classic is polynomial, deciding the existence of matchers is an NP-complete problem in the presence of existential restrictions. Second, whereas in sublanguages of Classic solvable matching problems have a unique least matcher, this is not the case for languages with existential restrictions. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {description-logics;existential-rules;} } @inproceedings{ baader_f-laux:1995a, author = {Franz Baader and Armin Laux}, title = {Terminological Logics with Modal Operators}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {808--814}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. "Baader".}, topic = {kr;description-logics;extensions-of-kl1;kr-course;} } @incollection{ baader_f-lutz_c:2006a, author = {Franz Baader and Carsten Lutz}, title = {Description Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Modal Logic}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan van Benthem and Frank Wolter}, pages = {757--819}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Inc.}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers. "Baader"}, topic = {modal-logic;description-logics;} } @inproceedings{ baader_f-nutt:1992a, author = {Franz Baader and Werner Nutt}, title = {Are Complete and Expressive Terminological Systems Feasible?}, booktitle = {Working Notes, {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Issues in Description Logics: Users Meet Developers}, year = {1992}, editor = {Robert MacGregor}, pages = {1--5}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. "Baader"}, contentnote = {Discusses the KR system KRIS.}, topic = {kr;krcourse;description-logics;} } @incollection{ baader_f-nutt:2003a, author = {Franz Baader and Werner Nutt}, title = {Basic Description Logics}, booktitle = {The Description Logic Handbook: Theory, Implementation and Applications}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Franz Baader and Diego Calvanese and Deborah L. McGuinness and Daniele Nardi and Peter Patel-Schneider}, pages = {43--95}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {description-logics;kr-course;} } @incollection{ baader_f-sattler:1996a, author = {Franz Baader and Ulrike Sattler}, title = {Number Restrictions on Complex Roles in Description Logics: A Preliminary Report}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {328--339}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;description-logics;extensions-of-kl1;kr-course;} } @article{ baader_f-sattler:2001a, author = {Franz Baader and Ulrike Sattler}, title = {Algorithms for Description Logics}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {69}, number = {1}, pages = {5--40}, topic = {proof-theory;semantic-tableaux;modal-logic;description-logics; classifier-algorithms;} } @book{ baader_f-schultz_ku:1996a, editor = {Franz Baader and Klaus U. Schultz}, title = {Frontiers of Combining Systems}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1996}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {072342712}, rtnote = {This is the first of a series of conferences.}, topic = {combining-logics;} } @incollection{ baader_f-schultz_ku:1998a, author = {Franz Baader and Klaus U. Schulz}, title = {Unification Theory}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {I}, Foundations: Calculi and Methods}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;unification-of-FSs;} } @inproceedings{ baader_f-schulz_ku:1992a, author = {Franz Baader and Klaus U. Schulz}, title = {Unification in the Union of Disjoint Equational Theories: Combining Decision Procedures}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Automated Deduction}, editor = {Deepak Kapur}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, address = {Berlin}, series = {Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence}, volume = 607, pages = {50--65}, topics = {unification-of-FSs;} } @book{ baader_f-schulz_ku:1998b, editor = {Franz Baader and Klaus Ulrich Schulz}, title = {Frontiers of Combining Systems 2}, publisher = {Research Studies Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0792342712}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Qa 9 .A1 F761}, topic = {combining-logics;combining-systems;} } @inproceedings{ baader_f-usters:2000a, author = {Franz Baader and Ralf K\"usters}, title = {Matching in Description Logics with Existential Restrictions}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {261--272}, topic = {taxonomic-logic;pattern-matching;} } @incollection{ baars_bj:1983a, author = {Bernard J. Baars}, title = {Conscious Contents Provide the Nervous System with Coherent, Global Information}, booktitle = {Consciousness and Self-Regulation, Volume 3}, publisher = {Plenum Press}, year = {1983}, editor = {Richard J. Davidson and Gary E. Schwartz and D. H. Shapiro}, pages = {41--79}, address = {New York}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuorscience;} } @book{ baars_bj:1988a, author = {Bernard J. Baars}, title = {A Cognitive Theory of Consciousness}, Publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1988}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN-13 = {978-0521427432}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;cognitive-psychology;consciousness;} } @incollection{ baars_bj:1993a, author = {Bernard J. Baars}, title = {How Does a Serial, Integrated and Very Limited Stream of Consciousness Emerge from a Nervous System that is Mostly Unconscious, Distributed, Parallel and of Enormous Capacity?}, booktitle = {Experimental and Theoretical Studies of Consciousness}, publisher = {Wiley}, year = {1993}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {282--303}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17\baars4.pdf}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ baars_bj:1994a, author = {Bernard J. Baars}, title = {A Thoroughly Empirical Approach To Consciousness}, journal = {Psyche}, year = {1994}, volume = {1}, number = {6}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17\baars(1994).pdf}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Baars".}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @book{ baars_bj:1997a, author = {Bernard J. Baars}, title = {In the Theatre of Consciousness: the Workspace of the Mind}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;cognitive-psychology;consciousness;} } @article{ baars_bj:1998a, author = {Bernard J. Baars}, title = {Metaphors of Consciousness and Attention in the Brain}, journal = {Trends in Neurosciences}, year = {1998}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {59--62}, abstract = {Scientific metaphors have long provided heuristic tools for approaching novel problems. Today, the neurobiology of consciousness and attention is a central concern, presenting formidable conceptual and empirical challenges. Many current ideas f it the broad theme of a theater metaphor; this idea can be worked out in detail, resulting in relevant, testable hypotheses.}, topic = {consciousness;attention;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ baars_bj:2002a, author = {Bernard J. Baars}, title = {The Conscious Access Hypothesis: Origins and Recent Evidence}, journal = {Trends in Cognitive Science}, year = {2002}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {47--52}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17\Baars(2002).pdf}, rtnote = {Rnotes on File. "Baars"}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ baars_bj-franklin_s:2003a, author = {Bernard J. Baars and Stan Franklin}, title = {How Conscious Experience and Working Memory Interact}, journal = {Trends in Cognitive Science}, year = {2003}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {166--172}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17\baars2.pdf}, topic = {consciousness;working-memory;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ baars_bj-mcgovern_k:1993a, author = {Bernard J. Baars and Katharine McGovern}, title = {Does Philosophy Help or Hinder Scientific Work on Consciousness?}, journal = {Consciousness and Cognition}, year = {1993}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {18--27}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17\baars5.pdf}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ baarslag-etal:2013a, author = {Tim Baarslag and Katsuhide Fujita and Enrico H. Gerding and Koen Hindriks and Takayuki Ito and Nicholas R. Jennings and Catholijn Jonker and Sarit Kraus and Raz Lin and Valentin Robu and Colin R. Williams}, title = {Evaluating Practical Negotiating Agents: Results and Analysis of the 2011 International Competition}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {198}, pages = {73--103}, topic = {automated-negotiation;AI-system-evaluation;} } @book{ baayen:2001a, author = {R. Harald Baayen}, title = {Word Frequency Distributions}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2001}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-7923-7017-1}, xref = {Review: sampson_g:2002a}, topic = {corpus-statistics;word-frequencies;} } @article{ baayen-sproat:1996a, author = {Harald Baayen and Richard Sproat}, title = {Estimating Lexical Priors for Low-Frequency Morphologically Ambiguous Forms}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {155--166}, topic = {corpus-statistics;} } @incollection{ baaz-etal:1998a, author = {M. Baaz et al.}, title = {Extension Methods in Automated Deduction}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {II}, Systems and Implementation Techniques}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, other authors, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @article{ baaz-ieenhof:2008a, author = {Mathias Baaz and Rosalie Ieenhof}, title = {On {S}kolemization in Constructive Theories}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {73}, number = {3}, pages = {969--998}, topic = {skolemization;intuitionistic-logic;} } @book{ baber-noyes:1993a, editor = {Christopher Baber and Janet M. Noyes}, title = {Interactive Speech Technology: Human Factors Issues in the Application of Speech Input}, publisher = {Taylor \& Francis}, year = {1993}, address = {Bristol, Pennsylvania}, ISBN = {074840127X (paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 I5931 1993.}, topic = {speech-processing;spoken-dialogue-systems;HCI;} } @article{ babic_b:2019a, author = {Boris Babic}, title = {A Theory of Epistemic Risk}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2019}, volume = {86}, number = {3}, pages = {522--550}, topic = {risk;Bayesian-reasoning;} } @article{ babka-etal:2013a, author = {Martin Babka and Tom\^a\v{s} Balyo and Ond\v{r}ej \v{C}epek and \v{S}tefan Gursk\'y and Petr Ku\v{c}era and V\'aclav Vl\v{c}ek}, title = {Complexity Issues Related to Propagation Completeness}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {203}, pages = {19--34}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;model-checking;} } @article{ bacchiagaluppi-ishmael:2015a, author = {Guido Bacchiagaluppi and Jenann Ishmael}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Emergent Multiverse: Quantum Theory According to the {E}verett Interpretation}, by {D}avid {W}allace}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2015}, volume = {82}, number = {1}, pages = {129--148}, xref = {Review of: wallace_d:2012a}, topic = {quantum-branching;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f:1989a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus}, title = {A Modest, but Semantically Well Founded, Inheritance Reasoner}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, pages = {1104--1109}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, CA}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @book{ bacchus_f:1990a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus}, title = {Representing and Reasoning with Probabilistic Knowledge}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Reviews: gryzmalabusse:1999a, kyburg-nelson_da:1994a.}, isbn = {0-262-02317-2}, topic = {probabilistic-reasoning;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @techreport{ bacchus_f:1990b, author = {Fahiem Bacchus}, title = {Default Reasoning Using Statistical Knowledge}, institution = {Computer Science Department, University of Waterloo}, number = {CS-90-39}, year = {1990}, address = {Waterloo, Ontario}, xref = {Later summary publication: bacchus_f:1991a}, topic = {statistical-inference;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f:1991a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus}, title = {Default Reasoning from Statistics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {Thomas Dean and Kathleen McKeown}, pages = {392--398}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {statistical-inference;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f:1999a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus}, title = {{TL}Plan: Planning Using Declarative Search Control (Abstract)}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {declarative-search-control;planning-algorithms;} } @article{ bacchus_f:2001a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus}, title = {{AIPS}'00 Planning Competition}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2001}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {47--56}, topic = {planning;planning-algorithms;planning-systems;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f:2002a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus}, title = {Enhancing {D}avis {P}utnam with Enriched Binary Clause Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {613--619}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {model-checking;} } @incollection{ bacchus_f-etal:1989a1, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Josh Tennenberg and Johannes Koomen}, title = {A Non-Reified Temporal Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {2--10}, address = {San Mateo, California}, contentnote = {Proposes a temporal logic in sorted FOL.}, xref = {Journal publication: bacchus_f-etal:1989a2.}, topic = {temporal-representation;} } @article{ bacchus_f-etal:1989a2, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Josh Tennenberg and Johannes Koomen}, title = {A Non-Reified Temporal Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {52}, number = {1}, pages = {87--108}, contentnote = {Proposes a temporal logic in sorted FOL.}, xref = {Conference publication: bacchus_f-etal:1989a.}, topic = {temporal-representation;kr;krcourse;} } @article{ bacchus_f-etal:1990a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Henry E. {Kyburg, Jr.} and Mariam Thalos}, title = {Against Conditionalization}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1990}, volume = {84}, number = {3}, pages = {475--506}, topic = {probability-kinematics;Dutch-book-argument;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f-etal:1992a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Adam Grove and Joseph Halpern and Daphne Kohler}, title = {From Statistics to Beliefs}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, editor = {Paul S. Rosenbloom and Peter Szolovits}, pages = {602--608}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Bacchus5.pdf}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;indifference;world-entropy;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f-etal:1993a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Adam Grove and Daphne Koller}, title = {Statistical Foundations for Default Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, missinginfo = {pagers}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Bacchus3.pdf }, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;probability-logics;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f-etal:1994a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Adam Grove and Joseph Halpern and Daphne Koller}, title = {Forming Beliefs about a Changing World}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, pages = {222--229}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files, "Bacchus".}, contentnote = {Title is misleading. A generalization of situation calculus to accommodate uncertainty. Uses random worlds for the statistics. Includes an indeterministic account of action.}, topic = {nondeterministic-action; foundations-of-planning;frame-problem;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f-etal:1994b, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Adam Grove and Joseph Halpern and Daphne Koller}, title = {Generating New Beliefs from Old}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, pages = {37--45}, editor = {Paul S. Rosenbloom and Peter Szolovits}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Bacchus2.pdf}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;indifference;world-entropy;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f-etal:1995a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Joseph Y. Halpern and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Reasoning about Noisy Sensors in the Situation Calculus}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {1933--1940}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files, "Bacchus".}, topic = {action-formalisms;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ bacchus_f-etal:1996a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Adam Grove and Joseph Y. Halpern and Daphne Koller}, title = {From Statistical Knowledge Bases to Degrees of Belief}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {87}, number = {1--2}, pages = {75--143}, topic = {statistical-inference;qualitative-probability;} } @article{ bacchus_f-etal:1999a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Joseph Y. Halpern and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Reasoning about Noisy Sensors and Effectors in the Situation Calculus}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {111}, number = {1--2}, pages = {171--208}, topic = {planning-formalisms;sensing-actions;uncertainty-in-AI;} } @article{ bacchus_f-etal:2002a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Xinguang Chen and Peter van Beek and Toby Walsh}, title = {Binary versus Non-Binary Constraints}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {140}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--37}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f-grove:1995a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Adam Grove}, title = {Graphical Models for Preference and Utility}, booktitle = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence. Proceedings of the Eleventh Conference (1995)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, year = {1995}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {3--10}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Bacchus1.pdf}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Bacchus"}, contentnote = {Idea: use _conditional_additive_independence_ as the basis for graph representations that may help computability. }, topic = {Bayesian-networks,qualitative-utility;preference;} } @incollection{ bacchus_f-grove:1996a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Adam Grove}, title = {Utility Independence in Qualitative Decision Theory}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {542--552}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;qualitative-utility;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ bacchus_f-grove:1997a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Adam Grove}, title = {Independence in Qualitative Decision Theory}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Qualitative Preferences in Deliberation and Practical Reasoning}, year = {1997}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {1--8}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-utility;foundations-of-utility;} } @article{ bacchus_f-kabanza:2000a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Froduald Kabanza}, title = {Using Temporal Logics to Express Search Control Knowledge for Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {116}, number = {1--2}, pages = {123--191}, topic = {procedural-control;temporal-logic;} } @incollection{ bacchus_f-petrick:1998a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Ron Petrick}, title = {Modeling an Agent's Incomplete Knowledge during Planning and Execution}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {432--443}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;planning;reasoning-about-knowledge; representing-agent-knowledge;kr-course;} } @article{ bacchus_f-yang_q:1994a, author = {Fahiem Bacchus and Qiang Yang}, title = {Downward Refinement and the Efficiency of Hierarchical Problem Solving}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {71}, number = {1}, pages = {41--100}, topic = {abstraction;hierarchical-problem-solving; AI-algorithms-analysis;} } @book{ bacciagaluppi-valentini:2009a, author = {Guido Bacciagaluppi and Antony Valentini}, title = {Quantum Theory at the Crossroads: Reconsidering the 1927 {S}olvay {C}onference}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: dickson:2012a}, topic = {history-of-physics;quantum-mechanics;} } @book{ bach_e:1964a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {An Introduction to Transformational Grammars}, publisher = {Holt, Rinehart and Winston}, year = {1964}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;} } @article{ bach_e:1965a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}n Integrated Theory of Linguistic Descriptions}, by {J}errold {J}. {K}atz and {P}aul {M}. {P}ostal}, journal = {American Anthropologist}, year = {1965}, volume = {67}, number = {4}, pages = {1013--1016}, xref = {Review of: katz_jj-postal:1964a}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-semantics;transformational-grammar;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1968a1, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Nouns and Noun Phrases}, booktitle = {Universals in Linguistic Theory}, publisher = {Holt, Rinehart and Winston}, year = {1968}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Robert Harms}, address = {New York}, missinginfo = {pages}, xref = {Republication: bach_e:1968a2.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantification;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1968a2, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Nouns and Noun Phrases}, booktitle = {The Logic of Grammar}, publisher = {Dickenson Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {79--99}, address = {Encino, California}, xref = {Original Publication: bach_e:1968a1.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantification;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1971a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {On Concrete Syntax}, booktitle = {Studies out in Left Field}, publisher = {Linguistics Research, Inc.}, year = {1971}, editor = {Arnold M. Zwicky and Peter H. Salus and Robert I. Binnick Anthony L. Vanek}, pages = {151--156}, note = {Published under the pseudonym `\v{C}abnomme'}, address = {Edmonton}, topic = {humor;transformational-grammar;} } @book{ bach_e:1974a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Syntactic Theory}, publisher = {Holt, reinhart and Winston}, year = {1974}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-03-076715-6}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-syntax;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1974b, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Explanatory Adequacy}, booktitle = {Explaining Linguistic Phenomena}, publisher = {Hemisphere Publishing Corp.}, year = {1974}, editor = {David Cohen}, pages = {153--171}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;linguistics-methodology; explanation;} } @unpublished{ bach_e:1977a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Control}, year = {1977}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Massachusetts.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {syntactic-control;Montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1978a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {A Framework for Syntax and Semantics}, booktitle = {Semantics and Grammmatical Theory}, publisher = {Haven Publishing Company}, year = {1978}, editor = {Michael Brame and Richard Smaby and Emmon Bach and Raphael Stern}, pages = {17--40 }, address = {New York}, topic = {Montague-grammar;transformational-grammar;} } @article{ bach_e:1979a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Control in {M}ontague Grammar}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1979}, volume = {10}, pages = {515--531}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nl-semantics[nl-syntax;Montague-grammar;syntactic-control;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1979b, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Montague Grammar and Classical Transformational Grammar}, booktitle = {Linguistics, Philosophy, and {M}ontague Grammar}, publisher = {University of Texas Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Steven Davis and Marianne Mithun}, pages = {3--49}, address = {Austin, Texas}, topic = {Montague-grammar;} } @article{ bach_e:1980a, author = {Emmon W. Bach}, title = {In Defense of Passive}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {297--341}, topic = {transformational-grammar;passive;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1981a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {On Time, Tense, and Aspect: An Essay in {E}nglish Metaphysics}, booktitle = {Radical Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Peter Cole}, pages = {63--81}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. E Bach}, topic = {temporal-logic;nl-metaphysics;Aktionsarten;tense-aspect; nl-tense;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1984a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Some Generalizations of Categorial Grammars}, booktitle = {Varieties of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1984}, editor = {Fred Landman and Frank Veltman}, pages = {1--23}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {categorial-grammar;} } @article{ bach_e:1986a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {The Algebra of Events}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1986}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {5--16}, topic = {nl-semantics;events;tense-aspect;Aktionsarten;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1986b, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Natural Language Metaphysics}, booktitle = {Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy Of Science, {VII}: Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science, Salzburg, 1983}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1986}, editor = {Ruth Barcan Marcus and Georg J.W. Dorn and Paul Weingartner}, pages = {63--81}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {metaphysics;philosophical-ontology;nl-semantics;} } @book{ bach_e:1989a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {Informal Lectures on Formal Semantics}, publisher = {State University of New York Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Albany, NY}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves. (2 copies).}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, xref = {Review; mj:1990a}, topic = {nl-semantics;common-sense-knowledge; nl-metaphysics;} } @inproceedings{ bach_e:1994a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {The Meanings of Words}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IV}}, year = {1994}, editor = {Mandy Harvey and Lynn Santelmann}, pages = {16--34}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-semantics;universal-grammar;Wakashan-language; lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1994b, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {The Semantics of Syntactic Categories}, booktitle = {The Logical Foundations of Cognition}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {John Macnamara and Gonzalo E. Reyes}, pages = {264--281}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantic-types;} } @incollection{ bach_e:1995a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {A Note on Quantification and Blankets in {H}aisla}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {13--20}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;Wakashan-language;} } @article{ bach_e:2002a, author = {Emmon Bach}, title = {On the Surface Verb q'ay'ai\raisebox{.5ex}{\small\sf \i}qela}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {25}, number = {5--6}, pages = {531--544}, topic = {universal-grammar;lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ bach_e-chan_w:2013a, author = {Emmon Bach and Wynn Chan}, title = {Semantic Types across Languages}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 3}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {2537--2558}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantic-types;typology;language-universals;} } @incollection{ bach_e-chao_w:2012a, author = {Emmon Bach and Wynn Chao}, title = {The Metaphysics of Language(s)}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Linguistics}, publisher = {North Holland}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruth Kempson and Tim Fernando and Nicholas Asher}, pages = {175--196}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {nl-metaphysics;} } @article{ bach_e-cooper_r1:1977a, author = {Emmon Bach and Robin Cooper}, title = {The {NP}-{S} Analysis of Relative Clauses and Compositional Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {145--149}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;syntax-semantics-interface; semantic-compositionality;} } @book{ bach_e-etal:1995a, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, title = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vols. 1 and 2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, volume = {54 and 55}, series = {Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {Ref for both volumes.}, xref = {Review: vanderdoes-verkuyl_hj:1999a.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;} } @book{ bach_e-etal:1995b, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, title = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, volume = {54}, series = {Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {This ref for volume 1 only. TC: Introduction. E. Bach, A Note on Quantification and Blankets in Haisla. M. Baker, On the Absence of Certain Quantifiers in Mohawk. M. Bittner, Quantification in Eskimo: A Challenge for Compositional Semantics. M. Bittner and K. Hale, Remarks on Definiteness in Walpiri. G. Chierchia, The Variability of Impersonal Subjects. I. Comorovski, On Quantifier Strength and Partitive Noun Phrases V. Dayal, Quantification in Correlatives. N. Evans, A-Quantifiers and Scope in Malayi. L. Faltz, Towards a Typology of Natural Logic. D. Gil, Universal Quantifiers and Distributivity. M. Haspelmath, Diachronic Sources of `All' and `Every'. }, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;} } @book{ bach_e-etal:1995c, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, title = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, volume = {55}, series = {Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {This ref for volume 2 only. TC: J. Higginbotham, Mass and Count Quantifiers. H. de Hoop, On the Characterization of the Weak-Strong Distinction. P. Jacobson, On the Quantificational Force of English Free Relatives. E. Jelinek, Quantification in Straits Salish. B. Partee, Quantificational Structures and Compositionality. K. Petronio, Bare Noun Phrases Verbs and Quantification in ASL Craige Roberts, Domain Restriction in Dynamic Semantics Marcia Damaso Vieira, The Expression of Quantificational Notions in Asurini do Trocara: Evidence against the Universality of Determiner Quantification }, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ bach_e-etal:1995d, author = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {1--11}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;} } @book{ bach_e-harms_r:1968a, editor = {Emmon Bach and Robert Harms}, title = {Universals in Linguistic Theory}, publisher = {Holt, Rinehart and Winston}, year = {1968}, address = {New York}, topic = {linguistics-general;} } @inproceedings{ bach_e-partee_bh:1980a, author = {Emmon Bach and Barbara Partee}, title = {Anaphora and Semantic Structure}, booktitle = {Papers From the Parasession on Pronouns and Anaphora}, editor = {K.J. Kreiman and A. Ojeda}, year = {1980}, pages = {1--28}, publisher = {Chicago Linguistics Society}, address = {Chicago University, Chicago, Illinois}, topic = {anaphora;nl-semantics;} } @article{ bach_k:1975a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Performatives are Statements Too}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1975}, volume = {28}, number = {4}, pages = {229--236}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @incollection{ bach_k:1979a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Meaning, Speech Acts, and Communication}, booktitle = {Basic Topics in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1979}, editor = {Robert M. Harnish}, pages = {3--21}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {speech-acts;implicature;pragmatics;speaker-meaning;} } @article{ bach_k:1981a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Referential/Attributive}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1981}, volume = {49}, number = {2}, pages = {219--244}, topic = {definite-descriptions;speech-acts;} } @article{ bach_k:1981b, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Escaping the Speech Act Dilemma}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1981}, volume = {41}, number = {3}, pages = {146--149}, topic = {speaker-meaning;} } @article{ bach_k:1982a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Semantic Nonspecificity and Mixed Quantifiers}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1982}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {593--605}, topic = {semantic-underspecification;nl-semantics;} } @book{ bach_k:1987a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Thought and Reference}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-language;reference;} } @article{ bach_k:1987b, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {On Communicative Intentions}, journal = {Mind and Language}, year = {1987}, volume = {2}, pages = {141--154}, topic = {speaker-meaning;pragmatics;communicative-intentions;} } @article{ bach_k:1992a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Intentions and Demonstrations}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1992}, volume = {52}, number = {3}, pages = {140--146}, topic = {demonstratives;} } @article{ bach_k:1994a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Conversational Implicature}, journal = {Mind and Language}, year = {1994}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {124--162}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se10}, topic = {implicature;pragmatics;} } @article{ bach_k:1995a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Standardization vs. Conventionalization}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1995}, volume = {18}, number = {6}, pages = {677--686}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ bach_k:1999a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {The Semantics-Pragmatics Distinction: What it Is and Why it Matters"}, booktitle = {The Semantic/Pragmatics Interface from Different Points of View}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {1999}, editor = {Ken Turner}, pages = {65--84}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {nl-semantics;pragmatics;} } @article{ bach_k:1999b, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {The Myth of Conventional Implicature}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {22}, number = {4}, pages = {327--366}, topic = {conventional-implicature;} } @article{ bach_k:1999c, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {You Don't Say?}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1999}, volume = {127}, number = {1--2}, pages = {15--44}, abstract = {This paper defends a purely semantic notion of what is said against various recent objections. The objections each cite some sort of linguistic,psychological, or epistemological fact that is supposed to show that on any viable notion of what aspeaker says in uttering a sentence, there ispragmatic intrusion into what is said. Relying on a modified version of Grice's notion, on which what is said must be a projection of the syntax of the utteredsentence, I argue that a purely semantic notion is needed to account for the linguistically determined input to the hearer's inference to what, if anything, the speaker intends to be conveying in uttering thesentence. }, topic = {speaker-meaning;} } @article{ bach_k:2000a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}oncepts: Where Cognitive Science Went Wrong}, by {J}erry {A}. {F}odor}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2000}, volume = {109}, number = {4}, pages = {627--632}, xref = {Review of: fodor_ja:1998a.}, topic = {lexical-semantics;semantic-primitives;} } @incollection{ bach_k:2002a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Giorgione Was So-Called Because of His Name}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 16: Language and Mind, 2002}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {73--103}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {proper-names;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ bach_k:2005a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {The Emperor's New `Knows{'}}, booktitle = {Contextualism in Philosophy: Knowledge, Meaning, and Truth}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Gerhard Preyer and Georg Peter}, pages = {51--89}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {context;knowledge;philosophy-of-language;contextualism;} } @incollection{ bach_k:2005b, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Pragmatics and the Philosophy of Language}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {463--487}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {pragmatics;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ bach_k:2006a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {What Does it Take to Refer?}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {516--554}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reference;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ bach_k:2007a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Review of \emph{Minimal Semantics}, by {E}mma {B}org}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2007}, volume = {116}, number = {2}, pages = {303--306}, xref = {Review of: borg_e:2004a}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ bach_k:2008a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Applying Pragmatics to Epistemology}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {68--88}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {epistemology;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ bach_k:2012a, author = {Kent Bach}, title = {Meaning and Communication}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Companion to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Gillian Russell and Delia Graff Fara}, pages = {79--90}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;speaker-meaning;} } @article{ bach_k-elugardo:2002a, author = {Kent Bach and Reinaldo Elugardo}, title = {Conceptual Minimalism and Anti-Individualism: A Reply to {G}oldberg}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2002}, volume = {36}, number = {1}, pages = {151--160}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;synonymy;} } @book{ bach_k-harnish_rm:1979a, author = {Kent Bach and Robert M. Harnish}, title = {Linguistic Communication and Speech Acts}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1979}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, isbn = {0-262052078-8}, topic = {speech-acts;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ bach_k-harnish_rm:1992a, author = {Kent Bach and Robert M. Harnish}, title = {How Performatives Really Work: A Reply to {S}earle}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1992}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {93--110}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @article{ bacharach_mol:1985a, author = {Michael Bacharach}, title = {Some Extensions of a Claim of {A}umann in an Axiomatic Model of Knowledge}, journal = {Journal of Economic Theory}, year = {1985}, volume = {37}, pages = {167--190}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ bacharach_mol:1992a, author = {Michael Bacharach}, title = {The Acquisition of Common Knowledge}, booktitle = {Knowledge, Belief, and Strategic Interaction}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Cristina Bicchieri and Maria Luisa {Dalla Chiara}}, pages = {285--315}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Bacharach"}, topic = {mutuality;knowledge;rationality;} } @book{ bacharach_mol:2006a, author = {Michael Bacharach}, title = {Beyond Individual Choice: Teams and Frames in Game Theory}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, ISBN = {9780691120058}, topic = {coalitional-games;} } @book{ bacharach_mol-etal:1997a, editor = {Michael Bacharach and L.A. G\'erard-Varet and P. Mongin and H.S. Shin}, title = {Epistemic Logic and the Theory of Games and Decisions}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-7923-4804}, xref = {Review: arlocosta:2000a.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;game-theory;decision-theory;} } @book{ bache:1997a, author = {Carl Bache}, title = {The Study of Aspect, Tense, and Action}, publisher = {Peter Lang}, year = {1997}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3-8204-3509-0}, topic = {tense-aspect;} } @incollection{ bachmair-ganziger:1998a, author = {L. Bachmair and H. Ganzinger}, title = {Equational Reasoning in Saturation-Based Theorem Proving}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {I}, Foundations: Calculi and Methods}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @article{ bachrach-etal:2013a, author = {Yoram Bachrach and David C. Parkes and Jeffrey S. Rosenschein}, title = {Computing cooperative solution concepts in coalitional skill games}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {204}, pages = {1--21}, topic = {computational-game-theory;} } @article{ back:1992a, author = {Allan Back}, title = {Sailing through The Sea Battle}, journal = {Ancient Philosophy}, year = {1992}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {133--151}, acontentnote = {I wish to present a simple resolution of the problem of the sea battle treated in Aristotle's "On Interpretation 9". Though my modelis simple, the task is not. I am going to have to battle with the text and to wade through a sea of secondary literature. Let me, then, first present the solution, and then face these labors. I shall conclude with some reflections about certain problems that my solution makes.}, topic = {Aristotle;future-contingent-propositions;} } @article{ backe:2000a, author = {Andrew Backe}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Philosophical Legacy of Behaviorism}, edited by {B}ruce {A}. {T}hyer}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2000}, volume = {67}, number = {3}, pages = {546--548}, xref = {Review of thyer:1999a.}, topic = {behaviorism;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @article{ backofen-etal:1995a, author = {Rolf Backofen and James Rogers and K. Vijay-Shankar}, title = {A First-Order Axiomatization of the Theory of Finite Trees}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1993}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {5--39}, topic = {finite-trees;} } @article{ backschneider:1987a, author = {Paul Backscheider}, title = {Punctuation for the Reader}, journal = {English Journal}, year = {1972}, volume = {61}, number = {6}, pages = {874--877}, topic = {punctuation;} } @incollection{ backstrom:1992a, author = {Christer B\"ackstr\"om}, title = {Equivalence and Tractability Results for {SAS$+$} Planning}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {126--137}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {planning-alorithms;} } @article{ backstrom:1995a, author = {Christer B\"ackstr\"om}, title = {Expressive Equivalence of Planning Formalisms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {76}, number = {1--2}, pages = {17--34}, topic = {planning-formalisms;} } @inproceedings{ backstrom_c-jonsson_p:2012a, author = {Christer B\"ackstr\"om and Peter Jonsson}, title = {Abstracting Abstraction in Search with Applications to Planning}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {446--456}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we present a coherent and flexible framework for modelling abstraction (and abstraction-like) methods based on transformations on labelled graphs. ... The usefulness of the framework is demonstrated by applying it to problems in both search and planning. ... }, topic = {abstraction;planning;search;} } @article{ backus:1978a, author = {John Backus}, title = {Can Programming be Liberated from the von {N}eumann Style?}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, year = {1978}, volume = {21}, number = {8}, pages = {613--641}, abstract = {Conventional programming languages are growing ever more enormous, but not stronger. Inherent defects at the most basic level cause them to be both fat and weak: their primitive word-at-a-time style of programming inherited from their common ancestor -- the von Neumann computer, their close coupling of semantics to state transitions, their division of programming into a world of expressions and a world of statements, their inability to effectively use powerful combining forms for building new programs from existing ones, and their lack of useful mathematical properties for reasoning about programs. An alternative functional style of programming is founded on the use of combining forms for creating programs. Functional programs deal with structured data, are often nonrepetitive and nonrecursive, are hierarchically constructed, do not name their arguments, and do not require the complex machinery of procedure declarations to become generally applicable. Combining forms can use high level programs to build still higher level ones in a style not possible in conventional languages. Associated with the functional style of programming is an algebra of programs whose variables range over programs and whose operations are combining forms. This algebra can be used to transform programs and to solve equations whose "unknowns" are programs in much the same way one transforms equations in high school algebra. These transformations are given by algebraic laws and are carried out in the same language in which programs are written. Combining forms are chosen not only for their programming power but also for the power of their associated algebraic laws. General theorems of the algebra give the detailed behavior and termination conditions for large classes of programs. A new class of computing systems uses the functional programming style both in its programming language and in its state transition rules. Unlike von Neumann languages, these systems have semantics loosely coupled to states -- only one state transition occurs per major computation.}, url = {http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs242/readings/backus.pdf}, topic = {foundations-of-computation;computer-architectures;} } @article{ bacon_a:2013a, author = {Andrew Bacon}, title = {Non-classical Metatheory for Non-classical Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {42}, number = {2}, pages = {335--355}, topic = {metalogic;vagueness;fuzzy-logic;} } @article{ bacon_a:2013b, author = {Andrew Bacon}, title = {Curry's Paradox and $\omega$-Inconsistency}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2013}, volume = {101}, number = {5}, pages = {1--9}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ bacon_a:2015a, author = {Andrew Bacon}, title = {Can the Classical Logician Avoid the Revenge Paradoxes?}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2015}, volume = {122}, number = {3}, pages = {299--352}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ bacon_a:2015b, author = {Andrew Bacon}, title = {Stalnaker's Thesis in Context}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {131--163}, topic = {indicative-conditionals;CCCP;} } @article{ bacon_a:2017a, author = {Andrew Bacon}, title = {Tense and Relativity}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {52}, number = {3}, pages = {667--696}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;relativity-theory;} } @article{ bacon_a:2018a, author = {Andrew Bacon}, title = {The Broadest Necessity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {5}, pages = {733--783}, topic = {higher-order-logic;modal-logic;necessity;} } @incollection{ bacon_a:2018b, author = {Andrew Bacon}, title = {Radical Anti-Disquotationalism}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 32: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2018}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {41--107}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;propositional-quantifiers;} } @book{ bacon_a:2018c, author = {Andrew Bacon}, title = {Vagueness and Thought}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780198712060}, xref = {Review: macfarlane_j:2020a}, abstract = {... Andrew Bacon develops a novel theory of vagueness in which vagueness is fundamentally a property of propositions, and is explicated in terms of its role in thought. On this theory, language plays little role in explaining the central puzzles of vagueness. ...}, xref = {Review: edgington_d:2019a}, topic = {vagueness;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ bacon_a:2019a, author = {Andrew Bacon}, title = {Substitution Structures}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {6}, pages = {1017--1075}, topic = {hyperintensionality;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ bacon_a:2020a, author = {Andrew Bacon}, title = {Logical Combinatorialism}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2020}, volume = {129}, number = {1}, pages = {537--589}, topic = {logical-modalities;metaphysics;} } @article{ bacon_a-etal:2016a, author = {Andrew Bacon and and John Hawthorne and Gabriel Uzquiano}, title = {Higher-Order Free Logic and the {P}rior-{K}aplan Paradox}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2016}, volume = {46}, number = {4--5}, pages = {403--541}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap21}, abstract = {The principle of universal instantiation plays a pivotal role both in the derivation of intensional paradoxes such as Prior's paradox and Kaplan's paradox and the debate between necessitism and contingentism. We outline a distinctively free logical approach to the intensional paradoxes and note how the free logical outlook allows one to distinguish two different, though allied themes in higherorder necessitism. We examine the costs of this solution and compare it with the more familiar ramificationist approaches to higher-order logic. Our assessment of both approaches is largely pessimistic, and we remain reluctantly inclined to take Prior's and Kaplan's derivations at face value.}, topic = {intensional-paradoxes;free-logic;ramified-type-theory;} } @article{ bacon_a-uzquiano_g:2018a, author = {Andrew Bacon and Gabriel Uzquiano}, title = {Some Results on the Limits of Thought}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {6}, pages = {991--999}, topic = {intensional-paradoxes;} } @article{ bacon_a-zeng_j:2022a, author = {Andrew Bacon and Jin Zeng}, title = {A Theory of Necessities}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {1}, pages = {151--199}, abstract = {We develop a theory of necessity operators within a version of higher-order logic that is neutral about how fine-grained reality is. ... We also wield the framework to probe the conditions under which a logicist account of necessities is possible, in which the theory is completely reducible to logic.}, topic = {necessary-truth;metaphysics;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ bacon_j:1965a, author = {John Bacon}, title = {A Simple Treatment of Complex Terms}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1965}, volume = {62}, number = {12}, pages = {328--331}, topic = {nl-quantification;relative-clauses;} } @article{ bacon_j:1965b, author = {John Bacon}, title = {An Alternative Contextual Definition for Descriptions}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1965}, volume = {16}, number = {5}, pages = {75--76}, contentnote = {G(ixFX) is defined as (x)[(Fx & (y)[Fy --> y=x]) --> Gx]. based on "the first one home gets a piece of bread" when all arrive at once.}, topic = {definite-descriptions;} } @phdthesis{ bacon_j:1966a, author = {John Bacon}, title = {Being and Existence: Two Ways of Formal Ontology}, school = {Philosophy Department, Yale University}, year = {1966}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {New Haven}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;(non)existence;generics;} } @article{ bacon_j:1969a, author = {John Bacon}, title = {Ontological Commitment and Free Logic}, journal = {The Monist}, year = {1969}, volume = {53}, number = {2}, pages = {310--319}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;logic-of-existence;} } @article{ bacon_j:1971a, author = {John Bacon}, title = {The Subjunctive Conditional as Relevant Implication}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1971}, volume = {1}, number = {1--2}, pages = {61--80}, topic = {conditionals;relevance-logic;} } @unpublished{ bacon_j:1973a1, author = {John Bacon}, title = {The Semantics of Generic `The{'}}, year = {1973}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, xref = {Journal Publication: bacon:1973a2.}, topic = {generics;} } @article{ bacon_j:1973a2, author = {John Bacon}, title = {The Semantics of Generic `The{'}}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1973}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {323--339}, topic = {generics;} } @article{ bacon_j:1973b, author = {John Bacon}, title = {Do Generic Descriptions Denote?}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1973}, volume = {82}, pages = {331--347}, topic = {generics;} } @article{ bacon_j:1974a, author = {John Bacon}, title = {The Untenability of Genera}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1974}, volume = {17}, number = {65--66}, pages = {197--298}, topic = {generics;} } @techreport{ bacon_j:1976a, author = {John Bacon}, title = {The Logical Form of Perception Sentences}, institution = {York College}, number = {1}, year = {1976}, address = {Jamaica,New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {logic-of-perception;} } @unpublished{ bacon_j:1984a, author = {John Bacon}, title = {Sommers and Modern Logic}, year = {1984}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Sydney.}, missinginfo = {Said to be for a vol on Sommers edited by George Englebretson. Date this reference is a guess.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {term-logic;} } @article{ bacon_j:1988a, author = {John Bacon}, title = {Four Modal Modelings}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1988}, volume = {17}, number = {2}, pages = {91--114}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ bacon_j:1989a, author = {John Bacon}, title = {A Single Primitive Trope Relation}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1989}, volume = {18}, number = {2}, pages = {141--154}, topic = {property-theory;philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ bacon_pl-precup_d:2018a, author = {Pierre-Luc Bacon and Doina Precup}, title = {Connecting Temporal Abstractions Autonomously in Reinforcement Learning}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2018}, volume = {39}, number = {1}, pages = {39--50}, topic = {reinforcement-learning;abstraction;temporal-reasoning;} } @article{ badaloni-giacomin:2006a, author = {Silvana Badaloni and Massimiliano Giacomin}, title = {The Algebra {IA}$^fuz$: A Framework for Qualitative Fuzzy Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {10}, pages = {872--908}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;fuzzy-logic;interval-algebras;} } @article{ baddeley_ad-hitch_g:1974a, author = {Alan D. Baddeley and Graham Hitch}, title = {Working Memory}, journal = {Psychology of Learning and Motivation}, year = {1974}, volume = {8}, pages = {47--89}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;working-memory;} } @book{ bade_n-etal:2016a, editor = {Nadine Bade and Polina Berezovskaya and Anthea Schöller}, title = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 20}, year = {2016}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of T\'ubingen}, address = {T\'ubingen}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/sub2015/}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ bader_r:2016a, author = {Ralf Bader}, title = {Conditions, Modifiers, and Holism}, booktitle = {Weighing Reasons}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Errol Lord and Barry Maguire}, pages = {27--55}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {This chapter provides a framework for understanding two ways in which reasons can vary across contexts, namely through the effects of (1) conditions which take the form of enablers and disablers, as well as (2) modifiers which take the form of intensifiers and attenuators. ...}, topic = {reasons-for-action;context;aggregation;practical-reasoning;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ bader_rm:2013a, author = {Ralf M. Bader}, title = {Towards a Hyperintensional Theory of Intrisicality}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {110}, number = {10}, pages = {525--563}, topic = {internal/external-properties;} } @incollection{ bader_rm:2016a, author = {Ralph M. Bader}, title = {Contingent Identity and Counterpart Theory}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 30: Metaphysics}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2016}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {7--20}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {metaphysics;identity;individuation;} } @book{ badesa:2004a, author = {Calixto Badesa}, title = {The Birth of Model Theory: {L}\"owenhein's Theorem in the Frame of the Theory of Relatives}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0-691-058539 (hbk)}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @article{ badia_g:2018a, author = {Guillermo Badia}, title = {On {S}ahlqvist Formulas in Relevant Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {4}, pages = {673--691}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ badia_g-etal:2022a, author = {Guillermo Badia and Zach Weber and Patrick Girard}, title = {Paraconsistent Metatheory: New Proofs with Old Tools}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {4}, pages = {825--856}, abstract = {This paper is a step toward showing what is achievable using non-classical metatheory -- particularly, a substructural paraconsistent framework. ... We reconstruct some of the originals proofs for Completeness, L\"owenheim-Skolem and Compactness theorems in the context of a substructural logic with the naive comprehension schema. The main result is that paraconsistent metatheory can 're-capture' versions of standard theorems, given suitable restrictions and background assumptions; but the shift to non-classical logic may recast the meanings of these apparently 'absolute' theorems.}, topic = {paraconsistent-mathematics;model-theory;} } @inproceedings{ badia_l:1997a, author = {Livia Badia}, title = {Reifying Concepts in Description Logics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Martha Pollack}, pages = {142--149}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {description-logics;higher-order-logic;} } @incollection{ badia_t-sauri_r:1998a, author = {Toni Badia and Roser Saur\'i}, title = {The Representation of Syntactically Unexpressed Complements to Nouns}, booktitle = {The Computational Treatment of Nominals: Proceedings of the Workshop}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Federica Busa and Inderjeet Mani and Patrick Saint-Dizier}, pages = {1--9}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nominal-constructions;argument-structure;} } @unpublished{ badouli-zanardo:1993a, author = {Sylvia Badouli and Alberto Zanardo}, title = {Plausible Reasoning: A First-Order Approach}, year = {1993}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Mathemaics, University of Padova.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @book{ badre-shneiderman:1982a, editor = {Albert Badre and Ben Shneiderman}, title = {Directions in Human-Computer Interaction}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Corp.}, year = {1982}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0893911445}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA76.9.I58 D571 1982.}, topic = {HCI;} } @article{ badura_c:2021a, author = {Christopher Badura}, title = {More Aboutness in Imagination}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {3}, pages = {523--547}, abstract = {... The paper extends Berto's semantics for aboutness in imagination ... }, topic = {imagination;aboutness;} } @book{ baecker:1995a, editor = {Ronald M. Baecker}, title = {Readings In Human-Computer Interaction: Toward The Year 2000}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, edition = {2}, year = {1995}, address = {San Francisco}, ISBN = {1558602461}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 R43 1995.}, topic = {HCI;} } @book{ baecker-buxton:1987a, editor = {Ronald M. Baecker and William A.S. Buxton}, title = {Readings in Human-Computer Interaction: A Multidisciplinary Approach}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1987}, address = {Los Altos, California}, ISBN = {0934613249 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 R43 1987.}, topic = {HCI;} } @incollection{ baehr_j:2005a, author = {Jason Baehr}, title = {Knowledge Need Not Be Virtuously Motivated}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {133--139}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;reasons-for-knowledge;} } @incollection{ baehr_j:2005b, author = {Jason Baehr}, title = {Are Intellectually Virtuous Motives Essential to Knowledge? Reply to {Z}agzebski}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {146--148}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: zagzebski_l:2005a}, topic = {knowledge;reasons-for-knowledge;} } @incollection{ baeten_jcm-sangiorgi_d:2014a, author = {Jos C.M. Baeten and Davide Sangiorgi}, title = {Concurrency Theory: A Historical Perspective on Coinduction and Process Calculi}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 9: Computational Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2014}, editor = {J\"org H. Siekmann}, pages = {399--442}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;computational-logic;concurrency;} } @article{ bagaria_j-etal:2019a, author = {Joan Bagaria and Peter Koellner and Hugh Woodin}, title = {Large Cardinals beyond Choice}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages = {283--318}, topic = {set-theory;} } @incollection{ baget_jf:2004a, author = {Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Baget}, title = {Improving the Forward-Chaining Algorithm for Conceptual Graphs Rules}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {407--414}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {conceptual-graphs;graph-based-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ baget_jf-etal:2010a, author = {Jean-Franois Baget and Michel LeClere and Marie-Laure Mugnier}, title = {Walking the Decidability Line for Rules with Existential Variables}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {466--465}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We consider positive rules in which the conclusion may contain existentially quantified variables, which makes reasoning tasks (such as conjunctive query answering or entailment) undecidable. ... The aim of this paper is to provide a clearer picture of the frontier between decidability and non-decidability of reasoning with these rules. ...}, topic = {(un)decidability;} } @article{ baget_jf-etal:2011a, author = {Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Baget and Michel Lecl\`ere and Marie-Laure Mugnier and Eric Salvat}, title = {On Rules with Existential Variables: Walking the Decidability Line}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {9--10}, pages = {1620--1654}, topic = {rule-based-reasoning;decidability;} } @inproceedings{ baget_jf-etal:2016a, author = {Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Baget and Salem Benferhat and Zied Bouraoui and Madalina Croitoru and Marie-Laure Mugnier and Odile Papini and Swan Rocher and Karim Tabia}, title = {A General Modifier-Based Framework for Inconsistency-Tolerant Query Answering}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {513--516}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We propose a general framework for inconsistency-tolerant query answering within existential rule setting. This framework unifies the main semantics proposed by the state of art and introduces new ones based on cardinality and majority principles. It relies on two key notions: modifiers and inference strategies. An inconsistency-tolerant semantics is seen as a composite modifier plus an inference strategy. We compare the obtained semantics from a productivity point of view. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {reasoning-about-inconsistency;existential-rules;} } @inproceedings{ bagga-baldwin_b:1998a, author = {Amit Bagga and Breck Baldwin}, title = {Entity-Based Cross-Document Coreferencing Using the Vector Space Model}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {79--85}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {identification-across-documents;vector-space-model;} } @incollection{ bagga-chai_jy:1998a, author = {Amit Bagga and Joyce Yue Chai}, title = {A Trainable Message Understanding System}, booktitle = {{CoNLL97}: Computational Natural Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {T. Mark Ellison}, pages = {1--8}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;nl-interpretation;} } @inproceedings{ bagga-etal:1996a, author = {Amit Bagga and Joyce Y. Chai and Alan W. Biermann}, title = {The Role of {WordNet} in the Creation of a Trainable Message Understanding System}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Eighth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference}, year = {1996}, editor = {William J. Clancey and Dan Weld}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, url = {http://www.cs.duke.edu/{\user}amit/iaai97.ps.gz}, topic = {wordnet;message-understanding;} } @book{ baggio_g:2018a, author = {Giosu\'e Baggio}, title = {Meaning in the Brain}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2018}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978026038126}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Fall, 2018}, topic = {cognitive-neuroscience;semantic-processing;} } @incollection{ baggio_g-etal:2012a, author = {Giosu\'e Baggio and Michael van Lambalgen and Peter Hagoort}, title = {Language, Linguistics, and Cognition}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Linguistics}, publisher = {North Holland}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruth Kempson and Tim Fernando and Nicholas Asher}, pages = {325--356}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {psycholinguistics;linguistics-methodology;cognitive-psychology;} } @incollection{ baggio_g-etal:2012b, author = {Giosu\`e Baggio and Michiel van Lambalgen and Peter Hagoort}, title = {The Processing Consequences of Compositionality}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Compositionality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Markus Werning and Wolfram Hinzen and Edouard Machery}, pages = {655--672}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {compositionality;psycholinguistics;nl-processing;} } @article{ baggio_g-vanlambalgen_m:2007a, author = {Giosu\'e Baggio and Michiel van Lambalgen}, title = {The Processing Consequences of the Imperfective Paradox}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2007}, volume = {24}, number = {4}, pages = {307--330}, abstract = {In this paper we present a semantic analysis of the imperfective paradox based on the Event Calculus (van Lambalgen & Hamm 2004), a planning formalism characterizing a class of models which can be computed by connectionist networks. We report the results of a questionnaire that support the semantic theory and suggest that different aspectual classes of VPs in the progressive give rise to different entailment patterns. Further, a processing model is outlined, combining the semantic analysis with the psycholinguistic principle of immediacy in the framework of recurrent networks. The model is used to derive predictions concerning the electrophysiological correlates of the computations described by the Event Calculus. }, topic = {psycholinguistics;nl-semantics;progressive;event-calculus;} } @book{ baghramian:1998a, editor = {Maria Baghramian}, title = {Modern Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {J.M. Dent}, year = {1998}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0460878662}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ baglini_r-kennedy_c:2019a, author = {Rebekah Baglini and Chris Kennedy}, title = {Adjectives and Event Structure}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Event Structure}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Robert Truswell}, pages = {406--433}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {events;eventualities;Aktionsarten;} } @inproceedings{ bahmani_z-etal:2012a, author = {Zeinab Bahmani and Leopoldo Bertossi and Solmaz Kolahi and Laks V.S. Lakshmanan}, title = {Declarative Entity Resolution via Matching Dependencies and Answer Set Programs}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {380--390}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we present disjunctive answer set programs (with stable model semantics) that capture through their models the class of alternative clean instances obtained after an ER process based on MDs. ... }, topic = {entity-resolution;stable-models;} } @article{ baier_a:1976a, author = {Annette Baier}, title = {Realizing What's What}, journal = {Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1976}, volume = {26}, number = {105}, pages = {328--337}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @article{ baier_ac:1970a, author = {Annette C. Baier}, title = {Act and Intent}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1970}, volume = {67}, number = {1970}, pages = {648--658}, topic = {intention;action;} } @article{ baier_ac:1971a, author = {Annette Baier}, title = {The Search for Basic Actions}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1971}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {161--170}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @article{ baier_ac:1972a, author = {Annette Baier}, title = {Ways and Means}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1972}, volume = {1}, pages = {275--293}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @incollection{ baier_ac:1985a, author = {Annette C. Baier}, title = {Rhyme and Reason: Reflections on {D}avidson's Version of Having Reasons}, booktitle = {Actions and Events: Perspectives on the Philosophy of {D}onald {D}avidson}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell Ltd.}, year = {1985}, editor = {Ernest LePore and Brian McLaughlin}, pages = {116--129}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reasons-for-action;} } @incollection{ baier_ac:1986a, author = {Annette Baier}, title = {The Ambiguous Limits of Desire}, booktitle = {The Ways of Desire: New Essays in Philosophical Psychology on the Concept of Wanting}, publisher = {Precedent Publishing, Inc.}, year = {1986}, editor = {Joel Marks}, pages = {39--63}, address = {Chicago}, topic = {desire;philosophical-psychology;} } @inproceedings{ baier_c-etal:2021a, author = {Christel Baier and Martin Diller and Clemens Dubslaff and Sarah Alice Gaggl and Holger Hermanns and Nikolai K\"afer}, title = {Admissibility in Probabilistic Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {87--98}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we address the quantitative treatment of argumentation based on probabilistic notions of admissibility in a way that they form fully conservative extensions of classical notions. ... we start from the fairly natural idea that whatever argumentation semantics is to be considered, semantics systematically induces constraints on the joint probability distribution on the sets of arguments. .... Standard semantic notions are shown to induce such sets of constraints, and so do their probabilistic extensions. This allows them to be tackled by SMT solvers ...}, topic = {probabilistic-argumentation;model-checking;AI-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ baier_ja-etal:2008a, author = {Jorge A. Baier and Christian Fritz and Meghyn Bienvenu and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Beyond Classical Planning: Procedural Control Knowledge and Preferences in State-of-the-Art Planners}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-Third National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, editor = {Dieter Fox and Carla Gomes}, pages = {1509--1512}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc10}, topic = {planning;procedural-control;} } @article{ baier_ja-etal:2009a, author = {Jorge A. Baier and Fahiem Bacchus and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {A Heuristic Search Approach to Planning with Temporally Extended Preferences}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {5--6}, pages = {593--618}, topic = {planning;planning-algorithms;preferences;temporal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ baier_ja-etal:2014a, author = {Jorge A. Baier and Brent Mombourquette and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Diagnostic Problem Solving via Planning with Ontic and Epistemic Goals}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {pages = {388--397}, publisher}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we explore these myriad of [diagnostic] reasoning tasks through the lens of artificial intelligence (AI) automated planning. We characterize a diversity of reasoning tasks associated with diagnostic problem solving, prove properties of these characterizations, and define correspondences with established automated planning tasks and existing state-of-the-art planning systems. In doing so, we characterize a class of epistemic planning tasks which we show can be compiled into non-epistemic planning, allowing state-of-the-art planners to compute plans for such tasks. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {diagnosis;epistemic-planning;} } @incollection{ baier_ja-mcilraith_sa:2006a, author = {Jorge A. Baier and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {On Planning with Programs that Sense}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {492--502}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {planning-formalisms;sensing-actions;sensing-formalisms;} } @article{ baier_ja-mcilraith_sa:2008a, author = {Jorge A. Baier and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Planning with Preferences}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2008}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {25--36}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "McIlraith".}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;planning;} } @book{ bailey_a:2002a, author = {Alan Bailey}, title = {Sextus {E}mpiricus and {P}yrrhonean Skepticism}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198238525}, xref = {Review: bett:2003a.}, rtnote = {UMich GRADUATE LIBRARY, B 623 .B351 2002.}, topic = {Hellenistic-philosophy;skepticism;Sextus-Empiricus;} } @book{ bailey_rw:1991a, author = {Richard W. Bailey}, title = {Images of {E}nglish: A Cultural History of the Language}, publisher = {University of Michigan Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, rtnote = {A fairly unfocused study of attitudes toward Eng, with some interesting passages.}, topic = {English-Language;sociolinguistics;} } @article{ baileykellogg-zhao_f:2001a, author = {Chris Bailey-Kellogg and Feng Zhao}, title = {Influence-Based Model Decomposition for Reasoning about Spatially Distributed Physical Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {130}, number = {2}, pages = {125--166}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;spatial-reasoning;qualitative-physics; causality;model-based-reasoning;} } @article{ baileykellogg-zhao_f:2003a, author = {Chris Bailey-Kellogg and Feng Zhao}, title = {Qualitative Spatial Reasoning: Extracting and Reasoning with Spatial Aggregates}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2003}, volume = {24}, number = {4}, pages = {47--60}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;spatial-reasoning;} } @article{ bailhache:1980a, author = {Patrice Bailhache}, title = {Several Possible Systems of Deontic Weak and Strong Norms}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {39--100}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ bailhache:1999a, author = {Patrice Bailhache}, title = {Review of \emph{{E}xtending Deontic Logic for the Formalization of Legal Rules}, by {L}amb\`er {M}.{M}. {R}oyakkers}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {64}, number = {4}, pages = {1841--1842}, xref = {Review of: royakkers_lmm:1998a.}, topic = {deontic-logic;logic-and-law;} } @article{ bain:2013a, author = {David Bain}, title = {What Makes Pain Unpleasant?}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2013}, volume = {166}, number = {1}, pages = {69--89}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ baioletti-etal:1998a, author = {M. Baioletti and S. Marcugini and A. Milani}, title = {Encoding Planning Constraints into Partial Order Planning Domains}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {608--616}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;planning;kr-course;} } @book{ baird:2004a, author = {Davis Baird}, title = {Thing Knowledge: A Philosophy of Scientific Instrumentation}, publisher = {University of California Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Berkeley}, xref = {Review: pitt:2005a}, topic = {scientific-instrumentation;experimental-science;} } @article{ bajscy-large:1999a, author = {Ruzena Bajscy and Edward W. Large}, title = {When and Where Will {AI} Meet Robotics? Issues in Representation}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {57--65}, topic = {robotics;cognitive-robotics;} } @incollection{ baker_ab:1989a, author = {Andrew B. Baker}, title = {A Simple Solution to the {Y}ale Shooting Problem}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {11--20}, address = {San Mateo, California}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {kr;Yale-shooting-problem;kr-course;} } @article{ baker_ab:1991a, author = {Andrew B. Baker}, title = {Nonmonotonic Reasoning in the Framework of the Situation Calculus}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {49}, number = {1--3}, pages = {5--23}, topic = {kr;situation-calculus;nonmonotonic-reasoning;frame-problem; kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ baker_ab-ginsberg_ml:1989a, author = {Andrew B. Baker and Matthew L. Ginsberg}, title = {A Theorem Prover for Prioritized Circumscription}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, pages = {463--467}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;circumscription;nonmonotonic-prioritization; nonmonotonic-reasoning;theorem-proving;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ baker_ab-ginsberg_ml:1989b, author = {Andrew B. Baker and Matthew L. Ginsberg}, title = {Temporal Projection and Explanation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, pages = {906--911}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;frame-problem;temporal-reasoning;Yale-Shooting-problem; nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @unpublished{ baker_ab-ginsberg_ml:1989c, author = {Andrew B. Baker and Yoav Shoham}, title = {Nonmonotonic Temporal Reasoning}, year = {1989}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Computer Science Department, Stanford University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {Supposedly forthcoming in a volume of The Handbook of Logic in Artificial Intelligence and Logic Programming, ed. Dov Gabbay.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;frame-problem; ramification-problem;Yale-Shooting-Problem;} } @article{ baker_aj:1956a, author = {A.J. Baker}, title = {Category Mistakes}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1956}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {13--26}, topic = {sortal-incorrectness;meaninglessness;} } @article{ baker_b-etal:2017a, author={Bowen Baker and Otkrist Gupta and Nikhil Naik and Ramesh Raskar}, title={Designing Neural Network Architectures using Reinforcement Learning}, journal={ArXiv}, year={2017}, volume={abs/1611.02167}, abstract = {... We introduce MetaQNN, a meta-modeling algorithm based on reinforcement learning to automatically generate high-performing CNN architectures for a given learning task. The learning agent is trained to sequentially choose CNN layers using Q-learning with an \epsilon-greedy exploration strategy and experience replay. The agent explores a large but finite space of possible architectures and iteratively discovers designs with improved performance on the learning task. ...}, url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/1611.02167}, topic = {reinforcement-learning;connectionist-models;neural-network-design;} } @book{ baker_c:1992a, author = {Colin Baker}, title = {Attitudes and Language}, publisher = {Multilingual Matters}, year = {1992}, address = {Bristol, England}, ISBN = {9781853591426}, abstract = {The book aims to establish the concept of attitudes as more central to the study of minority and majority languages. The strong tradition of attitude theory and research from social psychology is made relevant to language restoration and decay. Original research shows how attitude to bilingualism is conceptually distinct from attitude to a specific language. A piece of research in Wales investigates the origins of language attitudes in individual differences and in environmental attributes.}, topic = {sociolinguistics;} } @inproceedings{ baker_cf-etal:1998a, author = {Collin F. Baker and Charles J. Fillmore and John B. Lowe}, title = {The {B}erkeley {F}rame{N}et Project}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {86--90}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {computational-lexicography;corpus-linguistics;} } @article{ baker_cl:1970a, author = {Carl L. Baker}, title = {Notes on the Description of English Questions: The Role of an Abstract Question Morpheme}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1970}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {197--219}, topic = {interrogatives;nl-syntax;} } @book{ baker_cl:1973a, author = {Carl L. Baker}, title = {Definiteness and Indefiniteness in {E}nglish}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "CL Baker"}, topic = {definiteness;indefiniteness;} } @book{ baker_cl:1978a, author = {Carl L. Baker}, title = {Introduction to Generative-Transformational Gramamr}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall, Inc.}, year = {1978}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, ISBN = {013484410-6}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;syntax-intro;} } @article{ baker_d:2012a, author = {Derek Baker}, title = {Knowing Yourself--And Giving Up On Your Own Agency In The Process}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2012}, volume = {90}, number = {4}, pages = {641--656}, doi = {doi:10.1080/00048402.2011.617761}, abstract = {... argues that common-sense morality is committed to an inconsistent triad of principles. This inconsistency becomes acute when we consider the cases that motivate the possibilism-actualism debate. ... suggests that the inconsistent moral commitments originate in an inconsistent picture of human agency. Revisionary pictures of human agency are considered. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap22}, topic = {actualism/possibilism;introspection;} } @unpublished{ baker_dj:2007a, author = {David John Baker}, title = {Against Field Interpretations of Quantum Field Theory}, year = {2007}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Princeton University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;quantum-field-theory;} } @incollection{ baker_gp:1986a, author = {Gordon P. Baker}, title = {Alternative Mind-Styles}, booktitle = {Philosophical Grounds of Rationality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Richard E. Grandy and Richard Warner}, pages = {277--314}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {metaphilosophy;} } @book{ baker_gp-hacker:1980a, author = {Gordon P. Baker and Peter M.S. Hacker}, title = {Wittgenstein, Understanding and Meaning}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1980}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {0226035263}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B3376.W83P64 B17 1980 v.1.}, topic = {Wittgenstein;philosophy-of-language;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ baker_gp-hacker:1984a, author = {Gordon P. Baker and Peter M.S. Hacker}, title = {Scepticism, Rules and Language}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell}, year = {1984}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631136142}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B3376.W83 B165 1984.}, topic = {Wittgenstein;philosophy-of-language;skepticism;} } @incollection{ baker_j:1986a, author = {Judith Baker}, title = {Do One's Motives have to be Pure?}, booktitle = {Philosophical Grounds of Rationality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Richard E. Grandy and Richard Warner}, pages = {457--473}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {motivation;ethics;} } @incollection{ baker_j:2010a, author = {Judith Baker}, title = {Some Aspects of Reasons and Rationality}, booktitle = {Meaning and Analysis: New Essays on {G}rice}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2010}, editor = {Klaus Petrus}, pages = {184--201}, address = {New York}, topic = {Grice;rationality;} } @incollection{ baker_jp:1997a, author = {John Paul Baker}, title = {Consistency and Accuracy in Correcting Automatically Tagged Data}, booktitle = {Corpus Annotation}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1997}, editor = {Roger Garside and Geoffrey Leech and Tony McEnery}, pages = {243--250}, address = {London}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;corpus-annotation;corpus-tagging;} } @article{ baker_lr:1981a, author = {Lynn Rudder Baker}, title = {On Making and Attributing Demonstrative Reference}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1981}, volume = {49}, number = {2}, pages = {245--273}, topic = {demonstratives;indexicals;} } @incollection{ baker_lr:1986b, author = {Lynne Rudder Baker}, title = {Just What Do We Have in Mind?}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {X}: Studies in the Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {25--48}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {mental-representation;methodological-solipsism;} } @incollection{ baker_lr:1989a, author = {Lynne Rudder Baker}, title = {On a Causal Theory of Content}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 3: Philosophy of Mind and Action Theory}, publisher = {Ridgeview Publishing Company}, year = {1989}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {165--186}, address = {Atasacadero, California}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {intentionality;philosophy-of-mind;representation;} } @incollection{ baker_lr:1993a, author = {Lynne Rudder Baker}, title = {Metaphysics and Mental Causation}, booktitle = {Mental Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {John Heil and Alfred R. Mele}, pages = {75--95}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {mind-body-problem;causality;} } @incollection{ baker_lr:1994a, author = {Lynne Rudder Baker}, title = {Content and Context}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 8: Logic and Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {17--32}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {context;propositional-attitudes;intentionalituy; philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ baker_lr:1995a, author = {Lynne Rudder Baker}, title = {Explaining Attitudes}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;belief;} } @incollection{ baker_mc:1985a, author = {Mark Baker}, title = {On the Absence of Certain Quantifiers in {M}ohawk}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {21--58}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;(in)definiteness;Australian-language;} } @book{ baker_mc:1988a, author = {Mark C. Baker}, title = {Incorporation: A Theory of Grammatical Function Changing}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1988}, address = {Chicago, Illinois}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {morphology;incorporation;} } @incollection{ baker_mc:1992a, author = {Mark C. Baker}, title = {Thematic Conditions on Syntactic Structures: Evidence from Locative Applicatives.}, booktitle = {Thematic Structure: Its Role in Grammar}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1992}, editor = {Iggy M. Roca}, pages = {23--46}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {thematic-roles;argument-structure;nl-syntax;} } @article{ baker_mc:1992b, author = {Mark C. Baker}, title = {Unmatched Chains and the Representation of Plural Pronouns}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1992}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {33--73}, topic = {nl-semantics;plurals;anaphora;} } @article{ baker_mc-travis_l:1997a, author = {Mark C. Baker and Lisa Travis}, title = {Mood as Verbal Definiteness in a `Tenseless' Language}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1997}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {213--269}, topic = {nl-tense;nl-mood;Iroquois-language;} } @article{ baker_r:1973a, author = {Richard Baker}, title = {A Spatially-Oriented Information Processor which Simulates the Motions of Rigid Objects}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1973}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {29--40}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;} } @incollection{ baker_rsjd-ocumpaugh_j:2015a, author = {Ryan S.J.D. Baker and Jaclyn Ocumpaugh}, title = {Interaction-Based Affect Detection in Educational Software}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {233--245}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {emotion;emotion-recognition;} } @inproceedings{ balaban:1992a, author = {Mira Balaban}, title = {F-Logic as a Basis for a General Description Logic}, booktitle = {Working Notes, {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Issues in Description Logics: Users Meet Developers}, year = {1992}, editor = {Robert MacGregor}, pages = {6--10}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {kr;krcourse;description-logics;} } @article{ balaguer:1999a, author = {Mark Balaguer}, title = {Review of \emph{{N}aturalism in Mathematics}, by {P}enelope {M}addy}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1999}, volume = {66}, number = {3}, pages = {502--504}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ balaguer:2002a, author = {Mark Balaguer}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}hinking about Mathematics}, by {S}tewart {S}hapiro}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {89--91}, xref = {Review of shapiro_s1:2000a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;foundations-of-mathematics;} } @article{ balaguer:2004a, author = {Mark Balaguer}, title = {A Coherent, Naturalistic, and Plausible Formulation of Libertarian Free Will}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2004}, volume = {38}, number = {3}, pages = {379--406}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @book{ balaguer:2009a, author = {Mark Balaguer}, title = {Free will as an Open Scientific Problem}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-01354-3}, topic = {freedom;neurocognition;} } @article{ balaguer_m-horgan_t:2016a, author = {Mark Balaguer and Terry Horgan}, title = {A Solution to the Paradox of Analysis}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2016}, volume = {76}, number = {1}, pages = {3--7}, doi = {doi:10.1093/analys/anw001}, topic = {paradox-of-analysis;} } @incollection{ balashov:2000a, author = {Yuri Balashov}, title = {Relativity and Persistence}, booktitle = {{PSA}'1998: Proceedings of the 1998 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2000}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {S549--SS562}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;relativity-theory;} } @incollection{ balbiani_p:1996a, author = {Philippe Balbiani}, title = {Modal Logics with Relative Accessibility Relations}, booktitle = {Practical Reasoning: International Conference on Formal and Applied Practical Reasoning, FAPR'96}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Hans J\"urgen Olbach}, pages = {29--42}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @incollection{ balbiani_p:1998a, author = {Philippe Balbiani}, title = {Terminological Modal Logic}, booktitle = {Advances in Modal Logic, Volume 1}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1998}, editor = {Marcus Kracht and Maarten de Rijke and Heinrich Wansing}, pages = {23--39}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @incollection{ balbiani_p:2008a, author = {Philippe Balbiani}, title = {Time Representation and Temporal Reasoning from the Perspective of Non-Standard Analysis}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {695--704}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {This paper proceeds to develop models for representing time and reasoning about time from the perspective of non-standard analysis. It sets out a non-standard first-order theory and a non-standard qualitative approach for hyperreals. This first-order theory and this qualitative approach are based on the fact that any hyperreal is either infinitesimal, unlimited or appreciable. Within the first-order theory for hyperreal time presented in this paper, we establish a complete axiomatization and we prove that the associated membership problem is PSPACE-complete. Within the qualitative approach for hyperreal time presented in this paper, we establish qualitative constraint satisfaction problems and we prove that the associated consistency problem is in P. }, topic = {temporal-reasoning;nonstandard-analysis;} } @incollection{ balbiani_p:2008b, author = {Philippe Balbiani}, title = {Propositional Dynamic Logic}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url= {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2008/entries/logic-dynamic/}, year = {2008}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. .}, topic = {dynamic-logic}, } @incollection{ balbiani_p-etal:1996a, author = {Philippe Balbiani and Luis Fariñas del Cerro and Tinko Tinchev and Dimiter Vakarelov}, title = {Geometrical Structures and Modal Logic}, booktitle = {Practical Reasoning: International Conference on Formal and Applied Practical Reasoning, FAPR'96}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Hans J\"urgen Olbach}, pages = {43--57}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {modal-logic;formalizations-of-geometry;} } @incollection{ balbiani_p-etal:1998a, author = {Philippe Balbiani and Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Condotta and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro}, title = {A Model for Reasoning about Bidimensional Temporal Relations}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {124--130}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;temporal-reasoning;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ balbiani_p-etal:2007a, author = {Philippe Balbiani and Hans van Ditmarsch and Andreas Herzig and Tomohiro Hoshi and Tiago de Lima}, title = {What Can We Achieve by Arbitrary Announcements? A Dynamic Take on {F}itch's Knowability}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge: Proceedings of the Eleventh Conference ({TARK} 2007)}, year = {2007}, editor = {Dov Samet}, publisher = {ACM}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Public announcement logic is an extension of multi-agent epistemic logic with dynamic operators to model the informational consequences of announcements to the entire group of agents. We propose an extension of public announcement logic with a dynamic modal operator that expresses what is true after any announcement: []\phi expresses that \phi is true after an arbitrary announcement \psi. As this includes the trivial announcement \top, one might as well say that []\phi expresses what remains true after any announcement: it therefore corresponds to truth persistence after (definable) relativisation. The dual operation <>\phi expresses that there is an announcement after which \phi. This gives a perspective on Fitch's knowability issues: for which formulas \phi does it hold that \phi--><>K\phi? We give various semantic results, and we show completeness for a Hilbert-style axiomatisation of this logic.}, pages = {42--51}, topic = {dynamic-logic;epistemic-logic;public-announcements;Fitch-paradox;} } @article{ balbiani_p-etal:2008a, author = {Philippe Balbiani and Andreas Herzig and Nicolas Troquard}, title = {Alternaticve Axiomatics and the Complexity of Deliberative {STIT} Theories}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {37}, number = {4}, pages = {387--406}, topic = {stit;} } @article{ balbiani_p-etal:2018a, author = {Philippe Balbiani and David Fern\'andez-Duque and Emiliano Lorini}, title = {The Dynamics of Epistemic Attitudes in Resource-Bounded Agents}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2018}, volume = {107}, number = {3}, pages = {457--488}, abstract = {The paper presents a new logic for reasoning about the formation of beliefs through perception or through inference in non-omniscient resource-bounded agents. The logic distinguishes the concept of explicit belief from the concept of background knowledge. This distinction is reflected in its formal semantics and axiomatics: (i) we use a non-standard semantics putting together a neighborhood semantics for explicit beliefs and relational semantics for background knowledge, and (ii) we have specific axioms in the logic highlighting the relationship between the two concepts. Mental operations of perceptive type and inferential type, having effects on epistemic states of agents, are primitives in the object language of the logic. At the semantic level, they are modelled as special kinds of model-update operations, in the style of dynamic epistemic logic. Results about axiomatization, decidability and complexity for the logic are given in the paper.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;resource-limited-reasoning;} } @article{ balbiani_p-etal:2019a, author = {Philippe Balbiani and David Fern\'andez-Duque and Emilliano Lorini}, title = {The Dynamics of Epistemic Attitudes in Resource-Bounded Agents}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2019}, volume = {107}, number = {3}, pages = {457--488}, topic = {epistemic-logic;belief-revision;belief-update;limited-rationality;} } @incollection{ balbiani_p-osmani_a:2000a, author = {Philippe Balbiani and Aomar Osmani}, title = {A Model for Reasoning about Topologic Relations between cyclic intervals}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {378--385}, address = {San Francisco}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;interval-logic;} } @article{ balbiani_p-seban:2011a, author = {Philippe Balbiani and Pablo Seban}, title = {Reasoning about Permitted Announcements}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {40}, number = {4}, pages = {445--472}, topic = {deontic-logic;epistemic-logic;announcements;} } @article{ balcazar:1996a, author = {Jos\'e L. Balc\'azar}, title = {The Complexity of Searching Implicit Graphs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {86}, number = {1}, pages = {171--188}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;search;} } @article{ baldassarre-nolfi:2009a, author = {Gianluca Baldassarre and Stefano Nolfi}, title = {Strengths and Synergies of Evolved and Designed Controllers: A Study within Collective Robotics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {7--8}, pages = {857--875}, topic = {genetic-algorithms;robotics;} } @incollection{ baldazzi_t-etal:2022a, author = {Teodoro Baldazzi and Luigi Bellomarini and Marco Favorito and Emanuel Sallinger}, title = {On the Relationship between Shy and Warded Datalog+/-}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {395--399}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Datalog^E is the extension of Datalog with existential quantification. While its high expressive power, underpinned by a simple syntax and the support for full recursion, renders it particularly suitable for modern applications on Knowledge Graphs, query answering (QA) over such language is known to be undecidable in general. ... In this short paper, we focus on two promising tractable candidates, namely Shy and Warded Datalog+/-. Reacting to an explicit interest from the community, we shed light on the relationship between these fragments. Moreover, we carry out an experimental analysis of the systems implementing Shy and Warded, respectively DLV^E and Vadalog.}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {Datalog;AI-algorithms;} } @book{ baldi_p-brunak:1998a, author = {Pierre Baldi and S{\o}ren Brunak}, title = {Bioinformatics: The Machine Learning Approach}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-02442-X}, topic = {bioinformatics;machine-learning;} } @article{ baldner:1990a, author = {Kent Baldner}, title = {Is Transcendental Idealism Coherent}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1990}, volume = {85}, number = {1}, pages = {55--70}, contentnote = {Formulates a version of transcendental idealism, argues for its epistemological value.}, topic = {epistemology;Kant;} } @incollection{ baldoni_m-etal:1996a, author = {Matteo Baldoni and Laura Giordano and Alberto Martelli and Viviana Patti}, title = {An Abductive Proof Procedure for Reasoning about Actions in Modal Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Extensions of Logic Programming}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, year = {1996}, pages = {19--33}, topic = {aduction;logic-programming;action-formalisms;} } @article{ baldoni_m-etal:1998a, author = {Matteo Baldoni and Laura Giordano and Alberto Martelli}, title = {A Modal Extension of Logic Programming: Modularity, Beliefs and Hypothetical Reasoning}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {5}, pages = {597--635}, topic = {modal-logic;theorem-proving;logic-programming;} } @incollection{ baldoni_m-etal:2018a, author = {Matteo Baldoni and Cristina Baroglio and Amit K. Chopra and Akin G\"unay}, title = {Interaction Protocols}, booktitle = {Handbook of Normative Multiagent Systems}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2018}, editor = {Amit Chopra and Leon van der Torre and Harko Verhagen and Serena Villata}, pages = {209--224}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\chopra.pdf}, topic = {multiagent-systems;interactive-systems;} } @incollection{ baldoni_m-etal:2018b, author = {Matteo Baldoni and Cristina Baroglio and Olivier Boissier and Jomi F. Hubner and Roberto Micalizio}, title = {Norm-Aware and Norm-Oriented Programming}, booktitle = {Handbook of Normative Multiagent Systems}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2018}, editor = {Amit Chopra and Leon van der Torre and Harko Verhagen and Serena Villata}, pages = {247--301}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\chopra.pdf}, topic = {multiagent-systems;norm-aware-programming;} } @inproceedings{ balduccini-etal:2000a, author = {Marcello Balduccini and Michael Gelfond and Monica Nogueira}, title = {A-Prolog as a Tool for Declarative Programming}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Software Engineering and Knowledge Engineering (SEKE'2000)}, year = {2000}, publisher = {Knowledge Systems Institute}, address = {Skokie, Illinois}, missinginfo = {editor, pages}, topic = {logic-programming;stable-models;declarative-programming;} } @unpublished{ balduccini-etal:2001a, author = {Marcello Balduccini and Michael Gelfond and Monica Nogueira and Richard Watson and Matthew R. Barry}, title = {An A-Prolog Decision Support System for the Space Shuttle}, year = {2001}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Texas Tech University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {Available at http://www.cs.ttu.edu/{\user}mgelfond/.}, topic = {logic-programming;stable-models;decision-support;} } @incollection{ balduccini-etal:2008a, author = {Marcello Balduccini and Chitta Baral and Yulika Lierler}, title = {Knowledge Representation and Question Answering}, booktitle = {Handbook of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2008}, editor = {Frank van Harmelen and Vladimir Lifschitz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {779--819}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {kr;question-answering;} } @incollection{ balduccini-gelfond_m:2003a, author = {Marcello Balduccini and Michael Gelfond}, title = {Logic Programs with Consistency-Restoring Rules}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Logical Formalization of Commonsense Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John McCarthy and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {9--18}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {causality;temporal-reasoning;planning-formalisms; nonmonotonic-reasoning;situation-calculus;ramification-problem; reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @inproceedings{ balduccini_m-etal:2020a, author = {Marcello Balduccini and Michael Gelfond and Enrico Pontelli and Tran Cao Son}, title = {An Answer Set Programming Framework for Reasoning about Agents' Beliefs and Truthfulness of Statements}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {69--78}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {The paper proposes a framework for capturing how an agent's beliefs evolve over time in response to observations and for answering the question of whether statements made by a third party can be believed. The basic components of the framework are a formalism for reasoning about actions, changes, and observations and a formalism for default reasoning. The paper describes a concrete implementation that leverages answer set programming for determining the evolution of an agent's ``belief state'', based on observations, knowledge about the effects of actions, and a theory about how these influence an agent's beliefs. }, topic = {answer-sets;agent-attitudes;belief-tracking;} } @inproceedings{ balduccini_m-girotto_s:2010a, author = {Marcello Balduccini and Sara Girotto}, title = {Formalizing Psychological Knowledge in Answer Set Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {560--562}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In the field of psychology, a considerable amount of knowledge is expressed using only natural language, which complicates accurate studies and comparisons. We believe that Answer Set Programming (ASP) can be used successfully for the formalization of psychological knowledge. To demonstrate the viability of ASP for this task, in this paper we develop an ASP-based formalization of the mechanics of Short-Term Memory, and show how it correctly reproduces the observed behavior of human subjects.}, topic = {formalizations-of-psychology;answer-sets;} } @article{ balduzzi-tononi_g:2014a, author = {David Balduzzi and Giulio Tononi}, title = {Qualia: The Geometry of Integrated Information}, journal = {{PLoS} Computational Biology}, year = {2014}, volume = {5}, number = {8}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000462}, topic = {IIT;qualia;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @inproceedings{ baldwin_b-etal:1995a, author = {Breck Baldwin and Jeff Reynar and Michael John Collins and Jason Eisner and Adwait Ratnaparkhi and Joseph Rosenzweig and Anoop Sankar and B. Srinivas}, title = {Description of the University of Pennsylvania System Used for {MUC}-6}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth {ARPA} Message Understanding Conference}, year = {1995}, missinginfo = {publisher, editor, pages}, topic = {wordnet;message-understanding;} } @article{ baldwin_da-etal:2001a, author = {Dare A. Baldwin and Jodie A. Baird and Megan M. Saylor and M. Angela Clark}, title = {Infants Parse Dynamic Action}, journal = {Child Development}, year = {2001}, volume = {72}, number = {3}, pages = {708--717}, topic = {developmental-psychology;activity-recognition;} } @book{ baldwin_j:2018a, author = {John Baldwin}, title = {Model Theory and the Philosophy of Mathematical Practice}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2018}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9781316987216}, abstract = {... places the [model theoretic] revolution in its historical context from the ancient Greeks to the last century, argues for local rather than global foundations for mathematics, and provides philosophical viewpoints on the importance of modern model theory for both understanding and undertaking mathematical practice. The volume also addresses the impact of model theory on contemporary algebraic geometry, number theory, combinatorics, and differential equations.}, topic = {model-theory;geometry;foundations-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ baldwin_jf:1991a, author = {J.F. Baldwin}, title = {A New Approach to Inference Under Uncertainty for Knowledge-Based Systems}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {107--114}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;possibility-theory;fuzzy;fuzzy-logic;} } @article{ baldwin_jt:2014a, author = {John T. Baldwin}, title = {Completeness and Categoricity-in-Power; Formalization without Foundationalism}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {39--79}, topic = {categoricity;foundations-of-logic;} } @article{ baldwin_t:1979a, author = {Thomas Baldwin}, title = {Sartre, Kany, and the Original Choice of Self}, journal = {Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society}, year = {1979--80}, volume = {80}, pages = {31--44}, topic = {Sartre;} } @article{ baldwin_t:1982a, author = {Thomas Baldwin}, title = {Prior and {D}avidson on Indirect Speech}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1982}, volume = {42}, pages = {255--282}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;indirect-discourse;} } @book{ baldwin_t:1990a, editor = {Thomas Baldwin}, title = {{G}.{E}. {M}oore: Selected Writings}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1990}, address = {London}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate B 1647 .M74 B351 1990}, ISBN = {0415009049}, topic = {GEMoore;} } @incollection{ baldwin_t:2006a, author = {Thomas Baldwin}, title = {Philosophy of Language in the Twentieth Century}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {60--100}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;history-of-philosophy;} } @incollection{ baldwin_t:2007a, author = {Thomas Baldwin}, title = {The Normative Character of Belief}, booktitle = {Moore's Paradox: New Essays on Belief, Rationality, and the First Person}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, editor = {Mitchell S. Green and John N. Williams}, pages = {76--89}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;belief;} } @incollection{ baldwin_t:2010a, author = {Tom Baldwin}, title = {George {E}dward {M}oore}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2010/entries/moore/}, year = {2010}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {GEMoore;} } @article{ bale_a-schwarz_b2:2020a, author = {Alan Bale and Bernhard Schwarz}, title = {Proportional readings of many and few: the case for an underspecified measure function}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2020}, volume = {43}, number = {6}, pages = {673--679}, abstract = {In the so-called reverse proportional reading ... the truth conditions of statements of the form many/few \phi\psi appear to make reference to the ratio of the individuals that are in the extensions of both \phi and \psi to the individuals that are in the extension of \psi. ... we propose that reverse proportionality in such cases can arise from the underspecification of the measure function underlying the meanings of many and few. }, topic = {'many'/'few';nl-semantics;} } @article{ bale_ac:2008a, author = {Alan Clinton Bale}, title = {A Universal Scale of Comparison}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {31}, number = {1}, pages = {1--55}, topic = {nl-semantics;comparatives;measures;} } @article{ bale_ac:2011a, author = {Alan Clinton Bale}, title = {Scales and Comparison Classes}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2011}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {169--190}, topic = {comparative-constructions;comparison-classes;} } @incollection{ bale_ac-barner:2013a, author = {Alan Clinton Bale and David Barner}, title = {Grammatical Alternatives and Pragmatic Development}, booktitle = {Alternatives in Semantics}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amanira F\v{a}l\v{a}u\c{s}}, pages = {238--266}, address = {New York}, topic = {pragmtics;alternatives;l1-acquisition;} } @article{ bales_e:1972a, author = {Eugene Bales}, title = {Utilitarianism, Overall Obligatoriness and Deontic Logic}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1972}, volume = {32}, number = {6}, pages = {203--205}, doi = {doi:10.1093/analys/32.6.203}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap22}, contentnote = {Generalizes the problem for utilitarianism posed in castaneda_hn:1968a.}, topic = {utilitarianism;deontic-logic;deontology;} } @inproceedings{ balkanski-huraltplantet:1997a, author = {Cecile Balkanski and Martine Huralt-Plantet}, title = {Communicative Actions in a Dialog Model for Cooperative Discourse: An Initial Report}, booktitle = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Communicative Action in Humans and Machines}, year = {1997}, pages = {12--19}, organization = {{AAAI}}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, editor = {David R. Traum}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {speech-acts;discourse;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ balke-pearl_j:1994a, author = {Alexander Balke and Judea Pearl}, title = {Probabilistic Evaluation of Counterfactual Queries}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, editor = {Barbara Hayes-Roth and Richard Korf}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\pearl2.pdf}, topic = {conditionals;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ balke-pearl_j:1994b, author = {Alexander Balke and Judea Pearl}, title = {Counterfactual Probabilities: Computational Methods, Bounds, and Applications}, booktitle = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence 10}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {R. Lopez de Mantaras and David L. Poole}, pages = {46--54}, address = {San Mateo, California}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, topic = {conditionals;probabilities;causality;} } @incollection{ balke-pearl_j:1994c, author = {Alexander Balke and Judea Pearl}, title = {Counterfactuals and Policy Analysis in Structural Models}, booktitle = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence 11}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Philippe Besnard and Steven Hanks}, pages = {11--18}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\pearl.pdf}, topic = {conditionals;probabilities;causality;} } @article{ ball_b:2019a, author = {Brian Ball}, title = {Attitudes and Ascriptions in {S}talnaker Models}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {42}, number = {5}, pages = {517--539}, abstract = {What role, if any, should centered possible worlds play in characterizing the attitudes? Lewis ... argued (in effect) that, in order to account for the phenomena of self-location ... the contents of the attitudes should be taken to be centered propositions (i.e. sets of centered worlds). Stalnaker ..., however, has argued that while centered worlds are needed to characterize e.g. belief states, the contents of such states should be understood as ordinary, uncentered propositions ... . But Stalnaker does not, as is common, provide a semantics of attitude ascriptions based on the models he develops of the attitudinal states themselves. This paper begins to explore the prospects for doing so. It argues that a simple but well-motivated approach does not yield the principles of knowledge and belief Stalnaker endorses; and that a modification which does brings with it worries of its own surrounding communication and learnability. A technical appendix contains novel and pertinent results in doxastic/epistemic logic.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {self-locating-constructions;epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ ball_d:2018a, author = {Derek Ball}, title = {Semantics as Measurement}, booktitle = {The Science of Meaning: Essays on the Metatheory of Natural Language Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Derek Ball and Brian Rabern}, pages = {381--409}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {This chapter defends a view of semantics on which developing a semantic theory closely resembles developing a scale of measurement. The view helps explain how semantics has made so much progress despite deep disagreements about the target of semantic theorizing (e.g., between those who maintain that semantics is characterizing something psychological, and those who maintain that it is characterizing something social), how appeals to set-theoretic abstracta make sense despite Benacerraf-style worries and despite the fact that set-theoretic entities fit badly with standard (e.g., causal) metasemantic views, and why the threat of radical context sensitivity does not undermine the semantic project.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ ball_d-rabern_b:2018a, editor = {Derek Ball and Brian Rabern}, title = {The Science of Meaning: Essays on the Metatheory of Natural Language Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780198739548B}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Derek Ball and Brian Rabern, "Introduction to the Science of Meaning", pp. 1--45 1. Pauline Jacobson, "What Is---Or, for That Matter, Isn't---'Experimental' Semantics?", pp. 46--72 2. Wesley H. Holliday and Thomas F. Icard, "Axiomatization in the Meaning Sciences", pp. 73--97 3. Robert Stalnaker, "{D}avid {L}ewis on Context", pp. 98--112 4. Fran\c{c}ois Recanati, "From Meaning to Content", pp. 113--137 5. Bryan Pickel and Brian Rabern and Josh Dever, "Reviving the Parameter Revolution in Semantics", pp. 138--171 6. Barbara Partee, "Changing Notions of Linguistic Competence in the History of Formal Semantics", pp. 172--196 7. Michael Glanzberg, "Lexical Meaning, Concepts, and the Metasemantics of Predicates", pp. 197--225 8. Kathrin Gluer, "Interpretation and the interpreter: On the Role of the Interpreter in {D}avidsonian Foundational Semantics", pp. 226--252 9. In\'es Crespo and Hadil Karawani and Frank Veltman, "Expressing Expectations", pp. 253--275 10. Thomas Ede Zimmermann, "Fregean Compositionality", pp. 276--305 11. Paul Pietroski, "Semantic Typology and Composition", pp. 306--333 12. Seth Yalcin, "Semantics as Model-Based Science", pp. 334--360 13. Wolfgang Schwarz, "Semantic Possibility", pp. 361--380 14. Derek Ball, "Semantics as Measurement", pp. 381--409 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;metasemantics;} } @incollection{ ball_d-rabern_b:2018b, author = {Derek Ball and Brian Rabern}, title = {Introduction to the Science of Meaning}, booktitle = {The Science of Meaning: Essays on the Metatheory of Natural Language Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Derek Ball and Brian Rabern}, pages = {1--45}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;metasemantics;} } @incollection{ ball_j-breese_j:2000a, author = {Gene Ball and Jack Breese}, title = {Emotion and Personality in a Conversational Agent}, booktitle = {Embodied Conversational Agents}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2000}, editor = {Justine Cassell and Joseph Sullivan and Scott Prevost and Elizabeth F. Churchill}, pages = {189--402}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {embodied-nlp;emotional-computing;} } @incollection{ ballarin_r:2010a, author = {Roberta Ballarin}, title = {Modern Origins of Modal Logic}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2017/entries/logic-modal-origins}, year = {2010}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {modal-logic;history-of-logic;} } @article{ ballarin_r:2019a, author = {Roberta Ballarin}, title = {The Naked 'Duchess': Names are Titles}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {42}, number = {4}, pages = {349--379}, abstract = {In her recent defense of predicativism for proper names, Delia Graff Fara proposes the following non-metalinguistic being-called condition (BCC) for the applicability of names as predicates: A name 'N' is true of a thing if and only if it is called N. The BCC is supposed to hold for names only. In this essay I criticize Fara's BCC by arguing that the word 'called' is ambiguous, and that the BCC holds only for the particular sense of 'calling' as naming. ... I conclude the paper with pragmatic, syntactic, as well as semantic considerations in favor of the thesis that names are a subspecies of non-hereditary, honorific titles.}, topic = {proper-names;} } @book{ ballmer-pinkal:1993a, editor = {Thomas T. Ballmer and Manfred Pinkal}, title = {Approaching Vagueness}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1993}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ ballweg_j:1983a, author = {Joachim Ballweg}, title = {Vagueness or Context-Dependance? Supervaluation Revisited in a Semantics Based on Scales}, booktitle = {Approaching Vagueness}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1983}, editor = {Thomas T. Ballmer and Manfred Pinkal}, pages = {59--78}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {vagueness;supervaluations;} } @article{ baltag_a:2002a, author = {Alexandru Baltag}, title = {A Logic for Suspicious Players: Epistemic Actions and Belief Updates in Games}, journal = {Bulletin of Economic Research}, year = {2002}, volume = {54}, number = {1}, pages = {1--45}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;belief-update;} } @inproceedings{ baltag_a-etal:1998a, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Laurence S. Moss and Slawomir Solecki}, title = {The logic of Public Announcements, Common Knowledge, and Private Suspicions}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Seventh Conference ({TARK} 1998)}, year = {1998}, editor = {Itzhak Gilboa}, pages = {43--56}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {mutual-belief;public-announcements;} } @inproceedings{ baltag_a-etal:2012a, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Bryan Renne and Sonja Smets}, title = {The Logic of Justified Belief Change, Soft Evidence and Defeasible Knowledge}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 19th Workshop on Logic, Language, Information, and Computation ({WoLLIC} 2012)}, year = {2012}, editor = {Luke Ong and Ruy J.G.B. de Queiroz}, pages = {168--190}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {We present a logic for reasoning about the evidence-based knowledge and beliefs and the evidential dynamics of non-logically -omniscient agents. We do this by adapting key tools and techniques from Dynamic Epistemic Logic, Justification Logic, and Belief Revision so as to provide a lightweight, yet fine-grained approach that characterizes well-known epistemic and doxastic attitudes in terms of the evidential reasoning that justifies these attitudes. ...}, topic = {reasons-for-belief;belief-update;hyperintensionality; dynamic-epistemic-logic;justification-logic;} } @article{ baltag_a-etal:2019a, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Nick Bezhanishvili and Ayb\"uke \"Ozg\"un and Sonja Smets}, title = {A Topological Approach to Full Belief}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {2}, pages = {205--244}, topic = {epistemic-logic;topology;} } @article{ baltag_a-etal:2019b, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Zo\'e Christoff and Rasmus K. Rendsvig Sonja Smets}, title = {Dynamic Epistemic Logics of Diffusion and Prediction in Social Networks}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2019}, volume = {107}, number = {3}, pages = {489--531}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;social-networks;} } @article{ baltag_a-etal:2019c, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Nina Gierasimczuk and Sonja Smets}, title = {Truth-Tracking by Belief Revision}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2019}, volume = {107}, number = {5}, pages = {917--947}, abstract = {... We provide a general framework for interpreting belief revision policies as learning methods. ... Our main result is that conditioning and lexicographic revision can drive a universal learning mechanism, provided that the observations include only and all true data, and provided that a non-standard, i.e., non-well-founded prior plausibility relation is allowed. ...}, topic = {belief-revision;learning-theory;} } @incollection{ baltag_a-etal:2022a, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Nick Bezhanishvili and David Fern\'andez-Duque}, title = {The Topology of Surprise}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {33--42}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In this paper we present a topological epistemic logic, with modalities for knowledge (modeled as the universal modality), knowability (represented by the topological interior operator), and unknowability of the actual world. The last notion has a non-self-referential reading (modeled by Cantor derivative: the set of limit points of a given set) and a self-referential one (modeled by Cantor's perfect core of a given set: its largest subset without isolated points). We completely axiomatize this logic, showing that it is decidable and PSPACE-complete, and we apply it to the analysis of a famous epistemic puzzle: the Surprise Exam Paradox.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc22}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {epistemic-logic;topology;surprise-examination-paradox;} } @article{ baltag_a-etal:2023a, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Aybüke \"Ozgün and Ana Lucia Vargas Sandoval}, title = {Arbitrary Public Announcement Logic with Memory}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2023}, volume = {52}, number = {1}, pages = {53--110}, abstract = {We introduce Arbitrary Public Announcement Logic with Memory (APALM), obtained by adding to the models a 'memory' of the initial states, representing the information before any communication took place ("the prior"), and adding to the syntax operators that can access this memory. We show that APALM is recursively axiomatizable (in contrast to the original Arbitrary Public Announcement Logic, for which the corresponding question is still open). ...}, topic = {public-announcements;completeness-theorems;;} } @incollection{ baltag_a-renne_b:2016a, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Bryan Renne}, title = {{Dynamic Epistemic Logic}}, booktitle = {The {Stanford} Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2016/entries/dynamic-epistemic/}, year = {2016}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ baltag_a-smets_s:2008a, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Sonja Smets}, title = {A Qualitative Theory of Dynamic Interactive Belief Revision}, booktitle = {Dynamic Formal Epistemology: Proceedings of Logic and Foundations of Game Theory and Decision Theory (LOFT) 2007}, publisher = {University of Amsterdam Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Giacomo Bonanno and Wiebe van der Hoek and Michael Wooldridge}, pages = {11--58}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. See \fe20\LOFT7.pdf}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;dynamic-logic;dynamic-epistemic-logic; belief-revision;muntiagent-systems;} } @article{ baltag_a-smets_s:2015a, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Sonja Smets}, title = {Logics of Informational Interactions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {6}, pages = {595--607}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;} } @article{ baltag_a-vanbenthem_j:2021a, author = {Alexandru Baltag and Johan van Benthem}, title = {A Simple Logic of Functional Dependence}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {5}, pages = {939--1005}, abstract = {This paper presents a simple decidable logic of functional dependence LFD, based on an extension of classical propositional logic with dependence atoms plus dependence quantifiers treated as modalities, within the setting of generalized assignment semantics for first order logic. ... }, topic = {functional-dependence-logic;modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ banarescu_l-etal:2013a, author = {Laura Banarescu and Claire Bonial and Shu Cai and Madalina Georgescu and Kira Griffitt and Ulf Hermjakob and Kevin Knight and Philipp Koehn and Martha Palmer and Nathan Schneider}, title = {Abstract Meaning Representation for Sembanking}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 7th Language and Annotation Workshop}, year = {2013}, editor = {Stefanie Dipper and Maria Liakata}, pages = {178--186}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, abstract = {We describe Abstract Meaning Representation (AMR), a semantic representation language in which we are writing down the meanings of thousands of English sentences. We hope that a sembank of simple, whole-sentence semantic structures will spur new work in statistical natural language understanding and generation, like the Penn Treebank encouraged work on statistical parsing. This paper gives an overview of AMR and tools associated with it.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, topic = {knowledge-representation;computational-semantics;} } @article{ banick_k:2019a, author = {Kyle Banick}, title = {Epistemic Logic, Monotonicity, and the {H}albach-{W}elch Rapprochement Strategy}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2019}, volume = {107}, number = {4}, pages = {669--693}, abstract = {...This article concerns the question of whether Halbach and Welch's approach can provide a uniform formal treatment for intensionality. I show that the monotonicity constraint in Halbach and Welch's proof for necessity fails for almost all possible-worlds theories of knowledge. The nonmonotonicity results demonstrate that the most obvious way of emulating Halbach and Welch's rapprochement of the predicate and operator fails in the epistemic setting.}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;} } @inproceedings{ banihashemi_b-etal:2016a, author = {Bita Banihashemi and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Yves Lesp\'erance}, title = {Online Situation-Determined Agents and their Supervision}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {517--520}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we investigate supervision of an agent that may acquire new knowledge about her environment during execution, for example, by sensing. Thus we consider an agent's online executions, where, as she executes the program, at each time point she must make decisions on what to do next based on what her current knowledge is. This is done in a setting based on the situation calculus and a variant of the ConGolog programming language. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {agent-supervision;reasoning-about-permission;GoLog;} } @book{ bar_m:2011a, editor = {Moshe Bar}, title = {Predictions in the Brain: Using Our Past to Generate a Future}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {978-0195395518}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Karl K. Szpunar , and Endel Tulving, "Varieties of Future Experience" 2. Moshe Bar, "The proactive brain" 3. Lawrence W. Barsalou, "Simulation, Situated Conceptualization, and Predictions" 4. Aron K. Barbey and Frank Krueger and Jordan Grafman, "The Prefrontal Cortex and the Construction of Mental Models for Future Thinking" 5. Daniel Schacter and Donna Rose Addis, "On the nature of medial temporal lobe contributions to the constructive simulation of future events" 6. Demis Hassabis and Eleanor A. Maguire, "The construction system of the brain" 7. Kathleen McDermott and Karl K. Szpunar and Kathleen M. Arnold, "Similarities in Episodic Future Thought and Remembering: The Importance of Contextual Setting" 8. Samuel T. Moulton and Stephen M. Kosslyn, "Imagining Predictions: Mental Imagery as Mental Emulation" 9. Lisa Feldman Barrett and Moshe Bar, "See It with Feeling: Affective Predictions During Object Perceptions" 10. Antoine Bechara, "The somatic marker hypothesis and its neural basis: Using past experiences to forecast the future in decision-making" 11. Shelley E. Taylor, "Envisioning the Future and Self-Regulation" 12. Nira Liberman and Yaacov Trope and So Yon Rim, "Prediction: A Construal Level Theory Perspective" 13. Daniel Gilbert and Timothy D. Wilson, "Previews, Premotions, and Predictions" 15. Marta Kutas and Katherine A. DeLong and Nathaniel J. Smith, "A look around at what's ahead: Prediction and predictability in language processing" 16. Stephen Grossberg, "Cortical and Subcortical Predictive Dynamics and Learning during Perception, Cognition, Emotion, and Action" 17. Karl Friston and Stefan Kiebel, "Predictive coding: A free-energy formulation" 18. Jeff Hawkins, Dileep George, and Jamie Niemasik, "Sequence Memory for Prediction, Inference, and Behavior" 19. John Lisman and A. David Redish, "Prediction, sequences and the hippocampus" 20. Howard Eichenbaum and Norbert J. Fortin, "The neurobiology of memory based predictions" 21. Yadin Dudai, "Predicting not to predict too much: How the cellular machinery of memory anticipates the uncertain future" 22. Michael J. Berry II and Gregory Schwartz, "The Retina As Embodying Predictions About the Visual World" 23. Cristina Atance and Laura K. Hanson, "Making Predictions: A Developmental Perspective" 24. Lucy G Cheke and James M Thom and Nicola S Clayton, "Prospective Decision Making in Animals: A Potential Role for Intertemporal Choice in the study of Prospective Cognition" 25. Thomas Suddendorf, "Mental Time Travel and the Shaping of the Human Mind" }, topic = {predictive-causal-models;cogntive-neuroscience;philosophy-of-mind;} } @unpublished{ baral_c:1990a, author = {Chitta Baral}, title = {Relation between Flat Conditional Logics and Preferential Models (Preliminary Draft)}, year = {1990}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Computer Science, University of Maryland}, xref = {Publication: baral_c:1994a.}, topic = {conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;model-preference;} } @article{ baral_c:1994a, author = {Chitta Baral}, title = {Varying Selection Function to Relate Conditional Logics and Preferential Models}, journal = {Fundamenta Informaticae}, year = {1994}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {307--320}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;model-preference;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c:1995a, author = {Chitta Baral}, title = {Reasoning about Actions: Non-Deterministic Effects, Constraints, and Qualification}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {2017--2023}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\baral3.pdf}, topic = {planning-formalisms,actions;temporal-reasoning;} } @article{ baral_c:1998a, author = {Chitta Baral}, title = {Formalizing Narratives Using Nested Circumscription}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {104}, number = {1--2}, pages = {107--164}, topic = {narrative-representation;narrative-understanding; circumscription;} } @article{ baral_c:2000a, author = {Chitta Baral}, title = {Abductive Reasoning through Filtering}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {120}, number = {1}, pages = {1--28}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Abduction is an inference mechanism where given a knowledge base and some observations, the reasoner tries to find hypotheses which together with the knowledge base explain the observations. A reasoning based on such an inference mechanism is referred to as abductive reasoning. Given a theory and some observations, by filtering the theory with the observations, we mean selecting only those models of the theory that entail the observations. Entailment with respect to these selected models is referred to as filter entailment. In this paper we give necessary and sufficient conditions when abductive reasoning with respect to a theory and some observations is equivalent to the corresponding filter entailment. We then give sufficiency conditions for particular knowledge representation formalisms that guarantee that abductive reasoning can indeed be done through filtering and present examples from the knowledge representation literature where abductive reasoning is done through filtering. We extend the notions of abductive reasoning and filter entailment to allow preferences among explanations and models respectively and give conditions when they are equivalent. Finally, we give a weaker notion of abduction and abductive reasoning and show the later to be equivalent to filter entailment under less restrictive conditions. }, topic = {abduction;machine-learning;filtering;} } @book{ baral_c:2003a, author = {Chitta Baral}, title = {Knowledge Representation, Reasoning, and Declarative Problem Solving}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521818028}, xref = {Review: morgenstern_l:2006a.}, topic = {kr;kr-text;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c:2010a, author = {Chitta Baral}, title = {Reasoning about Actions and Change: From Single Agent Actions to Multi-agent Actions (Abstract)}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {3--5}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we will discuss how theories and results from reasoning about actions and change can be combined with theories and results in dynamic epistemic logics to obtain a unified theory of multi-agent actions.}, topic = {action-formalisms;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-dzifcak_j:2012a, author = {Chitta Baral and Juraj Dzifcak}, title = {Solving Puzzles Described in {E}nglish by Automated Translation to Answer Set Programming and Learning How to Do that Translation}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {573--577}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We present a system capable of automatically solving combinatorial logic puzzles given in (simplified) English. It uses an ontology to represent the puzzles in ASP which is applicable to a large set of logic puzzles. To translate the English descriptions of the puzzles into this ontology, we use a lambda-calculus based approach using Probabilistic Combinatorial Categorial Grammars (PCCG) where the meanings of words are associated with parameters to be able to distinguish between multiple meanings of the same word.}, topic = {logic-puzzles;answer-sets;nlp;} } @incollection{ baral_c-eiter_t:2004a, author = {Chitta Baral and Thomas Eiter}, title = {A Polynomial-Time Algorithm for Constructing $k$-Maintainable Policies}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {720--729}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {planning-algorithms;SAT-based-planning;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-etal:1990a, author = {Chitta Baral and Jorge Lobo and Jack Minker}, title = {Generalized Disjunctive Well-Founded Semantics for Logic Programs: Declarative Semantics}, booktitle = {Methodologies for Intelligent Systems: Proceedings of the Fifth International Symposium}, year = {1990}, editor = {Zbigniew Ras and M. Zemankova and M. Emrich}, pages = {212--225}, publisher = {North-Holland}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {well-founded-semantics;} } @article{ baral_c-etal:1992a, author = {Chitta Baral and Sarit Kraus and Jack Minker and V.S. Subramanian}, title = {Combining Knowledge Bases Consisting of First Order Theories}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1992}, missinginfo = {volume, number, pages}, topic = {knowledge-integration;} } @article{ baral_c-etal:1993a, author = {Chitta Baral and Michael Gelfond and Alessandro Provetti}, title = {Representing Actions: Laws, Observations, and Hypotheses}, journal = {Journal of Logic Programming}, year = {1993}, volume = {12}, issue = {1--3}, pages = {201--243}, abstract = {We propose a modification L1 of the action description language A. The language L1 allows representation of hypothetical situations and hypothetical occurrence of actions (as in A) as well as representation of actual occurrences of actions and observations of the truth values of fluents in actual situations. The corresponding entailment relation formalizes various types of common-sense reasoning about actions and their effects not modeled by previous approaches. As an application of L1 we also present an architecture for intelligent agents capable of observing, planning and acting in a changing environment based on the entailment relation of L1 and use logic programming approximation of this entailment to implement a planning module for this architecture. We prove the soundness of our implementation and give a sufficient condition for its completeness.}, topic = {actions;action-formalisms;causality;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-etal:1995a, author = {Chitta Baral and Michael Gelfond and Alessandro Provetti}, title = {Representing Actions {I} (Laws, Observations and Hypotheses)}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Extending Theories of Action: Formal Theories and Applications}, year = {1995}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. \ja19}, rtnote = {Discusses hypothetical situations in a situation calculus framework.}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {action;planning-formalisms;foundations-of-planning;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-etal:1996a, author = {Chitta Baral and Alfredo Gabeldon and Alessandro Provetti}, title = {Formalizing Narratives Using Nested Circumscription}, booktitle = {Working Papers: Common Sense '96}, year = {1996}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and Tom Costello}, pages = {15--24}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, Stanford University}, address = {Stanford University}, note = {Consult http://www-formal.Stanford.edu/tjc/96FCS.}, topic = {kr;circumscription;narrative-representation;kr-course;} } @incollection{ baral_c-etal:1996b1, author = {Chitta Baral and Alfredo Gabaldon and Alessandro Provetti}, title = {Value Minimization in Circumscription}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {474--481}, address = {San Francisco, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: baral_c-etal:1996b2.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;circumscription;} } @article{ baral_c-etal:1996b2, author = {Chitta Baral and Alfredo Gabaldon and Alessandro Provetti}, title = {Value Minimization in Circumscription}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {102}, number = {2}, pages = {163--186}, xref = {Conference Publication: baral_c-etal:1996b1.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;circumscription;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-etal:1998a, author = {Chitta Baral and L. Floriano and A. Hardesty and D. Morales and M. Nogueira and T. C. Son}, title = {From Theory to Practice: the {UTEP} Robot in the {AAAI} 96 and {AAAI} 97 Robot Contests}, booktitle = {AGENTS '98: Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Autonomous Agents}, year = {1998}, editor = {Katia Sycara and Michael Wooldridge}, pages = {32--38}, publisher = {ACM Press}, address = {New York}, topic = {cognitive-robotics;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-etal:1999a, author = {Chitta Baral and Michael Gelfond}, title = {Reasoning Agents in Dynamic Domains}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {action-formalisms;concurrent-actions;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-etal:2000a, author = {Chitta Baral and Sheila A. McIlraith and Tran Cao San}, title = {Formulating Diagnostic Reasoning Using an Action Language with Narratives and Sensing}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {311--322}, abstract = {... Since actions and narrative play a central role in diagnostic problem solving, we characterize diagnosis ... with respect to the existing action language L, extended to include static constraints, sensing actions, and the notion of observable fluents. This language is used to obtain a uniform account of diagnostic problem solving.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {diagnosis;action-formalisms;sensing-actions;} } @article{ baral_c-etal:2000b, author = {Chitta Baral and Vladik Kreinovich and Ra\'ul Trejo}, title = {Computational Complexity of Planning and Approximate Planning in the Presence of Incompleteness}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {122}, number = {1--2}, pages = {241--267}, topic = {planning;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-etal:2001a, author = {Chitta Baral and Vladik Kreinovich and Ra\'ul Trejo}, title = {Computational Complexity of Planning with Temporal Goals}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel}, pages = {509--514}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {planning-algorithms;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ baral_c-etal:2002a, author = {Chitta Baral and Tran Cao Son and Le-Chi Tuan}, title = {A Transition Function Based Characterization of Actions with Delayed and Continuous Effects}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {291--302}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {kr;reasoning-about-actions;temporal-reasoning;action-formalisms; ramification-problem;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-etal:2002b, author = {Chitta Baral and Nam Tran and Le-Chi Tuan}, title = {Reasoning about Actions in a Probabilistic Setting}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {507--512}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {probabilistic-reasoning;action-formalisms;} } @incollection{ baral_c-etal:2003a, author = {Chitta Baral and Tran Cao Son and Le-Chi Tuan}, title = {Golog$+${HTNT}t\raisebox{.5ex}{\scriptsize TM}: Adding Time and Intervals to Procedural and Hierarchical Control Knowledge}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Logical Formalization of Commonsense Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John McCarthy and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {19--26}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;cognitive-robotics;} } @article{ baral_c-etal:2008a, author = {Chitta Baral and Thomas Eiter and Marcus Bj\"areland and Mutsumi Nakamura}, title = {Maintenance Goals of Agents in a Dynamic Environment: Formulation and Policy Construction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {12--13}, pages = {1429--1469}, topic = {reasoning-about-goals;answer-sets;maintenance-goals;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-etal:2011a, author = {Chitta Baral and Juraj Dzifcak and Marcos Alvarez Gonzalez and Jiayu Zhou}, title = {Using Inverse Lambda and Generalization to Translate {E}nglish to Formal Languages}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Computational Semantics (IWCS 2011)}, year = {2011}, pages = {35--44}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, topic = {nl-semantics;computational-semantics;} } @book{ baral_c-etal:2014a, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, title = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, isbn = {978-1-57735-657-8}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Vernon Asuncion and Yan Zhang and Heng Zhang, "Logic Programs with Ordered Disjunction: First-Order Semantics and Expressiveness", pp. 2--11 2. Angelos Charalambidis and Panos Rondogiannis, "Constructive Negation in Extensional Higher-Order Logic Programming", pp. 13--21 3. Marc Denecker and Joost Vennekens, "The Well-Founded Semantics Is the Principle of Inductive Definition, Revisited", pp. 22--31 4. Amelia J. Harrison and Vladimir Lifschitz and Fangkai Yang, "The Semantics of {G}ringo and Infinitary Propositional Formulas", pp. 32--41 5. Federico Cerutti and Massimiliano Giacomin and Mauro Vallati and Marina Zanella, "An {SCC} Recursive Meta-Algorithm for Computing Preferred Labellings in Abstract Argumentation", pp. 42--51 6. Sylvie Coste-Marquis and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Jean-Guy Mailly and Pierre Marquis, "On the Revision of Argumentation Systems: Minimal Change of Arguments Statuses", pp. 52--61 7. Sylvie Doutre and Andreas Herzig and Laurent Perrussel, "A Dynamic Logic Framework for Abstract Argumentation", pp. 62--71 8. Paul E. Dunne and Wolfgang Dvorak and Thomas Linsbichler and Stefan Woltran, "Characteristics of Multiple Viewpoints in Abstract Argumentation", pp. 72--81 9. Ronald de Haan and Stefan Szeider, "The Parameterized Complexity of Reasoning Problems Beyond {NP}", pp. 82--91 10. Igor Razgon, "On {OBDD}s for {CNF}s of Bounded Treewidth", pp. 92--100 11. Hannes Strass and Johannes Peter Wallner, "Analyzing the Computational Complexity of Abstract Dialectical Frameworks via Approximation Fixpoint Theory", pp. 101--110 12. Guy Van den Broeck and Wannes Meert and Adnan Darwiche, "Skolemization for Weighted First-Order Model Counting", pp. 111--120 13. Patricia Everaere and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Pierre Marquis, "On Egalitarian Belief Merging", pp. 121--130 14. Davide Grossi and Wiebe van der Hoek, "Justified Beliefs by Justified Arguments", pp. 131--140 15. Andreas Herzig, "Belief Change Operations: A Short History of Nearly Everything, Told in Dynamic Logic of Propositional Assignments", pp. 141--150 16. Mehrdad Oveisi and James P. Delgrande and Francis Jeffry Pelletier and Fred Popowich, "Belief Change and Base Dependence", pp. 151--160 17. Pavlos Peppas and Mary-Anne Williams, "Belief Change and Semiorders", pp. 161--170 18. Claus-Peter Wirth and Frieder Stolzenburg, "David Poole's Specificity Revised", pp. 171--177 19. Adam Bjorndahl and Joseph Halpern and Rafael Pass, "Axiomatizing Rationality", pp. 178--187 20. Alexander Bochman, "Dynamic Causal Calculus", pp. 188--197 21. Joseph Halpern, "Appropriate Causal Models and Stability of Causation", pp. 198--207 22. Egor Ianovski and Luke Ong, "{EG}uarantee{N}ash for Boolean Games Is {NEXP}-Hard", pp. 208--217 23. Meghyn Bienvenu and Diego Calvanese and Magdalena Ortiz and Mantas Simkus, "Nested Regular Path Queries in Description Logics", pp. 218--227 24. Stefan Borgwardt and Felix Distel and Rafael Pe\~naloza, "Decidable {G}\"odel Description Logics without the Finitely-Valued Model Property", pp. 228--237 25. Elena Botoeva and Roman Kontchakov and Vladislav Ryzhikov and Frank Wolter and Michael Zakharyaschev, "Query Inseparability for Description Logic Knowledge Bases", pp. 238--247 26. Andreas Ecke and Rafael Pe\~naloza and Anni-Yasmin Turhan, "Answering Instance Queries Relaxed by Concept Similarity", pp. 248--257 27. Georg Gottlob and Andr\'e Hernich and Clemens Kupke and Thomas Lukasiewicz, "Stable Model Semantics for Guarded Existential Rules and Description Logics", pp. 258--267 28. Georg Gottlob and Marco Manna and Andreas Pieris, "Polynomial Combined Rewritings for Existential Rules", pp. 268--277 29. V\'ictor Guti\'errez-Basulto and Jean Christoph Jung and Thomas Schneider, "Lightweight Description Logics and Branching Time: A Troublesome Marriage", pp. 278--287 30. Yazm\'in Ib\'a\~nez Garc\'ia and Carsten Lutz and Thomas Schneider, "Finite Model Reasoning in {H}orn Description Logics", pp. 288--297 31. Boris Konev and Carsten Lutz and Ana Ozaki and Frank Wolter, "Exact Learning of Lightweight Description Logic Ontologies", pp. 298--307 32. Markus Kr\"otzsch and Sebastian Rudolph, "Nominal Schemas in Description Logics: Complexities Clarified", pp. 308--317 33. Michel Ludwig and Boris Konev, "Practical Uniform Interpolation and Forgetting for {ALC} {TB}oxes with Applications to Logical Difference", pp. 318--327 34. Leonid Libkin, "Certain Answers as Objects and Knowledge", pp. 328--337 35. Fangzhen Lin, "A Formalization of Programs in First-Order Logic with a Discrete Linear Order", pp. 328--337 36. Loizos Michael, "Simultaneous Learning and Prediction", pp. 338--347 37. Peter Sch\"uller, "Tackling {W}inograd Schemas by Formalizing Relevance Theory in Knowledge Graphs", pp. 358--367 38. Shahab Tasharrofi and Eugenia Ternovska, "Generalized Multi-Context Systems", pp. 368--377 39. Peng Zhang and Jochen Renz, "Qualitative Spatial Representation and Reasoning in Angry Birds: The Extended Rectangle Algebra", pp. 378--387 40. Jorge A. Baier and Brent Mombourquette and Sheila A. McIlraith, "Diagnostic Problem Solving via Planning with Ontic and Epistemic Goals", pp. 388--397 41. Francesco Belardinelli, "Satisfiability of Alternating-Time Temporal Epistemic Logic Through Tableaux", pp. 398--407 42. Julian Gutierrez and Paul Harrenstein and Michael Wooldridge, "Reasoning about Equilibria in Game-Like Concurrent Systems", pp. 408--417 43. Xiaowei Huang and Ron van der Meyden, "A Temporal Logic of Strategic Knowledge", pp. 418--427 44. Alessio Lomuscio and Jakub Michaliszyn, "An Abstraction Technique for the Verification of Multi-Agent Systems Against ATL Specifications", pp. 428--437 45. Vaishak Belle and Hector Levesque, "How to Progress Beliefs in Continuous Domains", pp. 438--447 46. Christopher James Ewin and Adrian R. Pearce and Stavros Vassos, "Transforming Situation Calculus Action Theories for Optimised Reasoning", pp. 448--457 47. Babak Bagheri Hariri and Diego Calvanese and Marco Montali and Alin Deutsch, "State-Boundedness in Data-Aware Dynamic Systems", pp. 458--467 48. Gerhard Lakemeyer and Hector J. Levesque, "Decidable Reasoning in a Fragment of the Epistemic Situation Calculus", pp. 468--477 49. Fangzhen Lin, "A First-Order Semantics for {G}olog and {C}on{G}olog under a Second-Order Induction Axiom for Situations", pp. 478--487 50. Alessio Lomuscio and Jakub Michaliszyn, "Model Checking Unbounded Artifact-Centric Systems", pp. 488--497 51. David Rajaratnam and Hector Levesque and Maurice Pagnucco and Michael Thielscher, "Forgetting in Action", pp. 498--507 52. Mehul Bhatt and Carl Schultz and Madhura Thosar, "Computing Narratives of Cognitive User Experience for Building Design Analysis: KR for Industry Scale Computer-Aided Architecture Design", pp. 508--517 53. Andrea Marrella and Massimo Mecella and Sebastian Sardina, "Smart{PM}: An Adaptive Process Management System through Situation Calculus, IndiGolog, and Classical Planning", pp. 518--527 54. Matthias Thimm, "Tweety: A Comprehensive Collection of {J}ava Libraries for Logical Aspects of Artificial Intelligence and Knowledge Representation", pp. 528--537 55. Salem Benferhat and Karim Tabia, "Reasoning with Uncertain Inputs in Possibilistic Networks", pp. 538--547 56. Seyed Mehran Kazemi and David Buchman and Kristian Kersting and Sriraam Natarajan and David Poole, "Relational Logistic Regression", pp. 548--557 57. Doga Kisa and Guy Van den Broeck and Arthur Choi and Adnan Darwiche, "Probabilistic Sentential Decision Diagrams", pp. 558--567 58. Nico Potyka, "Linear Programs for Measuring Inconsistency in Probabilistic Logics", pp. 568--577 59. Guillaume Aucher, "Axioms .2 and .4 as Interaction Axioms", pp. 579--582 60. Michael Bartholomew and Joohyung Lee, "Stable Models of Multi-Valued Formulas: Partial versus Total Functions", pp. 583--586 61. Wouter Beek and Stefan Schlobach and Frank van Harmelen, "Rough Set Semantics for Identity on the Web", pp. 687--589 62. Vaishak Belle and Gerhard Lakemeyer, "On the Progression of Knowledge in Multiagent Systems", pp. 590--593 63. Richard Booth and Edmond Awad and Iyad Rahwan, "Interval Methods for Judgment Aggregation in Argumentation", pp. 594--597 64. Pedro Cabalar and Mart\'in Di\'eguez, "Strong Equivalence of Non-Monotonic Temporal Theories", pp. 598--601 65. Sofie De Clercq and Kim Bauters and Steven Schockaert and Martine De Cock and Ann Now\'e, "Using Answer Set Programming for Solving Boolean Games", pp. 602--605 66. James P. Delgrande, "Towards a Knowledge Level Analysis of Forgetting", pp. 606--609 67. Irene-Anna Diakidoy and Antonis Kakas and Loizos Michael and Rob Miller, "A Psychology-Inspired Approach to Automated Narrative Text Comprehension", pp. 610--613 68. Felix Distel and Jamal Atif and Isabelle Bloch, "Concept Dissimilarity with Triangle Inequality", pp. 614--617 69. Matt Duckham and Sanjiang Li and Weiming Liu and Zhiguo Long, "On Redundant Topological Constraints", pp. 618--621 70. Valmi Dufour-Lussier and Alice Hermann and Florence Le Ber and Jean Lieber, "Belief Revision in the Propositional Closure of a Qualitative Algebra", pp. 622--625 71. Sjur Kristoffer Dyrkolbotn, "How to Argue for Anything: Enforcing Arbitrary Sets of Labellings using {AF}s", pp. 626--629 72. Valeria Fionda and Claudio Gutierrez and Giuseppe Pirro, "Knowledge Maps of Web Graphs", pp. 630--633 73. Martin Gebser and Tomi Janhunen and Jussi Rintanen, "{ASP} Encodings of Acyclicity Properties", pp. 634--637 74. Codruta Liliana Girlea and Eyal Amir and Roxana Girju, "Tracking Beliefs and Intentions in the Werewolf Game", pp. 638--641 75. Leora Morgenstern, "Representing and Reasoning about Time Travel Narratives: Foundational Concepts", pp. 642--645 76. Xavier Parent and Leon van der Torre, "Aggregative Deontic Detachment for Normative Reasoning", pp. 646--649 77. Fabio Patrizi and Stavros Vassos, "Action Theories over Generalized Databases with Equality Constraints (Extended Abstract)", pp. 650--653 78. Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Emmanuelle-Anna Dietz and Steffen H\"olldobler, "An Abductive Reasoning Approach to the Belief Bias Effect", pp. 654--657 79. Marcio Moretto Ribeiro and Renata Wassermann, "Minimal Change in {AGM} Revision for Non-Classical Logics", pp. 658--661 80. Viachaslau Sazonau and Uli Sattler and Gavin Brown, "Predicting Performance of {OWL} Reasoners: Locally or Globally?", pp. 662--665 81. Yuping Shen and Xishun Zhao, "Canonical Logic Programs are Succinctly Incomparable with Propositional Formulas", pp. 666--669 82. Andreas Sideris and Yannis Dimopoulos, "Heuristic Guided Optimization for Propositional Planning", pp. 670--673 83. Yi Zhou, "First-Order Default Logic Revisited", pp. 674--677 84. Franz Baader, "Ontology-Based Monitoring of Dynamic Systems", pp. 678--681 85. Georg Gottlob and Thomas Lukasiewicz and Andreas Pieris, "Datalog+/-: Questions and Answers", pp. 682--685 }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014, https://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr14contents.php}, topic = {kr;} } @book{ baral_c-etal:2016a, title = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2016}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Leila Amgoud and Jonathan Ben-Naim, "Axiomatic Foundations of Acceptability Semantics", Pp. 2--11 2. Leila Amgoud and Jonathan Ben-Naim and Dragan Doder and Srdjan Vesic, "Ranking Arguments With Compensation-Based Semantics", Pp. 12--21 3. Ringo Baumann, "Characterizing Equivalence Notions for Labelling-Based Semantics", Pp. 22--32 4. J\'er\^ome Delobelle and Adrian Haret and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Jean-Guy Mailly and Julien Rossit and Stefan Woltran, "Merging of Abstract Argumentation Frameworks", Pp. 33--42 5. Massimiliano Giacomin and Thomas Linsbichler and Stefan Woltran, "On the Functional Completeness of Argumentation Semantics", Pp. 43--52 6. Anthony Hunter and Matthias Thimm, "On Partial Information and Contradictions in Probabilistic Abstract Argumentation", Pp. 53--62 7. Antonio Rago and Francesca Toni and Marco Aurisicchio and Pietro Baroni, "Discontinuity-Free Decision Support with Quantitative Argumentation Debates", Pp. 63--72 8. Bart Bogaerts and Tomi Janhunen and Shahab Tasharrofi, "Declarative Solver Development: Case Studies", Pp. 74--83 9. Said Jabbour and Yue Ma and Badran Raddaoui and Lakhdar Sais and Yakoub Salhi, "A {MIS} Partition Based Framework for Measuring Inconsistency", Pp. 84--93 10. Umut Oztok and Arthur Choi and Adnan Darwiche, "Solving {PPPP}-Complete Problems Using Knowledge Compilation", Pp. 94--103 11. Paul Saikko and Johannes P. Wallner and Matti J\"arvisalo, "Implicit Hitting Set Algorithms for Reasoning Beyond NP", Pp. 104--113 12. Matthias Thimm and Johannes Peter Wallner, "Some Complexity Results on Inconsistency Measurement", Pp. 114--123 13. Glauber De Bona and Marcelo Finger and M\'arcio Moretto Ribeiro and Yuri David Santos and Renata Wassermann, "Consolidating Probabilistic Knowledge Bases via Belief Contraction", Pp. 125--134 14. Ricardo Goncalves and Matthias Knorr and Jo\~ao Leite, "The Ultimate Guide to Forgetting in Answer Set Programming", Pp. 135--144 15. Joohyung Lee and Yi Wang, "Weighted Rules under the Stable Model Semantics", Pp. 145--154 16. Marlo Souza and Alvaro Moreira and Renata Vieira and John-Jules Ch. Meyer, "Preference and Priorities: A Study Based on Contraction", Pp. 155--164 17. Haris Aziz and Paul Harrenstein and Jerome Lang and Michael Wooldridge, "Boolean Hedonic Games", Pp. 166--175 18. Ulle Endriss and Umberto Grandi and Ronald de Haan and Jerome Lang, "Succinctness of Languages for Judgment Aggregation", Pp. 176--185 19. Andrew Bate and Boris Motik and Bernardo Cuenca Grau and Franti\^sek Siman\^c\'ik and Ian Horrocks, "Extending Consequence-Based Reasoning to {SRIQ}", Pp. 187--196 20. Meghyn Bienvenu and Riccardo Rosati, "Query-Based Comparison of Mappings in Ontology-Based Data Access", Pp. 197--206 21. Pierre Bourhis and Carsten Lutz, "Containment in Monadic Disjunctive Datalog, {MMSNP}, and Expressive Description Logics", Pp. 207--216 22. Ernesto Jimenez-Ruiz and Terry R. Payne and Alessandro Solimando and Valentina Tamma, "Limiting Logical Violations in Ontology Alignnment Through Negotiation", Pp. 217--226 23. Boris Konev and Temur Kutsia, "Anti-Unification of Concepts in Description Logic {EL}", Pp. 227--236 24. Nhung Ngo and Magdalena Ortiz and Mantas Simkus, "Closed Predicates in Description Logics: Results on Combined Complexity", Pp. 237--246 25. Sebastian Rudolph, "Undecidability Results for Database-Inspired Reasoning Problems in Very Expressive Description Logics", Pp. 247--256 26. Benjamin Aminof and Aniello Murano and Sasha Rubin and Florian Zuleger, "Prompt Alternating-Time Epistemic Logics", Pp. 258--267 27. Tristan Charrier and Andreas Herzig and Emiliano Lorini and Faustine Maffre and Fran\c{c}ois Schwarzentruber, "Building Epistemic Logic from Observations and Public Announcements", Pp. 268--277 28. Joseph Y. Halpern and Rafael Pass, "Sequential Equilibrium in Games of Imperfect Recall", Pp. 278--287 29. Gerhard Lakemeyer and Hector J. Levesque, "Decidable Reasoning in a Logic of Limited Belief with Function Symbols", Pp. 288--297 30. Alessio Lomuscio and Jakub Michaliszyn, "Model Checking Multi-Agent Systems against Epistemic {HS} Specifications with Regular Expressions", Pp. 298--307 31. Sergio Abriola and Pablo Barcel\'o and Diego Figueira and Santiago Figueira, "Bisimulations on Data Graphs", Pp. 309--318 32. Alexander Borgida and David Toman and Grant Weddell, "On Referring Expressions in Query Answering over First Order Knowledge Bases", Pp. 319--328 33. Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Moshe Y. Vardi, "Regular Open {API}s", Pp. 329--338 34. Ismail Ilkan Ceylan and Adnan Darwiche and Guy Van den Broeck, "Open-World Probabilistic Databases", Pp. 339--348 35. Marco Console and Paolo Guagliardo and Leonid Libkin, "Approximations and Refinements of Certain Answers via Many-Valued Logics", Pp. 349--358 36. Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz and Livia Predoiu, "Generalized Consistent Query Answering under Existential Rules", Pp. 359--368 37. Roman Kontchakov and Egor V. Kostylev, "On Expressibility of Non-Monotone Operators in {SPARQL}", Pp. 369--378 38. Vaishak Belle and Hector J. Levesque, "Foundations for Generalized Planning in Unbounded Stochastic Domains", Pp. 380--389 39. Julian Gutierrez and Giuseppe Perelli and Michael Wooldridge, "Imperfect Information in Reactive Modules Games", Pp. 390--399 40. Alexander Bochman, "On Logics and Semantics of Indeterminate Causation", Pp. 401--410 41. Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Marco Montali and Fabio Patrizi, "On First-Order $\mu$-Calculus over Situation Calculus Action Theories", Pp. 411--420 42. Zhiyi Luo and Yuchen Sha and Kenny Q. Zhu and Seung-Won Hwang and Zhongyuan Wang, "Commonsense Causal Reasoning between Short Texts", Pp. 421--430 43. Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Condotta and Issam Nouaouri and Michael Sioutis, "A {SAT} Approach for Maximizing Satisfiability in Qualitative Spatial and Temporal Constraint Networks", Pp. 432--442 44. Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Condotta and Badran Raddaoui and Yakoub Salhi, "Quantifying Conflicts for Spatial and Temporal Information", Pp. 443--452 45. Ronald de Haan and Stefan Szeider, "Parameterized Complexity Results for Symbolic Model Checking of Temporal Logics", Pp. 453--462 46. Zhiguo Long and Steven Schockaert and Sanjiang Li, "Encoding Large {RCC8} Scenarios Using Rectangular Pseudo-Solutions", Pp. 463--472 47. Alberto Molinari and Angelo Montanari and Adriano Peron and Pietro Sala, "Model Checking Well-Behaved Fragments of HS: The (Almost) Final Picture", Pp. 473--482 48. Magdalena Ivanovska and Audun J{\o}ang and Francesco Sambo, "Bayesian Deduction with Subjective Opinions", Pp. 484--493 49. Thomas Lukasiewicz and Maria Vanina Martinez and David L. Poole and Gerardo Ignacio Simari, "Probabilistic Models over Weighted Orderings: Fixed-Parameter Tractable Variable Elimination", Pp. 494--504 50. Muhannad Alomari and Eris Chinellato and Yiannis Gatsoulis and David C. Hogg and Anthony G. Cohn, "Unsupervised Grounding of Textual Descriptions of Object Features and Actions in Video", Pp. 505--508 51. Ofer Arieli and Christian Strasser, "Argumentative Approaches to Reasoning with Maximal Consistency", Pp. 509--512 52. Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Baget and Salem Benferhat and Zied Bouraoui and Madalina Croitoru and Marie-Laure Mugnier and Odile Papini and Swan Rocher and Karim Tabia, "A General Modifier-Based Framework for Inconsistency-Tolerant Query Answering", Pp. 513--516 53. Bita Banihashemi and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Yves Lesp\'erance, "Online Situation-Determined Agents and their Supervision", Pp. 517--520 54. Pietro Baroni and Guido Governatori and Ho-Pun Lam and R\'egis Riveret, "On the Justification of Statements in Argumentation-based Reasoning", Pp. 521--524 55. Ringo Baumann and Hannes Strass, "An Abstract Logical Approach to Characterizing Strong Equivalence in Logic-based Knowledge Representation Formalisms", Pp. 525--528 56. David Buchman and David L. Poole, "Negation Without Negation in Probabilistic Logic Programming", Pp. 529--532 57. Arnaud Carayol and Zoltan Esik, "An Analysis of the Equational Properties of the Well-Founded Fixed Point", Pp. 533--536 58. Giovanni Casini and Thomas Meyer, "Using Defeasible Information to Obtain Coherence", Pp. 537--540 59. Federico Cerutti and Mauro Vallati and Massimiliano Giacomin, "{jArgSemSAT}: An Efficient Off-the-Shelf Solver for Abstract Argumentation Frameworks", Pp. 541--544 60. Luk\'a\^s Chrpa and Roman Bart\'ak, "Guiding Planning Engines by Transition-Based Domain Control Knowledge", Pp. 545--548 61. Kristijonas Cyras and Ken Satoh and Francesca Toni, "Abstract Argumentation for Case-Based Reasoning", Pp. 549--552 62. Kristijonas Cyras and Francesca Toni, "{ABA}+: Assumption-Based Argumentation with Preferences", Pp. 553--556 63. Jun Feng and Minlie Huang and Mingdong Wang and Mantong Zhou and Yu Hao and Xiaoyan Zhu, "Knowledge Graph Embedding by Flexible Translation", Pp. 557--560 64. Seyed Mehran Kazemi and David L. Poole, "Knowledge Compilation for Lifted Probabilistic Inference: Compiling to a Low-Level Language", Pp. 561--564 65. Shakil M. Khan and Yves Lesp\'erance, "Infinite Paths in the Situation Calculus: Axiomatization and Properties", Pp. 565--568 66. Petra Kubincov\'a and J\'an Kl'uka and Martin Homola, "Expressive Description Logic with Instantiation Metamodelling", Pp. 569--572 67. Domenico Lembo and Daniele Pantaleone and Valerio Santarelli and Domenico Fabio Savo, "Easy {OWL} Drawing with the Graphol Visual Ontology Language", Pp. 573--576 68. Maurizio Lenzerini and Lorenzo Lepore and Antonella Poggi, "A Higher-Order Semantics for Metaquerying in {OWL} 2 {QL}", Pp. 577--580 69. Roy Luo and Richard Anthony Valenzano and Yi Li and J. Christopher Beck and Sheila A. McIlraith, "Using Metric Temporal Logic to Specify Scheduling Problems", Pp. 581--584 70. Monica Martinez and Edelweis Roher and Paula Severi, "Complexity of the Description Logic ALCM", Pp. 585--588 71. Oezguer Luetfue Oezcep, "Minimality Postulates for Ontology Revision", Pp. 589--592 72. Theodore Patkos and Antonis Bikakis and Giorgos Flouris, "A Multi-Aspect Evaluation Framework for Comments on the Social Web", Pp. 593--586 73. Vasanth Sarathy and Matthias Scheutz, "Cognitive Affordance Representations in Uncertain Logic", Pp. 597--600 74. Nicolas Schwind and Tenda Okimoto and Maxime Clement and Katsumi Inoue, "Representative Solutions for Multi-Objective Constraint Optimization Problems", Pp. 601--604 75. Tran Cao Son and Enrico Pontelli and Michael Gelfond and Marcello Balduccini, "Reasoning about Truthfulness of Agents Using Answer Set Programming", Pp. 605--608 }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-gelfond_m:1993a, author = {Chitta Baral and Michael Gelfond}, title = {Representing Concurrent Actions in Extended Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {866--871}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {extended-logic-programming;planning-formalisms; concurrent-actions;} } @article{ baral_c-gelfond_m:1994a, author = {Chitta Baral and Michael Gelfond}, title = {Logic Programming and Knowledge Representation}, journal = {Journal of Logic-Programming}, year = {1994}, volume = {19--20}, pages = {73--148}, missinginfo = {number,check-topic}, topic = {logic-programming;kr;} } @article{ baral_c-gelfond_m:1997a, author = {Chitta Baral and Michael Gelfond}, title = {Reasoning About Effects of Concurrent Actions}, journal = {Journal of Logic Programming}, year = {1997}, volume = {31}, pages = {85--118}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {logic-programming;action-formalisms;concurrency;} } @incollection{ baral_c-gelfond_m:2000a, author = {Chitta Baral and Michael Gelfond}, title = {Reasoning Agents in Dynamic Domains}, booktitle = {Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Jack Minker}, pages = {257--279}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {logic-in-AI;agent-architectures;logic-programming; planning-formalisms;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-liang_ss:2012a, author = {Chitta Baral and Shanshan Liang}, title = {From Knowledge Represented in Frame-Based Languages to Declarative Representation and Reasoning via {ASP}}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {413--423}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In this paper we encode some of the reasoning methods used in frame based knowledge representation languages in answer set programming (ASP). In particular, we show how ``cloning'' and "unification" in frame based systems can be encoded in ASP. We then show how some of the types of queries with respect to a biological knowledge base can be encoded using our methodology. We also provide insight on how the reasoning can be done more efficiently when dealing with a huge knowledge base. }, topic = {frames;unification;answer-sets;} } @article{ baral_c-son_tc:1998a, author = {Chitta Baral and Tran Cao Son}, title = {Relating Theories of Actions and Reactive Control}, journal = {Electronic Transactions of Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {2}, number = {3--4}, pages = {211--271}, topic = {action-formalisms;reactive-systems;} } @inproceedings{ baral_c-subramanian_vs:1991a, author = {Chitta Baral and V.S. Subramanian}, title = {Dualities between Alternative Semantics for Logic Programming and Nonmonotonic Resoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First International Workshop on Logic Programming and Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, year = {1991}, pages = {69--85}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {logic-programming;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ baral_c-tran_n:2005a, author = {Chitta Baral and Nam Tran}, title = {Representations and Reasoning about Evolutions of the World in the Context of Reasoning about Actions}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2005}, volume = {79}, number = {1}, pages = {33--46}, topic = {action-formalisms;reasoning-about-change;} } @article{ baral_c-zhang_y:2005a, author = {Chitta Baral and Yan Zhang}, title = {Knowledge Updates: Semantics and Complexity Issues}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {164}, number = {1--2}, pages = {209--243}, topic = {belief-revision;complexity-in-AI;modal-logic;} } @incollection{ baral_c-zhung_y:2002a, author = {Chitta Baral and Yan Zhung}, title = {The Complexity of Model Checking for Knowledge Update}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {82--93}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;complexity-in-AI;model-checking;belief-revision;} } @incollection{ barandregt:1992a, author = {H.P. Barandregt}, title = {Lambda Calculi with Types}, booktitle = {Handbook of Logic in Computer Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Samson Abramsky and Dov Gabbay and T.S.F Maibaum}, missinginfo = {pages}, address = {Oxford, England}, topic = {type-theory;} } @book{ baraz:1992a, author = {Turhan Baraz}, title = {Uygulamal{\i} Noktalama-Yaz{\i}m Kurallar{\i}}, publisher = {Cem Yay{\i}nevi}, year = {1992}, address = {\.{I}stanbul}, topic = {punctuation;} } @article{ barba:1993a, author = {Juan Barba}, title = {A Modal Reduction for Partial Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1993}, volume = {22}, number = {4}, pages = {429--434}, topic = {bilattices;modal-logic;} } @article{ barba:1998a, author = {Juan Barba}, title = {Construction of Truth Predicates: Approximation Versus Revision}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {399--417}, topic = {truth;semantic-paradoxes;fixpoints;} } @article{ barba:2007a, author = {Juan Barba}, title = {Formal Semantics in the Age of Pragmatics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2007}, volume = {30}, number = {6}, pages = {637--668}, topic = {foundations-of-senantics;pragmatics;vagueness;semantic-paradoxes;} } @inproceedings{ barbeceanu:1998a, author = {Mihai Barbeceanu}, title = {Coordinating Agents by Role Based Social Constraints and Conversation Plans}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Ninth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference}, year = {1998}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {16--21}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {coord-in-conversation;coordination;artificial-societies;} } @article{ barber_a:2000a, author = {Alex Barber}, title = {A Pragmatic Treatment of Simple Sentences}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2000}, volume = {60}, number = {4}, pages = {300--308}, xref = {Commentary on: saul_jm:1997a et al}, topic = {referential-opacity;proper-names;} } @incollection{ barber_a-ramirez_eg:2017a, author = {Alex Barber and Eduardo Garcia Ramirez}, title = {Idiolects}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2017/entries/idiolects/}, year = {2017}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {idiolects;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ barber_ew:1994a, author = {Elizabeth Wayland Barber}, title = {Women's Work: The First 20,000 Years}, publisher = {Norton}, year = {1994}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-393-31348-4}, rtnote = {In RHT collection}, topic = {archaeology;} } @book{ barber_ew-barber_pt:2004a, author = {Elizabeth Wayland Barber and Paul T. Barber}, title = {When They Severed Earth from Sky: How the Human Mind Shapes Myth}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Princeton}, ISBN = {0-691-09986-3}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {archaeology;} } @incollection{ barbera:1983a, author = {Salvador Barber\'a}, title = {Pivotal Voters: A Simple Proof of {A}rrow's Theorem}, booktitle = {Social Choice and Welfare}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1983}, editor = {Prasanta K. Pattanaik and Maurice Salles}, pages = {31--35}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {social-choice-theory;} } @article{ barbero_f:2013a, author = {Fausto Barbero}, title = {On Existential Declarations of Independence in {IF} Logic}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {254--280}, topic = {IF-logic;} } @article{ barbero_f-sandu_g:2021a, author = {Fausto Barbero and Gabriel Sandu}, title = {Team Semantics for Interventionist Counterfactuals: Observations vs. Interventions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {3}, pages = {471--521}, abstract = {Team semantics is a highly general framework for logics which describe dependencies and independencies among variables. Typically, the (in)dependencies considered in this context are properties of sets of configurations or data records. We show how team semantics can be further generalized to support languages for the discussion of interventionist counterfactuals and causal dependencies, such as those that arise in manipulationist theories of causation (Pearl, Hitchcock, Woodward, among others). We show that the "causal teams" we introduce in the present paper can be used for modelling some classical counterfactual scenarios which are not captured by the usual causal models. We then analyse the basic properties of our counterfactual languages and discuss extensively the differences with respect to the Lewisian tradition. }, topic = {conditionals;causality;team-semantics;} } @incollection{ barbiers_s:2006a, author = {Sjef Barbiers}, title = {The Syntax of Modal Auxiliaries}, booktitle = {The {B}lackwell Companion to Syntax, Vol. 5}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2006}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-modality;} } @incollection{ barbiers_s:2008a, author = {Sjef Barbiers}, title = {The Syntax of Modal Auxiliaries}, booktitle = {The Blackwell Companion to Syntax, Volume 2}, year = {2008}, editor = {Martin Everaert and Henk van Riemsdijk}, pages = {1--22}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishing}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {modals;nl-syntax;} } @article{ barbosa_ls-etal:2014a, author = {Lu\'is S. Barbosa and Manuel A. Martins and Marta Carreteiro}, title = {A {H}ilbert-Style Axiomatization for Equational Hybrid Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2014}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {31--52}, topic = {hybrid-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @book{ barbosa_p:1998a, editor = {Pilar Barbosa}, title = {Is The Best Good Enough? Optimality and Competition in Syntax}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Peter Ackema and Ad Neeleman, "WHOT?" 2. Eric Bakovic, "Optimality and inversion in {S}panish" 3. Joan Bresnan, "Morphology Competes with Syntax: Explaining Typological Variation in Weak Crossover Effects" 4. Luigi Burzio, "Anaphora and Soft Constraints" 5. Noam Chomsky, "Some Observations on Economy in Generative Grammar" 6. Danny Fox, "Locality in Variable Binding" 7. Edward Gibson and Kevin Broihier, "Optimality Theory and Human Sentence Processing" 8. Jane Grimshaw and Vieri Samek-Lodovici, "Optimal Subjects and Subject Universals" 9. Yookyung Kim and Stanley Peters, "Semantic and Pragmatic Context-Dependence: The Case of Reciprocals" 10. G\'eraldine Legendre, Paul Smolensky, and Colin Wilson, "When is Less More? Faithfulness and Minimal Links in Wh-Chains" 11. Masanori Nakamura, "Reference Set, Minimal Link Condition, and Parameterization" 12. Mark Newson, "On the Nature of Inputs and Outputs: a Case Study of Negation" 13. David Pesetsky, "Some Optimality Principles of Sentence Pronunciation" 14. Geoffrey Poole, "Constraints on Local Economy" 15. Douglas Pulleyblank and William J. Turkel, "The Logical Problem of Language Acquisition in Optimality Theory" 16. Bruce B. Tesar, "Error-Driven Learning in Optimality Theory Via the Efficient Computation of Optimal Forms" }, ISBN = {0262024489}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 291 .I82 1998.}, topic = {optimality-theory;nl-syntax;} } @book{ barbosa_p-etal:1998a, author = {Pilar Barbosa and Danny Fox and Paul Hagstrom and Martha McGinnis and David Pesetsky}, title = {Is the Best Good Enough? Optimality and Competition in Syntax}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {nm-syntax;optimality-theory;} } @book{ barbosa_v:1996a, author = {Valmir Barbosa}, title = {An Introduction to Distributed Algorithms}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {distributed-processing;} } @inproceedings{ barbuceanu_m:1997a, author = {Mihai Barbuceanu}, title = {Coordinating Agents by Role Based Social Constraints and Conversation Plans}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Vol. ???}, year = {1997}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {16--21}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, abstract = {We explore the view that coordinated behavior is explained by the social constraints that agents in organizations are subject to. In this framework, agents adopt those goals that are requested by their obligations, knowing that not fulfilling obligations induces a price to pay or a loss of utility. Based on this idea we build a coordination system where we represent the organization, the roles played by agents, the obligations imposed among roles, the goals and the plans that agents may adopt. Once a goal adopted, a special brand of plans, called conversation plans, are available to the agents ...}, topic = {multiagent-systems;multiagent-planning;conversation; communication-protocols;} } @article{ barcells:2015a, author = {Maria Barcells}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} Brief History of the Philosophy of Time}, by {A}drian {B}ardon}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2015}, volume = {82}, number = {1}, pages = {152--155}, xref = {Review of: bardon:2013a}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;history-of-philosophy;} } @article{ bard-etal:2000a, author = {Ellen Gurman Bard and Anne H. Anderson and Catherine Sotillo and Matthew Aylett Gwyneth Doherty-Sneddon and Alison Newlands}, title = {Controlling the Intellibibility of Referring Expressions in Dialogue}, journal = {Journal of Memory and Language}, year = {2000}, volume = {42}, pages = {1--22}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja11}, topic = {referring-expressions;discourse;psycholinguistics;} } @incollection{ bard-etal:2002a, author = {Ellen Gurman Bard and Matthew P. Aylett and Robin J. Lickley}, title = {Towards a Psycholinguistics of Dialogue: Defining Reaction Time and Error Rate in a Dialogue Corpus}, booktitle = {{EDILOG} 2002: Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Centre, University of Edinburgh}, year = {2002}, editor = {Johan Bos and Mary Ellen Foster and Colin Mathesin}, pages = {29--36}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {psychology-of-discourse;} } @book{ bardon_a:2013a, author = {Adrian Bardon}, title = {A Brief History of the Philosophy of Time}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2013}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-938108-9}, xref = {Review: barcells:2015a}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves. }, xref = {Review: barcells:2015a}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;history-of-philosophy;} } @book{ bardon_a:2013b, editor = {Adrian Bardon}, title = {The Future of the Philosophy of Time}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2013}, address = {London}, ISBN-13 = {978-0415737067}, ISBN-10 = {0415737060}, contentsnote = { 1. L. Nathan Oaklander, "A-, B-, and R-Theories of Time: A Debate" 2. Michael Tooley, "Against Presentism: Two Very Different Types of Objection" 3. Ulrich Meyer, "Times as Abstractions" 4. Yuval Dolev, "Perceiving Transience" 5. Craig Callender, "Time's Ontic Voltage" 6. L. A. Paul, "Temporal Experience" 7. Barry Dainton, "Time and Temporal Experience" 8. Jenann Ismael, "Decision and the Open Future" 9. Heather Dyke, "On Methodology in the Metaphysics of Time" 10. Tim Maudlin, "Time and the Geometry of the Universe" }, topic = {philosophy-of-time;} } @book{ bardon_a-dyke_h:2013a, editor = {Adrian Bardon and Heather Dyke}, title = {A Companion to the Philosophy of Time}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2013}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-470-65881-9}, contentsnote = { 1. Ronald C. Hoy, "Heraclitus and Parmenides", pp. 9--29 2. Niko Strobach, "Zeno's Paradoxes", pp. 30--46 3. Andrea Falcon, "Aristotle on Time and Change", pp. 47--58 4. Ricardo Salles, "Determinism, Fatalism, and Freedom in Stoic Philosophy", pp. 59--72 5. Jon McGinnis, "Creation and Eternity in Medieval Philosophy", pp. 73--86 6. Eric Schliesser, "Newton's Philosophy of Time", pp. 87--101 7. Lorne Falkenstein, "Classical Empiricism", pp. 102--119 8 Andrew Brook, "Kant and Time-Order Idealism", pp. 120--134 9. Shaun Gallagher, "Husserl and the Phenomenology of Temporality", pp. 135--150 10. John Bigelow, "The Emergence of a New Family of Theories of Time", pp. 151-166- 11. M. Joshua Mozersky, "1 The B-Theory in the Twentieth Century", pp. 167--182 12. Gordon Belot, "Time in Classical and Relativistic Physics", pp. 185--200 13. Chris Smeenk, "Time in Cosmology", pp. 201--219 14. Jeremy Butterfield, "On Time in Quantum Physics", pp. 220--241 15. Nick Huggett and Tiziana Vistarini and Christian W\"uthrich, "Time in Quantum Gravity", pp. 242--261 16. David Wallace, "The Arrow of Time in Physics", pp. 262--281 17. Mathias Frisch, "Time and Causation", pp. 282--300 18. Douglas Kutach, "Time Travel and Time Machines", pp. 301--314 19. Simon Prosser, "The Passage of Time", pp. 315--327 20. Heather Dyke, "Time and Tense", pp. 328--344 21. Kristie Miller, "Presentism, Eternalism, and the Growing Block", pp. 345--364 22. Dana Lynne Goswick, "Change and Identity over Time", pp. 365--386 23. Barry Dainton, "The Perception of Time", pp. 389--409 24. Georges Dicker, "Transcendental Arguments and Temporal Experience", pp. 410--431 25. Jordi Fernández, "Memory", pp. 432--443 26. Julian Kiverstein and Valtteri Arstila, "Time in Mind", pp. 444--469 27. Holly Andersen, "The Representation of Time in Agency", pp. 470--485 28. John Perry, "Temporal Indexicals", pp. 486--506 29. Caspar Hare, "Time---The Emotional Asymmetry", pp. 507--520 30. Heather Dyke and James Maclaurin, "Evolutionary Explanations of Temporal Experience", pp. 521--534 31. Robin Le Poidevin, "Time and Freedom", pp. 535--548 32. Krister Bykvist, "Time and Morality", pp. 549--562 }, topic = {philosophy-of-time;} } @article{ bardram-etal:2015a, author = {Jakob E. Bardram and Steven Jeuris and Steven Houben}, title = {Activity-Based Computing: Computational Management of Activities Reflecting Human Intention}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2015}, volume = {36}, number = {2}, pages = {63--72}, topic = {context-aware-computing;} } @book{ bareiss:1989a, author = {Ray Bareiss}, title = {Exemplar-Based Knowledge Acquisition: A Unified Approach to Concept Representation, Classification, and Learning}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1989}, address = {San Diego, California}, topic = {learning;kr;case-based-reasoning;} } @article{ barelli:1997a, author = {Gilead Bar-Elli}, title = {Frege's Context Principle}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1997}, volume = {25}, number = {1--4}, pages = {99--129}, topic = {Frege;semantic-compositionality;reference;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ barendregt:1997a, author = {Henk Barendregt}, title = {The Impact of the Lambda Calculus in Logic and Computer Science}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1997}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {181--215}, topic = {lambda-calculus;history-of-logic;} } @book{ barense:1980a, author = {Diane D. Barense}, title = {Tense Structure and Reference: A First Order Non-Modal Approach}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1980}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 46405}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Barense"}, topic = {nl-tense;} } @book{ barfield_l:1993a, author = {Lon Barfield}, title = {The User Interface: Concepts and Design}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley}, year = {1993}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0201544415}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .U83 B353 1993.}, topic = {HCI;} } @book{ barfield_w-furness:1995a, editor = {Woodrow Barfield and Tomas A. {Furness, III}}, title = {Virtual Environments and Advanced Interface Design}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0195075552}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 V541 1995.}, topic = {virtual-reality;HCI;} } @inproceedings{ barg-walther_m:1998a, author = {Petra Barg and Markus Walther}, title = {Processing Unknown Words in {HPSG}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {91--95}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {robust-parsing;HPSG;word-acquisition;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1947a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {The Revival of `the Liar{'}}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1947}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {245--253}, xref = {Commentary on: koyre:1946a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1950a1, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Bolzano's Definition of `Analytic Proposition{'}}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1950}, volume = {16}, pages = {91--117}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Reprinted in barhillel_y:1970a. See barhillel_y:1950a2.}, topic = {history-of-logic;Bolzano;analyticity;} } @incollection{ barhillel_y:1950a2, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Bolzano's Definition of `Analytic Proposition{'}}, booktitle = {Aspects of Language: Essays in Philosophy of Language, Linguistic Philosophy, and Methodology of Linguistics}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1972}, pages = {3--24}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Reprinted in barhillel_y:1970a. See barhillel_y:1950a2.}, topic = {history-of-logic;Bolzano;analyticity;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1950b, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {On Syntactical Categories}, journal = {The Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1950}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {1--16}, xref = {Review: myhill_j:1950a}, topic = {syntactic-categories;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1951a1, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Comments on Logical Form}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1951}, volume = {2}, pages = {72--75}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Reprinted in barhillel_y:1970a. See barhillel_y:1951a2.}, topic = {logical-form;} } @incollection{ barhillel_y:1951a2, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Comments on Logical Form}, booktitle = {Aspects of Language: Essays in Philosophy of Language, Linguistic Philosophy, and Methodology of Linguistics}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1972}, pages = {25--28}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Reprinted in barhillel_y:1970a. See barhillel_y:1951a2.}, topic = {logical-form;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1951b, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Review of `{S}emantics and Abstract Objects', by {W}illard {V}.{O}. {Q}uine}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1951}, volume = {17}, number = {2}, pages = {136--137}, xref = {Review of: quine_wvo:1951b.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics; philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1952a1, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Bolzano's Propositional Logic}, journal = {Archiv f\"ur Mathematische Logik und Grundlagenforschung}, year = {1952}, volume = {1}, pages = {65--98}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Reprinted in barhillel_y:1970a. See barhillel_y:1952a2.}, topic = {history-of-logic;Bolzano;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1952a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Review of `{S}emantics and Abstract Objects'}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1952}, volume = {17}, number = {2}, pages = {136--137}, xref = {Review of: quine_wvo:1951b, black_m:1951b}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics; philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1952b1, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Mr. {G}each on Rigour in Semantics}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1952}, volume = {61}, pages = {261--264}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Reprinted in barhillel_y:1970a. See barhillel_y:1952a2.}, topic = {carnap;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1952c, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Review of `{T}he Need for Abstract Entities in Semantic Analysis', by {A}lonzo {C}hurch}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1952}, volume = {17}, number = {2}, pages = {137--139}, xref = {Review of: church_a:1951a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;propositional-attitudes; foundations-of-semantics;intensionality;philosophical-ontology; intensional-transitive-verbs;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1954a1, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Indexical Expressions}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1954}, volume = {63}, pages = {359--379}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Reprinted in barhillel_y:1970a. See barhillel_y:1954a2.}, xref = {Review: thomson_jf:1957a}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {indexicals;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ barhillel_y:1954a2, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Indexical Expressions}, booktitle = {Aspects of Language: Essays in Philosophy of Language, Linguistic Philosophy, and Methodology of Linguistics}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1972}, pages = {69--88}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Reprinted in barhillel_y:1970a. See barhillel_y:1954a1.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {indexicals;pragmatics;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1954b, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Logical Syntax and Semantics}, journal = {Language}, year = {1954}, volume = {30}, number = {2}, pages = {230--237}, xref = {Commentary: chomsky_n:1955a}, topic = {natural-language/formal-language; foundations-of-linguistics;logic-and-linguistics;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1955a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {An Examination of Information Theory}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1955}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {86--105}, abstract = {An introductory-level exposition of information theory, with some rather tough-minded philosophical comments. YBH claims semantic information has nothing to do with information-theoretic information. Semantic information has nothing to do, YBH says, with communication, though there is a psychological connection in certain cases. YBH feels that the statistical theory of signal transmission and the theory of semantic content can be regarded as different interpretations of a common formal system: the calculus of information.}, topic = {information-theory;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1957a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Review of `Designation and Description', `Property Designation and Description', and `Space, Time, and Individuals' by {N}eil {L}. {W}ilson}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1957}, volume = {22}, number = {4}, pages = {395--396}, xref = {Review of: wilson_nl:1953a, wilson_nl:1955a, wilson_nl:1955b.}, topic = {properties;referential-opacity;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1960a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {On Mr. S{\o}rensen's Analysis of \emph{To Be} and \emph{To Be True}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1960}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, pages = {93--96}, xref = {Criticism of: sorensen_hs:1959a}, xref = {Reply: sorensen_hs:1959b}, topic = {(non)existence;} } @book{ barhillel_y:1961a, editor = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Essays on the Foundations of Mathematics. Dedicated to {A}.{A}.{F}raenkel on His Seventieth Anniversary}, publisher = {Magnes Press}, year = {1961}, address = {Jerusalem}, rtnote = {UMich Science QA9 .J451 1966}, topic = {foundations-of-mathematics;set-theory;} } @incollection{ barhillel_y:1962a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Some Recent Results in Theoretical Linguistics}, booktitle = {Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science: Proceedings of the 1960 International Congress}, publisher = {Stanford University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Ernest Nagel and Patrick Suppes and Alfred Tarski}, pages = {551--557}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;finite-state-automata; formal-language-theory;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1963a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Can Indexical Sentences Stand in Logical Relations?}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1963}, volume = {14}, pages = {87--90}, number ={6}, xref = {Reprinted in barhillel_y:1970a. See barhillel_y:1963a2.}, topic = {indexicals;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ barhillel_y:1963b1, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Remarks on {C}arnap's {\it Logical Syntax of Language}}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {R}udolph {C}arnap}, publisher = {Open Court Publishing Company}, year = {1963}, editor = {Paul A. Schilpp}, pages = {519--543}, address = {LaSalle, Ilinois}, xref = {Reprinted in barhillel_y:1970a. See barhillel_y:1963b2.}, topic = {carnap;natural-language/formal-language;logic-and-linguistics;} } @incollection{ barhillel_y:1963c, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {{C}arnap's Views on Constructed Systems Versus Natural Languages in Analytic Philosophy}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {R}udolph {C}arnap}, publisher = {Open Court Publishing Company}, year = {1963}, editor = {Paul A. Schilpp}, pages = {503--518}, address = {LaSalle, Ilinois}, topic = {carnap;natural-language/formal-language;} } @book{ barhillel_y:1964a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Language and Information: Selected Essays on Their Theory and Application}, publisher = {Jerusalem Academic Press}, year = {1964}, address = {Jerusalem}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @book{ barhillel_y:1965a, editor = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Proceedings of the 1964 Congress for Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1965}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1966a1, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Do Natural Languages Contain Paradoxes?}, journal = {Studium Generale}, year = {1966}, volume = {19}, missinginfo = {number}, pages = {391--397}, xref = {Republication: barhillel_y:1966a2}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ barhillel_y:1966a2, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Do Natural Languages Contain Paradoxes?}, booktitle = {Aspects of Language: Essays in Philosophy of Language, Linguistic Philosophy, and Methodology of Linguistics}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1972}, pages = {273--285}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Republication of: barhillel_y:1966a1}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;nl-semantics;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1966a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Imperative Inference}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1966}, volume = {26}, number = {3}, pages = {79--82}, url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/3326285}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my10}, topic = {imperative-logic;imperatives;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1967a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Dictionaries and Meaning Rules}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1967}, volume = {3}, number = {4}, pages = {409--414}, rtnote = {Criticism of Katz}, topic = {transformational-grammar;nl-semantics;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1967b, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Structure of Language}, edited by {J}erry {A}. {F}odor and {J}errold {J}. {K}atz}, journal = {Language}, year = {1967}, volume = {43}, number = {2}, pages = {526--550}, xref = {Review of: fodor_ja-katz_jj:1964a}, topic = {nl-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ barhillel_y:1969a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Universal Semantics and the Philosophy of Language: Quandaries and Prospects}, booktitle = {Substance and Structure of Language}, publisher = {University of California Press}, year = {1969}, editor = {Jaan Puhvel}, pages = {1--21}, address = {Berkeley and Los Angeles, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection.}, rtnote = {Much Katz criticism.}, xref = {Republished, cf. barhillel_y:1970a.}, contentnote = {Continues the criticism of structural semantics, outlines YBH's program for philosophy of linguistics, nl-semantics.}, url = {https://www.google.com/books/edition/Substance_and_Structure_of_Language/-fjnDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&pg=PA1&printsec=frontcover}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;universal-grammar;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1969b, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Review of `Formalization of the Concept {`}About{'}', by {H}ilary {P}utnam}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1969}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {138--139}, xref = {Review of: putman:1958a}, topic = {aboutness;} } @book{ barhillel_y:1970a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Aspects of Language: Essays in Philosophy of Language, Linguistic Philosophy, and Methodology of Linguistics}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1972}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, xref = {Review: schnelle_h:1973a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ barhillel_y:1970b, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Communication and Argumentation in Pragmatic Languages}, booktitle = {Linguaggi nella Societ\'a e nella Tecnic\'a}, publisher = {Edizioni di Communit\`a}, year = {1970}, editor = {Bruno Visentini et al.}, pages = {269--284}, address = {Milan}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files, "Bar-Hillel"}, rtnote = {Bar-Hillel's thoughts on Montague Grammar.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;pragmatics;} } @book{ barhillel_y:1971a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Pragmatics of Natural Language}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1971}, address = {Dordrecht}, tableofcontents = {Get this.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;pragmatics;} } @article{ barhillel_y:1971b, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Out of the Pragmatic Wastebasket}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1971}, volume = {2}, pages = {401--407}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {pragmatics;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ barhillel_y:1972a, editor = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Pragmatics of Natural Languages}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1972}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0521207207}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, 800.31 M483 Graduate Library, 800 I598pr 1970}, topic = {pragmatics;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ barhillel_y:1972b, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {Argumentation in Natural Languages}, booktitle = {Aspects of Language: Essays in Philosophy of Language, Linguistic Philosophy, and Methodology of Linguistics}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1972}, address = {Amsterdam}, editor = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, pages = {202--205}, topic = {argumentation;} } @article{ barhillel_y-etal:1961a, author = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel and M. Perles and E. Shamir}, title = {On Formal Properties of Simple Phrase Structure Grammars}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"ur Phonologie, Sprachwissenschaft und Kommunikationsforschung}, year = {1961}, volume = {14}, pages = {113--124}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {formal-language-theory;} } @book{ barhillel_y-etal:1966a, editor = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel et al.}, title = {Essays On The Foundations of Mathematics: Dedicated to {A}.{A}. {F}raenkel on His Seventieth Anniversary}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Magnes Press Hebrew University}, year = {1966}, address = {Jerusalem}, rtnote = {UMich Science QA9 .J451 1966}, topic = {foundations-of-mathematics;} } @article{ barish-knoblock_c:2008a, author = {Greg Barish and Craig A. Knoblock}, title = {Speculative Plan Execution for Information Gathering}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {4--5}, pages = {413--453}, topic = {plan-execution;} } @article{ barker_c:1992a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Group Terms in {E}nglish Representing Terms as Atoms}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1992}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {69--91}, abstract = {What do terms such as the committee, the league, and the group of women denote? Pre-theoretically, group terms have a dual personality. On the one hand, the committee corresponds to an entity as ideosyncratic in its properties as any other object; for instance, two otherwise identical committees can vary with respect to the purpose for which they were formed. Call this aspect the group-as-individual. On the other hand, the identity of a group is at least partially determined by the properties of its members; for instance, a committee will be a committee of women just in case each of its members is a woman. Call this aspect the group-as-set. Elaborating on suggestions in Link (1984) and Lasersohn (1988), I propose that group terms in English denote atomic individuals, that is, entities lacking internal structure. In particular, it is not possible to determine the membership of a group by examining the denotation of a group term. The proposed account correctly predicts that group terms systematically behave differently semantically (as well as syntactically) from plurals such as the men and conjunctions such as John and Bill. Thus the atomic analysis advocated here stands in sharp contrast to previous proposals, including Bennet (1975), Link (1984), and Landman (1989), in which group terms are considered of a piece semantically with plurals and conjunctions. Additional arguments come from the use of names of groups as rigid designators, from the parallel between group nouns and measure nouns, and from the distribution of group terms across two dialects of English. }, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;pluralities;} } @inproceedings{ barker_c:1993a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {A Presuppositional Account of Proportional Ambiguity}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {III}}, year = {1993}, editor = {Utpal Lahiri and Zachary Wyner}, pages = {1--18}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;adverbs;conventional-implicature;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ barker_c:1995a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Episodic {\it -ee} in {E}nglish: Thematic Relations and New Word Formation}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {V}}, year = {1995}, editor = {Mandy Simons and Teresa Galloway}, pages = {1--18}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, contentnote = {Uses "-ee" suffix to study thematic relations.}, topic = {thematic-roles;} } @article{ barker_c:1996a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Presuppositions for Proportional Quantifiers}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1996}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {237--259}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;donkey-anaphora;nl-quantifiers;} } @article{ barker_c:1999a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Individuation and Quantification}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1999}, volume = {30}, number = {4}, pages = {683--691}, topic = {events;individuation;} } @article{ barker_c:2000a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Definite Possessives and Discouse Novelty}, journal = {Theoretical Linguistics}, year = {2000}, volume = {26}, number = {3}, pages = {211--227}, topic = {definiteness;possessives;old/new-information;} } @inproceedings{ barker_c:2001a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Introducing Continuation}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2001}, editor = {Rachel Hastings and Brendan Jackson and Zsofia Zvolenszky}, pages = {20--35}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;semantics-of-programming-languages;} } @article{ barker_c:2002a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {The Dynamics of Vagueness}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {1--36}, topic = {vagueness;context;} } @article{ barker_c:2005a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Remark on {J}acobson 1999: Crossover as a Local Constraint}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2005}, volume = {28}, number = {4}, pages = {447--472}, topic = {categorial-grammar;combinatory-logic;variable-free-semantics; crossover;} } @article{ barker_c:2007a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Parasitic Scope}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2007}, volume = {30}, number = {4}, pages = {407--444}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;nl-semantic-types;} } @article{ barker_c:2009a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Clarity and the Grammar of Skepticism}, journal = {Mind and Language}, year = {2009}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {253--273}, doi = {10.1111/j.1468-0017.2009.01362.x}, abstract = {Why ever assert clarity? If It is clear that p is true, then saying so should be at best superfluous. Barker and Taranto (2003) and Taranto (2006) suggest that asserting clarity reveals information about the beliefs of the discourse participants, specifically, that they both believe that p. However, mutual belief is not sufficient to guarantee clarity (It is clear that God exists). I propose instead that It is clear that p means instead (roughly) the publicly available evidence justifies concluding that p. Then what asserting clarity reveals is information concerning the prevailing epistemic standard that determines whether a body of evidence is sufficient to justify a claim. If so, the semantics of clarity constitutes a grammatical window into the discourse dynamics of inference and skepticism.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my13}, topic = {clarity;nl-semantics;mutuality;} } @article{ barker_c:2010a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Free Choice Permission as Resource Sensitive Reasoning}, journal = {Semantics and Pragmatics}, year = {2010}, volume = {3}, number = {10}, pages = {1--38}, topic = {free-choice-permission;} } @incollection{ barker_c:2011a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Possessives and Relational Nouns}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {177--203}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;possessives;} } @article{ barker_c:2013a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Negotiating Taste}, journal = {Inquiry}, year = {2013}, volume = {56}, number = {2-3}, pages = {240--257}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au17}, topic = {predicates-of-taste;} } @article{ barker_c:2014a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Scopability and Sluicing}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {36}, number = {3}, pages = {187--223}, abstract = {This paper analyzes sluicing as anaphora to an anti-constituent (a continuation), that is, to the semantic remnant of a clause from which a subconstituent has been removed. For instance, in Mary said that [John saw someone yesterday], but she didn't say who, the antecedent clause is John saw someone yesterday, the subconstituent targeted for removal is someone, and the ellipsis site following who is anaphoric to the scope remnant John saw ___ yesterday. I provide a compositional syntax and semantics on which the relationship between the targeted subconstituent and the rest of the antecedent clause is one of scopability, not movement or binding. $\ldots$}, topic = {nl-semantics;ellipsis;} } @article{ barker_c:2018a, author = {Chris Barker}, title = {Negative Polarity as Scope Marking}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2018}, volume = {41}, number = {5}, pages = {483--510}, abstract = {What is the communicative value of negative polarity? ... My starting point for exploring a new answer is the fact that an NPI must always take narrow scope with respect to its licensing context. ... whatever other functions NPIs may have, they at least serve as an utterly reliable signal that an indefinite is taking narrow scope. ... one part of the explanation for the ubiquity and robust stability of negative polarity is that it signals scope relations.}, topic = {polarity;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @inproceedings{ barker_c-dowty_dr:1993a, author = {Chris Barker and David Dowty}, title = {Nominal Thematic Proto-Roles}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-Third Meeting of the New England Linguistic Society}, year = {1993}, pages = {125--309}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {thematic-roles;} } @book{ barker_c-jacobson_p:2007a, editor = {Chris Barker and Pauline Jacobson}, title = {Direct Compositionality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199204380}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Chris Barker and Pauline Jacobson, "Introduction: Direct Compositionality" 2. David Dowty, "Compositionality as an Empirical Problem" 3. Chris Barker, "Direct Compositionality on Demand" 4. Chung-chieh Shan, "Linguistic Side Effects" 5. Yoad Winter, "Type Shifting with Semantic Features: a Unified Perspective" 6. Pauline Jacobson, "Direct Compositionality and Variable Free Semantics: the Case of `Principle B' Effects" 7. Ivano Caponigro and Daphna Heller, "The Non Concealed Nature of Free Relatives: Implications for Connectivity in Specificational Sentences" 8. Maribel Romero, "Connectivity in a Unified Analysis of Specificational Subjects and Concealed Questions" 9. Rajesh Bhatt and Roumyana Pancheva, "Degree Quantifiers, Position of Merger Effects with their Restrictors, and Conservativity" 10. Yael Sharvit, "Two Reconstruction Puzzles" 11. Maria Bittner, "Online Update: Temporal, Modal, and de sa Anaphora in Polysynthetic Discourse," 12. Christopher Potts, "The Dimensions of Quotation", pp. 405--421 } , topic = {nl-semantics;compositionality;} } @article{ barker_c-pullum_gk:1990a, author = {Chris Barker and Geoffrey K. Pullum}, title = {A Theory of Command Relations}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1990}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {1--34}, topic = {syntactic-command;foundations-of-syntax;} } @article{ barker_c-shan_cc:2006a, author = {Chris Barker and Chung-Chieh Shan}, title = {Types as Graphs: Continuations in Type Logical Grammar}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2006}, volume = {15}, number = {4}, pages = {331--370}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;type-theory;} } @inproceedings{ barker_c-taranto_g:2003a, author = {Chris Barker and Gina Taranto}, title = {The Paradox of Asserting Clarity}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Western Conference in Linguistics 14}, year = {2003}, editor = {Paivi Koskinen}, pages = {10--21}, publisher = {Department of Linguistics, California State University}, address = {Fresno, CA}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TY0OWM1Z/barker.taranto.clarity.pdf}, topic = {clarity;converssational-record;conversational-update;} } @techreport{ barker_ja:1973a, author = {John A. Barker}, title = {A Formal Analysis of Conditionals}, institution = {Southern Illinois University}, number = {Humanities Series / Number 3}, year = {1973}, address = {Carbondale, Illinois}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ barker_ja:1973b, author = {John A. Barker}, title = {Hypotheticals: Conditionals and Theticals}, journal = {The Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1973}, volume = {23}, number = {93}, pages = {335--345}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ barker_ja:1974a, author = {John A. Barker}, title = {Knowledge, Ignorance and Presupposition}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1974}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {33--45}, contentnote = {Proposes projectability through negation as a test for presupposition.}, topic = {presupposition;} } @article{ barker_ja:1980a, author = {John A. Barker}, title = {`If' and `Even If{'}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1980}, volume = {40}, number = {2}, pages = {93--98}, xref = {Commentary on: hazen_ap-slote_ma:1979a}, topic = {conditionals;`even';} } @incollection{ barker_ja-adams_f2:2012a, author = {John A. Barker and Fred Adams}, title = {Conclusive Reasons, Knowledge, and Action}, booktitle = {Action Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {35--52}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reasons-for-action;philosophy-of-action;} } @phdthesis{ barker_k:1998a, author = {Ken Barker}, title = {Semi-Automatic Recognition of Semantic Relationships in {E}nglish Technical Texts}, school = {University of Ottowa}, year = {1998}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Ottawa}, topic = {compound-nouns;machine-language-learning; computational-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ barker_k-szpakowicz:1998a, author = {Ken Barker and Stan Szpakowicz}, title = {Semi-Automatic Recognition of Noun Modifier Relationships}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {96--102}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {compound-nouns;machine-language-learning; computational-semantics;} } @book{ barker_r:1990a, author = {Richard Barker}, title = {Case Method: Entity-Relationship Modelling}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley}, year = {1990}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, topic = {entity-relationship-modeling;} } @article{ barker_s:1991a, author = {Stephen Barker}, title = {`{E}ven', `Still' and Counterfactuals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1991}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {1--38}, topic = {`even';sentence-focus;pragmatics;} } @article{ barker_s:1996a, author = {Stephen Barker}, title = {Parsing If-Sentences and the Conditions of Sentencehood}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1996}, volume = {56}, number = {4}, pages = {210--218}, xref = {Commentary on Dudman's work}, xref = {Reply: dudman_vh:1998a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ barker_s:1997a, author = {Stephen Barker}, title = {E-Type Pronouns, {DRT}, Dynamic Semantics and the Quantifier-Variable Binding Model}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {195--228}, topic = {anaphora;pronouns;discourse-representation-theory;} } @article{ barker_s:1998a, author = {Stephen J. Barker}, title = {Predetermination and Tense Probabilism}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1998}, volume = {58}, number = {4}, pages = {290--296}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11}, topic = {conditionals;nl-tense;subjunctive-mood;} } @article{ barker_s:2000a, author = {Stephen Barker}, journal = {Analysis}, pages = {268--279}, title = {Is Value Content a Component of Conventional Implicature?}, volume = {60}, year = {2000}, topic = {expressivism;implicature;} } @article{ barker_s:2002a, author = {Stephen Barker}, title = {Counterfactual Analyses of Causation: The Problem of Effects and Epiphenomena Revisited}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2002}, volume = {36}, number = {1}, pages = {133--150}, topic = {causality;conditionals;} } @book{ barker_s:2002b, author = {Stephen Barker}, title = {Renewing Meaning: A Speech-Act Theoretic Approach}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199263660}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;speech-acts;} } @article{ barker_s:2011a, author = {Stephen Barker}, title = {Can Counterfactuals Really Be about Possible Worlds?}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2011}, volume = {44}, number = {3}, pages = {557--576}, topic = {conditionals;possible-worlds-semantics;} } @article{ barker_s-dowe_p:2003a, author = {Stephen Barker and Phil Dowe}, title = {Paradoxes of Multi-Location}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2003}, volume = {63}, number = {2}, pages = {106--114}, xref = {Commentary: mcdaniel_k:2003a, beebee_h-rush_m:2003a}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @book{ barker_sf:1957a, author = {Stephen F. Barker}, title = {Induction and Hypotheses}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1957}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Philsci Shelves.}, topic = {induction;} } @incollection{ barker_sf:1961a, author = {Steven F. Barker}, title = {The Role of Simplicity in Explanation}, booktitle = {Current Issues in the Philosophy of Science}, publisher = {Holt Rinehart and Winston}, year = {1961}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Grover Maxwell}, pages = {265--274}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {An attack on logical empiricist accounts of explanation. These accounts he aligns with views of explanatory hypotheses as fictions. B emphasizes symmetry between explanation and prediction in logical empiricism, so that theoretical terms are not interpreted realistically but only in their predictive function. B's objections are: (1) Craig's lemma difficulty: if theoretical terms are nothing over and above their predictive consequences for observation, why have them at all? (2) Emphasis on physics and chemistry is misleading. (3) Expanation is possible in cases where prediction is not -- eg in post-mortems. (4) The distinction between observational and theoretical terms is unclear. (5) No real account is given of what it is for an explanation to be better than another. Simplicity is such a criterion, but insufficiently clarified -- perhaps looking at historical examples would help here. Comments: The arguments are scattered and none of them is developed as carefully or pushed as far as one would like. The ending is particularly weak. B sees difficulties in the logical empiricist account, and is able to list them, but has no constructive alternative to offer.}, topic = {explanation;} } @article{ barker_sf-achenstein_p:1960a, author = {Steven F. Barker and Peter Achenstein}, title = {One the New Riddle of Induction}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1960}, volume = {69}, number = {4}, pages = {511--522}, topic = {(un)natural-predicates;induction;} } @article{ barker_sj:1993a, author = {Stephen J. Barker}, title = {Conditional Excluded Middle, Conditional Assertion, and `Only If{'}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1993}, volume = {53}, number = {4}, pages = {254--261}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no16}, topic = {conditionals;conditional-excluded-middle;'only-if';} } @article{ barker_sj:1998a, author = {Stephen J. Barker}, title = {Predetermination and Tense Probabilism}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1998}, volume = {58}, number = {4}, pages = {290--296}, xref = {Comentary on: edgington_d:1995}, topic = {conditionals;probability;} } @article{ barker_sj:2000a, author = {Stephen J. Barker}, title = {Is Value Content a Component of Conventional Implicature?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2000}, volume = {60}, number = {3}, pages = {268--279}, xref = {Commentary on: jackson_fc-pettit_p:1998a}, topic = {expressivism;conventional-implicature;} } @article{ barker_sj:2014a, author = {Stephen J. Barker}, title = {Semantic Paradox and Alethic Undecidability}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2014}, volume = {74}, number = {2}, pages = {201--209}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;truthmaking;} } @article{ barker_sj-popawyatt_m:2015a, author = {Stephen J. Barker and Mihaela Popa-Wyatt}, title = {Irony and the Dogma of Force and Sense}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2015}, volume = {75}, number = {1}, pages = {9--16}, DOI = {doi:10.1093/analys/anu104}, abstract = {... We argue that both the Force/Sense distinction and the principle of embedding are seriously challenged by figurative language, and irony in particular. We conclude that theorists need to go back to the drawing board about the nature of illocutionary acts.}, topic = {illocutionary-force;irony;speech-acts;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ barkerplummer:2005a, author = {David Barker-Plummer}, title = {Turing Machines}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {Stanford University}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2005/entries/turing-machine/}, year = {Spring 2005}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {Turing-machines;} } @inproceedings{ barkhuus:2003a, author = {Louise Barkhuus}, title = {How to Define the Communication Situation: Determining Context Cues in Mobile Telephony}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {411--418}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;communication;context-aware-computing;} } @incollection{ barkley_c-kluender_r:2019a, author = {Christopher Barkley and Robert Kluender}, title = {Processing Anaphoric Relations: An Electrophysiological Perspective}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Reference}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Jeannette Gundel and Barbara Abbott}, pages = {384--410}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reference;psycholinguistics;} } @incollection{ barklund-etal:1994a, author = {Jonas Barklund and Katrin Boberg and Pierangelo Dell'Acqua}, title = {A Basis for a Multi-Level Meta-Logic Programming Language}, booktitle = {Logic Programming Synthesis and Transformation, Meta-Programming in Logic: Fourth International Workshops, {LOBSTR}'94 and {META}'94, Pisa, Italy}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Laurent Fribourg and Franco Turini}, pages = {262--275}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {metaprogramming;} } @article{ barlassina_l-delprete_p:2015a, author = {Luca Barlassina and Fabio Del Prete}, title = {The Puzzle of the Changing Past}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2015}, volume = {75}, number = {1}, pages = {59--67}, contentnote = {The puzzle is that some predicates have a component that depends on the future. "Future millionaire" is an example. They use the example of a revoked outcome of a bicycle race.}, topic = {temporal-logic;philosophy-of-time;} } @article{ barlev_me:2021a, author = {Moshe E. Bar-Lev}, title = {An Implicature Account of Homogeneity and Non-Maximality}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2021}, volume = {44}, number = {5}, pages = {1045--1097}, abstract = {I provide arguments in favor of an implicature approach to Homogeneity ... where the basic meaning of the kids laughed is some of the kids laughed, and its strengthened meaning is all of the kids laughed. ...}, topic = {scalar-implicature;} } @article{ barlew_j:2017a, author = {Jefferson Barlew}, title = {Focus on Numbers}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2017}, volume = {40}, number = {4}, pages = {401--426}, abstract = {This paper contributes to the debate over the so-called "easy argument for numbers" ... . It presents novel data showing that critical examples in the literature are ambiguous between two readings, contrary to previous assumptions. It then accounts for these data using independently motivated linguistic theory. The account developed rescues the easy argument from the primary challenges leveled against it in the literature and sets the agenda for future work to determine whether or not the argument is valid.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {numerical-linguistic-constructions;degree-semantics;philosophical-ontology;} } @book{ barlow-etal:1982a, editor = {Michael Barlow and Daniel P. FLickinger and Ivan A. Sag}, title = {Developments in Generalized Phrase Structure Grammar}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, ISBN = {1575862190}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, P 128 .M6 U81 2000.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Ewan Klein and Ivan A. Sag, "Semantic Type and Control", pp. 1--25 2. Henry Thompson, "Handling Metarules in a Parser for {GPSG}", pp. 26--37 3. Gerald Gazdar and Ewan Klein and Geoffrey K. Pullum and Ivan Sag, "Coordinate Structure and Unbounded Dependencies", pp. 38--71 4. Martin Kay, "When Metarules are Not Metatules", pp. 72--94 5. Ivan A. Sag and Ewan Klein, "The Syntax and Semantics of {E}nglish Expletive Pronoun Constructions", pp. 95--139 6. Gerald Gazdar and Geoffrey K. Pullum, "Phrase Structure and Categorial Syntax: A Bibliography of Recent WOrk", pp. 140--148 } , rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Editex Shelf}, topic = {GPSG;} } @book{ barlow-ferguson_ca:1988a, editor = {Michael Barlow and Charles A. Ferguson}, title = {Agreement in Natural Language: Approaches, Theories, Descriptions}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, year = {1988}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {0937073024}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 299 .A35 A351 1988.}, topic = {agreement;} } @book{ barlow-kemmer:2000a, editor = {Michael Barlow and Suzanne Kemmer}, title = {Usage-Based Models of Language}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2000}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1575862190}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Suzanne Kemmer and Michael Barlow, "A usage-based conception of language" 2. Ronald W. Langacker, "A dynamic usage-based model" 3. Joan L. Bybee, "The phonology of the lexicon" 4. Sydney Lamb, "Bidirectional processing in language and related cognitive systems" 5. Brian MacWhinney, "Connectionism and language learning" 6. Connie Dickinson and T. Giv\'on, "The effect of the interlocutor on episodic recall, an experimental study " 7. Mira Ariel, "The development of person agreement markers, from pronoun to higher accessibility markers " 8. Arie Verhagen, "Interpreting usage, construing the history of Dutch causal verbs" 9. Douglas Biber, "Investigating language use through corpus-based analyses of association patterns" 10. Michael Barlow, "Usage, blends and grammar" }, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, P 128 .M6 U81 2000.}, topic = {sociolinguistics;corpus-linguistics;} } @article{ barmpalias:2013a, author = {George Barmpalias}, title = {Algorithmic Randomness and Measures of Complexity}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {318--350}, topic = {randomness;complexity-theory;} } @article{ barnard_k-johnson_m3:2005a, author = {Kobus Barnard and Matthew Johnson}, title = {Word Sense Disambiguation with Pictures}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {167}, number = {1--2}, pages = {13--30}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;visual-reasoning;situated-nlp;} } @article{ barnard_st:1983a, author = {Stephen T. Barnard}, title = {Interpreting Perspective Images}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {435--462}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A fundamental problem in computer vision is how to determine the 3-D spatial orientation of curves and surfaces appearing in an image. The problem is generally underconstrained, and is complicated by the fact that metric properties, such as orientation and length, are not invariant under projection. Under perspective projection (the correct model for most real images) the transform is nonlinear, and therefore hard to invert. Two constructive methods are presented. The first finds the orientation of parallel lines and planes by locating vanishing points and vanishing lines. The second determines the orientation of planes by `backprojection' of two intrinsic properties of contours: angle magnitude and curvature.}, topic = {computer-vision;three-D-reconstruction; reasoning-about-perspective;} } @book{ barnbrook:1996a, author = {Geoff Barnbrook}, title = {Language and Computers: A Practical Introduction to the Computer Analysis of Language}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Edinburgh}, ISBN = {0-7486-0785-4}, xref = {Review: kirk_jm:1998a}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;} } @article{ barnden:1986a, author = {John A. Barnden}, title = {Imputations and Explications: Representational Problems in Treatments of Propositional Attitudes}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1986}, volume = {10}, number = {3}, pages = {319--364}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ barnden:1989a, author = {John A. Barnden}, title = {Belief, Metaphorically Speaking}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {21--32}, address = {San Mateo, California}, rtnote = {Attempts to develop a "commonsense" theory of attitudes. Really, it turns out to be an account of belief as context. But metaphors of mind are also broadly used to influence how reasoning about belief is carried out.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;belief;context;} } @incollection{ barnden:1995a, author = {John A. Barnden}, title = {Simulative Reasoning, Common-Sense Psychology, and Artificial Intelligence}, booktitle = {Mental Simulation: Evaluations and Applications}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Martin Davies and Tony Stone}, pages = {247--273}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {folk-psychology;theory-theory-of-folk-psychology; mental-simulation;propositional-attitude-ascription;} } @article{ barnden:1996a, author = {John A. Barnden}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}nformation, Language, and Cognition}, by {P}hilip {P}. {H}anson}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {95--99}, xref = {Review of:}, topic = {information;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @inproceedings{ barnden:2001a, author = {John A. Barnden}, title = {Uncertainty and Conflict Handling in the {ATT}-Meta Context-Based System for Metaphorical Reasoning}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {15--29}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;metaphor;nl-interpretation;reasoning-about-attitudes; mental-simulation;} } @incollection{ barnden-etal:1994a, author = {John A. Barnden and Stephen Helmreich and Eric Iverson and Gees C. Stein}, title = {An Integrated Implementation of Simulative, Uncertain, and Metaphorical Reasoning about Mental States}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {27--38}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;reasoning-about-mental-states;metaphor;kr-course;} } @incollection{ barnden-lee_mg:1999a, author = {John A. Barnden and Mark G. Lee}, title = {An Implemented Context System that Combines Belief Reasoning, Metaphor-Based Reasoning and Uncertainty Handling}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {28--41}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;metaphor;reasoning-about-attitudes; mental-simulation;} } @book{ barnden-pollack_jb:1991a, editor = {John A. Barnden and Jordan B. Pollack}, title = {Advances in Connectionist and Neural Computation Theory, Volume 1: High-Level Connectionist Models}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Corp.}, year = {1991}, address = {Norwood< New Jersey}, ISBN = {0893916870}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.5 .H48151 1991.}, xref = {Review: rose:1993a.}, topic = {connectionism;connectionist-models;} } @article{ barnden-srinivas:1996a, author = {John A. Barnden and Kankanahalli Srinivas}, title = {Quantification without Variables in Connectionism}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {173--201}, topic = {connectionism;symbolic-reasoning;} } @book{ barnes_a:1997a, editor = {Annette Barnes}, title = {Seeing through Self-Deception}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {self-deception;} } @article{ barnes_gw:1971a, author = {Gerald W. Barnes}, title = {Utilitarianisms}, journal = {Ethics}, volume = {82}, year = {1971}, pages = {56--64}, topic = {utilitarianism;} } @article{ barnes_gw:1983a, author = {Gerald W. Barnes}, title = {The Conclusion of Practical Reasoning}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1983}, volume = {43}, number = {4}, pages = {193--199}, topic = {practical-reasoning;practical-syllogism;intention;} } @book{ barnes_j-etal:1975a, editor = {Jonathan Barnes and Malcolm Schofield and Richard Sorabji}, title = {Articles on Aristotle, Volume 1 (Science)}, publisher = {Duckworth}, year = {1975}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0715607626}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B485 .A79.}, topic = {Aristotle;ancient-physics;ancient-science;} } @book{ barnes_j-etal:1977b, editor = {Jonathan Barnes and Malcolm Schofield and Richard Sorabji}, title = {Articles on Aristotle: Volume 2 (Ethics and Politics)}, publisher = {Duckworth}, year = {1977}, address = {London}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B485 .A79.}, topic = {Aristotle;ethics;} } @book{ barnes_j-etal:1979a, editor = {Jonathan Barnes and Malcolm Schofield and Richard Sorabji}, title = {Articles on Aristotle: Volume 3 (Metaphysics)}, publisher = {Duckworth}, year = {1979}, address = {London}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B485 .A79.}, topic = {Aristotle;metaphysics;} } @book{ barnes_j-etal:1979b, editor = {Jonathan Barnes and Malcolm Schofield and Richard Sorabji}, title = {Articles on Aristotle: Volume 4 (Psychology and Aesthetics)}, publisher = {Duckworth}, year = {1979}, address = {London}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B485 .A79.}, topic = {Aristotle;} } @article{ barnes_kt:1977a, author = {Kenneth T. Barnes}, title = {Aristotle on Identity and Its Problems}, journal = {Phronesis}, year = {1977}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {48--62}, topic = {Aristotle;identity;} } @article{ barnes_rf:1981a, author = {Robert F. Barnes}, title = {Interval Temporal Logic: A Note}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {395--397}, topic = {temporal-logic;interval-logic;} } @article{ barnes_wfh:1963a, author = {W.F.H. Barnes}, title = {Knowing}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1963}, volume = {72}, number = {1}, pages = {3--16}, topic = {knowledge;speech-acts;} } @incollection{ barnett_d:2000a, author = {David Barnett}, title = {Vagueness-Related Attitudes}, booktitle = {Skepticism}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {302--320}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary on: schiffer_s:2000a}, topic = {skepticism;vagueness;belief;sorites-paradox;} } @unpublished{ barnett_d:2001a, author = {David Barnett}, title = {Vagueness as Roughness}, year = {2001}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, New York University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ barnett_d:2004a, author = {David Barnett}, title = {Some Stuffs Are Not Sums of Stuff}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2004}, volume = {113}, number = {1}, pages = {89--100}, topic = {mereology;} } @article{ barnett_d:2008a, author = {David Barnett}, title = {Indeterminacy and Incomplete Descriptions}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {105}, number = {4}, pages = {167--191}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ barnett_d:2009a, author = {David Barnett}, title = {Yalcin on `Might'}, journal = {Mind}, year = {2009}, volume = {118}, number = {471}, pages = {771--775}, abstract = {On one view about the word 'might', to say, sincerely and literally, that it might be that S is to say something about one's epistemic state (and perhaps also about the epistemic states of those around one). ... Yalcin (2007) has argued that all versions of the ... view are wrong. My aim in this article is to show how at least one version of the natural view escapes Yalcin's argument.}, topic = {epistemic-modals;} } @article{ barnett_d:2010a, author = {David Barnett}, title = {Zif Would Have Been If: A Suppositional View of Counterfactuals}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2010}, volume = {43}, number = {2}, pages = {267--304}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ barnett_d:2012a, author = {David Barnett}, title = {Counterfactual Entailment}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {2012}, volume = {112}, number = {1, Part 1}, pages = {73--97}, contentnote = {Endorses a strict theory.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ barnett_dj:2021a, author = {David James Barnett}, title = {Self-Knowledge Requirements and {M}oore's Paradox}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2021}, volume = {130}, number = {2}, pages = {227--262}, abstract = {This article considers a few ways the data surrounding Moore's paradox might be marshaled to support rational requirements to know one's beliefs, and finds that none succeed.}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;epistemic-logic;belief} } @article{ barnett_j-etal:1990a, author = {Jim Barnett and Kevin Knight and Inderjeet Mani and Elaine Rich}, title = {Knowledge and Natural Language Processing}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, year = {1990}, volume = {33}, number = {8}, pages = {50--71}, topic = {kr;word-acquisition;} } @article{ barnett_ja:1984a, author = {Jeffrey A. Barnett}, title = {How Much Is Control Knowledge Worth? A Primitive Example}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {77--89}, topic = {procedural-control;} } @article{ barney:1992a, author = {Rachel Barney}, title = {Appearances and Impressions}, journal = {Phronesis}, year = {1992}, volume = {37}, number = {3}, pages = {283--313}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {Sextus-Empiricus;ancient-philosophy;epistemology;} } @article{ baron_d:2004a, author = {Dorit Bar-On}, title = {Externalism and Self-Knowledge: Content, Use, and Expression}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2004}, volume = {38}, number = {3}, pages = {430--455}, topic = {introspection;epistemology;internalism/externalism;} } @incollection{ baron_d-simmons_k:2006a, author = {Dorit Bar-On and Keith Simmons}, title = {Deflationism}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {607--630}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {deflationary-analyses;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ baron_de:1982a, author = {Dennis E. Baron}, title = {Grammar and Good Taste: Reforming the {A}merican Language}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, year = {1982}, address = {New Haven}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {language-reform;prescriptive-linguistics;} } @book{ baron_j:1993a, editor = {Jonathan Baron}, title = {Morality and Rational Choice}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1993}, number = {18}, series = {Theory and Decision Library}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {Chapters: 1. Introduction 2. Morality and decision-making 3. The nature of goals 4. Expected utility theory 5. Decisions for others 6. Self-other conflict 7. Acts and omissions 8. Utilitarian education 9. Decision analysis and public policy 10. Equity in social policy and liability 11. The risk analysis debate 12. Social decisions }, rtnote = {UMich BF 448 .B371 1993}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;rationality;goals; foundations-of-utility;policy-making;} } @book{ baron_j:2008a, author = {Jonathan Baron}, title = {Thinking and Deciding, 4th Edition}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780521862073}, abstract = {...[Addresses:] How should we think? What, if anything, keeps us from thinking that way? How can we improve our thinking and decision making? ... topics such as risk, utilitarianism, Baye's theorem, and moral thinking. ...}, topic = {decision-making;utility;rationality;} } @article{ baron_s:2020a, author = {Sam Baron}, title = {Counterfactual Scheming}, journal = {Mind}, year = {2020}, volume = {129}, number = {514}, pages = {535--562}, abstract = {Recently, a counterfactual approach to mathematical explanation has been suggested. I argue that such a view fails to differentiate the explanatory uses of mathematics within science from the non-explanatory uses. I go on to offer a solution to this problem by combining elements of the counterfactual theory of explanation with elements of a unification theory of explanation.}, topic = {conditionals;explanation;} } @book{ baron_s-etal:1990a, editor = {Sheldon Baron and Dana S. Kruser and Beverly Messick Huey}, title = {Quantitative Modeling of Human Performance in Complex, Dynamic Systems}, publisher = {National Academy Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Washington, D.C.}, ISBN = {030904135X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, QA 76.9 .H85 Q22 1990.}, topic = {HCI;} } @article{ baroni_m-etal:2015a, author = {Marco Baroni and Raffaella Bernardi and Roberto Zamparelli}, title = {Frege in Space: A Program for Compositional Distributional Semantics}, journal = {Linguistic Issues in Language Technology}, year = {2014}, volume = {9}, pages = {5--110}, url = {http://csli-lilt.stanford.edu/ojs/index.php/LiLT/article/view/6}, abstract = {This article sketches a new approach to semantics that brings together ideas from statistical and formal semantics to account, in parallel, for the richness of lexical meaning and the combinatorial power of sentential semantics. We adopt, in particular, the idea that word meaning can be approximated by the patterns of co-occurrence of words in corpora from statistical semantics, and the idea that compositionality can be captured in terms of a syntax-driven calculus of function application from formal semantics.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my16}, topic = {statistical-semantics;compositionality;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ baroni_p-etal:1999a, author = {Pietro Baroni and Gianfranco Lamperti and P. Pogliano and Marina Zanella}, title = {Diagnosis of Large Active Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {110}, number = {1}, pages = {135--183}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper presents a modular technique, amenable to parallel implementation, for the diagnosis of large-scale, distributed, asynchronous event-driven (namely, active) systems. An active system is an abstraction of a physical system that can be modeled as a network of communicating automata. Due to the distributed nature of the class of systems considered, and unlike other approaches based on synchronous composition of automata, exchanged events are buffered within communication links and dealt with asynchronously. The main goal of the diagnostic technique is the reconstruction of the behavior of the active system starting from a set of observable events. The diagnostic process involves three steps: interpretation, merging, and diagnosis generation. Interpretation generates a representation of the behavior of a part of the active system based on observable events. Merging combines the result of several interpretations into a new, broader interpretation. The eventual diagnostic information is generated on the basis of fault events possibly incorporated within the reconstructed behavior. In contrast with other approaches, the proposed technique does not require the generation of the, possibly huge, model of the entire system, typically, in order to yield a global diagnoser, but rather, it allows a modular and parallel exploitation of the reconstruction process. This property, to a large extent, makes effective the diagnosis of real active systems, for which the reconstruction of the global behavior is often unnecessary, if not impossible. }, missinginfo = {A's 1st names.}, topic = {diagnosis;model-based-reasoning; reasoning-about-distributed-systems;} } @article{ baroni_p-etal:2000a, author = {Pietro Baroni and M. Giacomin and G. Guida}, title = {Extending Abstract Argumentation Systems Theory}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {120}, number = {2}, pages = {251--270}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In this paper, we extend the theory of abstract argumentation systems proposed by Vreeswijk (1997). This framework stands at a high abstraction level and provides a general model for argumentation activity. However, the theory reveals an inherent limitation in that the premises of the argumentation process are assumed to be indefeasible, and this introduces the need of an implicit constraint on the strength of the arguments, in order to preserve correctness. In many application contexts the information available to start reasoning is not guaranteed to be completely reliable, therefore it is natural to assume that premises can be discarded during the argumentation process. We extend the theory by admitting that premises can be defeated and relaxing the implicit assumption about their strength. Besides fixing the technical problems related to this hidden assumption (e.g., ensuring that warranted arguments are compatible), our proposal provides an integrated model for belief revision and defeasible reasoning, confirming the suitability of argumentation as a general model for the activity of intelligent reasoning in presence of various kinds of uncertainty. }, topic = {argument-based-defeasible-reasoning; belief-revision;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ baroni_p-etal:2005a, author = {Pietro Baroni and Massimiliano Giacomin and Giovanni Guida}, title = {{SCC}-Recursiveness: A General Schema for Argumentation Semantics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {168}, number = {1--2}, pages = {162--210}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ baroni_p-etal:2005b, author = {Pietro Baroni and Massimiliano Giacomin and Giovanni Guida}, title = {Self-Stabilizing Defeat Status Computation: Dealing with Conflict Management in Multi-Agent Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {165}, number = {2}, pages = {187--259}, topic = {argumenation;multi-agent-systems;conflict-resolution;} } @article{ baroni_p-etal:2011a, author = {Pietro Baroni and Paul E. Dunne and Massimiliano Giacomin}, title = {On the Resolution-Based Family of Abstract Argumentation Semantics and its Grounded Instance}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {3--4}, pages = {791--813}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ baroni_p-etal:2013a, author = {Pietro Baroni and Federico Cerutti and Paul E. Dunne and Massimiliano Giacomin}, title = {Automata for Infinite Argumentation Structures}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {203}, pages = {104--150}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ baroni_p-etal:2016a, author = {Pietro Baroni and Guido Governatori and Ho-Pun Lam and R\'egis Riveret}, title = {On the Justification of Statements in Argumentation-based Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {521--524}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we propose to reappraise statement justification as a formalism-independent component. To this purpose, we introduce a novel general model of argumentation-based reasoning based on multiple levels of labellings, one of which is devoted to statement justification. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {argumentaton-theory;} } @article{ baroni_p-giacomin:2007a, author = {Pietro Baroni and Massimiliano Giacomin}, title = {On Principle-Based Evaluation of Extension-Based Argumentation Semantics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {10--15}, pages = {675--700}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;semantics-evaluation;} } @incollection{ barr-davidson_j:1981a, author = {Avron Barr and James E. Davidson}, title = {Representation of Knowledge}, booktitle = {The Handbook of {AI}, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Heuris{T}ech Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Avron Barr and Edward A. Feigenbaum}, pages = {141--222}, address = {Stanford, California}, note = {Co-authors: Robert Filman, Douglas Appelt, Anne Gardiner, and James Bennett.}, topic = {kr-survey;} } @book{ barr-feigenbaum:1981a, editor = {Avron Barr and Edward A. Feigenbaum}, title = {The Handbook of {AI}, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Heuris{T}ech Press}, year = {1981}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Shelf.}, topic = {AI-survey;} } @incollection{ barrett_a:2004a, author = {Anthony Barrett}, title = {From Hybrid Systems to Universal Plans Via Domain Compilation}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {654--661}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {planning;control-theory;} } @techreport{ barrett_a-etal:1994a, author = {Anthony Barrett and Keith Golden and Scott Pemberthy and Daniel Weld}, title = {{\sc ucpop} User's Manual}, institution = {Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington}, number = {93--09--06}, year = {1991}, address = {Seattle, WA 98105}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {planning-systems;} } @article{ barrett_a-weld_ds:1994a, author = {Anthony Barrett and Daniel S. Weld}, title = {Partial-Order Planning: Evaluating Possible Efficiency Gains}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {67}, number = {1}, pages = {71--112}, topic = {partial-order-planning;} } @book{ barrett_e:1988a, editor = {Edward Barrett}, title = {Text, Con{T}ext, and Hyper{T}ext: Writing with and for the Computer}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1988}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS General shelves.}, topic = {document-design;internet-technology;} } @book{ barrett_ja:1999a, author = {Jeffrey Alan Barrett}, title = {The Quantum Mechanics of Minds and Worlds}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reviews: becker_l:2001a, myrvold:2002a.}, topic = {foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;branching-time;} } @article{ barrett_ja:2009a, author = {Jeffrey A. Barrett}, title = {Review of \emph{Scientific Representation: Paradoxes of Perspective}}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2009}, volume = {106}, number = {11}, pages = {634--639}, xref = {Review of: vanfraassen_bc:2008a}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;empiricism;quantum-mechanics;} } @book{ barrett_ja-alexander_jm:2000a, editor = {Jeffrey Alan Barrett and J. McKenzie Alexander}, title = {Philosophy of Science: Proceedings of the 2000 Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part 1: Contributed Papers}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Chicago, Illinois}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Philsci Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ barrett_ja-huttegger_sm:2020a, author = {Jeffrey A. Barrett and Simon M. Huttegger}, title = {Quantum Randomness and Underdetermination}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2020}, volume = {87}, number = {3}, pages = {391--408}, topic = {randomness;empiricism;quantum-mechanics;} } @article{ barrett_rh-stenner:1971a, author = {Robert H. Barrett and Alfred J Stenner}, title = {The Myth of the Exclusive `Or{'}}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1971}, volume = {80}, number = {317}, pages = {116--121}, topic = {disjunction;} } @article{ barrett_tw-halvorsen_h:2016a, author = {Thomas William Barrett and Hans Halvorsen}, title = {Glymour and {Q}uine on Theoretical Equivalence}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2016}, volume = {45}, number = {5}, pages = {467--483}, topic = {theoretical-equivalence;philosophy-of-science;} } @inproceedings{ barriere:1998a, author = {Caroline Barri\'ere}, title = {Redundancy: Helping Semantic Disambiguation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {103--109}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {disambiguation;} } @inproceedings{ barriere_a-etal:2018a, author = {Aur\`ele Barri\`ere and Bastien Maubert and Aniello Murano and Sasha Rubin}, title = {Changing Observations in Epistemic Temporal Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {621--622}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We study dynamic changes of agents' observational power in logics of knowledge and time. ... We also provide a model-checking procedure for the logic that we introduce, which has the same complexity as the best known model-checking procedure for the less expressive logic CTL*K.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {epistemic-logic;temporal-logic;model-checking;} } @book{ barringer:1996a, author = {Howard Barringer and M. Fisher and D. Gabbay and R. Owens and M. Reynolds}, title = {The Imperative Future: Principles of Executable Temporal Logic}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1996}, address = {Chichester, England}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {temporal-logic;temporal-reasoning;software-engineering;} } @incollection{ barringer-etal:1991a, author = {Howard Barringer and Michael Fisher and Dov Gabbay and Anthony Hunter}, title = {Meta-Reasoning in Executable Temporal Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {40--49}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;temporal-logics;imperative-logic;programming-systems; kr-course;} } @book{ barringer_h-etal:2000a, editor = {Howard Barringer and Michael Fisher and Dov M. Gabbay and Graham Gough}, title = {Advances in Temporal Logic}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2000}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-94-015-9586-5}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Iliano Cervesato and Massimo Franceschet and Angelo Montanari, "A Hierarchy of Modal Event Calculi: Expressiveness and Complexity", pp. 1--20 2. Jeroen Krabbendam and John-Jules Meyer, "Release Logics for Temporalizing Dynamic Logic", pp. 21--45 3. Francesca Levi, "Compositional Verification of Timed Statecharts", pp. 47--70 4. Yassine Lakhnech and Michael Siegel, "Temporal Logic for Stabilizing Systems", pp. 71--90 5. Angelo Montanari and Adriano Peron and Alberto Policriti, "Decidable Theories of $\omega$-Layered Metric Temporal Structures", pp. 91--108 6. Orna Kupfermant and Moshe Y. Vardi, "Synthesis with Incomplete Information", pp. 109--127 7. Nikolaj S. Bjørner and Uri Lerner and Zohar Manna, "Deductive Verification of Parameterized Fault-Tolerant Systems: A Case Study", pp. 129--148 8. Clare Dixon, "Using Otter for Temporal Resolution", pp. 149--166 9. Michael Fisher and Clare Dixon, "Guiding Clausal Temporal Resolution", pp. 167--184 10. Torben Br\"aüner and Per Hasle and Peter {\O}hrstr{\o}m, "Determinism and the Origins of Temporal Logic", pp. 185--206 11. Miguel Leith and Jim Cunningham, "Modelling Linguistic Events", pp. 207--222 12. Ralf Naumann, "A Dynamic Temporal Logic for Aspectual Phenomena in Natural Language", pp. 223--253 13. Ian Pratt and Nissim Francez, "A Decidable Temporal Logic for Temporal Prepositions", pp. 255--278 14. Antony Galton, "Transitions in Continuous Time, with an Application to Qualitative Changes in Spatial Relations", pp. 279--297 15. Isabel Nunes and Jose Luiz Fiadeiro and Wladyslaw M. Turski, "A Modal Logic of Durative Actions", pp. 299--317 16. Hans J\"urgen Ohlbach, "About Real Time, Calendar Systems and Temporal Notions", pp. 319--338 17. Stefania Gnesi and Gioia Ristori, "A Model Checking Algorithm for $\pi$-Calculus Agents", pp. 339--357 18. Tiegeng Luo and Huowang Chen and Bingshan Wang and Ji Wang and Zhichang Qi and Zhenghu Gong, "Interleaving Model and Verification of Distributed Probabilistic Real-time Systems", pp. 359--375 19. Simon Thompson, "Constructive Interval Temporal Logic in Alf", pp. 377--392 }, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @article{ barrio_e-egre_p:2022a, author = {Eduardo Barrio and Paul \'Egr\'e}, title = {Editorial Introduction: Substructural Logics and Metainferences}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {6}, pages = {1215--1231}, abstract = {On the one hand, standard ways of defining the notion of logical consequence in classical logic naturally induce substructural logics when admitting more than two truth values; on the other hand, these substructural logics give rise to hierarchies of metainferences that can be used to approximate classical logic at different levels.}, topic = {substructural-logics;metainference;} } @article{ barrio_e-pailos_f:2022a, author = {Eduardo Barrio and Federico Pailos}, title = {Validities, Antivalidities and Contingencies: A Multi-Standard Approach}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {1}, pages = {75--98}, abstract = {It is widely accepted that classical logic is trivialized in the presence of a transparent truth-predicate. In this paper, we will explain why this point of view must be given up. ... We embrace Scambler's challenge and develop a new logic based on [hierarchies of metainferential logics] This logic recovers both every classical validity and every classical antivalidity. A truth-predicate can be added to this logic, this result can be interpreted as showing that, despite the claims that are extremely widely accepted, classical logic does not trivialize in the context of transparent truth.}, topic = {axionatic-truth;metainference;} } @article{ barrio_ea:2011a, author = {Eduardo Alejandro Barrio}, title = {Theories of Truth without Standard Models and {Y}ablo's Sequences}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2011}, volume = {96}, number = {3}, pages = {375--401}, topic = {truth-definitions;Yablo-paradox;} } @article{ barrio_ea-etal:2015a, author = {Eduardo A. Barrio and Lucas Rosenblatt and Diego Tajer}, title = {The Logics of Strict-Tolerant Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {5}, pages = {551--571}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;substructural-logics;} } @article{ barrio_ea-etal:2019a, author = {Eduardo Alejandro Barrio and Federico Pailos and Damian Szmuc}, title = {A Recovery Operator for Nontransitive Approaches}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {80--104}, abstract = {In some recent articles, Cobreros, Egr\'e, Ripley, & van Rooij have defended the idea that abandoning transitivity may lead to a solution to the trouble caused by semantic paradoxes. For that purpose, they develop the Strict-Tolerant approach, which leads them to entertain a nontransitive theory of truth, where the structural rule of Cut is not generally valid. However, that Cut fails in general in the target theory of truth does not mean that there are not certain safe instances of Cut involving semantic notions. In this article we intend to meet the challenge of answering how to regain all the safe instances of Cut, in the language of the theory, making essential use of a unary recovery operator. ...}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ barrio_ea-etal:2020a, author = {Eduardo Alejandro Barrio and Federico Pailos and Damian Szmuc}, title = {A Hierarchy of Classical and Paraconsistent Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {1}, pages = {93--120}, abstract = {In this article, we will present a number of technical results concerning Classical Logic, Strict-Tolerennt Logic and related systems. Our main contribution consists in offering a novel identity criterion for logics in general and, therefore, for Classical Logic. ... We will claim that a logic is to be identified with an infinite sequence of consequence relations holding between increasingly complex relata: formulae, inferences, metainferences, and so on. }, topic = {inference-rules;logic-taxonomies;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ barrio_ea-picollo_lm:2013a, author = {Eduardo A. Barrio and Lavinia Picollo}, title = {Notes on $\omega$-Inconsistent Theories of Truth in Second-Order Languages}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {733--741}, topic = {omega-inconsistency;truth;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ barron_ab-klein_c:2016a, author = {Andrew B. Barron and Colin Klein}, title = {What Insects Can Tell Us About the Origins of Consciousness}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Science}, year = {2016}, volume = {113}, number = {6}, pages = {4900--4908}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17}, topic = {animal-cognition;consciousness;} } @incollection{ barroncohen-cross_p:1995a, author = {Simon Baron-Cohen and Pippa Cross}, title = {Reading the Eyes: Evidence for the Role of Perception in the Development of a Theory of Mind}, booktitle = {Mental Simulation: Evaluations and Applications}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Martin Davies and Tony Stone}, pages = {259--273}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {developmental-psychology;mental-simulation; propositional-attitude-ascription;} } @article{ barrow_hg:1984a, author = {Harry G. Barrow}, title = {{VERIFY}: A Program for Proving Correctness of Digital Hardware Designs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, volume = {24}, number = {1--3}, pages = {437--491}, topic = {design-verification;} } @article{ barrow_hg-tenenbaum:1981a, author = {Harry G. Barrow and J.M. Tenenbaum}, title = {Interpreting Line Drawings as Three-Dimensional Surfaces}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, volume = {17}, number = {1--3}, pages = {75--116}, topic = {three-D-reconstruction;} } @article{ barrow_hg-tennenbaum_jm:1993a, author = {Harry G. Barrow and J.M. Tennenbaum}, title = {Retrospective on `Interpreting Line Drawings as Three-Dimensional Surfaces'}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {71--80}, topic = {computer-vision;three-D-reconstruction;} } @book{ barrow_jd:1998a, author = {John D. Barrow}, title = {Impossibility}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;goedels-second-theorem; popular-logic;popular-physics;popular-science; paradoxes;} } @article{ barry-etal:1988a, author = {Michele Barry and David Cyrluk and Deepak Kapur and Joseph Mundy and Van-Duc Nguyen}, title = {A Multi-Level Geometric Reasoning System for Vision}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {37}, number = {1--3}, pages = {291--332}, topic = {computer-vision;geometrical-reasoning;spatial-reasoning;} } @book{ barsalou:1992a, author = {Lawrence W. Barsalou}, title = {Cognitive Psychology: An Overview for Cognitive Scientists}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1992}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0-89859-966-0.}, xref = {Review: dyck:1991a}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;} } @incollection{ barsalow:1992a, author = {Lawrence W. Barsalow}, title = {Frames, Concepts, and Conceptual Fields}, booktitle = {Frames, Fields, and Contrasts}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1992}, editor = {Adrienne Lehrer and Eva Feder Kittay}, pages = {21--74}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de11}, topic = {frames;concepts;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ barstow:1979a1, author = {David R. Barstow}, title = {An Experiment in Knowledge-Based Automatic Programming}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1979}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {73--119}, xref = {Republication: barstow:1979a2.}, topic = {program-synthesis;} } @incollection{ barstow:1979a2, author = {David Barstow}, title = {An Experiment in Knowledge-Based Automatic Programming}, booktitle = {Readings in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1981}, editor = {Bonnie Webber and Nils J. Nilsson}, pages = {289--312}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: barstow:1979a2.}, topic = {program-synthesis;} } @article{ bartak:2005a, author = {Ronan Bart\'ak}, title = {Review of \emph{Constraint Processing}, by {R}ina {D}echter}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {169}, number = {2}, pages = {142--145}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;} } @inproceedings{ bartak_r-etal:2021a, author = {Roman Bart\'ak and Simona Ondr\v{c}kov\'a and Gregor Behnke and Pascal Bercher}, title = {Correcting Hierarchical Plans by Action Deletion}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {99--109}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we propose a method that corrects a given action sequence to form a valid HTN plan by deleting the minimal number of actions. This plan correction explains what is wrong with a given action sequence concerning the HTN domain model.}, topic = {hierarchical-planning;plan-verification;} } @book{ bartal:1990a, author = {Daniel Bar-Tal}, title = {Group Beliefs: A Conception for Analyzing Group Structure, Processes, and Behavior}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1990}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0387970851}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Hm 131 .B281 1990.}, topic = {social-psychology;group-attitudes;} } @book{ bartal:2000a, author = {Daniel Bar-Tal}, title = {Shared Beliefs in a Society: Social Psychological Analysis}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {2000}, address = {Thousand Oaks, California}, ISBN = {0-7629-0658-4 (cloth)}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate Library HM 1041 .B371 2000}, topic = {social-psychology;group-attitudes;} } @book{ bartal-kruglanski:1988a, editor = {Daniel Bar-Tal and Arie W. Kruglanski}, title = {The Social Psychology of Knowledge: Its Scope and Meaning}, publisher = {Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme}, year = {1988}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052132114X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD 175 .S6251 1988.}, topic = {social-psychology;} } @incollection{ bartal-kruglanski:1988b, author = {Daniel Bar-Tal and Arie W. Kruglanski}, title = {The Social Psychology of Knowledge: Its Scope and Meaning}, booktitle = {The Social Psychology of Knowledge}, publisher = {Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l'Homme}, year = {1988}, editor = {Daniel Bar-Tal and Arie W. Kruglanski}, pages = {1--14}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {social-psychology;group-attitudes;} } @article{ bartha_pa:1993a, author = {Paul A. Bartha}, title = {Conditional Obligation, Deontic Paradoxes, and the Logic of Agency}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {9}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--23}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my15}, topic = {deontic-logic;agency;stit;} } @incollection{ bartha_pa:1999a, author = {Paul A. Bartha}, title = {Moral Preference, Contrary-to-Duty Obligation and Defeasible Oughts}, booktitle = {Norms, Logics and Information Systems. New Studies in Deontic Logic and Computer Science}, publisher = {IOS Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul McNamara and Henry Prakken}, pages = {93--108}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {deontic-logic;prima-facie-obligation;} } @article{ bartha_pa:2002a, author = {Paul Bartha}, title = {Review of \emph{Agency and Deontic Logic}, by John F. Horty}, journal = {Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews}, year = {2002}, volume = {2}, URL = {https://ndpr.nd.edu/reviews/agency-and-deontic-logic/}, xref = {Review of: horty_jf:2001}, topic = {deontic-logic;practical-reasoning;pr-course; ability;stit;foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @book{ bartha_pa:2010a, author = {Paul A. Bartha}, title = {By Parallel Reasoning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2010}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-532553-9}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {analogical-reasoning;analogy;} } @incollection{ bartha_pa:2014a, author = {Paul A. Bartha}, title = {Decision Theory in Branching Time}, booktitle = {Nuel {B}elnap on Indeterminism and Free Action}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2014}, editor = {Thomas M\"uller}, pages = {29--56}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {decision-theory;deontic-logic;stit;} } @inproceedings{ bartha_pa-hitchcock_c:1998a, author = {Paul A. Bartha and Christopher Hitchcock}, title = {No One Knows the Date or the Hour: An Unorthodox Application of Rev. {B}ayes's Theorem}, booktitle = {{PSA}98: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part 1: Contributed Papers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {339--353}, organization = {Philosophy of Science Association}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, address = {Chicago, Illinois}, topic = {foundations-of-statistics;} } @inproceedings{ bartholomew_m-lee_jh:2012a, author = {Michael Bartholomew and Joohyung Lee}, title = {Stable Models of Formulas with Intensional Functions}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {2--12}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In classical logic, nonBoolean fluents, such as the location of an object and the color of a ball, can be naturally described by functions, but this is not the case with the traditional stable model semantics, where the values of functions are pre-defined, and nonmonotonicity of the semantics is related to minimizing the extents of predicates but has nothing to do with functions. We extend the first-order stable model semantics by Ferraris, Lee and Lifschitz to allow intensional functions. The new formalism is closely related to multi-valued nonmonotonic causal logic, logic programs with intensional functions, and other extensions of logic programs with functions, while keeping similar properties as those of the first-order stable model semantics. }, topic = {stable-models;logic-programming;causal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ bartholomew_m-lee_jy:2010a, author = {Michael Bartholomew and Joohyung Lee}, title = {A Decidable Class of Groundable Formulas in the General Theory of Stable Models}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {477--485}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We present a decidable class of first-order formulas in the general theory of stable models that can be instantiated even in the presence of function constants. ...}, topic = {(un)decidability;stable-models;} } @inproceedings{ bartholomew_m-lee_jy:2014a, author = {Michael Bartholomew and Joohyung Lee}, title = {Stable Models of Multi-Valued Formulas: Partial versus Total Functions}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {583--586}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Recent extensions of the stable model semantics that allow intensional functions -- functions that can be specified by logic programs using other functions and predicates--can be divided into two groups. One group defines a stable model in terms of minimality on the values of partial functions, and the other defines it in terms of uniqueness on the values of total functions. We show that, in the context of multi-valued formulas, these two different approaches can be reduced to each other, and further, each of them can be viewed in terms of propositional formulas under the stable model semantics. Based on these results, we present a prototype implementation of different versions of functional stable model semantics by using existing answer set solvers. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {stable-models;} } @book{ bartlett-suber:1987a, editor = {Steven J. Bartlett and Peter Suber}, title = {Self-reference: Reflections on Reflexivity}, publisher = {Martinus Nijhoff}, year = {1987}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {9024734746}, topic = {self-reference;} } @article{ barto_ag:2019a, author = {Andrew G. Barto}, title = {Reinforcement Learning: Connections, Surprises, and Challenge}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2019}, volume = {40}, number = {1}, pages = {3--15}, topic = {reinforcement-learning;} } @article{ barto_ag-etal:1995a, author = {Andrew G. Barto and Steven J. Bradtke and Satinder P. Singh}, title = {Learning to Act Using Real-Time Dynamic Programming}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {72}, number = {1--2}, pages = {81--138}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Learning methods based on dynamic programming (DP) are receiving increasing attention in artificial intelligence. Researchers have argued that DP provides the appropriate basis for compiling planning results into reactive strategies for real-time control, as well as for learning such strategies when the system being controlled is incompletely known. We introduce an algorithm based on DP, which we call Real-Time DP (RTDP), by which an embedded system can improve its performance with experience. RTDP generalizes Korf's Learning-Real-Time-A* algorithm to problems involving uncertainty. We invoke results from the theory of asynchronous DP to prove that RTDP achieves optimal behavior in several different classes of problems. We also use the theory of asynchronous DP to illuminate aspects of other DP-based reinforcement learning methods such as Watkins' Q-Learning algorithm. A secondary aim of this article is to provide a bridge between AI research on real-time planning and learning and relevant concepts and algorithms from control theory.}, topic = {reinforcement-learning;machine-learning;dynamic-programming;} } @article{ barton_n:2020a, author = {Neil Barton}, title = {Forcing and the Universe of Sets: Must We Lose Insight?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {4}, pages = {575--612}, abstract = {A central area of current philosophical debate in the foundations of mathematics concerns whether or not there is a single, maximal, universe of set theory. Universists maintain that there is such a universe, while Multiversists argue that there are many universes, no one of which is ontologically privileged. Often forcing constructions that add subsets to models are cited as evidence in favour of the latter. ... We conclude that the Universist has promising options for interpreting different forcing constructions. }, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ barton_n-etal:2022a, author = {Neil Barton and Moritz M\"uller and Mihai Prunescu}, title = {On Representations of Intended Structures in Foundational Theories}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {2}, pages = {283--296}, abstract = {... In this paper, we examine how faithfully foundational theories can represent intended structures, and show that this question is closely linked to the decidability of the theory of the intended structure. We argue that this sheds light on the trade-off between expressive power and meta-theoretic properties when comparing first-order and second-order logic.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;mathematical-reasoning;} } @unpublished{ bartsch_r:1972a, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Relative Adjectives and Comparison in a {M}ontague Grammar}, year = {1972}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Freie Universit\"at, Berlin.}, topic = {semantics-of-adjectives;comparative-constructions;} } @incollection{ bartsch_r:1972b, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {The Proper Treatment of Number and Numbers in a {M}ontague Grammar}, booktitle = {Papers in {M}ontague Grammar}, publisher = {Linguistics Department, UCLA}, year = {1972}, editor = {Robert Rodman}, pages = {66--79}, address = {Los Angeles, California}, note = {ULCA Occasional Papers in Linguistics, No. 2}, topic = {Montague-grammar;nl-semantics;plural;} } @book{ bartsch_r:1972c, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Adverbialsemantik: Die {K}onstitution {L}ogisch-{S}emantischer {R}epr\"asentationen von {A}dverbialkonstruktionen}, publisher = {Athen\"aum}, year = {1972}, address = {Frankfurt}, topic = {nl-semantics;adverbs;} } @incollection{ bartsch_r:1975a, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Subcategorization of Adnominal and Adverbial Modifiers}, booktitle = {Formal Semantics of Natural Language}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Edward L. Keenan}, pages = {175--187}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {adverbs;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ bartsch_r:1976a, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {The Role of Categorial Syntax in Grammatical Theory}, booktitle = {Language in Focus}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Asa Kasher}, pages = {503--539}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {categorial-grammar;} } @incollection{ bartsch_r:1980a, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Semantics and Syntax of Nominalizations}, booktitle = {Formal Methods in the Study of Language}, publisher = {Foris}, year = {1981}, editor = {Jeroen A. Groenendijk and Theo Janssen and Martin Stokhof}, address = {Dordrecht}, pages = {1--28}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nominal-constructions;} } @incollection{ bartsch_r:1984a, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {The Structure of Word Meanings: Polysemy, Metaphor, Metonymy}, booktitle = {Varieties of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1984}, editor = {Fred Landman and Frank Veltman}, pages = {25--54}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {lexical-semantics;context;nl-polysemy;metaphor;metonymy;} } @article{ bartsch_r:1986a, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {The Construction of Properties under Perspectives}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1987}, volume = {5}, number = {4}, pages = {293--320}, abstract = {Adjectives express properties, is the traditional opinion, be it properties an individual has itself (absolute properties) or properties that it has only in relation to others (relative properties or relations). I shall show in this paper that most properties are not expressed by adjectives, rather they are denoted by them in what I call `thematic dimensions'. Properties are expressed by thematic dimensions and adjectives together. Adjectives can be used in predicative, adnominal, adverbial, or adsentential position and function. Besides elaborating the notion of thematic dimensions and explaining the relationship between properties and these dimensions, an aim of this paper is to assign suitable semantic types to adjectives and the thematic dimensions they are used in. These serve for forming conjunctions and other combinations of thematic dimensions, and for forming conjunctions of expressions in several categories. These operations form the basis for the construction of properties under perspectives, i.e. in thematic dimensions. }, topic = {nl-semantics;adjectives;} } @techreport{ bartsch_r:1987a, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {The Construction of Properties Under Perspectives}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {87--08}, year = {1987}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland }, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-semantics;adjectives;measures;} } @techreport{ bartsch_r:1987b, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Frame Representations and Discourse Representations}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {87--08}, year = {1992}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland }, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-semantics;frames;discourse-representation-theory; pragmatics;} } @article{ bartsch_r:1987c, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Frame Representations and Discourse Representations}, journal = {Theoretical Linguistics}, year = {1987}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {65--117}, topic = {discourse-representation-theory;frames;lexical-semantics; pragmatics;} } @book{ bartsch_r:1987d, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Norms of Language: Theoretical and Practical Aspects}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1987}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0582014751}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P368 .B293 1987.}, topic = {foundations-of-linguistics;linguistics-methodology;} } @article{ bartsch_r:1988a, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Tenses and Aspects in Discourse}, journal = {Theoretical Linguistics}, year = {1987}, volume = {15}, number = {1/2}, pages = {133--194}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;discourse; pragmatics;} } @techreport{ bartsch_r:1988b, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Tenses, Aspects, and Their Scopes in Discourse}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP--88--07}, year = {1990}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland}, topic = {tense-aspect;discourse;pragmatics;} } @techreport{ bartsch_r:1990a, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Concept Formation and Concept Composition}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP--90--03}, year = {1990}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {metaphor;polysemy;pragmatics;} } @book{ bartsch_r:1998a, author = {Renate Bartsch}, title = {Dynamic Conceptual Semantics: A Logico-Philosophical Investigation into Concept Formation and Understanding}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1998}, address = {Stanford}, ISBN = {1575861259 (hardcover}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 325 .B3731 1998.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @book{ bartsch_r-etal:1989a, editor = {Renate Bartsch and Johan van Benthem and P. van Emde Boas}, title = {Semantics and Contextual Expression}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1989}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {9067654434}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 325 .S3541 1989.}, note = {Articles based on papers chosen from those presented at the 6th Amsterdam Colloquium on April 1987.}, ISBN-13 = {978-9067654432}, ISBN-10 = {9067654434}, topic = {nl-semantics;context;} } @book{ bartsch_r-vennemann:1973a, author = {Renate Bartsch and Theo Vennemann}, title = {Semantic Structures: A Study in the Relation between Semantics and Syntax}, publisher = {Athen\"aum Verlag}, year = {1973}, address = {Frankfurt}, ISBN = {3761017091}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, 800.31 B295se 1973.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {syntax-semantics-interface;} } @article{ barwise_j-perry_j:1981a, author = {Jon Barwise and John Perry}, title = {Situations and Attitudes}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1981}, volume = {78}, number = {11}, pages = {668--691}, topic = {situation-theory;} } @book{ barwise_kj:1975a, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Admissible Sets and Structures}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1975}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {mathematical-logic;admissible-sets;model-theory;} } @book{ barwise_kj:1977a, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Handbook of Mathematical Logic}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1977}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {mathematical-logic;} } @article{ barwise_kj:1978a, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {On Branching Quantifiers in {E}nglish}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1978}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {47--80}, topic = {branching-quantifiers;nl-semantics;} } @article{ barwise_kj:1981a1, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Scenes and Other Situations}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1981}, volume = {78}, number = {7}, pages = {369--397}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Republication: barwise_kj:1981a2.}, topic = {situation-theory;logic-of-perception;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1981a2, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Scenes and Other Situations}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {5--33}, address = {Stanford, California}, xref = {Republication of: barwise_kj:1981a1.}, topic = {situation-theory;logic-of-perception;} } @article{ barwise_kj:1983a, author = {Jon Barwise}, title = {Information and Semantics}, journal = {The Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1983}, volume = {6}, rtnote = {Get this.}, missinginfo = {number, pages.}, topic = {nl-semantics;theories-of-information;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ barwise_kj:1983b, author = {Jon Barwise}, title = {Information and Semantics: Comments on Dretske's {\it Knowledge and the Flow of Information}}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1983}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {55--90}, topic = {situation-semantics;information-flow-theory; theories-of-information;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1983c, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1983}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {xiii--xvi}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {situation-theory;logic-of-percception;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1983d, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Appendix: Reply to {L}akoff}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1983}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {34--36}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {situation-theory;logic-of-perception;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1985a, author = {Jon Barwise}, title = {Model-Theoretic Logics: Background and Aims}, booktitle = {Model-Theoretic Logics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1985}, editor = {Jon Barwise and Solomon Feferman}, pages = {3--23}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {model-theory;} } @techreport{ barwise_kj:1985b1, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {The Situation in Logic {II}: Conditionals and Conditional Information}, institution = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, number = {CSLI--85--21}, year = {1985}, address = {Stanford University, Stanford California.}, xref = {Republication: barwise_kj:1985b1}, xref = {Published version: barwise_kj:1986a2.}, topic = {conditionals;situation-theory;information-flow-theory;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1985b2, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Conditionals and Conditional Information}, booktitle = {On Conditionals}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Elizabeth Traugott and Alice {ter Meulen} and Judy Reilly and Charles Ferguson}, pages = {21--54}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Tech Report version: barwise_kj:1986a1.}, xref = {Republication: barwise_kj:1986a2.}, topic = {conditionals;situation-theory;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1986a2, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Conditionals and Conditional Information}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {97--135}, address = {Stanford, California}, xref = {Republication: barwise_kj:1986a2.}, topic = {conditionals;situation-semantics;} } @article{ barwise_kj:1986a, author = {Jon K. Barwise}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}nquiry}, by {R}obert {C}. {S}talnaker}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1986}, volume = {95}, number = {3}, pages = {429--434}, xref = {Review of stalnaker_rc:1984a.}, topic = {foundations-of-modality;propositional-attitudes;belief-revision; pragmatics;agent-attitudes;belief;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1986b2, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Logic and Information}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {37--57}, address = {Stanford, California}, xref = {Republication of barwise_kj:1986b1.}, topic = {foundations-of-logic;situation-theory;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1987a, author = {Jon Barwise}, title = {Noun Phrases, Generalized Quantifiers, and Anaphora}, booktitle = {Generalized Quantifiers}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1987}, editor = {Peter G\"{a}rdenfors}, pages = {1--29}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;generalized-quantifiers;anaphora;} } @inproceedings{ barwise_kj:1988a, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Three Views of Common Knowledge}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge}, year = {1988}, editor = {Moshe Y. Vardi}, pages = {365--379}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {mutual-belief;} } @book{ barwise_kj:1989a, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. K. Jon Barwise, "Introduction", pp. xiii--xvi 2. K. Jon Barwise, "Scenes and Other Situations", pp. 5--33 3. K. Jon Barwise, "Appendix: Reply to {L}akoff", pp. 34--36 4. K. Jon Barwise, "Logic and Information", pp. 37--57 5. K. Jon Barwise, "On the Circumstantial Relation between Meaning and Content", pp. 59--77 6. K. Jon Barwise, "Situations and Small Worlds", pp. 79--96 7. K. Jon Barwise, "Conditionals and Conditional Information", pp. 97--135 8. K. Jon Barwise, "Information and Circumstance", pp. 137--154 9. K. Jon Barwise, "Unburdening the Language of Thought", pp. 155--176 10. K. Jon Barwise, "Situations, Sets and the Axiom of Foundation", pp. 177--200 11. K. Jon Barwise, "On the Model Theory of Common Knowledge", pp. 201--220 12. K. Jon Barwise, "Situations, Facts, and True Propositions", pp. 221--254 13. K. Jon Barwise, "Notes on the Branch Points in Situation Theory", pp. 255--276 14. K. Jon Barwise, "{AFA} and the Unification of Information", pp. 277--283 15. K. Jon Barwise, "Mixed Fixed Points", pp. 285--287 16. K. Jon Barwise, "Situated Set Theory", pp. 289--292 17. K. Jon Barwise, "Epilogue: Toward a Mathematical Theory of Meaning", pp. 293--297 }, topic = {situation-theory;logic-of-perception;theories-of-information;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989b, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {On the Circumstantial Relation between Meaning and Content}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {59--77}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;situation-theory;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989c, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Situations and Small Worlds}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {79--96}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;situation-semantics; possible-worlds-semantics;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989d, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Information and Circumstance}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {137--154}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;situation-theory;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989e, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Unburdening the Language of Thought}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {155--176}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;situation-theory;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989f, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Situations, Sets and the Axiom of Foundation}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {177--200}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {situation-theory;nonwellfounded-sets;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989g, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {On the Model Theory of Common Knowledge}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {201--220}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {situation-theory;mutual-belief;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989h, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Situations, Facts, and True Propositions}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {221--254}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {situation-theory;facts;propositions;philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989i, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Notes on the Branch Points in Situation Theory}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {255--276}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {situation-theory;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989j, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {{AFA} and the Unification of Information}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {277--283}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {situation-theory;nonwellfounded-sets;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989k, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Mixed Fixed Points}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {285--287}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {situation-theory;nonwellfounded-sets;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989l, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Situated Set Theory}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {289--292}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {situation-theory;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1989m, author = {K. Jon Barwise}, title = {Epilogue: Toward a Mathematical Theory of Meaning}, booktitle = {The Situation in Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {K. Jon Barwise}, pages = {293--297}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {situation-theory;philosophy-of-logic;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj:1991a, author = {Jon Barwise}, title = {Situationen und kleine Welten}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {80--89}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {situation-semantics;} } @article{ barwise_kj:1991b, author = {Jon Barwise}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}nformation, Semantics, and Epistemology}, edited by {E}nrique {V}illaneuva}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1991}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {350--353}, xref = {Review of: villanueva:1990a.}, topic = {nl-semantics;philosophy-of-language;foundations-of-semantics; epistemology;} } @article{ barwise_kj:1997a, author = {Jon Barwise}, title = {Guest Editorial: The New Sciences}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1997}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {217}, topic = {cognitive-science;} } @article{ barwise_kj-cooper_r1:1981a, author = {K. Jon Barwise and Robin Cooper}, title = {Generalized Quantifiers and Natural Language}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1981}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {159--219}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;nl-quantifiers;nl-semantics;} } @book{ barwise_kj-etal:1990a, editor = {K. Jon Barwise and Jean Mark Gawron and Gordon Plotkin and Syun Tutiya}, title = {Situation Theory and Its Applications, Volume 1}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information ({CSLI})}, year = {1990}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {0937073555 (v. 1)}, rtnote = {UMich RESEARCH COLLECTIONS Call No: BC5 .S57 1990}, topic = {situation-theory;} } @book{ barwise_kj-etal:1991a, editor = {K. Jon Barwise and Jean Mark Gawron and Gordon Plotkin and Syun Tutiya}, title = {Situation Theory and Its Applications, Volume 2}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information ({CSLI})}, year = {1991}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {0937073555 (v. 2)}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {situation-theory;} } @book{ barwise_kj-etchemendy_j:1987a, author = {Jon Barwise and John Etchemendy}, title = {The Liar}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, xref = {Commentary: grim_p-mar_g:1989a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;propositional-attitudes;situation-theory;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj-etchemendy_j:1989a, author = {Jon Barwise and John Etchemendy}, title = {Model-Theoretic Semantics}, booktitle = {Foundations of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, editor = {Michael I. Posner}, chapter = {6}, missinginfo = {pages}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {nl-semantics;situation-semantics;situation-theory; theories-of-information;} } @book{ barwise_kj-etchemendy_j:1990a, author = {Jon Barwise and John Etchemendy}, title = {The Language of First-Order Logic}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1990}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {logic-intro;logic-courseware;kr-course;micro-formalization;} } @unpublished{ barwise_kj-etchemendy_j:1991a, author = {Jon Barwise and John Etchemendy}, title = {Hyperproof: The Beta Manual}, year = {1991}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, CSLI, Stanford University, Stanford, California.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {logic-intro;logic-courseware;} } @book{ barwise_kj-etchemendy_j:1995a, author = {K. Jon Barwise and John Etchemendy}, title = {Hyperproof}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {logic-intro;human-theorem-proving;} } @book{ barwise_kj-etchemendy_j:1995b, author = {K. Jon Barwise and John Etchemendy}, title = {Turing's World 3.0 (Windows Version)}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {mathematics-intro;computability;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj-etchemendy_j:1995c, author = {Jon Barwise and John Etchemendy}, title = {Heterogeneous Logic}, booktitle = {Diagrammatic Reasoning}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Janice Glasgow and N. Hari Narayanan and B. Chandrasekaran}, pages = {211--234}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {diagrams;foundations-of-logic;reasoning-with-diagrams;} } @inproceedings{ barwise_kj-etchemendy_j:1998a, author = {Jon Barwise and Jon Etchemendy}, title = {A Computational Architecture for Heterogeneous Reasoning}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Seventh Conference ({TARK} 1998)}, year = {1998}, editor = {Itzhak Gilboa}, pages = {1--14}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {diagrams;reasoning-with-diagrams;logic-courseware;} } @book{ barwise_kj-etchemendy_j:1999a, author = {Jon Barwise and John Etchemendy}, title = {Language, Proof, and Logic}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1999}, address = {Stanford, California}, xref = {Review: grim:1999a.}, xref = {Accompanied by software and manual: allein-etal:1999a.}, topic = {logic-intro;logic-courseware;kr-course;} } @book{ barwise_kj-feferman_s:1985a, editor = {Jon Barwise and Solomon Feferman}, title = {Model-Theoretic Logics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1985}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {1575860090}, rtnote = {UMich Science, QA 248 .B3761 1996}, topic = {model-theory;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj-hammer:1994a, author = {John Barwise and Eric Hammer}, title = {Diagrams and the Concept of Logical System}, booktitle = {What is a Logical System?}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Dov Gabbay}, pages = {73--106}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {diagrams;} } @book{ barwise_kj-moss_ls:1996a, author = {Jon Barwise and Lawrence Moss}, title = {Vicious Circles: On the Mathematics of Non-Wellfounded Phenomena}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1996}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1575860090 (alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Science, QA 248 .B3761 1996.}, topic = {nonwellfounded-sets;} } @article{ barwise_kj-moss_ls:1998a, author = {Jon Barwise and Lawrence Moss}, title = {Modal Correspondence for Models}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {275--294}, topic = {modal-logic;modal-correspondence-theory;} } @book{ barwise_kj-perry_j:1983a, author = {Jon Barwise and John Perry}, title = {Situations and Attitudes}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {situation-theory;} } @techreport{ barwise_kj-perry_j:1984a1, author = {Jon Barwise and John Perry}, title = {Shifting Situations and Shaken Attitudes}, institution = {Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University}, number = {CSLI--84--13}, year = {1984}, address = {Stanford, California}, xref = {Repubpication: barwise_kj-perry_j:1985a2}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;situation-theory;} } @article{ barwise_kj-perry_j:1985a2, author = {Jon Barwise and John Perry}, title = {Shifting Situations and Shaken Attitudes}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {105--161}, xref = {Repubpication of: barwise_kj-perry_j:1985a1}, topic = {situation-semantics;} } @book{ barwise_kj-sag_ia:1980a, editor = {K. Jon Barwise and Ivan Sag}, title = {Stanford Working Papers in Semantics, Volume 1}, publisher = {Stanford Cognitive Science Group}, year = {1980}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ barwise_kj-seligman_j:1994a, author = {Jon Barwise and Jerry Seligman}, title = {The Rights and Wrongs of Natural Regularity}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 8: Logic and Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {331--364}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {This is worth reading re foundations of NM logic and applications thereof to philosophy.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Zip Drive. bar-sel.pdf}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;natural-laws; natural-regularities;information-flow-theory;conditionals; theories-of-information;channel-theory;} } @book{ barwise_kj-seligman_j:1997a, author = {Jon Barwise and Jerry Seligman}, title = {Information Flow: The Logic of Distributed Systems}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Reviews: vanbenthen_j-israel_dj:1999a, derijke_m:1999b.}, topic = {information-flow-theory;distributed-systems; theories-of-information;} } @article{ barwise_kj-shimojima:1995a, author = {Jon Barwise and Atsushi Shimojima}, title = {Surrogate Reasoning}, journal = {Cognitive Studies: Journal of {J}apanese Cognitive Science Society}, year = {1995}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {7--27}, topic = {reasoning-with-diagrams;} } @article{ bary_c-egg_m:2012a, author = {Corien Bary and Markus Egg}, title = {Variety in Ancient {G}reek Aspect Interpretation}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2012}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {111--134}, abstract = {The wide range of interpretations of aoristic and imperfective aspect in Ancient Greek cannot be attributed to unambiguous aspectual operators but suggest an analysis in terms of coercion in the spirit of de Swart (Nat Lang Linguist Theory 16:347-385, 1998). But since such an analysis cannot explain the Ancient Greek data, we combine Klein's (Time in language, 1994) theory of tense and aspect with (Egg 2005)'s aspectual coercion approach.}, topic = {progressive-aspect;perfective-aspect;ancient-Greek-language;} } @inproceedings{ bary_c-maier_e:2014a, author = {Corien Bary and Emar Maier}, title = {Unembedded Indirect Discourse}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 18}, editor = {Urtzi Etxeberria and Anamaria F\v{a}l\v{a}u\v{s} and Aritz Irurtzun and Bryan Leferman}, year = {2014}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/sub2013}, pages = {77--94}, abstract = {We [show] that there is a distinction between FID and what we call Unembedded Indirect Discourse (UID). The semantic analysis that we develop for the latter shows that the two phenomena, though superficially similar, are semantically fundamentally different. We conclude that UID would have been more deserving of the title 'free indirect discourse' than the more quotative and direct discourse-like narrative technique that is now confusingly called so.}, topic = {indirect-discourse;} } @incollection{ barzilay-etal:1998a, author = {Regina Barzilay and Daryl McCullough and Owen Rambow and Jonathan DeChristofaro and Tanya Korelsky and Benoit Lavoie}, title = {A New Approach to Expert System Explanations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Natural Language Generation}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Eduard Hovy}, pages = {78--87}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-generation;explanation;expert-systems;} } @inproceedings{ barzilay-lapata_m:2005a, author = {Regina Barzilay and Mirella Lapata}, title = {Modeling Local Coherence: An Entity-Based Approach}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {141--148}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1018}, topic = {discourse-coherence;} } @incollection{ barzilay-lee_l:2003a, author = {Regina Barzilay and Lillian Lee}, title = {Learning to Paraphrase: An Unsupervised Approach Using Multiple-Sequence Alignment}, booktitle = {Human Language Technology Conference of the {N}orth {A}merican {C}hapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2003}, editor = {Marti Hearst and Mari Ostendorf}, pages = {16--23}, address = {East Stroudsberg, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {paraphrasing;machine-learning;} } @article{ barzilay-mckeown:2005a, author = {Regina Barzilay and Kathleen R. Mckeown}, title = {Sentence Fusion for Multidocument News Summarization}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2005}, volume = {31}, number = {3}, pages = {297--327}, topic = {text-summary;text-integration;} } @book{ basden:2008a, author = {Andrew Basden}, title = {Philosophical Frameworks for Understanding Information Systems}, publisher = {IGI Publishing}, year = {2008}, address = {Hershey, New York}, ISBN = {978-159904036-3}, xref = {Review: poli:2009a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-computer-science;} } @article{ basili:2003a, author = {Roberto Basili}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}earning to Classify Text Using Support Vector Machines: Methods, Theory, and Algorithms}, by {T}horsten {J}oachims}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2003}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {655--661}, xref = {Review of: joachims:2002a}, topic = {document-classification;statistical-nlp;machine-learning;} } @article{ basili-etal:1996a, author = {Roberto Basili and Maria Teresa Pazienza and Paolo Velardi}, title = {An Empirical Symbolic Approach to Natural Language Processing}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {85}, number = {1--2}, pages = {59--99}, topic = {probabilistic-parsing;knowledge-representation;nl-processing;} } @incollection{ basili-etal:1996b, author = {Roberto Basili and A. Marziali and Maria T. Pazienza and P. Velardi}, title = {Modeling Conversational Speech for Speech Recognition}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Eric Brill and Kenneth Church}, pages = {23--32}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;} } @incollection{ basili-etal:1997a, author = {Roberto Basili and Gianluca de Rossi and Maria Teresa Pazienza}, title = {Inducing Terminology for Lexical Acquisition}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {125--133}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {empirical-methods-in-nlp;dictionary-construction; word-acquisition;machine-learning;} } @article{ basili-etal:1997b, author = {Roberto Basili and M. DellaRocca and Maria Teresa Pazienza}, title = {Contextual Word Sense Tuning and Disambiguation}, journal = {Applied Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {235--262}, topic = {wordnet;lexical-disambiguation;} } @incollection{ basili-etal:1998a, author = {Roberto Basili and Alessandro Cucchiarelli and Carlo Consoli and Maria Teresa Pazienza and Paola Velardi}, title = {Automatic Adaptation of {W}ord{N}et to Sublanguages and to Computational Tasks}, booktitle = {Use of {W}ord{N}et in Natural Language Processing Systems: Proceedings of the Conference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Sanda Harabagiu}, pages = {80--86}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-processing;WordNet;sublanguages;} } @article{ basilico:2003a, author = {David Basilico}, title = {The Topic of Small Clauses}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {2003}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {1--36}, topic = {small-clauses;s-topic;} } @article{ basilico-etal:2012a, author = {Nicola Basilico and Nicola Gatti and Francesco Amigoni}, title = {Patrolling Security Games: Definition and Algorithms for Solving Large Instances with Single Patroller and Single Intruder}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {184--185}, pages = {78--123}, topic = {security-games;} } @incollection{ basin:1994a, author = {David A. Basin}, title = {Logic Frameworks for Logic Programs}, booktitle = {Logic Programming Synthesis and Transformation, Meta-Programming in Logic: Fourth International Workshops, {LOBSTR}'94 and {META}'94, Pisa, Italy}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Laurent Fribourg and Franco Turini}, pages = {1--16}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @incollection{ basin-etal:1996a, author = {David A. Basin and Se\'an Matthews and Luca Vigan\`a}, title = {Implementing Modal and Relevance Logics in a Logical Framework}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {386--397}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @book{ basin-etal:1996b, author = {David Basin and Se\'an Matthews and Luca Vigan}, title = {Labelled Propositional Modal Logics: Theory and Practice}, publisher = {Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Informatik}, year = {1996}, address = {Saarbr\"ucken}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We show how labelled deductive systems can be combined with a logical framework to provide a natural deduction implementation of a large and well-known class of propositional modal logics (including K, D, T, B, S4, S4.2, K D45, S5). Our approach is modular and based on a separation between a base logic and a labelling algebra, which interact through a fixed interface. While the base logic stays fixed, different modal logics are generated by plugging in appropriate algebras. This leads to a hierarchical structuring of modal logics with inheritance of theorems. Moreover, it allows modular correctness proofs, both with respect to soundness and completeness for semantics, and faithfulness and adequacy of the implementation. We also investigate the tradeoffs in possible labelled presentations: We show that a narrow interface between the base logic and the labelling algebra supports modularity and provides an attractive proof-theory (in comparison to, e.g., semantic embedding) but limits the degree to which we can make use of extensions to the labelling algebra. }, topic = {labeled-deductive-systems;} } @article{ basin-etal:1998a, author = {David Basin and Se\'an Matthews and Luca Vigano}, title = {Labelled Modal Logics: Quantifiers}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1998}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {237--263}, topic = {modal-logic;labeled-deductive-systems; quantifying-in-modality;first-order-modal-logic;} } @incollection{ basin-matthews_s:2002a, author = {David Basin and Sean Matthews}, title = {Logical Frameworks}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {IX}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {89--164}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au10}, topic = {proof-theory;metalogic;} } @article{ basri-rivlin:1995a, author = {Ronen Basri and Ehud Rivlin}, title = {Localization and Homing Using Combinations of Model Views}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {78}, number = {1--2}, pages = {327--354}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Navigation involves recognizing the environment, identifying the current position within the environment, and reaching particular positions. We present a method for localization (the act of recognizing the environment), positioning (the act of computing the exact coordinates of a robot in the environment), and homing (the act of returning to a previously visited position) from visual input. The method is based on representing the scene as a set of 2D views and predicting the appearances of novel views by linear combinations of the model views. The method accurately approximates the appearance of scenes under weak-perspective projection. Analysis of this projection as well as experimental results demonstrate that in many cases this approximation is sufficient to accurately describe the scene. When weak-perspective approximation is invalid, either a larger number of models can be acquired or an iterative solution to account for the perspective distortions can be employed. The method has several advantages over other approaches. It uses relatively rich representations; the representations are 2D rather than 3D; and localization can be done from only a single 2D view without calibration. The same principal method is applied for both the localization and positioning problems, and a simple ``qualitative'' algorithm for homing is derived from this method.}, topic = {robot-navigation;spatial-reasoning;reasoning-about-perspective;} } @book{ bass-coutaz:1991a, author = {Len Bass and Jo\"elle Coutaz}, title = {A Discipline For Software Engineering}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley}, year = {1995}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0201546108}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.758 .H8571 1995.}, topic = {software-engineering;} } @article{ bassac-etal:2010a, author = {Christian Bassac and Bruno Mery and Christian Retor\'e}, title = {Towards a Type-Theoretical Account of Lexical Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2010}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {229--345}, topic = {categorial-grammar;lexical-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ bassi_i-barlev_m:2017a, author = {Itai Bassi and Moshe E. Bar-Lev}, title = {A Unified Existential Semantics for Bare Conditionals}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 21}, editor = {Robert Truswell and Chris Cummins and Caroline Heycock and Brian Rabern and Hannah Rohde}, year = {2017}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {Universoty of Edinburgh}, address = {Edinburgh}, abstract = {... We propose that bare conditionals have a basic existential semantics which is obligatorily strengthened into a universal meaning in UE contexts, while being preserved in DE contexts. Our claim that bare conditionals are underlyingly existential is further supported by Conditional Perfection data with bare and non-bare conditionals.}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/DRjNjViN/}, topic = {conditionals;nl-quantifiers;} } @inproceedings{ bassi_i-rasin_e:2018a, author = {Itai Bassi and Ezer Rasin}, title = {Equational-Intensional Relative Clauses with Syntactic Reconstruction}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 22}, editor = {Uli Sauerland and Stephanie Solt}, year = {2018}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {Leibniz-Centre General Linguistics}, address = {Berlin}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/GE4MWViN/SuB22-twovolume.pdf}, pages = {143--160}, abstract = {Analyses of scope reconstruction typically fall into two competing approaches: 'semantic reconstruction', which derives non-surface scope using semantic mechanisms, and 'syntactic reconstruction', which derives it by positing additional syntactic representations at the level of Logical Form. Grosu and Krifka (2007) proposed a semantic-reconstruction analysis for relative clauses like the gifted mathematician that Dan claims he is ... We develop an alternative analysis for such relative clauses that replaces type-shifting with syntactic reconstruction. ...}, xref = {Criticism of: grosu-krifka_m:2007a}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;type-shifting;} } @book{ basso-selby:1976a, editor = {K.H. Basso and H.A. Selby}, title = {Meaning in Anthropology}, publisher = {University of New Mexico Press}, year = {1976}, address = {Alburqueque}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {meaning-and-culture;} } @article{ bastiaanse:2014a, author = {Harald Andreas Bastiaanse}, title = {The Intensional Many---Conservativity Reclaimed}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {5}, pages = {883--901}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ bastien-cordier:1998a, author = {V\'eronique Bastien and Denis Cordier}, title = {Methods and Tricks Used in an Attempt to Pass the {T}uring Test}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {275--277}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {Turing-test;} } @incollection{ basu:1995a, author = {Kalyan Shankar Basu}, title = {Android Epistemology: An Essay on Interpretation and Intentionality}, booktitle = {Android Epistemology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Kenneth M. Ford and Clark Glymour and Patrick J. Hayes}, pages = {123--140}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {philosophy-AI;intentionality;} } @article{ basye-etal:1995a, author = {Kenneth Basye and Thomas Dean and Leslie Pack Kaelbling}, title = {Learning Dynamics: System Identification for Perceptually Challenged Agents}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {72}, number = {1--2}, pages = {139--171}, acontentnote = {Abstract: From the perspective of an agent, the input/output behavior of the environment in which it is embedded can be described as a dynamical system. Inputs correspond to the actions executable by the agent in making transitions between states of the environment. Outputs correspond to the perceptual information available to the agent in particular states of the environment. We view dynamical system identification as inference of deterministic finite-state automata from sequences of input/output pairs. The agent can influence the sequence of input/output pairs it is presented by pursuing a strategy for exploring the environment. We identify two sorts of perceptual errors: errors in perceiving the output of a state and errors in perceiving the inputs actually carried out in making a transition from one state to another. We present efficient, high-probability learning algorithms for a number of system identification problems involving such errors. We also present the results of empirical investigations applying these algorithms to learning spatial representations.}, topic = {machine-learning;spatial-representation; agent-environment-interaction;} } @article{ batali:1995a, author = {John Batali}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Rediscovery of the Mind}, by John R. Searle}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {77}, number = {1}, pages = {177--193}, xref = {Review of searle_jr:1992a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-AI;} } @inproceedings{ bate_a-etal:2016a, author = {Andrew Bate and Boris Motik and Bernardo Cuenca Grau and Franti\^sek Siman\^c\'ik and Ian Horrocks}, title = {Extending Consequence-Based Reasoning to {SRIQ}}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {187--196}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Consequence-based calculi are a family of reasoning algorithms for description logics (DLs), and they combine hypertableau and resolution in a way that often achieves excellent performance in practice. ... we present a novel consequence-based calculus for SRIQ---a rich DL that supports both features. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {description-logics;} } @incollection{ bateman_j-etal:1997a, author = {Jeremy Bateman and Jean Forrest and Tim Willis}, title = {The Use of Syntactic Annotation Tools: Partial and Full Parsing}, booktitle = {Corpus Annotation}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1997}, editor = {Roger Garside and Geoffrey Leech and Tony McEnery}, pages = {166--178}, address = {London}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;corpus-annotation;} } @incollection{ bateman_ja:1991a, author = {John A. Bateman}, title = {Uncovering Textual Meanings: A Case Study Involving Systemic-Functional Resources for the Generation of {J}apanese Texts}, booktitle = {Natural Language Generation in Artificial Intelligence and Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, address = {Dordrecht}, year = {1991}, editor = {C\'{e}cile L. Paris and William R. Swartout and William C. Mann}, pages = {125--153}, topic = {functional-grammar;nl-generation;Japanese-language;} } @inproceedings{ bateman_ja:1997a, author = {John A. Bateman}, title = {The Theoretical Status of Ontologies in Natural Language Processing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the workshop on Text Representation and Domain Modelling---Ideas from Linguistics and {AI}}, year = {1997}, editor = {Susanne Preusz and Birte Schmitz}, organization = {Technical University Berlin}, publisher = {Technical University Berlin}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {computational-ontology;} } @inproceedings{ bateman_ja-etal:1994a, author = {John A. Bateman and Bernardo Magnini and F. Rinaldi}, title = {The Generalized {I}talian, {G}erman, {E}nglish Upper Model}, booktitle = {{ECAI}94, Ninth European Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, editor, publisher, address, pages}, topic = {computational-semantics;computational-ontology;} } @incollection{ bateman_ja-etal:1998a, author = {John A. Bateman and Thomas Kamps and J\"org Kleinz and Klaus Reichenberger}, title = {Communicative Goal-Driven {NL} Generation and Data-Driven Graphics Generation: An Architectural Synthesis for Multimedia Page Generation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Natural Language Generation}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Eduard Hovy}, pages = {8--17}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-generation;graphics-generation;multimedia-generation;} } @article{ bateman_ja-etal:2001a, author = {John A. Bateman and Thomas Kamps and J\"org Kleinz and Klaus Reichenberger}, title = {Towards Constructive Text, Diagram, and Layout Generation for Information Presentation}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2001}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {409--449}, topic = {diagram-generation;document-design;} } @article{ bateman_ja-etal:2010a, author = {John A. Bateman and Joana Hois and Robert Ross and Thora Tenbrink}, title = {A Linguistic Ontology of Space for Natural Language Processing}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {14}, pages = {1027--1071}, topic = {computational-ontology;nl-semantics;spatial-reasoning;} } @techreport{ bateman_ja-rondhuis:1994a, author = {John A. Bateman and Klaas Jon Rondhuis}, title = {Coherence Relations: Analysis and Specification}, institution = {Dandelion Consortium, CEC}, year = {1994}, note = {Deliverable R.1.1.2}, topic = {punctuation;} } @incollection{ bateman_ja-zock:2003a, author = {John Bateman and Michael Zock}, title = {Natural Language Generation}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {284--304}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-processing;nl-generation;} } @article{ batens_d:2001a, author = {Diderik Batens}, title = {A Dynamic Characterization of the Pure Logic of Relevant Implication}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {30}, number = {3}, pages = {267--280}, topic = {relevance-logic;dynamic-logic;} } @article{ batens_d-meheus_j:2000a, author = {Diderick Batens and Joke Meheus}, title = {The Adaptive Logic of Compatibility}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2000}, volume = {66}, number = {3}, pages = {327--348}, topic = {belief-revision;modal-logic;adaptive-logic;} } @book{ bates_e:1976a, author = {Elizabeth Bates}, title = {Language and Context: The Acquisition of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0120815516, 9780120815517}, Contentnote = {There is a chapter on counterfactuals}, topic = {L1-acquisition;pragmatics;conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ bates_j-etal:1994a, author = {Joseph Bates and A. Bryan Loyall and W. Scott Reilly}, title = {An Architecture for Action, Emotion, and Social Behavior}, booktitle = {Artificial Social Systems Selected Papers from the Fourth {E}uropean Workshop on Modelling Autonomous Agents in a Multi-Agent World, {MAAMAW}-92 ({LNAI} Volume 830)}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, editor = {C. Castelfranchi and E. Wemer}, pages = {55--68}, year = {1994}, url = {citeseer.ist.psu.edu/bates94architecture.html}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {emotion;interactive-fiction;} } @article{ bates_j1:1992a, author = {Joseph Bates}, title = {Virtual Reality, Art and Entertainment}, journal = {PRESENCE: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments}, year = {1992}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {133--138}, topic = {virtual-reality;} } @article{ bates_j1-etal:1991a, author = {Joseph Bates and A. Bryan Loyall and W. Scott Reilly}, title = {Broad Agents}, journal = {Sigart Bulletin}, year = {1991}, volume = {2}, number = {4}, pages = {38--40}, url = {citeseer.ist.psu.edu/bates91broad.html}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;interactive-fiction;} } @article{ bates_j2:1994a, author = {Joseph Bates}, title = {The Role of Emotion in Believable Agents}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, year = {1994}, volume = {37}, number = {7}, pages = {122--125}, topic = {emotion;interactive-fiction;} } @incollection{ bates_m-etal:1993b, author = {Madeline Bates and Robert Bobrow and Ralph Weischedel}, title = {Critical Challenges for Natural Language Processing.}, booktitle = {Challenges in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Madeleine Bates and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {3--34}, address = {Cambridge, England}, contentnote = {Thesis is that NLP hasn't had big impact on tech because some critical issues haven't been addressed.}, topic = {nl-processing;} } @book{ bates_m-weischedel:1993a, editor = {Madeleine Bates and Ralph M. Weischedel}, title = {Challenges in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, England}, contentnote = {TC: Bates etal, Critical Challenges for Natural Language Processing. Atkins, The Contribution of Lexicography. Levin, The Contribution of Linguistics. Boguraev, The Contribution of Computational Lexicography. Moore, Events, Situations, and Adverbs. Allen, Natural Language, Knowledge Representation, and Logical Form. Passonneau, Getting and Keeping the Center of Attention Steedman, Surface Structure, Intonation, and Discourse Meaning. Pierrehumbert, Prosody, Intonation, and Speech Technology. Bates-Weischedel, The Future of Computational Linguistics. }, ISBN = {0521410150 (hardback)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 98 .C451 1993.}, topic = {nl-processing;pragmatics;} } @book{ batori-etal:1989a, editor = {Istv\'an Batori and Winfried Lenders and Wolfgang Putscke}, title = {Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1989}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {This book is written partly in German.}, topic = {nlp-survey;} } @incollection{ batsell-etal:2002a, author = {Randy Batsell and Lyle Brenner and Daniel Osherson and Moshe Y. Vardi and Spyros Tsavachidis}, title = {Eliminating Incoherence from Subjective Estimates of Chance}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {353--364}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;probabilistic-reasoning;probability-judgments;} } @article{ batterman_rw:2018a, author = {Robert W. Batterman}, title = {Autonomy of Theories: An Explanatory Problem}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {52}, number = {4}, pages = {858--873}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;reduction;levels-of-scientific-representation;} } @book{ battistella:1996a, author = {Edwin L. Battistella}, title = {The Logic of Markedness}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {markedness;} } @article{ baudet:1978a, author = {G\'erard M. Baudet}, title = {On the Branching Factor of the Alpha-Beta Pruning Algorithm}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1978}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {173--199}, topic = {search;} } @book{ bauer_l:1983a, author = {Laurie Bauer}, title = {English Word-Formation}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, ISBN = {0521241677, 0521284929 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate Pe1175 .B381 1983}, topic = {derivational-morphology;English-language;} } @book{ bauer_l:1988a, author = {Laurie Bauer}, title = {Introducing Linguistic Morphology}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, year = {1988}, address = {Edinburgh}, ISBN = {0852245610}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 241 .B34 1988.}, topic = {morphology;} } @article{ bauer_l-boagey:1977a, author = {Laurie Bauer and Winifred Boagley}, title = {On `The Grammar of Case'}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {119--152}, topic = {case-grammar;thematic-roles;} } @article{ bauer_ma:1979a, author = {Michael A. Bauer}, title = {Programming by Examples}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1979}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {1--21}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In this paper, examples of how an algorithm behaves on particular input are considered as possible means of describing the algorithm. In particular, a simple language for examples (a Computational Description Language) is presented and an algorithm for the synthesis of a procedure from a set of such example computations is described. The algorithm makes use of knowledge about variables, inputs, instructions and procedures during the synthesis process to guide the formation of a procedure. Several examples of procedures actually synthesized are discussed. }, topic = {automatic-programming;} } @inproceedings{ bauer_t-leake:2001a, author = {Travis Bauer and David B. Leake}, title = {{W}ord{S}eive: A Method for Real-Time Context Extraction}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {30--44}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;document-classification;statistical-nlp;} } @incollection{ bauer_v-wegener:1977a, author = {Volker Bauer and Michael Wegener}, title = {A Community Information Feedback System with Multiattribute Utilities}, booktitle = {Conflicting Objectives in Decisions}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1977}, editor = {David E. Bell and Ralph L. Keeney and Howard Raiffa}, pages = {323--357}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {An applied paper.}, topic = {decision-analysis;multiattribute-utility;} } @article{ bauerle_r:1978a, author = {Rainer B\"auerle}, title = {Fugitive Propositions Again}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1978}, volume = {38}, number = {2}, pages = {78--80}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {propositions;temporal-logic;} } @incollection{ bauerle_r:1979a, author = {Rainer B\"auerle}, title = {Questions and Answers}, booktitle = {Semantics from Different Points of View}, year = {1979}, editor = {Rainer B\"auerle and Urs Egli and Arnim {von Stechow}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, pages = {61--74}, topic = {nl-semantics;interrogatives;} } @article{ bauerle_r:1979b, author = {Rainer B\"auerle}, title = {Tense Logics and Natural Language}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1979}, volume = {40}, number = {2}, pages = {225--231}, topic = {nl-tense;temporal-adverbials;} } @incollection{ bauerle_r:1991a, author = {Rainer B\"auerle}, title = {Verben der propositionalen Einstellung}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {709--721}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-semantics;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ bauerle_r:2002a, author = {Rainer B\"auerle}, title = {Fixing the Reference Situations: {G}erman Temporal Conjunctions}, booktitle = {Context-Dependence in the Analysis of Linguistic Meaning}, publisher = {Brill Publishing}, year = {2002}, editor = {Hans Kamp and Barbara Partee}, pages = {61--77}, address = {Leiden}, topic = {temporal-adverbials;German-language;} } @incollection{ bauerle_r-cresswell_mj:2004a, author = {Rainer B\"auerle and Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Propositional Attitudes}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {X}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {121--142}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;propostions;intensionality;} } @book{ bauerle_r-etal:1979a, editor = {Rainer B\"auerle and Urs Egli and Arnim {von Stechow}}, title = {Semantics from Different Points of View}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1979}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Barbara Partee, "Semantics---Mathematics or Psychology?" 2. Dov Gabbay and Christian Rohrer, "Do We Really Need Tenses Other Than Future and Past?" 3. Thomas T. Ballmer, "Context Change, Truth, and Competence" 4. Manfred Pinkal, "How to Refer with Vague Descriptions" 5. Irene Heim, "Concealed Questions" 6. Rainer B\"auerle, "Questions and Answers" 7. Joachim Ballweg and Helmuth Frosch, "Comparison and Gradual Change" 8. Max J. Cresswell, "Interval Semantics for Some Event Expressions" 9. Angelika Kratzer, "Conditional Necessity and Possibility" 10. Ekkehard K\"onig, "A Semantic Analysis of German `Erst{'}" 11. Dieter Wunderlich, "Meaning and Context-Dependence" 12. David Lewis, "Scorekeeping in a Language Game" 13. Asa Kasher, "On Pragmatic Demarcation of a Language" 14. Friedrich Kambertel, "Constructive Pragmatics and Semantics" 15. Hans J. Schneider, "Explanation and Understanding in the Theory of Language" 16. Klaus-J\"urgen Engelberg, "A New Approach to Formal Syntax" 17. Arnim von Stechow, "Visiting {G}erman Relatives" 18. Urs Egli, "The {S}toic Concept of Anaphora" 19. Karlheinz H\"ulser, "Expression and Content in {S}toic Linguistic Theory" 20. Christoph Schwarze, "Reparer--Reparieren. A Contrastive Study" 21. Christa Hauenschild and Edgar Huckert and Robert Maier, "{SALAT}: Machine Translation Via Semantic Representation" 22. Rudolf Cohen and Stephanie Kelter and Gerhild Woll, "Conceptual Impairment in Aphasia" 23. Claus Heeschen, "On the Representation of Classificatory and Propositional Lexical Relations in the Human Brain" 24. Hans Kamp, "Events, Instants, and Temporal Reference" }, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @book{ bauerle_r-etal:1983a, editor = {Rainer B\"auerle and Christoph Schwarze and Arnim von Stechow}, title = {Meaning, Use, and Interpretation of Language}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1983}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3110089017}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P23 .M361 1983.}, topic = {nl-semantics;pragmatics;} } @book{ bauerle_r-etal:2010a, editor = {Rainer Bauerle and Uwe Reyle and Thomas Zimmermann}, title = {Pre-Suppositions and Discourse: Essays offered to {H}ans {K}amp}, publisher = {Emerald Group Publishing}, year = {2010}, address = {Bingley, UK}, ISBN = {978-90-04-25316-2}, topic = {presupposition;nl-semantics;pragmatics;discourse-representation-theory;} } @incollection{ bauerle_r-zimmermann_te:1991a, author = {Rainer B\"auerle and Thomas Ede Zimmermann}, title = {Fragesätze}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {333--348}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-semantics;interrogatives;} } @book{ baum:2005a, author = {Eric B. Baum}, title = {What is Thought?}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780-262-52457-5 (pbk)}, contentnote = {Argues for a computational theory of mind}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;foundaitons-of-cognition;} } @article{ baum-smith_wd:1997a, author = {Eric B. Baum and Warren D. Smith}, title = {A {B}ayesian Approach to Relevance in Game Playing}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {97}, number = {1--2}, pages = {195--242}, topic = {relevance;game-playing;} } @book{ bauman-sherzer:1974a, editor = {Richard Bauman and Joel Sherzer}, title = {Explorations in the Ethnography of Speaking}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1974}, address = {Cambridge, England}, isbn = {9780521379335}, topic = {conversation-analysis;} } @incollection{ baumann_p:2004a, author = {Peter Baumann}, title = {Involvement and Detachment A Paradox of Practical Reason}, booktitle = {Practical Conflicts: New Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Peter Baumann and Monika Betzler}, pages = {244--261}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {practical-reason;} } @article{ baumann_p:2010a, author = {Peter Baumann}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Case for Contexualism: Knowledge, Skepticism, and Context, Vol. 1}, by {K}eith {D}erose}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2010}, volume = {70}, number = {1}, pages = {149--160}, xref = {Review of: derose_k:2009a}, topic = {contextualism;knowledge;} } @article{ baumann_p:2010b, author = {Peter Baumann}, title = {Factivity and Contextualism}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2010}, volume = {70}, number = {1}, pages = {82--89}, topic = {contextualism;} } @article{ baumann_p:2013a, author = {Peter Baumann}, title = {Review of {Contrastivism in Philosophy}, by {M}artin {B}lauw}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Philosophical Reviews}, year = {2013}, month = {June}, note = {Available at {\tt https://ndpr.nd.edu/news/40345-contrastivism-in-philosophy/}.}, xref = {Review of: blaauw_m:2012a}, topic = {contrastivism;} } @incollection{ baumann_p:2013b, author = {Peter Baumann}, title = {A Contradiction for Contextualism?}, booktitle = {Epistemology, Context, Formalism}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Franck Lihoreau and Manuel Rebuschi}, pages = {33--48}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {knowledge;context;} } @book{ baumann_p:2017a, author = {Peter Baumann}, title = {Epistemic Contextualism: A Defense}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780198754312}, abstract = {... The first part of the book examines arguments for contextualism and develops Baumann's version. ... The second part of the book discusses the problems contextualism faces ... and provides an extension of contextualism beyond epistemology. Chapter 4 discusses "lottery-scepticism" and argues for a contextualist response. ... Baumann argues for a way out and for a version of contextualism that can underwrite this solution. Chapter 6 proposes a contextualist account of responsibility: The concept of knowledge is not the only one which allows for a contextualist analysis and it is important to explore structural analogies in other areas of philosophy. The third part of the book is focused on some major objections to contextualism and alternative views, namely subject-sensitive invariantism, contrastivism and relativism. }, topic = {contextualism;knowledge;} } @book{ baumann_p-betzler:2004a, editor = {Peter Baumann and Monika Betzler}, title = {Practical Conflicts: New Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, England}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Peter Baumann and Monika Betzler, "Introduction: Varieties of Practical Conflict and the Scope of Practical Reason", pp. 1--27 2. J. David Velleman, "Willing the Law", pp. 27--56 3. Christine Korsgaard, "The Myth of Egoism", pp. 57--91 4. Henry S. Richardson, "Thinking about Conflicts of Desire", pp. 92--117 5. Ruth Chang, "Putting Together Morality and Well-Being" pp. 118--158 6. Isaac Levi, "The Second Worst in Practical Conflict", pp. 159--171 7. Joseph Raz, "Personal Practical Conflicts", pp. 172--196 8. Monika Betzler, "Sources of Practical Conflicts and Reasons for Regret", pp. 197--243 9. Peter Baumann, "Involvement and Detachment A Paradox of Practical Reason", pp. 244--261 10. Alfred Mele, "Outcomes of Internal Conflicts in the Sphere of Akrasia and Self-Control", pp. 262--278 11. Peter Schaber, "Are There Insolvable Moral Conflicts?", pp. 279--294 12. Jon Elster, "Moral Dilemmas of Transitional Justice", pp. 295--315 13. Barbara Guches, "Do Conflicts Make Us Free?", pp. 316--333 14. Nicholas White, "Conflicting Values and Conflicting Virtues", 223--243 }, ISBN = {0-521-01210-4 (pbk)}, topic = {moral-conflict;conflict-resolution;practical-reasoning;} } @incollection{ baumann_p-betzler:2004b, author = {Peter Baumann and Monika Betzler}, title = {Introduction: Varieties of Practical Conflict and the Scope of Practical Reason}, booktitle = {Practical Conflicts: New Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Peter Baumann and Monika Betzler}, pages = {1--27}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {moral-conflict;conflict-resolution;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ baumann_r:2012a, author = {Ringo Baumann}, title = {Normal and Strong Expansion Equivalence for Argumentation Frameworks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {193}, pages = {18--44}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ baumann_r:2016a, author = {Ringo Baumann}, title = {Characterizing Equivalence Notions for Labelling-Based Semantics}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {22--32}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {A central question in knowledge representation is the following: given some knowledge representation formalism, is it possible, and if so how, to simplify parts of a knowledge base without affecting its meaning, even in the light of additional information? The term strong equivalence was coined in the literature, i.e. strongly equivalent knowledge bases can be locally replaced by each other in a bigger theory without changing the semantics of the latter. In contrast to classical (monotone) logics where standard and strong equivalence coincide, it is possible to find ordinary but not strongly equivalent objects for any nonmonotonic formalism available in the literature. This paper addresses these questions in the context of abstract argumentation theory. Much effort has been spent to characterize several argumentation tailored equivalence notions w.r.t. extension-based semantics. In recent times labelling-based semantics have received increasing attention, for example in connection with algorithms computing extensions, proof procedures, dialogue games, dynamics in argumentation as well as belief revision in general. Of course, equivalence notions allowing for replacements are of high interest for the mentioned topics. In this paper we provide kernel-based characterization theorems for semantics based on complete labellings as well as admissible labellings w.r.t. eight different equivalence notions including the aforementioned most prominent one, namely strong equivalence.}, topic = {kr;abstract-argumentation;strong-equivalence;} } @inproceedings{ baumann_r-etal:2010a, author = {Ringo Baumann and Gerhard Brewka and Hannes Strass and Michael Thielscher and Vadim Zaslawski}, title = {State Defaults and Ramifications in the Unifying Action Calculus}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {435--444}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We present a framework for reasoning about actions that not only solves the frame and ramification problems, but also the state default problem -- the problem to determine what normally holds at a given time point. Yet, the framework is general enough not to be tied to a specific time structure. ... We use effect axioms that draw ideas both from Reiter's successor state axioms and the nonmonotonic causal theories by Giunchiglia et al. These axioms are formulated in a recently proposed unifying action calculus to guarantee independence of a specific underlying notion of time. Reiter's default logic is then wrapped around the resulting calculus and plays a key role in solving the ramification as well as the state default problem.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc22}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;action-formalisms;frame-problem;ramification-problem;} } @inproceedings{ baumann_r-etal:2020a, author = {Ringo Baumann and Gerhard Brewka and Markus Ulbricht}, title = {Comparing Weak Admissibility Semantics to their Dung-style Counterparts -- Reduct, Modularization, and Strong Equivalence in Abstract Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {79--88}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {Semantics based on weak admissibility were recently introduced to overcome a problem with self-defeating arguments that has not been solved for more than 25 years. ... In this paper we show that standard Dung semantics can be naturally reformulated using the reduct revealing that this concept is already implicit. We further identify a new abstract principle for semantics, so-called modularization describing how to obtain further extensions given an initial one. Its importance for the study of abstract argumentation semantics is shown by its ability to alternatively characterize classical and non-classical semantics.}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ baumann_r-strass_h:2016a, author = {Ringo Baumann and Hannes Strass}, title = {An Abstract Logical Approach to Characterizing Strong Equivalence in Logic-based Knowledge Representation Formalisms}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, pages = {525--528}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We consider knowledge representation (KR) formalisms as collections of finite knowledge bases with a model-theoretic semantics. In this setting, we show that for every KR formalism there is a formalism that characterizes strong equivalence in the original formalism, that is unique up to isomorphism and that has a model theory similar to classical logic.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;strong-equivalence;} } @inproceedings{ baumann_r-ulbricht_m:2018a, author = {Ringo Baumann and Markus Ulbricht}, title = {If Nothing Is Accepted---Repairing Argumentation Frameworks}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {108--117}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Conflicting information in an agent's knowledge base may lead to a semantical defect, that is, a situation where it is impossible to draw any plausible conclusion. Finding out the reasons for the observed inconsistency (so-called diagnosis) and/or restoring consistency in a certain minimal way (so-called repairs) are frequently occurring issues in knowledge representation and reasoning. In this paper we provide a series of first results for these problems in the context of abstract argumentation theory regarding the two most important reasoning modes, namely credulous as well as sceptical acceptance. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;repairing-KR-systems;;} } @inproceedings{ baumann_r-ulbricht_m:2021a, author = {Ringo Baumann and Markus Ulbricht}, title = {Choices and their Consequences---Explaining Acceptable Sets in Abstract Argumentation Frameworks}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {110--119}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We develop a notion of explanations for acceptance of arguments in an abstract argumentation framework. To this end we show that extensions returned by Dung's standard semantics can be decomposed into i) non-deterministic choices made on even cycles of the given argumentation graph and then ii) deterministic iteration of the so-called characteristic function. ...}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;explainable-AI;} } @article{ baumer_mb:1979a, author = {Michael R. Baumer}, title = {The Role of `Inevitability at time t' in {A}quinas' Solution to the Problem of Future Contngents}, journal = {THe New Scholasticism}, year = {1979}, volume = {53}, number = {2}, pages = {147--167}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;Aquinas;} } @article{ baumgaertner_b:2012a, author = {Bert Baumgaertner}, title = {Vagueness Intuitions and the Mobility of Cognitive Sortals}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2012}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {213--234}, abstract = {One feature of vague predicates is that, as far as appearances go, they lack sharp application boundaries. I argue that we would not be able to locate boundaries even if vague predicates had sharp boundaries. I do so by developing an idealized cognitive model of a categorization faculty which has mobile and dynamic sortals ('classes', 'concepts or 'categories') and formally prove that the degree of precision with which boundaries of such sortals can be located is inversely constrained by their flexibility. Given the literature, it is plausible that we are appropriately like the model. Hence, an inability to locate sharp boundaries is not necessarily because there are none; boundaries could be sharp and it is plausible that we would nevertheless be unable to locate them.}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ baumgartner_m:2010a, author = {Michael Baumgartner}, title = {Shallow Analysis and the Slingshot Argument}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {39}, number = {5}, pages = {531--536}, topic = {desci[ptions;facts;} } @article{ baumgartner_m-casini_l:2017a, author = {Michael Baumgartner and Lorenzo Casini}, title = {An Abductive Theory of Constitution}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2017}, volume = {84}, number = {2}, pages = {214--233}, topic = {abduction;scientific-reasoning;} } @article{ baumgartner_p-etal:1997a, author = {Peter Baumgartner and Ulrich Furbach and Frieder Stolzenburg}, title = {Computing Answers with Model Elimination}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {90}, number = {1--2}, pages = {135--176}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @inproceedings{ baumgartner_p-etal:2018a, author = {Peter Baumgartner and Sylvie Thi\'ebaux and Felipe W. Trevizan}, title = {Heuristic Search Planning With Multi-Objective Probabilistic {LTL} Constraints}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {415--424}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We present an algorithm for computing cost-optimal stochastic policies for Stochastic Shortest Path problems (SSPs) subject to multi-objective PLTL constraints, i.e., conjunctions of probabilistic LTL formulas. ... We prove our algorithm correct and optimal, and demonstrate encouraging scalability results.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {probabilistic-planning;AI-algorithms;} } @incollection{ baumgartner_p-furbach:1998a, author = {Peter Baumgartner and Ulrich Furbach}, title = {Variants of Clausal Tableaux}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {I}, Foundations: Calculi and Methods}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;proof-theory;} } @article{ baumgartner_p-kuhn_m:2000a, author = {Peter Baumgartner and Michael {K\"uhn}}, title = {Abducing Coreference by Model Construction}, journal = {Journal of Language and Computation}, year = {2000}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {175--190}, xref = {Also available at http://www.uni-koblenz.de/{\user}kuehn/Publications/paper-icos1.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {model-checking;abduction;anaphora;} } @book{ baumgartner_p-payr_s:1995a, editor = {Peter Baumgartner and Sabine Payr}, title = {Speaking Minds: Interviews with Twenty Eminent Cognitive Scientists}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0-691-03678-0}, xref = {Review: berkeley_isn:1996a.}, topic = {history-of-cogsci;cognitive-science-general;} } @incollection{ baumgartner_p-peterman:1998a, author = {Peter Baumgartner and U. Peterman}, title = {Theory Reasoning}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {I}, Foundations: Calculi and Methods}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @article{ baumgartner_p-tinelli:2008a, author = {Peter Baumgartner and Cesare Tinelli}, title = {The Model Evolution Calculus as a First-Order {DPLL} Method}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {4--5}, pages = {591--632}, topic = {model-checking;} } @article{ baumrin:1965a, author = {Bernard M. Baumrin}, title = {Prima Facie Duties}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1965}, volume = {62}, number = {20}, pages = {736--739}, xref = {Commentary on: shope:1965a.}, topic = {prima-facie-obligation;} } @article{ bave_a:2011a, author = {Arvid B{\aa}ve}, title = {How to Precisify Quantifiers}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {40}, number = {1}, pages = {103--111}, topic = {vagueness;quantifiers;} } @article{ bave_a:2019a, author = {Arvid B\^ave}, title = {Acts and Alternative Analyses}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {116}, number = {4}, pages = {181--205}, topic = {propositions;} } @article{ bavelas-etal:forthcominga, author = {Janet Beavin Bavelas and Nicole Chovil and Linda Coates and Lori Roe}, title = {Gestures Specialized for Dialogue}, journal = {Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin}, year = {to appear}, topic = {gestures;} } @article{ baxter_dlm:2018a, author = {Donald L.M. Baxter}, title = {Self-Differing, Aspects, and Leibniz's Law}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {52}, number = {4}, pages = {900--920}, topic = {personal-identity;} } @article{ baxter_dm:2001a, author = {David M. Baxter}, title = {Loose Identity and Becoming Something Else}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2001}, volume = {35}, number = {4}, pages = {592--601}, topic = {individuation;identity;} } @article{ bayardo-miranker:1994a, author = {Roberto J. {Bayardo Jr.} and Daniel P. Miranker}, title = {An Optimal Backtrack Algorithm for Tree-Structured Constraint Satisfaction Problems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {71}, number = {1}, pages = {159--181}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper presents and evaluates an optimal backtrack algorithm for solving tree-structured constraint satisfaction problems-a subset of constraint satisfaction problems which can be solved in linear time. Previous algorithms which solve these problems in linear time perform expensive preprocessing steps before attempting solution. The work presented here resolves the open problem posed by Dechter (1990) on the development of an algorithm which avoids this preprocessing. We demonstrate significant improvements in average-case performance over the previous state of the art, and show the benefits provided to backtrack enhancement schemes exploiting the easiness of tree-structured problems such as the cycle-cutset method (Dechter and Pearl, 1987). }, topic = {backtracking;constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ bayart:1966a, author = {Arnould Bayart}, title = {Review of `The Undecidability of Monadic Modal Quantification Theory', by {S}aul {A}. {K}ripke}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1966}, volume = {31}, number = {2}, pages = {277--278}, xref = {Review of: kripke_sa:1962a.}, topic = {modal-logic;(un)decidability;} } @article{ bayart_a:1959a, author = {Arnould Bayart}, title = {Quasi-Ad\'equation de la Logique Modale de Second Ordre {S}5 et Ad\'equation de Premiere Order {S}5}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1959}, volume = {2}, number = {6--7}, pages = {99--121}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ bayer_aj:1996a, author = {Samuel Bayer}, title = {The Size of Events}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1996}, editor = {Teresa Galloway and Justin Spence}, pages = {1--16}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;event-semantics;} } @incollection{ bayer_s-etal:1998a, author = {Samuel Bayer and John Aberdeen and John Burger and Lynette Hirschman and David Palmer and Marc Vilain}, title = {Theoretical and Computational Linguistics: Toward a Mutual Understanding}, booktitle = {Using Computers in Linguistics: A Practical Guide}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1998}, editor = {John Lawler and Aristar Dry}, pages = {231--255}, address = {London}, topic = {nlp-and-linguistics;} } @book{ baykent_uo:2016a, author = {Ufuk \"Ozen Baykent}, title = {Introductory Course to Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Cambridge Scholars Publishing}, year = {2016}, address = {Newcastle upon Tyne}, ISBN-13 = {978-1443897457}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1936a, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Are Some Propositions Neither True Nor False?}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1936}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {156--166}, topic = {truth-value-gaps;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1944a, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `{A}nalysis and the Unity of {R}ussell's Philosophy', by {M}orris {W}eitz}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1944}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {77}, xref = {Review of: weitz:1942a.}, topic = {Russell;philosophical-analysis;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1944b, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `{T}he Different Kinds of A Priori', by {A}rthur {P}ap}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1944}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {102--103}, xref = {Review of: pap_a:1944a.}, topic = {a-priori;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1947a, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `{D}eterminables, Determinates and Determinants', by {A}rthur {P}rior}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1947}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {147--148}, xref = {Review of: prior:1949a.}, topic = {determinables;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1947b, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `The Contrary-to-Fact Conditional', by {F}.{L}. Will}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1947}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {57--58}, xref = {Review of: will:1947a.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1949a, author = {Charles Baylis}, title = {Review of `Subjunctive Conditionals', by {S}tuart {H}ampshire}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1949}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {203}, xref = {Review of: hampshire_s:1948a.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1951a, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `The Institutional Use of \emph{The}', by {C}ooper H. Langford}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1951}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, pages = {63}, xref = {Review of: langford_ch:1949a}, topic = {generics;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1951b, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `The Analysis of Conditional Sentences', by {D}.{J}. {O}'{C}onner}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1951}, volume = {16}, number = {4}, pages = {301--302}, xref = {Review of: oconnor_dj:1951a.}, topic = {natural-laws;conditionals;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1951c, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `\emph{If}, \emph{So}, and \emph{Because}, by {G}ilbert {R}yle}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1951}, volume = {16}, number = {4}, pages = {300}, xref = {Review of: ryle_g:1954b}, topic = {conditionals;pragmatics;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1951d, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Universals, Communicable Knowledge, and Metaphysics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1951}, volume = {48}, number = {21}, pages = {636--644}, topic = {nominalism;metaphysics;philosophy-of0-language;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1956a, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `{L}aw Statements and Counterfactual Inference', by {{R}oderick {M}. {C}hisholm}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1956}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {86--87}, xref = {Review of: chisholm_rm:1955a.}, topic = {natural-laws;conditionals;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1959a, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `{L}inguistic Approaches to Philosophical Problems', by Alice Ambrose and `{C}omments on the \emph{Proposal Theory of Philosophy}, by {R}oderick {M}. {C}hisholm}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1959}, volume = {24}, number = {1}, pages = {91}, xref = {Review of: ambrose:1952a, chisholm_rm:1952b}, topic = {philosophy-and-language;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1961c, author = {Charles A, Baylis}, title = {Review of `{O}n the Uses of Intentional Words', by {R}oderick {M}. {C}hisholm}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1962}, volume = {27}, number = {1}, pages = {121}, xref = {Review of: chisholm_rm:1954a}, topic = {intensionality;mind-body-problem;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1962a, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `{I}ntentionality and the Theory of Signs', by {{R}oderick {M}. {C}hisholm}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1962}, volume = {27}, number = {1}, pages = {120}, xref = {Review of: chisholm_rm:1952a.}, topic = {Brentano;intentionality;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ baylis_ca:1962b, author = {Charles A. Baylis}, title = {Review of `{R}educibility and Intentional Words', by {P}hilip {N}ochlan}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1962}, volume = {27}, number = {1}, pages = {121--121}, xref = {Review of: nochlin:1953}, topic = {intensionality;mind-body-problem;} } @incollection{ bayne:2007a, author = {Tim Bayne}, title = {Conscious States and Conscious Creatures: Explanation in the Scientific Study of Consciousness}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2007}, editor = {John Hawthorne}, pages = {1--22}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ bayne-spener:2010a, author = {Tim Bayne and Maja Spener}, title = {Introspective Humility}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2010}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {1--22}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;introspection;} } @mastersthesis{ bayraktar:1996a, author = {Murat Bayraktar}, title = {Computer-Aided Analysis of {E}nglish Punctuation on a Parsed Corpus: The Special Case of Comma}, school = {Department of Computer Engineering and Information Science, Bilkent University, Turkey}, year = {1996}, note = {Forthcoming}, topic = {punctuation;} } @article{ bays:2001a, author = {Timothy Bays}, title = {On {P}utnam and His Models}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2001}, volume = {98}, number = {7}, pages = {331--350}, xref = {Discussion of: putnam_h:1983c.}, topic = {philosophical-realism;lowenheim-skolem-theorem;} } @article{ bays:2001b, author = {Timothy Bays}, title = {On {T}arski on Models}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {66}, number = {4}, pages = {1701--1726}, topic = {Tarski;history-of-logic;model-theory;} } @incollection{ bazarganforward_s:2017a, author = {Saba Bazargan-Forward}, title = {Complicity}, booktitle = {The Routledge Handbook of Collective Intentionality}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2017}, editor = {Marija Jankovic and Kirk Ludwig}, pages = {327--337}, address = {New York}, topic = {social-institutions;group-action;group-attitudes;} } @article{ bazhenov_n:2019a, author = {Nicolay Bazhenov}, title = {Foundations of Online Structure Theory}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {141--181}, topic = {online-structure-theory;complexity-theory;} } @incollection{ bazire-brezillon:2005a, author = {Mary Bazire and Patrick Br\'ezillon}, title = {Understanding Context before Using It}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {29--40}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {Studies the use of "context" in a cognitive science corpus.}, topic = {context;cognitive-science;} } @inproceedings{ bazzi-neiger:1992a, author = {R. Bazzi and G. Neiger}, title = {The Complexity and Impossibility of Achieving Fault-Tolerant Coordination}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh {ACM} Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing}, year = {1992}, pages = {203--214}, organization = {ACM}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {communication-protocols;} } @article{ bazzoni_a:2015a, author = {Andr\'e Bazzoni}, title = {Hintikka on the Foundations of Mathematics: {IF} Logic and Uniformity Concepts}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {5}, pages = {507--516}, topic = {IF-logic;} } @article{ bazzoni_a:2016a, author = {Andr\'e Bazzoni}, title = {Pure Quotation, Metalanguage and Metasemantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2016}, volume = {39}, number = {2}, pages = {119--149}, abstract = {Every theory of pure quotation embraces in some form or another the intuitively obvious thesis that pure quotations refer to their quoted expressions. However, they all remain vague (and sometimes even inconsistent) about the nature of these latter. This paper proposes to take seriously the fact that quoted items are semantic, not syntactic objects, and to develop therefrom a semantics for pure quotation that retains the basic intuitions and at the same time circumvents standard problems.}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ beach:1983a, author = {Wayne A. Beach}, title = {Background Understandings and the Situated Accomplishment of Conversational Telling-Expressions}, booktitle = {Conversational Coherence: Form, Structure and Strategy}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1983}, editor = {Robert T. Craig and Karen Tracey}, pages = {196--221}, address = {London}, topic = {coord-in-conversation;discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @article{ beal_df:1990a, author = {Don F. Beal}, title = {A Generalised Quiescence Search Algorithm}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {85--98}, topic = {game-playing;search;} } @incollection{ beale_s-etal:1998a, author = {Stephen Beale and Sergei Nirenburg and Evelyne Viegas and Leo Wanner}, title = {De-Constraining Text Generation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Natural Language Generation}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Eduard Hovy}, pages = {48--57}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-generation;nl-generation-algorithms;} } @book{ beale_wh:1987a, author = {Walter H. Beale}, title = {A Pragmatic Theory of Rhetoric}, publisher = {Southern Illinois University Press}, year = {1967}, address = {Carbondale, Illinois}, ISBN = {0809031300-6}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {pragmatics;rhetoric;} } @article{ bealer_g:1979a, author = {George Bealer}, title = {Theories of Properties, Relations, and Propositions}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {76}, pages = {634--648}, topic = {intensionality;property-theory;} } @book{ bealer_g:1982a, author = {George Bealer}, title = {Quality and Concept}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1982}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {intensionality;property-theory;} } @article{ bealer_g:1983a, author = {George Bealer}, title = {Completeness in the Theory of Properties, Relations, and Propositions}, journal = {The Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1983}, volume = {44}, number = {2}, pages = {415--426}, topic = {property-theory;} } @incollection{ bealer_g:1984a, author = {George Bealer}, title = {Mind and Anti-Mind: Why Thinking Has No Functional Definition}, booktitle = {Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. Uehling, Jr. and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {283--328}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {mind-body-problem;functionalism;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ bealer_g:1986a, author = {George Bealer}, title = {The Logical Status of Mind}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {X}: Studies in the Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {231--274}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {intentionality;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ bealer_g:1989a, author = {George Bealer}, title = {On the Identification of Properties and Propositional Functions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1989}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {1--14}, topic = {property-theory;intensional-logic;propositional-functions;} } @incollection{ bealer_g:1993a, author = {George Bealer}, title = {A Solution to {F}rege's Puzzle}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 7: Language and Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {17--60}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Zip drive. bealer.zip}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {propositions;identity;} } @article{ bealer_g:1994a, author = {George Bealer}, title = {Mental Properties}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1994}, volume = {91}, number = {4}, pages = {185--208}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;property-theory;} } @article{ bealer_g:1994b, author = {George Bealer}, title = {Property Theory: the Type-Free Approach v. the {C}hurch Approach}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1994}, volume = {23}, pages = {139--171}, topic = {intensionality;hyperintensionality;epistemic-logic; property-theory;propositional-attitudes;}, } @article{ bealer_g:1997b, author = {George Bealer}, title = {Self-Consciousness}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1997}, volume = {106}, number = {1}, pages = {69--117}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ bealer_g:1998a, author = {George Bealer}, title = {Propositions}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1998}, volume = {107}, number = {425}, pages = {1--32}, topic = {propositions;} } @article{ bealer_g:2004a, author = {George Bealer}, title = {An Inconsistency in Direct Reference Theory}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {101}, number = {11}, pages = {574--593}, topic = {reference;identity;} } @incollection{ bealer_g-monnich:2004a, author = {George Bealer and Uwe M\"onnich}, title = {Property Theories}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {X}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {143--248 }, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {property-theory;} } @article{ beall_jc:2000a, author = {J.C. Beall}, title = {A Neglected Response to the {G}rim Result}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2000}, volume = {60}, number = {1}, pages = {38--41}, topic = {foundations-of-possible-worlds;intensional-paradoxes;} } @article{ beall_jc:2001a, author = {J.C. Beall}, title = {A Neglected Deflationist Approach to the {L}iar}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2001}, volume = {61}, number = {2}, pages = {126--129}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @book{ beall_jc:2003a, editor = {J.C. Beall}, title = {Liars and Heaps: New Essays on Paradox}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0199264805}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Edited Shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Graham Priest, "A Site for Sorites", pp. 7--23 2. Achille C. Varzi, "Cut-Offs and Their Neighbors", pp. 24--38 3. Stewart Shapiro, "Vagueness and Conversation", pp. 39--72 4. Rosanna Keefe, "Context, Vaguness, and the Sorites", pp. 73--83 5. Crispin Wright, "Vagueness: A FIfth Column Approach", pp. 84--105 6. Richard C. Heck, "Semantic Accounts of Vagueness", pp. 106--127 7. Scott Soames, "Higher-Order Vaguensss for Partially Defined Predicates", pp. 128--150 8. Michael Glanzberg, "Against Truth-Value Gaps", pp. 151--194 9. Delia Graff, "Gap Principles, Penumbral Consequence, and Infinitely Higher-Order Vagueness", pp. 195--194 10. Roy A. Sorensen, "A Definite No-No", pp. 195--221 11. Keith Simmons, "Reference and Paradox", pp. 225--229 12. J.C. Beall, "On the Singularity Theory of Denotation", pp. 230--252 13. Hartry Field, "The Semantic Paradoxes and the Paradoxes of Vagueness", pp. 253--311 14. Steven Yablo, "New Grounds for Naive Truth Theory", pp. 312--330 15. Agustin Rayo and Timothy Williamson, "A Completeness Theorem for Unrestricted First-Order Languages", pp. 331--356 16. Vann McGee, "Universal Universal Quantification", pp. 357--364 }, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;sorites-paradox;} } @incollection{ beall_jc:2003b, author = {J.C. Beall}, title = {On the Singularity Theory of Denotation}, booktitle = {Liars and Heaps: New Essays on Paradox}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {J.C. Beall}, pages = {230--252}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {denotation;semantic-paradoxes;} } @incollection{ beall_jc:2004a, author = {J.C. Beall}, title = {True and False---As If}, booktitle = {The Law of Non-Contradiction}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Graham Priest and J.C. Beall and Bradley Armour-Garb}, pages = {197--216}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary: liggins_d:2014a}, topic = {paraconsistency;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ beall_jc:2006a, author = {J.C. Beall}, title = {True, False, and Paranormal}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2006}, volume = {66}, pages = {102--114}, url = {http://homepages.uconn.edu/~jcb02005/papers/paranormal.pdf}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;paraconsistency;} } @article{ beall_jc:2007a, author = {J.C. Beall}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}ruth and Paradox: Solving the Riddles}, by {T}im {M}audlin}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2007}, volume = {116}, number = {3}, pages = {478--481}, xref = {Review of: maudlin_t:2004a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @book{ beall_jc:2009a, author = {J.C. Beall}, title = {Spandrels of Truth}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978019926873}, xref = {Review: armourgarb_b-goldstein_l:2010a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;paraconsistency;deflationary-analyses;} } @incollection{ beall_jc:2009b, author = {J.C. Beall}, title = {Vague Intensions: A Modest Marriage Proposal}, booktitle = {Cuts and Clouds: Vaguenesss, its Nature and its Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi}, pages = {pp. 187--199}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ beall_jc:2013a, author = {J.C. Beall}, title = {{LP}$^+$, {K3}$^+$, {FDAE}$^+$, and Their `Classical Collapse{'}}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {755--764}, topic = {truth-value-gluts;} } @book{ beall_jc-armourgarb_b:2005a, editor = {J.C. Beall and Bradley Armour-Garb}, title = {Deflationism and Paradox}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN13 = {978-0-19-954492-9}, ISBN10 = {0-19-954492-1}, contentnote = {Deflationist accounts of truth are widely held in contemporary philosophy: they seek to show that truth is a dispensable concept with no metaphysical depth. However, logical paradoxes present problems for deflationists, which their work has struggled to overcome. In this volume of fourteen original essays, a distinguished team of contributors explore the extent to which, if at all, deflationism can accommodate paradox.}, topic = {deflationary-analyses;semantic-paradoxes;truth;} } @article{ beall_jc-etal:2006a, author = {J.C. Beall and Ross T. Brady and Allen P. Hazen and Graham Priest}, title = {Relevant Restricted Quantification}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2006}, volume = {35}, number = {6}, pages = {587--598}, topic = {relevance-logic;restricted-quantifiers;} } @article{ beall_jc-etal:2011a, author = {J.C. Beall and Graham Priest and Zach Weber}, title = {Can u Do That?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {2}, pages = {280--285}, xref = {Commentary on: restall_g:2010a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;truth-value-gaps;truth-value-gluts;paraconsistency;} } @article{ beall_jc-etal:2012a, author = {J.C. Beall and Ross Brady and J. Michael Dunn and Allen P. Hazen}, title = {On the Ternary Relation and Conditionality}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {41}, number = {3}, pages = {595--612}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @incollection{ beall_jc-etal:2016a, author = {J.C. Beall and Michael Glanzberg and David Ripley}, title = {Liar Paradox}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, address = {Stanford, California}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url ={https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2016/entries/liar-paradox/}, year = {2016}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ beall_jc-murzi_j:2013a, author = {J.C. Beall and Julieri Murzi}, title = {Two Flavors of {C}urry's Paradox}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {110}, number = {3}, pages = {143--165}, topic = {Curry-paradox;validity;} } @book{ beall_jc-vanfraassen_bc:2003a, author = {J.C. Beall and Bas C. van Fraassen}, title = {Possibilities and Paradox: An Introduction to Modal and Many-Valued Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic shelves.}, ISBN = {0-19-925987-9}, topic = {logic-intro;multivalued-logic;modal-logic;semantic-paradoxes; vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @incollection{ beaney_m:2006a, author = {Michael Beaney}, title = {Wittgenstein on Language: From Simples to Samples}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {40--59}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Wittgenstein;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ beaney_m:2016a, author = {Michael Beaney}, title = {Analysis}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2016/entries/analysis/}, year = {2016}, edition = {Summer 2016}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {philosophical-analysis;history-of-philosophy;} } @book{ bear:1992a, author = {John Bear}, title = {Gaps as Syntactic Features}, publisher = {Indiana Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {Department of Linguistics, University of Indiana, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-syntax;GPSG;} } @inproceedings{ bear-hobbs_jr:1988a, author = {John Bear and Jerry R. Hobbs}, title = {Localizing the Expression of Ambiguity}, booktitle = {Proceedings Second Conference on Applied Natural Language Processing}, year = {1988}, month = {February}, missinginfo = {publisher, pages}, topic = {ambiguity;nl-interpretation;} } @article{ beard:1965a, author = {Robert W. Beard}, title = {Synonymy and Oblique Contexts}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1965}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {1--5}, topic = {referential-opacity;} } @article{ beardman:2004a, author = {Stephanie Beardman}, title = {Review of {\it {A}lchemies of the Mind: Rationality and the Emotions}, by {J}ohn {E}lster}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {101}, number = {9}, pages = {484--491}, xref = {Review of: elster:1999a.}, topic = {emotion;rationality;} } @techreport{ beardon-turner_k:1993a, author = {Colin Beardon and Ken Turner}, title = {An Analysis of the Problems Involved in Understanding Complex Nominals}, institution = {Rediffusion Simulation Research Centre, University of Brighton}, number = {RSRC-93001}, year = {1993}, address = {Brighton}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {compound-nominasl;} } @article{ beardsley:1944a, author = {Elizabeth Lane Beardsley}, title = {Imperative Sentences in Relation to Indicatives}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {2001944}, volume = {53}, pages = {175--185}, number ={2}, xref = {Review: kraft_j:}, topic = {imperatives;} } @article{ beardsley:1949a, author = {Elizabeth Lane Beardsley}, title = {{`}Non-Accidental' and Counterfactual Sentences}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1964}, volume = {46}, pages = {573--591}, number = {18}, xref = {Review: chisholm_rm:1951a.}, topic = {conditionals;(non)accidental-generalizations;} } @article{ beattie:1979a, author = {Geoffrey W. Beattie}, title = {Planning Units in Spontaneous Speech: Some Evidence From Hesitation in Speech and Speaker Gaze Direction in Conversation}, journal = {Linguistics}, year = {1979}, volume = {17}, pages = {61--78}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {discourse;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ beatty_j:1995a, author = {John Beatty}, title = {The Evolutionary Contingency Thesis}, booktitle = {Concepts, Theories, and Rationality in the Biological Sciences}, publisher = {University of Pittsburgh Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Geroen Wolters and James G. Lennox}, pages = {45--81}, address = {Pittsburgh}, abstract = {The thesis ... is this: all distinctively biological generalizations describe evolutionarily contingent states of nature ... This means that there are no laws of biology.}, topic = {philosophy-of-biology;evolution;} } @book{ beauchamp_tl-childress_jf:2019a, author = {Tom L. Beauchamp and James F. Childress}, edition = {8}, title = {Principles of Biomedical Ethics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780190640873}, topic = {biomedical-ethics;} } @article{ beaver_d:1994c, author = {David Beaver}, title = {An Infinite Number of Monkeys}, journal = {Acta Linguistica Hungarica}, year = {1994}, volume = {42}, number = {3/4}, pages = {253--270}, xref = {Earlier version of: beaver_di:1999b}, topic = {presupposition;accommodation;} } @inproceedings{ beaver_d-condoravdi_c:2007a, author = {David Beaver and Cleo Condoravdi}, title = {On the Logic of Verbal Modification}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixteenthth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, year = {2007}, editor = {Maria Aloni and Paul Dekker and Floris Roelofsen}, pages = {3--10}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe21}, topic = {verb-semantics;argument-structure;event-semantics;linking-semantics;} } @incollection{ beaver_d-geurts_b:2013a, author = {David Beaver and Bart Geurts}, title = {Presupposition}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 3}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {2432--2460}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;presupposition;accommodation;} } @incollection{ beaver_di:1981a, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {The Kinematics of Presupposition}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1991}, editor = {Paul Dekker and Martin Stokhof}, pages = {17--36}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {nl-semantics;presupposition;pragmatics; dynamic-semantics;} } @techreport{ beaver_di:1992a, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {The Kinematics of Presupposition}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP--92--05}, year = {1992}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland }, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;presupposition;pragmatics;dynamic-semantics; accommodation;} } @techreport{ beaver_di:1993a, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {What Comes First in Dynamic Semantics}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP--93--15}, year = {1993}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland }, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;presupposition;pragmatics;dynamic-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ beaver_di:1994a, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {When Variables Don't Vary Enough}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IV}}, year = {1994}, editor = {Mandy Harvey and Lynn Santelmann}, pages = {35--60}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, abstract = {This paper concerns treatment of variables in a dynamic semantics. The main empirical concern will be the interaction of presupposition and quantification, but I will also consider how epistemic modals and quantifiers combine. I will show how these empirical considerations motivate a choice between two styles of quantification. The first of these styles involves treating quantified variables rather like discourse markers, whereas the second style gives variables a more classical interpretation. ...}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;presupposition;pragmatics;anaphora; dynamic-semantics;} } @incollection{ beaver_di:1994b2, author = {David Beaver}, title = {Accommodating Topics}, booktitle = {Context-Dependence in the Analysis of Linguistic Meaning}, publisher = {Brill Publishing}, year = {2002}, editor = {Hans Kamp and Barbara Partee}, pages = {79--90}, address = {Leiden}, topic = {accommodation;s-topic;conditionals;presupposition;} } @incollection{ beaver_di:1994b, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {Accommodating Topics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IBM} and Journal of Semantics Conference on Focus}, year = {1994}, editor = {Rob A. {van der Sandt} and Peter Bosch}, publisher = {IBM}, address = {Heidelburg}, abstract = {This paper concerns the relevance of notions of sentence topic and discourse topic to the analysis of sentences containing presuppositions. ... a process I refer to as topical accommodation could justify the existence of the readings predicted by van der Sandt's model in some cases. I then show that similar problems occur in the treatment of presuppositions occurring in the consequents of conditionals, and once again conclude that current models err by not taking into account topic-focus articulation and issues of discourse coherency.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\Beaver2.pdf}, topic = {accommodation;s-topic;conditionals;presupposition;} } @phdthesis{ beaver_di:1995a1, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {Presupposition and Assertion in Dynamic Semantics}, school = {Centre for Cognitive Science, University of Edinburgh}, year = {1995}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Edinburgh}, xref = {Book Publication: beaver_di:1995a2.}, topic = {nl-semantics;presupposition;dynamic-semantics;} } @book{ beaver_di:1995a2, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {Presupposition and Assertion in Dynamic Semantics}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2001}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1575861208 (pbk), 1575861208 (cloth)}, xref = {Publication of dissertation: beaver_di:1995a1.}, topic = {nl-semantics;presupposition;dynamic-semantics;} } @incollection{ beaver_di:1996a, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {Presupposition}, booktitle = {Handbook of Logic and Language}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {1996}, editor = {Johan {van Benthem} and Alice {ter Meulen}}, address = {Amsterdam}, pages = {939--1008}, topic = {presupposition;} } @incollection{ beaver_di:1999a, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {The Logic of Anaphora Resolution}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {61--66}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {anaphora-resolution;} } @incollection{ beaver_di:1999b, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {Presupposition Accommodation: A Plea for Common Sense}, booktitle = {Logic, Language and Computation, Volume 2}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1999}, editor = {Lawrence S. Moss and Jonathan Ginzburg and Maarten de Rijke}, pages = {21--44}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\Beaver1.pdf}, topic = {presupposition;accommodation;} } @incollection{ beaver_di:1999c, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {Pragmatics to a First Approximation}, booktitle = {{JFAK}: Essays Dedicated to Johan van Benthem on the Occasion of his 50th Birthday}, publisher = {Vossiuspers, Amsterdam University Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jelle Gerbrandy and Maarten Marx and Maarten de Rijke and Yde Venema}, address = {Amsterdam}, url = {ftp://ftp-csli.stanford.edu/linguistics/Papers/pragmatics.ps.gz}, topic = {pragmatics;dynamic-semantics;} } @book{ beaver_di:2001a, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {Presupposition and Assertion in Dynamic Semantics}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2001}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {ISBN (Paperback): 1575861208}, topic = {presupposition;assertion;dynamic-semantics;} } @book{ beaver_di:2001b, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {What Comes First in Dynamic Semantics: A Critical Review of Linguistic Theories of Presupposition and a Dynamic Alternative}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {presupposition;dynamic-semantics;} } @incollection{ beaver_di:2002a, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {Presupposition Projection in {DRT}}, booktitle = {The Construction of Meaning}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2002}, editor = {David Beaver and Luis de Casillas Mart\'inez and Brady Z. Clark and Stefan Kaufmann}, pages = {23--44}, address = {Stanford University}, topic = {prespuposition;discourse-representation-theory;} } @article{ beaver_di:2004a, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {The Optimization of Discourse Anaphora}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {27}, number = {1}, pages = {3--56}, topic = {anaphora-resolution;optimality-theory;centering;} } @article{ beaver_di:2004b, author = {David Beaver}, title = {Five Only Pieces}, journal = {Theoretical Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {1}, pages = {45--64}, xref = {Commentary on: geurts_b-vandersandt_r:2004a}, topic = {sentence-focus;presupposition;'only';'too';} } @incollection{ beaver_di:2010a, author = {David I. Beaver}, title = {Have You Noticed that your Belly Button Lint Colour si Related to the Colour of your Clothing?}, booktitle = {Pre-Suppositions and Discourse: Essays offered to {H}ans {K}amp}, year = {2010}, editor = {Rainer Bauerle and Uwe Reyle and Thomas Zimmermann}, pages = {65--100}, publisher = {Emerald Group Publishing}, address = {Bingley, UK}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\Beaver3.pdf}, topic = {presupposition;implicature;} } @inproceedings{ beaver_di-clark_bz:2002a, author = {David I. Beaver and Brady Z. Clark}, title = {Monotonicity and Focus Sensitivity}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2002}, editor = {Brendan Jackson}, pages = {40--58}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;s-focus;nl-quantifiers;event-semantics;} } @article{ beaver_di-clark_bz:2003a, author = {David I. Beaver and Brady Clark}, title = {Always and Only: Why Not All Focus-Sensitive Operators Are Alike}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2003}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {323--362}, topic = {`only';sentence-focus;} } @book{ beaver_di-clark_bz:2009a, author = {David I. Beaver and Brady Z. Clark}, title = {Sense and Sensitivity: How Focus Determines Meaning}, publisher = {Wiley}, year = {2009}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {1444301330, 9781444301335}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Summer, 2021}, topic = {focus;'only';} } @incollection{ beaver_di-condoravdi_c:2003a, author = {David I. Beaver and Cleo Condoravdi}, title = {A Uniform Analysis of Before and After}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XIII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2003}, editor = {Robert B. Young and Yuping Zhou}, pages = {37--54}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;temporal-adverbials;} } @book{ beaver_di-etal:2002a, editor = {David I. Beaver and Luis D. Casillas Mart\'inez and Brady Z. Clark and Stefan Kaufmann}, title = {The Construction of Meaning}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2002}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1575863766 (pbk)}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Ash Asudeh, "A Resource-Sensitive Semantics for Equi and Raising", pp. 1--22 2. David I. Beaver, "Presupposition Projection in DRT", pp. 23--44 3. Eve V. Clark, "Making Use of Pragmatic Inferences in the Acquisition of Meaning", pp. 45--58 4. Cleo Condoravdi, "Temporal Interpretation of Modals", pp. 59--88 5. Martina Faller, "Remarks on Evidential Hierarchies", pp. 89--112 6. Paul Kiparsky, "Event Structure and the Perfect", pp. 113--136 7. David A. McKercher, "Subject-Oriented \emph{with}-Phrases in Event Semantics", pp. 137--162 8. Kyonghee Paik and Francis Bond, "Spatial Representation and Shape Classifiers in {J}apanese and {K}orean, pp. 163--180 9. Stanley Peters and Dag Westerst{\aa}hl, "Does {E}nglish Really Have Resumptive Quantification?", pp. 181--196 10. Shiao Wei Tham, "Extended Postposing and Focus S {M}andarin Locatives", pp. 197--218 11. Arnold Zwicky, "I Wonder What Kind of Construction this Example Illustrates", pp. 219-248 }, topic = {nl-semantics;pragmatics;} } @unpublished{ beaver_di-etal:2009a, author = {David I. Beaver and Craige Roberts and Mandy Simons and Judith Tonhauser}, title = {Addendum: Investigating Properties of Projective Meaning}, year = {2009}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Texas}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no14\beaver.pdf}, topic = {nl-semantics;presupposition;} } @article{ beaver_di-krahmer_e:2000a, author = {David I. Beaver and Emiel Krahmer}, title = {A Partial Account of Presupposition Projection}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {147--182}, topic = {presupposition;} } @unpublished{ beaver_di-zeevat_h:2004a, author = {David I. Beaver and Henk Zeevat}, title = {Accommodation}, year = {2004}, note = {Unpublished manuscript. Available at http://montague.stanford.edu/~dib/Publications/accommodation.pdf.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {To appear in Ramchand, G. and C. Reiss (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Interfaces, Oxford University Press.}, topic = {accommodation;pragmatics;} } @article{ beavers_af:2010a, author = {Anthony F. Beavers}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}oral Machines: Teaching Robots Right from Wrong}, by {W}endell {W}allach and {C}olin {A}llen}, journal = {Ethics and Information Technology}, year = {2010}, volume = {12}, number = {4}, pages = {357--358}, DOI = {10.1007/s10676-010-9237-3}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \email\12\ja12\beavers.pdf}, xref = {Review of: wallach-allen_c:2009a}, topic = {social-political-implications-of-AI;computational-ethics;} } @article{ beavers_af:2011a, author = {Anthony F. Beavers}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}nformation: A Very Short Introduction}, by {L}uciano {F}loridi}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {97--101}, xref = {Review of: floridi_l:2010a.}, topic = {information;information-theory;} } @incollection{ beavers_af:2012a, author = {John Beavers}, title = {Resultative Constructions}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {908--933}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de20}, topic = {tense-aspect;resultative-constructions;} } @article{ beavers_j:2010a, author = {John Beavers}, title = {The Structure of Lexical Meaning: Why Semantics Really Matters}, journal = {Language}, year = {2010}, volume = {86}, number = {4}, pages = {821--864}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc15}, topic = {lexical-semantics;argument-structure;} } @article{ beavers_j:2011a, author = {John Beavers}, title = {An Aspectual Analysis of Ditransitive Verbs of Caused Possession in {E}nglish}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2011}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {1--54}, abstract = {In this article I examine ditransitive verbs that can describe caused possession (e.g. give, throw, send) by looking at their lexical aspectual properties, a methodology that has proved fruitful for the exploration of (in)transitive verbs. I show that as a whole these ditransitives share a number of aspectual properties in common with (in)transitive verbs of change of state and motion, suggesting a single shared underlying analysis, which I outline in terms of the scalar analysis of change of Beavers (forthcoming b). ... }, doi = {10.1093/jos/ffq014}, topic = {verb-semantics;nl-causatives;} } @incollection{ becher-etal:1999a, author = {Ver\'onica Becher and E. Ferm\'e and R. Rodriguez and S. Lazzer C. Oller and G. Palua}, title = {Some Observations on {C}arlos {A}lchourron's Theory of Defeasible Conditionals}, booktitle = {Norms, Logics and Information Systems. New Studies in Deontic Logic and Computer Science}, publisher = {IOS Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Paul McNamara and Henry Prakken}, pages = {219--230}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {deontic-logic;nonmonotonic-conditionals;} } @article{ becher-etal:2006a, author = {Ver\'onica Becher and Santiago Figueira and Serge Grigorieff and Joseph S. Miller}, title = {Randomness and Halting Probabilities}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2006}, volume = {71}, number = {4}, pages = {1411--1430}, topic = {randomness;} } @article{ bechet_d:2007a, author = {Denis B\'echet}, title = {Parsing Pregroup Grammars and {L}ambek Calculus Using Partial Composition}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {87}, number = {2--3}, pages = {199--224}, topic = {pregroups;Lambek-calculus;context-free-grammars;} } @incollection{ bechet_d-degroote:1997a, author = {Denis B\'echet and Philippe de Groote}, title = {Constructing Different Phonological Bracketings from a Proof Net}, booktitle = {{LACL}'96: First International Conference on Logical Aspects of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1997}, editor = {Christian Retor/'e}, pages = {118--133}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-and-nl-processing; computational-phonology;} } @article{ bechet_d-etal:2007a, author = {Denis B\'echet and Annie Foret and Isabelle Tellier}, title = {Learnability of Pregroup Grammars}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {87}, number = {2--3}, pages = {225--252}, topic = {pregroups;categorial-grammar;machine-language-learning;} } @incollection{ bechet_f-etal:1997a, author = {Fr\'ed\'eric B\'echet and Thierry Spriet and Marc El-B\`eze}, title = {Automatic Lexicon Enhancement by Means of Corpus Tagging}, booktitle = {Interactive Spoken Dialog Systems: Bridging Speech and {NLP} Together in Real Applications}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Julia Hirschberg and Candace Kamm and Marilyn Walker}, pages = {29--32}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;computational-lexicography; corpus-tagging;} } @article{ bechtel_pw:1978a, author = {P. William Bechtel}, title = {Indeterminacy and Intentionality: {Q}uine's Purported Elimination of Propositions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1978}, volume = {75}, number = {11}, pages = {649--661}, topic = {indeterminacy-of-translation;} } @article{ bechtel_pw:1980a, author = {P. William Bechtel}, title = {Indeterminacy and Underdetermination}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1980}, volume = {38}, number = {38}, pages = {309--320}, contentnote = {Critique of Quine}, topic = {radical-interpretation;indeterminacy-of-translation;} } @unpublished{ bechtel_r-shapiro_sc:1976a, author = {Robert Bechtel and Stuart Shapiro}, title = {A Logic for Semantic Networks}, year = {1976}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Indiana University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {semantic-networks;kr;kr-course;} } @article{ bechtel_w:2005a, author = {William Bechtel}, title = {Explanation: A Mechanist Alternative}, journal = {Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences}, year = {2005}, volume = {36}, number = {2}, pages = {421--441}, topic = {mechanisms;explanation;philosophy-of-biology;} } @book{ bechtel_w:2007a, author = {William Bechtel}, title = {Mental Mechanisms: Philosophical Perspectives on Cognitive Neuroscience}, publisher = {Psychology Press}, year = {2007}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {9780429235498}, topic = {philosophy-of-cognitive-neuroscience;mechanisms;} } @article{ bechtel_w:2017a, author = {William Bechtel}, title = {Explicating Top-Down Causation in Using Networks and Dynamics}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2017}, volume = {84}, number = {2}, pages = {253--274}, abstract = {... Craver and I defended the view that [top-down causality] should be understood in terms of a constitution relation between levels in a mechanism and intralevel causal relations (occurring at any level). In this article I appeal to graph-theoretic representations of networks, now widely employed in systems biology and neuroscience, and associate mechanisms with modules that exhibit high clustering. ... mechanisms often exhibit complex dynamic behaviors that constrain how individual components respond to external inputs, a central feature of top-down causation.}, topic = {network-models;causality;philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ bechtel_w-abrahamsen_aa:2013a, author = {William Bechtel and Adele A. Abrahamsen}, title = {Thinking Dynamically About Biological Mechanisms: Networks of Coupled Oscillators}, journal = {Foundations of Science}, year = {2013}, volume = {18}, number = {4}, pages = {707--723}, topic = {biological-mechanisms;dynamic-systems;} } @inproceedings{ bechtel_w-abramson_a:2012a, author = {William Bechtel and Adele Abramson}, title = {Diagramming Phenomena for Mechanistic Explanation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 34th Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society}, year = {2012}, editor = {Naomi Miyake and David Peebles and Richard P. Cooper}, pages = {102--107}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Society}, address = {Seattle, Washington}, topic = {mechanisms'explanation;diagrams;} } @book{ bechtel_w-richardson_rc:2010a, author = {William Bechtel and Robert C. Richardson}, title = {Discovering Complexity: Decomposition and Localization as Strategies in Scientific Research}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2010}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {1-282-97836-5, 9786612978364,0-262-28917-2}, abstract = {... Drawing on historical cases from disciplines including cell biology, cognitive neuroscience, and genetics, they identify a number of 'choice points' that life scientists confront in developing mechanistic explanations and show how different choices result in divergent explanatory models ...}, topic = {mechanisms;explanation;philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ bechtel_wp:1993a, author = {William P. Bechtel}, title = {Currents in Connectionism}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {125--153}, topic = {connectionism;} } @article{ bechtel_wp:1994a, author = {William P. Bechtel}, title = {Levels of Description and Explanation in Cognitive Science}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {1--25}, xref = {Commentary: rosenberg_jf:1994a.}, topic = {levels-of-scientific-representation:natural-hierarchies; philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @article{ bechtel_wp:1994b, author = {William P. Bechtel}, title = {Natural Deduction in Connectionist Systems}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1994}, volume = {101}, number = {3}, pages = {433--463}, abstract = {$\ldots$ I have argued elsewhere that the systematicity of human thought might better be explained as resulting from the fact that we have learned natural languages which are themselves syntactically structured. According to this view, symbols of natural language are external to the cognitive processing system and what the cognitive system must learn to do is produce and comprehend such symbols. In this paper I pursue that idea by arguing that ability in natural deduction itself may rely on pattern recognition abilities that enable us to operate on external symbols rather than encodings of rules that might be applied to internal representations. To support this suggestion, I present a series of experiments with connectionist networks that have been trained to construct simple natural deductions in sentential logic. These networks not only succeed in reconstructing the derivations on which they have been trained, but in constructing new derivations that are only similar to the ones on which they have been trained.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe12\bechtel1.pdf}, topic = {connectionist-plus-symbolic-architectures;} } @article{ bechtel_wp:2001a, author = {William P. Bechtel}, title = {The Compatibility of Complex Systems and Reduction: A Case Analysis of Memory Research}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {483--502}, abstract = {Some theorists who emphasize the complexity of biological and cognitive systems and who advocate the employment of the tools of dynamical systems theory in explaining them construe complexity and reduction as exclusive alternatives. This paper argues that reduction, an approach to explanation that decomposes complex activities and localizes the components within the complex system, is not only compatible with an emphasis on complexity, but provides the foundation for dynamical analysis. $\ldots$ }, topic = {theory-reduction;cognitive-neuroscience;dynamic-systems;} } @article{ bechtel_wp:2011a, author = {William P. Bechtel}, title = {Mechanism and Biological Explanation}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2011}, volume = {78}, number = {4}, pages = {533--557}, abstract = {This article argues that the basic account of mechanism and mechanistic explanation, involving sequential execution of qualitatively characterized operations, is itself insufficient to explain biological phenomena such as the capacity of living organisms to maintain themselves as systems distinct from their environment.}, topic = {mechanisms;philosophy-of-biology;explanation;} } @article{ bechtel_wp:2012a, author = {William P. Bechtel}, title = {Understanding Endogenously Active Mechanisms: A Scientific and Philosophical Challenge}, journal = {European Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year = {2012}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {233--248}, abstract = {... the new mechanistic philosophers of science have followed most biologists in focusing primarily on only the simplest mode of organization in which operations are envisaged as occurring sequentially. Increasingly, though, biologists are recognizing that the mechanisms they confront are non-sequential and the operations nonlinear. To understand how such mechanisms function through time, they are turning to computational models and tools of dynamical systems theory. ...}, xref = {In RHT collectipon. \no21}, topic = {mechanisms;developmental-biology;} } @book{ bechtel_wp-graham_g1:1997a, author = {William Bechtel and George Graham}, title = {A Companion to Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1997}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {cognitive-science-survey;} } @article{ bechtel_wp-mundale:1999a, author = {William P. Bechtel and Jennifer Mundale}, title = {Multiple Realizability Revisited: Linking Cognitive and Neural States}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1999}, volume = {66}, number = {2}, pages = {175--207}, topic = {philosophy-of-cogscifoundations-of-psychology; neurocognition;} } @article{ beck_j:2019a, author = {Jacob Beck}, title = {Perception Is Analog: The Argument from {W}eber's Law}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {116}, number = {6}, pages = {319--349}, topic = {analog-digital;perception;} } @article{ beck_jc-fox_ms:2000a, author = {J. Christopher Beck and Mark S. Fox}, title = {Dynamic Problem Structure Analysis as a Basis for Constraint-Directed Scheduling Heuristics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {117}, number = {1}, pages = {31--81}, acontentnote = {Abstract: While the exploitation of problem structure by heuristic search techniques has a long history in AI (Simon, 1973), many of the advances in constraint-directed scheduling technology in the 1990s have resulted from the creation of powerful propagation techniques. In this paper, we return to the hypothesis that understanding of problem structure plays a critical role in successful heuristic search even in the presence of powerful propagators. In particular, we examine three heuristic commitment techniques and show that the two techniques based on dynamic problem structure analysis achieve superior performance across all experiments. More interestingly, we demonstrate that the heuristic commitment technique that exploits dynamic resource-level non-uniformities achieves superior overall performance when those non-uniformities are present in the problem instances. }, topic = {scheduling;constraint-based-reasoning;heuristics;search;} } @article{ beck_jc-fox_ms:2000b, author = {J. Christopher Beck and Mark S. Fox}, title = {Constraint-Directed Techniques for Scheduling Alternative Activities}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {121}, number = {1--2}, pages = {211--250}, topic = {constraint-based-reasoning;scheduling;} } @article{ beck_s:1996a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {Quantified Structures as Barriers for {LF} Movement}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1996}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {1--56}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;LF;} } @article{ beck_s:1997a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {On the Semantics of Comparative Conditionals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {229--271}, topic = {nl-semantics;comparative-constructions;} } @inproceedings{ beck_s:1998a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {{NP} Dependent Readings of `Different'}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VIII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1998}, editor = {Devon Strolovitch and Aaron Lawson}, pages = {19--35}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;`different';} } @incollection{ beck_s:1999a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {Plural Predication and Partitional Discourses}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {67--72}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;nl-quantifiers;} } @inproceedings{ beck_s:1999b, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {Reciprocals and Cumulation}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IX}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1999}, editor = {Tanya Matthews and Devon Strolovitch}, pages = {16--33}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;reciprocal-constructions;} } @article{ beck_s:2000a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {The Semantics of `Different': Comparison Operator and Relational Adjective}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2000}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {101--139}, topic = {identity;sameness/difference;comparative-constructions;} } @inproceedings{ beck_s:2000b, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {Exception in Relational Plurals}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {X}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2000}, editor = {Brendan Jackson and Tanya Matthews}, pages = {1--16}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;exception-constructions;} } @article{ beck_s:2001a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {Reciprocals are Definites}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {69--138}, topic = {reciprocal-constructions;} } @article{ beck_s:2006a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {Focus on \emph{Again}}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2006}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {277--314}, topic = {focus;presupposition;`again';} } @article{ beck_s:2007a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {Intervention Effects follow from Focus Intervention}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2006}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {1--56}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Beck"}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-semantics;sentence-focus;} } @incollection{ beck_s:2011a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {Comparison Constructions}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {1341--1388}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;comparative-constructions;} } @article{ beck_s:2012a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {Pluractional Comparisons}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2012}, volume = {35}, number = {1}, pages = {57--110}, abstract = {This paper develops a semantic analysis of data like 'It is getting colder and colder'. Their meaning is argued to arise from a combination of a comparative with pluractionality. The analysis is embedded in a general theory of plural predication and pluractionality. It supports a semantic theory involving a family of syntactic plural operators.}, topic = {comparative-constructions; pluractionality;} } @article{ beck_s:2020a, author = {Sigrid Beck}, title = {Readings of Scalar Particles: Noch/Still}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2020}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {1--67}, abstract = {The paper develops a uniform compositional analysis of the various readings of the scalar particle still and its German counterpart noch. Noch/still is a presuppositional scalar particle that gives rise to implicatures. Interpretive possibilities arise through different choices for the scale that the particle associates with, different attachment sites in the syntax, and interaction with focus. ... The implicatures triggered by the scalar item open an interesting perspective for the generation of implicatures in general.}, topic = {'still';implicature;sentence-focus;} } @article{ beck_s-etal:2008a, author = {Sigrid Beck and Luka Crnic and Thilo G\"otz}, title = {Ruin and Restitution}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2008}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {111--114}, topic = {nl-semantics;ability;} } @article{ beck_s-rullmann:1999a, author = {Sigrid Beck and Hotze Rullmann}, title = {A Flexible Approach to Exhaustivity in Questions}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1999}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {249--298}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @article{ beck_s-sutherland_u:2000a, author = {Sigrid Beck and Uli Sutherland}, title = {Cumulation is Needed: A Reply to {W}inter (2000)}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2000}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {349--371}, xref = {Discussion of winter_y:2000a.}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;distributive/collective-readings;} } @inproceedings{ beck_s-tiemann_s:2017a, author = {Sigrid Beck and Sonja Tiemann}, title = {Towards a Model of Incremental Composition}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 21}, editor = {Robert Truswell and Chris Cummins and Caroline Heycock and Brian Rabern and Hannah Rohde}, year = {2017}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {Universoty of Edinburgh}, address = {Edinburgh}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/DRjNjViN/}, abstract = {This paper reviews some recent psycholinguistic results on semantic processing and explores their consequences for a cognitively plausible model of incremental composition. We argue that semantic composition is neither strictly incremental (in the sense that every incoming word is composed immediately) nor global (in the sense that composition only proceeds when the entire syntactic structure is available).}, topic = {semantic-processing;compositionality;} } @article{ beck_sd-etal:2014a, author = {Sarah D. Beck and Daniel P. Weisberg and Patrick Burns and Kevin J. Biggs}, title = {Conditional Reasoning and Emotional Experience: A Review of the Development of Counterfactual Thinking}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2014}, volume = {102}, number = {4}, pages = {673--689}, topic = {conditionals;developmental-psychology;imagination;} } @article{ becker_a-geiger:1996a, author = {Ann Becker and Dan Geiger}, title = {Optimization of {P}earl's Method of Conditioning and Greedy-Like Approximation Algorithms for the Vertex Feedback Set Problem}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {83}, number = {1}, pages = {167--188}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;conditioning-methods;} } @article{ becker_a-geiger:2001a, author = {Ann Becker and Dan Geiger}, title = {A Sufficiently Fast Algorithm for Finding Close to Optimal Clique Trees}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {125}, number = {1--2}, pages = {3--17}, topic = {AI-algorithms;optimization;} } @book{ becker_gs:1971a, author = {Gary S. Becker}, title = {The Economics of Discrimination}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Chicago, University of Chicago Press}, year = {1971}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {0226041158}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Hd 4903.5 .U5 B39 1971.}, topic = {discrimination;behavioral-economics;} } @book{ becker_gs:1976a, author = {Gary S. Becker}, title = {The Economic Approach to Human Behavior}, publisher = {Chicago University of Chicago Press}, year = {1976}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {0226041115}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, HB 71 .B431.}, topic = {behavioral-economics;} } @book{ becker_gs:1996a, author = {Gary S. Becker}, title = {Accounting For Tastes}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0674543564 (alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Hf 5415.32 .B431 1996.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Economics shelves}, topic = {market-research;preferences;consumer-behavior;behavioral-economics;} } @book{ becker_ko:1967a, author = {Karl O. Becker}, title = {Die wirtschaftliche {E}ntscheidungen des {H}aushalt}, publisher = {Duncker \&\ Humblot}, year = {1968}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-3-428-00075-3}, topic = {decision-making;} } @article{ becker_l1:1972a, author = {L. Becker}, title = {Foreknowledge and Predestination}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1972}, volume = {81}, number = {321}, pages = {138--141}, topic = {(in)determinism;foreknowledge;} } @article{ becker_l2:2001a, author = {Lon Becker}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Quantum Mechanics of Minds and Worlds}, by {J}effrey {A}lan {B}arrett}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {3}, pages = {482--484}, xref = {Review of: barrett_ja:1999a.}, topic = {foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;branching-time;} } @book{ becker_o:1952a, author = {Oskar Becker}, title = {Einf\"urung {L}ogistik vorz\"uglich in den {M}odalkalk\"ul}, publisher = {Anton Hain}, year = {1951}, address = {Meisenheim an {G}lan}, xref = {JSL 18.4}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ becker_o-leopold_u:1996a, author = {Otwin Becker and Ulrike Leopold}, title = {The Bounds and Likelihood Procedure, A Simulation Study Concerning the Efficiency of Visual Forecasting Techniques}, journal = {Central European Journal of Operations Research and Economics}, year = {1996}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, topic = {limited-rationality;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ becker_s:1993a, author = {Sue Becker}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}ntroduction to Neural and Cognitive Modeling}, by {D}aniel {S}. {L}evine}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {62}, number = {1}, pages = {113--116}, xref = {Review of levine_ds:1991a.}, topic = {cognitive-modeling;neurocognition;} } @incollection{ becker_t:1998a, author = {Tilman Becker}, title = {Fully Lexicalized Head-Driven Syntactic Generation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Natural Language Generation}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Eduard Hovy}, pages = {208--217}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-generation;HPSG;} } @inproceedings{ becker_t-etal:1998a, author = {Tilman Becker and Wolfgang Finkler and Anne Kilger and Peter Poller}, title = {An Efficient Kernel for Multilingual Generation in Speech-to-Speech Dialogue Translation }, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {110--116}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {speech-to-speech-machine-translation;} } @book{ beckermann_a-etal:2009a, editor = {Ansgar Beckermann and Brian P. McLaughlin and Sven Walter}, title = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199262618}, rtnote = {Available electronically through UMich Library}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ beckers_s:2021a, author = {Sander Beckers}, title = {Causal Sufficiency and Actual Causation}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {6}, pages = {1341--1374}, abstract = {This paper offers ... six formal definitions of causal sufficiency and two interpretations of necessity. Combining the two gives twelve new definitions of actual causation. ... One definition comes out as being superior to all others, and is therefore suggested as a new definition of actual causation.}, xref = {Correction: beckers_s:2021b}, topic = {causality;causal-networks;} } @article{ beckers_s:2021b, author = {Sander Beckers}, title = {Correction to: Causal Sufficiency and Actual Causation}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {6}, pages = {1375--1375}, xref = {Correction to: beckers_s:2021a}, topic = {causality;causal-networks;} } @incollection{ beckert_b:1998a, author = {Bernhard Beckert}, title = {Rigid {E}-Unification}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {I}, Foundations: Calculi and Methods}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;unification-of-FSs;} } @article{ beckert_b-gore:2001a, author = {Bernhard Beckert and Rajeev Gor\'e}, title = {Free-Variable Tableaux for Propositional Modal Logics}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {69}, number = {1}, pages = {59--96}, topic = {proof-theory;semantic-tableaux;modal-logic;autoepistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ beckert_b-hanle:1998a, author = {Bernhard Beckert and R. H\"anle}, title = {Analytic Tableaux}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {I}, Foundations: Calculi and Methods}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;proof-theory;} } @incollection{ beckett_a:2008a, author = {Andy Beckett}, title = {Santiago Dreaming}, booktitle = {The Mechanical Mind in History}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Phil Husbands and Owen Holland and Michael Wheeler}, pages = {213--218}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @article{ beckman_a:2002a, author = {Arnold Beckman}, title = {Review of `Incompleteness Theorems and $S^i_2$ Versus $S^{i+1}_2$' and `{G}\"odel Sentences of Unbounded Arithmetic', by {G}aisi {T}akeuti}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {433--435}, xref = {Review of: takeiti_g:1998a, takeiti_g:2000a.}, topic = {bounded-arithmetic;P=NP-problem;} } @article{ beckman_f:1994a, author = {Frank Beckman}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}rgument Structure}, by {J}ane {G}rimshaw}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1994}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {103--131}, xref = {Review of: grimshaw:1990a.}, topic = {argument-structure;} } @article{ beckman_l-etal:1976a, author = {Lennart Beckman and Anders Haraldson, \"Osten Oskarsson and Erik Sandewall}, title = {A Partial Evaluator, and Its Use as a Programming Tool}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1976}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {319--357}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Programs which perform partial evaluation, beta-expansion, and certain optimizations on programs, are studied with respect to implementation and application. Two implementations are described, one ``interpretive'' partial evaluator, which operates directly on the program to be partially evaluated, and a ``compiling'' system, where the program to be partially evaluated is used to generate a specialized program, which in its turn is executed to do the partial evaluation. Three applications with different requirements on these programs are described. Proofs are given for the equivalence of the use of the interpretive system and the compiling system in two of the three cases. The general use of the partial evaluator as a tool for the programmer in conjunction with certain programming techniques is discussed. }, topic = {partial-evaluation;optimization;} } @article{ beckman_me-pierrehumbert:1986a, author = {Mary E. Beckman and Janet Pierrehumbert}, title = {Intonational Structure in {J}apanese and {E}nglish}, journal = {Phonology Yearbook}, year = {1986}, volume = {3}, pages = {15--70}, url = {http://www.google.com/url?q=http://faculty.wcas.northwestern.edu/~jbp/publications/intonation_japanese_english.pdf}, topic = {intonation;} } @incollection{ bedau:1986a, author = {Mark Bedau}, title = {Cartesian Interaction}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {X}: Studies in the Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {483--502}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {mind-body-problem;} } @incollection{ bedau:1997a, author = {Mark A. Bedau}, title = {Weak Emergence}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 11: Mind, Causation, and World}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {375--399}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {emergence;} } @article{ bedau:2008a, author = {Mark A. Bedau}, title = {Is Weak Emergence Just in the Mind?}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {4}, pages = {443--459}, abstract = {Weak emergence is the view that a system's macro properties can be explained by its micro properties but only in an especially complicated way. This paper explains a version of weak emergence based on the notion of explanatory incompressibility and `crawling the causal web.' Then it examines three reasons why weak emergence might be thought to be just in the mind }, topic = {emergence;} } @book{ bedau-humphreys_p:2007a, editor = {Mark A. Bedau and Paul Humphreys}, title = {Emergence}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Cambridge, Massachsetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-52475-9}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Edited Shelves.}, topic = {emergence;} } @book{ bedau-humphreys_p:2008a, editor = {Mark A. Bedau and Paul Humphreys}, title = {Emergence: Contemporary Readings in Philosophy and Science}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-52475-9}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {emergence;} } @article{ beddor_b-goldstein_s:2018a, author = {Bob Beddor and Simon Goldstein}, title = {Believing Epistemic Contradictions}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {87--114}, topic = {epistemic-logic;dynamic-logic;belief;} } @article{ beddor_b-goldstein_s:2021a, author = {Bob Beddor and Simon Goldstein}, title = {Mighty Knowledge}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2021}, volume = {118}, number = {5}, pages = {229--269}, topic = {epistemic-modals;knowledge;} } @article{ beddor_r:2019a, author = {Bob Beddor}, title = {Subjective Disagreement}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2019}, volume = {53}, number = {4}, pages = {819--851}, topic = {predicates-of-taste;context;} } @article{ beebe_m:1979a, author = {Michael Beebe}, title = {How Beliefs Find Their Objects}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {595--608}, topic = {singular-propositions;belief;} } @article{ beebee_h:2002a, author = {Helen Beebee}, title = {Reply to {H}uemer on the Consequence Argument}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2002}, volume = {111}, number = {2}, pages = {235--241}, topic = {(in)determinism;} } @incollection{ beebee_h:2004a, author = {Helen Beebee}, title = {Causing and Nothingness}, booktitle = {Causation and Counterfactuals}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {John Collins and Ned Hall and Laurie A. Paul}, pages = {291--308}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {causality;conditionals;} } @article{ beebee_h:2011a, author = {Helen Beebee}, title = {Necessary Connections and the Problem of Induction}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2011}, volume = {44}, number = {3}, pages = {504--527}, topic = {foundations-of-induction;metaphysics;} } @book{ beebee_h-etal:2017a, editor = {Helen Beebee and Christopher Hitchcock and Huw Price}, title = {Making a Difference: Essays on the Philosophy of Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Helen Beebee and Christopher Hitchcock and Huw Price, "Introduction" 2. Daniel Nolan, "Causal Counterfactuals and Impossible Worlds" 3. Rachael Briggs, "Two Interpretations of the Ramsey Test" 4. Cei Maslen, "Pragmatic Explanations of the Proportionality Constraint on Causation" 5. Huw Price, "Causation, Intervention, and Agency: Woodward on Menzies and Price" 6. David Braddon-Mitchell, "The Glue of the Universe" 7. Christopher Hitchcock, "Actual Causation: What's the Use?" 8. Nancy Cartwright, "Can Structural Equations Explain How Mechanisms Explain?" 9. Peter Menzies, "The Problem of Counterfactual Isomorphs" 10. Thomas Blanchard and Jonathan Schaffer, "Cause without Default" 11. Brad Weslake, "Difference-making, Closure and Exclusion" 12. Philip Pettit, "The Program Model, Difference-Makers, and the Exclusion Problem" 13. James Woodward, "Intervening in the Exclusion Argument" 14. Christian List and Peter Menzies,e "My Brain Made Me Do It: The Exclusion Argument Against Free Will and What's Wrong With It" 15. Helen Beebee, "Epiphenomenalism for Functionalists" 16. Peter Menzies, "The Consequence Argument Disarmed: an Interventionist Perspective" } , topic = {causality;philosophy-of-science;levels-of-scientific-representation;reducibiliry;} } @article{ beebee_h-papineau_d:1997a, author = {Helen Beebee and David Papineau}, title = {Probability as a Guide to Life}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {94}, number = {5}, pages = {217--243}, topic = {probability;foundations-of-utility;} } @article{ beebee_h-rush_m:2003a, author = {Helen Beebee and Michael Rush}, title = {Non-Paradoxical Multi-Location}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2003}, volume = {63}, number = {4}, pages = {311--317}, xref = {Commentary on: barker_s-dowe_p:2003a}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @book{ beebee_h-sabbartonleary_n:2010a, editor = {Helen Beebee and Nigel Sabbarton-Leary}, title = {The Semantics and Metaphysics of Natural Kinds}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2010}, address = {London}, xref = {Review: law_s:2012a}, topic = {natural-kinds;} } @incollection{ beeferman_d:1998a, author = {Doug Beeferman}, title = {Lexical Discovery with an Enriched Semantic Network}, booktitle = {Use of {W}ord{N}et in Natural Language Processing Systems: Proceedings of the Conference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Sanda Harabagiu}, pages = {135--141}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, url = {http://www.ai.sri.com/{\user}harabagi/coling-acl98/acl_work/beeferman.ps.gz}, topic = {nl-processing;WordNet;word-acquisition;} } @incollection{ beeferman_d-etal:1997a, author = {Doug Beeferman and Adam Berger and John Lafferty}, title = {Text Segmentation Using Exponential Models}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {35--46}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {empirical-methods-in-nlp;statstical-nlp;corpus-tagging; topic-extraction;} } @inproceedings{ beeferman_d-etal:1997b, author = {Doug Beeferman and Adam Berger and John Lafferty}, title = {A Model of Lexical Attraction and Repulsion}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {373--380}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {speech-recognition;statistical-nlp;} } @inproceedings{ beeferman_s:1996a, author = {Scott Beeferman}, title = {The Rhythm of lexical Stress in Prose}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {302--309}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {prosody;discourse;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ beek_w-etal:2014a, author = {Wouter Beek and Stefan Schlobach and Frank van Harmelen}, title = {Rough Set Semantics for Identity on the Web}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {687--589}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We argue that the traditional notion of equality, is unsuited for many realistic knowledge representation settings. ... We provide a more flexible semantics to identity by assigning meaning to the subrelations of an identity relation in terms of the predicates that are used in a knowledge-base. Using those indiscernability-predicates, we define upper and lower approximations of equality in the style of rought-set theory, resulting in a quality-measure for identity relations. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {world-wide-web;identity;rough-sets;} } @incollection{ beeman_wo:2012a, author = {William O. Beeman}, title = {Anthropological Linguistics}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Linguistics}, publisher = {North Holland}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruth Kempson and Tim Fernando and Nicholas Asher}, pages = {531--551}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;anthropological-linguistics;} } @article{ beer_cg:1999a, author = {Colin G. Beer}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}eadings in Animal Cognition}, edited by {M}arc {B}ekoff and {D}ale {J}amieson}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1999}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {156--160}, xref = {Review of: bekoff-jamieson_d:1997a.}, topic = {animal-cognition;} } @article{ beer_rd:1995a, author = {Randall D. Beer}, title = {A Dynamical Systems Perspective on Agent-Environment Interaction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {72}, number = {1--2}, pages = {173--215}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Using the language of dynamical systems theory, a general theoretical framework for the synthesis and analysis of autonomous agents is sketched. In this framework, an agent and its environment are modeled as two coupled dynamical systems whose mutual interaction is in general jointly responsible for the agent's behavior. In addition, the adaptive fit between an agent and its environment is characterized in terms of the satisfaction of a given constraint on the trajectories of the coupled agent-environment system. The utility of this framework is demonstrated by using it to first synthesize and then analyze a walking behavior for a legged agent. }, topic = {agent-environment-interaction;legged-motion;robotics; dynamic-systems;} } @article{ beeri-etal:1984a, author = {C. Beeri and M. Dowd and Ronald Fagin and Richard Statman}, title = {On the Structure of {A}rmstrong Relations for Functional Dependencies}, journal = {Journal of the {ACM}}, year = {1984}, volume = {31}, number = {1}, pages = {30--46}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {functional-dependencies;} } @article{ beesley:1982a, author = {Kenneth Read Beesley}, title = {Evaluative Adjectives as One-Place Predicates in {M}ontague Grammar}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1982}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {3--4}, abstract = {In this paper I will argue that evaluative adjectives, such as good, bad, clever and skilful, should be analysed as one-place predicates in logical translation. This approach, which is basically the traditional logical treatment of absolute adjectives, is to be contrasted with the approach in Montague (1974a) and Parsons (1972), wherein all adjectives are translated as two-place predicates, i.e. as semantic attributives. The move away from the Montague-Parsons analysis is not new: Bartsch (1972. 1975), McConnell-Ginet (1973), Kamp (1975), Siegel (1976a, 1976b, 1979), Keenan &. Faltz (1978) and Klein (1980) have similarly advocated one-place predicate status, at least for fairly straightforward qualities (e.g. red, carnivorous, stony,) and even for degree adjectives (e.g. tall, short, heavy and old). Evaluatives, however, remain troublesome: Kamp concluded that their status was uncertain, and Siegel classified them as two-place predicates after much argument. My remarks are directed primarily against Siegel's analysis; I intend to show that there are syntactic tests, some suggested by Siegel herself, which argue persuasively that evaluative adjectives should be interpreted as one-place predicates.}, topic = {nl-semantics;adjectives;} } @incollection{ beesley:1998a, author = {Kenneth R. Beesley}, title = {Constraining Separated Morphotactic Dependencies in Finite State Grammars}, booktitle = {{FSMNLP'98}: International Workshop on Finite State Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Lauri Karttunen}, pages = {118--127}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-processing;finite-state-nlp;finite-state-morphology;} } @inproceedings{ beesley:1998b, author = {Kenneth R. Beesley}, title = {Consonant Spreading in {A}rabic Stems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {117--123}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {Arabic-language;computational-phonology;} } @article{ beesley:2001a, author = {Kenneth R. Beesley}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} Computational Theory of Writing Systems}, by {R}ichard {S}proat}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2001}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {464--467}, xref = {Review of: sproat:2000a}, topic = {writing-systems;nl-processing;} } @book{ beesley-karttunen_l:2003a, author = {Kenneth R. Beesley and Lauri Karttunen}, title = {Finite State Morphology}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2003}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1575864339}, xref = {Review: wintner:2004a.}, topic = {finite-state-morphology;finite-state-nlp;finite-state-phonology;} } @incollection{ beeson_mj:1988a, author = {Michael J. Beeson}, title = {Computerizing Mathematics: Logic and Computation}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {191--225}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {computer-assisted-science;computer-assisted-mathematics;} } @inproceedings{ beeson_mj:1998a, author = {Michael J. Beeson}, title = {Automatic Generation of Epsilon-Delta Proofs of Continuity}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation: Proceedings of {AISC'98}}, year = {1998}, editor = {Jacques Calmet and Jan Plaza}, pages = {67--83}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {theorem-proving;limit-proofs;} } @article{ beeson_mj:2016a, author = {Michael J. Beeson}, title = {Constructive Geometry and the Parallel Postulate}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2016}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {1--104}, topic = {constructive-mathematics;formalizations-of-geometry;} } @article{ beeson_p-etal:2010a, author = {Patrick Beeson and Joseph Modayil and Benjamin Kuipers}, title = {Factoring the Mapping Problem: Mobile Robot Map-building in the Hybrid Spatial Semantic Hierarchy}, journal = {The International Journal of Robotics Research}, year = {2010}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {428--459}, abstract = {We propose a factored approach to mobile robot map-building that handles qualitatively different types of uncertainty by combining the strengths of topological and metrical approaches. Our framework is based on a computational model of the human cognitive map thus it allows robust navigation and communication within several different spatial ontologies. This paper focuses exclusively on the issue of mapbuilding using the framework. Our approach factors the mapping problem into natural subgoals: building a metrical representation for local small-scale spaces; finding a topological map that represents the qualitative structure of large-scale space; and (when necessary) constructing a metrical representation for large-scale space using the skeleton provided by the topological map. We describe how to abstract a symbolic description of the robot's immediate surround from local metrical models, how to combine these local symbolic models in order to build global symbolic models, and how to create a globally consistent metrical map from a topological skeleton by connecting local frames of reference.}, topic = {map-building;} } @book{ beetz-etal:2002a, editor = {ichael Beetz and Joachim Hertzberg and Malik Ghallab and Martha E. Pollack}, title = {Advances in Plan-Based Control of Robotic Agents}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2002}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {cognitive-robotics;} } @inproceedings{ beetz-mcdermott_d:1992a, author = {Michael Beetz and Drew McDermott}, title = {Declarative Goals in Reactive Plans}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence Systems: Proceedings of the First International Conference}, year = {1992}, pages = {3--12}, missinginfo = {publisher}, topic = {planning;plan-monitoring;} } @article{ begeer:2005a, author = {Sander Begeer}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Discovery of the Artificial: Behaviour, Mind and Machines Before and Beyond Cybernetics}, by {R}oberto {C}ordeschi}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2005}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {264--268}, xref = {Review of: cordeschi:2002a.}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @phdthesis{ beghelli:1995a, author = {F. Beghelli}, title = {The Phrase Structure of Quantifier Scope}, school = {Linguistics Department, UCLA}, year = {1995}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Los Angeles, California}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;} } @incollection{ beghelli:1997a, author = {Filippo Beghelli}, title = {The Syntax of Distributivity and Pair-List Readings}, booktitle = {Ways of Scope Taking}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {Anna Szabolcsi}, pages = {349--408}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;distributivity-of-quantifiers;nl-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ beghelli-etal:1997a, author = {Fillipo Beghelli and Dorit Ben-Shalom and Anna Szabolski}, title = {Variation, Distributivity, and the Illusion of Branching}, booktitle = {Ways of Scope Taking}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {Anna Szabolcsi}, pages = {29--69}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;distributivity-of-quantifiers; branching-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ beghelli-stowell:1997a, author = {Fillipo Beghelli and Tim Stowell}, title = {Distributivity and Negation: The Syntax of {\it Each} and {\it Every}}, booktitle = {Ways of Scope Taking}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {Anna Szabolcsi}, pages = {71--107}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;nl-quantifiers;distributivity-of-quantifiers;} } @article{ begum-karray:2011a, author = {Momotaz Begum and Fakhri Karray}, title = {Visual Attention for Robotic Cognition: A Survey}, journal = {{IEEE} Transactions on Autonomous Mental Development}, year = {2011}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {92--105}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no13}, topic = {attention;cognitive-robotics;} } @book{ behforooz-hudson_fj:1996a, author = {Ali Behforooz and Frederick J. Hudson}, title = {Software Engineering Fundamentals}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0195105397 (cloth)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.758 .B441 1996.}, topic = {software-engineering-text;} } @article{ behre_f:1965a, author = {Frank Behre}, title = {J.L. Austin's `If'}, journal = {English Studies}, year = {1965}, volume = {46}, pages = {85--92}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {JL-Austin;conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ beil:1997a, author = {Franz Beil}, title = {The Definiteness Effect in Attributive Comparatives}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1997}, editor = {Aaron Lawson}, pages = {37--54}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;comparative-constructions;} } @article{ beimgraben-gerth:2012a, author = {Peter beim Graben and Sabrina Gerth}, title = {Geometric Representations for Minimalist Grammars}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2012}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {393--432}, topic = {nl-syntax;mathematical-linguistics;geometry; complexity-in-linguistics;} } @article{ beirlaen_m-etal:2013a, author = {Mathieu Beirlaen and Christian Stra{\ss}er and Joke Meheus}, title = {An Inconsistency-Adaptive Deontic Logic for Normative Conflicts}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {42}, number = {2}, pages = {285--315}, topic = {deontic-logic;moral-conflict;} } @article{ beirlaen_m-etal:2019a, author = {Mathieu Beirlaen and Jesse Heyninck and Christian Stra{\ss}er}, title = {Structured Argumentation with Prioritized Conditional Obligations and Permissions}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2019}, volume = {29}, number = {2}, pages = {187--214}, abstract = {... In the presence of facts and constraints, we answer the question whether an unconditional obligation or permission is detachable by considering arguments for and against its detachment. For the evaluation of arguments in favour of detachment, we use a Dung-style argumentation-theoretical semantics. We illustrate how violations and contrary-to-duty scenarios are dealt with in our framework and pay special attention to conflict-resolution via priorities.}, topic = {structured-argumentation;deontic-logic;conditional-obligation;} } @article{ bejar-etal:2005a, author = {Ram\'on B\'ejar and Carmal Domschlak and C\`esar Fern\'andez and Carla Gomes and Bhaskar Krishnamachari andd Bart Selman and Magda Valls}, title = {Sensor Networks and Distributed {CSP}: Communication, Computation and Complexity}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {161}, number = {1--2}, pages = {117--147}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;distributed-processing;} } @book{ bekey-etal:2008a, author = {George Bekey and Robert Ambrose and Vijay Kumar and David Lavery and Arthur Sanderson and Brian Wilcox and Junku Yuh and Yuan Zheng}, title = {Robotics: State of the Art and Future Challenges}, publisher = {Imperial College Press}, year = {2008}, address = {London}, ISBN = {978-1-84816-006-4}, xref = {Review: stanton_s-williams_ma:2008a.}, topic = {robotics;} } @article{ beklemishev:1996a, author = {Lev D. Beklemishev}, title = {Bimodal Logics for Extensions of Arithmetical Theories}, journal = {The Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {61}, number = {1}, pages = {91--124}, topic = {provability-logic;} } @article{ beklemishev:2007a, author = {Lev D. Beklemishev}, title = {Review of \emph{{G}\"odel's Theorem: An Incomplete Guide to its Use and Abuse}, by {T}orkel {F}ranz\'en}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {241--243}, xref = {Review of: franzen:2005a}, topic = {(in)completeness;goedels-first-theorem; philosophy-of-computation;} } @article{ beklemishev-etal:2014a, author = {Lev D. Beklemishev and David Fern\'andez-Duque and J oost J. Joosten}, title = {On Provability Logics with Linerarly Ordered Modalities}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2014}, volume = {102}, number = {3}, pages = {541--566}, topic = {provability-logic;} } @book{ bekoff-jamieson_d:1997a, editor = {Marc Bekoff and Dale Jamieson}, title = {Readings in Animal Cognition}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-52208-X}, topic = {animal-cognition;} } @phdthesis{ belardinelli_f:2006a, author = {Francesco Belardinelli}, title = {Quantified Modal Logic and the Ontology of Physical Objects}, school = {Scuola Normale Superiore}, year = {2006}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Pisa}, topic = {first-order-modal-logic;ontology;} } @inproceedings{ belardinelli_f:2014a, author = {Francesco Belardinelli}, title = {Satisfiability of Alternating-Time Temporal Epistemic Logic Through Tableaux}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {398--407}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In this paper we present a tableau-based method to decide the satisfiability of formulas in ATEL, an extension of the alternating-time temporal logic ATL including epistemic modalities for individual knowledge. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {epistemic-logic;alternating-time-logic;} } @inproceedings{ belardinelli_f-etal:2010a, author = {Francesco Belardinelli and Alessio Lomuscio}, title = {Interactions between Time and Knowledge in a First-order Logic for Multi-Agent Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {38--48}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We investigate a class of first-order temporal-epistemic logics for reasoning about multi-agent systems. We encode typical properties of systems including perfect recall, synchronicity, no learning, and having a unique initial state in terms of variants of quantified interpreted systems, a first-order extension of interpreted systems. We identify several monodic fragments of first-order temporal-epistemic logic and show their completeness with respect to their corresponding classes of quantified interpreted systems.}, topic = {temporal-logic;epistemic-logic;multiagent-systems;} } @inproceedings{ belardinelli_f-etal:2012a, author = {Francesco Belardinelli and Alessio Lomuscio and Fabio Patrizi}, title = {An Abstraction Technique for the Verification of Artifact-Centric Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {319--328}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We explore the paradigm of artifact-centric systems from a knowledge-based perspective. We provide a semantics based on interpreted-systems to interpret a first-order temporalepistemic language with identity in a multi-agent setting. We consider the model checking problem for this language and provide abstraction results. We isolate a natural subclass of artifact-systems for which the model checking problem is decidable. We give an upper bound on the complexity of the model checking problem.}, topic = {kr;artifacts;} } @inproceedings{ belardinelli_f-etal:2018a, author = {Francesco Belardinelli and Catalin Dima and Aniello Murano}, title = {Bisimulations for Logics of Strategies: A Study in Expressiveness and Verification}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {425--434}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We present a novel three-valued semantics for ATL*, respectively ATL, under bounded recall and imperfect information, and study the corresponding model checking problems. Most importantly, we show that the three-valued semantics constitutes an approximation with respect to the traditional two-valued semantics. In the light of this we construct a sound, albeit partial, algorithm for model checking two-valued perfect recall via its approximation as three-valued bounded recall. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {alternating-time-logic;model-checking;} } @inproceedings{ belardinelli_f-etal:2018b, author = {Francesco Belardinelli and Alessio Lomuscio and Vadim Malvone}, title = {Approximating Perfect Recall When Model Checking Strategic Abilities}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {435--444}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We investigate the notion of bounded recall in the context of model checking ATL* and ATL specifications in multi-agent systems with imperfect information. We present a novel three-valued semantics for ATL*, respectively ATL, under bounded recall and imperfect information, and study the corresponding model checking problems. Most importantly, we show that the three-valued semantics constitutes an approximation with respect to the traditional two-valued semantics.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {alternating-time-logic;model-checking;multivalued-logic;} } @inproceedings{ belardinelli_f-lomuscio_ar:2007a, author = {Francesco Belardinelli and Alessio Lomuscio}, title = {Quantified Epistemic Logics with Flexible Terms}, booktitle = {{LORI-2007}: Proceedings of of the Workshop on Logic, Rationality and Interaction}, year = {2007}, editor = {Johan van Benthem, Shier Ju and Frank Veltman}, pages = {113--128}, publisher = {College Publications}, address = {London}, abstract = {We present a family of quantified epistemic logics for reasoning about knowledge in multi-agent systems. The language enjoys flexible terms with different denotations depending on the epistemic context in which they are interpreted. We present syntax and semantics of the language formally and show completeness of an axiomatisation. We discuss the expressive features of the language by means of an example}, topic = {epistemic-logic;multiagent-systems;context;} } @incollection{ belardinelli_f-lomuscio_ar:2008a, author = {Francesco Belardinelli and Alessio Lomuscio}, title = {A Complete First-Order Logic of Knowledge and Time}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {705--714}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {We introduce and investigate quantified interpreted systems, a semantics to reason about knowledge and time in a first order setting. We provide an axiomatisation, which we show to be sound and complete. We utilise the formalism to study message passing systems (Lamport 1978; Fagin et al 1995) in a first-order setting, and compare the results obtained to those available for the propositional case. }, topic = {epistemic-logic;temporal-logic;} } @article{ belardinelli_f-lomuscio_ar:2009a, author = {Francesco Belardinelli and Alessio R. Lomuscio}, title = {Quantified Epistemic Logics for Reasoning about Knowledge in Multi-Agent Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {9--10}, pages = {982--1013}, topic = {epistemic-logic;multiagent-systems;} } @article{ belardinelli_f-lomuscio_ar:2009b, author = {Francesco Belardinelli1 and Alessio Lomuscio}, title = {A Complete Quantified Epistemic Logic for Reasoning About Knowledge in Multi-Agent Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {9--10}, pages = {982--1013}, abstract = {We introduce quantified interpreted systems, a semantics to reason about knowledge in multi-agent systems in a first-order setting. Quantified interpreted systems may be used to interpret a variety of first-order modal epistemic languages with global and local terms, quantifiers, and individual and distributed knowledge operators for the agents in the system. We define first-order modal axiomatisations for different settings, and show that they are sound and complete with respect to the corresponding semantical classes.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;multiagent-systems;communication-protocols;} } @inproceedings{ belardinelli_f-malvone_v:2020a, author = {Francesco Belardinelli and Vadim Malvone}, title = {A Three-valued Approach to Strategic Abilities under Imperfect Information}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {89--98}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {A major challenge for logics for strategies is represented by their verification in contexts of imperfect information. In this contribution we advance the state of the art by approximating the verification of Alternating-time Temporal Logic (ATL) under imperfect information by using perfect information and a three-valued semantics. }, topic = {alternating-time-logic;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ belew:1993a, author = {Richard K. Belew}, title = {Review of \emph{{N}euroscience and Connectionist Theory: Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, $\ldots$}, edited by {M}ark {A}. {G}luck and {D}avid {E}. {R}umelhart}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {62}, number = {1}, pages = {153--161}, topic = {connectionism;neurocognition;} } @incollection{ belkin:1994a, author = {Nicholas J. Belkin}, title = {Design Principles for Electronic Textual Resources: Investigating Uses of Scholarly Information}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Computational Linguistics: Essays in Honour of {D}on {W}alker}, publisher = {Giardini Editori e Stampatori and Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {Antonio Zampolli and Nicoletta Calzolari and Martha Palmer}, pages = {479--488}, address = {Pisa and Dordrecht}, topic = {computer-assisted-scholarship;computers-in-the-humanities;} } @book{ bell_cg-newell_a:1971a, author = {C. Gordon Bell and Allen Newell}, title = {Computer Structures: Readings and Examples}, publisher = {McGraw-Hill}, year = {1971}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-004357-4}, contentnote = {TC: Part 1: The Structure of Computers Part 2: The Instruction-set Processor: Main-line Computers Part 3: The Instruction-set Processor Level: Variations in the Processor Part 4: The Instruction-set Processor Level: Special-function Processors Part 5: The PMS Level Part 6: Computer Families }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. CS Shelves.}, topic = {computer-architectures;computer-engineering;} } @article{ bell_d:1987a, author = {David Bell}, title = {Thoughts}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1987}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {36--50}, topic = {Frege;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ bell_d:1996a, author = {David Bell}, title = {The Formation of Concepts and the Structure of Thoughts}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1996}, volume = {56}, number = {3}, pages = {583--596}, topic = {concepts;} } @incollection{ bell_de:1977a, author = {David E. Bell}, title = {A Decision Analysis of Objectives for a Forest Pest Problem}, booktitle = {Conflicting Objectives in Decisions}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1977}, editor = {David E. Bell and Ralph L. Keeney and Howard Raiffa}, pages = {389--421}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {An applied paper.}, topic = {decision-analysis;multiattribute-utility;} } @book{ bell_de-etal:1977a, editor = {David E. Bell and Ralph L. Keeney and Howard Raiffa}, title = {Conflicting Objectives in Decisions}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1977}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {decision-analysis;multiattribute-utility;foundations-of-utility;} } @incollection{ bell_de-etal:1977b, author = {David E. Bell and Ralph L. Keeney and Howard Raiffa}, title = {Introduction and Overview}, booktitle = {Conflicting Objectives in Decisions}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1977}, editor = {David E. Bell and Ralph L. Keeney and Howard Raiffa}, pages = {1--14}, address = {New York}, topic = {decision-analysis;multiattribute-utility;foundations-of-utility;} } @incollection{ bell_g:1996a, author = {Gordon Bell}, title = {Great and {\it Big} Ideas in Computer Structures}, booktitle = {Mind Matters: A Tribute to {A}llen {N}ewell}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.}, year = {1996}, editor = {David M. Steier and Tom M. Mitchell}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, pages = {189--212}, topic = {computer-architectures;computer-technology;parallel-processing;} } @phdthesis{ bell_j2:1988a, author = {John Bell}, title = {Predictive Conditionals, Nonmonotonicity, and Reasoning about the Future}, school = {University of Essex}, year = {1988}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Colchester}, topic = {conditionals;nonmonotonic-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;} } @article{ bell_j2:1990a, author = {John Bell}, title = {The Logic of Nonmonotonicity}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {41}, number = {3}, pages = {365--374}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ bell_j2:1991a, author = {John Bell}, title = {Pragmatic Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {50--60}, address = {San Mateo, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {kr;kr-course;nonmonotonic-logic;conditional-logic; model-preference;} } @article{ bell_j2:1991b, author = {John Bell}, title = {Extended Causal Theories}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {48}, number = {2}, pages = {211--224}, contentnote = {Solves some technical problems in Shoham's dissertation.}, topic = {Yale-shooting-problem;causality;temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ bell_j2:1995a, author = {John Bell}, title = {Pragmatic Reasoning, A Model-Based Theory}, booktitle = {Applied Logic: How, What, and Why? Logical Approaches to Natural Language}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {L\'aszl\'o P\'olos and Michael Masuch}, pages = {1--27}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files, "Bell"}, topic = {discourse;implicature;nonmonotonic-reasoning;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ bell_j2:1998a, author = {John Bell}, title = {Causation, Conditionals and Common Sense}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Prospects for a Commonsense Theory of Causation}, year = {1998}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publication = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, editor = {Charles L. {Ortiz, Jr.}}, pages = {1--11}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Shelf.}, topic = {causality;temporal-reasoning;planning-formalisms; nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ bell_j2:1999a, author = {John Bell}, title = {Pragmatic Reasoning: Inferring Contexts}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {42--53}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;discourse-representation-theory; nonmonotonic-logic;computer-vision;} } @book{ bell_j2:1999b, editor = {John Bell}, title = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Practical Reasoning and Rationality}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @inproceedings{ bell_j2:1999c, author = {John Bell}, title = {Primary and Secondary Events}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Action and Change}, year = {1999}, editor = {Michael Thielscher}, pages = {65--72}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {action-formalisms;qualification-problem;ramification-problem; defeasible-causality;} } @inproceedings{ bell_j2:2001a, author = {John Bell}, title = {Pragmatic Reasoning: Pragmatic Semantics and Semantic Pragmatics}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {45--58}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ bell_j2:2003a, author = {John Bell}, title = {A Common Sense Theory of Causation}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {40--53}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {causality;action-formalisms;} } @incollection{ bell_j2:2004a, author = {John Bell}, title = {Causation and Causal Conditionals}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {2--11}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {causality;conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ bell_j2-huang_zs:1997a1, author = {John Bell and Zhishing Huang}, title = {Dynamic Goal Hierarchies}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Qualitative Preferences in Deliberation and Practical Reasoning}, year = {1997}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {9--17}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, xref = {Republication: bell_j2-huang_zs:1997a2.}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preference-dynamics;foundations-of-utility;} } @incollection{ bell_j2-huang_zs:1997a2, author = {John Bell and Zhishing Huang}, title = {Dynamic Obligation Hierarchies}, booktitle = {Norms, Logics and Information Systems. New Studies in Deontic Logic and Computer Science}, publisher = {IOS Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul McNamara and Henry Prakken}, pages = {231--246}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Previous publication: bell_j2-huang_zs:1997a2.}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preference-dynamics;foundations-of-utility;} } @inproceedings{ bell_jg:2000a, author = {John G. Bell}, title = {the Representation of Discrete Multi-Resolution Spatial Knowledge}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {38--49}, topic = {spatial-representation;} } @book{ bell_jl:1977a, author = {John L. Bell}, title = {Boolean-Valued Models and Independence Proofs in Set Theory}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1977}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198531680}, rtnote = {UMich Shapiro Science - 4th floor QA 248 .B43}, topic = {continuum-hypothesis;set-theory;boolean-algebras;} } @article{ bell_jl:1993a, author = {John L. Bell}, title = {Hilbert's $\epsilon$-Operator and Classical Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1993}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {1--18}, topic = {epsilon-operator;} } @article{ bell_jl:1999a, author = {John L. Bell}, title = {Frege's Theorem in a Constructive Setting}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {64}, number = {2}, pages = {486--488}, topic = {set-theory;constructive-mathematics;} } @article{ bell_jl:2000a, author = {John L. Bell}, title = {Sets and Classes as Many}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {29}, number = {6}, pages = {585--601}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ bell_jl:2007a, author = {John L, Bell}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}ynthetic Differential Geometry}, by {A}nders {K}ock}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {244--245}, xref = {Review of: kock:2006a}, topic = {constructive-mathematics;synthetic-differential-geometry;} } @incollection{ bell_jl:2012a, author = {John L. Bell}, title = {Types, Sets, and Categories}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 6: Sets and Extensions in the Twentieth Century}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2012}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Akihiro Kanamori and John Woods}, pages = {633--687}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;set-theory;type-theory;} } @book{ bell_jl-etal:2001a, author = {John L. Bell and David DeVidi and Graham Solomon}, title = {Logical Options}, publisher = {Broadview Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Peterborough, Ontario}, ISBN = {1-55111-297-3}, topic = {logic-intro;modal-logic;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ bell_jm:1973a, author = {J.M. Bell}, title = {What is Referential Opacity?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1973}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {155--180}, topic = {referential-opacity;} } @article{ bell_js:1964a, author = {John S. Bell}, title = {On the {E}instein-{P}odolsky-{R}osen Paradox}, journal = {Physics}, year = {1964}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {195--290}, topic = {Bell-inequalities;foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @incollection{ bell_js:1989a, author = {Jonn S. Bell}, title = {Six Possible Worlds of Quantum Mechanics}, booktitle = {Possible Worlds in Humanities, Arts and Sciences}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1989}, editor = {Sture All\'en}, pages = {359--373}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @article{ bell_m:1975a, author = {Martin Bell}, title = {Questioning}, journal = {The Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1975}, volume = {25}, number = {100}, pages = {193--212}, topic = {interrogatives;speech-acts;} } @inproceedings{ belle_v-lakemeyer_g:2010a, author = {Vaishak Belle and Gerhard Lakemeyer}, title = {Multi-Agent Only-Knowing Revisited}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {49--59}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... Despite its appeal, all attempts to extend only-knowing to the many agent case have undesirable properties. ... In this paper, we propose a new account of multi-agent only-knowing which, for the first time, has a natural possible-world semantics for a quantified language with equality. We then provide, for the propositional fragment, a sound and complete axiomatization that faithfully lifts Levesque's proof theory to the many agent case. We also discuss comparisons to the earlier approach by Halpern and Lakemeyer. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc22\Halpern2.pdf}, topic = {only-knowing;multiagent-epistemic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ belle_v-lakemeyer_g:2014a, author = {Vaishak Belle and Gerhard Lakemeyer}, title = {On the Progression of Knowledge in Multiagent Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {590--593}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we study the progression of knowledge in multiagent settings, where after actions, an agent updates her beliefs but also updates what she believes other agents know given what has occurred. By appealing to the notion of only knowing, we are able to avoid limitations of earlier work on multiagent progression, and obtain a new general account: we show that after an action, knowledge bases are updated in a Lin and Reiter fashion at every nesting of modalities. Consequently, recent results on the first-order definability of progression carry over to a multiagent setting without too much effort. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {progression;multiagent-systems;} } @inproceedings{ belle_v-levesque_hj:2014a, author = {Vaishak Belle and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {How to Progress Beliefs in Continuous Domains}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {438--447}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {When Lin and Reiter introduced the progression of basic action theories ... their account does not deal with probabilistic uncertainty about the initial situation nor with effector or sensor noise, as often needed in robotic applications. In this paper, we obtain results on how to progress continuous degrees of belief against continuous effector and sensor noise in a semantically correctfashion. Most significantly, and perhaps surprisingly, we identify conditions under which our account is not only as efficient as the filtering mechanism scommonly used in robotics, but considerably more general. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {progression;continuity;reasoning-about-noisy-sensors;} } @inproceedings{ belle_v-levesque_hj:2016a, author = {Vaishak Belle and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Foundations for Generalized Planning in Unbounded Stochastic Domains}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {380--389}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Generalized plans, such as plans with loops, are widely used in AI. ... However, the correctness of such plans is non-trivial to define, making it difficult to provide a clear specification of what we should be looking for. ... we are interested in the applicability and correctness of generalized plans in domains that are possibly unbounded, and/or stochastic, and/or continuous. ...}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {planning-algorithms;} } @incollection{ bellert_i:1971a, author = {Irena Bellert}, title = {On the Semantic Interpretation of Subject-Predicate Relations in Sentences of Particular Reference}, booktitle = {Progress in Linguistics: A Collection of Papers}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1971}, editor = {Manfred Bierwisch and Karl Erich Heidolph}, pages = {9--26}, address = {The Hague}, contentnote = {Linguistic discussion of definite reference, not very well acquainted with philosophical literature.}, topic = {definite-descriptions;definiteness;reference;} } @article{ bellert_i:1997a, author = {Irena Bellert}, title = {On Semantic and Distributional Properties of Sentential Adverbs}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1997}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {337--351}, topic = {nl-semantics;adverbs;} } @incollection{ bellman_kl:2002a, author = {Kirstie L. Bellman}, title = {Emotions: Meaningful Mappings between the Individual and Its World}, booktitle = {Emotions in Humans and Artifacts}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Robert Trappl and Paolo Petta and Sabine Payr}, pages = {149--188}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {emotions;} } @article{ bello_p-bridewell_w:2017a, author = {Paul Bello and Will Bridewell}, title = {There Is No Agency Without Attention}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2017}, volume = {38}, number = {4}, pages = {27--34}, topic = {agency;agent-architectures;attention;} } @inproceedings{ belloni_a-etal:2015a, author = {Aline Belloni and Alain Berger and Olivier Boissier and Gr\'egory Bonnet and Gauvain Bourgne and Pierre-Antoine Chardel Jean-Pierre Cotton and Nicolas Evreux and Jean-Gabriel Ganascia and Philippe Jaillon and Bruno Mermet and Gauthier Picard Bernard Rever and Ga\"ele Simon and Thibault de Swarte and Catherine Tessier and Fran\c{c}ois Vexler and Robert Voyer and Antoine Zimmermann}, title = {Dealing with Ethical Conflicts in Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Ethics: Papers from the 2015 AAAI Workshop}, year = {2015}, editor = {Toby Walsh}, pages = {22--27}, organization = {Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja17}, topic = {computational-ethics;multiagent-systems;} } @article{ bellosta-etal:2011a, author = {Marie-Jo Bellosta and Sylvie Kornman and Daniel Vanderpooten}, title = {Preference-Based {E}nglish Reverse Auctions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {7--8}, pages = {1449--1467}, topic = {auction-protocols;reasoning-about-prefrences;} } @article{ bellott-etal:1999a, author = {P. Bellott and J-P. Cottin and B. Robinet and D. Sarni and J. Leneutre and E. Zarpass}, title = {Prolegomena to a Logic of Causality and Dynamism}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1999}, volume = {62}, number = {1}, pages = {77--105}, topic = {linear-logic;proof-theory;causality;} } @article{ bellucci_f-pietarinen_av:2016a, author = {Francesco Bellucci and Ahti-Veikko Pietarinen}, title = {Existential Graphs as an Instrument of Logical Analysis: Part {I}. {A}lpha}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2016}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {209--237}, topic = {existential-graphs;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1960a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Review of `{N}ondesignating Singular Terms', by {H}ugues {L}eblanc and {T}heodore {H}ailperin}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1960}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {87--88}, xref = {Review of: leblanc_h-hailperin_t:1959a.}, topic = {logic-of-existence;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1960b, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Review of `{E}xistential Presuppositions and Existential Commitments', by {J}aakko {H}intikka}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1960}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {88}, xref = {Review of: hintikka_j:1959a.}, topic = {logic-of-existence;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1960c, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Review of `{T}owards a Theory of Definite Descriptions', by {J}aakko {H}intikka}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1960}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {88--89}, xref = {Review of: hintikka_j:1959b}, topic = {definite-descriptions;reference-gaps;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1962a, author = {Nuel D. Belnap}, title = {Tonk, Plonk and Plink}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1962}, volume = {22}, number = {6}, pages = {130--134}, xref = {Commentary on: prior_an:1960a1}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;natural-deduction;logical-connectives;} } @techreport{ belnap_nd:1963a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {An Analysis of Questions: Preliminary Report}, institution = {System Development Corporation}, number = {TM-1287/000/00}, year = {1963}, address = {Santa Monica, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {interrogatives;interrogative-logic;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd:1969a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Questions: Their Presuppositions, and How They Can Fail to Arise}, booktitle = {The Logical Way of Doing Things}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, year = {1969}, editor = {Karel Lambert}, pages = {23--37}, address = {New Haven, Connecticut}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd:1969b, author = {Nuel D. {Be;lnap, Jr.}}, title = {{\AA}qvist's Corrections-Accumulating Questions Sequences}, booktitle = {Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1969}, editor = {John W. Davis and Donald J. Hockney and W.K. Wilson}, pages = {123--134}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {interrogative-logic;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1970a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Conditional Assertion and Restricted Quantification}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1970}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {1--12}, topic = {conditionals;assertion;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1972a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {{S-P} Interrogatives}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1972}, volume = {1}, number = {3--4}, pages = {331}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd:1973a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Restricted Quantification and Conditional Assertion}, booktitle = {Truth, Syntax and Modality: Proceedings of the {T}emple {U}niversity Conference on Alternative Semantics}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1973}, editor = {Hugues Leblanc}, pages = {48--75}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {conditionals;assertion;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd:1976a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, year = {1976}, title = {How a Computer Should Think}, booktitle = {Contemporary Aspects of Philosophy}, editor = {Gilbert Ryle}, address = {Stocksfield}, publisher = {Oriel Press}, pages = {30--56}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {multivalued-relevance-logic;4-valued-logic;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd:1977a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {A Useful Four-Valued Logic}, booktitle = {Modern Uses of Multiple-Valued Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1977}, editor = {J. Michael Dunn and George Epstein}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {multivalued-logic;} } @unpublished{ belnap_nd:1979a1, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Questions and Answers in {M}ontague Grammar}, year = {1979}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Pittsburgh}, xref = {Publication: belnap_nd:1979a2.}, topic = {nl-semantics;interrogatives;montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd:1979a2, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Questions and Answers in {M}ontague Grammar}, booktitle = {Processes, Beliefs, and Questions}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1982}, editor = {Stanley Peters and Esa Saarinen}, pages = {165--198}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Publication of: belnap_nd:1979a1.}, topic = {nl-semantics;interrogatives;montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd:1982b, author = {Nuel D. Belnap}, title = {Approaches to the Semantics of Questions in Natural Language {II}}, booktitle = {320311: Philosophical Essays Dedicated to {L}ennart {\AA}qvist on His Fiftieth Birthday}, publisher = {Department of Philosophy, University of Uppsala}, year = {1982}, editor = {Tom Pauli}, pages = {16--33}, address = {Uppsala}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja15}, topic = {nl-semantics;interrogatives;montague-grammar;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1982c, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Gupta's Rule of Revision Theory of Truth}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {103--116}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;truth;fixpoints;revision-rules;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1982d, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Display Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {375--417}, topic = {proof-theory;combining-logics;} } @unpublished{ belnap_nd:1988a1, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Declaratives Are Not Enough}, year = {1988}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Publication: belnap_nd:1988a2}, topic = {speech-acts;stit;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1988a2, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Declaratives Are Not Enough}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1989}, volume = {59}, number = {1}, pages = {1--30}, xref = {Publication of: belnap_nd:1988a1}, topic = {imperatives;} } @unpublished{ belnap_nd:1989a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Before Refraining: Concepts for Agency}, year = {1989}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {action;stit;branching-time;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1991a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Backwards and Forwards in the Modal Logic of Agency}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1991}, volume = {51}, pages = {777--807}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {stit;branching-time;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1991b, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap. Jr.}}, title = {Before Refraining: Concepts for Agency}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {1991}, volume = {34}, pages = {137--169}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {MS in RHT collection.}, topic = {stit;} } @article{ belnap_nd:1992a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Branching Space-Time}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1992}, volume = {92}, pages = {385--434}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {branching-time;space-time;} } @unpublished{ belnap_nd:1994a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {An Austere Theory of Strategies}, year = {1994}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Belnap"}, topic = {stit;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd:1996a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Agents in Branching Time}, booktitle = {Logic and Reality: Essays on the Legacy of {A}rthur {P}rior}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jack Copeland}, pages = {239--271}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {action;stit;branching-time;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd:2001a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Double Time References: Speech-Act Reports as Modalities in an Indeterminist Setting}, booktitle = {Advances in Modal Logic, Volume 3}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2001}, editor = {Frank Wolter and Heinrrich Wansing and Maarten de Rijke and Michael Zakharyaschev}, pages = {37--57}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {branching-time;(in)determinism;temporal-logic;} } @article{ belnap_nd:2003a, author = {Nuel D. Belnap}, title = {No-Common-Cause {EPR}-Like Funny Business in Branching Space-Times}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2003}, volume = {114}, number = {3}, pages = {199--221}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de17}, topic = {space-time;branching-time;EPR;} } @article{ belnap_nd:2005a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Under {C}arnap's Lamp: Flat Pre-Semantics}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2005}, volume = {80}, number = {1}, pages = {1--28}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;truth;} } @article{ belnap_nd:2005b, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {A Theory of Causation: Causae Causantes (Originating Causes) as Inus Conditions in Branching Space-Times}, journal = {British Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year = {2005}, volume = {56}, pages = {221--253}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ belnap_nd:2009a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {Truth Values, Neither-true-nor-false, and Supervaluations}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2009}, volume = {91}, number = {3}, pages = {305--334}, topic = {multivalued-logic;supervaluations;branching-time; future-contingent-propositions;} } @article{ belnap_nd:2012a, author = {Nuel D. Belnap}, title = {Newtonian Determinism to Branching Space-Times Indeterminism in Two Moves}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2012}, volume = {188}, number = {1}, pages = {5--21}, topic = {branching-time;space-time;} } @unpublished{ belnap_nd:2012b, author = {Nuel D. Belnap, Jr.}, title = {Internalizing Case-Relative Truth in {CIFOL}}, year = {2012}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my12\belnap1.pdf}, topic = {higher-order-modal-logic;} } @unpublished{ belnap_nd:2012c, author = {Nuel D. Belnap, Jr.}, title = {Bressan's Proof that a Strictly Unique Elementary Range Happens}, year = {2012}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap12}, topic = {higher-order-modal-logic;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd-bartha_p:1995a, author = {{Nuel D. Belnap, Jr.} and Paul Bartha}, title = {Marcus and the Problem of Nested Deontic Modalities}, booktitle = {Modality, Morality, and Belief: Essays in Honor of {R}uth {B}arcan {M}arcus}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Walter S. Armstrong and Diana Raffman and Nicholas Asher}, pages = {174--197}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ belnap_nd-etal:1980a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.} and Anil Gupta and J. Michael Dunn}, title = {A Consequtive Calculus for Positive Relevant Implication with Necessity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {343--362}, topic = {proof-theory;relevance-logic;} } @book{ belnap_nd-etal:2001a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.} and Michael Perloff and Ming Xu}, title = {Facing the Future: Agents and Choices in Our Indeterminist World}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-513878-3}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {action;stit;branching-time;causality;} } @article{ belnap_nd-etal:2021a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.} and Thomas Miller and Tomasz Placek}, title = {New Foundations for Branching Space-Time}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2021}, volume = {109}, number = {2}, pages = {239--283}, topic = {branching-time;space-time;} } @unpublished{ belnap_nd-green_m:1996b, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.} and Mitchell S. Green}, title = {Wagering on the Future}, year = {1996}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, }, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {branching-time;(in)determinism;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd-green_ms:1994a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.} and Mitchell S. Green}, title = {Indeterminism and the Thin Red Line}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 7: Logic and Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {365--388}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {branching-time;(in)determinism;} } @unpublished{ belnap_nd-muller_t:2012a, author = {Nuel D. Belnap, Jr. and Thomas M\"uller}, title = {Case-Intensional First Order Logic ({I}): Towards a Theory of Sorts}, year = {2012}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my12\belnap2.pdf}, topic = {higher-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ belnap_nd-muller_t:2014a, author = {Nuel D. Belnap and Thomas M\"uller}, title = {{CIFOL}: Case-Intensional First Order Logic: (I) Toward a Theory of Sorts}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {2--3}, pages = {393--437}, topic = {modal-logic;foundations-of-modal-logic;higher-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ belnap_nd-muller_t:2014b, author = {Nuel D. Belnap and Thomas M\"uller}, title = {{BH-CIFOL}: Case-Intensional First Order Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {5}, pages = {835--866}, topic = {modal-logic;foundations-of-modal-logic;higher-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ belnap_nd-perloff_m:1988a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.} and Michael Perloff}, title = {Seeing to it That: a Canonical Form for Agentives}, journal = {Theoria}, volume = {54}, year = {1988}, pages = {175--199}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {action;stit;branching-time;} } @incollection{ belnap_nd-perloff_m:1990a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.} and Michael Perloff}, title = {Seeing to it that: A Canonical Form for Agentives}, booktitle = {Knowledge Representation and Defeasible Reasoning}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1990}, editor = {Henry Kyburg and Ronald Loui and Greg Carlson}, pages = {167--190}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {action;stit;} } @article{ belnap_nd-perloff_m:1992a, author = {Nuel D. Belnap. Jr. and Michael Perloff}, title = {The Way of Agent}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1992}, volume = {51}, pages = {463--484}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {stit;} } @article{ belnap_nd-perloff_m:1993a, author = {Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.} and Michael Perloff}, title = {In the Realm of Agents}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {9}, number = {1--2}, pages = {25--48}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my15}, topic = {stit;} } @book{ belnap_nd-steele_tb:1976a, author = {{Nuel D. Belnap, Jr.} and {Thomas B. Steele, Jr.}}, title = {The Logic of Questions and Answers}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, year = {1976}, address = {New Haven}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @book{ belohaver_r-kleer_g:2017a, author = {Radim B\v{e}loh\'aver and George Kleer}, title = {Fuzzy Logic and Mathematics: A Historical Perspective}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {9780190200015}, abstract = {... Each logical system subsumed under FL allows for additional, intermediary truth values, which are interpreted as degrees of truth. These systems are distinguished from one another by the set of truth degrees employed, its algebraic structure, truth functions chosen for logical connectives, and other properties. The book examines from the historical perspective two areas of research on fuzzy logic known as fuzzy logic in the narrow sense (FLN) and fuzzy logic in the broad sense (FLB), which have distinct research agendas. The agenda of FLN is the development of propositional, predicate, and other fuzzy logic calculi. The agenda of FLB is to emulate commonsense human reasoning in natural language and other unique capabilities of human beings. ... the book also examines mathematics based on FL. ... }, topic = {fuzzy-logic;fuzzy-set-theory;} } @article{ belot_g:1998a, author = {Gordon Belot}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}ime's Arrow and {A}rchimedes' Point: New Directions for the Physics of Time}, by {H}uw {P}rice}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1998}, volume = {107}, number = {3}, pages = {477--480}, xref = {Review of: price_h:1996a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;temporal-direction;} } @incollection{ belot_g:2000a, author = {Gordon Belot}, title = {Chaos and Fundamentalism}, booktitle = {{PSA}'1998: Proceedings of the 1998 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2000}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {S454--S465}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;chaos-theory;} } @article{ belot_g:2001a, author = {Gordon Belot}, title = {The Principle of Sufficient Reason}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2000}, volume = {98}, number = {2}, pages = {55--74}, topic = {Leibniz;principle-of-sufficient-reason;} } @book{ belot_g:2011a, author = {Gordon Belot}, title = {Geometric Possibility}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-959532-7}, xref = {Review: maudlin_t:2013a}, topic = {philosophy-of-geometry;} } @article{ belot_g:2018a, author = {Gordon Belot}, title = {Fifty Million {E}lvis Fans Can't be Wrong}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {52}, number = {4}, pages = {946--981}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;possibility;possible-worlds;} } @article{ belpaeme:2007a, author = {Tony Belpaeme}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Computational Nature of Language Learning and Evolution}, by {P}artha {N}iyogi}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2007}, volume = {33}, number = {3}, pages = {429--430}, xref = {Review of: niyogi:2006a}, topic = {language-learning;language-change;} } @unpublished{ beltrama_a:2015a, author = {Andrea Beltrama}, title = {Intensification, Gradability and Social Perception: the Case of `Totally{'}}, year = {2015}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Konstanz}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja17}, topic = {sociolinguistics;intensifiers;} } @article{ beltrama_a:2022a, author = {Andrea Beltrama}, title = {Just Perfect, Simply the Best: An Analysis of Emphatic Exclusion}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {2}, pages = {321--364}, abstract = {... I develop an analysis of these modifiers as a special kind of alternative-targeting operator, whereby the speaker signals that more specific descriptions than the one they just asserted ... need not be asserted in order for a complete representation of the facts to be provided. On this analysis, the intensifying effect of these modifiers are derived from the interaction of exclusivity, granularity, and the distinctive semantic properties of predicates denoting the extreme of a scalar extreme. ...}, topic = {intensifiers;alternatives;} } @article{ beltrametti-cassinelli:1977a, author = {Enrico G. Beltrametti and Gianni Cassinelli}, title = {On State Transitions Induced by Yes-No Experiments, in the Context of Quantum Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {369--379}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @book{ beltrametti-cassinelli:1981a, author = {Enrico G. Beltrametti and Gianni Cassinelli}, title = {The Logic of Quantum Mechanics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1981}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521302358}, rtnote = {UMich Science Library, QC174.12 .B451 1984}, rtnote = {Chapters 10-20 In RHT collection. Reprint files.}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @book{ beltrametti-vanfraassen_bc:1979a, editor = {Enrico G. Beltrametti and Bas C. van Fraassen}, title = {Current Issues in Quantum Logic}, publisher = {Plenum Press}, year = {1979}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-306-40652-7}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Philsci Shelves.}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @book{ belz-etal:2004a, editor = {Anja Belz and Roger Evans and Paul Piwek}, title = {Natural Language Generation: Third International Conference, INLG 2004}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2004}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540223401}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union QA 76.9 .N38 N389 2004.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Ardi Roelofs, "The Seduced Speaker: Modeling of Cognitive Control", pp.1--10 2. Farah Benemara, "Generating Intensional Answers in Intelligent Question Answering Systems", pp. 11--20 3. Christian Chiarcos and Manfred Stede, "Salience-Driven Text Planning", pp. 21--30 4. Kees van Deemter, "Indirect Supervised Learning of Content Selection Logic", pp. 41--50 5. Kotaro Funakoshi, Satoru Watanabe, Naoko Kuriyama, Takenobu Tokunaga, "Generating Referring Expressions Using Perceptual Groups", pp. 51--60 6. Nizar Habash, "The Use of a Structural N-gram Language Model in Generation-Heavy Hybrid Machine Translation", pp. 61--69 7. Helmut Horacek, "On Referring to Sets of Objects Naturally", pp. 70--79 8. Hasan Kamal and Chris Mellish, "An {ATMS} Approach to Systemic Sentence Generation", pp. 80--89 9. Nikiforos Karamanis, Chris Mellish, Jon Oberlander, Massimo Poesio, "A Corpus-Based Methodology for Evaluating Metrics of Coherence for Text Structuring", pp. 90--99 10. Tomasz Marciniak and Michael Strube, "Classification-Based Generation Using TAG", pp. 100--109 11. Daniel S. Paiva and Roger Evans, "A Framework for Stylistically Controlled Generation", pp. 120--129 12. Shimei Pan and James Shaw, "SEGUE: A Hybrid Case-Based Surface Natural Language Generator", pp. 130--140 13. Kaka Porayska-Pomsta and Chris Mellish, "Modelling Politeness in Natural Language Generation", pp. 141--150 14. Matthew Purver and Ruth Kempson, "Context-Based Incremental Generation for Dialogue", pp. 151--160 15. Ehud Reiter and Somayajulu Sripada, "Contextual Influences on Near-Synonym Choice", pp. 161--170 16. Sebastian Varges, "Overgenerating Referring Expressions Involving Relations and Booleans", pp. 171--181 17. Michael White, "Reining in CCG Chart Realization", pp. 182--191 18. David K. Elson, "Categorization of Narrative Semantics for Use in Generative Multidocument Summarization", pp. 192--197 19. Mary Ellen Foster, "Corpus-Based Planning of Deictic Gestures in COMIC", pp. 198--204 20. Martin Klarner, "Hybrid NLG in a Generic Dialog System", pp. 205--211 21. Kristina Striegnitz, "When to Say Also", pp. 212--218 }, topic = {nl-generation;} } @article{ belzer_m:1985a, author = {Marvin Belzer}, title = {Normative Kinematics ({I}): A Solution to a Problem about Permission}, journal = {Law and Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {4}, pages = {257--287}, xref = {Commentary on: lewis_dk:1979c}, topic = {counterfactuals;deontic-logic;} } @article{ belzer_m:1986a, author = {Marvin Belzer}, title = {Reasoning with Defeasible Principles}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, volume = {66}, pages = {135--158}, year = {1986}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ belzer_m:1986b, author = {Marvin Belzer}, title = {Intentional Social Action and We-Intentions}, journal = {Analyse \&\ Kritik}, year = {1986}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {86--106}, abstract = {... Tuomela's introduction of the concept into social action theory is motivated by the assumption that theories of individual actions and social actions are analogous relative to the role of a concept of intention in those theories. This assumption is criticized; and a number of difficulties with the new concept are discussed Keywords}, topic = {group-attitudes;intention;} } @incollection{ belzer_m-loewer_b:1994a, author = {Marvin Belzer and Barry Loewer}, title = {Hector Meets {3-D}: A Diaphilosophical Epic}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 8: Logic and Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {389--414}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {deontic-logic;conditional-obligation;} } @article{ benacerraf:1965a, author = {Paul Benacerraf}, title = {What Numbers Could Not Be}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1965}, volume = {74}, number = {1}, pages = {47--73}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;} } @article{ benacerraf:1967a, author = {Paul Benacerraf}, title = {God, the Devil and {G}\"odel}, journal = {The Monist}, year = {1967}, volume = {51}, number = {1}, pages = {9--32}, contentnote = {Criticizes lucas_jr:1961a.}, xref = {Review: boolos_g:1969a}, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;philosophy-of-computation; mechanistic-thesis;} } @article{ benacerraf:1973a, author = {Paul Benacerraf}, title = {Mathematical Truth}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1973}, volume = {70}, pages = {661--679}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ benacerraf:1981a, author = {Paul Benacerraf}, title = {Frege: The Last Logicist}, journal = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy}, year = {1981}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {17--36}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {Frege;logicism;} } @book{ benacerraf-putnam_h:1964a, editor = {Paul Benacerraf and Hilary Putnam}, title = {Philosophy of Mathematics: Selected Readings}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1964}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic shelves.}, rtnote = {Extra copy in office?}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;foundations-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ benamor_n-etal:2000a, author = {Nahla Ben Amor and Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and Hector Geffner and Henri Prade}, title = {Independence in Qualitative Uncertainty Frameworks}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {235--246}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {... This paper first studies qualitative independence relations [in Bayesian networks] when uncertainty is encoded by a complete pre-order between states ... our interest ... is rather to formulate a general definition of independence based on pure ordering considerations, and that applies to all qualitative uncertainty frameworks ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {independence;qualitative-probability;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @inproceedings{ benamor_n-etal:2020a, author = {Nahla Ben Amor and H\'el`ene Fargier and R\'egis Sabbadin and Meriem Trabelsi}, title = {Ordinal Polymatrix Games with Incomplete Information}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {99--108}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {Possibilistic games with incomplete information (\Pi-games) constitute a suitable framework for the representation of ordinal games under incomplete knowledge. ... we propose a less costly view of \Pi-games, namely min-based polymatrix \Pi-games, which allows to concisely specify \Pi-games with local interactions. ... }, topic = {reasoning-about-games;complexity-in-AI;} } @book{ benardete_ja:1964a, author = {Jos\'e A. Benardete}, title = {Infinity: An Essay in Metaphysics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1964}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary: priest_g:1999a, yablo_s:2000a}, topic = {paradoxes-of-motion;foundations-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ benardete_ja:2002a, author = {Jos\'e A. Benardete}, title = {Logic and Ontology: Numbers and Sets}, booktitle = {A Companion to Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dale Jacquette}, pages = {349--364}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;logic-and-ontology;} } @inproceedings{ benari-etal:1981a, author = {M. Ben-Ari and Z. Manna and Amir Pnueli}, title = {The Temporal Logic of Branching Time}, booktitle = {Eighth Annual {ACM} Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages}, publisher = {ACM}, year = {1981}, organization = {ACM}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, editor, publisher, address}, rtnote = {Check this out. Useful for Handbook chapter?}, topic = {branching-time;} } @article{ benari-etal:1983a, author = {M. Ben-Ari and Amir Pnueli and Z. Manna}, title = {The Temporal Logic of Branching Time}, journal = {Acta Informatica}, year = {1983}, volume = {20}, pages = {207--226}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {temporal-logic;branching-time;} } @article{ benavi-winter_y:2003a, author = {Gilad Ben-Avi and Yoad Winter}, title = {Monotonicity and Collective Quantification}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2003}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {122--151}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;n;-quantifiers;} } @inproceedings{ benavi_g-winter_y:2007a, author = {Gilad Ben-Avi and Yoad Winter}, title = {A Modular Approach to Intensionality}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 11}, editor = {Estela Puig-Waldm\"uler}, year = {2007}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TVkNTE2O/sub11proc.pdf}, pages = {76--90}, abstract = {This paper introduces a procedure that takes a simple version of extensional semantics and generates from it an equivalent possible-world semantics that is suitable for treating intensional phenomena in natural language. This process of intensionalization allows to treat intensional phenomena as stemming exclusively from the lexical meaning of words like believe, need or fake. We illustrate the proposed intensionalization technique using an extensional toy fragment. ...}, topic = {nl-semantics;intensionality;nl-semantic-types;} } @article{ benchcapon_t:2003a, author = {Trevor J.M. Bench-Capon}, title = {Persuasion in Practical Argument Using Value-Based Argumentation Frameworks}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2003}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {429--448}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;practical-argumentation;} } @article{ benchcapon_t-dunne_pe:2007a, author = {T.J.M. Bench-Capon and Paul E. Dunne}, title = {Argumentation in Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {10--15}, pages = {619--641}, topic = {argumentation;abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ benchcapon_t-etal:2007a, author = {Trevor Bench-Capon and Sylvie Doutre and Paul E. Dunne}, title = {Audiences in Argumentation Frameworks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {1}, pages = {42--71}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;argumentation;} } @article{ benchcapon_t-sartor_g:2003a, author = {Trevor Bench-Capon and Giovanni Sartor}, title = {A Model of Legal Reasoning with Cases Incorporating Theories and Values}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {150}, number = {1-2}, pages = {97--143}, topic = {AI-and-law;case-based-reasoning;} } @article{ benci_v-etal:2018a, author = {Vieri Benci and Leon Horsten and Sylvia Wenmackers}, title = {Infinitesimal Probabilities}, journal = {The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year = {2018}, volume = {69}, number = {2}, pages = {509--552}, abstract = {Non-Archimedean probability functions allow us to combine regularity with perfect additivity. We discuss the philosophical motivation for a particular choice of axioms for a non-Archimedean probability theory and answer some philosophical objections that have been raised against infinitesimal probabilities in general.}, topic = {nonstandard-probability;} } @article{ bencivenga:1975a, author = {Ermanno Bencivenga}, title = {Set Theory and Free Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1975}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {1--15}, topic = {reference-gaps;foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ bencivenga:1977a, author = {Ermanno Bencivenga}, title = {Are Arithmetical Truths Analytic? New Results in Free Set Theory}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {319--330}, topic = {(non)existence;foundations-of-arithmetic;} } @article{ bencivenga:1978a, author = {Ermanno Bencivenga}, title = {Free Semantics for Indefinite Descriptions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1978}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {389--405}, topic = {reference-gaps;} } @article{ bencivenga:1979a, author = {Ermanno Bencivenga}, title = {On Good and Bad Arguments}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1979}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {247--259}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;logical-consequence;} } @incollection{ bencivenga:1986a, author = {Ermanno Bencivenga}, title = {Free Logics}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {III}: Alternatives in Classical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1986}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther}, pages = {373--426}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {truth-value-gaps;reference-gaps;} } @incollection{ bencivenga:2002a, author = {Ermanno Bencivenga}, title = {Free Logics}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {V}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {147--196}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {free-logic;} } @incollection{ bencivenga:2002b, author = {Ermanno Bencivenga}, title = {Putting Language First: The `Liberation' of Logic from Ontology}, booktitle = {A Companion to Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dale Jacquette}, pages = {293--304}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {logic-and-ontology;} } @article{ benda:2008a, author = {Thomas Benda}, title = {A Formal Construction of the Space-Time Manifold}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {37}, number = {5}, pages = {441--478}, topic = {logicism;relativity-theory;} } @article{ bendall:1971a, author = {Kent Bendall}, title = {Laplacian Determinism and Omnitemporal Determinates}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1971}, volume = {67}, number = {21}, pages = {751--761}, topic = {determinism;formalizations-of-physics;} } @article{ bendall:1978a, author = {Kent Bendall}, title = {Natural Deduction, Separation, and the Meaning of Logical Operators}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1978}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {245--276}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @article{ bendall:1979a, author = {Kent Bendall}, title = {Belief-Theoretic Formal Semantics for First-Order Logic and Probability}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1979}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {375--397}, contentnote = {The idea is to develop probability semantics from constraints on coherent belief}, topic = {epistemic-semantics;probability-semantics;} } @article{ bendall:1982a, author = {Kent Bendall}, title = {A `Definitive' Probabilistic Semantics for First Order Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {255--278}, topic = {probability-semantics;} } @article{ bendavid-zohary:2000a, author = {Rachel Ben-David and Rachel Ben-Eliyahu Zohary}, title = {A Modal Logic for Subjective Default Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {116}, number = {1--2}, pages = {217--236}, topic = {nonmonotonic-conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;modal-logic;} } @incollection{ bendefarkas:1999a, author = {Agnes Bende-Farkas}, title = {Incorporation as Unification}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {79--84}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {incorporation;unification-of-FSs;"have"-constructions; nl-semantics;} } @book{ bender_em-lascarides_a:2019a, author = {Emily M. Bender and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Linguistic Fundamentals for Natural Language Processing {II}: {E}ssentials from Semantics and Pragmatics}, publisher = {Morgan and Claypool}, year = {2019}, address = {San Rafael, California}, ISBN = {9781681730738}, topic = {nl-processing;nlp-semantics;pragmatics;} } @techreport{ bendix:1966a, author = {Edward H. Bendix}, title = {Componential Analysis of General Vocabulary: The Semantic Structure of a Set of Verbs in {E}nglish, {H}indi, and {J}apanese}, institution = {Indiana University Research Center in Anthropology, Folklore, and Linguistics}, number = {Publication 41}, year = {1966}, address = {Bloomington, Indiana}, topic = {componential-semantics;} } @incollection{ bendix:1971a, author = {Edward H. Bendix}, title = {The Data of Semantic Description}, booktitle = {Semantics: An Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1971}, editor = {Danny D. Steinberg and Leon A. Jacobovits}, pages = {393--409}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {linguistics-methodology;foundations-of-semantics; componential-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ beneceretti-etal:2001a, author = {Massimo Beneceretti and Paolo Bouquet and Chiara Ghidini}, title = {On the Dimensions of Context Dependence: Partiality, Approximation, and Perspective}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {59--72}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;contextual-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ benedikt_m-etal:2020a, author = {Michael Benedikt and Pierre Bourhis and Louis Jachiet and Efthymia Tsamoura}, title = {Balancing Expressiveness and Inexpressiveness in View Design}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {109--118}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We study the design of data publishing mechanisms that allow a collection of autonomous distributed datasources to collaborate to support queries. ... We investigate the problem of designing views that satisfy both an expressiveness and an inexpressiveness requirement, for views in a restricted declarative language (conjunctive queries), and for arbitrary views.}, topic = {data-publishing;} } @techreport{ beneliyahu-dechter_r:1992a, author = {Rachel Ben-Eliyahu and Rina Dechter}, title = {Inference in Inheritance Networks, Using Propositional Logic and Constraint Networks Techniques}, year = {1992}, number = {ICS-TR-92-64}, institution = {University of california at Irvine}, url = {citeseer.ist.psu.edu/ben-eliyahu92inference.html" }, abstract = {This paper focuses on network default theories. [Etherington, 1987] has established a correspondence between inheritance networks with exceptions and a subset of Reiter 's default logic called etwork default theories, thus providing a formal semantics and a notion of correct inference for such networks. We show that any such propositional network default theory can be compiled in polynomial time into a classical propositional theory such that the set of models of the latter coincides with the set of extensions of the former. ... }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {inheritance;constraint-networks;} } @article{ beneliyahu-dechter_r:1996a, author = {Rachel Beneliyahu and Rina Dechter}, title = {Default Reasoning Using Classical Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {84}, number = {1--2}, pages = {113--150}, contentnote = {Shows how to do efficient reasoning using classical equivalents for a class of default theories.}, topic = {default-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ beneliyahu-palopoli:1994a, author = {Rachel Ben-Eliyahu and Luigi Palopoli}, title = {Reasoning with Minimal Models: Efficient Algorithms and Applications}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {39--50}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;minimal-models;circumscription;kr-course;} } @article{ beneliyahuzohary:2002a, author = {Rachel Ben-Eliyahu Zohary}, title = {Yet Some More Complexity Results for Default Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {139}, number = {1}, pages = {1--20}, topic = {default-logic;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ beneliyahuzohary:2005a, author = {Rachel Ben-Eliyahu-Zohary}, title = {An Incremental Algorithm for Generating All Minimal Models}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {169}, number = {1}, pages = {1--22}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;model-checking;minimal-models;} } @article{ beneliyahuzohary-etal:2003a, author = {Rachel Ben-Eliyahu-Zohary and Ehud Gudes and Giovambattista Ianni}, title = {Metaqueries: Semantics, Complexity, and Efficient Algorithms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {149}, number = {1}, pages = {61--87}, topic = {data-mining;} } @article{ beneliyahuzohary-palopoli:1997a, author = {Rachel Ben-Eliyahu-Zohary and Luigi Palopoli}, title = {Reasoning with Minimal Models: Efficient Algorithms and Applications}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {96}, number = {2}, pages = {421--449}, topic = {minimal-models;stable-models;AI-algorithms;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ benerecetti-etal:1997a, author = {Massimo Benerecetti and Paolo Bouquet and Chiara Ghidini}, title = {A Multi Context Approach to Belief Report}, booktitle = {AAAI Fall 1997 Symposium on Context in {KR} and {NL}}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and L.~Ivanska}, year = {1997}, organization = {AAAI}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ benerecetti-etal:1997b, author = {Massimo Benerecetti and Chiari Ghidini and Paolo Bouquet}, title = {Formalizing Opacity and Transparency in Belief Contexts}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Context in Knowledge Representation and Natural Language}, year = {1997}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and {\L}ucia Iwa\'nska}, pages = {30--37}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;epistemic-logic;referential-opacity;} } @inproceedings{ benerecetti-etal:1998a, author = {Massimo Benerecetti and Chiari Ghidini and Paolo Bouquet}, title = {Formalizing Belief Reports---The Approach and a Case Study}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Methodology, Systems, and Applications}, year = {1998}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {editor, pages}, topic = {epistemic-logic;} } @unpublished{ benerecetti-etal:1999a, author = {Massimo Benerecetti and Paolo Bouquet and Chiara Ghidini}, title = {Contextual Reasoning Distilled}, year = {1999}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Trento}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Paolo gave me this in Dundee, Feb. 1999.}, topic = {context;} } @incollection{ benerecetti-etal:2007a, author = {Massimo Benerecetti and Paolo Bouquet and Chiara Ghidini}, title = {On the Dimensions of Context Dependence}, booktitle = {Perspectives on Context}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2007}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {1--18}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {context;contextual-reasoning;} } @article{ benes_ve:1953a, author = {Vaclav E. Benes}, title = {On Some Alleged Implications of Mathematical Logic}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1953}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {56--58}, contentnote = {The issue is whether, e.g., G\"odel's incompleteness theorem is in any sense a psychological law.}, xref = {Objection to: myhill_j:1952a.}, xref = {Reply: }, topic = {effectivity;foundations-of-logic;} } @incollection{ benferhat_s:1998a, author = {Salem Benferhat}, title = {Infinitesimal Theories of Uncertainty for Plausible Reasoning}, booktitle = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems, Volume 1: Quantified Representation of Uncertainty and Imprecision}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Philippe Smets}, pages = {303--356}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {infinitesimals;nonstandard-analysis; nonmonotonic-reasoning;nonstandard-probability; reasoning-about-uncertainty;foundations-of-probability;} } @article{ benferhat_s:2009a, author = {Salem Benferhat}, title = {Review of \emph{{E}lements of Argumentation}, by {P}hilippe {B}esnard and {A}nthony {H}unter}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {174}, number = {2}, pages = {134--139}, xref = {Review of: besnard_p-hunter_a:2008a}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ benferhat_s:2009b, author = {Salem Benferhat}, title = {Interventions and Belief Change in Possibilistic Graphical Models}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {174}, number = {2}, pages = {177--189}, topic = {causality;belief-change;Bayesian-networks;} } @incollection{ benferhat_s-etal:1992a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Representing Default Rules in Possibilistic Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {673--684}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;default-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;possibilistic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ benferhat_s-etal:1993a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Claudette Cayrol and Didier Dubois and Jer\^ome Lang and Henri Prade}, title = {Inconsistency Management and Prioritized Syntax-Based Entailment}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {640--647}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {reasoning-about-inconsistency;} } @article{ benferhat_s-etal:1997a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Conditional Objects, and Possibility Theory}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {92}, number = {1--2}, pages = {259--276}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;conditionals;conditional-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ benferhat_s-etal:1997b, author = {Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Possibilistic and Standard Probabilistic Semantics of Conditional Knowledge}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Vol. 1}, year = {1997}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {70--75}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {conditionals;knowledge;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ benferhat_s-etal:1998a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and J. Lang and Henri Prade and Philippe Smets and A. Saffiotti}, title = {A General Approach for Inconsistency Handling and Merging Information in Prioritized Knowledge Bases}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {466--477}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-prioritization;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ benferhat_s-etal:1998b, author = {Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Possibilistic and Standard Probabilistic Semantics of Conditional Knowledge}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Ninth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference}, year = {1998}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {70--75}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {probabilistic-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ benferhat_s-etal:2000a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Alessandro Saffiotti and Philippe Smets}, title = {Belief Functions and Default Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {122}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--69}, topic = {default-reasoning;probability-semantics;infinitesimals;} } @incollection{ benferhat_s-etal:2000b, author = {Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and H\'elene Fargier and Henri Prade and R\'egis Sabbadin}, title = {Decision, Nonmonotonic Reasoning and Possibilistic Logic}, booktitle = {Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Jack Minker}, pages = {333--358}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {logic-in-AI;qualitative-decision-theory;possibilistic-logic;} } @article{ benferhat_s-etal:2001a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Souhila Kaci and Daniel Le Berre and Mary-Anne Williams}, title = {Weakening Conflicting Information for Integrated Revision and Knowledge Representation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {153}, number = {5--6}, pages = {339--371}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;belief-revision;knowledge-integration;} } @article{ benferhat_s-etal:2002a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and Henri Prade and Mary-Anne Williams}, title = {A Practical Approach to Revising Prioritized Knowledge Bases}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2002}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {105--130}, topic = {belief-revision;kr;knowledge-base-revision;} } @incollection{ benferhat_s-etal:2002b, author = {Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and Souhila Kaci and Henri Prade}, title = {Bipolar Representation and Fusion of Preferences in the Possibilistic Logic Framework}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {421--432}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;possibilistic-logic;preferences;qualitative-utility; possibility-theory;} } @incollection{ benferhat_s-etal:2004a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Jean Fran\c{c}ois Bonnefon and Rui Da Silva Neves}, title = {An Experimental Analysis of Possibilistic Default Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {130--139}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;cognitive-psychology;} } @inproceedings{ benferhat_s-etal:2006a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Daniel Le Berre and Karima Sedki}, title = {An Alternative Inference for Qualitative Choice Logic}, booktitle = {ECAI 2006: 17th {E}uropean Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and Silvia Coradeschi and Anna Perini and Paolo Traverso}, pages = {741--742}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Qualitative Choice Logic adds to classical propositional logic a new connective, called ordered disjunction, used to express preferences between alternatives. We present an alternative inference relation for the QCL language that overcomes some QCL limitations.}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;quanitative-decision-theory;} } @article{ benferhat_s-garcia_l:2002a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Laurent Garcia}, title = {Handling with Locally Stratified Inconsistent Knowledge Bases}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2002}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {77--104}, topic = {belief-revision;paraconsistency;knowledge-base-revision;} } @article{ benferhat_s-giunchiglia_e:2004a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Enrico Giunchiglia}, title = {Editorial}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {157}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--3}, note = {Introduction to a special issue on nonmonotonic reasoning.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ benferhat_s-kaci:2003a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Souhila Kaci}, title = {Logical Representation and Fusion of Prioritized Information Based on Guaranteed Possibility Measures: Application to the Distance-Based Merging of Classical Bases}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {148}, number = {1--2}, pages = {291--333}, topic = {possibility-theory;fuzzy-set-theory;knowledge-integration;} } @inproceedings{ benferhat_s-tabia_k:2014a, author = {Salem Benferhat and Karim Tabia}, title = {Reasoning with Uncertain Inputs in Possibilistic Networks}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {538--547}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... Possibilistic networks are graphical belief models based on possibility theory. In this paper, we address reasoning under uncertain inputs in both quantitative and qualitative possibilistic networks. More precisely, we first provide possibilistic counterparts of Pearl's methods of virtual evidence then compare them with the possibilistic counterparts of Jeffrey's rule of conditioning. As in the probabilistic setting, the two methods are shown to be equivalent in the quantitative setting regarding the existence and uniqueness of the solution. However in the qualitative setting, Pearl's method of virtual evidence which applies directly on graphical models disagrees with Jeffrey's rule and the virtual evidence method. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {possibilistic-networks;possibility-theory;be;lief-networks;} } @inproceedings{ benhamou-heocque:1998a, author = {Belaid Benhamou and Laurent Heocque}, title = {Finite Model Search for Equational Theories (FMSET)}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation: Proceedings of {AISC'98}}, year = {1998}, editor = {Jacques Calmet and Jan Plaza}, pages = {84--93}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {theorem-proving;finite-models;model-checking;} } @article{ benjamin_ac:1939a, author = {A.C. Benjamin}, title = {Science and Vagueness}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1939}, volume = {6}, pages = {422--431}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {vagueness;} } @unpublished{ benjamin_dp:1995a, author = {D. Paul Benjamin}, title = {Analyzing Languages of Actions for the Purpose of Synthesis}, year = {1995}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Oklahoma State University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Year is Guess. Published in some AI conference? Which one? This author seems that semigroup theory is the key to understanding all sorts of things about action.}, topic = {action-formalisms;} } @incollection{ benl-etal:1998a, author = {H. Benl et al.}, title = {Proof Theory at Work: Program Development in the {M}inlog System}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {II}, Systems and Implementation Techniques}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, other authors, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @book{ benmenahem_y:2005a, editor = {Yemima Ben-Menahem}, title = {Hilary Putnam}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521813115}, topic = {Hilar-Putnam;} } @book{ benmenahem_y:2006a, author = {Yemima Ben-Menahem}, title = {Conventionalism}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {978-1-107-407-31-2}, topic = {convention; conventionalism;} } @incollection{ bennaim_j:2006a, author = {Jonathan Ben-Naim}, title = {Lack of Finite Characterizations for the Distance-Based Revision}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {239--248}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ bennett_adc-etal:2000a, author = {A.D.C. Bennett and J.B. Paris and A. Vencovsk\'a}, title = {A New Criterion for Comparing Fuzzy Logics for Uncertain Reasoning}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {31--63}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;fuzzy-logic;} } @article{ bennett_af:1946a, author = {Alfred A. Bennett}, title = {Review of `{O}n Closed Elements in Closure Algebras', by {J}.{C}.{C}. {M}c{K}insey and {A}lfred {T}arski}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1946}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {83--84}, xref = {Review of: mckinsey_jcc-tarski_a:1947a.}, topic = {closure-algebras;} } @incollection{ bennett_b:1994a, author = {Brandon Bennett}, title = {Spatial Reasoning with Propositional Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, address = {San Francisco, California}, pages = {51--62}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;kr;kr-course;} } @incollection{ bennett_b:1998a, author = {Brandon Bennett}, title = {Modal Semantics for Knowledge Bases Dealing with Vague Concepts}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {234--244}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;modal-logic;vagueness;kr-course;} } @incollection{ bennett_b:2002a, author = {Brandon Bennett}, title = {Physical Objects, Identity and Vagueness}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {395--406}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;computational-ontology;vagueness;identity;qualitative-physics;} } @incollection{ bennett_b:2003a, author = {Brandon Bennett}, title = {The Role of Definitions in Construction and Analysis of Formal Ontologies}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Logical Formalization of Commonsense Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John McCarthy and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {27--35}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {definitions;computational-ontology;} } @incollection{ bennett_b:2006a, author = {Brandon Bennett}, title = {A Theory of Vague Adjectives Grounded in Relevant Observables}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {36--44}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ bennett_b:2011a, author = {Brandon Bennett}, title = {Possible Worlds and Possible Meanings}, booktitle = {Logical Formalizations of Commonsense Reasoning: Papers from the {AAAI} 2011 Spring Symposium ({SS}-11-06)}, publisher = {Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, editor = {Ernest Davis and Patrick Doherty and Esra Erdem}, address = {Palo Alto}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. SSS11-CD}, topic = {vagueness;} } @inproceedings{ bennett_b-galton:2001a, author = {Brandon Bennett and Antony P. Galton}, title = {A Versatile Representation for Time and Events}, booktitle = {In Fifth Symposium on Logical Formalizations of Commonsense Reasoning (Commonsense 2001}, year = {2001}, pages = {43--52}, topic = {temporal-logic;events;commonsense-reasoning;} } @article{ bennett_b-galton_ap:2001a, author = {Brandon Bennett and Anthony P. Galton}, title = {A Unifying Semantics for Time and Events}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {153}, number = {5--6}, pages = {13--48}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;events;} } @article{ bennett_bh:1999a, author = {Bonnie Holte Bennett}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}obot: Mere Machine to Transcendent Mind}, by {H}ans {M}oravec}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {92--93}, topic = {robotics;AI-survey;} } @incollection{ bennett_ch:1988a, author = {Charles H. Bennett}, title = {Logical Depth and Physical Complexity}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {227--257}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {complexity-theory;physical-realizations-of-computation;} } @article{ bennett_d:1969a, author = {Daniel Bennett}, title = {Essential Properties}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1969}, volume = {66}, number = {15}, pages = {487--499}, topic = {essence;essentialism;} } @article{ bennett_j:1957a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Review of `{D}as {U}niversalienproblem einst and jetzt', by {W}olfgang {S}tegm\"uller}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1957}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {320--319}, xref = {Review of: stegmuller_w:1957a.}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;history-of-philosophy;} } @article{ bennett_j:1958a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Analytic-Synthetic}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian {S}ociety}, year = {1958}, volume = {59}, pages = {163--188}, topic = {analyticity;} } @article{ bennett_j:1959a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Review of `{I}mperative and Deontic Logic', by {P}eter {T}. {G}each, and `{I}mperatives and Deontic Logic', by {{H}ector-{N}eri} {C}asta\~{n}eda}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1959}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {264--265}, xref = {Review of: geach_pt:1958a,castaneda_hn:1958a.}, topic = {imperatives;deontic-logic;} } @article{ bennett_j:1961a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {A Myth about Logical Necessity}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1961}, volume = {21}, number = {3}, pages = {59--63}, contentnote = {Argues that the notionb is unlear and unexplained.}, topic = {analyticity;} } @article{ bennett_j:1966a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Whatever the Consequences}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1966}, volume = {26}, number = {3}, pages = {83--102}, xref = {Commentary: fitzgerald_pj:1967a}, topic = {ethics;refraining;} } @article{ bennett_j:1967a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Acting and Refraining}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1967}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {30--31}, xref = {Reply to: fitzgerald_pj:1967a}, topic = {refraining;} } @incollection{ bennett_j:1969a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {\,`Real{'} }, booktitle = {Symposium on J.L. Austin}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1969}, editor = {Kuang T. Fann}, pages = {267--283}, address = {London}, topic = {JL-Austin;phenomenalism;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @article{ bennett_j:1970a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Review of `\emph{Ought} and Assumption in Moral Philosophy', by {H}ector-{N}eri {C}asta\~neda}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1970}, volume = {35}, number = {1}, pages = {134--135}, xref = {Review of: castaneda:1960a}, topic = {`ought';imperatives;} } @article{ bennett_j:1973a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {The Meaning-Nominalist Strategy}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1973}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {141--168}, topic = {nominalism;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ bennett_j:1974a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Counterfactuals and Possible Worlds}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1974}, volume = {4}, pages = {381--402}, number ={2}, topic = {conditionals;} } @book{ bennett_j:1976a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Linguistic Behaviour}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1976}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, xref = {Reviews: peacocke_c:1977a, caton_ce:1978a, thomason_rh:1978b,harman_gh:1977a}, xref = {Extended Commentary: dennett_dc:2016a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;semantics;speaker-meaning;Grice; convention;} } @article{ bennett_j:1982a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Psychology and Semantics: {S}chiffer's `Intention-Based Semantics{'} }, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {258--262}, xref = {Comments on schiffer_s:1982a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files, "J Bennett"}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ bennett_j:1982b, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {\,`Even If{'} }, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1982}, volume = {5}, pages = {403--418}, number = {3}, topic = {`even';sentence-focus;pragmatics;semantics;} } @article{ bennett_j:1984a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Counterfactuals and Temporal Direction}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1984}, volume = {93}, number = {1}, pages = {7--89}, topic = {conditionals;causality;temporal-reasoning;} } @article{ bennett_j:1985a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Philosophy and Mr. {S}toppard}, journal = {Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {50}, missinginfo = {number}, pages = {5--18}, topic = {Stoppard;} } @incollection{ bennett_j:1985b, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Adverb-Dropping Inferences and the {L}emmon Criterion}, booktitle = {Actions and Events: Perspectives on the Philosophy of {D}onald {D}avidson}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell Ltd.}, year = {1985}, editor = {Ernest LePore and Brian P. McLaughlin}, pages = {193--206}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {adverbs;events;} } @book{ bennett_j:1988a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Events and Their Names}, publisher = {Hackett Publishing Company}, year = {1988}, address = {Indianapolis}, ISBN = {0-87220-045-0 (paperback)}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {events;philosophical-ontology;facts;causation;} } @article{ bennett_j:1988b, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Quotation}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1988}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {399--418}, xref = {Commentary on: davidson_d:1979a1}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @article{ bennett_j:1990a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Why Is Belief Involuntary?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1990}, volume = {50}, number = {2}, pages = {87--107}, topic = {will-to-believe;} } @incollection{ bennett_j:1993a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Event Causation: The Counterfactual Analysis}, booktitle = {Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Michael Tooley}, pages = {217--233}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc21}, topic = {causation;conditionals;} } @article{ bennett_j:1994a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {The `Namely' Analysis of the `by'-Locution}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1994}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {29--51}, topic = {agency;manner-adverbials;action;} } @article{ bennett_j:1995a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {Classifying Conditionals: the Traditional Way is Right}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1995}, volume = {104}, pages = {331--354}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files.}, xref = {Commentary: cogan_r:1996a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @book{ bennett_j:2003a, author = {Jonathan Bennett}, title = {A Philosophical Guide to Conditionals}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-925887-2}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Introduction 2. The material conditional: Grice 3. The material conditional: Jackson 4. The equation 5. The equation attacked 6. The subjectivity of indicative conditionals 7. Indicative conditionals lack truth values 8. Uses of indicative conditionals 9. The logic of indicative conditionals 10. Subjunctive conditionals---first steps 11. The competition for `closest' 12. Unrolling from the antecedent time 13. Forks 14. Reflections on legality 15. Truth at the actual world 16. Subjunctive conditionals and probability 17. `Even if $\ldots$' 18. Backward subjunctive conditionals 19. Subjunctive conditionals and time's arrow 20. Support theories 21. The need for worlds 22. Relating the two kinds of conditional 23. Unifying the two kinds of conditional }, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ bennett_k:2005a, author = {Karen Bennett}, title = {Two Axes of Actualism}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2003}, volume = {114}, number = {3}, pages = {297--326}, topic = {metaphysics;actualism;} } @book{ bennett_k:2017a, author = {Karen Bennett}, title = {Making Things Up}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199682683}, xref = {Review: mcdaniel_k:2019a, hofweber_t:2019a}, topic = {metaphysics;partonomies;mereology;truthmaking;} } @book{ bennett_k-zimmerman_d:2012a, editor = {Karen Bennett and Dean W. Zimmerman}, title = {Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, Volume 7}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-965907-4}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Delia Graff Fara, "Possibility Relative to a Sortal" 2. Allen Hazen, "Reflections on Counterpart Theory" 3. Joshua Spencer, "All Things Must Pass Away" 4. Agust\'in Rayo, "Absolute Generality Reconsidered" 5. Troy Cross, "Goodbye, Humean Supervenience" 6. Marc Lange, "There Sweep Great General Principles which All the Laws Seem to Follow" 7. Adam Murray and Jessica Wilson, "Relativized Metaphysical Modality" 8. Sydney Shoemaker, "Coincidence Through Thick and Thin" 9. Rachael Briggs and Graeme Forbes, "The Real Truth about the Unreal Future" 10. Jonathan Tallant and David Ingram, "Presentism and Distributional Properties" }, topic = {metaphysics;} } @incollection{ bennett_mr:1972a, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Accommodating the Plural in {M}ontague's Fragment of {E}nglish}, booktitle = {Papers in {M}ontague Grammar}, publisher = {Linguistics Department, UCLA}, year = {1972}, editor = {Robert Rodman}, pages = {25--65}, address = {Los Angeles, California}, note = {ULCA Occasional Papers in Linguistics, No. 2}, topic = {Montague-grammar;nl-semantics;plural;} } @unpublished{ bennett_mr:1973a, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Two Puzzles Concerning Tense and Aspect in {E}nglish}, year = {1973}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, UCLA, 1973.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se14\bennett.pdf}, url = {http://web.eecs.umich.edu/~rthomaso/documents/nls/bennett.pdf}, xref = {Comments: church_z:1980b}, topic = {tense-aspect;} } @phdthesis{ bennett_mr:1974a1, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Some Extensions of a {M}ontague Fragment of {E}nglish}, school = {University of California at Los Angeles}, year = {1974}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Los Angeles}, xref = {Republication, with corrections: bennett_mr:1974a2.}, rtnote = {I have several versions on file.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {demonstratives;indexicals;Montague-grammar;} } @book{ bennett_mr:1974a2, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Some Extensions of a {M}ontague Fragment of {E}nglish (Corrected Version)}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1975}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, xref = {Republication, with corrections, of: bennett_mr:1974a1.}, topic = {Montague-grammar;plural;nl-semantics;} } @unpublished{ bennett_mr:1976a, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Demonstratives in {M}ontague Grammar}, year = {1976}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {demonstratives;indexicals;Montague-grammar;} } @unpublished{ bennett_mr:1976b, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {A Variation on {N}uel's Theory}, year = {1976}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-semantics;interrogatives;} } @unpublished{ bennett_mr:1976c, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {The Plural {\it Which}}, year = {1976}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Michael Bennett"}, topic = {nl-semantics;interrogatives;} } @incollection{ bennett_mr:1976d, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {A Variation and Extension of a {M}ontague Fragment of {E}nglish}, booktitle = {Montague Grammar}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Barbara H. Partee}, pages = {119--163}, address = {New York}, topic = {Montague-grammar;nl-semantics;} } @unpublished{ bennett_mr:1977a1, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Mass Nouns and Mass Terms in {M}ontague Grammar}, year = {1977}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh.}, xref = {Publication: bennett_mr:1977a2}, topic = {mass-term-semantics;nl-semantics;Montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ bennett_mr:1977a2, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Mass Nouns and Mass Terms in {M}ontague Grammar}, booktitle = {Linguistics, Philosophy, and Montague Grammar}, publisher = {University of Texas Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Steven Davis and Marianne Mithun}, pages = {263--285}, address = {Austin, Texas}, topic = {mass-term-semantics;nl-semantics;Montague-grammar;} } @unpublished{ bennett_mr:1977b, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Mass Nouns and Their Quantifiers in {M}ontague Grammar}, year = {1977}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {mass-term-semantics;nl-semantics;Montague-grammar;} } @article{ bennett_mr:1977c, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {A Guide to the Logic of Tense and Aspect in {E}nglish}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, volume = {20}, number = {80}, year = {1977}, pages = {491--517}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Michael Bennett"}, topic = {tense-aspect;} } @unpublished{ bennett_mr:1977d, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {The Plural in {M}ontague Grammar}, year = {1977}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {Apparently, this was never published.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers "Michael Bennett"}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;Montague-grammar;} } @article{ bennett_mr:1977e, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {A Response to {K}arttunen on Questions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {279--300}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File.}, topic = {Montague-grammar;interrogatives;} } @unpublished{ bennett_mr:1978a1, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Of Tense and Aspect: One Analysis}, year = {1978}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;Montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ bennett_mr:1978a2, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Of Tense and Aspect: One Analysis}, booktitle = {Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Philip Tedeschi and Annie Zaenen}, pages = {13--29}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;Montague-grammar;} } @article{ bennett_mr:1978b, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Demonstratives and Indexicals in {M}ontague Grammar}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1978}, volume = {39}, number = {1}, pages = {1--80}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {demonstratives;indexicals;Montague-grammar;} } @unpublished{ bennett_mr:1978c, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Summary of Future Work}, year = {1978}, month = {December}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-semantics;Montague-grammar;} } @book{ bennett_mr:1979a, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Questions in {M}ontague Grammar}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1979}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 46405}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {interrogatives;montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ bennett_mr:1979b, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Mass Nouns and Mass Terms in Montague Grammar}, booktitle = {Linguistics, Philosophy, and {M}ontague Grammar}, publisher = {University of Texas Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Steven Davis and Marianne Mithun}, pages = {263--285}, address = {Austin, Texas}, topic = {Montague-grammar;mass-terms;mass-term-semantics;} } @article{ bennett_mr:1980a, author = {Michael R. Bennett}, title = {Review of \emph{{F}ormal Semantics of Natural Language}, edited by {E}dward {L}. {K}eenan}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {103--132}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @book{ bennett_mr-partee_bh:1978a1, author = {Michael R. Bennett and Barbara H. Partee}, title = {Toward the Logic of Tense and Aspect in {E}nglish}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;} } @incollection{ bennett_mr-partee_bh:1978a2, author = {Michael R. Bennett and Barbara H. Partee}, title = {Toward the Logic of Tense and Aspect in English}, booktitle = {Compositionality in Formal Semantics: Selected Papers of {B}arbara {H}. {P}artee}, publisher = {Wiley}, year = {2008}, editor = {Barbara H. Partee}, pages = {59--109}, address = {New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;} } @book{ bennett_p:1995a, author = {Paul Bennett}, title = {A Course in Generalized Phrase Structure Grammar}, publisher = {UCL Press}, year = {1995}, address = {London}, topic = {GPSG;} } @incollection{ bennett_sw-etal:1997a, author = {Scott W. Bennett and Chinatsu Aone and Craig Lovell}, title = {Learning to Tag Multilingual Texts through Observation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {109--116}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {empirical-methods-in-nlp;information-extraction;machine-learning; multilingual-corpora;} } @article{ bennett_ws-etal:1989a, author = {Wilfield S. Bennet and Tanya Herlick and Katerine Hoyt and Joseph Liro and Ana Santisteban}, title = {Toward a Computational Model of Aspect and Verb Semantics}, journal = {Machine Translation}, year = {1989}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {247--280}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;tense-aspect;machine-translation;} } @article{ benothmanezribi-benahmed:2013a, author = {Chiraz Ben Othmane Zribi and Mohamed Ben Ahmed}, title = {Detection of Semantic Errors in {A}rabic Texts}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {195}, pages = {249--264}, topic = {nl-processing;Arabic-language;} } @phdthesis{ benotti:2010a, author = {Luciana Benotti}, title = {Implicature as an Interactive Process}, school = {Nancy-Universit\'e}, year = {2010}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Nancy}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {implicature;} } @article{ benotti:2015a, author = {Luciana Benotti}, title = {Review of \emph{The Interactive Stance: Meaning in Conversation}, by {J}onathan {G}inzburg}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2015}, volume = {103}, number = {1}, pages = {877--882}, xref = {Review of: ginzburg_j:2012a}, topic = {computational-dialogue;discourse;} } @incollection{ bensaou-guessarian:1994a, author = {N. Bensaou and Irhne Guessarian}, title = {An Extended Transformation System for {CLP} Programs}, booktitle = {Logic Programming Synthesis and Transformation, Meta-Programming in Logic: Fourth International Workshops, {LOBSTR}'94 and {META}'94, Pisa, Italy}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Laurent Fribourg and Franco Turini}, pages = {17--35}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @inproceedings{ benshalom:1993a, author = {Dirit Ben-Shalom}, title = {Object Wide Scope and Semantic Trees}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {III}}, year = {1993}, editor = {Utpal Lahiri and Zachary Wyner}, pages = {19--37}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ benshalom:2003a, author = {Dorit Ben Shalom}, title = {On the Connection between Standard Invariance Conditions on Modal Formulas and Generalized Quantifiers}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2003}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {47--52}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;modal-logic;} } @phdthesis{ benshalom_d:1996a, author = {David Ben-Shalom}, title = {Semantic Trees}, school = {Linguistics Department, UCLA}, year = {1996}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Los Angeles}, url = {https://linguistics.ucla.edu/images/stories/ben-shalom.1996.pdf}, topic = {logic-and-language;syntax-semantics-interface;nl-quantifiers;} } @book{ bentham:1789a, author = {Jeremy Bentham}, title = {Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, year = {1789}, topic = {ethics;political-philosophy;utilitarianism;} } @book{ bentham:1823a, author = {Jeremy Bentham}, title = {Principles of Morals and Legislation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1823}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Originally published in 1789.}, topic = {utilitarianism;} } @article{ benthem-minic:2012a, author = {Johan van Benthem and \c{S}tefan Mini\v{c}}, title = {Toward a Dynamic Logic of Questions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {41}, number = {4}, pages = {633--669}, topic = {interrogatives;dynamic-logic;} } @incollection{ bentinetto-lenci:2012a, author = {Pier Marco Bentinetto and Alessandro Lenci}, title = {Habituality, Pluractionality, and Imperfectivity}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {852--880}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;progressive-aspect;} } @article{ benton_j-etal:2009a, author = {J. Benton and Minh Binh Do and Subbarao Kambhampati}, title = {Anytime Heuristic Search for Partial Satisfaction Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {5--6}, pages = {562--592}, topic = {planning;heuristics;search;} } @article{ benton_ma:2016a, author = {Matthew A. Benton}, title = {Gricean Quality}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2016}, volume = {50}, number = {4}, pages = {689--703}, topic = {assertion;knowledge;} } @article{ benton_ra:2002a, author = {Roy A. Benton}, title = {A Simple Complete Extension of $T$ which is the Union of Two Complete Modal Logics with Finite Model Property}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {31}, number = {6}, pages = {527--541}, topic = {modal-logic;finite-model-property;} } @article{ bentzen:2014a, author = {Martin Mose Bentzen}, title = {Action Type Deontic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2014}, volume = {23}, number = {4}, pages = {397--414}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ benyami:2014a, author = {Hanoch Ben-Yami}, title = {The Quantified Argument Calculus}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {120--146}, topic = {exotic-logics;quantification;} } @article{ benz_a:2006a, author = {Anton Benz}, title = {Partial Blocking and Associative Learning}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2006}, volume = {29}, number = {5}, pages = {617--629}, topic = {blocking;} } @article{ benz_a:2012a, author = {Anton Benz}, title = {Errors in Pragmatics}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2012}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {97--116}, abstract = {In this paper we are going to show that error coping strategies play an essential role in linguistic pragmatics. We study the effect of noisy speaker strategies within a framework of signalling games with feedback loop. We distinguish between cases in which errors occur in message selection and cases in which they occur in signal selection. The first type of errors affects the content of an utterance, and the second type its linguistic expression. The general communication model is inspired by the Shannon-Weaver communication model. We test the model by a number of benchmark examples, including examples of relevance implicatures, quantity implicatures, and presupposition accommodation. }, topic = {pragmatics;game-theory;implicature;} } @book{ benz_a-etal:2006a, editor = {Anton Benz and Gerhard J\"ager and Robert van Rooij}, title = {Game Theory and Pragmatics}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan UK}, year = {2006}, address = {London}, ISBN = {978-1-349-52317-7}, topic = {pragmatics;game-theory;} } @article{ benz_a-gotzner_n:2021a, author = {Anton Benz and Nicole Gotzner}, title = {Embedded Implicature: What Can Be Left Unsaid?}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2021}, volume = {44}, number = {5}, pages = {1099--1130}, abstract = {Our study shows that embedded and unembedded implicatures are reliably communicated by 'some'. We propose two cognitive principles that describe what can be left unsaid. ...}, topic = {scalar-implicature;experimental-semantics;} } @book{ benzeev:2000a, author = {Aaron Ben-Ze'ev}, title = {The Subtlety of Emotions}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-02463-2}, topic = {emotion;} } @article{ benzmuller_c:2017a, author = {Christoph Benzm\"uller}, title = {Cut-Elimination for Quantified Conditional Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {3}, pages = {333--353}, topic = {conditionals;cut-elimination;proof-theory;} } @inproceedings{ benzmuller_c:2020a, author = {Christoph Benzm\"uller}, title = {A (Simplified) Supreme Being Necessarily Exists, Says the Computer: Computationally Explored Variants of G\"odel's Ontological Argument}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {779--789}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {An approach to universal (meta-)logical reasoning in classical higher-order logic is employed to explore and study simplifications of Kurt Gödel's modal ontological argument. ... Key to the gained simplifications of Gödel's original theory is the exploitation of a link to the notions of filter and ultrafilter in topology. The paper illustrates how modern knowledge representation and reasoning technology for quantified non-classical logics can contribute new knowledge to other disciplines. ...}, topic = {computational-theology;} } @incollection{ benzmuller_c-miller_d:2014a, author = {Christoph Benzm\"uller and Dale Miller}, title = {Automation of Higher-Order Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 9: Computational Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2014}, editor = {J\"org H. Siekmann}, pages = {215--254}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;theorem-proving;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ berardi-etal:2005a, author = {Daniela Berardi and Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo}, title = {Reasoning on {UML} Class Diagrams}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {168}, number = {1--2}, pages = {70-118}, topic = {description-logics;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ berckmans:1993a, author = {Paul Berckmans}, title = {The Quantifier Theory of `Even{'} }, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1993}, volume = {16}, number = {6}, pages = {589--611}, topic = {`even';} } @article{ berg_j1:1955a, author = {Jan Berg}, title = {On Defining Disposition Predicates}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1955}, volume = {15}, number = {4}, pages = {85--89}, xref = {Review: watling_j:1957h.}, topic = {dispositionals;} } @article{ berg_j1:1960a, author = {Jan Berg}, title = {A Note on Deontic Logic}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1960}, volume = {69}, number = {276}, pages = {566--567}, xref = {Criticism of: anderson_ar:1958a.}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ berg_j1:1968a, author = {Jan Berg}, title = {Review of `{D}ispositional Statements', by {A}rthur {W}. {B}urks}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1969}, volume = {33}, number = {2}, pages = {313--314}, xref = {Review of: burks_aw:1955a}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ berg_j2:1988a, author = {Jonathan Berg}, title = {The Pragmatics of Substitutivity}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1988}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {355--370}, topic = {referential-opacity;pragmatics;} } @article{ berg_j2:1991a, author = {Jonathan Berg}, title = {The Relevant Relevance}, journal = {Journal of Pragmatics}, year = {1991}, volume = {16}, pages = {411--425}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {relevance;implicature;} } @book{ berg_j2:2014a, editor = {Jonathan Berg}, title = {{N}aming, Necessity and More: Explorations in the Philosophical Work of {S}aul {K}ripke}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2014}, address = {New York}, xref = {Review: spencer_j:2016a}, topic = {Kripke;} } @article{ berg_n-hoffrage:2010a, author = {Nathan Berg and Ulrich Hoffrage}, title = {Compressed Environments: Unbounded Optimizers Should Sometimes Ignore Information }, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {259--275}, abstract = {Given free information and unlimited processing power, should decision algorithms use as much information as possible? $\ldots$ Different methods converge on the normative proposition of ecological rationality, as opposed to axiomatic rationality based on informational efficiency and internal consistency axioms, as a superior framework for comparing the effectiveness of decision strategies and prescribing decision algorithms in application. }, topic = {resource-limited-reasoning;} } @article{ bergadano:1993a, author = {Francesco Bergadano}, title = {Machine Learning and the Foundations of Inductive Inference}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {31--51}, topic = {machine-learning;inductive-reasoning;} } @incollection{ bergadano_f-etal:2000a, author = {Francesco Bergadano and Vincenzo Cutello and Daniele Gunetti}, title = {Abduction in Machine Learning}, booktitle = {Abductive Reasoning and Learning}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2000}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Philippe Smets}, pages = {197--229}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {abduction;nachine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ bergamaschi-etal:1992a, author = {Sonia Bergamaschi and Stefano Lodi and Claudio Sartori}, title = {Representational Extensions of {DL}s}, booktitle = {Working Notes, {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Issues in Description Logics: Users Meet Developers}, year = {1992}, editor = {Robert MacGregor}, pages = {11--18}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Idea is to add n-ary rels to Kl1.}, topic = {kr;krcourse;extensions-of-kl1;relational-reasoning; description-logics;} } @book{ bergen_bk:2012a, author = {Benjamin K. Bergen}, title = {Louder Than Words: The New Science of How the Mind Makes Meanings}, publisher = {Basic Books}, year = {2012}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {978-0-465-02829-0}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, topic = {cognitive-semantics;meaningfulness;embodied-cognition;} } @article{ berger_a1-etal:1996a, author = {Adam L. Berger and Stephen A. Della Pietra and Vincent J. Della Pietra}, title = {A Maximum Entropy Approach to Natural Language Processing}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {39--71}, topic = {statistical-nlp;maximum-entropy;} } @article{ berger_a2:2002a, author = {Alan Berger}, title = {A Formal Semantics for Plural Quantification, Intersentential Binding and Anaphoric Pronouns as Rigid Designators}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2002}, volume = {36}, number = {1}, pages = {50--74}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;nl-quantifiers;rigid-designators; plural-quantification;} } @book{ berger_a2:2011a, editor = {Alan Berger}, title = {Saul Kripke}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780521858267}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Alan Berger, "Introduction" 1. Bernard Linsky, "Kripke on Proper and General Names" 2. Nathan Salmon, "Kripke on Vacuous Names and Names in Fiction" 3. Scott Soames, "Kripke on Epistemic and Modal Possibility: Two Routes to the Necessary A Posteriori" 4. Robert Stalnaker, "Possible World Semantics and Its Philosophic Foundations" 5. John Burgess, "Kripke Models for Modal Logic and Intuitionism" 6. John Burgess, "Kripke's Theory of Truth" 7. Mark Steiner, "Kripke on Logicism, {W}ittgenstein, and De Re Beliefs about Numbers" 8. Alan Berger, "Kripke on the Incoherency of Adopting a Logic" 9. Mark Richard, "Kripke's New Puzzle about Belief and Our Principles of Belief Attribution" 10. Nathan Salmon, "A note on {K}ripke's Puzzle about Belief" 11. George Wilson, "Kripke's Version of {W}ittgenstein: Some Conceptions and Misconceptions" 12. Mario Gomez-Torrente, "Kripke on Color Words and the Primary, Secondary Quality Distinction" 13. Sydney Shoemaker, "Kripke's Views on {C}artesianism and Naturalism" 14. Jeff Buechner, "Kripke's Critique of Functionalism"}, xref = {Review: liebesman_d:2012a}, topic = {Kripke;analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ berger_j:1996a, author = {Jonathan Berger}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}omputers and Musical Style}, by {D}avid {C}ope}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {79}, number = {2}, pages = {343--348}, xref = {Review of: cope:1991a.}, topic = {AI-and-music;} } @book{ berger_jo:1985a, author = {James O. Berger}, title = {Statistical Decision Theory and Bayesian Analysis}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1985}, edition = {second}, address = {New York}, topic = {decision-theory;} } @book{ berger_pl-luckmann:1966a, author = {Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann}, title = {The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge}, publisher = {Doubleday}, year = {1966}, address = {Garden City, New York}, ISBN = {0226069311}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, GN360 .B681 1985.}, topic = {sociology-of-knowledge;} } @unpublished{ berglas:1994a, author = {Anthony Berglas}, title = {Very Skeptical Defaults}, year = {1994}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Computer Science Department, University of Brisbane.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @unpublished{ berglas:1995a, author = {Anthony Berglas}, title = {Beyond Shortest Path Defaults}, year = {1995}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Computer Science Department, University of Brisbane.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @incollection{ bergler:1995a, author = {Sabine Bergler}, title = {From Lexical Semantics to Text Analysis}, booktitle = {Computational Lexical Semantics}, year = {1995}, editor = {Patrick Saint-Dizier and Evelyne Viegas}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, pages = {98--124}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {lexical-semantics;nl-interpretation;} } @article{ bergman_g:1950a, author = {Gustav Bergman}, title = {A Note on Ontology}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1950}, volume = {1}, number = {7}, pages = {89--92}, topic = {ontology;philosophical-logic;} } @article{ bergman_m1:1977a, author = {Merrie Bergman}, title = {Logic and Sortal Incorrectness}, journal = {Review of Metaphysics}, year = {1977}, volume = {31}, number = {1}, pages = {27--53}, topic = {sortal-incorrectness;} } @article{ bergman_m1:1979a, author = {Merrie Bergman}, title = {Metaphor and Formal Semantic Theory}, journal = {Poetics}, year = {1979}, volume = {8}, pages = {213--230}, topic = {metaphor;sortal-incorrectness;} } @article{ bergman_m1:1981a, author = {Merrie Bergman}, title = {Presupposition and Two-Dimensional Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {27--53}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @article{ bergman_m1:1982a, author = {Merrie Bergman}, title = {Cross-Categorial Semantics for Conjoined Noun Phrases}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1982}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {399--401}, topic = {coordination;nl-semantics;} } @article{ bergman_m2:1999a, author = {Michael Bergman}, title = {(Serious) Actualism and (Serious) Presentism}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1999}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {118--132}, topic = {actualism;} } @article{ bergmann_g:1945a, author = {Gustav Bergmann}, title = {Descriptions in Non-Extensional Contexts}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1948}, volume = {15}, number = {4}, pages = {253--355}, topic = {Russell;definite-descriptions;intensionality;} } @article{ bergmann_g:1948a, author = {Gustav Bergmann}, title = {Descriptions in Non-Extensional Contexts}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1948}, volume = {15}, number = {6}, pages = {253--355}, topic = {ontology;philosophical-logic;} } @article{ bergmann_g:1952a, author = {Gustav Bergmann}, title = {Comments on {S}torer's Definition of `soluble{'}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1952}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {44--48}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my10}, xref = {Criticism of: storer:1951a}, xref = {Reply: storer:1954a}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ bergmann_g:1955a, author = {Gustav Bergmann}, title = {Dispositional Properties and Dispositions}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1955}, volume = {6}, pages = {77--80}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Review: watling_j:1957c.}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ bergmann_g:1960a, author = {Gustav Bergmann}, title = {Ineffability, Ontology, and Methods}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1960}, volume = {69}, number = {1}, pages = {18--40}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ bergmann_g:1960b, author = {Gustav Bergmann}, title = {The Philosophical Significance of Modal Logic}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1960}, volume = {69}, number = {276}, pages = {466--485}, contentnote = {The claim is that it is of no significance whatever. This is based on CI Lewis' work, and apparently without a very clear idea of what philosophical significance is.}, topic = {foundations-of-modal-logic;} } @article{ bergmann_m1:2010a, author = {Merrie Bergmann}, title = {Conjunction-Based \emph{Sorites}: A Misguided Objection to Degree-Theoretic (Fuzzy) Solutions to Sorites Paradoxes}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {39}, number = {1}, pages = {1--4}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @incollection{ bergmann_r-wilke_w:1998a, author = {Ralph Bergmann and Wolfgang Wilke}, title = {Towards a New Formal Model of Transformational Adaptation in Case-Based Reasoning}, booktitle = {{ECAI}98, Thirteenth European Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1998}, editor = {Henri Prade}, pages = {53--57}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {case-based-reasoning;} } @book{ bergstra-etal:1989a, editor = {J.A. Bergstra and J. Heering and P. Klint}, title = {Algebraic Specification}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley}, year = {1989}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0201416352}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .A23 A441 1989.}, topic = {abstract-data-types;} } @book{ bergstrom_l:1966a, author = {Lars Bergstr\"om}, title = {The Alternatives and Consequences of Actions: An Essay on Certain Fundamental Notions in Teleological Ethics}, publisher = {Almqvist and Wiksell}, year = {1966}, address = {Stockholm}, rtnote = {Hatcher Graduate B 20.6 .S86 no.4}, topic = {action;utilitatianism;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ bergstrom_l:1968a, author = {Lars Bergstr{\o}m}, title = {Utilitarianism and Deontic Logic}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1968}, volume = {29}, number = {2}, pages = {43--44}, xref = {Commentary on: castaenda:1967d}, topic = {deontic-logic;utilitarianism;} } @article{ bergstrom_l:1971a, author = {Lars Bergstr{\"o}m}, title = {Utilitarianism and Alternative Actions}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1971}, volume = {5}, pages = {237--252}, topic = {utilitarianism;} } @article{ bergstrom_l:1974a, author = {Lars Bergstr\"om}, title = {Hintikka on Prima Facie Obligation}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1974}, volume = {40}, number = {3}, pages = {163--165}, xref = {Reply: hintikka_j:1975e}, topic = {deontic-logic;prima-facie-obligation;} } @article{ bergstrom_l:1975a, author = {Lars Bergstr\"om}, title = {Reply to {P}rofessor {H}intikka}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1975}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {84}, xref = {Reply to: hintikka_j:1975e}, topic = {deontic-logic;prima-facie-obligation;} } @article{ bergstrom_l:1976a, author = {Lars Bergstr\"om}, title = {On the Formulation and Application of Utilitarianism}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1976}, volume = {10}, pages = {121--144}, topic = {utilitarianism;practical-reasoning;pr-course;alternatives-for-action;} } @article{ bergstrom_l:1977a, author = {Lars Bergstr{\"o}m}, title = {Utilitarianism and Future Mistakes}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1977}, volume = {43}, pages = {84--102}, topic = {utilitarianism;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ beringer_t-schindler_t:2017a, author = {Timo Beringer and Thomas Schindler}, title = {A Graph-Theoretic Analysis of the Semantic Paradoxes}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {23}, number = {4}, pages = {442--492}, topic = {graph-theory;semantic-paradoxes;Yablo-paradox;} } @article{ berk:2003a, author = {Lon Berk}, title = {Why the {L}iar Does not Matter}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2003}, volume = {32}, number = {3}, pages = {323--341}, topic = {truth;semantic-paradoxes;deflationary-analyses;} } @article{ berk:2004a, author = {Lon A. Berk}, title = {The {L}iar, Context, and Logical Form}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2004}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {267--286}, topic = {truth;semantic-paradoxes;context;} } @article{ berkeley_isn:1996a, author = {Istvan S. N. Berkeley}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}peaking Minds: Interviews with Twenty Eminent Cognitive Scientists}, by Peter Baumgartner and Sabine Payr}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {273--276}, xref = {Review of: baumgartner-payr_s:1995a}, topic = {history-of-cogsci;cognitive-science-general;} } @article{ berkeley_isn:2000a, author = {Istv\'an S. N. Berkeley}, title = {What the \#\$*\%! is a Subsymbol?}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {1--14}, abstract = {In 1988, Smolensky proposed that connectionist processing systems should be understood as operating at what he termed the `subsymbolic' level. $\ldots$ recently published work on a network trained on a set of logic problems originally studied by Bechtel and Abrahamsen (1991) seems to offer the potential to provide a detailed, empirically based answer to questions about the nature of subsymbols. $\ldots$ }, topic = {sub-symbolic-representations;} } @article{ berker_s:2008a, author = {Selim Berker}, title = {Luminosity Regained}, journal = {Philosopher's Imprint}, year = {2008}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {1--22}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;} } @article{ berker_s:2013a, author = {Selim Berker}, title = {Epistemic Teleology and the Separateness of Propositions}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2013}, volume = {122}, number = {3}, pages = {337--393}, topic = {belief;epistemic-norms;} } @incollection{ berker_s:2013b, author = {Selim Berker}, title = {The Rejection of Epistemic Consequentialism}, booktitle = {Epistemic Agency}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2013}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Baron Reed}, pages = {363--387}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {belief;consequentialism;} } @article{ berker_s:2018a, author = {Selim Berker}, title = {The Unity of Grounding}, journal = {Mind}, year = {201}, volume = {127}, number = {507}, pages = {729--777}, abstract = {I argue -- contra moderate grounding pluralists such as Kit Fine and more extreme grounding pluralists such as Jessica Wilson -- that there is fundamentally only one grounding/in-virtue-of relation. I also argue that this single relation is indispensable for normative theorizing -- that we can't make sense of, for example, the debate over consequentialism without it. It follows from what I argue that there is no metaethically-pure normative ethics (in contrast to Ronald Dworkin's claim that there is no normatively-pure metaethics). }, topic = {truthmaking;metaethics;} } @article{ berleant-kuipers_bj:1997a, author = {Daniel Berleant and Benjamin J. Kuipers}, title = {Qualitative and Quantitative Simulation: Bridging the Gap}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {95}, number = {2}, pages = {215--255}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;qualitative-modeling; combined-qualitative-and-quantitative-reasoning;} } @book{ berlin_b-kay_p:1969a, author = {Brent Berlin and Paul Kay}, title = {Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and Evolution}, publisher = {University of California Press}, year = {1969}, address = {Los Angeles}, xref = {Review: hickerson:1971a.}, topic = {color-terms;cultural-anthropology;} } @article{ berlin_d:1984a, author = {Daniel Berlin}, title = {Review of {\ it Planning and Understanding: A Computational Approach to Human Reasoning}, by {R}obert {W}ilensky}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {242--244}, xref = {Review of wilensky_r:1983a.}, topic = {planning;nl-interpretation;plan-recognition;} } @incollection{ berlin_i:1973a, author = {Isaiah Berlin}, title = {Austin and the Early Beginnings of {O}xford Philosophy}, booktitle = {Essays on J.L. Austin}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1973}, editor = {Isiah Berlin et al.}, pages = {1--16}, address = {Oxford}, missinginfo = {Other editors}, topic = {JL-Austin;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @book{ berlin_i-etal:1973a, author = {Isiah Berlin and L.W. Forguson and David F. Pears and George Pitcher and John R. Searle and Peter F. Strawson and G.J. Warnock}, title = {Essays on J.L. Austin}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1973}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {Hillman B1618 A84E87}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {JL-Austin;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @article{ berliner:1978a, author = {Hans J. Berliner}, title = {A Chronology of Computer Chess and its Literature}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1978}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {201--214}, topic = {game-playing;} } @article{ berliner:1979a1, author = {Hans Berliner}, title = {The B* Tree Search Algorithm: A Best-First Procedure}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1979}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {23--40}, xref = {Republication: berliner:1979a2.}, topic = {search;} } @incollection{ berliner:1979a2, author = {Hans Berliner}, title = {The B* Tree Search Algorithm: A Best-First Procedure}, booktitle = {Readings in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1981}, editor = {Bonnie Webber and Nils J. Nilsson}, pages = {79--87}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: berliner:1979a1.}, topic = {search;} } @article{ berliner:1980a, author = {Hans J. Berliner}, title = {Backgammon Computer Program Beats World Champion}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1980}, volume = {14}, number = {2}, pages = {205--220}, topic = {game-playing;} } @article{ berliner-beal_df:1990a, author = {Hans J. Berliner and Don F. Beal}, title = {Introduction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, contentnote = {Intro to a special issue on game playing.}, pages = {1--5}, topic = {game-playing;} } @article{ berliner-campbell_m:1984a, author = {Hans Berliner and Murray Campbell}, title = {Using Chunking to Solve Chess Pawn Endgames}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {97--120}, topic = {game-playing;computer-chess;} } @article{ berliner-ebeling:1989a, author = {Hans Berliner and Carl Ebeling}, title = {Pattern Knowledge and Search: The {SUPREM} Architecture}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {38}, number = {2}, pages = {161--198}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We present a new problem solving architecture based upon extremely fast search and pattern recognition. This architecture, which we have named SUPREM, has been implemented in the chess machine/program Hitech, and has proven to be very successful. We describe the implementation in Hitech and the reasons for its success, and compare the SUPREM architecture to other well-known problem solving architectures. Certain interesting phenomena have become exposed as the result of our work with Hitech. The most important of these is that: ``The further a process can look ahead, the less detailed knowledge it needs''. We have also found that patterns can be formulated for quite complex problems in relatively small pattern recognizers, by eschewing generality and concentrating on likely patterns and their redundancies.}, topic = {search;pattern-recognition;computer-chess;problem-solving; problem-solving-architectures;} } @article{ berliner-etal:1990a, author = {Hans J. Berliner and Gordon Goetsch and Murray S. Campbell and Carl Ebeling}, title = {Measuring The Performance Potential Of Chess Programs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {7--20}, topic = {game-playing;computer-chess;} } @article{ berliner-mcconnell:1996a, author = {Hans J. Berliner and Chris McConnell}, title = {B Probability Based Search[*]}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {86}, number = {1}, pages = {97--156}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We describe a search algorithm for two-player games that relies on selectivity rather than brute-force to achieve success. The key ideas behind the algorithm are: (1) stopping when one alternative is clearly better than all the others, and (2) focusing the search on the place where the most progress can likely be made toward stopping. Critical to this process is identifying uncertainty about the ultimate value of any move. The lower bound on uncertainty is the best estimate of the real value of a move. The upper bound is its optimistic value, based on some measure of unexplored potential. This provides an I-have-optimism-that-needs-to-be-investigated attitude that is an excellent guiding force. Uncertainty is represented by probability distributions. The search develops those parts of the tree where moving existing bounds would be most likely to succeed and would make the most progress toward terminating the search. Termination is achieved when the established real value of the best move is so good that the likelihood of this being achieved by any other alternative is minimal. The B* probability based search algorithm has been implemented on the chess machine Hitech. En route we have developed effective techniques for: -- producing viable optimistic estimates to guide the search, -- producing cheap probability distribution estimates to measure goodness, -- dealing with independence of alternative moves, and -- dealing with the graph history interaction problem. The report describes the implementation, and the results of tests including games played against brute-force programs. Test data indicate that B* Hitech is better than any searcher that expands its whole tree based on selectivity. Further, analysis of the data indicates that should additional power become available, the B* technique will scale up considerably better than brute-force techniques. }, topic = {probabilistic-algorithms;search;computer-chess;} } @book{ berlinski:2000a, author = {David Berlinski}, title = {The Advent of the Algorithm}, publisher = {Harcourt, Inc.}, year = {2000}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-15-601391-6 (pbk)}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. History of Science Shelves.}, topic = {history-of-computer-science;history-of-logic; history-of-mathematics;} } @article{ berman_dh:1995a, author = {Donald H. Berman}, title = {Review of \emph{Modeling Legal Argument: Reasoning With Cases and Hypotheticals}, by {K}evin {A}shley}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1995}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {420--426}, xref = {Review of: ashley_kd:1990a.}, topic = {case-based-reasoning;legal-reasoning;legal-AI;} } @incollection{ berman_dh-hafner:1986a, author = {Donald H. Berman and Carole D. Hafner}, year = {1986}, title = {Obstacles to the Development of Logic-Based Models of Legal Reasoning}, booktitle = {Computer Power and Legal Language}, publisher = {Quorum Books}, editor = {Charles Walter}, pages = {185--214}, address = {New York}, topic = {legal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ berman_pj-etal:1989a, author = {P.J. Berman and J. Garray and J. Perry}, title = {Towards Optimal Distributed Consensus}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirtieth {IEEE} Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science}, year = {1989}, pages = {410--415}, organization = {IEEE}, publisher = {IEEE}, missinginfo = {A's 1st names, editor, address}, topic = {distributed-systems;artificial-societies;mutual-belief;} } @phdthesis{ berman_s:1991a, author = {Steve Berman}, title = {On the Semantics and Logical Form of Wh-Clauses.}, school = {University of Massachusetts at Amherst}, year = {1991}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, topic = {relative-clauses;} } @incollection{ berman_sr:1987a, author = {Stephen R. Berman}, title = {Situation-based Semantics for Adverbs of Quantification}, booktitle = {Studies in Semantics}, editor = {James Blevins and Anne Vainikka}, series = {U. Mass Occasional Papers in Linguistics 12}, publisher = {GLSA Publications}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, year = {1987}, topic = {situation-semantics;nl-quantifiers;} } @book{ berman_sr-etal:1985a, editor = {Stephen R. Berman and J-W. Choe and J. McDonough}, title = {{NELS 15}: Proceedings of the Fifteenth Conference of the {N}orth {E}ast {L}inguistic {S}ociety}, publisher = {GLSA Publications}, year = {1985}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, note = {URL FOR GLSA Publications: http://www.umass.edu/linguist/glsa-pubs.html.}, topic = {linguistics-proceedings;nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @book{ berman_sr-etal:1986a, editor = {Stephen R. Berman and J-W. Choe and Joyce McDonough}, title = {{NELS 16}: Proceedings of the Sixteenth Conference of the {N}orth {E}ast {L}inguistic {S}ociety}, publisher = {GLSA Publications}, year = {1986}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, note = {URL FOR GLSA Publications: http://www.umass.edu/linguist/glsa-pubs.html.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. S. Abney & J. Cole, "A government-binding parameter" 2. J. Aoun, "Bound pronouns in Chinese" 3. D. Archangeli, "The OCP and Nyangumarda buffer vowels" 4. G. A. Broadwell, "A-bar anaphora and relative clauses" 5. G. Chierchia & P. Jacobson, "Local and long distance control" 6. H.-S. Choe, "An {SVO} analysis of {VSO} languages and parameterization: a study of {B}erber" 7. S. Crain & C. McKee, "Acquisition of structural restrictions on anaphora" 8. H. Davis, "Syntactic undergeneration in the acquisition of English: Wh-questions and the ECP" 9. A. M. Di Sciullo & E. S. Williams, "Noun incorporation vs. cliticization" 10. W. N. Elliott & K. Wexler, "A principled theory of categorial acquisition" 11. D. L. Finer & E. I. Broselow, "Second language acquisition of reflexive binding" 12. A. Giorgi, "The proper notion of c-command and the binding theory: evidence from NPs" 13. P. Gorrell, "Natural language parsing and reanalysis" 14. I. Haik, "Pronouns of laziness" 15. C. K. Kamprath, "The syllabification of consonantal glides: post peak distinctions" 16. M. Kenstowicz, "Multiple linking in Javanese" 17. Y. Kitagawa, "Barriers to government" 18. R. Kluender, "SATZCHEN: German small clauses as S's" 19. R. Lieber, "Quirky mutations in an autosegmental framework" 20. D. Lillo-Martin, "Effects of the acquisition of morphology on syntactic parameter setting" 21. M. R. Manzini, "On control and binding theory" 22. C. Paradis, "Les marquers de classe en Pulaar (Fula): strates et syllabes" 23. B. H. Partee, "Ambiguous pseudoclefts with unambiguous be" 24. E. J. Reuland, "Constraining the relation between morphology and syntax" 25. Y. Roberge, "On doubling and null argument languages" 26. K. Safir, "On implicit arguments and thematic structure" 27. D. Schlindwein, "Tier alignment in reduplication" 28. P. Sells, "Coreference and bound anaphora: a restatement of facts" 29. U. Shlonsky & M. Sigler, "Unexceptional exceptional case marking" 30. R. Sproat, "The projection principle and the syntax of synthetic compounds" 31. T. Stowell, "Null antecedents and proper government" }, topic = {linguistics-proceedings;nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @article{ bermudez_j:2000a, author = {Jos\'e Luis Berm\'udez}, title = {Self-Deception, Intentions, and Contradictory Beliefs}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2000}, volume = {60}, number = {4}, pages = {309--319}, topic = {self-deception;} } @book{ bermudez_jl:1998a, author = {Jos\'e L. Berm\'udez}, title = {The Paradox of Self-Consciousness}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massacusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-02441-1}, topic = {consciousness;} } @article{ bermudez_jl:2000a, author = {Jos\'e Luis Berm\'udez}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}: The Meaning of the First Person Term}, by {M}aximilian {D}e {G}aynesford}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2000}, volume = {109}, number = {4}, pages = {634--637}, xref = {Review of: degaynesford:2006a}, topic = {first-person;demonstratives;} } @article{ bermudez_jl:2001a, author = {Jos\'e L. Berm\'udez}, title = {Frege on Thoughts and Their Structure}, journal = {Logical Analysis and History of Philosophy}, year = {2001}, volume = {4}, pages = {87--105}, topic = {Frege;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ bermudez_jl:2004a, author = {Jos\'e Luis Berm\'udez}, title = {Vagueness, Phenomenal Concepts and Mind-Brain Identity}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {2}, pages = {134--139}, xref = {Commentary on: papineau_d:2002a}, topic = {mind-body-problem;} } @book{ bermudez_jl:2005a, author = {Jos\'e Luis Berm\'udez}, title = {Philosophy of Psychology: A Contemporary Introduction}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2005}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0-415-27595-4}, xref = {Review: luo_j:2008a}, topic = {philosophy-of-psychology;} } @book{ bermudez_jl:2007a, author = {Jos\'e Luis Berm\'udez}, title = {Thinking without Words}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780195341607}, abstract = {... provides a challenging new theory of the nature of non-linguistic thought. ... ascriptions of thoughts to non-linguistic creatures have frequently been held to be metaphorical and not to be taken at face value. Bermudez offers a conceptual framework for treating human infants and non-human animals as genuine thinkers. ... Bermudez approaches the problem by considering what is required in explaining behavior in psychological terms. In developing a positive account of non-linguistic thought he shows how the experimental tools used by developmental psychologists and students of animal behavior can be used to give a precise account of the way in which a human infant or non-human animal is representing the world. Much of the book is devoted to exploring the differences between thinking without words and language-based thinking. Bermudez argues that there are clear limits to the expressive power of non-linguistic thought. Nonetheless, he identifies primitive analogues at the non-linguistic level that can be used to explain sophisticated non-linguistic behaviors. ...}, topic = {animal-cognition;} } @incollection{ bermudez_jl:2009a, author = {Jos\'e Luis Berm\'udez}, title = {Mindreading in the Animal Kingdom}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of Animal Minds}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert K. Lurz}, pages = {145--164}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {animal-cognition;other-modeling;agent-attitude-recognition;} } @article{ bermudez_jl:2012a, author = {Jos\'e Luis Berm\'udez}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}anguage and Equilibrium}, by {P}rasant {P}arikh}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2012}, volume = {121}, number = {2}, pages = {294--298}, xref = {Review of: parikh_p:2010a}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;game-theory;} } @book{ bermudez_jl-etal:1995a, editor = {Jos\'e L. Berm\'udez and Anthony J. Marcel and Naomi Eilan}, title = {The Body and the Self}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, Massacusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-52248-9}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;} } @article{ bernard_o-gouze:2002a, author = {Oliver Bernard and Jean-Luc Gouz\'e}, title = {Global Qualitative Description of a Class of Nonlinear Dynamical Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {136}, number = {1}, pages = {29--59}, topic = {nonlinear-systems;qualitative-modeling;} } @article{ bernardi_c-dagostino_g:1996a, author = {Claudio Bernardi and Giovanna D'Agostino}, title = {Translating the Hypergame Paradox: Remarks on the Set of Founded Elements of a Relation}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {25}, number = {5}, pages = {545--557}, topic = {paradoxes;} } @article{ bernardi_r:2004a, author = {Raffaella Bernardi}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Syntactic Process}, by {M}ark {S}teedman}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2004}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, pages = {526--530}, xref = {Review of: steedman_m:2000a.}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-semantics;categoriaal-grammar;nl-processing; nl-quantifiers;nl-quantifier-scope;intonation;} } @article{ bernardi_r-szabolcsi_a:2008a, author = {Raffaella Bernardi and Anna Szabolcsi}, title = {Optionality, Scope, and Licensing: An Application of Partially Ordered Categories}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2008}, volume = {17}, number = {3}, pages = {237--283}, topic = {categorial-grammar;polarity;Hungarian-language;} } @inproceedings{ bernardini_s-etal:2020a, author = {Sara Bernardini and Fabio Fagnani and Santiago Franco}, title = {An Optimization Approach to Robust Goal Obfuscation}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {119--129}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {...we present a set of strategies to underpin the behavior of an agent that wants to arrive as close as possible to its destination without revealing it to an observer, which monitors its progress in the environment. ...}, topic = {goal-obfuscation;} } @article{ bernays_p:1946a, author = {Paul Bernays}, title = {Review of `Russell's Mathematical Logic', by {K}urt {G}\"odel}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1946}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {75--79}, xref = {Review of: godel_k:1944a1.}, topic = {Russell;foundations-of-logic;type-theory;Russell-paradox; vicious-circle-principle;ramified-type-theory;} } @article{ bernays_p:1950a, author = {Paul Bernays}, title = {Review of \emph{Meaning and Necessity}, by {R}udolf {C}arnap}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1950}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {237--241}, xref = {Review of: carnap:1947a}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @book{ bernecker_s:2010a, author = {Sven Bernecker}, title = {Memory: A Philosophical Study}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2010}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199577569}, topic = {memory;philosophical-psychology;} } @incollection{ bernecker_s:2014a, author = {Sven Bernecker}, title = {How to Understand the Extended Mind}, booktitle = {Extended Knowledge}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2014}, editor = {J. Adam Carter and Jesper Kallestrup and Orestis Palermos and Duncan Pritchard}, pages = {1--23}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {embedded-cognition;} } @article{ bernerslee-kagal_l:2008a, author = {Tim Berners-Lee and Lalana Kagal}, title = {The Fractal Nature of the Semantic Web}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2008}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {29--34}, topic = {semantic-web;} } @book{ bernhardt_c:2017a, author = {Chris Bernhardt}, title = {Turing's Vision: The Birth of Computer Science}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-53351-5}, abstract = {In 1936, when he was just twenty-four years old, Alan Turing wrote a remarkable paper in which he outlined the theory of computation, laying out the ideas that underlie all modern computers. This groundbreaking and powerful theory now forms the basis of computer science. In Turing's Vision, Chris Bernhardt explains the theory, Turing's most important contribution, for the general reader. Bernhardt argues that the strength of Turing's theory is its simplicity, and that, explained in a straightforward manner, it is eminently understandable by the nonspecialist. \dots\ He also views Turing's theory in the context of mathematical history, other views of computation (including those of Alonzo Church), Turing's later work, and the birth of the modern computer. \dots\ To explain Turing's ideas, Bernhardt examines three well-known decision problems to explore the concept of undecidability; investigates theoretical computing machines, including Turing machines; explains universal machines; and proves that certain problems are undecidable, including Turing's problem concerning computable numbers.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Fall, 2018}, topic = {Turing;computability;history-of-mathematics;history-of-theory-of-computation;} } @incollection{ bernsen:1989a, author = {Niels Ole Bernsen}, title = {General Introduction: A {E}uropean Perspective on Cognitive Science}, booktitle = {Logic and Linguistics}, publisher = {Lawrence Earlbaum Associates}, year = {1989}, editor = {Helmut Schnelle and Niels Ole Bernsen}, pages = {vii--xiv}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, topic = {cognitive-science-survey;} } @book{ bernsen:1998a, author = {Niels Ole Bernsen}, title = {Designing Interactive Speech Systems: from First Ideas to User Testing}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540760482 (acid-free paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 B471 1998.}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ bernsen-etal:2004a, author = {Niels Ole Bernsen and Laila Dybkjaer and Mykola Kolodnytsky}, title = {An Interface for Annotating Natural Interactivity}, booktitle = {Current and New Directions in Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Jan van Kuppevelt and Ronnie W. Smith}, pages = {35--62}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {dialogue-corpora;} } @incollection{ bernstein_a-wattenberg:1969a, author = {A. Bernstein and F. Wattenberg}, title = {Non-Standard Measure Theory}, booktitle = {Applications of Model Theory of Algebra, Analysis and Probability}, publisher = {Holt, Rinehart and Winston}, year = {1968}, editor = {W.A.J. Luxemburg}, pages = {171--185}, address = {New York}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {nonstandard-probability;} } @incollection{ bernstein_s:2016a, author = {Sara Bernstein}, title = {Grounding is not Causation}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 30: Metaphysics}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2016}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {21--38}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {metaphysics;truthmaking;causation;} } @incollection{ bernth:1987a, author = {Arendse Bernth}, title = {Treatment of Anaphoric Pronouns in Referentially Opaque Contexts}, booktitle = {Natural Language and Logic}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1987}, editor = {Rudi Studer}, pages = {1--25}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {anaphora;referential-opacity;computational-semantics;} } @article{ berovsky:1973a, author = {Bernard Berovsky}, title = {The Counterfactual Analysis of Causation}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1973}, volume = {70}, number = {17}, pages = {568--569}, topic = {causality;conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ berreby_f-etal:1997a, author = {Fiona Berreby and Gauvain Bourgne and Jean-Gabriel Ganascia}, title = {A Declarative Modular Framework for Representing and Applying Ethical Principles}, booktitle = {AGENTS '17 Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Autonomous Agents}, year = {1997}, editor = {Sanmay Das and Edmund Durfee}, pages = {148--155}, organization = {Association for Computing Machinery}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @inproceedings{ berreby_f-etal:2017a, author = {Fiona Berreby and Gauvain Bourgne and Jean-Gabriel Ganascia}, title = {A Declarative Modular Framework for Representing and Applying Ethical Principles}, booktitle = {AAMAS '17: Proceedings of the 16th Conference on Autonomous Agents and MultiAgent Systems}, year = {2017}, editor = {Kare Larsom and Michael Winikoff}, pages = {96--104}, publisher = {ACM Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {This paper investigates the use of high-level action languages for designing ethical autonomous agents. It proposes a novel and modular logic-based framework for representing and reasoning over a variety of ethical theories, based on a modified version of the Event Calculus and implemented in Answer Set Programming. The ethical decision-making processis conceived of as a multi-step procedure captured by four types of interdependent models which allow the agent to assess its environment, reason over its accountability and make ethically informed choices. ...}, topic = {computational-ethics;answer-sets;} } @article{ berresford_gc:1981a, author = {Geoffrey C. Berresford}, title = {A Note on {T}homson's Lamp `Paradox{'}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1981}, volume = {41}, number = {1}, pages = {1--3}, topic = {paradoxes-of-physical-infinity;} } @incollection{ berry_g:1969a, author = {George Berry}, title = {Logic with Platonism}, booktitle = {Words and Objections: Essays on the Work of {W.V.O.} {Q}uine}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1969}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Jaakko Hintikka}, pages = {243--277}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;} } @article{ berry_gdw:1944a, author = {George D.W. Berry}, title = {Review of `{A} Set of Axioms for Logic', by {T}heodore {H}ailperin}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1944}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {73--74}, xref = {Review of: hailperin_t:1944a.}, topic = {Quine;set-theory;} } @article{ berry_gdw:1954a, author = {George D.W. Berry}, title = {Review of `{S}ome Notes on Nominalism', by {L}eon {H}enkin}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1954}, volume = {19}, number = {4}, pages = {289--290}, xref = {Review of: henkin_l:1953a}, topic = {nominalism;formalizations-of-syntax;} } @article{ berskyte_j-stevens_g:2023a, author = {Justina Ber\v{s}kyt\.{e} and Graham Stevens}, title = {Faultless Disagreement without Contradiction: Expressive-Relativism and Predicates of Personal Taste}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {1}, pages = {31--64}, abstract = {... we motivate and develop a new approach to predicates of personal taste within the framework of semantic relativism. Our primary goal is to explain faultless disagreement ... We combine semantic relativism with an expressivist semantics to yield a novel hybrid theory which we call Expressive-Relativism. We motivate the theory by rehearsing a famous objection to Relativism from Frege which we interpret as severing the connection between contradiction and disagreement for relativists. Endorsing the objection, we respond by enriching relativism with an expressivist component which explains disagreement over matters of taste as a refusal to share perspectives rather than as resting on contradiction. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se23}, topic = {predicates-of-taste;expressivism;} } @book{ bert-etal:1999a, editor = {D. Bert and C. Choppy and P. Mosses}, title = {Recent Trends in Algebraic Development Techniques: 14th International Workshop, {WADT}'99, Chateau de Bonas}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3-540-67898-0}, topic = {abstract-data-types;} } @article{ bertenthal_bi:1995a, author = {Bennett I. Bertenthal}, title = {Origins and Early Development of Perception, Action, and Representation}, journal = {Annual Review of Psychology}, year = {1996}, volume = {47}, pages = {431--459}, abstract = {... research on object recognition suggests that even young infants represent some of the defining features and physical constraints that specify the identity and continuity of objects. Different factors contribute to developmental changes within the two systems; it is difficult to generalize from one response system to another; and neither perception, action, nor representation qualifies as ontogenetically privileged. All three processes develop from birth as a function of intrinsic processing constraints and experience.}, topic = {developmental-psychology;object-recognition;} } @unpublished{ berthiaume:1999a, author = {Andr\'e Berthiaume}, title = {Quantum Computation}, year = {1999}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Centrum voor Wiskunde en Informatica, Amsterdam.}, url = {https://ir.cwi.nl/pub/2622}, topic = {quantum-computing;} } @incollection{ berthold_m:2022a, author = {Matti Berthold}, title = {On Syntactic Forgetting with Strong Persistence}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {43--52}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {It is generally agreed upon that so-called strong persistence (SP) captures best the essence of forgetting in logic programming. ... This technical paper aims to answer one of them: How can atoms be forgotten from a program without having to calculate its exponential number of models? To this end, we introduce two concrete representatives of F_R and F_SP that forget sets of atoms by syntactical manipulation of a program's rules. This may in many cases prevent exponential blowups and produce a forgetting result that is close to the original program.}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {answer-sets;logic-programming;forgetting;} } @incollection{ berthouzoz:1999a, author = {Cathy Berthouzoz}, title = {A Model of Context Adapted to Domain-Independent Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {54--66}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;machine-translation;} } @book{ bertilsson:1978a, author = {Margareta Bertilsson}, title = {Towards a Social Reconstruction of Science Theory: {P}eirce's Theory of Inquiry and Beyond}, publisher = {Bokcafeet}, year = {1978}, address = {Lund}, topic = {Peirce;sociology-of-science;} } @book{ bertinetto-etal:1995a, editor = {Pier M. Bertinetto and V. Bianchi and James Higginbotham and Mario Squartini}, title = {Temporal Reference, Aspect, and Actuality}, publisher = {Rosenberg and Sellier}, year = {1995}, address = {Torino}, ISBN = {8870116379}, missinginfo = {E's 1st names}, contentnote = {Proceedings of a conference held in October 1993 in Cortona.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 281 .T46 1995}, topic = {tense-aspect;} } @article{ berto_f:2014a, author = {Francesco Berto}, title = {Absolute Contradiction, Dialetheism, and Revenge}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {193--207}, topic = {paraconsistency;inconsistency;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ berto_f:2017a, author = {Francesco Berto}, title = {Aboutness in Imagination}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2017}, volume = {175}, number = {8}, pages = {1871--1886}, abstract = {I present a formal theory of the logic and aboutness of imagination. Aboutness is understood as the relation between meaningful items and what they concern, as per Yablo and Fine'zs works on the notion. Imagination is understood as per Chalmers's positive conceivability: the intentional state of a subject who conceives that p by imagining a situation -- a configuration of objects and properties --verifying p. So far aboutness theory has been developed mainly for linguistic representation, but it is natural to extend it to intentional states. The proposed framework combines a modal semantics with a mereology of contents: imagination operators are understood as variably strict quantifiers over worlds with a content-preservation constraint.}, topic = {logic-of-imagination;aboutness;intentionality;} } @article{ berto_f-etal:2018a, author = {Francesco Berto and Rohan French and Graham Priest and David Ripley}, title = {Williamson on Counterpossibles}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {4}, pages = {693--713}, topic = {conditionals;relevance-logic;} } @article{ berto_f-ozgun_a:2023a, author = {Francesco Berto and Ayb\"uke \"Ozg\"un}, title = {The Logic of Framing Effects}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2023}, volume = {52}, number = {3}, pages = {939--962}, abstract = {Framing effects concern the having of different attitudes towards logically or necessarily equivalent contents. Framing is of crucial importance for cognitive science, behavioral economics, decision theory, and the social sciences at large. We model a typical kind of framing, grounded in (i) the structural distinction between beliefs activated in working memory and beliefs left inactive in long term memory, and (ii) the topic- or subject matter-sensitivity of belief: a feature of propositional attitudes which is attracting growing research attention. We introduce a class of models featuring (i) and (ii) to represent, and reason about, agents whose belief states can be subject to framing effects. We axiomatize a logic which we prove to be sound and complete with respect to the class. }, topic = {cognitive-logics;conceptualizing;} } @article{ berto_f-restall_g:2019a, author = {Francesco Berto and Greg Restall}, title = {Negation on the {A}ustralian Plan}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {6}, pages = {1119--1144}, abstract = {We present and defend the Australian Plan semantics for negation. ... The first [idea] is that negation is an exclusion-expressing device: we utter negations to express incompatibilities. The second is that, because incompatibility is modal, negation is a modal operator as well. It can, then, be modelled as a quantifier over points in frames, restricted by accessibility relations representing compatibilities and incompatibilities between such points. ...}, topic = {negation;relevance-logic;} } @inproceedings{ bertoglio_n-etal:2020a, author = {Nicola Bertoglio and Gianfranco Lamperti and Marina Zanella and Xiangfu Zhao}, title = {Explanatory Diagnosis of Discrete-Event Systems with Temporal Information and Smart Knowledge-Compilation}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {130--140}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... To favor explainability, the notions of temporal fault, explanation, and explainer are introduced in diagnosis of DESs. The explanation engine reacts to a given sequence of observations by generating and refining in real-time a sequence of regular expressions, where the language of each expression is a set of temporal faults. ...}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;diagnosis;explanation;} } @incollection{ bertolet_r:1980a, author = {Rod Bertolet}, title = {Context and What is Said}, booktitle = {New Essays in Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Canadian Association for Publishing in Philosophy}, year = {1980}, editor = {Jeffrey Pelletier and Calvin G. Normore}, pages = {111--117}, address = {Guelph}, topic = {context;indexicals;} } @article{ bertolet_r:1980b, author = {Rod Bertolet}, title = {Demonstrations and Intentions}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1980}, volume = {38}, number = {4}, pages = {75--78}, rtnote = {Criticizes Kaplan in "Dthat", kaplan_d:1978c}, topic = {nl-semantics;indexicals;demonstratives;} } @article{ bertolet_r:1980c, author = {Rod Bertolet}, title = {The Semantic Significance of {D}onnelan's Distinction}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1980}, volume = {37}, number = {3}, pages = {281--288}, content = {B's idea is that the distinction is pragmatic.}, topic = {definite-descriptions;pragmatics;} } @article{ bertolet_r:1981a, author = {Rod Bertolet}, title = {Kripke's Speaker's Reference}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1981}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {70--72}, topic = {philosophy-reference;} } @article{ bertolet_r:1983a, author = {Rod Bertolet}, title = {Where Do Implicatures Come From?}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1983}, volume = {13}, pages = {181--192}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {implicature;} } @article{ bertolet_r:1984a, author = {Rod Bertolet}, title = {Inferences, Names, and Fictions}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1984}, volume = {58}, number = {2}, pages = {203--218}, topic = {fiction;fictional-characters;} } @incollection{ bertolet_r:1984b, author = {Rod Bertolet}, title = {Are There Indirect Speech Acts?}, booktitle = {Foundations of Speech Act Theory: Philosophical and Linguistic Perspectives}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1984}, editor = {Savas L. Tsohatzidis}, pages = {335--349}, address = {London}, topic = {indirect-speech-acts;speech-acts;} } @article{ bertolet_r-rowe_wl:1979a, author = {Rod Bertolet and William L. Rowe}, title = {The Fatalism of `{D}iodorus {C}ronus{'}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1979}, volume = {39}, number = {3}, pages = {137--138}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;(in)determinism;} } @inproceedings{ bertoli-etal:1998a, author = {P.G. Bertoli and J. Calmet and Fausto Giunchiglia and K. Homann}, title = {Specification and Integration of Theorem Provers and Computer Algebra Systems}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation: Proceedings of {AISC'98}}, year = {1998}, editor = {Jacques Calmet and Jan Plaza}, pages = {94--106}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {combining-systems;automated-algebra;theorem-proving;} } @inproceedings{ bertoli-etal:2001a, author = {Piergiorgio Bertoli and Alessandro Cimatti and Marco Roveri and Paolo Traverso}, title = {Planning in Nondeterministic Domains under Partial Observability Via Symbolic Model Checking}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel}, pages = {473--478}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {planning;concurrency;model-checking;uncertainty-in-AI;} } @article{ bertoli-etal:2006a, author = {Piergiorgio Bertoli and Alessandro Cimatti and Marco Roveri and Paolo Traverso}, title = {Strong Planning under Partial Uncertainty}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {4--5}, pages = {337--384}, topic = {planning;reasoning-about-uncertainty;search;} } @article{ bertoli-etal:2009a, author = {Piergiorgio Bertoli and Marco Pistore and Paolo Traverso}, title = {Automated Composition of Web Services Via Planning in Asynchronous Domains}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {174}, number = {3--4}, pages = {316--361}, topic = {planning;program-synthesis;world-wide-web;} } @article{ bertoni-dorigo:1993a, author = {A. Bertoni and M. Dorigo}, title = {Implicit Parallelism in Genetic Algorithms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {61}, number = {2}, pages = {307--314}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper is related to Holland's result on implicit parallelism. Roughly speaking, Holland showed a lower bound of the order of a n3/c13l to the number of schemata usefully processed by the genetic algorithm in a population of n = c1 . 2l binary strings, with c1 a small integer. We ananlyze the case of a population of n = 2[beta]l binary strings where [beta] is a positive parameter (Holland's result is related to the case [beta] = 1). In the main result, we state a lower bound on the expected number of processed schemata for all [beta] < 0; moreover, we prove that this bound is tight up to a constant for all [beta] >= 1 and, in this case, we strengthen in probability the previous result. }, topic = {genetic-algorithms;} } @incollection{ bertossi-reiter_r:1994a, author = {Leopoldo E. Bertossi and Raymond Reiter}, title = {On the Concept of a Generic Object: A Nonmonotonic Reasoning Approach and Examples}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Craig Mac{N}ish and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and David Pearce}, pages = {346--363}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers. "Reiter"}, topic = {generics;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @book{ bertossi_l-etal:2005a, editor = {Leopoldo Bertossi and Anthony Hunter and Torsten Schaub}, title = {Inconsistency Tolerance}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2005}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-3-540-24260-4}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Leopoldo Bertossi and Anthony Hunter and Torsten Schaub, "Introduction to Inconsistency Tolerance", pp. 1--14 2. Marcelo Arenas and Wenfei Fan and Leonid Libkin, "Consistency of {XML} Specifications", pp. 15--41 3. Leopoldo Bertossi and Loreto Bravo, "Consistent Query Answers in Virtual Data Integration Systems", pp. 42--83 4. Philippe Besnard and Torsten Schaub and Hans Tompits and Stefan Woltran, "Representing Paraconsistent Reasoning via Quantified Propositional Logic", pp. 84--118 5. Jan Chomicki and Jerzy Marcinkowski, "On the Computational Complexity of Minimal-Change Integrity Maintenance in Relational Databases", pp. 119--150 6. Sylvie Coste-Marquis and Pierre Marquis, "On the Complexity of Paraconsistent Inference Relations", pp. 151--190 7. Anthony Hunter and S\'ebastien Konieczny, "Approaches to Measuring Inconsistent Information", pp. 191--236 8. Andrea Rodr\'iguez, "Inconsistency Issues in Spatial Databases", pp. 237--269 9. John Slaney, "Relevant Logic and Paraconsistency", pp. 270--293 } , topic = {reasoning-under-inconsistency;} } @incollection{ bertossi_l-etal:2005b, author = {Leopoldo Bertossi and Anthony Hunter and Torsten Schaub}, title = {Introduction to Inconsistency Tolerance}, booktitle = {Inconsistency Tolerance}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Leopoldo Bertossi and Anthony Hunter and Torsten Schaub}, pages = {1--14}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {reasoning-under-inconsistency;} } @article{ berwanger:2003a, author = {Dietmar Berwanger}, title = {Game Logic is Strong Enough for Parity Games}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2003}, volume = {75}, number = {2}, pages = {205--219}, topic = {game-logic;game-theory;} } @article{ berwanger-kaiser_l:2010a, author = {Dietmar Berwanger and Lukasz Kaiser}, title = {Information Tracking in Games on Graphs}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2010}, volume = {19}, number = {4}, pages = {395--412}, topic = {game-theory;reasoning-about-knowledge;} } @book{ berwick_rc:1989a, author = {Robert C. Berwick}, title = {Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262-02266-4}, topic = {nlp-intro;} } @book{ berwick_rc-chomsky_n:2015a, author = {Robert C. Berwick and Noam Chomsky}, title = {Why Only Us: Language and Evolution}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780262533492}, xref = {Critical Review: planer1_rj:2017a}, topic = {language-and-evolution;} } @inproceedings{ berwick_rc-epstein_sd:1995a, author = {Robert C. Berwick and Samuel D. Epstein}, title = {On the Convergence of `Minimalist' Syntax with Categorial Grammar}, booktitle = {{TWLT} 10: Algebraic Methods in Language Processing}, year = {1995}, editor = {A. Nijholt and G. Scollo and R. Steetskamp}, pages = {143--148}, publisher = {Universiteit Twente}, address = {Entschede}, topic = {minimalist-syntax;categorial-grammar;} } @article{ berwick_rc-weinberg_as:1983a, author = {Robert C. Berwick and Amy S. Weinberg}, title = {The Role of Grammars in Models of Language Use}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {1983}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {1--61}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-processing;psycholinguistics;} } @book{ berwick_rc-weinberg_as:1984a, author = {Robert C. Berwick and Amy S. Weinberg}, title = {The Grammatical Basis of Linguistic Performance: Language Use and Acquisition}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-02192-7}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {government-binding-theory;parsing-algorithms;L1-acquisition;} } @article{ berzins:2001a, author = {Martin Berzins}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Computational Beauty of Nature} by {G}ary {W}illiam {F}lake}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {128}, number = {1--2}, pages = {237--238}, xref = {Review of: flake:1998a.}, topic = {fractals;chaos-theory;computational-aesthetics;} } @incollection{ berztiss:1999a, author = {Alfs Berztiss}, title = {Contexts, Domains, and Software}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {443--446}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;software-engineering;} } @incollection{ bes-lecomte:1995a, author = {Gabriel G. Bes and Alain Lecomte}, title = {Semantic Features in a Generic Lexicon}, booktitle = {Computational Lexical Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Patrick Saint-Dizier and Evelyne Viegas}, pages = {141--162}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-lexical-semantics;thematic-roles; argument-structure;} } @incollection{ besnard_p:1991a, author = {Philippe Besnard}, title = {Default Logics}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {38--41}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {default-logic;inheritance-theory;} } @book{ besnard_p:1992a, author = {Philippe Besnard}, title = {Default Logic}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Shelves.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic;kr-course;} } @incollection{ besnard_p-doutre_s:2004a, author = {Philippe Besnard and Sylvie Doutre}, title = {Characterization of Semantics for Argument Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {183--193}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {argument-based-defeasible-reasoning;} } @article{ besnard_p-etal:1989a, author = {Philippe Besnard and Yves Moinard and Robert E. Mercer}, title = {The Importance of Open and Recursive Circumscription}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {39}, number = {2}, pages = {251--262}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Circumscription is known to result in an inconsistency when applied to certain consistent theories. To counter this problem, closed nonrecursive circumscription, a restricted form of circumscription that has been proved not to affect the consistency of the theory over which circumscription is applied, has been proposed. We show that closed nonrecursive circumscription involves an excessive weakening of standard circumscription by establishing that closed nonrecursive circumscription is incomplete for some crucial theories over which standard circumscription is consistent and complete. First, we prove that closed circumscription cannot yield the desired uniqueness formula for the simplest of existential theories. Second, we prove that nonrecursive circumscription fails to be as strong as predicate completion for Horn clause theories. Third, we prove that the natural way to strengthen circumscription, that is, adding more variable predicates, may weaken nonrecursive circumscription. }, topic = {circumscription;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ besnard_p-etal:2003a, author = {Philippe Besnard and G. Fanselow and Torsten Schaub}, title = {Optimality Theory as a Family of Cumulative Logics}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2003}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {153--182}, topic = {optimality-theory;cumulative-logics;} } @incollection{ besnard_p-etal:2005a, author = {Philippe Besnard and Torsten Schaub and Hans Tompits and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Representing Paraconsistent Reasoning via Quantified Propositional Logic}, booktitle = {Inconsistency Tolerance}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Leopoldo Bertossi and Anthony Hunter and Torsten Schaub}, pages = {84--118}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {... Firstly, in recent years, practicably efficient solvers for quantified propositional logic have been presented. Secondly, complexity results imply that there is a wide range of paraconsistent reasoning problems which can be efficiently represented in terms of QBFs. Hence, solvers for QBFs can be used as a core engine in systems prototypically implementing several of such reasoning tasks, most of them lacking concrete realisations. To this end, we show how certain paraconsistent reasoning principles can be naturally formulated or reformulated by means of quantified Boolean formulas. ...}, topic = {reasoning-under-inconsistency;AI-algorithms;model-checking; propositional-quantifiers;} } @article{ besnard_p-etal:2009a, author = {Philippe Besnard and Anthony Hunter and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Encoding Deductive Argumentation in Quantified Boolean Formulae}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {15}, pages = {1406--1423}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;propositional-quantifiers;} } @article{ besnard_p-etal:2014a, author = {Philippe Besnard and Alejandro Javier Garc\'ia and Anthony Hunter and Sanjay Modgil and Henry Prakken and Guillermo R. and Francesca Toni}, title = {Introduction to Structured Argumentation}, journal = {Journal of Argument and Computation}, year = {2015}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {1--4}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr22}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @book{ besnard_p-hanks_s:1995a, editor = {Phillipe Besnard and Steve Hanks}, title = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence. Proceedings of the Eleventh Conference (1995)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, year = {1995}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @book{ besnard_p-hunter_a:1998a, editor = {Philippe Besnard and Anthony Hunter}, title = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems: Reasoning with Actual and Potential Contradictions}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, volume = {2}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentsnote = {TC: 1. Philippe Besnard and Anthony Hunter, "Introduction to Actual and Potential Contradictions", pp. 1--9 2. Anthony Hunter, "Paraconsistent Logics", pp. 11--36 3. John-Jules Ch. Meyer and Wiebe van der Hoek, "Modal Logics for Representing Incoherent Knowledge", pp. 37--75 4. Torsten Schaub, "The Family of Default Logics", pp. 77--133 5. James P. Delgrande, "Conditional Logics for Defeasible Logics", pp. 135--173 6. P. Geerts and E. Laenens and Dirk Vermeir, "Defeasible Logics", pp. 175--210 7. Wolfgang Lenzen, "Necessary Conditions for Negation-Operators (with Particular Applications to Paraconsistent Negation)", pp. 211--239 8. Carlos Viegas Dam\'asio and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira, "A Survey of Paraconsistent Semantics for Logic Programs", pp. 241--320}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic edited shelves.}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;relevance-logic;paraconsistency; nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ besnard_p-hunter_a:1998b, author = {Philippe Besnard and Anthony Hunter}, title = {Introduction to Actual and Potential Contradictions}, booktitle = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems, Volume 2: Reasoning with Actual and Potential Contradictions}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Philippe Smets}, pages = {1--9}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;relevance-logic;paraconsistency;} } @article{ besnard_p-hunter_a:2001a, author = {Philippe Besnard and Anthony Hunter}, title = {A Logic-Based Theory of Deductive Arguments}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {128}, number = {1--2}, pages = {203--235}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;reasoning-about-consistency;} } @incollection{ besnard_p-hunter_a:2006a, author = {Philippe Besnard and Anthony Hunter}, title = {Knowledebase Compilation for Efficient Logical Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {123--132}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {argumentation;(in)consistency;} } @book{ besnard_p-hunter_a:2008a, author = {Philippe Besnard and Anthony Hunter}, title = {Elements of Argumentation}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN-10 = {0-262-02643-0}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-262-02643-7}, xref = {Review: benferhat_s:2009a}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ besnard_p-schaub_t:1993a, author = {Phillipe Besnard and Torstein Schaub}, title = {A Context-Based Framework for Default Logics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Richard E. Fikes and Wendy Lehnert}, pages = {406--411}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {kr;context;kr-course;} } @incollection{ besnard_p-schaub_t:1996a, author = {Philippe Besnard and Torsten Schaub}, title = {A Simple Signed System for Paraconsistent Reasoning}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence: {E}uropean Workshop, {Jelia}'96, Ivora, Portugal, September 30 - October 3, 1996.}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Ewa Orlowska}, pages = {404--416}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {paraconsistent-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ besnard_p-schaub_t:1997a, author = {Phillipe Besnard and Torsten Schaub}, title = {Circumscribing Inconsistency}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Martha Pollack}, pages = {150--155}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {We present a new logical approach to reasoning from inconsistent information. The idea is to restore modelhood of inconsistent formulas by providing a third truth-value tolerating inconsistency. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection}, topic = {circumscription;multivalued-logic;} } @inproceedings{ besnard_p-schaub_t:2000a, author = {Phillipe Besnard and Torsten Schaub}, title = {Significant Inferences: Preliminary Report}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {401--410}, abstract = {We explore the possibility of a logic where a conclusion substantially improves over its premise(s): Specically, we intend to rule out inference steps such that the premise conveys more information, in a simpler form, than the conclusion does. In fact, most reasoning formalisms, among them classical logic, come with means for generating disjunctive or conditional information in a fairly arbitrary way. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {significant-inferences;relevance-logic;} } @inproceedings{ besnard_p-siegel_p:1988a, author = {Philippe Besnard and Pierre Siegel}, title = {A Framework for the Logics of `Suppose' and `Admit'\,}, booktitle = {European Workshop on Logical Methods in Artifcial Intelligence, {JELIA} '88}, year = {1988}, publisher = {{LIUC}, University of Caen}, pages = {65--68}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ besnard_p-tan_yh:1995a, author = {Phillipe Besnard and Yao-Hua Tan}, title = {A Modal Logic with Context-Dependent Inference for Non-Monotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {Formalizing Context}, year = {1995}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, pages = {31--38}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;modal-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ bessiere:1994a, author = {Christian Bessi\'ere}, title = {Arc-consistency and Arc-Consistency Again}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {65}, number = {1}, pages = {179--190}, acontentnote = {Abstract: There is no need to show the importance of arc-consistency in constraint networks. Mohr and Henderson [9] have proposed AC-4, an algorithm with optimal worst-case time complexity. But it has two drawbacks: its space complexity and average time complexity. In problems with many solutions, where constraints are large, these drawbacks become so important that users often replace AC-4 by AC-3 [8], a non-optimal algorithm. In this paper, we propose a new algorithm, AC-6, which keeps the optimal worst-case time complexity of AC-4 while working out the drawback of space complexity. Moreover, the average time complexity of AC-6 is optimal for constraint networks where nothing is known about the constraint semantics. }, topic = {arc-(in)consistency;constraint-networks;complexity-in-AI; constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ bessiere-debruyne:2008a, author = {Christian Bessiere and Romuald Debruyne}, title = {Theoretical Analysis of Singleton Arc Consistency and Its Extensions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {1}, pages = {29--41}, topic = {arc-(in)consistency;} } @article{ bessiere-etal:1999a, author = {Christian Bessi\'ere and Eugene C. Freuder and Jean-Charles R/'egin}, title = {Using Constraint Metaknowledge to Reduce Arc Consistency Computation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {107}, number = {1}, pages = {125--148}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ bessiere-etal:2002a, author = {Christian Bessi\`ere and Pedro Meseguer and Eugene C. Freuder and Javier Larrosa}, title = {On Forward Checking for Non-Binary Constraint Satisfaction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {141}, number = {1--2}, pages = {205--224}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ bessiere-etal:2005a, author = {Christian Bessi\`ere and Arnold Maestre and Ismel Brito and Pedro Meseguer}, title = {Asynchronous Backtracking without Adding Links: A New Member in the {ABT} Family}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {161}, number = {1--2}, pages = {7--24}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;distributed-processing;} } @article{ bessiere-etal:2005b, author = {Christian Bessi\'ere and Jean-Charles R\'egin and Roland H.C. Yap and Yuanlin Zhang}, title = {An Optimal Coarse-Grained Arc Consistency Problem}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {165}, number = {2}, pages = {165--185}, topic = {arc-(in)consistency;constraint-propagation;} } @article{ bessiere-etal:2008a, author = {Christian Bessiere and Kostas Stergiou and Toby Walsh}, title = {Domain Filtering Consistencies for Non-Binary Constraints}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {6--7}, pages = {800--822}, topic = {constraint-programming;constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ bessiere-etal:2009a, author = {Christian Bessiere and Emmanuel Hebrard and Brahim Hnich and Zeynep Kiziltan and Toby Walsh}, title = {Range and Roots: Two Common Patterns for Specifying and Propagating Counting and Occurrence Constraints}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {11}, pages = {1054--1078}, topic = {constraint-programming;constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ besson_c-hattiangadi_a:2014a, author = {Corine Besson and Anandi Hattiangadi}, title = {The Open Future, Bivalence and Assertion}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2014}, volume = {167}, number = {2}, pages = {251--271}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;bivalence;} } @article{ bestor_tw:1980a, author = {Thomas W. Bestor}, title = {Plato's Semantics and Plato's Parmenides}, journal = {Phronesis}, year = {19800}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {38--75}, topic = {Plato;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ betegh:2009a, author = {Gabor Betegh}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}ristotle}, by {C}hristopher {S}hields}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2009}, volume = {118}, number = {2}, pages = {375--377}, xref = {Review of: shields:2007a}, topic = {ancient-philosophy;Aristotle;} } @article{ beth_ew:1951a, author = {Evert W. Beth}, title = {Review of `{M}r. {S}trawson's Analysis of Truth', by {A}nalysis}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1951}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {137--138}, xref = {Review of: cohen_lj:1950a.}, topic = {truth;natural-language/formal-language;} } @book{ beth_ew:1959a, author = {Evert W. Beth}, title = {The Foundations of Mathematics}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1959}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {logic-general;} } @book{ beth_ew:1962a, author = {Evert W. Beth}, title = {Formal Methods: An Introduction to Symbolic Logic and to the Study of Effective Operations in Arithmetic and Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1962}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {logic-intro;} } @incollection{ beth_ew:1962b, author = {Evert W. Beth}, title = {Extension and Intension}, booktitle = {Logic and Language: Studies Dedicated to {P}rofessor {R}udolf {C}arnap on the Occasion of his Seventieth {B}irthday}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1962}, editor = {B.H. Kazemier and D. Vuysje}, pages = {64--68}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {intensionality;} } @incollection{ beth_ew:1963a, author = {Evert W. Beth}, title = {Carnap's Views on the Advantages of Constructed Systems over Natural Languages in the Philosophy of Science}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {R}udolph {C}arnap}, publisher = {Open Court}, year = {1963}, editor = {Paul A. Schilpp}, pages = {469--502}, address = {LaSalle, Illinois}, topic = {Carnap;philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ bethke-rodenberg:2011a, author = {Inge Bethke and Piet Rodenberg}, title = {Typicality in Partial Applicative Structures}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2011}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {161--168}, topic = {combinatory-algebras;} } @article{ bett:2003a, author = {Richard Bett}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}extus {E}mpiricus and {P}yrrhonean Skepticism}, by {A}lan {B}ailey}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2003}, volume = {112}, number = {1}, pages = {100--102}, xref = {Review of: bailey_a:2002a.}, topic = {Hellenistic-philosophy;skepticism;Sextus-Empiricus;} } @book{ bett:2010a, editor = {Richard Bett}, title = {The {C}ambridge Guide to Ancient Skepticism}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2010}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: scofield:2011a}, topic = {skepticism;ancient-philosophy;} } @incollection{ betti_a:2008a, author = {Arianna Betti}, title = {Polish Axiomatics and its Truth: On {T}arski's {L}e\'sniewskian Background and the {A}jdukiewicz Connection}, booktitle = {New Essays on {T}arski and Philosophy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Douglas Patterson}, pages = {44--71}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {history-of-logic;Tarski;} } @article{ bettini-etal:2002a, author = {Claudio Bettini and X. Sean Wang and Sushil Jajodia}, title = {Solving Multi-Granularity Temporal Constraint Networks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {140}, number = {1--2}, pages = {107--152}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;arc-(in)consistency;temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ betzler:2004a, author = {Monika Betzler}, title = {Sources of Practical Conflicts and Reasons for Regret}, booktitle = {Practical Conflicts: New Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Peter Baumann and Monika Betzler}, pages = {197--243}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {moral-conflict;regret;} } @article{ beuchcapon_t:2000a, author = {Trevor Beuch Capon}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}ogical Tools for Modeling Legal Argument: A Study of Defeasible Reasoning in Law}, by {H}enry {P}rakken}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2000}, volume = {64}, number = {1}, pages = {143--146}, xref = {Review of prakken_h:1997c.}, topic = {logic-and-law;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @phdthesis{ beun:1989a, author = {Robert-Jan Beun}, title = {The Recognition of Declarative Questions in Information Dialogues}, school = {Tilburg University}, year = {1989}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Tilburg}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {speech-act-recognition;computational-dialogue;interrogatives;} } @inproceedings{ beun:1996a, author = {Robert-Jan Beun}, title = {Speech Act Generation in Cooperative Dialogue}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 11th {T}wente Workshop on Language Technology}, year = {1996}, pages = {71--79}, organization = {University of Twente}, address = {Entschede}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, editor, publisher}, topic = {speech-acts;nl-generation;computational-dialogue;} } @article{ beun-vaneijck_rm:2007a, author = {Robert-Jan Beun and Roger M. van Eijck}, title = {Dialogue Coherence: A Generation Framework}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2007}, volume = {16}, number = {4}, pages = {365--385}, topic = {coherence;computational-dialogue;} } @article{ bevan:2023a, author = {Michael Bevan}, title = {The Metalogic of Ground: Pure and Iterative Systems}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2023}, volume = {52}, number = {2}, pages = {609--641}, abstract = {I develop a graph-theoretic model theory for pure and iterative grounding logics. }, topic = {truthmaking;graph-based-representations;} } @incollection{ bever:1970a, author = {Thomas G. Bever}, title = {The Cognitive Basis for Linguistic Structures}, booktitle = {Cognition and the Development of Language}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1970}, editor = {John R. Hayes}, pages = {279--352}, address = {New York}, topic = {psycholinguistics;nl-syntax;} } @incollection{ bever:1974a, author = {Thomas G. Bever}, title = {The Ascent of the Specious,or, There's a Lot We Don't Know about Mirrors}, booktitle = {Explaining Linguistic Phenomena}, publisher = {Hemisphere Publishing Corp.}, year = {1974}, editor = {David Cohen}, pages = {173--200}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;linguistics-methodology;} } @incollection{ bever:1976a, author = {Thomas G. Bever}, title = {The Influence of Speech Performance on Linguistic Structure}, booktitle = {An Integrated Theory of Linguistic Ability}, publisher = {Thomas Y. Crowell Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Thomas G. Bever and Jerrold J. Katz and D. Terence Langendoen}, pages = {65--88}, address = {New York}, topic = {linguistics-methodology;foundations-of-linguistics; competence;} } @book{ bever-etal:1976a, editor = {Thomas G. Bever and Jerrold J. Katz and D. Terence Langendoen}, title = {An Integrated Theory of Linguistic Ability}, publisher = {Thomas Y. Crowell Co.}, year = {1976}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Thomas G. Bever and Jerrold J. Katz and D. Terence Langendoen, "Introduction", pp. 1--9 2. Jerrold J. Katz and Thomas G. Bever, "The Fall and Rise of Empiricism", pp. 11--64 3. Thomas G. Bever, "The Influence of Speech Performance on Linguistic Structure", pp. 65--88 4. D. Terence Langendoen, "Finite-State Parsing of Phrase-Structure Languages and the Status of Readjustment Rules in Grammar", pp. 89--113 5. Thomas G. Bever and D. Terence Langendoen, "A Dynamic Model of the Evolution of Language", pp. 115--147 6. Thomas G. Bever and John M. Carroll, Jr. and Richard Hurtig, "Analogy or Ungrammatical Sequences That Are Utterable and Comprehensible Are the Origins of New Grammars in Language", pp. 149--182 7. D. Terence Langendoen, "A Case of Apparent Ungrammaticality", pp. 183--193 8. D. Terence Langendoen and Nancy Kalish-Landon and John Dore, "Dative Questions: A Study in the Relation of Accessibility to Grammaticality of an English Sentence Type", pp. 195--223 9. D. Terence Langendoen, "Acceptable Conclusions from Unacceptable Ambiguity", pp. 225--238 10. D. Terence Langendoen and Thomas G. Bever, "Can a Not Unhappy Person be Called a Not Sad One?", pp. 239--260 11. Robert M. Harnish, "The Argument from {\em Lurk}", pp. 261--270 12. Manfred Bierwisch, "Social Differentiation of Language Structures", pp. 271--312 13. Robert M. Harnish, "Logical Form and Implicature", pp. 313--391 14. Jerrold J. Katz and D. Terence Langendoen, "Pragmatics and Presupposition", pp. 393--413 15. Jerrold J. Katz, "Global Rules and Surface Structure Interpretation", pp. 415--425 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {linguistics-methodology;foundations-of-linguistics;} } @incollection{ bever-etal:1976b, author = {Thomas G. Bever and Jerrold J. Katz and D. Terence Langendoen}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {An Integrated Theory of Linguistic Ability}, publisher = {Thomas Y. Crowell Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Thomas G. Bever and Jerrold J. Katz and D. Terence Langendoen}, pages = {1--9}, address = {New York}, topic = {linguistics-methodology;foundations-of-linguistics;} } @incollection{ bever-etal:1976c, author = {Thomas G. Bever and John M. Carroll, Jr. and Richard Hurtig}, title = {Analogy or Ungrammatical Sequences that Are Utterable and Comprehensible Are the Origins of New Grammars in Language}, booktitle = {An Integrated Theory of Linguistic Ability}, publisher = {Thomas Y. Crowell Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Thomas G. Bever and Jerrold J. Katz and D. Terence Langendoen}, pages = {149--182}, address = {New York}, topic = {analogy;language-change;} } @incollection{ bever-langendoen:1976a, author = {Thomas G. Bever and D. Terence Langendoen}, title = {A Dynamic Model of the Evolution of Language}, booktitle = {An Integrated Theory of Linguistic Ability}, publisher = {Thomas Y. Crowell Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Thomas G. Bever and Jerrold J. Katz and D. Terence Langendoen}, pages = {115--147}, address = {New York}, topic = {language-change;} } @incollection{ bever-rosenbaum_ps:1971a, author = {Thomas A. Bever and Peter S. Rosenbaum}, title = {Some Lexical Structures and Their Empirical Validity}, booktitle = {Semantics: An Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1971}, editor = {Danny D. Steinberg and Leon A. Jacobovits}, pages = {586--599}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {psycholinguistics;transformational-grammar;} } @article{ bex_f-etal:2013a, author = {Floris Bex and John Lawrence and Mark Snaith and and Chris Reed}, title = {Implementing the Argument Web}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, year = {2013}, volume = {56}, number = {10}, pages = {951--989}, topic = {argumentation;world-wide-web;} } @incollection{ beygelzimer-rish:2002a, author = {Alina Beygelzimer and Irina Rish}, title = {Inference Complexity as a Model-Selection Criterion for Learning {B}ayesian Networks}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {558--567}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;Bayesian-networks;machine-learning;} } @article{ bezem:2006a, author = {Marc Bezem}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} Modern Perspective on Type Theory---{F}rom its Origins until Today}, by {F}arouz {K}amareddine and {T}wan {L}aan and {R}ob {N}ederfelt}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2006}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {296--297}, xref = {Review of: kamareddine_f-etal:2004a.}, topic = {type-theory;} } @article{ bezhanishvili_g:2001a, author = {Guram Bezhanishvili}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}ools and Techniques in Modal Logic}, by {M}arcus {K}racht}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {278--279}, xref = {Review of: kracht_m:1999a}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ bezhanishvili_g-bezhanishvili_n:2012a, author = {Guram Bezhanishvili and Nick Bezhanishvili}, title = {Canonical Formulas for {\bf wK4}}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {5}, number = {4}, pages = {731--762}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ bezhanishvili_g-etal:2018a, author = {Guram Bezhanishvili and Nick Bezhanishvili and Joel Lucero-Bryan and Jan Van Mill}, title = {Tychonoff {HED}-Spaces and {Z}emanian Extensions of {S}4.3}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {115--132}, topic = {modal-logic;topological-semantics;} } @article{ bezhanishvili_g-etal:2018b, author = {Guram Bezhanishvili and Nick Bezhanishvili and Julia Ilin}, title = {Stable Modal Logics}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {436--469}, abstract = {Stable logics are modal logics characterized by a class of frames closed under relation preserving images. These logics admit all filtrations. Since many basic modal systems such as K4 and S4 are not stable, we introduce the more general concept of an M-stable logic, where M is an arbitrary normal modal logic that admits some filtration. Of course, M can be chosen to be K4 or S4. We give several characterizations of M-stable logics. We prove that there are continuum many S4-stable logics and continuum many K4-stable logics between K4 and S4. bWe axiomatize K4-stable and S4-stable logics by means of stable formulas and discuss the connection between S4-stable logics and stable superintuitionistic logics. We conclude the article with many examples (and nonexamples) of stable, K4-stable, and S4-stable logics and provide their axiomatization in terms of stable rules and formulas.}, topic = {modal-logic;finite-matrix;filtration;} } @article{ bezhanishvili_g-etal:2021a, author = {Guram Bezhanishvili and Nick Bezhanishvili and Joel Lucero-Bryan and Jan van Mill}, title = {The {M}c{K}insey-{T}arski Theorem for Locally Compact Ordered Spaces}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {187--211}, topic = {modal-logic;topology;} } @article{ bezhanishvili_n-hodkinson_i:2004a, author = {Nick Bezhanishvili and Ian Hodkinson}, title = {All Normal Extensions of $S5$-Squared are Finitely Axiomatizable}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2004}, volume = {78}, number = {3}, pages = {443--457}, topic = {modal-logic;finitely-axiomatizable-logics;} } @article{ bezhanishvilli-etal:2015a, author = {Guram Bezhanishvilli and David Gabelaia and Joel Lucero-Bryan}, title = {Topological Completeness of Logics above {\bf S4}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {80}, number = {2}, pages = {520--566}, topic = {topological-semantics;modal-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ bezhanishvilli-etal:2015b, author = {Guram Bezhanishvilli and David Gabelaia and Joel Lucero-Bryan}, title = {Modal Logics of Metric Spaces}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {178--191}, topic = {modal-logic;metric-spaces;} } @incollection{ beziau_jy:2012a, author = {Jean-Yves B\'eziau}, title = {A History of Truth-Values}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 11: Logic, a History of its Central Concepts}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2012}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Francis Jeffry Pelletier and John Woods}, pages = {235--307}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;truth-values;} } @incollection{ bezuidenhout_a:2019a, author = {Anne Bezuidenhout}, title = {Joint Reference}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Reference}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Jeannette Gundel and Barbara Abbott}, pages = {44--66}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reference;philosophy-of-language;joint-reference;} } @article{ bezuidenhout_al:1997a, author = {Anne L. Bezuidenhout}, title = {The Communication of De Re Thoughts}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1997}, volume = {31}, number = {2}, pages = {197--223}, topic = {reference;singular-propositions;} } @article{ bezuidenhout_al:1998a, author = {Anne L. Bezuidenhout}, title = {Is Verbal Communication a Purely Preservative Process?}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1998}, volume = {107}, number = {2}, pages = {261--288}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ bezuidenhout_al:2001a, author = {Anne L. Bezuidenhout}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Philosophy of {P}.{F}. {S}trawson}, edited by {L}.{E.} {H}ahn}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {3}, pages = {460--465}, xref = {Review of: hahn_le:1998a}, topic = {Strawson;analytic-philosophy;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ bezuidenhout_al:2001b, author = {Anne Bezuidenhout}, title = {Metaphor and What Is Said: A Defense of a Direct Expression View of Metaphor}, journal = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy}, year = {2001}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {156--186}, topic = {metaphor;} } @incollection{ bezuidenhout_al:2002a, author = {Anne L. Bezuidenhout}, title = {Truth-Conditional Pragmatics}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 16: Language and Mind, 2002}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {105--134}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;pragmatics;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ bezuidenhout_al:2006a, author = {Anne L. Bezuidenhout}, title = {Language as Internal}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {127--139}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {mental-language;philosophy-of-language;} } @unpublished{ bezuidenhout_al:2006b, author = {Anne Bezuidenhout}, title = {Comments on {F}razier on the Processing of Novel Definites}, year = {2006}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of South Carolina}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {psychlinguistics;definiteness;} } @incollection{ bezuidenhout_al:2010a, author = {Anne Bezuidenhout}, title = {Grice on Presupposition}, booktitle = {Meaning and Analysis: New Essays on {G}rice}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2010}, editor = {Klaus Petrus}, pages = {75--102}, address = {New York}, topic = {Grice;presupposition;} } @book{ bezuidenhout_al-reimer_m:2004a, editor = {Anne Bezuidenhout and Marga Reimer}, title = {Descriptions and Beyond}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {019927052X}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Francois Recanati, "Descriptions and Situations", pp. 15--40 2. Ernie Lepore, "An Abuse of Context in Semantics: The Case of Incomplete Definite Descriptions", pp. 41--67 3. Stephen Neale, "This, That, and the Other", pp. 68--181 4. Kent Bach, "Descriptions: Points of Reference", pp. 189-229 5. Nathan Salmon, "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly", pp. 230--260 6. Geoffrey Nunberg, "Descriptive Indexicals and Indexical Descriptions", pp. 261--279 7. Michael Devitt, "The Case for Referential Descriptions", pp. 280--305 8. Kai von Fintel, "Would you Believe It? The King of France is Back! (Presuppositions and Truth-Value Intuitions)", pp. 315--341 9. Jay Atlas, "Descriptions, Linguistic Topic/Comment and Negative Existentials", pp. 342--359 10. Mark Sainsbury, "Referring Descriptions", pp. 369--387 11. Joseph Almog, "The Vernacular and the Omniscient Observer of History", pp. 390--419 12. Peter Ludlow and Gabriel Segal, "On a Unitary Analysis for Definite and Indefinite Descriptions", pp. 420--435 13. Richard Breheny, " Indefinites and Anaphoric Independence: A Case for Semantics and Pragmatics?", pp. 455--483 14. Paul Dekker, "Grounding Dynamic Semantics", pp. 484--502 15. Craige Roberts, "Pronouns as Definites", pp. 503--543 16. Alice ter Meulen, "Anaphoric Definite Descriptions", pp. 544--557 17. Ruth Kempson and Wilfried Meyer-Viol, "Indefinites and Scope Choice", pp. 558--584 18. Robin Jeshion, "Descriptive Descriptive Names", pp. 591--612 19. Marga Reimer, " Descriptively Introduced Names", pp. 613--629 }, topic = {definite-descriptions;} } @incollection{ bezuidenhout_al-reimer_m:2004b, author = {Anne Bezuidenhout and Marga Reimer}, title = {Part {III}: Presupposition and Truth-Value Gaps}, booktitle = {Descriptions and Beyond}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Anne Bezuidenhout and Marga Reimer}, pages = {261--268}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers. "Bezuidenhout"}, topic = {presuppoisition;truth-value-gaps;} } @article{ bezzazi_h-etal:1997a, author = {Hassan Bezzazi and David Makinson and Ram\'on Pino-P\'erez}, title = {Beyond Rational Monotony: on Some Strong Non-{H}orn Conditions for Nonmonotonic Inference Operations}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {5}, pages = {605--632}, abstract = {Explores the effect of adding to the rules of preferential inference a number of non-Horn rules stronger than or incomparable with rational monotony, but still weaker than plain monotony ... focussing on their representation in terms of special classes of preferential models.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;} } @book{ bharuchareid:1978a, editor = {A. T. Bharucha-Reid}, title = {Probabilistic Analysis and Related Topics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1978}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0120956012 (v. 1)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA274.2 .P761.}, topic = {probability-theory;stochastic-analysis;} } @article{ bhaskar-nigam:1990a, author = {R. Bhaskar and Anil Nigam}, title = {Qualitative Physics Using Dimensional Analysis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {45}, number = {1--2}, pages = {73--111}, topic = {qualitative-physics;} } @inproceedings{ bhatnagar:1995a, author = {Raj Bhatnagar}, title = {Probabilistic Contexts for Reasoning}, booktitle = {Formalizing Context}, year = {1995}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, pages = {39--46}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @phdthesis{ bhatt:1999a1, author = {Rajesh Bhatt}, title = {Covert Modality in Non-Finite Contexts}, school = {University of Pennsylvania}, year = {1999}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Philadelphia}, url = {http://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent/cgi?article=1033&context=ircs_reports.}, contentnote = {Includes a theory of infinitive-interrogatives.}, xref = {Book publication: bhatt:1999a2.}, topic = {nl-semantics;modality;} } @book{ bhatt:1999a2, author = {Rajesh Bhatt}, title = {Covert Modality in Non-Finite Contexts}, publisher = {de Gruyter Mouton}, year = {2006}, address = {Boston}, contentnote = {Includes a theory of infinitive-interrogatives.}, xref = {Book publication of: bhatt:1999a1.}, topic = {nl-semantics;modality;} } @article{ bhatt:2002a, author = {Rajesh Bhatt}, title = {Review of \emph{{E}conomy and Semantic Interpretation}, by {D}anny {F}ox}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {233--259}, xref = {Review of fox_d:2000a.}, topic = {syntax-semantics-interface;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ bhatt:2002b, author = {Rajesh Bhatt}, title = {The Raising Analysis of Relative Clauses: Evidence from Adjectival Modification}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {43--90}, topic = {relative-clauses;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ bhatt-pancheva:2006a, author = {Rajesh Bhatt and Roumyana Pancheva}, title = {Conditionals}, booktitle = {The {B}lackwell Companion to Syntax, Volume 1}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2006}, editor = {Martin Everaert and Henk Van Riemsdijk and Rob Goedemans and Bart Hollebrandse}, pages = {687--638}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ bhatt_m-etal:2014a, author = {Mehul Bhatt and Carl Schultz and Madhura Thosar}, title = {Computing Narratives of Cognitive User Experience for Building Design Analysis: KR for Industry Scale Computer-Aided Architecture Design}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {508--517}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We present a cognitive design assistance system equipped with analytical capabilities aimed at anticipating architectural building design performance with respect to people-centred functional design goals. ... The system is based on an underlying declarative narrative representation and computation framework pertaining to conceptual, geometric, and qualitative spatial knowledge. The semantics of the declarative narrative model, i.e., the overall representation and computation model, is founded on: (a). conceptual knowledge formalised in an OWL ontology; (b). a general spatial representation and reasoning engine implemented in constraint logic programming; and (c). a declaratively encoded (narrative) construction process (based on search over graph structures) implemented in answer-set programming. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {computer-aided-design;OWL;} } @inproceedings{ bhatt_r:1997a, author = {Rajesh Bhatt}, title = {Obligation and Possession}, booktitle = {Papers from the {Upenn/MIT} Roundtable on Argument Structure and Aspect, Volume 32}, year = {1997}, editor = {Heidi Harley}, publisher = {MIT Linguistics Department}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, abstract = {In this paper, I will discuss the question of why the same means are used for marking possession and obligation in many languages and provide a syntac- tic analysis of the obligational construction.}, topic = {'ought';possessives;evidential-constructions;} } @article{ bhattacharya-etal:2010a, author = {Sukanto Bhattacharya and Yonggui Wang and Dongming Xu}, title = {Beyond Simon's Means-Ends Analysis: Natural Creativity and the Unanswered `Why' in the Design of Intelligent Systems for Problem-Solving}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {327--347}, abstract = {Goal-directed problem solving as originally advocated by Herbert Simon's means-ends analysis model has primarily shaped the course of design research on artificially intelligent systems for problem-solving. We contend that there is a definite disregard of a key phase within the overall design process that in fact logically precedes the actual problem solving phase. While systems designers have traditionally been obsessed with goal-directed problem solving, the basic determinants of the ultimate desired goal state still remain to be fully understood or categorically defined. We propose a rational framework built on a set of logically inter-connected conjectures to specifically recognize this neglected phase in the overall design process of intelligent systems for practical problem-solving applications. }, topic = {philosophy-of-AI;} } @incollection{ bhattacharyya:2009a, author = {Sibajiban Bhattacharyya}, title = {Indian Logic}, booktitle = {The Development of Modern Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Leila Haaparanta}, pages = {903--961}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {history-of-logic;Indian-logic;} } @inproceedings{ bi_ha:2022a, author = {Ruyue Agnes Bi}, title = {Evaluativity in 'even'-comparatives via presupposition accommodation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 26}, year = {2022}, editor = {Daniel Gutzmann and Sophie Repp}, pages = {112--129}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Cologne}, address = {Cologne}, url = {https://bit.ly/Proceedings-of-SuB-26}, abstract = {Sentences involving the scalar particle even result in positive or negative inferences when combined with gradable predicates, which is unexpected assuming the classic (un)-likelihood analysis of even. I observe that these evaluative inferences arise when (i) the likelihood presupposition of even is not already entailed in the common ground, and (ii) the comparison class is not explicitly given. Hence, this paper gives a pragmatic account of the puzzle and demonstrates that the evaluative inferences can be derived systematically with the help of two general pragmatic principles, what I call the 'Presupposition Accommodation Condition' and 'Alternative-sampling Hypothesis'. ...}, topic = {'even';pragmatics;} } @article{ bi_yx-etal:2008a, author = {Yaxin Bi and Jiwen Guan and David Bell}, title = {The Combination of Multiple Classifiers Using an Evidential Reasoning Approach}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {15}, pages = {1731--1751}, topic = {evidential-reasoning;machine-learning;} } @article{ bianchi_a-bonanini_a:2014a, author = {Andrea Bianchi and Alessandro Bonanini}, title = {Is there Room for Reference Borrowing in {D}onnellan's Historical Explanation Theory?}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2014}, volume = {37}, number = {3}, pages = {175--203}, abstract = {Famously, both Saul Kripke and Keith Donnellan opposed description theories and insisted on the role of history in determining the reference of a proper name token. No wonder, then, that their views on proper names have often been assimilated. By focusing on reference borrowing -- an alleged phenomenon that Kripke takes to be fundamental -- we argue that they should not be. In particular, we claim that according to Donnellan a proper name token never borrows its reference from preceding tokens which it is historically connected to. On the contrary, its reference is always fixed anew on who or what the speaker has in mind when he or she produces it. $\ldots$}, topic = {proper-names;reference-fixing;} } @incollection{ bianchi_c:1999a, author = {Claudia Bianchi}, title = {Three Forms of Contextual Dependence}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {67--76}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;philosophy-of-language;foundations-of-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ bianchi_c:2001a, author = {Claudia Bianchi}, title = {Context of Utterance and Intended Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {73--66}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;indexicals;demonstratives;} } @inproceedings{ bianchi_c:2003a, author = {Claudia Bianchi}, title = {How to Refer: Objective Context vs. Intentional Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {66--79}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;} } @incollection{ bianchi_c:2013a, author = {Claudia Bianchi}, title = {Implicating}, booktitle = {Pragmatics of Speech Actions}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Marina Sbis\'a and Ken Turner}, pages = {107--142}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {Grice;implicature;} } @incollection{ bianchi_c-vassallo_n:2005a, author = {Claudia Bianchi and Nicla Vassallo}, title = {Epistemological Contextualization: A Semantic Perspective}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {41--54}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;knowledge;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ bianchiberthouze_n-kleinsmith_a:2015a, author = {Nadia Bianchi-Berthouze and Andrea Kleinsmith}, title = {Automatic Recognition of Affective Body Expressions}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {151--169}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {emotional-computing;facial-expression;facial-recognition;} } @incollection{ biatov:2000a, author = {Konstantin Biatov}, title = {Experiments on Unsupervised Learning for Extracting Relevant Fragments from Spoken Dialog Corpus}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {83--86}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;spoken-language-corpora;} } @article{ bibel:1980a, author = {Wolfgang Bibel}, title = {Syntax-Directed, Semantics-Supported Program Synthesis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1980}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {243--261}, topic = {program-synthesis;} } @book{ bibel:1982a, author = {Wolfgang Bibel}, title = {Automated Theorem Proving}, publisher = {Friedr. Vieweg \& Sohn}, year = {1982}, address = {Braunschweig, Germany}, ISBN = {3528085207}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA76.9.A96 B51 1982.}, topic = {theorem-proving;kr-course;} } @article{ bibel:1982b, author = {Wolfgang Bibel}, title = {A Comparative Study of Several Proof Procedures}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1982}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {269--293}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @article{ bibel:1988a, author = {Wolfgang Bibel}, title = {Constraint Satisfaction from a Deductive Viewpoint}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {35}, number = {3}, pages = {401--413}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;theorem-proving;} } @article{ bibel:1998a, author = {Wolfgang Bibel}, title = {Let's Plan it Deductively!}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {103}, number = {1--2}, pages = {183--208}, topic = {planning-algorithms;theorem-proving;} } @incollection{ bibel-eder_e:1993a, author = {Wolfgang Bibel and Elmar Eder}, title = {Methods and Calculi for Deduction}, booktitle = {The Handbook of Logic in Artificial Intelligence and Logic Programming, Volume 1: Deductive Methodologies}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Christopher Hogger and John A. Robinson}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, pages = {68--367}, address = {Oxford}, year = {1993}, missinginfo = {ed's 1st name}, topic = {kr;logic-survey;theorem-proving;kr-course;} } @book{ bibel-etal:1993a, author = {Wolfgang Bibel and Steffen H\"olldobler and Gerd Neugebauer}, title = {Deduction: Automated Logic}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1993}, address = {London}, ISBN = {012095835X}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, DA 76.9 .A96 B5311 1993.}, note = {Translated by Monika Lekuse with the assistance of Donald Sannella.}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @incollection{ bibel-etal:1998a, author = {Wolfgang Bibel et al.}, title = {Compressions and Extensions}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {I}, Foundations: Calculi and Methods}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, other authors, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;proof-theory;} } @book{ bibel-jorrand:1986a, editor = {W. Bibel and Ph. Jorrand}, title = {Fundamentals of Artificial Intelligence: An Advanced Course}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1986}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {354016782X}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, Q335 .F861 1986.}, topic = {AI-intro;AI-text;} } @book{ bibel-schmidt_ph:1998a, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, title = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {I}, Foundations: Calculi and Methods}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, volume = {1}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Ulrich Furbach, "Introduction (to Part I: Tableau and Connection Calculi)" 1. B. Beckert and R. H\"anle, "Analytic Tableaux" 2. R. Letz, "Clausal Tableaux" 3. P. Baumgartner and Ulrich Furbach, "Variants of Clausal Tableaux" 4. U. Egly, "Cuts in Tableaux" 5. W. Bibel et al., "Compressions and Extensions" 0'. U. Petermann, "Introduction (to Part II: Special Calculi and Refinements" 6. P. Baumgartner and U. Peterman, "Theory Reasoning" 7. F. Baader and K.U. Schulz, "Unification THeory" 8. P. Beckert, "Rigid E-Unification" 9. C. Weidenbach, "Sorted Unification and Tree Automata" 10. G. Meyer and C. Beierle, "Dimensions of Types in Logic Programming" 11. L. Bachmair and H. Ganzinger, "Equational Reasoning in Saturation-Based Theorem Proving" 12. T. Nipkow and C. Prehofer, "Higher-Order Rewriting and Equational Reasoning" 13. M. Kohlhase, "Higher-Order Automated Theorem Proving" }, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @book{ bibel-schmidt_ph:1998b, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, title = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {II}, Systems and Implementation Techniques}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, volume = {1}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {TC: 0. T. Nipkow and W. Reif, "Introduction (to Part I: Interactive Theorem Proving)" 1. W. Reif et al., "Structured Specifications and Interactive Proofs with {KIV}" 2. H. Benl et al., "Proof Theory at Work: Program Development in the {M}inlog System" 3. M. Strecker et al., "Interactive and Automated Construction in Type Theory" 4. W. Ahrendt et al., "Integrating Automated and Interactive Theorem Proving" 0'. J. Siekmann and D. Fehrer, "Introduction (to Part II: Representation)" 5. P. Graf and D. Fehrer, "Term Indexing" 6. D. Fehrer, "Developing Deductive Systems: The] Toolbox Style" 7. G. Neugebauer and U. Petermann, "Specifications of Inference Rules: Extensions of the {PTTP} Technique" 8. T. Kolbe and C. Walther, "Proof Analysis, Generalization, and Reuse" 0''. W. K\"uchlin, "Introduction (To Part III: Parallel Inference Systems)" 9. R. B\"undgen et al., "Parallel Term Rewriting with {P}a{R}e{D}u{X}" 10. J. Schulmann et al., "Parallel Theorem Provers Based on {SETHO}" 11. S.-E. Bornscheuer et al., "Massively Parallel Reasoning" 0'''. J. Avenhaus, "Introduction (To Part IV: Comparison and Cooperation of Theorem Provers)" 12. M. Baaz et al., "Extension Methods in Automated Deduction" 13. J. Denzinger and M. Fuchs, "A Comparison of Equality Reasoning Heuristics" 14. J. Denzinger and I. Dahn, "Cooperating Theorem Provers" }, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;AI-implementations;} } @book{ bibel-schmidt_ph:1998c, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, title = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {III}, Applications}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, volume = {1}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {TC: 0. M. Kohlhase, "Introduction (to Part I: Automated Theorem Proving in Mathematics)" 1. I. Dahn, "Lattice-Ordered Groups in Deduction" 2. J. Stuber, "Superposition Theorem Proving for Commutsative Rings" 3. H.J. Olbach and J. K\"ohler, "How to Augment a Formal System with a {B}oolean Algebra Component" 4. M. Kerber, "Proof Planning: A Practical Approach to Mechanized Reasoning in Mathematics" 0'. J. Schumann, "Introduction (to Part II: Automated Deduction in Software Engineering and Hardware Design )" 5. C. Kreitz, "Program Synthesis" 6. J. Geisl et al., "Termination Analysis for Functional Programs" 7. G. Schellhorn and W. Ahrendt, "The {WAM} Case Study: Verifying Compiler Correctness for {P}rolog with {KIV}" 8. I. Dahn and J. Schumann, "Using Automated Theorem Provers in Verification of Protocols" 9. W. Reif and G. Schellhorn, "Theorem Proving in Large Theories" 10. F. Stolzenburg and B. Thomas, "Analyzing Rule Sets for the Calculation of Banking Fees by a Theorem Prover with Constraints" 11. B. Fischer et al., "Deduction-Based Software Component Retrieval" 12. R. B\"undgen, "Rewrite Based Hardware Verification with {R}e{D}u{X}" }, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @incollection{ biber:1994a, author = {Douglas Biber}, title = {Representativeness in Corpus Design}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Computational Linguistics: Essays in Honour of {D}on {W}alker}, publisher = {Giardini Editori e Stampatori and Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {Antonio Zampolli and Nicoletta Calzolari and Martha Palmer}, pages = {377--407}, address = {Pisa and Dordrecht}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;} } @article{ biber:1999a, author = {Douglas Biber}, title = {Review of \emph{{E}xploring Textual Data}, by {L}udvic {L}ebart and {A}ndr\'e {S}alem and {L}isette {B}arry}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {165--166}, xref = {Review of lebart-etal:1998a.}, topic = {corpus-statistics;multivariate-statistics;cluster-analysis;} } @book{ biber-etal:1998a, author = {Douglas Biber and Susan Conrad and Randi Reppen}, title = {Corpus Linguistics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Research Notes. "Biber"}, ISBN = {052149957-7}, topic = {corpus-annotation;corpus-linguistics;corpus-tagging;} } @book{ biber-etal:1999a, author = {Douglas Biber and Stig Johansson and Susan Conrad and Edward Finnegan}, title = {Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written {E}nglish}, publisher = {Pearson Education, Ltd.}, year = {1999}, address = {Harlow, England}, ISBN = {058223725-4}, xref = {Review: hirst_g:2001a.}, topic = {descriptive-grammar;Engliah-language;} } @article{ bic:1985a, author = {Lubomir Bic}, title = {Processing of Semantic Nets on Dataflow Architectures}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {219--227}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Extracting knowledge from a semantic network may be viewed as a process of finding given patterns in the network. On a von Neumann computer architecture the semantic net is a passive data structure stored in memory and manipulated by a program. This paper demonstrates that by adopting a data-driven model of computation the necessary pattern-matching process may be carried out on a highly-parallel dataflow architecture. The model is based on the idea of representing the semantic network as a dataflow graph in which each node is an active element capable of accepting, processing, and emitting data tokens traveling asynchronously along the network arcs. These tokens are used to perform a parallel search for the given patterns. Since no centralized control is required to guide and supervise the token flow, the model is capable of exploiting a computer architecture consisting of large numbers of independent processing elements.}, topic = {semantic-nets;parallel-processing;} } @inproceedings{ bicchieri_c:1988a, author = {Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {Common Knowledge and Backward Induction: A Solution to the Paradox}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge}, year = {1988}, editor = {Moshe Y. Vardi}, pages = {381--393}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {game-theory;mutual-belief;backward-induction;} } @article{ bicchieri_c:1988b, author = {Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {Strategic Behavior and Counterfactuals}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1988}, volume = {76}, number = {1}, pages = {135--169}, topic = {conditionals;game-theory;} } @inproceedings{ bicchieri_c:1989a, author = {Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {Backward Induction Without Common Knowledge}, booktitle = {{PSA} 1988: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Volume 2}, year = {1989}, editor = {Arthur Fine and Janet Leplin}, pages = {329--343}, organization = {Philosophy of Science Association}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, address = {East Lansing, Michigan}, abstract = {Game theorists have generally assumed that the informational requirement needed to solve [finite non-cooperative, extensive form perfect information] games is that the players have common knowledge of rationality. This assumption, however, has given rise to several problems and paradoxes. Most notably, it has been shown that the common knowledge assumption makes the theory of the game inconsistent at some information set. The present paper shows that a) no common knowledge of rationality need be assumed for the backward induction solution to hold. Rather, it is sufficient that the players have a number of levels of knowledge proportional to the length of the game, and b) it is also necessary that the number of levels of knowledge is finite and proportional to the length of the game. For a higher number of levels of knowledge, inconsistencies arise.}, topic = {game-theory;mutual-belief;backward-induction;} } @book{ bicchieri_c:1993a, author = {Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {Rationality and Coordination}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: gilbert:1998a.}, topic = {foundations-of-game-theory;game-theoretic-coordination; rationality;} } @article{ bicchieri_c:1994a, author = {Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {Counterfactuals, Belief Changes, and Equilibrium Refinements}, journal = {Philosophical Topics}, year = {1994}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {21--52}, topic = {game-theory; counterfactuals;Nash-equilibria;} } @book{ bicchieri_c:2006a, author = {Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {The Grammar of Society}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780521574907}, topic = {social-norms;} } @incollection{ bicchieri_c:2008a, author = {Cristina Bicchieri}, title = {The Fragility of Fairness: An Experimental Investigation on the Conditional Status of Pro-Social Norms}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {229--248}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {experimental-philosophy;ethics;} } @article{ bicchieri_c-antonelli_ga:1995a, author = {Cristina Bicchieri and Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Game-Theoretic Axioms for Local Rationality and Bounded Knowledge}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1995}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {145--167}, topic = {game-theory;rationality;} } @incollection{ bicchieri_c-antonelli_ga:1996a, author = {Cristina Bicchieri and Aldo Antonelli}, title = {Games Servers Play: A Procedural Approach}, booktitle = {Intelligent Agents {II}: Agent Theories, Architectures, and Languages}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Michael J. Wooldridge and J.P. M\"uller and Milind Tambe}, pages = {127--142}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, topic = {game-theory;distributed-systems;} } @book{ bicchieri_c-chiara:1992a, editor = {Cristina Bicchieri and Maria L. Dalla Chiara}, title = {Knowledge, Belief and Strategic Interaction}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-41674-4}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;} } @book{ bicchieri_c-dallachiara_ml:1992a, editor = {Cristina Bicchieri and Maria Luisa {Dalla Chiara}}, title = {Knowledge, Belief, and Strategic Interaction}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {Check topic.}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate BC 177 .K581 1992}, topic = {foundations-of-game-theory;} } @book{ bicchieri_c-etal:1997a, editor = {Cristina Bicchieri and Richard Jeffrey and Brian Skyrms}, title = {The Dynamics of Norms}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {Check topic.}, ISBN = {0521560624}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, GN 493.3 .D961 1997}, ISBN = {0521560624}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, GN 493.3 .D961 1997.}, topic = {conditional-obligation;obligation-update;} } @book{ bicchieri_c-etal:1999a, editor = {Cristina Bicchieri and Richard Jeffrey and Brian Skyrms}, title = {The Logic of Strategy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0195117158}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, B 105 .S68 L641 1999.}, topic = {decision-theory;foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @unpublished{ bickard-campbell_rl:1991a, author = {Mark H. Bickard and Robert L. campbell}, title = {Some Foundational Questions Concerning Language Studies: with a Focus on Categorial Grammars and Model Theoretic Possible Worlds Semantics}, year = {1991}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, contentnote = {This is an attempt at a foundational criticism of logical semantics.}, rtnote = {I didn't look at it that carefully, it didn't seem to have anything very powerful or profound to say. I don't know where these people are.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ bickel:1997a, author = {Balthasar Bickel}, title = {Aspectual Scope and the Difference Between Logical and Semantic Representation}, journal = {Lingua}, year = {1997}, volume = {102}, number = {1}, pages = {115--132}, topic = {tense-aspect;operator-scope;implicature;} } @incollection{ bickerton:1979a, author = {Derek Bickerton}, title = {Where Do Presuppositions Come From}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics 11: Presupposition}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {ChoonKyo Oh and David A. Dineen}, pages = {235--248}, address = {New York}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @article{ bickhard_mh-campbell_rj:1992a, author = {Mark H. Bickhard and Robert L. Campbell}, title = {Some Foundational Questions Concerning Language Studies: with a Focus on Categorial Grammars and Model-Theoretic Possible Worlds Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Pragmatics}, year = {1992}, volume = {17}, number = {5--6}, pages = {401--433}, abstract = {First, we demonstrate that the logical foundations of standard approaches to language studies involve an incoherence in their presuppositions. Second, we present an alternative approach that resolves this incoherence. Third, we discuss how this error manifests itself in categorial grammars and model-theoretic possible worlds semantics. Fourth, we suggest some possible revisions in standard approaches to accommodate them to the alternative that we suggest. We arrive at a fundamentally functional, or pragmatic, conceprion -- an interactive conception -- of the nature of language and meaning. In a paper, such claims and programmatic suggestions can at best be adumbrated, but we aim to show that there are some issues of fundamental importance that need to be pursued.}, cpntentnote = {The alleged incoherence is a regress of interpretations.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ bickle:2001a, author = {John Bickle}, title = {Understanding Neural Complexity: A Role For Reduction}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {467--481}, abstract = {Psychoneural reduction is under attack again, only this time from a former ally: cognitive neuroscience. It has become popular to think of the brain as a complex system whose theoretically important properties emerge from dynamic, non-linear interactions between its component parts. ``Emergence'' is supposed to replace reduction: $\ldots$ }, topic = {theory-reduction;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @incollection{ bickle-etal:2012a, author = {John Bickle and Peter Mandik and Anthony Landreth}, title = {The Philosophy of Neuroscience}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2012/entries/neuroscience/}, year = {2012}, edition = {Summer 2012}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {philosophy-of-psychology;neuroscience;} } @incollection{ bickmore_tw:2015a, author = {Timothy W. Bickmore}, title = {Relational Agents in Health Applications: Leveraging Affective Computing to Promote Healing and Wellness}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {537--546}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;} } @article{ bidlock-wellman_ml:2010a, author = {Clint Bidlock and Michael P. Wellman}, title = {Exceptional Data Quality Using Intelligent Matching and Retrieval}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2010}, volume = {31}, number = {1}, pages = {65--73}, topic = {data-mining;} } @article{ bidoit-froidevaux:1991a, author = {N. Bidoit and Christine Froidevaux}, title = {General Logical Databases and Programs: Default Logic Semantics and Stratefication}, journal = {Information and Computation}, year = {1991}, volume = {91}, pages = {15--54}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {default-logic;stratified-logic-programs;} } @inproceedings{ bieber_p:1990a, author = {Pierre Bieber}, title = {A Logic of Communication in Hostile Environments}, booktitle = {[1990] Proceedings. The Computer Security Foundations Workshop {III}}, year = {1990}, pages = {14--22}, publisher = {IEEE Computer Society}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {The author adapts a knowledge-oriented model of distributed systems in order to analyze cryptographic protocols. This new model provides semantics for a logic of knowledge, time and communication. He expresses and proves with this logic security properties as secrecy and authentication}, topic = {cryptography;reasoning-about-knowledge;} } @incollection{ biederman_i:1990a, author = {Irving Biederman}, title = {Higher-Level Vision}, booktitle = {An Invitation to Cognitive Science. Volume 2: Visual Cognition and Action}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel N. Osherson and Howard Lasnik}, pages = {41--72}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers. "Biederman"}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;human-vision;visual-reasoning;} } @incollection{ biederman_i:1995a, author = {Irving Biederman}, title = {Visual Object Recognition}, volume = {2}, edition = {2}, booktitle = {Visual Cognition: An Invitation to Cognitive Science}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Stephen M. Kosslyn and Daniel N. Osherson}, chapter = {4}, pages = {121--166}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc17}, topic = {human-vision;object-recognition;} } @book{ bielec:1998a, author = {Dana Bielec}, title = {Polish--An Essential Grammar}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1998}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0415164052 (alk. paper), 0415164060 (pbk)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, 891.855 B587pL.}, topic = {Polish-language;reference-grammars;} } @article{ bieltz_p:2019a, author = {Petre Bieltz}, title = {Logical Foundatios of Social Decision}, journal = {Revista de Filosofie}, year = {2019}, volume = {46}, number = {5}, pages = {659--676}, abstract = {... This paper translates in formal logical language the way in which the social decision is made under the shape of choice of preferrence for a choice or another, according to certain laws preestablished by those who decide (individuals of individual groups).}, topic = {social-reasoning;aggregation;} } @article{ bienvenu_l:2012a, author = {Laurent Bienvenu}, title = {Review of \emph{Algorithmic Randomness and Complexity}, by {R}odney G. Downey and Denis R. Hirschfeldt}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {126--128}, xref = {Review of: downey-hirschfeldt:2010a.}, topic = {randomness;} } @incollection{ bienvenu_m:2008a, author = {Meghyn Bienvenu}, title = {Complexity of Abduction in the {EL} Family of Lightweight Description Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {220--230}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {The complexity of logic-based abduction has been extensively studied for the case in which the background knowledge is represented by a propositional theory, but very little is known about abduction with respect to description logic knowledge bases. The purpose of the current paper is to examine the complexity of logic-based abduction for the EL family of lightweight description logics. We consider several minimality criteria for explanations (set inclusion, cardinality, prioritization, and weight) and three decision problems: deciding whether an explanation exists, deciding whether a given hypothesis appears in some acceptable explanation, and deciding whether a given hypothesis belongs to every acceptable explanation. We determine the complexity of these tasks for general TBoxes and also for EL and EL+ terminologies. We also provide results concerning the complexity of computing abductive explanations. }, topic = {abduction;description-logics;} } @inproceedings{ bienvenu_m-bourgaux_c:2020a, author = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Camille Bourgaux}, title = {Querying and Repairing Inconsistent Prioritized Knowledge Bases: Complexity Analysis and Links with Abstract Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {141--151}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {In this paper, we explore the issue of inconsistency handling over prioritized knowledge bases (KBs), which consist of an ontology, a set of facts, and a priority relation between conflicting facts. ... Our results provide a nearly complete picture of the data complexity of these tasks for ontologies formulated in common DL-Lite dialects. ...}, topic = {reasoning-about-inconsistency;prioritized-knowledge-bases;} } @incollection{ bienvenu_m-bourgaux_c:2022a, author = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Camille Bourgaux}, title = {Querying Inconsistent Prioritized Data with {ORBITS}: Algorithms, Implementation, and Experiments}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {523--532}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We investigate practical algorithms for inconsistency-tolerant query answering over prioritized knowledge bases, which consist of a logical theory, a set of facts, and a priority relation between conflicting facts. We consider three well-known semantics (AR, IAR and brave) based upon two notions of optimal repairs (Pareto and completion). ... The present paper introduces the first SAT encodings for Pareto- and completion-optimal repairs w.r.t. general priority relations and proposes several ways of employing existing and new encodings to compute answers under (optimal) repair-based semantics, by exploiting different reasoning modes of SAT solvers. ...}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {SAT-based-algorithms;kb-query-processing;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ bienvenu_m-etal:2006a, author = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Christian Fritz and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Planning with Qualitative Temporal Preferences}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {134--144}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {planning;preferences;qualitative-utility;temporal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ bienvenu_m-etal:2010a, author = {Meghyn Bienvenu and J\'er\^ome Lang and Nic Wilson}, title = {From Preference Logics to Preference Languages, and Back}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {414--424}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We start by constructing a "prototypical" preference logic, which combines features of existing preference logics, and then we show that many well-known preference languages, such as CP-nets and its extensions, are natural fragments of it. After establishing useful characterizations of dominance and consistency in our logic, we study the complexity of satisfiability in the general case as well as for meaningful fragments, and we study the expressive power as well as the relative succinctness of some of these fragments.}, topic = {preference-logics;} } @article{ bienvenu_m-etal:2011a, author = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Christian Fritz and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Specifying and Computing Preferred Plans}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {7--8}, pages = {1308--1345}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;planning-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ bienvenu_m-etal:2012a, author = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Carsten Lutz and Frank Wolter}, title = {Query Containment in Description Logics Reconsidered}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {221--231}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we study a rather general version of query containment that, unlike the classical version, cannot be reduced to query answering. ... We also study global minimization of queries in the presence of DL ontologies, which is more subtle than for classical databases as minimal queries need not be isomorphic.}, topic = {kb-query-processing;} } @inproceedings{ bienvenu_m-etal:2014a, author = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Diego Calvanese and Magdalena Ortiz and Mantas Simkus}, title = {Nested Regular Path Queries in Description Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {218--227}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We study the computational complexity of answering nested 2RPQs and conjunctions thereof (CN2RPQs) in the presence of domain knowledge expressed in description logics (DLs). We establish tight complexity bounds in data and combined complexity for a variety of DLs, ranging from lightweight DLs (DL-Lite, EL) up to highly expressive ones. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {dl-lite;query-answering;description-logics;complexity-in-AI;} } @book{ bienvenu_m-etal:2021a, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, title = {{KR}2021: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, year = {2021}, address = {Vienna}, ISBN = {978-1-956792-99-7}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2021/}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Thomas \o{A}gotnes and Yì N. Wáng, "Somebody Knows", pp. 2--11 2. Shqiponja Ahmetaj and Robert David and Magdalena Ortiz and Axel Polleres and Bojken Shehu and Mantas \v{S}imkus, "Reasoning about Explanations for Non-validation in SHACL", pp. 12--21 3. Diego Aineto and Sergio Jimenez and Eva Onaindia, "Generalized Temporal Inference via Planning", pp. 22--31 4. Leila Amgoud and Vivien Beuselinck, "Equivalence of Semantics in Argumentation", pp. 32--41 5. Benjamin Amino and fGiuseppe De Giacomo and Alessio Lomuscio and Aniello Murano and Sasha Rubin, "Synthesizing Best-Effort Strategies under Multiple Environment Specifications", pp. 42--51 6. Ofer Arieli and AnneMarie Borg and Christian Stra{\ss}er, "Characterizations and Classifications of Argumentative Entailments", pp. 52--62 7. Alessandro Artale and Andrea Mazzullo and Ana Ozaki and Frank Wolter, "On Free Description Logics with Definite Descriptions", pp. 63--73 8. Gilles Audemard and Steve Bellart and Louenas Bounia and Fr\'ed\'eric KoricheeJean-Marie Lagniez and Pierre Marquis, "On the Computational Intelligibility of Boolean Classifiers", pp. 74--86 9. Christel Baier and Martin Diller and Clemens Dubslaff and Sarah Alice Gaggl and Holger Hermanns and Nikolai Käfer, "Admissibility in Probabilistic Argumentation", pp. 87--98 10. Roman Bart\'ak and Simona Ondr\v{c}kov\'a and Gregor Behnke and Pascal Bercher, "Correcting Hierarchical Plans by Action Deletion", pp. 99--109 11. Ringo Baumann and Markus Ulbricht, "Choices and their Consequences - Explaining Acceptable Sets in Abstract Argumentation Frameworks", pp. 110--119 12. Thomas Bolander and Lasse Dissing and Nicolai Herrmann, "DEL-based Epistemic Planning for Human-Robot Collaboration: Theory and Implementation", pp. 120--129 13. AnneMarie Borg and Floris Bex, "Enforcing Sets of Formulas in Structured Argumentation", pp. 130--140 14. Camille Bourgaux and David Carral and Markus Kr\"otzsch and Sebastian Rudolph and Michaël Thomazo, "Capturing Homomorphism-Closed Decidable Queries with Existential Rules", pp. 141--150 15. Roman Bresson and Johanne Cohen and Eyke H\"ullermeier and Christophe Labreuche and Michèle Sebag, "On the Identifiability of Hierarchical Decision Models", pp. 151--162 16. Maxime Buron and Marie-Laure Mugnier and Michaël Thomazo, "Parallelisable Existential Rules: a Story of Pieces", pp. 163--173 17. Claudia Cauli and Magdalena Ortiz and Nir Piterman, "Closed- and Open-world Reasoning in DL-Lite for Cloud Infrastructure Security", pp. 174--183 18. Luk\'a\v{s} Chrpa and Martin Pil\'at and Jakub Med, "On Eventual Applicability of Plans in Dynamic Environments with Cyclic Phenomena", pp. 184--193 19. Jens Cla{\ss}en and James P. Delgrande, "An Account of Intensional and Extensional Actions, and its Application to Belief, Nondeterministic Actions and Fallible Sensors", pp. 194--204 20. Alexis de ColnetS and Stefan Mengel, "A Compilation of Succinctness Results for Arithmetic Circuits", pp. 205--215 21. Giuseppe De Giacomo and Yves Lesp\'erance, "The Nondeterministic Situation Calculus", pp. 216--226 22. Giuseppe De Giacomo and Aniello Murano and Fabio PatriziGiu and Giuseppe Perelli, "Timed Trace Alignment with Metric Temporal Logic over Finite Traces", pp. 227--236 23. Giuseppe De Giacomo and Antonio Di Stasio and Giuseppe Perelli and Shufang Zhu, "Synthesis with Mandatory Stop Actions", pp. 237--246 24. Devendra Singh Dhami and Mayukh Das and Sriraam Natarajan, "Beyond Simple Images: Human Knowledge-Guided GANs for Clinical Data Generation", pp. 247--257 25. Dominik Drexler and Jendrik Seipp and Hector Geffner, "Expressing and Exploiting the Common Subgoal Structure of Classical Planning Domains Using Sketches", pp. 258--268 26. Thomas Eiter and Markus Hecher and Rafael Kiesel, "Treewidth-Aware Cycle Breaking for Algebraic Answer Set Counting", pp. 269--279 27. Thomas Eiter and Tobias Geibinger and Nysret Musliu and Johannes Oetsch and Peter Sko\v{c}ovsk\'y and Daria Stepanova, "Answer-Set Programming for Lexicographical Makespan Optimisation in Parallel Machine Scheduling", pp. 280--290 28. Patricia Everaere and Chouaib Fellah and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Ram\'on Pino P\'erez, "Borda, Cancellation and Belief Merging", pp. 291--300 29. Bettina Fazzinga and Sergio Flesca and Filippo Furfaro, "Reasoning over Attack-incomplete AAFs in the Presence of Correlations", pp. 301--311 30. Julian Gutierrez and Lewis Hammond and Anthony W. Lin and Muhammad Najib and Michael Wooldridge, "Rational Verification for Probabilistic Systems", pp. 312--322 31. Anneke Haga and Carsten Lutz and Leif Sabellek and Frank Wolter, "How to Approximate Ontology-Mediated Queries", pp. 323--333 32. Jesse Heyninck and Ofer Arieli, "Approximation Fixpoint Theory for Non-Deterministic Operators and Its Application in Disjunctive Logic Programming", pp. 334-344 33. Jesse Heyninck and Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Tjitze Rienstra and Kenneth Skiba and Matthias Thimm, "Revision and Conditional Inference for Abstract Dialectical Frameworks", pp. 345--355 34. Xuanxiang Huang and Yacine Izza and Alexey Ignatiev and Joao Marques-Silva, "On Efficiently Explaining Graph-Based Classifiers", pp. 356--367 35. Wojciech Jamroga and Wojciech Penczek and Teofil Sidoruk, "Strategic Abilities of Asynchronous Agents: Semantic Side Effects and How to Tame Them", pp. 368--378 36. Brendan Juba and Hai S. Le and Roni Stern, "Safe Learning of Lifted Action Models", pp. 379--389 37. Jean Christoph Jung and Carsten Lutz and Hadrien Pulcini and Frank Wolter, "Separating Data Examples by Description Logic Concepts with Restricted Signatures", pp. 390--399 38. Magdalena Kacprzak and Artur Niewiadomski and Wojciech Penczek, "Satisfiability Checking of Strategy Logic with Simple Goals", pp. 400--410 39. Yusuke Kawamoto and Tetsuya Sato and Kohei Suenaga, "Formalizing Statistical Beliefs in Hypothesis Testing Using Program Logic", pp. 411--421 40. Atefeh Keshavarzi Zafarghandi and Rineke Verbrugge and Bart Verheij, "Semi-Stable Semantics for Abstract Dialectical Frameworks", pp. 422--431 41. Spencer Killen and Jia-Huai You, "Unfounded Sets for Disjunctive Hybrid MKNF Knowledge Bases", pp. 432--441 42. Gianfranco Lamperti and Marina Zanella and Xiangfu Zhao, "Diagnosis of Active Systems with Abstract Observations and Compiled Knowledge", pp. 442--453 43. Ruiqi LiHua Hua and Patrik Haslum and Jochen Renz, "Unsupervised Novelty Characterization in Physical Environments Using Qualitative Spatial Relations", pp. 454--464 44. Daxin Liu and Qihui Feng, "On the Progression of Belief", pp. 465--474 45. Robin Manhaeve and Giuseppe Marra and Luc De Raedt, "Approximate Inference for Neural Probabilistic Logic Programming", pp. 475--486 46. Bastien Maubert and Munyque Mittelmann and Aniello Murano and Laurent Perrussel, "Strategic Reasoning in Automated Mechanism Design", pp. 487--496 47. Robin Nolte and Thomas Schneider, "Properties of Module Notions and Atomic Decomposition", pp. 497--507 48. Guilherme Paulino-Passos and Francesca Toni, "Monotonicity and Noise-Tolerance in Case-Based Reasoning with Abstract Argumentation", pp. 508--518 49. David Rajaratnam and Michael Thielscher, "Representing and Reasoning with Event Models for Epistemic Planning", pp. 519--528 50. Jandson S. Ribeiro and Matthias Thimm, "Consolidation via Tacit Culpability Measures: Between Explicit and Implicit Degrees of Culpability", pp. 529--538 51. Ivan D. Rodriguez and Blai Bonet and Javier Romero and Hector Geffner, "Learning First-Order Representations for Planning from Black Box States: New Results", pp. 539--548 52. Zeynep G. Saribatur and Johannes P. Wallner, "Existential Abstraction on Argumentation Frameworks via Clustering", pp. 549--559 53. Taisuke Sato and Ryosuke Kojima, "Boolean Network Learning in Vector Spaces for Genome-wide Network Analysis", pp. 560--569 54. Igor Sedlár, "Decidability and Complexity of Some Finitely-valued Dynamic Logics", pp. 570---580 55. Mate Soos and Kuldeep S. Meel, "Gaussian Elimination Meets Maximum Satisfiability", pp. 581--587 56. Marlo Souza and Renata Wassermann, "Belief Contraction in Non-classical logics as Hyperintensional Belief Change", pp. 588--598 57. Timothy van Bremen and Ond\v{r}ej Ku\v{z}elka, "Lifted Inference with Tree Axioms", pp. 599--608 58. Przemys{\l}aw A. Wa{\l}\c{e}ga and David J. Tena Cucala and Egor V. Kostylev and Bernardo Cuenca Grau, "DatalogMTL with Negation Under Stable Models Semantics", pp. 609--618 59. Przemys{\l}aw A. Wa{\l}\c{e}ga and Micha{\l} Zawidzki and Bernardo Cuenca Grau, "Finitely Materialisable Datalog Programs with Metric Temporal Operators", pp. 619--628 60. Liuwen Yu and Dongheng Chen and Lisha Qiao and Yiqi Shen and Leendert van der Torre, "A Principle-based Analysis of Abstract Agent Argumentation Semantics", pp. 629--639 61. Stefan Borgwardt and Jörg Hoffmann and Alisa Kovtunova and Marcel Steinmetz, "Making DL-Lite Planning Practical", pp. 641--645 62. Angelos Charalambidis and George Papadimitriou and Panos Rondogiannis and Antonis Troumpoukis, "A Many-valued Logic for Lexicographic Preference Representation", pp. 646--650 63. Luká\v{s} Chrpa and Wolfgang Faber and Michael Morak, "Universal and Uniform Action Reversibility", pp. 651--655 64. Carl Corea and Matthias Thimm and Patrick Delfmann, "Measuring Inconsistency over Sequences of Business Rule Cases", pp. 656--660 65. Fabio Aurelio D'Asaro and Paolo Baldi and Giuseppe Primiero, "Introducing k-lingo: a k-depth Bounded Version of ASP System Clingo", pp. 661--665 66. Marjolein Deryck and Nuno Comenda and Bart Coppens and Joost Vennekens, "Combining Logic and Natural Language Processing to Support Investment Management", pp. 666--670 67. Wolfgang Dvo\v{r}\'ak and Matthias König and Stefan Woltran, "On the Complexity of Preferred Semantics in Argumentation Frameworks with Bounded Cycle Length", pp. 671--675 68. Andreas Herzig and Frédéric Maris and Elise Perrotin, "A Dynamic Epistemic Logic with Finite Iteration and Parallel Composition", pp. 676--680 69. Andreas Herzig and Antonio Yuste-Ginel, "On the Epistemic Logic of Incomplete Argumentation Frameworks", pp. 681--685 70. Isabelle Kuhlmann and Tjitze Rienstra and Lars Bengel and Kenneth Skiba and Matthias Thimm, "Distinguishability in Abstract Argumentation", pp. 686--690 71. Michael Morak, "Sticky Existential Rules and Disjunction are Incompatible", pp. 691--695 72. Patrick Rodler and Erich Teppan and Dietmar Jannach, "Randomized Problem-Relaxation Solving for Over-Constrained Schedules", pp. 696--701 73. Philipp Matthias Schäfer and Franz Steinmetz and Stefan Schneyer and Timo Bachmann and Thomas Eiband and Florian Samuel Lay and Abhishek Padalkar and Christoph Sürig and Freek Stulp and Korbinian Nottensteiner, "Flexible Robotic Assembly Based on Ontological Representation of Tasks, Skills, and Resources", pp. 702--706 74. Markus Ulbricht, "On the Maximal Number of Complete Extensions in Abstract Argumentation Frameworks", pp. 707--711 75. Yida Xin and Henry Lieberman and Peter Chin, "PATCHCOMM: Using Commonsense Knowledge to Guide Syntactic Parsers", pp. 712--716 }, topic = {kr;} } @incollection{ bienvenu_m-etal:2022a, author = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Quentin Mani\'ere and Micha\"el Thomazo}, title = {Counting Queries over {ELHI}$\bot$ Ontologies}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {53--62}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {While ontology-mediated query answering most often adopts (unions of) conjunctive queries as the query language, some recent works have explored the use of counting queries coupled with DL-Lite ontologies. The aim of the present paper is to extend the study of counting queries to Horn description logics outside the DL-Lite family. ... Our study not only provides the first results for counting queries beyond DL-Lite, but it also closes some open questions about the combined complexity of CCQ answering in DL-Lite.}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {dl-lite;knowledge-base-queries;} } @inproceedings{ bienvenu_m-rosati_r:2016a, author = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {Query-Based Comparison of Mappings in Ontology-Based Data Access}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {197--206}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {An (OBDA) system is composed of one or more data sources, an ontology that provides a conceptual view of the data, and declarative mappings that relate the data and ontology schemas. In order to debug and optimize [ONDA (ontology-based data access systems)], it is important to be able to analyze and compare OBDA specifications. ... an interesting alternative is to consider query-based notions, in which two specifications are deemed equivalent if they give the same answers to the considered query or class of queries for all possible data sources. In this paper, we define such query-based notions of entailment and equivalence of OBDA specifications and investigate the complexity of the resulting analysis tasks when the ontology is formulated in (fragments of) DL-LiteR. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {dl-lite;computational-ontology;ontology-based-data-access-systems;} } @article{ biermann:1972a, author = {A.W. Biermann}, title = {On the Inference of {T}uring Machines from Sample Computations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1972}, volume = {3}, number = {1--3}, pages = {181--198}, topic = {learning-theory;} } @book{ biermann:1997a, author = {Alan W. Biermann}, title = {Great Ideas in Computer Science: A Gentle Introduction}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, edition = {2nd}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, isbn = {0-262-52223-3}, xref = {Review: ruml:1991a.}, topic = {cs-intro;} } @article{ bierwisch_m:1967a, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {Some Semantic Universals of {G}erman Adjectivals}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1967}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {1--36}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {nl-semantics;semantic-primitives;German-language; semantics-of-adjectives;} } @incollection{ bierwisch_m:1971a, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {On Classifying Semantic Features}, booktitle = {Semantics: An Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1971}, editor = {Danny D. Steinberg and Leon A. Jacobovits}, pages = {410--435}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {componential-semantics;} } @book{ bierwisch_m:1971b, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {Modern Linguistics; Its Development, Methods and Problems}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1971}, address = {The Hague}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: 805 J35 no.110}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {linguistics-intro;linguistics-history;} } @incollection{ bierwisch_m:1976a1, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {Social Differentiation of Language Structure}, booktitle = {Language in Focus}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Asa Kasher}, pages = {407--456}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Alternate publication: bierwisch_m:1976a2.}, topic = {linguistic-variation;foundations-of-linguistics;} } @incollection{ bierwisch_m:1976a2, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {Social Differentiation of Language Structures}, booktitle = {An Integrated Theory of Linguistic Ability}, publisher = {Thomas Y. Crowell Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Thomas G. Bever and Jerrold J. Katz and D. Terence Langendoen}, pages = {271--312}, address = {New York}, xref = {Alternate publication: bierwisch_m:1976a1.}, topic = {linguistic-variation;foundations-of-linguistics;} } @unpublished{ bierwisch_m:1982a, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {Formal and Lexical Semantics}, year = {1982}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Bierwisch"}, topic = {nl-semantics;lexical-semantics;} } @article{ bierwisch_m:1988a, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {Tools and Explanations of Comparison---Part 1}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1988}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {57--93}, abstract = {In this paper, I will outline a theory of gradation that builds upon quite a number of previous analyses, preserving as far as possible the concepts that have already been clarified, but modifying the structure of earlier proposals in crucial respects. ... I will make the following assumptions: (i) The Positive of relative adjectives must be analysed in close connection with the Comparative, the Equative, and a number of related constructions. ... (ii) The Positive of a relative adjective is interpreted with respect to a contextually determined class of comparison C. ... (iii) Relative adjectives assign to an individual x a degree dA where d might be conceived as a class of individuals that are equivalent with respect to A. ... (iv) The lexical representation of a relational adjective is semantically a kind of three-place predicate that relates an individual x, a standard of comparison v, and a difference c. ... (v) Comparative and Equative constructions are related to each other in roughly the following way: the complement clause of the Comparative specifies the value of v, while that of the Equative specifies the value of c. (vi) Relative adjectives belong to (at least) two classes, which I will call dimensional adjectives (tall, long, heavy etc.), and evaluative adjectives (clever, nice, good etc.). The degrees specified by D-adjectives are extents, the degrees specified by E-adjectives are grades. (vii) There is a small number of conditions on semantic representations that determine, among others, the value the standard of comparison v can assume in specified configurations. }, topic = {comparative-constructions;adjectives;measurement-theory; nl-semantics;} } @article{ bierwisch_m:1988b, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {Tools and Explanations of Comparison---Part 2}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1988}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {101--146}, abstract = {See bierwisch_m:1988b}, topic = {nl-semantics;adjectives;comparative-constructions;measures;} } @incollection{ bierwisch_m:2005a, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {The Event Structure of {CAUSE} and {BECOME}}, booktitle = {Events in Syntax, Semantics, and Discourse}, publisher = {Max Niemayer Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Angelika W\"ollstein-Leisten}, pages = {11--44}, address = {T\"ubingen}, topic = {event-semantics;event-structure;nl-causatives;inchoatives;} } @incollection{ bierwisch_m:2010a, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {{BECOME} and its Presuppositions}, booktitle = {Pre-Suppositions and Discourse: Essays offered to {H}ans {K}amp}, year = {2010}, editor = {Rainer Bauerle and Uwe Reyle and Thomas Zimmermann}, pages = {189--234}, publisher = {Emerald Group Publishing}, address = {Bingley, UK}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {presupposition;implicature;} } @incollection{ bierwisch_m:2011a, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {Semantic Features and Primes}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {322--357}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;semantic-features;} } @book{ bierwisch_m-heidolph:1970a, editor = {Manfred Bierwisch and Karl Erich Heidolph}, title = {Progress In Linguistics: A Collection of Papers}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1970}, address = {The Hague}, rtnote = {Graduate Library Call No: 805 J36 v.43}, topic = {linguistics-misc-collection;} } @book{ bierwisch_m-lang_e:1989a, author = {Manfred Bierwisch and Ewald Lang}, title = {Dimensional Adjectives: Grammatical Structure and Conceptual Interpretation}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1989}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540506330 (Germany) 0387506330 (U.S.A.)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: 830.5 D582}, topic = {adjectives;nl-semantics;spatial-reasoning;} } @incollection{ bierwisch_mm:1989a, author = {Manfred Bierwisch}, title = {The Semantics of Gradation}, booktitle = {Dimensional Adjectives: Grammatical Structure and Conceptual Interpretation}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1989}, editor = {Manfred Bierwisch and Karl Erich Heidolph}, pages = {71--261}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {adjectives;nl-semantics;degree-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ biezma_m-goebel_a:2017a, author = {María Biezma and Arno Goebel}, title = {The Pragmatic Ingredients to Get Perfect Biscuits}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 21}, editor = {Robert Truswell and Chris Cummins and Caroline Heycock and Brian Rabern and Hannah Rohde}, year = {2017}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {Universoty of Edinburgh}, address = {Edinburgh}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/DRjNjViN/}, abstract = {... We present a new phenomenon that we dub biscuit perfection to support our proposal and argue that differences between BCs and hypothetical conditionals can be explained once we consider the relation between if -constructions and discourse.}, topic = {biscuit-conditionals;} } @article{ biezma_m-goebel_a:2023a, author = {Mar\'ia Biezma and Arno Goebel}, title = {Being Pragmatic about Biscuits}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {3}, pages = {567--626}, abstract = {... we argue for a unified semantics for hypothetical conditionals, hcs,and biscuit conditionals, bcs. We side with recent literature in proposing that differences in the interpretation are related to (in)dependence between antecedent and consequent, but we move beyond current accounts in spelling out a characterization of independence that is actually predictive. We further establish a systematic link between if-constructions and discourse structure, providing a dynamic update model that integrates the QUD, and thus the intentional discourse-structure. We argue that in bcs the antecedent sets up the question that is addressed by the consequent, and show that rescuing (Gricean) relevance in face of independence gives rise to implicatures corresponding to the different flavors associated with bcs. ... }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se23}, topic = {biscuit-conditionals;question-under-discussion;discourse-structure;} } @article{ biezma_m-rawlins_k:2012a, author = {Mar\'ia Biezma and Kyle Rawlins}, title = {Responding to Alternative and Polar Questions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2012}, volume = {35}, number = {5}, pages = {361--406}, abstract = {This paper gives an account of the differences between polar and alternative questions, as well as an account of the division of labor between compositional semantics and pragmatics in interpreting these types of questions. Alternative questions involve a strong exhaustivity presupposition for the mentioned alternatives. We derive this compositionally from the meaning of the final falling tone and its interaction with the pragmatics of questioning in discourse. $\ldots$}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @article{ bigaj:2001a, author = {Thomas Bigaj}, title = {Three-Valued Logic, Indeterminacy and Quantum Mechanics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {30}, number = {2}, pages = {97--119}, topic = {quantum-logic;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ bigelow_jc:1975a, author = {John C. Bigelow}, title = {Contexts and Quotation {I}}, journal = {Linguistische {B}erichte}, year = {1975}, volume = {38}, number = {1975}, pages = {1--22}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {direct-discourse;context;indexicals;} } @article{ bigelow_jc:1975b, author = {John C. Bigelow}, title = {Contexts and Quotation {II}}, journal = {Linguistische {B}erichte}, year = {1975}, volume = {39}, number = {1975}, pages = {1--22}, topic = {direct-discourse;context;indexicals;} } @article{ bigelow_jc:1976a, author = {John C. Bigelow}, title = {Possible Worlds Foundations for Probability}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1976}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {299--320}, rtnote = {Rtrnote: UMich Reading notes on file.}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;possible-worlds-semantics;} } @article{ bigelow_jc:1977a, author = {John C. Bigelow}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}anguage, Mind, and Knowledge}, edited by {K}eith {G}underson}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {301--304}, xref = {Review of gunderson_k:1975a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ bigelow_jc:1978a, author = {John C. Bigelow}, title = {Semantics of Thinking, Speaking and Translation}, booktitle = {Meaning and Translation: Philosophical and Logical Approaches}, publisher = {New York University Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Franz Guenthner and Monica Guenthner-Reutter}, pages = {109--135}, address = {New York}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;intensionality;} } @article{ bigelow_jc:1978b, author = {John C. Bigelow}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}ssues in the Philosophy of Language}, edited by {A}lfred {F}. {M}ackay and {D}.{D}. {M}errill}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1978}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {447--454}, xref = {Review of mackay_af-merrill_dd:1976a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ bigelow_jc:1980a, author = {John C. Bigelow}, title = {Believing in Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {101--144}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;syntactic-attitudes;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ bigelow_jc:1980b, author = {John C. Bigelow}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}ubjunctive Reasoning}, by {J}ohn {P}ollock}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {129--139}, xref = {Review of pollock_jl:1976a.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @incollection{ bigelow_jc:1981a, author = {John C. Bigelow}, title = {Truth and Universals}, booktitle = {Words, Worlds, and Contexts: New Approaches to Word Semantics}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1981}, editor = {Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser}, pages = {168--189}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {propositions;possible-worlds;} } @incollection{ biggs_c:1975a, author = {Colin Biggs}, title = {Quantifiers, Definite Descriptions, and Reference}, booktitle = {Formal Semantics of Natural Language}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Edward L. Keenan}, pages = {112--120}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;reference;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ bikakis_a-antoniou_g:2009a, author = {Antonis Bikakis and Gregoris Antoniou}, title = {Contextual Argumentation in Ambient Intelligence}, journal = {{IEEE} Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering}, year = {2009}, volume = {22}, number = {11}, pages = {1492--1506}, doi = {DOI:10.1109/TKDE.2010.37}, abstract = {The accomplishment of [contexytualized reasoning] requires formal models that handle the involved entities as autonomous logic-based agents and provide methods for handling the imperfect and distributed nature of context. This paper proposes a solution based on the Multi-Context Systems paradigm in which local context knowledge of ambient agents is encoded in rule theories (contexts) and information flow between agents is achieved through mapping rules that associate concepts used by different contexts. To handle imperfect context, we extend Multi-Context Systems with nonmonotonic features; local defeasible theories, defeasible mapping rules, and a preference ordering on the system contexts. On top of this model, we have developed an argumentation framework that exploits context and preference information to resolve potential conflicts caused by the interaction of ambient agents through the mappings, and a distributed algorithm for query evaluation.}, topic = {reasoning-about-context;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ bikel:2000a, author = {Daniel M. Bikel}, title = {A Statistical Model for Parsing and Word-Sense Disambiguation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2000 Joint {SIGDAT} Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Hinrich Sch\"utze and Keh-Yih Su}, pages = {155--163}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {statistical-nlp;lexical-disambiguation;} } @article{ bikel:2004a, author = {Daniel M. Bikel}, title = {Intricaciess of {C}ollins' Parsing Model}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {4}, pages = {479--511}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;statistical-nlp;} } @article{ bilankova:2007a, author = {Marta B\'ilkov\'a}, title = {Uniform Interpolation and Propositional Quantifiers in Modal Logics}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {85}, number = {1}, pages = {1--31}, topic = {modal-logic;propositional-quantifiers;proof-theory;} } @incollection{ bilgrami_a:1998a, author = {Akeel Bilgrami}, title = {Why Holism is Harmless and Necessary}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 12: Language, Mind, and Ontology}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {105--126}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {holism;philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ bilgrami_a:2013a, author = {Akeel Bilgrami}, title = {Why Meanings Are Not Normative}, booktitle = {Logic at the Crossroads. Volume {II}: Games, Norms, and Reasons}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Johan van Benthem and Amitabha Gupta and Eric Pacuit}, pages = {39--59}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ bilkova_m-etal:2018a, author = {Marta B\'ilkov\'a and Giuseppe Greco and Alessandra Palmigiano and Apostolos Tzimoulis and Nachoem Wijnberg}, title = {The Logic of Resources and Capabilities}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {371--410}, topic = {ability;modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ bill_c-koev_t:2022a, author = {Cory Bill and Todor Koev}, title = {Really: Ambiguity and Question Bias}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 26}, year = {2022}, editor = {Daniel Gutzmann and Sophie Repp}, pages = {130--148}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Cologne}, address = {Cologne}, url = {https://bit.ly/Proceedings-of-SuB-26}, abstract = {We discuss two empirical puzzles about English really: (i) really is ambiguous between an intensifier use akin to very (cf. Zelda is really tall) and a conversational use that expresses definite certainty (cf. Zelda REALLY is tall); (ii) polar questions with conversational really convey a negative speaker bias towards the question prejacent (cf. Is Kai REALLY from Hawaii?) ...}, topic = {'really';} } @article{ billinge:1997a, author = {Helen Billinge}, title = {A Constructive Formulation of {G}leason's Theorem}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1997}, volume = {26}, number = {6}, pages = {661--670}, contentnote = {Gleason's theorem is important in QM, it says that all probability measures over the projection lattice of Hilbert space can be represented as density operators. G. Hellman argued that this theorem is not constructively provable. See hellman_g:1993a.}, topic = {quantum-logic;foundations-of-quantum-mechanics; constructive-mathematics;} } @article{ billings-etal:2002a, author = {Darse Billings and Aaron Davidson and Jonathan Schaeffer and Duane Szafron}, title = {The Challenge of Poker}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {134}, number = {1--2}, pages = {201--240}, topic = {computer-games;agent-modeling;connectionist-models;} } @article{ billington_d:1993a, author = {David Billington}, title = {Defeasible Logic Is Stable}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {4}, pages = {379--400}, topic = {defeasible-logic;} } @article{ billington_d-etal:1990a, author = {David Billington and Koen De Coster and Donald Nute}, title = {A Modular Translation from Defeasible Nets to Defeasible Logics}, journal = {Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {2}, pages = {151--177}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;inheritance-theory;} } @article{ billington_d-rock_a:2001a, author = {David Billington and Andrew Rock}, title = {Proposiitonal Plausible Logic: Introduction and Implementation}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {67}, number = {2}, pages = {243--269}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;nonmonotonic-reasoning; nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ bimbo_k:2004a, author = {Katalin Bimb\'o}, title = {Semantics for Dual and Symmetric Combinatory Calculi}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {33}, number = {2}, pages = {125--153}, topic = {algebraic-semantics;combinatory-logic;} } @article{ bimbo_k:2005a, author = {Katalin Bimb\'o}, title = {Types of l-Free Hereditary Right Maximal Terms}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2005}, volume = {34}, number = {5--6}, pages = {607--620}, topic = {combinatory-logic;relevance-logic;} } @article{ bimbo_k:2007a, author = {Katalin Bimb\'o}, title = {$LE^t_{\rightarrow}$, $LR^{\circ}_{\stackrel{\wedge}{\sim}}$, $LK$, and Cutfree Proofs}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {36}, number = {5}, pages = {557--570}, topic = {proof-theory;relevance-logic;} } @article{ bimbo_k:2015a, author = {Katalin Bimb\'o}, title = {Current Trends in Substructural Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {6}, pages = {609--624}, topic = {substructural-logics;} } @book{ bimbo_k-dunn_jm:2008a, author = {Katalin Bimb\'o and J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Relational Semantics of Nonclassical Logical Calculi}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2008}, address = {Stanford}, xref = {Review: urquhart_a:2010c}, topic = {algebraic-logic;relevance-logic;} } @incollection{ binaghi:1991a, author = {Elisabetta Binaghi}, title = {Learning of Uncertain Classification Rules in Medical Diagnosis}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {115--119}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {machine-learning;fuzzy-logics;} } @incollection{ binas-mcilraith_sa:2008a, author = {Arnold Binas and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Peer-to-Peer Query Answering with Inconsistent Knowledge}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {329--339}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {Decentralized reasoning is receiving increasing attention due to the distributed nature of knowledge on the Web. We address the problem of answering queries to distributed propositional reasoners which may be mutually inconsistent. This paper provides a formal characterization of a prioritized peer-to-peer query answering framework that exploits a priority ordering over the peers, as well as a distributed entailment relation as an extension to established work on argumentation frameworks. We develop decentralized algorithms for computing query answers according to distributed entailment and prove their soundness and completeness. To improve the efficiency of query answering, we propose an ordering heuristic that exploits the peers' priority ordering and empirically evaluate its effectiveness. }, topic = {query-answering;inconsistency-management;} } @article{ bing:1983a, author = {Janet Mueller Bing}, title = {Contrastive Stress, Contrastive Intonation and Contrastive Meaning}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1983}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {141--156}, abstract = {Although the term `contrastive stress' has been incorrectly used in the past to describe default accent. contrastive intonation, or a combination of the two. English does have contrastive stress. However, contrastive stress is not used primarily to show a contrast. It is possible to have contrastive meaning without contrastive stress and it is also possible to have contrastive stress without contrastive meaning. The fact that English has contrastive stress constitutes further evidence for the existence of an unmarked or normal stress pattern. }, topic = {intonation;contrastive-stress;} } @article{ binkley:1959a, author = {Robert Binkley}, title = {A Note on S{\o}rensen and Existence}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1959}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {121---131}, xref = {Criticism of: sorensen_hs:1959a}, xref = {Reply: sorensen_hs:1959b}, topic = {(non)existence;} } @article{ binkley:1965a, author = {Robert Binkley}, title = {A Theory of Practical Reason}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, pages = {423--440}, volume = {74}, year = {1965}, rtnote = {In RHT collection \email\10\fe10}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @book{ binkley-marras:1971a, editor = {Robert Binkley and Richard Bronaugh and Ausonio Marras}, title = {Agent, Action, and Reason}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1971}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631139109}, topic = {action;agency;} } @book{ binkley_rw-etal:1971a, editor = {Robert W. Binkley and Richard N. Burraugh and Ausonio Marres}, title = {Agent, Action, and Reason}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1971}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @article{ binmore_k:1987a, author = {Ken Binmore}, title = {Modeling Rational Players {I}}, journal = {Economics and Philosophy}, year = {1987}, volume = {3}, pages = {179--214}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ binmore_k:1988a, author = {Ken Binmore}, title = {Modeling Rational Players {II}}, journal = {Economics and Philosophy}, year = {1988}, volume = {4}, pages = {9--55}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;} } @book{ binmore_k:1990a, author = {Ken Binmore}, title = {Essays on the Foundations of Game Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1990}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631168664}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, QA 269 .B461 1990.}, topic = {foundations-of-game-theory;game-theory;ratonality;} } @incollection{ binmore_k:1994a, author = {Ken Binmore}, title = {Rationality in the Centipede}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fifth Conference ({TARK} 1994)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Ronald Fagin}, pages = {150--159}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {There is an extra page, 145 1/2.}, topic = {game-theory;backward-induction;} } @article{ binmore_k:2008a, author = {Ken Binmore}, title = {Do Conventions Need to be Common Knowledge}, journal = {Topoi}, year = {2008}, volume = {27}, number = {1}, pages = {17--27}, abstract = {David Lewis builds this requirement into his definition of a convention. This paper explores the extent to which his approach finds support in the game theory literature. The knowledge formalism developed by Robert Aumann and others militates against Lewis's approach, because it demonstrates that it is almost impossible for something to become common knowledge in a large society. On the other hand, Ariel Rubinstein's Email Game suggests that coordinated action is equally hard for rational players. But an unnecessary simplifying assumption in the Email Game turns out to be doing all the work, and the paper concludes that common knowledge is better excluded from a definition of the conventions that we use to regulate our daily lives.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se10}, topic = {mutual-belief;convention;} } @article{ binmore_k-samuelson_l:2001a, author = {Ken Binmore and Larry Samuelson}, title = {Coordinated Action in the Electronic Mail Game}, journal = {Games and Economic Behavior}, year = {2001}, volume = {35}, number = {1}, pages = {6--30}, abstract = {We examine a version of Rubinstein's Electronic Mail Game in which the noisy communications technology is voluntary and costly. Multiple Nash equilibria exist, including an equilibrium in which messages are ignored, and an equilibrium in which only one message is sent, revealing the state of nature and allowing coordination on the relevant action whenever this message arrives. ...}, topic = {game-theory;mutual-belief;} } @article{ binmore_k-samuelson_l:2006a, author = {Ken Binmore and Larry Samuelson}, title = {The Evolution of Focal Points}, journal = {Games and Economic Behavior,}, year = {2006}, volume = {55}, number = {1}, pages = {21--42}, topic = {evolutionary-game-theory;} } @incollection{ binmore_k-shin_hs:1993a, author = {Ken Binmore and H.S. Shin}, title = {Algorithmic Knowledge and Game Theory}, booktitle = {Knowledge, Belief, and Strategic Interaction}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Cristina Bicchieri and M.L.D. Chiara}, chapter = {9}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {Look at this.}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, E's 1st name}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ binnick:1970a, author = {Robert I. Binnick}, title = {Ambiguity and Vagueness}, booktitle = {Proceedings From the Sixth Regional Meeting of the {C}hicago {L}inguistic {S}ociety}, year = {1970}, pages = {147--153}, organization = {Chicago Linguistic Society}, publisher = {Chicago Linguistic Society}, address = {Chicago, IL}, topic = {ambiguity;vagueness;} } @incollection{ binnick:1976a, author = {Robert Binnick}, title = {The Iffiness of Transitive Verbs}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics Vol. 6: The Grammar of Causative Constructions}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Mayayoshi Shibatani}, pages = {217--227}, address = {New York}, topic = {nl-causatives;} } @book{ binnick:1991a, author = {Robert I. Binnick}, title = {Time and the Verb: A Guide to Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;} } @book{ binnick:2012a, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, title = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-823882-7}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Robert I. Binnick, "Introduction", pp. 3--56 2. Peter Ludlow, "Philosophy of Language", pp. 59--74 3. Monika FLudernik, "Narratology and Literary Linguistics", pp. 75--101 4. Mark Steedman, "Computational Linguistics", pp. 102--120 5. Jean-Pierre Descl\'es and Zlatka Guentch\'eva, "Universals and Typology", pp. 123--154 6. Ashwini Deo, "Morphology", pp. 155--183 7. Tim Stowell, "Syntax", pp. 184--211 8. Edna Andrews, "Markedness", pp. 212--236 9. Monika Rathert, "Adverbials", pp. 237--268 10. Patrick Caudal, "Pragmatics", pp. 269--305 11. Janice Caruthers, "Discourse and Text", pp. 306--334 12. Diana Santos, "Translation", pp. 335--369 13. Steve Nicolle, "Diachrony and Grammaticalization", pp. 370--397 14. Victor A. Friedman, "Language Contact", pp. 398--427 15. Donald Winford, "Creole Languages", pp. 428--457 16. Laura Wagner, "Primary Language Acquisition", pp. 458--503 17. John Hewson, "Tense", pp. 507--525 18. Robert Botne, "Remoteness Distinctions", pp. 536--562 19. Henk J. Vekuyl, "Compositionality", pp. 563--585 20. Louis de Saussure and Bertrand Sthioul, "The Surcompos\'e Past Tense", pp. 586--610 21. Galia Hatav, "Bound Tenses", pp. 611--637 22. Toshiyuki Ogihara and Yael Sharvit, "Embedded Tenses", pp. 638--668 23. Jo-Wang Lin, "Tenselessness", pp. 669--695 24. Jacqueline Lecarme, "Nominal Tense", pp. 696--718 25. Hana Filip, "Lexical Aspect", pp. 721--751 26. Henri\"ette de Swart, "Verbal Aspect", pp. 752-780 27. Jadranka Gvozdanovi\v{c}, "Perfective and Imperfective Aspect", pp. 781--802 28. Christian Mair, "Progressive and Continuous Aspect", pp. 803--827 29. Greg Carlson, "Habitual and Generic Aspect", pp. 804--851 30. Pier Marco Bentinetto and Alessandro Lenci, "Habituality, Pluractionality, and Imperfectivity", pp. 852--880 31. Marie-Eve Ritz, "Perfect Tense and Aspect", pp. 881--907 32. John Beavers, "Resultative Constructions", pp. 908--933 33. Mila Dimitrova-Vulchanova, "Voice", pp. 939--959 34. Kylie Richardson, "Case", pp. 960--985 35. Ilse Depraetere, "Time in Sentences with Modal Verbs", pp. 989--1019 36. Ferdinand de Haan, "Evidentiality and Mirativity", pp. 1020--1046 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. (Actually ST collection.)}, topic = {tense-aspect;nl-tense;} } @incollection{ binnick:2012b, author = {Robert I. Binnick}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {3--56}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;Aktionsarten;perfective-aspect;progressive-aspect;} } @book{ biocca-levy_mr:1995a, editor = {Frank Biocca and Mark R. Levy}, title = {Communication in the Age of Virtual Reality}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1995}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Frank Biocca and Taeyong Kim and Mark R. Levy, "The Vision of Virtual Reality" 2. Frank Biocca and Mark R. Levy, "Virtual Reality as a Communication System" 3. Jonathan Steuer, "Defining Virtual Reality: Dimensions Determining Telepresence" 4. Frank Biocca and Ben Delaney, "Immersive Virtual Reality Technology" 5. Frank Biocca and Mark R. Levy, "Communication Applications of Virtual Reality" 6. Diana Gagnon Hawkins, "Virtual Reality and Passive Simulators: The Future of Fun" 7. Carrie Heeter, "Communication Research on Consumer {VR}" 10.Kenneth Meyer, "Dramatic narrative in virtual reality" 11.Gregory Kramer, "Sound and Communication in Virtual Reality" 12. Mark T. Palmer, "Interpersonal Communication and Virtual Reality: Mediating Interpersonal Relationships" 13. Thomas W. Valente and Thierry Bardini, "Virtual Diffusion or an Uncertain Reality: Networks, Policy, and Models for the Diffusion of {VR} Technology" 14. Michael A. Shapiro and Daniel G. McDonald, "I'm Not a Real Doctor, But I Play One in Virtual Reality: Implications of Virtual Realty for Judgements about Reality" 15. Anne Balsamo, "Signal to Noise: On the Meaning of Cyberpunk Subculture" 16. Lisa St. Clair Harvey, "Communication Issues and Policy Implications" }, ISBN = {080581549X (c: alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Qa 76.9 .H85 C6551 1995.}, topic = {virtual-reality;} } @article{ bird_a:1998a, author = {Alexander Bird}, title = {Dispositions and Antidotes}, journal = {The Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1998}, volume = {48}, number = {191}, pages = {227--234}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ bird_a:2001a, author = {Alexander Bird}, title = {Necessarily, Salt Dissolves in Water}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2001}, volume = {61}, number = {4}, pages = {267--274}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ bird_a:2001b, author = {Alexander Bird}, title = {Scepticism and Contrast Classes}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2001}, volume = {61}, number = {2}, pages = {97--107}, xref = {Commentary: sinnottarmstrong_w:2002a}, topic = {skepticism;epistemology;contrastivism;contextualism;} } @article{ bird_a:2002a, author = {Alexander Bird}, title = {Illocutionary Silencing}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {2002}, volume = {83}, number = {1}, pages = {1--15}, abstract = {I argue that uptake is not in general required for illocution, nor is it required for refusal in particular. I conclude with remarks on the relationship between illocutionary and perlocutionary speech-acts.}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @article{ bird_a:2003a, author = {Alexander Bird}, title = {Resemblance Nominalism and Counterparts}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2003}, volume = {63}, number = {3}, pages = {221--228}, xref = {Commentary on: rodriguezpereyra_g:2002a}, xref = {Reply: rodriguezpereyra_g:2003a}, topic = {nominalism;philosophical-ontology;countarpart-theory;} } @incollection{ bird_a:2012a, author = {Alexander Bird}, title = {Dispositional Expressions}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Companion to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Gillian Russell and Delia Graff Fara}, pages = {729--740}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;dispositions;} } @article{ bird_a:2014a, author = {Alexander Bird}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}aws and Lawmakers: Science, Metaphysics, and the Laws of Nature}, by {M}arc {L}ange}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2014}, volume = {123}, number = {1}, pages = {116--118}, xref = {Review of: lange_m:2009a.}, topic = {natural-laws;} } @article{ bird_g:1979a, author = {Graham Bird}, title = {Speech Acts and Conversation}, journal = {Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1979}, volume = {29}, number = {115}, pages = {142--152}, topic = {Grice;implicature;speech-acts;} } @article{ bird_gn:1954a, author = {G.N. Bird}, title = {Mr. {H}ampshire on Dispositions}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1954}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {100--102}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \???}, xref = {Commentary on: hampshire_s:1953a}, topic = {dispositions;conditionals;} } @incollection{ bird_j-dipaolo_e:2008a, author = {Jon Bird and Eziquiel Di Paolo}, title = {Gordon Pask and His Maverick Machines}, booktitle = {The Mechanical Mind in History}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Phil Husbands and Owen Holland and Michael Wheeler}, pages = {185--212}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @phdthesis{ bird_s:1990a, author = {Stephen Bird}, title = {Constraint-Based Phonology}, school = {University of Edinburgh}, year = {1990}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Edinburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Bird1.pdf}, topic = {computational-phonology;foundations-of-phonology;} } @book{ bird_s:1994a, editor = {Steven Bird}, title = {Computational Phonology: First Meeting of the Special Interest Group in Computational Phonology}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1994}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Steven Bird, "Automated Tone Transcription", pp. 1--12 2. Michael Mastroiani and Bob Carpenter, "Constraint-Based Morpho-Phonology, pp. 13--24 3. T. Mark Ellison, "Constrants, Exceptions and Representations", pp. 25--32 4. Gerald Penn and Richmond H. Thomason, "Default Finite State Machines and Finite State Phonology", pp. 33--42 5. Sheila M. Williams, "Lexical Phonology and Speech Style: Using a Model to Test a Theory", pp. 43--58 6. Michael Maxwell, "Parsing Using Linearly Ordered Phonological Rules", pp. 59--70 7. Thomas C. Bourgeois and Richard T. Oehrle, "Qualitative and Quantitative Dynamics of Vowels", pp. 71--82 8. Timothy A. Cartwright and Michael R. Brent, "Segmenting Speech without a Lexicon: The Roles of Phonotactics and Speech Source", pp. 83--90 }, topic = {computational-phonology;finite-state-phonology;} } @book{ bird_s:1995a, author = {Steven Bird}, title = {Computational Phonology: A Constraint-Based Approach}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-47496-5}, xref = {Review: wheeler_dw-carpenter_b:1995a.}, topic = {computational-phonology;} } @incollection{ bird_s:2003a, author = {Steven Bird}, title = {Phonology}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {1--24}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-processing;phonology;} } @incollection{ bird_s-calder:1991a, author = {Steven Bird and Jo Calder}, title = {Defaults in Underspecification Phonology}, booktitle = {Default Logics for Linguistic Analysis}, publisher = {University of Stuttgart}, year = {1991}, editor = {Hans Kamp}, pages = {129--139}, address = {Stuttgart}, note = {{DYANA} Deliverable R2.5.B}, topic = {phonology;underspecification-theory;nm-ling;} } @article{ bird_s-ellison:1994a, author = {Steven Bird and T. Mark Ellison}, title = {One Level Phonology: Autosegmental Representations and Rules as Finite Automata}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, volume = {20}, year = {1994}, pages = {55--90}, topic = {computational-phonology;} } @article{ bird_s-klein_e:1990a, author = {Stephen Bird and Ewan Klein}, title = {Phonological Events}, journal = {Journal of Linguistics}, year = {1990}, volume = {26}, pages = {33--56}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {foundations-of-phonology;nonlinear-phonology;} } @article{ bird_s-klein_e:1994a, author = {Steven Bird and Ewan Klein}, title = {Phonological Analyses in Typed Feature Structures}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, volume = {20}, year = {1994}, pages = {455--491}, topic = {computational-phonology;} } @techreport{ bird_s-liberman_my:1999a1, author = {Steven Bird and Mark Y. Liberman}, title = {A Formal Framework for Linguistic Annotation}, institution = {Department of Computer and Information Science, University of Pennsylvania}, number = {MS-CIS-99-01}, year = {1999}, address = {Philadelphia, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. FIle Drawers, "Bird"}, xref = {Journal publication: bird_s-liberman_my:1999a2}, topic = {corpus-annotation;corpus-linguistics;} } @article{ bird_s-liberman_my:1999a2, author = {Steven Bird and Mark Y. Liberman}, title = {A Formal Framework for Linguistic Annotation}, journal = {Speech Communication}, year = {2003}, volume = {33}, number = {1--2}, pages = {23--60}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Bird2.pdf}, topic = {corpus-annotation;corpus-linguistics;} } @incollection{ bird_s-liberman_my:1999b, author = {Steven Bird and Mark Y. Liberman}, title = {Annotation Graphs as a Framework for Multidimensional Linguistic Data Analysis}, booktitle = {Towards Standards and Tools for Discourse Tagging: Proceedings of the Workshop}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, editor = {Marilyn Walker}, pages = {1--10}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Bird". And \de19}, topic = {corpus-tagging;representation-of-ling-info;} } @book{ bird_s-simons_gf:2000a, editor = {Stephen Bird and Gary F. Simons}, title = {Linguistic Explorations: Workshop on Web-Based Language Documentation and Description}, publisher = {Institute for Research in Cognitive Science, University of Pennsylvania}, year = {2000}, address = {Philadelphia, Pennsylvania}, note = {See www.ldc.upenn.edu/exploration/expl2000}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. ACL shelves.}, topic = {internet-based-language-documentation;} } @article{ bird_s-simons_gf:2003a, author = {Steven Bird and Gary F. Simons}, title = {Seven Dimensions of Portability for Language Documentation and Description}, journal = {Language}, year = {2003}, volume = {79}, number = {3}, pages = {557--582}, topic = {internet-based-language-documentation;} } @book{ birkenmayer-folejewski:1978a, author = {Sigmund S. Birkenmayer and Zbigniew Folejewski}, title = {Introduction to the {P}olish Language}, publisher = {Kosciuszko Foundation}, edition = {3}, year = {1978}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0917004116}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, 891.855 B62, 1978.}, topic = {Polish-language;reference-grammars;} } @book{ birkhoff_g:1967a, author = {Garrett Birkhoff}, title = {Lattice Theory}, publisher = {American Mathematical Society}, year = {1967}, address = {Providence, RI}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Math shelves.}, topic = {lattice-theory;} } @article{ birkhoff_g-vonneumann_j:1936a, author = {Garrett Birkhoff and John von Neumann}, title = {The Logic of Quantum Mechanics}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics}, year = {1936}, volume = {37}, number = {4}, pages = {823--843}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @article{ birkhoff_gd-lewis_dc:1935a, author = {Garret D. Birkhoff and Daniel C. {Lewis, Jr.}}, title = {Stability in Causal Systems}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1935}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {304--333}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de20}, topic = {physical-stability;} } @article{ birnbaum_l:1991a, author = {Lawrence Birnbaum}, title = {Rigor Mortis: A Response to {N}ilsson's `{L}ogic and Artificial Intelligence'}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {47}, number = {1--3}, pages = {57--77}, contentnote = {Discusses the limits of the logicist approach.}, topic = {logic-in-AI-survey;} } @book{ birnbaum_mm:1998a, editor = {Michael H. Birnbaum}, title = {Measurement, Judgment, and Decision Making}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, address = {San Diego}, ISBN = {0120999757 (alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF 39 .M375 1998.}, topic = {psychometrics;} } @incollection{ birner:1997a, author = {Betty J. Birner}, title = {Recency Effects in {E}nglish Inversion}, booktitle = {Centering Theory in Discourse}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Marilyn A. Walker and Arivind K. Joshi and Ellen Prince}, pages = {309--323}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {discourse;pragmatics;given-new;centering;} } @incollection{ birner-ward_gl:2005a, author = {Betty Birner and Gregory L. Ward}, title = {Information Structure and Non-Canonical Syntax}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {153--174}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {information-structure;} } @book{ birner-ward_gl:2006a, editor = {Betty J. Birner and Gregory L. Ward}, title = {Drawing the Boundaries of Meaning: Neo-{G}ricean Studies in Pragmatics and Semantics in Honor of {L}aurence {R}. {H}orn.}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {2006}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {9027230900}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate P 99.4 .P72 D73 2006}, rtnote = {TC is not terribly interesting}, contentsnote = {TC: 1. Barbara Abbott, "Where Have Some of the Presuppositions Gone?", pp. 1--20 2. Kent Bach, "The Top 10 Misconceptions about Implicature", pp. 21--30 3. Betty J. Birner, "Inferential Relations and Noncanonical Word Order", pp. 31--51 4. Greg Carlson and Gianluca Storto, "Sherlock Holmes Was in No Danger", pp. 59--76 5. Donka Farcas, "Free Choice in {R}omanian, pp. 71--94 6. Anastasia Giannakidou, "Polarity Questiions and the Scalar Properties of \emph{Even}", pp. 95--116 7. Georgia Green, "Discourse Particles and the Symbiosis of Natural Language Processing and Basic Research", pp. 117--135 8. Michael Israel, "Saying Less and Meaning Less", pp. 137--156 10. Paulene Jacobsom, "I Can't Seem to Figure this Out", pp. 157--175 11. Andrew Kehler and Gregory Ward, "Referring Expressions and Conversational Implicature", pp. 177--19 12. Steven R. Kleinedler and Randall Eggert, "Indexi-lexicography", pp. 195-- 13. Sally McCinnell-Ginet, "Why Defining is Seldom `Just Semantics': Marriage and \emph{marriage}", pp. 217--240 14. Frederick J. Newmeyer, "Negation and Modularity", pp. 241--261 15. Barbara H. Partee, "A Note on Mandarin Possessives Demonstratives, and Definiteness", pp. 263--280 16. Francis Jeffry Pelletier and Andrew Hartline, "On a Homework Problem of {L}Arry {H}orn's", pp. 281--293 17. Ellen F. Prince, "Impersonal Pronouns in {F}rench and {Y}iddish: Semantic Reference vs. Discourse Reference", pp. 296--315 18. Jerrold M. Sadock, "Motors and Switches: An Exercise in Syntax and Pragmatics", pp. 317-- 19. Scott A. Schwenter, "Fine-Tuning {J}espersen's Cycle", pp. 327--344 }, topic = {nl-semantics;pragmatics;} } @article{ biro_ji:1978a, author = {John I. Biro}, title = {Conventionality in Speech Acts}, journal = {Southwestern Philosophical Studies}, year = {1978}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {11--17}, topic = {convention;speech-acts;JL-Austin;} } @article{ biro_ji:1979a, author = {John I. Biro}, title = {Intentionalism in the Theory of Meaning}, journal = {The Monist}, year = {1979}, volume = {62}, pages = {238--258}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {speaker-meaning;intention;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ biro_ji:1995a, author = {John Biro}, title = {The Neo-{F}regean Argument}, booktitle = {Frege, Sense and Reference One Hundred Years Later}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {John I. Biro and Petr Kotatko}, pages = {185--205}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {intensionality;reference;foundations-of-semantics;Frege;} } @book{ biro_ji-kotatko:1995a, editor = {John I. Biro and Petr Kotatko}, title = {Frege, Sense and Reference One Hundred Years Later}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {HILLMAN B3245 F24F716 1995}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Thomas Baldwin, Three Puzzles in Frege's Theory of Truth, 1--15 2. Gabriel Segal, Truth and Sense, 15--24 3. Barry Smith, Frege and Chomsky: Sense and Psychologism, 25--46 4. Petr Kotatko, Meaning and the Third Realm, 47--57 5. David Wiggins, Putnam's Doctrine of Natural Kind Words and {F}rege's Doctrines of Sense, Reference, and Extension: Can They Cohere?, 59--74 6. A.C. Grayling, Concept-Reference and Kinds, 75--93 7. Francois Rencanati, The Communication of First Person Thoughts, 95--102 8. Tom Stoneham, Transparency, Sense and Self-Knowledge, 103--112 9. Christine Tappolet, The Sense and Reference of Evaluative Terms, 113--127 10. Peter Simons, The Next Best Thing to Sense in the {B}egriffschrift, 129-140 11. David Owens, Understanding Names, 141--149 12. Emos Corazza and Jerome Dori\v{c}, Why is {F}rege's Puzzle Still Puzzling?, 151--168 13. Martin Hahn, The {F}rege Puzzle One More Time, 169-183 14. John Biro, The Neo-{F}regean Argument, 185--205 }, topic = {Frege;} } @book{ biro_ji-shahan:1982a, editor = {John I. Biro and Robert W. Shahan}, title = {Mind, Brain, and Function: Essays in the Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {University of Oklahoma Press}, year = {1982}, address = {Norman, Oklahoma}, rtnote = {HILLMAN BF38 .M56 1982}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ bishop_j:1981a, author = {John Bishop}, title = {Peacocke on Intentional Action}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1981}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {92--98}, topic = {intention;} } @incollection{ bishop_j:2012a, author = {John Bishop}, title = {Exercising Control in Practical Reasoning: Problems for Naturalism about Agency}, booktitle = {Action Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {53--72}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;agency;causality;} } @incollection{ bishop_m:2002a, author = {Mark Bishop}, title = {Dancing with Pixies: Strong Artificial Intelligence}, booktitle = {Views into the {C}hinese Room: New Essays on {S}earle and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {John Preston and Mark Bishop}, pages = {360--378}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-computation;} } @article{ bishop_m:2009a, author = {Mark Bishop}, title = {Why Computers Can't Feel Pain}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year ={2009}, volume = {19}, number = {4}, pages = {507--516}, abstract = {The most cursory examination of the history of artificial intelligence highlights numerous egregious claims of its researchers, especially in relation to a populist form of `strong' computationalism which holds that any suitably programmed computer instantiates genuine conscious mental states purely in virtue of carrying out a specific series of computations. The argument presented herein is a simple development of that originally presented in Putnam's (Representation & Reality) $\ldots$, which if correct, has important implications for turing machine functionalism and the prospect of `conscious' machines. $\ldots$ I will try to establish the weaker result that, `everything implements the specific machine Q on a particular input set (x)'. Then, equating Q(x) to any putative AI program, I will show that conceding the 'strong AI' thesis for Q (crediting it with mental states and consciousness) opens the door to a vicious form of panpsychism whereby all open systems, (e.g. grass, rocks etc.), must instantiate conscious experience and hence that disembodied minds lurk everywhere. }, topic = {philosophy-of-AI;} } @article{ bishop_ma-stich_sp:1998a, author = {Michael A. Bishop and Stephen P. Stich}, title = {The Flight to Reference, or How Not to Make Progress in the Philosophy of Science}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1998}, volume = {65}, number = {1}, pages = {33--49}, topic = {metaphilosophy;reference;} } @inproceedings{ biso_a-etal:2000a, author = {Alessandro Biso and Francesca Rossi and Alessandro Sperduti}, title = {Experimental Results on Learning Soft Constraints}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {435--444}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {machine-learning;experimentai-AI;preference-learning;} } @article{ bistarelli_s-etal:2002a, author = {Stefano Bistarelli and Philippe Codognet and Francesca Rossi}, title = {Abstracting Soft Constraints: Framework, Properties, Examples}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {139}, number = {2}, pages = {175--211}, topic = {abstraction;constraint-propagation;constraint-satisfaction;} } @inproceedings{ bistarelli_s-santini_f:2018a, author = {Stefano Bistarelli and Francesco Santini}, title = {Some Thoughts On Well-Foundedness in Weighted Abstract Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {623--624}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We focus on the notion of well-foundedness originally provided by P. M. Dung in his pioneering work. We generalise such a property to different notions of defence in weighted frameworks, in order to finally obtain a single extension for different weighted semantics (uniqueness result). }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @incollection{ bittel:1992a, author = {Oliver Bittel}, title = {Tableau-Based Theorem Proving and Synthesis of {$\lambda$}-Terms in the Intuitionistic Logic}, booktitle = {Logics in {AI}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, editor = {Samson Abramsky and Steven Vickers}, year = {1992}, volume = {633}, series = {LNCS}, pages = {262--278}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {theorem-proving;intuitionistic-logic;} } @unpublished{ bittencourt:1989a, author = {Guilherme Bittencourt}, title = {A Four-Valued Semantics for Inheritance with Exceptions}, year = {1989}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Universit\"at Karlsruhe.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Bittencourt"}, topic = {inheritance-theory;multivalued-logic;} } @techreport{ bittencourt:1990a, author = {Guilherme Bittencourt}, title = {The {MANTRA} Reference Manual}, institution = {Institut f\"ur {A}lgorithmen und {K}ognitive {S}ysteme, {F}akult\"at f\"ur {I}nformatik, {U}niversit\"at {K}arlsruhe}, number = {2/90}, year = {1990}, address = {D--7500 Karlsruhe 1}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {kr;hybrid-kr-architectures;} } @book{ bittinger:1970a, author = {Marvin L. Bittinger}, title = {Logic, Proof, and Sets}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley}, year = {1970}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, topic = {mathematics-primer;how-to-prove-it;} } @incollection{ bittner_m:1985a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Quantification in {E}skimo: A Challenge for Compositional Semantics}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {59--80}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;compositionality;Inuit-language;} } @unpublished{ bittner_m:1992a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Ergativity, Binding and Scope}, year = {1992}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Rutgers University}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {ergativity;Inuit-language;binding-theory;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ bittner_m:1994a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Cross-Linguistic Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1994}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {53--108}, topic = {nl-semantics;universal-gramamr;} } @incollection{ bittner_m:1995a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Remarks on Definiteness in {W}alpiri}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {81--105}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {definiteness;Australian-languages;} } @article{ bittner_m:1998a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Cross-Linguistic Semantics for Questions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1998}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {1--82}, topic = {interrogatives;nl-semantics;} } @article{ bittner_m:1999a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Concealed Causatives}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1999}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {1--78}, topic = {nl-causatives;nl-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ bittner_m:2001a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Topical Referents for Individuals and Possibilities}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2001}, editor = {Rachel Hastings and Brendan Jackson and Zsofia Zvolenszky}, pages = {36--55}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;anaphora;possibility;} } @article{ bittner_m:2001b, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Surface Composition as Bridging}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {18}, number = {2}, pages = {127--177}, abstract = {The development of explicit theories of dynamic context change has led to a fundamentally new perspective on the interpretation of discourse. In this paper I show that this development also opens up the possibility of approaching subclausal composition along similar lines. More specifically, I propose a dynamic Bridging Theory, where type-driven rules apply directly to overt surface structures and proceed by building anaphoric bridges. I then present three arguments that this dynamic approach is more faithful to natural language semantics than static Montagovian theories. First, the Bridging Theory explains how dynamic phenomena, such as temporal anaphora, generalize across different levels -- from discourse all the way down to the lexicon -- in typologically distant languages. Second, it explains the shift from defeasible defaults in discourse to structural determinism lower down, in terms of the type diversity needed to support type-driven bridging. Deterministic type-driven bridging also makes detailed predictions about the exact impact of the structure on top-level anaphora, in various domains, and other presuppositional phenomena that it mediates. And last but not least, the Bridging Theory combines a strong claim that semantics is universal -- bridgeable basic meanings are typically universal and type-driven bridges, all universal --with the ideal of strict surface composition. }, topic = {nl-semantics;anaphora;dynamic-semantics;} } @article{ bittner_m:2005a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Future Discourse in a Tenseless Language}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2005}, volume = {22}, number = {4}, pages = {339--387}, abstract = {The Eskimo language Kalaallisut (alias West Greenlandic) has traditionally been described as having a rich tense system, with three future tenses (Kleinschmidt 1851; Bergsland 1955; Fortescue 1984) and possibly four past tenses (Fortescue 1984). Recently, however, Shaer (2003) has challenged these traditional claims, arguing that Kalaallisut is, in fact, tenseless. This paper settles the debate, in favour of Shaer, based on text studies examining how the English future auxiliaries will/would and is/was going to are rendered in Kalaallisut translations of five books: Harry Potter, The Old Man and the Sea, Pippi Longstocking (translated from the Swedish), The Blind Colt, and Black Star, Bright Dawn. The results of these five text studies are reported here in detail and in theory-neutral terms. They conclusively show that Kalaallisut is truly tenseless, but has an alternative system that conveys temporal information, even about the future, as precisely as the English tenses. }, topic = {nl-tense;Inuit-language;} } @incollection{ bittner_m:2007a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Online Update: Temporal, Modal, and de se Anaphora in Polysynthetic Discourse}, booktitle = {Direct Compositionality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, editor = {Chris Barker and Pauline Jacobson}, pages = {363--404}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {This paper introduces a framework for direct surface composition by online update. The surface string is interpreted as is, with each morpheme in turn updating the input state of information and attention. A formal representation language, Logic of Centering, is defined and some crosslinguistic constraints on lexical meanings and compositional operations are formulated.}, topic = {compositionality;foundations-of-semantics;Inuit-language;} } @inproceedings{ bittner_m:2012a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Perspectival Discourse Referents for Indexicals}, booktitle = {Proceedings ofSULA 7: Semantics of Under-Represented Languages in the Americas}, year = {2012}, editor = {Hanah Greene}, url = {https://philpapers.org/archive/BITPDR.pdf}, abstract = {This paper argues that indexical reference is a species of discourse reference, just like anaphora. Both varieties of discourse reference involve not only context dependence, but also context change. The act of speaking up focuses attention and thereby makes this very speech event available for discourse reference by indexicals. Mentioning something likewise focuses attention, making the mentioned entity available for subsequent discourse reference by anaphors. Empirical evidence is presented from grammatical centering in Kalaallisut and 'shifty indexicals' in Slave attitude reports.}, topic = {indexicals;perspective-sensitive-constructions;Inuit-language;} } @book{ bittner_m:2014a, author = {Maria Bittner}, title = {Temporality: Universals and Variation}, publisher = {Wiley Blackwell}, year = {2014}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {9781405190404}, abstract = {Temporality surveys the ways in which languages of different types refer to past, present, and future events, through an in-depth examination of four major language types: tense-based English, tense-aspect-based Polish, aspect-based Chinese, and mood-based Kalaallisut.}, topic = {tense-aspect;modality;typology;} } @incollection{ bittner_m-hale_k:1985a, author = {Maria Bittner and Ken Hale}, title = {Remarks on Definiteness in {W}alpiri}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {81--105}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;(in)definiteness;Australian-language;} } @article{ bittner_m-hale_k:1996a, author = {Maria Bittner and Ken Hale}, title = {Ergativity: Towards a Theory of a Heterogeneous Class}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1996}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {531--604}, topic = {ergativity;} } @incollection{ bittner_t:2002a, author = {Thomas Bittner}, title = {Judgments about Spatio-Temporal Relations}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {521--532}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;spatial-reasoning;} } @incollection{ bizzi-mussaivaldi:1989a, author = {E. Bizzi and F.A. Mussa-Ivaldi}, title = {Geometrical and Mechanical Issues in Movement Planning and Control}, booktitle = {Foundations of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, editor = {Michael I. Posner}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, missinginfo = {pages, A's First names.}, topic = {motor-skills;motion-mechanics;} } @incollection{ bizzi-mussaivaldi:1990a, author = {E. Bizzi and F.A. Mussa-Ivaldi}, title = {Muscle Properties and the Control of Arm Movements}, booktitle = {An Invitation to Cognitive Science. Volume 2: Visual Cognition and Action}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel N. Osherson and Howard Lasnik}, pages = {213--242}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;motor-skills;} } @book{ bjarkman-raskin:1986a, editor = {Peter C. Bjarkman and Victor Raskin}, title = {The Real-World Linguist: Linguistic Applications in the 1980s}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing}, year = {1986}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, topic = {applications-of-linguistics;} } @article{ bjerring_jc:2014a, author = {Jens Christian Bjerring}, title = {Problems in Epistemic Space}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {153--170}, topic = {possible-worlds-semantics;epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ bjerring_jc-pedersen_jll:2014a, author = {Jens Christian Bjerring and Nikolaj Jang Lee Linding Pedersen}, title = {All the (Many, Many) Things We Know: Extended Knowledge}, booktitle = {Extended Knowledge}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2014}, editor = {J. Adam Carter and Jesper Kallestrup and Orestis Palermos and Duncan Pritchard}, pages = {24--38}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {embedded-cognition;epistemology;} } @article{ bjerring_jc-skipper_m:2019a, author = {Jens Christian Bjerring and Mattias Skipper}, title = {A Dynamic Solution to the Problem of Logical Omniscience}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {3}, pages = {501--521}, abstract = {... In this paper, we argue that existing impossible-worlds models of belief fail to describe agents who are both logically non-omniscient and logically competent. To model such agents, we argue, we need to 'dynamize the impossible-worlds framework in a way that allows us to capture not only what agents believe, but also what they are able to infer from what they believe. In light of this diagnosis, we go on to develop the formal details of a dynamic impossible-worlds framework, and show that it successfully models agents who are both logically non-omniscient and logically competent. }, topic = {epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality;limited-rationality;impossible-worlds;} } @article{ bjordal:2011a, author = {Frode Bj{\o}rdal}, title = {The Inadequacy of a Proposed Paraconsistent Set Theory}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {106--113}, xref = {Reply: weber_z:2011a}, topic = {set-theory;relevance-logic;paraconsistent-mathematics;} } @inproceedings{ bjorndahl_a-etal:2014a, author = {Adam Bjorndahl and Joseph Halpern and Rafael Pass}, title = {Axiomatizing Rationality}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {178--187}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We provide a sound and complete axiomatization for a class of logics appropriate for reasoning about the rationality of players in games. Essentially the same axiomatization applies to a wide class of decision rules.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au18}, topic = {game-theory;decision-theory;foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @incollection{ bjorndahl_a-etal:2015a, author = {Adam Bjorndahl and Joseph Y. Halpern and Rafael Pass}, title = {Bayesian Games with Intentions}, booktitle = {{TARK} 2015: Proceedings of the 15th Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge}, publisher = {TARK.org}, year = {2015}, editor = {Ramaswamy Ramanujam}, pages = {99--113}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, abstract = {We show that standard Bayesian games cannot represent the full spectrum of belief-dependent preferences. However, by introducing a fundamental distinction between intended and actual strategies, we remove this limitation. We define Bayesian games with intentions, generalizing both Bayesian games and psychological games, and prove that Nash equilibria in psychological games correspond to a special class of equilibria as defined in our setting.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;game-theory;} } @article{ bjorndahl_a-ozgun_a:2020a, author = {Adam Bjorndahl and Ayb\"uke \"Ozg\"un}, title = {Logic and Topology for Knowledge, Knowability, and Belief}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, pages = {748--775}, abstract = {... we argue that the plausibility of the principles Stalnaker proposes relating knowledge and belief relies on a subtle equivocation between an 'evidence-in-hand' conception of knowledge and a weaker 'evidence-out-there' notion of what could come to be known. Our analysis leads to a trimodal logic of knowledge, knowability, and belief interpreted in topological subset spaces in which belief is definable in terms of knowledge and knowability. We provide a sound and complete axiomatization for this logic as well as its uni-modal belief fragment. ...}, topic = {epistemic-logic;knowledge;belief;topological-logics;} } @incollection{ bjornsson-shanklin:2014a, author = {Gunnar Bj\"ornsson and Robert Shanklin}, title = {{`}Must', `Ought', and the Structure of Standards}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic and Normative Systems: {DEON} 2014}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2014}, editor = {Fabrizio Cariani and Davide Grossi and Joke Mehens and Xavier Parent}, pages = {33--48}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {modals;`ought';epistemic-modals;} } @book{ blaauw_m:2012a, editor = {Martijn Blaauw}, title = {Contrastivism in Philosophy}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9781138922839}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Martijn Blaauw, "Introduction: Contrastivism in Philosophy", pp. 1--10 1. Christopher Hitchcock, "Contrastive Explanation", pp. 11--34 2. Jonathan Schaffer, "Causal Contextualisms", pp. 35--63 3. Branden Fitelson, "Contrastive Bayesianism", pp. 64--87 4. Martijn Blaauw, "Contrastive Belief", pp. 88--100 5. Adam Morton, "Contrastive Knowledge", pp. 101--115 6. Justin Snedegar, "Contrastive Semantics for Deontic Modals", pp. 116--133 7. Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, "Free Contrastivism", pp. 134--153 8. Julia Driver, "Luck and Fortune in Moral Evaluation", pp. 154--172 }, xref = {Review: baumann_p:2013a}, topic = {contrastivism;} } @incollection{ blaauw_m:2012b, author = {Martijn Blaauw}, title = {Introduction: Contrastivism in Philosophy}, booktitle = {Contrastivism in Philosophy}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Martijn Blaauw}, pages = {1--10}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {contrastivism;} } @incollection{ blaauw_m:2012c, author = {Martijn Blaauw}, title = {Contrastive Belief}, booktitle = {Contrastivism in Philosophy}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Martijn Blaauw}, pages = {88--100}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {contrastivism;belief;} } @incollection{ blaauw_mj:2008a, author = {Martijn J. Blaauw}, title = {Contra Contrastivism}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {20--34}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Criticism of (inter alia): schaffer_j:2008a}, topic = {knowledge;assertion;context;question-under-discussion;} } @article{ blaauw_mj:2012a, author = {Martijn J. Blaauw}, title = {Reinforcing the Knowledge Account of Assertion}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {1}, pages = {105--108}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de16}, topic = {knowledge;assertion;parentheticals;} } @inproceedings{ blache:1998a, author = {Philippe Blache}, title = {Parsing Ambiguous Structures using Controlled Disjunctions and Unary Quasi-Trees}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {124--130}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;disambiguation;} } @article{ blachowicz:1997a, author = {James Blachowicz}, title = {Analog Representation beyond Mental Imagery}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {94}, number = {2}, pages = {55--84}, topic = {analog-digital;representation;} } @book{ black_d-newing:1998a, author = {Duncan Black and R.A. Newing}, edition = {2}, title = {The Theory of Committees and Elections}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, address = {Boston}, ISBN = {0792381106}, note = {Edited by Iain McLean, Alistair McMillan, and Burt L. Monroe, with a foreword by Ronald H. Coase.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, AS 6 .B63 1998.}, topic = {voting-theory;} } @article{ black_e:1968a, author = {Edward Black}, title = {Aristotle's Essentialism and Quine's Cycling Mathematician}, journal = {The Monist}, year = {1968}, volume = {52}, number = {2}, pages = {288--297}, contentnote = {Attemots to formulate a thoroughly Aristotelian Defense against Quine.}, topic = {essentialism;} } @inproceedings{ black_e-etal:1998a, author = {Ezra Black and Andrew Finch and Hideki Kashioka}, title = {Trigger-Pair Predictors in Parsing and Tagging}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {131--137}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {trigger-pair-predictors;parsing-algorithms; part-of-speech-tagging;} } @article{ black_m:1937a1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Vagueness: an Exercise in Logical Analysis}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1937}, volume = {4}, pages = {427--455}, missinginfo = {Reprinted, with Reply to Hempel, in black:1949a, pp. ???.}, xref = {Republication of black_m:1937a1.}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ black_m:1937a2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Vagueness: An Exercise in Philosophical Analysis}, booktitle = {Vagueness: A Reader}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Rosanna Keefe and Peter Smith}, pages = {69--81}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1937a2.}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ black_m:1942a, author = {Max Black}, title = {Russell's Philosophy of Language}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {B}ertrand {R}ussell}, publisher = {Open Court}, year = {1942}, editor = {P. Schilpp}, pages = {227--225}, address = {LaSalle, Illinois}, contentnote = {This has to do with metaphysics, and has little or nothing to do with language.}, xref = {Review: nagel_e:1944b}, topic = {Russell;philosophy-of-language;philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ black_m:1944a1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Russell's Philosophy of Language}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {B}ertrand {R}ussell}, publisher = {The Tudor Publishing Company}, year = {1944}, editor = {Paul Schilpp}, pages = {227--255}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1944a2}, topic = {Russell;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ black_m:1944a2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Russell's Philosophy of Language}, booktitle = {Language and Philosophy}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1949}, editor = {Rosanna Keefe and Peter Smith}, pages = {109--138}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of: black_m:1944a1}, topic = {Russell;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ black_m:1944a, author = {Max Black}, title = {Review of `{R}ussell's Theory of Descriptions', by {G}eorge {E}. {M}oore}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1944}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {78}, xref = {Review of: moore_ge:1942a.}, topic = {Russell;definite-descriptions;Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ black_m:1944b, author = {Max Black}, title = {Review of `{B}ertrand {R}ussell's Logic', by {H}ans {R}eichenbach}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1944}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {76--77}, xref = {Review of: reichenbach_h:1942a.}, topic = {Russell;definite-descriptions;Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ black_m:1945a, author = {Max Black}, title = {The `Paradox of Analysis' Again: A Reply}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1945}, volume = {54}, number = {215}, pages = {272--273}, xref = {Review: church_a:1946a}, xref = {Reply to: white_mg:1945a}, xref = {Rejoinder: white_mg:1945a}, topic = {philosophical-analysis;paradox-of-analysis;} } @article{ black_m:1946a, author = {Max Black}, title = {How Can Analysis Be Informative?}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1946}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {628--631}, xref = {Review: church_a:1946a}, topic = {philosophical-analysis;paradox-of-analysis;} } @article{ black_m:1948a, author = {Max Black}, title = {The Semantic Definition of Truth}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1948}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {49--63}, xref = {Review: mostowski_a:1948a}, xref = {Commentary: geach_pt:1948a}, xref = {Commentary on: tarski_a:1944a1}, xref = {Criticism: geach_pt:1948a}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @book{ black_m:1949a, author = {Max Black}, title = {Language and Philosophy}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1949}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ black_m:1950a, editor = {Max Black}, title = {Philosophical Analysis: A Collection of Essays}, publisher = {Irvington Publishers}, year = {1950}, address = {New York}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ black_m:1951a, author = {Max Black}, title = {Achilles and the Tortoise}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1951}, volume = {11}, number = {5}, pages = {91--101}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my10}, topic = {Achilles-and-the-tortoise;} } @article{ black_m:1951b, author = {Max Black}, title = {Comments on the Preceeding Paper by {W}.{V}. {Q}uine}, journal = {Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences}, year = {1951}, volume = {80}, pages = {97--99}, xref = {Review: barhillel_y:1951b}, xref = {Commentary on: quine_wvo:1951b}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics; philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ black_m:1952a, author = {Max Black}, title = {Saying and Disbelieving}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1952}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {25--33}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn11}, xref = {Commentary: willis_r:1953a}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ black_m:1954a1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Metaphor}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian {S}ociety}, year = {1954}, volume = {55}, pages = {273--294}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1954a2.}, topic = {metaphor;} } @incollection{ black_m:1954a2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Metaphor}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {25--47}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Original Publication: black_m:1954a1.}, topic = {metaphor;} } @article{ black_m:1955a1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Why Cannot an Effect Precede Its Cause?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1955}, volume = {16}, pages = {49--58}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1955a2}, topic = {causality;temporal-direction;} } @incollection{ black_m:1955a2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Can the Effect Precede the Cause?}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {170--181}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Original Publication: black_m:1962a}, topic = {causality;temporal-direction;} } @article{ black_m:1958a1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Language and Reality}, journal = {Proceedings and Addresses of the {A}merican {P}hilosophical {A}ssociation}, year = {1958}, volume = {32}, pages = {5--17}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1958a2}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ black_m:1958a2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Language and Reality}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {1--16}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Original Publication: black_m:1962a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ black_m:1958b1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Necessary Statements and Rules}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1958}, volume = {67}, pages = {313--341}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1958b2}, topic = {necessary-truth;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ black_m:1958b2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Necessary Statements and Rules}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {64--94}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Original Publication: black_m:1958b1.}, topic = {necessary-truth;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ black_m:1958c1, author = {Max Black}, title = {The Analysis of Rules}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1958}, volume = {24}, pages = {107--136}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1958c2.}, topic = {foundations-of-linguistics;rule-following;} } @incollection{ black_m:1958c2, author = {Max Black}, title = {The Analysis of Rules}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {95--139}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Original Publication: black_m:1958a1.}, topic = {foundations-of-linguistics;rule-following;} } @incollection{ black_m:1958d1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Making Something Happen}, booktitle = {Determinism and Freedom}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Sidney Hook}, pages = {25--33}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1958d2.}, topic = {agency;causality;} } @incollection{ black_m:1958d2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Making Something Happen}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {153--169}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Republication of black_m:1958d1.}, topic = {agency;causality;} } @article{ black_m:1958e1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Self-Supporting Inductive Arguments}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1958}, volume = {55}, pages = {718--725}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1958e2.}, topic = {induction;} } @incollection{ black_m:1958e2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Self-Supporting Inductive Arguments}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {209--218}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Original Publication: black_m:1958e1.}, topic = {induction;} } @incollection{ black_m:1958f, author = {Max Black}, title = {Presupposition and Implication}, booktitle = {Kogaku Tetsugaku eno Michi}, publisher = {Waseda University Press}, year = {1958}, editor = {Seizi Uyeda}, pages = {433--448}, address = {Tokyo}, xref = {Review: dummett_m:1960b}, topic = {presupposition;} } @article{ black_m:1959a1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Can Induction be Vindicated}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1959}, volume = {10}, pages = {5--16}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1959a2.}, topic = {induction;} } @incollection{ black_m:1959a2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Can Induction be Vindicated?}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {194--208}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Original Publication: black_m:1959a1.}, topic = {induction;} } @article{ black_m:1959b1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Linguistic Relativity: The Views of {B}enjamin {L}ee {W}horf}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1959}, volume = {68}, pages = {228--238}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1959b2}, topic = {linguistic-relativity;} } @incollection{ black_m:1959b2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Linguistic Relativity: The Views of {B}enjamin {L}ee {W}horf}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {244--257}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Original Publication: black_m:1959b1.}, topic = {linguistic-relativity;} } @article{ black_m:1960a1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Possibility}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1960}, volume = {57}, pages = {117--126}, xref = {Republication: black_m:1960a2.}, topic = {possibility;} } @incollection{ black_m:1960a2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Possibility}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {140--152}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Original Publication: black_m:1960a1.}, topic = {possibility;} } @book{ black_m:1962a, author = {Max Black}, title = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Max Black, "Language and Reality", pp. 1--16 2. Max Black, "Explanations of Meaning", pp. 17--24 3. Max Black, "Metaphor", pp. 25--47 4. Max Black, "Presupposition and Implication", pp. 48--63 5. Max Black, "Necessary Statements and Rules", pp. 64--94 6. Max Black, "The Analysis of Rules", pp. 95--139 7. Max Black, "Possibility", pp. 140--152 8. Max Black, "Making Something Happen", pp. 153--169 9. Max Black, "Can the Effect Precede the Cause?", pp. 170--181 10. Max Black, "The `Direction' of Time", pp. 182--193 11. Max Black, "Can Induction be Vindicated?", pp. 194--208 12. Max Black, "Self-Supporting Inductive Arguments", pp. 209--218 13. Max Black, "Models and Archetypes", pp. 219--243 14. Max Black, "Linguistic Relativity: The Views of {B}enjamin {L}ee {W}horf", pp. 244--257 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, contentnote = {On p.57, Black alleges a resemblance between (1) (A ||- B) and (2) A ||- Bel(B), with an application to Moore's paradox.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ black_m:1962b, author = {Max Black}, title = {Explanations of Meaning}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {17--24}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;speaker-meaning;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ black_m:1962c, author = {Max Black}, title = {Presupposition and Implication}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {48--63}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {presupposition;} } @incollection{ black_m:1962d, author = {Max Black}, title = {The `Direction' of Time}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {182--193}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {temporal-direction;} } @incollection{ black_m:1962n, author = {Max BlackMax Black}, title = {Models and Archetypes}, booktitle = {Models and Metaphors}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Max Black}, pages = {219--243}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {philosophy-and-models;} } @article{ black_m:1963a1, author = {Max Black}, title = {Austin on Performatives}, journal = {Philosophy}, year = {1963}, volume = {38}, pages = {217--226}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Reprinted see black:1963a2.}, topic = {JL-Austin;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ black_m:1963a2, author = {Max Black}, title = {Austin on Performatives}, booktitle = {Symposium on J.L. Austin}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1969}, editor = {Kuang T. Fann}, pages = {401--411}, address = {London}, xref = {Reprinted; see black:1963a1.}, topic = {JL-Austin;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @article{ black_m:1963b, author = {Max Black}, title = {Reasoning with Loose Concepts}, journal = {Dialogue}, year = {1963}, volume = {2}, pages = {1--12}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {vagueness;} } @book{ black_m:1968a, author = {Max Black}, title = {The Labyrinth of Language}, publisher = {Mentor Books}, year = {1968}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {vagueness;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ black_m:1969a, author = {Max Black}, title = {Some Troubles with {W}horfianism}, booktitle = {Language and Philosophy: A Symposium}, publisher = {New York University Press}, year = {1969}, editor = {Sidney Hook}, pages = {30--35}, address = {New York}, topic = {linguistic-relativity;} } @book{ black_m:1970a, author = {Max Black}, title = {Margins of Precision}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1970}, address = {Ithaca, NY}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ black_m:1970b, author = {Max Black}, title = {The Gap between `Is' and `Should'}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1970}, volume = {79}, pages = {165--181}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {logical-autonomy;metaethics;} } @article{ black_m:1978a, author = {Max Black}, title = {The 'Prisoner's Dilemma' and the Limits of Rationality}, journal = {International Studies in Philosophy}, year = {1978}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {7--22}, topic = {prisoner's-dilemma;rationality;} } @article{ black_m:1979a, author = {Max Black}, title = {Wittgenstein's Language Games}, journal = {Dialectica}, year = {1979}, volume = {33}, number = {3/4}, pages = {337--353}, topic = {Wittgenstein;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ black_wj-bunt_hc:1997a, editor = {William J. Black and Harry Bunt}, title = {Studies in Computational Pragmatics}, publisher = {University College Press}, year = {1997}, address = {London}, topic = {pragmatics;discourse;nl-processing;} } @techreport{ blackburn_p:1990a1, author = {Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Nominal Tense Logic}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP--90--05}, year = {1990}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Journal Publication: blackburn_p:1990a2}, topic = {temporal-logic;hybrid-modal-logics;} } @article{ blackburn_p:1990a2, author = {Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Nominal Tense Logic}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1993}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {56--83}, topic = {temporal-logic;hybrid-modal-logics;} } @incollection{ blackburn_p:1993a, author = {Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Modal Logic and Attribute Value Structures}, booktitle = {Diamonds and Defaults}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, editor = {Maarten de Rijke}, year = {1993}, pages = {19--65}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Blackburn"}, topic = {modal-logic;feature-structures;} } @article{ blackburn_p:1994a, author = {Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Tense, Temporal Reference, and Tense Logic}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1994}, volume = {11}, number = {1--2}, pages = {83--101}, abstract = {This paper examines extensions of Priorean tense logic in which reference to times is possible. The key technical idea is to sort the atomic symbols of Prior's language and to impose different interpretational restrictions on the different sorts. Among the sorts introduced are nominals (which permit Reichenbachian analyses of tense and tense-in-texts to be reconstructed in tense logic) and sorts which mimic temporal indexicals and calendar terms. The possibilities raised by sorting richer systems are briefly discussed. }, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;temporal-logic;} } @article{ blackburn_p:1995a, author = {Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Introduction: Static and Dynamic Aspects of Syntactic Structure}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1993}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {1--4}, topic = {logic;nl-syntax;foundations-of-grammar;grammar-logicism; grammar-formalisms;} } @article{ blackburn_p:1997a, author = {Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}eaning and Partiality}, by {R}einhard {M}uskens}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1997}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {353--355}, xref = {Review of muskens_r:1996b.}, topic = {partial-logic;nl-semantics;} } @article{ blackburn_p:1999a, author = {Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Review of \emph{{B}asic Model Theory}, by {K}ees {D}oes}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1999}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {258--261}, xref = {Review of: doets:1996a}, topic = {model-theory;logic-intro;} } @article{ blackburn_p:2000a, author = {Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Representation, Reasoning, and Relational Structures: A Hybrid Logic Manifesto}, journal = {Logic Journal of {IGPL}}, year = {2000}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {339--365}, abstract = {This paper is about the good side of modal logic, the bad side of modal logic, and how hybrid logic takes the good and fixes the bad. ... hybrid logic is a rather unusual modal upgrade. It pushes one simple idea as far as it will go: represent all information as formulas. This turns out to be the key needed to draw together a surprisingly diverse range of work (for example, feature logic, description logic and labelled deduction). Moreover, it displays a number of knowledge representation issues in a new light, notably the importance of sorting.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\blackburn1.pdf}, topic = {hybrid-modal-logic;} } @article{ blackburn_p:2006a, author = {Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Language of Time: A Reader}, edited by {I}nderjeet {M}ani, {J}ames {P}ustejovsky, and {R}ob {G}aizaukas}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2006}, volume = {32}, number = {3}, pages = {445--446}, xref = {Review of: mani-etal:2005a}, topic = {temporal-discourse;temporal-reasoning;temporal-representation; tense-aspect;} } @article{ blackburn_p:2007a, author = {Patrick Blackburn}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Proper Treatment of Events}, by {M}ichiel van {L}ambargen and {F}ritz {H}amm}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2006}, volume = {33}, number = {2}, pages = {263--265}, xref = {Review of: vanlambalgen_m-hamm_f:2005a}, topic = {nl-semantics;events;} } @unpublished{ blackburn_p-bos_j:1999a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan Bos}, title = {Representation and Inference in Natural Language: A First Course in Computational Semantics. Volume {II}: Working with Discourse Representations}, year = {1999}, note = {Available at http://www.coli.uni-sb.de/{\user}patrick}, topic = {computational-semantics;nl-interpretation;} } @book{ blackburn_p-bos_j:2005a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Jonathan Bos}, title = {Representation and Inference for Natural Language: A First Course in Computational Semantics}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2005}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-58576-496-7}, xref = {Review: pelletier_fj:2006b}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. "First-Order Logic" 2. "Lambda Calculus" 3. "Underspecified Representations" 4. "Propositonal Inference" 5. "First-Order Inference" 6. "Putting it All Together" }, topic = {computational-semantics;} } @article{ blackburn_p-derijke_m:1997a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Maarten de Rijke}, title = {Zooming In, Zooming Out}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1997}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {5--31}, topic = {hybrid-modal-logics;modal-logics;logic-in-AI;dynamic-logic;} } @book{ blackburn_p-derijke_m:1997b, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Maarten de Rijke}, title = {Specifying Syntactic Structures}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1997}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1575860856 (hc)}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Tore Burheim, "A Grammar Formalism and Cross-Serial Dependencies" 2. Jochen D\"orre and Suresh Manandhar, "On Constraint-Based Lambek calculi" 3. Marcus Kracht, "On Reducing Principles to Rules" 4. Natasha Kurtonina and Michael Moortgat, "Structural Control" 5. M. Andrew Moshier, "Featureless HPSG" 6. James Rogers, "On Descriptive Complexity, language complexity, and GB" 7. Ralf Treinen, "Feature Trees over Arbitrary Structures" 8. Gertjan van Noord and Gosse Bouma, "Dutch Verb Clustering without Verb Clusters" 9. J\"urgen Wedekind, "Approaches to Unification in Grammar: A Brief Survey" }, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 291 .S551 1997.}, topic = {grammar-formalisms;} } @article{ blackburn_p-derijke_m:1997c, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Maarten de Rijke}, title = {Why Combine Logics?}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1997}, volume = {59}, number = {1}, pages = {5--27}, topic = {combining-logics;quantifying-in-modality; first-order-modal-logic;} } @incollection{ blackburn_p-etal:1995a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Claire Gardent and Maarten de Rijke}, title = {On Rich Ontologies for Tense and Aspect}, booktitle = {Logic, Language and Computation, Volume 1}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1995}, address = {Stanford, California}, editor = {Jerry Seligman and Dag Westerst{\aa}hl}, pages = {77--92}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {tense-aspect;modal-logic;} } @incollection{ blackburn_p-etal:1997a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Marc Dymetman and Alain Lecomte and Aarne Ranta and Christian Retor\'e and Eric Villemonte de la Clergerie}, title = {Logical Aspects of Computational Linguistics: an Introduction}, booktitle = {{LACL}'96: First International Conference on Logical Aspects of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1997}, editor = {Christian Retor/'e}, pages = {1--20}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-and-nl-processing;} } @incollection{ blackburn_p-etal:1999a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan Bos and Michael Kohlhase and H. de Neville}, title = {Inference and Computational Semantics}, booktitle = {Third International Workshop on Computational Semantics ({IWCS}--3)}, year = {1999}, editor = {Harry Bunt and Elias Thijsse}, pages = {5--21}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {East Stroudsberg, Pennsylvania}, topic = {computational-semantics;cl-course;} } @book{ blackburn_p-etal:2001a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Maarten de Rijke and Yde Venema}, title = {Modal Logic}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, ISBN = {0 521 52714 7 (pbk)}, xref = {Review: bremer:2005b.}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @book{ blackburn_p-etal:2001b, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Nick Braisby and Lawrence Cavedon and Atsushi Shimojima}, title = {Logic, Language and Computation, Volume 3}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2003}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-575862-67-0 (hbk), 1-575862-68-9 (pbk)}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Janet Aisbett and Greg Gibbon, "Epistemic Utility in Commonsense Reasoning" 2. Maria Aloni, "Conceptual Covers in Dynamic Semantics" 3. Carlos Areces, Ver nica Becher and Sebastin Ferro, "Characterization Results for d-Horn Formulas", pp. 49--66 4. Cristian S. Calude, "A Glimpse into Algorithmic Information Theory" 5. Robin Cooper, "Information States, Attitudes and Dependent Record Types" 6. Paul Dekker, "The Semantics of Dynamic Conjunction" 7. Peter G\"ardenfors, "Concept Combination: A Geometrical Model" 8. Jelle Gerbrandy, "Identity in Epistemic Semantics" 9. Yasuhiro Katagiri, "An Implicit Argument Analysis of {J}apanese Zeros" 10. Yookyung Kim, "A Situation Semantic Account of Topic vs. Nominative Marking" 11. Hisashi Komatsu, "Belief and the Epistemic Channel" 12. Gregory R. Mulhauser, "Functions, Representations, and Zombies" 13. Satoshi Tojo, "Aspect Analysis in Arrow Logic" 14. Michiel van Lambalgen, "Logical Constructions Suggested by Vision" 15. Kees Vermeulen, "Information in Discourse: A Game for Many Agents" 16. Cees Witteveen and Wiebe van der Hoek, "How to Recover From (Non)Monotonic Inconsistencies" }, topic = {logic-in-CS;} } @book{ blackburn_p-etal:2003a, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, title = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {TC: 1. David Ahn, "Presupposition Incorporation in Adverbial Quantification", pp. 1--14 2. Horacio Arl\'o Costa, "A Theory of Contextual Propositions for Indicatives", pp. 15--28 3. Robert P. Arrit and Roy M. Turner, "Context-Sensitive Weights for a Neural Network", pp. 29--39 4. John Bell, "A Common Sense Theory of Causation", pp. 40--53 5. Claudia Bianchi, "How to Refer: Objective Context vs. Intentional Context", pp. 54--65 6. Paolo Bouquet and Bernardo Magnini and Luciano Serafini and Stefano Zanobini, "A SAT-Based Algorithm for Context Matching", pp. 66--79 7. Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini, "On the Difference between Bridge Rules and Lifting Axioms", pp. 80--93 8. Patrick Br\'ezillon, "Context Dynamic and Explanation in Contextual Graphs", pp. 94--106 9. Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}, "A Deduction Theorem for Normal Modal Propositional Logic", pp. 107--115 10. Valeria de Paiva, "Natural Deduction and Context as (Constructive) Modality", pp. 116--129 11. Anita Fetzer, "Communicative Contributions and Communicative Genres: Language Production and Language Understanding in Context", pp. 130--141 12. Leslie Ganet and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Charles Tijus, "Explanation as Contextual Categorization", pp. 142--153 13. Agn\`es Ganiboreau and Isabel Urdapilleta and Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Richard, "Effects of Context on the Description of Olfactory Properties", pp. 154--163 14. Ramanathan Guha and John McCarthy, "Varieties of Context", pp. 164--177 15. Seiie Jang and Woontack Woo, "Ubi-UCAM: A Unified Context-Aware Application Model", pp. 178--189 16. Nobo Komogata, "Contextual Effects on Word Order: Information Structure and Information Theory", pp. 190--203 17. Ghita Kouadri Most\'efaouri and Patrick Br\'ezillon, "A Generic Framework for Context-Based Distributed Authorizations", pp. 204--217 18. Hugo Liu, "Unpacking Meaning from Words: A Context-Centered Approach to Computational Lexicon Design", pp. 218--232 19. Rolf Nossum, "A Contextual Approach to the Logic of Fiction", pp. 233--244 20. Lucas Paletta, "Predictive Visual Context in Object Detection", pp. 245--258 21. Orin Percus, "Copular Questions and the Common Ground", pp. 259--271 22. Robert Porzel and Iryna Gurevych, "Contextual Coherence in Natural Language Processing", pp. 272--285 23. Luciano Serafini and Fausto Giunchiglia and John Mylopoulos and Philip Bernstein, "Local Relational Model: A Logical Formalization of Database Coordination", pp. 286--299 24. Isadora Stojanovic, "What to Say on What Is Said", pp. 300--313 25. Kavita E. Thomas, "Modelling `but' in Task-Oriented Dialogue", pp. 314--327 26. Richmond H. Thomason, "Dynamic Contextual Intensional Logic: Logical Foundations and an Application", pp. 328--341 27. Martin Trautwein, "Comparatively True Types: a Set-Free Ontological Model of Interpretation and Evaluation Contexts", pp. 342--355 28. Mark Whitsey, "Discourse Context and Indexicality", pp. 356--368 29. Domenic Widdows, "A Mathematical Model for Context and Word-Meaning", pp. 369--382 30. Robert A. Young, "Demonstratives, Reference and Perception", pp. 383--396 31. Elisabetta Zibetti and Charles Tijus, "Perceiving Action from Static Images: the Role of Spatial Context", pp. 397--410 32. Louise Barkhuus, "How to Define the Communication Situation: Determining Context Cues in Mobile Telephony", pp. 411--418 33. C\'ecile Bothorel and Karine Chevalier, "How to Use Enriched Browsing Context to Personalize Web Site Access", pp. 419--426 34. Harry Bunt, "Modular Partial Models: A Formalism for Context Representation", pp. 427--434 35. Piort Cisowski, "Contextual Modeling Using Context-Dependent Feedforward Neural Nets", pp. 435--442 36. Stefania Costantini and Arianna Tocchio, "Context-Based Commonsense Reasoning in the {DALI} Logic Programming Language", pp. 443--450 37. Panu Korpip\"a\"a and Jani M\"antyj\"arvi, "An Ontology for Mobile Device Sensor-Based Context Awareness", pp. 451--458 38. Marcello L'Abbate and Ulrich Thiel, "The Use of Contextual Information in a Proactivity Model for Conversational Agents", pp. 459--466 39. Rami Musa and Madleina Schneidegger and Andrea Kulas and Yoan Anguilet, "Glo{B}uddy: A Dynamic Broad Context Phrase Book", pp. 467--474 40. Emanuele Panizzi, "Exploiting Dynamicity for the Definition and Parsing of Context Sensitive Grammars", pp. 475--482 41. Mariano Gomes Pimentel and Hugo Fuks and Carlos Jos\'e Pereira de Lucena, "Co-Text Loss in Textual Chat Codes", pp. 483--490 42. Jean-Charles Pomeral and Patrick Br\'ezillon, "Context Proceduralization in Decision Making", pp. 491--498 43. Paul Robertson and Robert Ladagga, "{GRAVA}: An Architecture Supporting Automatic Context Transitions and Its Application to Robust Computer Vision", pp. 499--506 44. Alice G.B. ter Meulen, "Speaking One's Mind", pp. 507--516 45. Ladina Tschander, "Connecting Route Segments Given in Route Descriptions", pp. 517--524 }, ISBN = {3-540-40380-9}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, xref = {Report: ghidini-turner_r:2003a.}, topic = {context;} } @book{ blackburn_p-etal:2006a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan Bos and Kristina Stiegnitz}, title = {Learn Prolog Now!}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2006}, address = {London}, ISBN = {1904987176}, xref = {Review: broda:2008a}, topic = {Prolog;} } @book{ blackburn_p-etal:2006b, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan van Benthem and Frank Wolter}, title = {Handbook of Modal Logic}, year = {2006}, ISBN = {0444516905}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Inc.}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Patrick Blackburn and Johan van Benthem, "Modal Logic: A Semantic Perspective", pp. 1--84 2. Melvin Fitting, "Modal Proof Theory", pp. 85--138 3. Maarten Marx, "Complexity of Modal Logic", pp. 139--179 4. Ian Horrocks and Ullrich Hustadt and Ulrike Sattler and Renate Schmidt, "Computational Modal Logic", pp. 181--245 5. Valentin Goranko and Martin Otto, "Model Theory of Modal Logic", pp. 249--329 6. Yde Venema, "Algebras and Co-Algebras", pp. 331--426 7. Frank Wolter and Michael Zakharyaschev, "Modal Decision Problems", pp. 427--489 8. Marcus Kracht, "Modal Consequence Relations", pp. 491--545 9. Torben Br\"auner and Silvio Ghilardi, "First-Order Modal Logic", pp. 549--620 10. Reinhard Muskens, "Higher Order Modal Logic", pp. 621--653 11. Ian Hodkinson and Mark Reynolds, "Temporal Logic", pp. 655--720 12. Jill Bradfield and Colin Stitling, "Modal $\mu$-Calculi", pp. 721--756 13. Franz Baader and Carsten Lutz, "Description Logic", pp. 757--819 14. Carlos Areces and Balder ten Cate, "Hybrid Logics", pp. 821--868 15. \'Agnes Kurucz, "Combining Modal Logics", pp. 869--924 16. Sergei N. Artemov, "Modal Logic in Mathematics", pp. 927--969 17. Moshe Y. Vardi, "Automata-Theoretic Techniques for Temporal Reasoning", pp. 971--989 18. {John-Jules Ch.} Meyer and Frank Veltman, "Intelligent Agents and Common-Sense Reasoning", pp. 991--1029 19. Lawrence S. Moss and Hans-Joerg Tiede, "Applications of Modal Logic in Linguistics", pp. 1031--1076 20. Wiebe van der Hoek and Marc Pauly, "Modal Logic for Games and Information", pp. 1077--1148 21. Sten Lindstrom and Krister Segerberg, "Modal Logic and Philosophy", pp. 1149--1214 }, topic = {modal-logic;} } @book{ blackburn_p-etal:2019a, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Emiliano Lorini and Meiyun Guo}, title = {Logic, Rationality, and Interaction, 7th International Workshop, ({LORI} 2019)}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2019}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-3-662-60291-1}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Alexandru Baltag and Dazhu Li and Mina Young Pedersen, "On the Right Path: A Modal Logic for Supervised Learning", pp. 1--14 2. Jake Chandler and Richard Booth, "Elementary Iterated Revision and the {L}evi Identity", pp. 15-28 3. Ivano Ciardelli and Fausto Barbero, "Undefinability in Inquisitive Logic with Tensor", pp. 29--42 4. Ivano Ciardelli and Xinghan Liu, "Minimal-Change Counterfactuals in Intuitionistic Logic", pp. 43--56 5. Yuri David Santos, "Consolidation of Belief in Two Logics of Evidence", pp. 57--70 6. Huimin Dong and Beishui Liao and R\'eka Markovich and Leendert van der Torre, "From Classical to Non-monotonic Deontic Logic Using {ASPIC}+", pp. 71--85 7. Ivo D\"untsch and Ewa Or{\l}owska, "A Discrete Representation of Lattice Frames", pp. 86--97 8. Rustam Galimullin and Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Natasha Alechina, "Group Announcement Logic with Distributed Knowledge", pp. 98--111 9. Valentin Goranko and Fengkui Ju, "Towards a Logic for Conditional Local Strategic Reasoning", pp. 112--125 10. Yanjun Li and Yanjing Wang, "Multi-agent Knowing How via Multi-step Plans: A Dynamic Epistemic Planning Based Approach", pp. 126--139 11. Kaiyang Lin and Zhe Lin, "The Sequent Systems and Algebraic Semantics of Intuitionistic Tense Logics", pp. 140--152 12. Jixin Liu and Yanjing Wang, Yifeng Ding, "Weakly Aggregative Modal Logic: Characterization and Interpolation", pp. 153--167 13. Andr\'es Occhipinti Liberman and Rasmus K. Rendsvig, "Dynamic Term-Modal Logic for Epistemic Social Network Dynamics", pp. 168--182 14. Mina Young Pedersen and Sonja Smets and Thomas {\AA}gotnes, "Analyzing Echo Chambers: A Logic of Strong and Weak Ties", pp. 183--198 15. Elise Perrotin and Rustam Galimullin and Quentin Canu and Natasha Alechina, "Public Group Announcements and Trust in Doxastic Logic", pp. 199--213 16. Carlo Proietti and Davide Grossi and Sonja Smets and Fernando R. Vel\'azquez-Quesada, "Bipolar Argumentation Frameworks, Modal Logic and Semantic Paradoxes", pp. 214--229 17. Paolo Galeazzi and Rasmus K. Rendsvig and Marija Slavkovik, "Improving Judgment Reliability in Social Networks via Jury Theorems", pp. 230--243 18. Takahiro Sawasaki and Katsuhiko Sano and Tomoyuki Yamada, "Term-Sequence-Modal Logics", pp. 244--258 19. Katrin Schulz and Sonja Smets and Fernando R. Vel\'azquez-Quesada and Kaibo Xie, "A Logical and Empirical Study of Right-Nested Counterfactuals", pp. 259--272 20. Igor Sedl\'ar and V\'it Pun\v{c}och\'a\v{r} and Andrew Tedder, "First Degree Entailment with Group Attitudes and Information Updates", pp. 273--285 21. Chenwei Shi, "Knowledge in Topological Argumentation Models", pp. 286--296 22. Anthia Solaki and Fernando R. Vel\'azquez-Quesada, "Towards a Logical Formalisation of Theory of Mind: A Study on False Belief Tasks", pp. 297--312 23. Pengfei Song and Wei Xiong, "A Two-Layer Partition Awareness Structure", pp. 313--325 24. Youan Su and Katsuhiko Sano, "First-Order Intuitionistic Epistemic Logic", pp. 326--339 25. Kees van Berkel and Tim Lyon, "A Neutral Temporal Deontic {STIT} Logic", pp. 340--354 26. Kees van Berkel and Agata Ciabattoni and Elisa Freschi and Sanjay Modgil, "Evaluating Networks of Arguments: A Case Study in M\=im\=a\n{m}s\=a Dialectics", pp. 355--369 27. Wiebe van der Hoek and Louwe B. Kuijer and Y\`i N. W\'ang, "Who Should Be My Friends?", pp. 370--384 28. Xinyu Wang, "Epistemic Logic with Partial Dependency Operator", pp. 385--398 29. Xinyu Wang and Yanjing Wang, "Knowledge-Now and Knowledge-All", pp. 399--412 30. Xun Wang, "A Logic of Knowing How with Skippable Plans", pp. 413--424 Zuojun Xiong and Meiyun Guo, "A Dynamic Hybrid Logic for Followership", pp. 425--439}, topic = {logic-misc;} } @article{ blackburn_p-kohlhase:2004a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Michael Kohlhase}, title = {Inference and Computational Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2004}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {117--120}, note = {Preface to a special issue on computational semantics.}, topic = {computational-semantics;Montague-grammar;} } @article{ blackburn_p-marx:2002a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Maarten Marx}, title = {Remarks on {G}regory's `Actually' Operator}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {31}, number = {3}, pages = {281--288}, topic = {modal-logic;actuality;} } @article{ blackburn_p-seligman_j:1995a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Jerry Seligman}, title = {Hybrid Languages}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1993}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {251--272}, topic = {hybrid-modal-logics;modal-logic;modal-correspondence-theory;} } @incollection{ blackburn_p-seligman_j:1998a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Jerry Seligman}, title = {What Are Hybrid Languages?}, booktitle = {Advances in Modal Logic, Volume 1}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1998}, editor = {Marcus Kracht and Maarten de Rijke and Heinrich Wansing}, pages = {41--62}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ blackburn_p-spaan_e:1993a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Edith Spaan}, title = {A Modal Perspective on the Computational Complexity of Attribute Value Grammar}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1993}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {129--169}, topic = {complexity-theory;grammar-formalisms;feature-structures;} } @article{ blackburn_p-tencate:2006a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Balder ten Cate}, title = {Pure Extensions, Proof Rules, and Hybrid Axiomatics}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2006}, volume = {84}, number = {2}, pages = {277--322}, topic = {modal-logic;hybrid-modal-logics;completeness-theorems;} } @unpublished{ blackburn_p-tzakova:1998a1, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Miroslava Tzakova}, title = {Hybrid Languages and Temporal Logic}, year = {1998}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Paris}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Journal publication: blackburn_p-tzakova:1998a2}, topic = {hybrid-modal-logics;temporal-logic;} } @article{ blackburn_p-tzakova:1998a2, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Miroslava Tzakova}, title = {Hybrid Languages and Temporal Logic}, journal = {Logic Journal of the {IGPL}}, year = {1999}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {27--54}, topic = {hybrid-modal-logics;temporal-logic;} } @incollection{ blackburn_p-vanbenthem_j:2006a, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan van Benthem}, title = {Modal Logic: A Semantic Perspective}, booktitle = {Handbook of Modal Logic}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan van Benthem and Frank Wolter}, pages = {1--84}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Inc.}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Blackburn"}, topic = {modal-logic;model-theory;} } @article{ blackburn_p-venema_y:1995b, author = {Patrick Blackburn and Yde Venema}, title = {Dynamic Squares}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {24}, number = {5}, pages = {469--523}, contentnote = {This deals with dynamic implication; see groenendijk_ja-stokhof_m:1991a.}, topic = {dynamic-logic;conditionals;} } @phdthesis{ blackburn_pr:1990a, author = {Patrick R. Blackburn}, title = {Nominal Tense Logic and Other Sorted Intensional Frameworks}, school = {University of Edinburgh}, year = {1990}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @book{ blackburn_s:1975b, editor = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Meaning, Reference and Necessity: New Studies in Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1975}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521207207}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: 800.31 M483}, topic = {semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ blackburn_s:1975c, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {The Identity of Propositions}, booktitle = {Meaning, Reference and Necessity: New Studies in Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Simon Blackburn}, pages = {182--205}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Blackburn"}, topic = {propositions;intensionality;} } @book{ blackburn_s:1980a, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Open University Press}, year = {1980}, address = {Milton Keynes}, ISBN = {0335110207 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, QA273.4 .C28.}, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @article{ blackburn_s:1980b, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Truth, Realism, and the Regulation of Theory}, journal = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {353--372}, topic = {philosophical-realism;} } @book{ blackburn_s:1984a, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Spreading the Word: Groundings in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198246501 paperback}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library P106 .B471 1984, Undergraduate P106 .B471 1984}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;expressivism;} } @article{ blackburn_s:1988b, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Attitudes and Contents}, journal = {Ethics}, year = {1988}, volume = {98}, number = {3}, pages = {501--517}, xref = {Reply to schueler_gf:1988a.}, Url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/2380964}, topic = {expressivism;Frege-Geach-problem;} } @article{ blackburn_s:1992a, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Gibbard on Normative Logic}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, volume = {52}, number = {4}, pages = {947--952}, year = {1992}, xref = {Commentary on: gibbard_af:1990a}, topic = {expressivism;} } @incollection{ blackburn_s:1993a, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Circles, Finks, Smells and Biconditionals}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 7: Language and Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {259--279}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {concept-grasping;nl-semantics-and-cognition; perceptual-concepts;primary/secondary-qualities;} } @incollection{ blackburn_s:1995a, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Theory, Observation, and Drama}, booktitle = {Mental Simulation: Evaluations and Applications}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Martin Davies and Tony Stone}, pages = {274--290}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {mental-simulation;propositional-attitude-ascription; theory-theory-of-folk-psychology;} } @book{ blackburn_s:1998a, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Ruling Passions: A Theory of Practical Reasoning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198247850}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BJ 1311 .B531 1998.}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ blackburn_s:1999a, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}ind, Language, and Society}, by {J}ohn {R}. {S}earle}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {96}, number = {12}, pages = {626--629}, xref = {Review of searle_jr:1998a}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ blackburn_s:2004a, author = {Simon Blackburn}, title = {Essays in Quasi-Realisn}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {metaphysics;realism;} } @article{ blackburn_s-code_a:1978a, author = {Simon Blackburn and Alan Code}, title = {The Power of {R}ussell's Criticism of {F}rege: `On Denoting' pp. 48--50}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1978}, volume = {38}, number = {2}, pages = {65--77}, contentnote = {The claim is that R's criticism has been misunderstood and unjustly condemned}, topic = {on-denoting;Russell;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ blackburn_s-code_a:1978b, author = {Simon Blackburn and Alan Code}, title = {Reply to {G}each}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1978}, volume = {38}, number = {4}, pages = {206--207}, xref = {Reply to geach_pt:1978a}, xref = {Reply: geach_pt:1979a}, topic = {on-denoting;Russell;} } @article{ blackburn_s-code_a:1979a, author = {Simon Blackburn and Alan Code}, title = {Geach Again}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1979}, volume = {39}, number = {3}, pages = {195--201}, xref = {Reply to: geach_pt:1979a}, topic = {on-denoting;Russell;} } @article{ blackburn_s-heal_j:1979a, author = {Simon Blackburn and Jane Heal}, title = {Thought and Things}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1979}, volume = {53}, number = {1}, pages = {33--41}, topic = {individual-attitudes;} } @book{ blackburn_s-simmons_k:1999a, editor = {Simon Blackburn and Keith Simmons}, title = {Truth}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198752504}, contentnote = {TC: 1. F.H. Bradley, "On truth and copying" 2. H.H. Joachim, "The nature of truth" 3. William James, "Pragmatism's conception of truth" 4. Bertand Russell, "William James's conception of truth" 5. Gottlob Frege, "The thought: a logical inquiry" 6. F.P. Ramsey, "On facts and propositions" 7. Ludwig Wittgenstein, "Philosophical extracts" 8. Alfred Tarski, "The semantic conception of truth and the foundations of semantics" 9. W.V. Quine, "Philosophy of logic" 10. J.L. Austin, "Truth" 11. P.F. Strawson, "Truth" 12. J.L Austin, "Unfair to facts" 13. Crispin Wright, "Truth: a traditional debate reviewed" 14. Paul Horwich, "The minimalist conception of truth" 15. Michael Dummett, "Of what kind of thing is truth a property?" 16. Anil Gupta, "A critique of deflationism" 17. Donald Davidson, "The folly of trying to define truth" 18. Richard Rorty, "Pragmatism, Davidson, and truth" 19. Hartry Field, "Deflationist views of meaning and content" }, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Bc 171 .T761 1999.}, topic = {truth;} } @article{ blackburn_wk:1983a, author = {William K. Blackburn}, title = {Ambiguity and Non-Specificity: A Reply to {J}ay {D}avid {A}tlas}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1983}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {479--498}, topic = {definite-descriptions;presuppositon;ambiguity;} } @article{ blackburn_wk:1987a, author = {William K. Blackburn}, title = {Davidson on Force and Convention}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1987}, volume = {47}, number = {2}, pages = {72--74}, xref = {Commentary on: davidson_d:1984c}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;convention;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @book{ blackmore:1999a, author = {Susan Blackmore}, title = {The Meme Machine}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-850365-2}, xref = {Review: elton:2001a.}, topic = {evolutionary-psychology;} } @book{ blackmore:2005a, author = {Susan Blackmore}, title = {Consciousness: A Very Short Introduction}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-280585-1}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ blackorby_c-etal:2009a, author = {Chuck Blackorby and Walter Bossert and David Donaldson}, title = {Population Ethics}, booktitle = {Handbook of Rational and Social Choice}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Paul Anand and Prasanta Pattanaik and Clemens Puppe}, pages = {483--500}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {This chapter reviews the welfarist approach to population ethics. ... The chapter illustrates the difficulties arising in population ethics by means of an impossibility result and present characterizations of the critical-level generalized utilitarian principles and of three of their sub classes.}, topic = {population-ethics;} } @incollection{ blair_d:2009a, author = {Daniel Blair}, title = {Bridging the Paratactic Gap}, booktitle = {Compositionality, Context and Semantic Values}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert J. Stainton and Christopher Viger}, pages = {31--58}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {[Davidson's paratactic theory is] inadequate to handle a large number of semantic and grammatical phenomena that otherwise naturally occur in such contexts, most famously the binding of pronouns by quantificational antecedents. This paper modifies some aspects of Davidson's view in such a way as to permit such phenomena to occur while preserving the underlying idea of parataxis. ...}, topic = {davidson-semantics;indirect-discourse;anaphora;} } @unpublished{ blair_dc:1990a, author = {David C. Blair}, title = {Language and Representation in Information Retrieval}, year = {1990}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Michigan}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Misc Shelves.}, topic = {information-retrieval;} } @article{ blair_dc-maron:1985a, author = {David C. Blair and M.E. Maron}, title = {An Evaluation of Retrieval Effectiveness for a Full-Text Document-Retrieval System}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, year = {1985}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {289--299}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {information-retrieval;} } @article{ blair_g-etal:1989a, author = {Gordon Blair and John Gallagher and Javad Malik}, title = {Genericity vs. Inheritance vs. Delegation vs. Conformance vs. $\ldots$}, journal = {Journal of Object-Oriented Programming}, year = {1989}, pages = {11--17}, month = {September/October}, missinginfo = {volume, number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {distributed-systems;object-oriented-systems;} } @article{ blair_ha-subrahmanian_vs:1987a, author = {Howard A. Blair and V.S. Subramanian}, title = {Paraconsistent Logic Programming}, journal = {Theoretical Computer Science}, year = {1987}, volume = {68}, pages = {127--158}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {paraconsistency;logic-programming;annotated-logics;} } @article{ blake-etal:1995a, author = {Andrew Blake and Michael Isard and David Reynard}, title = {Learning to Track the Visual Motion of Contours}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {78}, number = {1--2}, pages = {179--212}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A development of a method for tracking visual contours is described. Given an ``untrained'' tracker, a training motion of an object can be observed over some extended time and stored as an image sequence. The image sequence is used to learn parameters in a stochastic differential equation model. These are used, in turn, to build a tracker whose predictor imitates the motion in the training set. Tests show that the resulting trackers can be markedly tuned to desired curve shapes and classes of motions.}, topic = {motion-tracking;machine-learning;} } @book{ blakemore_c:1989a, editor = {Colin Blakemore}, title = {Mindwaves: Thoughts on Intelligence, Identity, and Consciousness}, publisher = {Basil Blackweell}, year = {1989}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631146237, 9780631146230}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;} } @inproceedings{ blakemore_d:1980a, author = {Diane Blakemore}, title = {Constraints on Interpretation }, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Meeting of the {B}erkeley Linguistics Society}, year = {1980}, editor = {Kira Hall}, pages = {363--370}, publisher = {Linguistic Society of America}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {Grice;implicature;} } @book{ blakemore_d:1987a, author = {Diane Blakemore}, title = {Semantic Constraints on Relevance}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631156445}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P325 .B481 1987.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {relevance;implicature;} } @article{ blakemore_d:1987b, author = {Diane Blakemore}, title = {Linguistic Constraints on Pragmatic Interpretation: A Reassessment of Linguistic Semantics}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1987}, volume = {4}, pages = {712--713}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {pragmatics;semantics;} } @incollection{ blakemore_d:1988a, author = {Diane Blakemore}, title = {\,`So' as a Constraint on Relevance}, booktitle = {Mental Representations: The Interface Between Language and Reality}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Ruth Kempson}, pages = {183--195}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {relevance-theory;discourse-cue-words;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ blakemore_d:1988b, author = {Diane Blakemore}, title = {The Organization of Discourse}, booktitle = {Linguistics: The {C}ambridge Survey, Volume {II}}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1988}, pages = {229-250}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {pragmatics;} } @article{ blakemore_d:1989a, author = {Diane Blakemore}, title = {Denial and Contrast: A Relevance Theoretic Analysis of `But{'} }, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1989}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {15--37}, topic = {discourse-cue-words;`but';relevance-theory;} } @article{ blakemore_d:1989b, author = {Diane Blakemore}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}eaning and Force: The Pragmatics of Performative Utterances}, by {F}ran\c{c}ois {R}ecanti}, journal = {Mind and Language}, year = {1989}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {235--245}, xref = {Review of: recanati_f:1988a}, topic = {pragmatics;speech-acts;} } @book{ blakemore_d:1990a, author = {Diane Blakemore}, title = {Understanding Utterances: The Pragmatics of Natural Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1990}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {implicature;pragmatics-survey;} } @incollection{ blakemore_d:2005a, author = {Diane Blakemore}, title = {Discourse Markers}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {221--240}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {discourse-cue-words;discourse-connectives;discourse-coherence;} } @article{ blaketurner_c:2020a, author = {Christopher Blake-Turner}, title = {Deflationism About Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {3}, pages = {551--571}, abstract = {Logical consequence is typically construed as a metalinguistic relation between (sets of) sentences. Deflationism is an account of logic that challenges this orthodoxy. ... This paper defends deflationism from its most important challenge to date, due to {O}le {H}jortland. ... }, topic = {logical-consequence;unrestrictive-quantification;} } @article{ blaketurner_c:2020b, author = {Christopher Blake-Turner}, title = {Correction to: Deflationism About Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {3}, pages = {573}, topic = {logical-consequence;unrestrictive-quantification;} } @unpublished{ blamey:1985a, author = {Stephen Blamey}, title = {The Logical Analysis of Presupposition}, year = {1985}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ blamey:1986a, author = {Stephen Blamey}, title = {Partial Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {III}: Alternatives to Classical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther}, pages = {1--70}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {partial-logic;truth-value-gaps;} } @incollection{ blamey:2002a, author = {Stephen Blamey}, title = {Partial Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {V}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {261--354}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {partial-logic;} } @article{ blanchard_k:1979a, author = {Kendall Blanchard}, title = {The {N}avajo and the Idea of Ultimate Reality and Meaning}, journal = {Ultimate Reality and Meaning: Studies in the Philosophy of Understanding}, year = {1979}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {84--106}, topic = {linguistic-relativity;} } @article{ blanchard_t:2018a, author = {Thomas Blanchard}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}ow Physics Makes Us Free}, by Jennam .T. {I}smael}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2017}, volume = {114}, number = {3}, pages = {160--164}, xref = {Review of: ismael_jt:2016a}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @article{ blanchette:1996a, author = {Patricia A. Blanchette}, title = {Frege and {H}ilbert on Consistency}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1996}, volume = {93}, number = {7}, pages = {317--336}, topic = {foundations-of-mathematics;history-of-logic;} } @incollection{ blanchette:2001a, author = {Patricia A. Blanchette}, title = {Logical Consequence}, booktitle = {The {B}lackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2001}, editor = {Lou Goble}, pages = {115--135}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {logical-consequence;} } @article{ blanck_r:2021a, author = {Rasmus Blanck}, title = {Hierarchical Incompleteness Results for Arithmetically Definable Extensions of Fragments of Arithmetic}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {624--644}, abstract = {... we prove hierarchical versions of Mostowski's theorem on independent formulae, Kripke's theorem on flexible formulae, Woodin's theorem on the universal algorithm, and a few related results. ...}, topic = {(in)completeness;hyperarithmetical-hierarchy;} } @article{ blasch_e-etal:2019a, author = {Erik Blasch and Robert Cruise and Alexander J. Aved and Uttam K. Majumder and Todd V. Rovito}, title = {Methods of {AI} for Multimodal Sensing and Action for Complex Situations}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2019}, volume = {40}, number = {4}, pages = {50--65}, topic = {robotics;context;multimodal-sensing;} } @article{ blass_a-etal:2002a, author = {Andreas Blass and Yuri Gurevich and Saharon Shelah}, title = {On Polynomial Time Computation over Unordered Structures}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {67}, number = {3}, pages = {1093--1125}, topic = {complexity-logics;} } @article{ blass_a-etal:2009a, author = {Andreas Blass and Nachum Dersowitz and Yuri Gurevich}, title = {When Are Two Algorithms the Same?}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {145--168}, contentnote = {Argues that "same algorithm", Church-Turing thesis are too vague to be formalizable.}, topic = {algorithms;foundations-of-computation;} } @article{ blass_a-gurevich_y:2000a, author = {Andreas Blass and Yuri Gurevich}, title = {The Logic of Choice}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {65}, number = {3}, pages = {1264--1310}, topic = {abstract-state-machines;epsilon-operator;choice-constructs;} } @incollection{ blass_a-gurevich_y:2013a, author = {Andreas Blass and Yuri Gurevich}, title = {Zero-One Laws: Thesauri and Parametric Conditions}, booktitle = {Logic at the Crossroads. Volume {I}: Proof, Computation, and Agency}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amitabha Gupta and Rohit Parikh and Johan van Benthem and Eric Pacuit}, pages = {99--114}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {probability-theory;} } @article{ blattner:2001a, author = {William Blattner}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Paradox of Subjectivity: The Self in the Transcendental Tradition}, by {D}avid {C}arr}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {3}, pages = {454--456}, xref = {Review of: carr_d:1999a.}, topic = {idealism;Kant;Husserl;Heidegger;} } @incollection{ blau:1983a, author = {Ulrich Blau}, title = {Three-Valued Analysis of Precise, Vague, and Presupposing Quantifiers}, booktitle = {Approaching Vagueness}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1983}, editor = {Thomas T. Ballmer and Manfred Pinkal}, pages = {79--129}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {vagueness;nl-quantifiers;} } @book{ blauw_m:2012a, editor = {Martin Blauw}, title = {Contrastivism in Philosophy: New Perspectives}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9781138922839}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Martijn Blaauw, "Introduction: Contrastivism in Philosophy", pp. 1--10 1. Christopher Hitchcock, "Contrastive Explanation", pp. 11--14 2. Jonathan Schaffer, "Causal Contextualisms", pp. 35--63 3. Branden Fitelson, "Contrastive Bayesianism", pp. 64--87 4. Martijn Blaauw, "Contrastive Belief", pp. 88--100 5. Adam Morton, "Contrastive Knowledge", pp. 101--115 6. Justin Snedegar, "Contrastive Semantics for Deontic Modals", pp. 116--133 7. Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, "Free Contrastivism", pp. 134--153 8. Julia Driver, "Luck and Fortune in Moral Evaluation", pp. 154--172 }, xref = {Review: baumann:2013a}, topic = {contrastivism;} } @phdthesis{ blaylock_nj:2005a, author = {Nathan J. Blaylock}, title = {Towards Tractable Agent-Based Dialogue}, school = {University of Rochester}, year = {2005}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Rochester}, url = {www.cs.rochester.edu/research/cisd/pubs/2005/blaylock-phd-2005.pdf}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ blaylock_nj-allen_jf:2014a, author = {Nathan J. Blaylock and James Allen}, title = {Hierarchical Goal Recognition}, booktitle = {Plan, Activity, and Intent Recognition: Theory and Practice}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2014}, editor = {Gita Sukthankar and Christopher Geib and Hung Hai Bui and David Pynadath and Robert P. Goldman}, pages = {3--32}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {plan-recognition;} } @incollection{ blaylock_nj-etal:2002a, author = {Nathan J. Blaylock and James Allen and George Ferguson}, title = {Synchronization in an Asynchronous Agent-Based Architecture for Dialogue Systems}, booktitle = {Third {SIGdial} Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue: Proceedings of the Workshop}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2002}, editor = {Kristina Jokinen and Susan McRoy}, pages = {1--10}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ blaylock_nj-etal:2004a, author = {Nathan J. Blaylock and James F. Allen and George Ferguson}, title = {Managing Communicative Intentions with Collaborative Problem Solving}, booktitle = {Current and New Directions in Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Jan van Kuppevelt and Ronnie W. Smith}, pages = {63--85}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {communicative-intentions;collaboration;problem-solving;} } @article{ blecher_i:2021a, author = {Ian Blecher}, title = {Review of \emph{{K}ant and the Science of Logic}, by {H}uaping-{L}u {A}dler}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2021}, volume = {130}, number = {2}, pages = {307--310}, xref = {Review of: adler_hpl:2018a}, topic = {Kant;history-of-logic;} } @article{ bledin_j:2015a, author = {Justin Bledin}, title = {\emph{Modus Ponens} Defended}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2015}, volume = {112}, number = {2}, pages = {57--83}, topic = {modus-ponens;indicative-conditionals;} } @article{ bledin_j:2020a, author = {Justin Bledin}, title = {Fatalism and the Logic of Unconditionals}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2020}, volume = {54}, number = {1}, pages = {126--161}, topic = {fatalism;unconditionals;} } @inproceedings{ bledin_j-srinivas_s:2019a, author = {Justin Bledin and Sadhwi Srinivas}, title = {As ifs}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 23}, year = {2019}, editor = {M. Teresa Espinal and Elena Castroviejo and Manuel Leonetti and Louise McNally and Cristina Real-Puigdollers}, pages = {163--180}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/issue/view/25}, abstract = {We provide an event semantic analysis of as if-phrases in manner reports and other modification uses on which these adjuncts contribute hypothetical comparative properties of eventualities. When combined with the dynamic verb dance, for instance, an as if-phrase expresses that the reported dancing event resembles in some relevant respect its counterparts in the most normal worlds described by the clause embedded under as if. Towards the end of the paper, we extend our analysis to as if-complements of copy raising verbs in perceptual resemblance reports.}, topic = {similarity;} } @article{ bledsoe:1970a, author = {W.W. Bledsoe}, title = {Splitting and Reduction Heuristics in Automatic Theorem Proving}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1970}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {55--77}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @article{ bledsoe:1977a1, author = {W. W. Bledsoe}, title = {Non-Resolution Theorem Proving}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1977}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {23--40}, xref = {Republication: bledsoe:1977a2.}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @incollection{ bledsoe:1977a2, author = {W. W. Bledsoe}, title = {Non-Resolution Theorem Proving}, booktitle = {Readings in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1981}, editor = {Bonnie Webber and Nils J. Nilsson}, pages = {91--108}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: bledsoe:1977a1.}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @article{ bledsoe-bruell:1974a, author = {W.W. Bledsoe and Peter Bruell}, title = {A Man-Machine Theorem-Proving System}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1974}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {51--72}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @article{ bledsoe-etal:1972a, author = {W.W. Bledsoe and R.S. Boyer and W.H. Henneman}, title = {Computer Proofs of Limit Theorems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1972}, volume = {3}, number = {1--3}, pages = {27--60}, topic = {theorem-proving;computer-assisted-mathematics;} } @article{ bledsoe-etal:1985a, author = {Woodrow W. Bledsoe and K. Kunen and R. Shostak}, title = {Completeness Results for Inequality Provers}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {255--288}, topic = {theorem-proving;completeness-theorems;} } @techreport{ bleeker_a-vaneijck_j:2000a, author = {Annettee Bleeker and Jan van Eijck}, title = {The Epistemics of Encryption}, institution = {CWI, Amsterdam}, number = {INS-R0019}, year = {2000}, address = {Amsterdam}, urk = {http://db.cwi.nl/rapporten/}, topic = {cryptography;epsitemic-logic;} } @incollection{ bleichrodt_h-schmidt_u:2009a, author = {Han Bleichrodt and Ulrich Schmidt}, title = {Applications of Non-Expected Utility}, booktitle = {Handbook of Rational and Social Choice}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Paul Anand and Prasanta Pattanaik and Clemens Puppe}, pages = {90--112}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {Expected utility is the dominant framework for analyzing decisions under risk and uncertainty. Many empirical studies show that people deviate systematically from expected utility. To accommodate these deviations new, non-expected utility models have been proposed. Among these models prospect theory is the most influential. This chapter studies applications of non-expected utility and in particular prospect theory in insurance economics, auctions, and health economics. This chapter shows how the insights from non-expected utility have improved understanding of people's choices and have led to improved decisions and more accurate measurements of utility.}, topic = {prospect-theory;utility;expected-utility;} } @book{ blevins_j-carter_j:1988a, editor = {J. Blevins and J. Carter}, title = {{NELS 18}: Proceedings of the Eighteenth Conference of the {N}orth {E}ast {L}inguistic {S}ociety}, publisher = {GLSA Publications}, year = {1988}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, note = {URL FOR GLSA Publications: http://www.umass.edu/linguist/glsa-pubs.html.}, topic = {linguistics-proceedings;nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @unpublished{ blevins_jp:1992a, author = {James P. Blevins}, title = {The Linguistic relevance of Combinatory Grammars}, year = {1992}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Western Australia.}, topic = {categorial-grammar;} } @article{ blevins_jp:1995a, author = {James P. Blevins}, title = {Syncretism and Paradigmatic Opposition}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1995}, volume = {18}, number = {2}, pages = {113--152}, contentnote = {Discusses hierarchical organization of information in the lexicon.}, topic = {morphology;feature-structures;HPSG;} } @incollection{ blin-miclet:2000a, author = {Laurent Blin and Laurent Miclet}, title = {Generating Synthetic Speech Prosody with Lazy Learning in Tree Structures}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {87--90}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;speech-generation;} } @book{ bloch_b-trager:1942a, author = {Bernard Bloch and George L. Trager}, title = {Outline of Linguistic Analysis}, publisher = {Linguistic Society of America at the Waverly Press, Inc.}, year = {1942}, address = {Baltimore}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 121 .B62.}, topic = {linguistic-classic;structuralist-linguistics;} } @inproceedings{ bloch_i:2000a, author = {Isabelle Bloch}, title = {Spatial Representation of Spatial Relationship Knowledge}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {247--258}, abstract = {... We propose ... spatial representations of [relationships] in a fuzzy set framework, that allows for quantitative, qualitative, imprecise, heterogeneous knowledge. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;spatial-representation;fuzzy-set-theory;} } @article{ bloch_i-etal:2003a, author = {Isabelle Bloch and Thierry G\'eraud and Henri Ma\^itre}, title = {Representation and Fustion of Heterogeneous Fuzzy Information in the {3D} Space for Model-Based Structural Recognition---Application to {3D} Brain Imaging}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {148}, number = {1--2}, pages = {141--175}, topic = {possibility-theory;fuzzy-set-theory;pattern-recognition;} } @incollection{ bloch_i-etal:2004a, author = {Isabelle Bloch and Ram\'on Pino-P\'erez and Carlos Uzc\'ategui}, title = {A Unified Treatment for Knowledge Dynamics}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {329--337}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {belief-revision;abduction;} } @unpublished{ block_e:2008a, author = {Eliza Block}, title = {Is the Symmetry Problem Really a Problem?}, year = {2008}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, New York University}, rtnote = {See url for LPW08}, topic = {implicature;} } @article{ block_i:1961a, author = {Irving Block}, title = {Truth and Error in {A}ristotle's Theory of Sense Perception}, journal = {Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1961}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {1--9}, topic = {Aristotle;perception;} } @incollection{ block_n:1978a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {Troubles with Functionalism}, booktitle = {Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Volume 9. Perception and Cognition: Issues in the Foundations of Psychology}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {C. Wade Savage}, pages = {261--325}, address = {Minneapolis}, url = {https://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/philo/faculty/block/papers/1978.troubles.with.f.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de21}, topic = {functionalism;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @incollection{ block_n:1986a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {Advertisement for a Semantics for Psychology}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {X}: Studies in the Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {615--678}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;cognitive-semantics;} } @article{ block_n:1987a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {Functional Role and Truth Conditions}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1987}, volume = {61}, note = {Supplementary Series.}, pages = {157--181}, topic = {conceptual-role-semantics;} } @article{ block_n:1995a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {How Many Concepts of Consciousness?}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1995}, volume = {18}, number = {2}, pages = {272--287}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ block_n:1997a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {Anti-Reductionism Slaps Back}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 11: Mind, Causation, and World}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {107--132}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @incollection{ block_n:1998a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {The Mind as the Software of the Brain}, booktitle = {An Invitation to Cognitive Science: Thinking}, volume = {3}, edition = {2}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Edward E. Smith and Daniel N. Osherson}, chapter = {11}, pages = {377--425}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc17\block2.pdf}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ block_n:2001a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {Paradox and Cross Purposes in Recent Work on Consciousness}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {2001}, volume = {79}, number = {1--2}, pages = {197--220}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc17\block1.pdf}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Misc".}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ block_n:2002a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {The Harder Problem of Consciousness}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {99}, number = {8}, pages = {391--425}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ block_n:2002b, author = {Ned Block}, title = {Searle's Argument Against Cognitive Science}, booktitle = {Views into the {C}hinese Room: New Essays on {S}earle and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {John Preston and Mark Bishop}, pages = {70--79}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @article{ block_n:2005a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {Two Neural Correlates of Consciousness}, journal = {Trends in Cognitive Sciences}, year = {2005}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {46--52}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de11\block1}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @incollection{ block_n:2006a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {Bodily Sensations as an Obstacle for Representationism}, booktitle = {Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Muryat Aydede}, pages = {137--142 }, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ block_n:2010a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {Attention and Mental Paint}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2010}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {23--63}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;attention;perception;} } @article{ block_n:2011a, author = {Ned Block}, title = {The Higher Order Approach to Consciousness Is Defunct}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {3}, pages = {419--431}, xref = {Commentary: rosenthal_dm:2011a}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ block_n:2011b, author = {Ned Block}, title = {Response to {R}osenthal and {W}eisberg}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {3}, pages = {443--448}, xref = {Response to: rosenthal_dm:2011a, weisberg_j1:2011a}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ block_n-etal:1997a, editor = {Ned Block and Owen Flanagan and G\"uven G\"ueldere}, title = {The Nature of Consciousness: Philosophical Debates}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-52210-1}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ block_n-etal:2014a, author = {Ned Block and David Carmel and Stephen M. Fleming and Robert W. Kentridge and Christof Koch and Victor A.F. Lamme and Hakwan Lau and David Rosenthal}, title = {Consciousness Science: Real Progress and Lingering Misconceptions}, journal = {Trends in Cognitive Science}, year = {2014}, volume = {18}, number = {11}, pages = {566--567}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de14\block.pdf}, topic = {consciousness;cogsci-editorial;} } @article{ block_n-fodor_ja:1972a, author = {Ned Block and Jerry A. Fodor}, title = {What Psychological States Are Not}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1972}, volume = {81}, number = {2}, pages = {159--181}, topic = {cognitive-states;} } @incollection{ block_n-segel:1998a, author = {Ned Block and Gabriel Segel}, title = {The Philosophy of Psychology}, booktitle = {Philosophy 2: Further through the Subject}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {A.C. Grayling}, pages = {1--71}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Block"}, topic = {philosophy-of-psychology;} } @article{ block_n-stalnaker_rc:1999a, author = {Ned Block and Robert C. Stalnaker}, title = {Conceptual Analysis, Dualism, and the Explanatory Gap}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1999}, volume = {108}, number = {1}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {a-priori;} } @incollection{ block_pi-eberle_k:1999a, author = {Peter I. Block and Kurt Eberle}, title = {What is the Alternative? The Computation of Focus Alternatives from Lexical and Sortal Information}, booktitle = {Focus: Linguistic, Cognitive, and Computational Perspectives}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {Peter Bosch and Rob {van der Sandt}}, pages = {105--120}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {reasoning-about-alternatives;alternatives;s-focus;} } @article{ blockeel-deraedt:1998a, author = {Hendrik Blockeel and Luc De Raedt}, title = {Top-Down Induction of First-Order Logical Decision Trees}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {101}, number = {1--2}, pages = {285--297}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A first-order framework for top-down induction of logical decision trees is introduced. The expressivity of these trees is shown to be larger than that of the flat logic programs which are typically induced by classical ILP systems, and equal to that of first-order decision lists. These results are related to predicate invention and mixed variable quantification. Finally, an implementation of this framework, the TILDE system, is presented and empirically evaluated.}, topic = {machine-learning;structure-learning;} } @article{ blok_p:1991a, author = {Peter Blok}, title = {Focus and Presupposition}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1991}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {149--165}, abstract = {In this paper traditional approaches to the notion presupposition are criticized. The relation between the concepts topic; and presupposition is discussed in a game-theoretical framework. It is shown that the concept presupposition has to be defined pragmatically with respect to its dialogical functions. }, topic = {presupposition;discourse;game-theory;sentence-focus;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ blok_p:1991b, author = {Peter Blok}, title = {On Rooth's Analysis of Heavy Stress}, booktitle = {Language and Cognition 1}, publisher = {University of Groningen}, year = {1991}, editor = {M. Kas and Eric Reuland and C. Vet}, pages = {19--37}, address = {Groningen}, contentnote = {Referenced in blok_p:1993a.}, topic = {sentence-focus;pragmatics;} } @phdthesis{ blok_p:1993a, author = {Peter Blok}, title = {The Interpretation of Focus: An Epistemic Approach to Pragmatics}, school = {Rijksuniversiteit Groningen}, year = {1993}, address = {Groningen, Holland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {sentence-focus;epistemic-logic;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ blok_s-etal:2003a, author = {Sergey Blok and Douglas Medin and Daniel Osherson}, title = {Probability from Similarity}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Logical Formalization of Commonsense Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John McCarthy and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {36--42}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-probability;} } @article{ blok_wj:1980a, author = {W.J. Blok}, title = {The Lattice of Modal Logics}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {45}, number = {2}, pages = {221--236}, contentnote = {The lattice of extensions of S$ is well behaved, but the general case is messy.}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ blok_wj:1988a, author = {W.J. Blok}, title = {Alfred {T}arski's Work on General Metamathematics}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1958}, volume = {53}, number = {1}, pages = {36--50}, topic = {Tarski;history-of-logic;metamathematics;} } @article{ blok_wj-jonsson_b:2006a, author = {Willem J. Blok and Bjarni J\'onsson}, title = {Equivalence of Consequence Relations}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2006}, volume = {83}, number = {1--3}, pages = {91--110}, topic = {algebraic-logic;logical-consequence;} } @article{ blomberg_o:2015a, author = {Olle Blomberg}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}hared Agency: A Planning Theory of Acting Together}, by {M}ichael {B}ratman}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2015}, volume = {75}, number = {2}, pages = {346--348}, xref = {Review of: bratman_me:2014a}, doi = {doi:10.1093/analys/anu155}, topic = {shared-cognition;group-attitudes;group-planning;group-plans;} } @book{ blometillman_m:2014a, author = {Michael Blome-Tillman}, title = {Knowledge and Presuppositions}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199686087}, xref = {Review: rysiew_p:2017a}, topic = {knowledge;contextualisn;} } @book{ bloom_p:1994a, editor = {Paul Bloom}, title = {Language Acquisition: Core Readings}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Paul Bloom, "language acquisitions" 2. Paul Bloom, "Overview: controversies in language acquisition" 3. Anne Fernald, "Human maternal vocalizations to infants as biologically relevant signals: an evolutionary perspective" 4. Laura Ann Petitto, "Modularity and constraints in early lexical acquisition: evidence from children's early language and gesture" 5. Dare A. Baldwin, "Infant contributions to the achievement of joint reference" 6. Ellen M. Markman, Lila Gleitman, Janellen Huttenlocher and Patricia Smiley, 7. Janellen Huttenlocher and Patricia Smiley, "Constraints children place on word "Early word meanings: the case of object names"meanings" 8. Eve V. Clark and Kathie L. Carpenter, "The notion of source in language acquisition" 9. Jess Gropen et al, "Affectedness and direct objects: the role of lexical semantics in the acquisition of verb argument structure" 10. Melissa Bowerman, "Learning a semantic system: what role do cognitive predispositions play?" 11. Stephen Crain, "Language acquisition in the absence of experience" 12. Richard F. Cromer, "Language growth with experience without feedback" 13. D.E. Rumelhart and J.L. McClelland, "On learning the past tenses of English verbs" 14. Steven Pinker, "Rules of language" 15. Peter Gordon, "Level-ordering in lexical development" 16. Susan Goldin-Meadow and Carolyn Mylander, "Beyond the input given: the child's role in the acquisition of language" 17. Elissa L. Newport, "Maturational constraints on language learning" 16. Annette Karmiloff-Smith, "Innate constraints and developmental change" 16. Peter Marler, "The instinct to learn" }, topic = {L1-acquisition;} } @book{ bloom_p:1996a, editor = {Paul Bloom}, title = {Language and Space}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262024039}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Ray Jackendoff, "The Architecture of the Lingustic-Spatial Interface" 2. Manfred Bierwisch, "How Much Space Gets into Language" 3. Willem J.M. Levelt, "Perspective Taking and Ellipsis in Spatial Descriptions" 4. Stephen C. Levinson, "Frames of Reference and {M}olyneux's Question: Crosslinguistic Evidence" 5. Karen Emmorey, "The Confluence of Space and Language in Signed Languages" 6. Leonard Talmy, "Fictive Motion in Language and `Ception{'}" 7. John O'Keefe, "The Spatial Prepositions in {E}nglish, Vector Grammar, and the Cognitive Map Theory" 8. Barbara Landau," Multiple geometric representations of Objects in Languages and Language Learners" 9. Jean M. Mandler, "Preverbal Representation and Language" 10. Melissa Bowerman, " Learning How to Structure Space for Language: A Crosslinguistic Perspective" 11. Philip N. Johnson-Laird, "Space to Think" 12. Barbara Tversky, " Spatial Perspective in Descriptions" 13. Gordon D. Logan and Daniel D. Sadler, " A Computational Analysis of the Apprehension of Spatial Relations" 14. Tim Shallice, "The Language-to-Object Perception Interface: Evidence from Neuropsychology" 15. Mary A. Peterson and Lynn Nadel and Paul Bloom and Merrill F. Garrett, "Space and language" }, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 37.5 .S65 L361 1996.}, topic = {spatial-language;} } @book{ bloom_p:1996b, editor = {Paul Bloom}, title = {Language and Space}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262024039}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 37.5 .S65 L361 1996}, topic = {spatial-semantics;spatial-language;} } @book{ bloom_p:2000a, author = {Paul Bloom}, title = {How Children Learn the Meanings of Words}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {psycholinguistics;lexical-acquistion;} } @book{ bloomfield:1914a, author = {Leonard Bloomfield}, title = {An Introduction to the Study of Language}, publisher = {H. Holt and Company}, year = {1914}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {UMich Graduate Library 800 B65}, xref = {Revision: bloomfield:1933a.}, topic = {linguistics-classics;} } @book{ bloomfield:1933a, author = {Leonard Bloomfield}, title = {Language}, publisher = {Holt, Rinehart and Winston}, year = {1933}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library P 121 .B65 1933}, xref = {Revision of: bloomfield:1914a.}, topic = {linguistics-classics;} } @book{ bloomfield:1939a, author = {Leonard Bloomfield}, title = {Linguistic Aspects of Science}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1939}, address = {Chicago}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {linguistics-methodology;} } @article{ blue:1981a, author = {N.A. Blue}, title = {A Metalinguistic Interpretation of Counterfactual Conditionals}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {179--200}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ blum_a:1975a, author = {Alex Blum}, title = {Convention {T} and Natural Language}, journal = {Dialectics}, year = {1975}, volume = {32}, number = {1}, pages = {77--80}, contentnote = {Tries to rebut Hintikka's criticism.}, topic = {Davidson-semantics;} } @article{ blum_al-furst:1997a, author = {Avrim L. Blum and Merrick L. Furst}, title = {Fast Planning through Planning Graph Analysis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {90}, number = {1--2}, pages = {281--300}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We introduce a new approach to planning in STRIPS-like domains based on constructing and analyzing a compact structure we call a planning graph. We describe a new planner, Graphplan, that uses this paradigm. Graphplan always returns a shortest possible partial-order plan, or states that no valid plan exists. We provide empirical evidence in favor of this approach, showing that Graphplan outperforms the total-order planner, Prodigy, and the partial-order planner, UCPOP, on a variety of interesting natural and artificial planning problems. We also give empirical evidence that the plans produced by Graphplan are quite sensible. Since searches made by this approach are fundamentally different from the searches of other common planning methods, they provide a new perspective on the planning problem.}, topic = {planning-algorithms;graph-based-reasoning;} } @article{ blum_al-langley_p:1997a, author = {Arvin L. Blum and Pat Langley}, title = {Selection of Relevant Features and Examples in Machine Learning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {97}, number = {1--2}, pages = {245--271}, topic = {relevance;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ blum_al-mitchell_tm:1998a, author = {Avrim L. Blum and Thomas Mitchell}, title = {Combining Labeled and Unlabeled Data with Co-Training}, booktitle = {{COLT}: Proceedings of the Workshop on Computational Learning Theory}, year = {1998}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {92-100}, missinginfo = {editor}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under "Mitchell".}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @article{ blum_c:2005a, author = {Christian Blum}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}nt Colony Optimization}, by {M}arco {D}origo and {T}homas {S}t\"utzle}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {165}, number = {2}, pages = {261--264}, xref = {Review of: dorigo-stutzle:2004a}, topic = {swarm-intelligence;} } @article{ blum_m:1967a, author = {Manual Blum}, title = {A Machine-Independent Theory of the Complexity of Recursive Functions}, journal = {JACM}, year = {1967}, volume = {14}, number = {2}, pages = {322--336}, topic = {complexity-theory;} } @article{ blumberg_k:2018a, author = {Kyle Blumberg}, title = {Counterfactual Attitudes and the Relational Analysis}, journal = {Mind}, year = {2017}, volume = {127}, number = {506}, pages = {521---546}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja22}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;logic-of-imagination;} } @article{ blumberg_k:2022a, author = {Kyle Blumberg}, title = {On Preferring}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {6}, pages = {1315--1344}, abstract = {... I draw attention to comparative preference claims, i.e. sentences of the form 'S prefers p to q'. I show that preference claims exhibit interesting patterns, and try to develop a semantics that captures them. Then I use my account of preference to provide an analysis of desire. The resulting entry for desire ascriptions is independently motivated, and finds support from a wide range of phenomena. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja23}, topic = {preference;prefereential-constructions;} } @article{ blumberg_k-goldstein_s:2023a, author = {Kyle Blumberg and Simon Goldstein}, title = {Attitude Verbs' Local Context}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {3}, pages = {483--507}, abstract = {Schlenker (2009;2010a;2010b) provides an algorithm for deriving the presupposition projection properties of an expression from that expression’s classical semantics. In this paper, we consider the predictions of Schlenker’s algorithm as applied to attitude verbs. ... We show that Schlenker’s theory does not predict belief projection, and discuss several consequences of this result. }, topic = {propositional-attitudes;presupposition;} } @article{ blumberg_k-holguin_b:2019a, author = {Kyle Blumberg and Ben Holgu\'in}, title = {Embedded Attitudes}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2019}, volume = {36}, number = {3}, pages = {377--406}, abstract = {This paper presents a puzzle involving embedded attitude reports. We resolve the puzzle by arguing that attitude verbs take restricted readings: in some environments the denotation of attitude verbs can be restricted by a given proposition. For example, when these verbs are embedded in the consequent of a conditional, they can be restricted by the proposition expressed by the conditional's antecedent.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ blume-etal:2006a, author = {Lawrence E. Blume and David A. Easley and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Redoing the Foundations of Decision Theory}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {14--24}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @incollection{ blumel_l-ulbricht_m:2022a, author = {Lydia Bl\"umel and Markus Ulbricht}, title = {Defining Defense and Defeat in Abstract Argumentation From Scratch--A Generalizing Approach}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {63--72}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We propose a general framework to investigate semantics of Dung-style argumentation frameworks (AFs) by means of a generic defeat notion formalized by refute operators. After establishing the technical foundations, we propose natural generic versions of Dung's classical semantics. We demonstrate how classical as well as recent proposals can be captured by our approach when utilizing suitable notions of refutal. ... We contribute to a principle-based study of AF semantics by discussing properties tailored to compare different refute operators. Finally, we report computational complexity results for basic reasoning tasks which hold in our general framework.}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc22}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ blumenthal-porter_bw:1994a, author = {Brad Blumenthal and Bruce W. Porter}, title = {Analysis and Empirical Studies of Derivational Analogy}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {67}, number = {2}, pages = {287--327}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Derivational analogy is a technique for reusing problem solving experience to improve problem solving performance. This research addresses an issue common to all problem solvers that use derivational analogy: overcoming the mismatches between past experiences and new problems that impede reuse. First, this research describes the variety of mismatches that can arise and proposes a new approach to derivational analogy that uses appropriate adaptation strategies for each. Second, it compares this approach with seven others in a common domain. This empirical study shows that derivational analogy is almost always more efficient than problem solving from scratch, but the amount it contributes depends on its ability to overcome mismatches and to usefully interleave reuse with from-scratch problem solving. Finally, this research describes a fundamental tradeoff between efficiency and solution quality, and proposes a derivational analogy algorithm that can improve its adaptation strategy with experience.}, topic = {analogy;case-based-reasoning;problem-solving; analogical-reasoning;} } @article{ blutner_r:1993a, author = {Reinhard Blutner}, title = {Dynamic Generalized Quantifiers and Existential Sentences in Natural Languages}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1993}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {33--65}, topic = {nl-semantics;generalized-quantifiers;dynamic-semantics; existential-constructions;} } @inproceedings{ blutner_r:1995a, author = {Reinhard Blutner}, title = {{\em Normality} in Update Semantics}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {V}}, year = {1995}, editor = {Mandy Simons and Teresa Galloway}, pages = {19--36}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @article{ blutner_r:2000a, author = {Reinhard Blutner}, title = {Some Aspects of Optimality in Natural Language Interpretation}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2000}, volume = {17}, number = {3}, pages = {189--216}, abstract = {In a series of papers, Petra Hendriks, Helen de Hoop, and Henriette de Swart have applied optimality theory (OT) to semantics. These authors argue that there is a fundamental difference between the from of OT as used in syntax on the one hand and its from as used in semantics on the other hand. Whereas in the first case. OT takes the point of view of the speaker, in the second case the point of view of the hearer is taken. The aim of this paper is to argue that the proper treatment of OT in natural language interpretation has to take both perspectives at the same time. A conceptual framework is established that realizes the integration of both perspectives. It will be argued that this framework captures the essence of the Gricean maxims and gives a precise explication of Atlas & Levinson's (1981) idea of balancing between informativeness and efficiently in natural language processing. The ideas are then applied to resolve some puzzles in natural language interpretation. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se10}, topic = {implicature;optimality-theory;foundations-of-pragmatics;} } @article{ blutner_r:2002a, author = {Reinhard Blutner}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}earnability in Optimality Theory}, by {B}ruce {T}esar and {P}aul {S}molensky}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {65--70}, xref = {Review of: tesar-smolensky:2000a.}, topic = {grammar-learning;optimality-theory;} } @incollection{ blutner_r:2005a, author = {Reinhard Blutner}, title = {Pragmatics and the Lexicon}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {488--514}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {pragmatics;lexical-semantics;} } @article{ blythe_j:1999a, author = {Jim Blythe}, title = {Decision-Theoretic Planning}, journal = {{AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, numer = {2}, pages = {37--54}, topic = {decision-theoretic-planning;} } @incollection{ blythe_j:1999b, author = {Jim Blythe}, title = {An Overview of Planning under Uncertainty}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence Today}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Michael Wooldridge and Manuela Veloso}, pages = {85--110}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Blythe".}, topic = {decision-theoretic-planning;} } @inproceedings{ blythe_j:2002a, author = {Jim Blythe}, title = {Visual Exploration and Incremental Utility Elicitation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {526--532}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {preference-elicitation;} } @inproceedings{ blythe_j-etal:2011a, author = {James Blythe and Jerry Hobbs and Pedro Domingos and Rohit Kate and Raymond Mooney}, title = {Implementing Weighted Abduction in {M}arkov Logic}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Computational Semantics (IWCS 2011)}, year = {2011}, pages = {55--64}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja14}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, topic = {abduction;Markov-logic-networks;} } @article{ bo_m-kambhampati_s:2001a, author = {Minh Binh Bo and Subbaro Kambhampati}, title = {Planning as Constraint Satisfaction: Solving the Planning Graph by Compiling It into {CSP}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {132}, number = {2}, pages = {151--182}, topic = {planning;constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ board_o:2004a, author = {Oliver Board}, title = {Dynamic Interactive Epistemology}, journal = {Games and Economic Behavior}, year = {2004}, volume = {49}, number = {1}, pages = {49--80}, abstract = {while the properties of Aumann structures are well understood, without a formal language in which belief and belief revision statements can be expressed, it is unclear exactly what are the properties of these dynamic models. Here we investigate this question by defining such a language. A semantics and syntax are presented, with soundness and completeness theorems linking the two}, topic = {dynamic-logic;epistemic-logic;game-theory;} } @inproceedings{ board_oj:1998a, author = {Oliver J. Board}, title = {Belief Revision and Rationalizability}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Seventh Conference ({TARK} 1998)}, year = {1998}, editor = {Itzhak Gilboa}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco, California}, missinginfo = {pages pages = {201--}}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ board_oj-chung_ks:2011a, author = {Oliver J. Board and Kim-Sau Chung}, title = {Object-Based Unawareness: Theory and Applications}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2011}, volume = {179}, number = {1}, pages = {13--34}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se12\board.pdf}, topic = {awareness;bounded-agents;hyperintensionality;} } @book{ boasson:1966a, author = {Charles Boasson}, title = {The Use of Logic in Legal Reasoning}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1966}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {legal-reasoning;logic-and-law;} } @article{ bobenrieth:2010a, author = {Andr\'es M. Bobenrieth}, title = {The Origins of the Use of the Argument of Trivialization in the Twentieth Century}, journal = {History and Philosophy of Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {31}, number = {2}, pages = {111--121}, xref = {Review: Matthias Wille}, topic = {ex-falso-quodlibet;history-of-logic;} } @article{ bobrow_dg:1980a, author = {Daniel G. Bobrow}, title = {Editor's Preface}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1980}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {1--4}, note = {Preface to an issue on nonmonotonic logic}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ bobrow_dg:1984a, author = {Daniel G. Bobrow}, title = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems: An Introduction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, volume = {24}, number = {1--3}, pages = {1--5}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;} } @book{ bobrow_dg:1985a, editor = {Daniel G. Bobrow}, title = {Qualitative Reasoning About Physical Systems}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262521008 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, Q335.5 .Q351 1985.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;} } @article{ bobrow_dg:1993a, author = {Daniel G. Bobrow}, title = {Artificial Intelligence in Perspective: A Retrospective on Fifty Volumes of the {A}rtificial {I}ntelligence {J}ournal}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {5--20}, topic = {AI-general;history-of-AI;} } @article{ bobrow_dg:2005a, author = {Daniel G. Bobrow}, title = {{AAAI}: {I}t's Time for Large-Scale Systems}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2005}, volume = {26}, number = {4}, pages = {40--41}, topic = {AI-editorial;} } @article{ bobrow_dg-brady_jm:1998a, author = {Daniel Bobrow and J. Michael Brady}, title = {Editorial}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {100}, number = {1--3}, pages = {1--3}, topic = {AI-editorial;} } @article{ bobrow_dg-brady_jm:1998b, author = {Daniel J. Bobrow and J. Michael Brady}, title = {Aritificial Intelligence 40 Years After}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {103}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--4}, topic = {AI-survey;} } @book{ bobrow_dg-collins_a:1975a, editor = {Daniel G. Bobrow and Allan Collins}, title = {Representation and Understanding: Studies in Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1975}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0121085503}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, BF 311 .R43}, topic = {cognitive-science;} } @inproceedings{ bobrow_dg-etal:2005a, author = {Daniel G. Bobrow and Cleo Condoravdi and Richard Crouch and Ronald M. Kaplan and L. Karttunen and T. King and Valeria de Paiva and Annie Zaenen}, title = {A Basic Logic for Textual Inference}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {AAAI} Workshop on Inference for Textual Question Answering}, year = {2005}, editor = {Sanda M. Harabagiu}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Palo Alto, California}, url = {https://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~vdp/publications/til.pdf}, topic = {text-understanding;} } @article{ bobrow_dg-hayes_pj1:1985a, author = {Daniel G. Bobrow and Patrick J. Hayes}, title = {Artificial Intelligence---Where Are We?}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages = {375--415}, topic = {AI-survey;AI-editorial;} } @article{ bobrow_dg-winograd_t:1977a1, author = {Daniel G. Bobrow and Terry Winograd}, title = {An Overview of {KRL}, a Knowledge Representation Language}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1977}, volume = {1}, pages = {3--46}, xref = {Republished in Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque; Readings in Knowledge Representation. See bobrow_dg-winograd_t:1977a2.}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {kr;frames;kr-course;} } @incollection{ bobrow_dg-winograd_t:1977a2, author = {Daniel G. Bobrow and Terry Winograd}, title = {An Overview of {KRL}, a Knowledge Representation Language}, booktitle = {Readings in Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1995}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque}, address = {Los Altos, California}, pages = {263--286}, xref = {Originally published in Cognitive Science; 1; 1977. See bobrow_dg-winograd_t:1977a1.}, topic = {kr;frames;kr-course;} } @book{ bobzien_s:1998a, author = {Suzanne Bobzien}, title = {Determinism and Freedom in {S}toic Philosophy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: meyer_ss:2003a.}, topic = {volition;freedon;Stoic-philosophy;} } @incollection{ bobzien_s:2012a, author = {Susanne Bobzien}, title = {Dialectical School}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, note = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2011/entries/dialectical-school/}, year = {2011}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {ancient-philosophy;} } @article{ bobzien_s-rumfitt_i:2020a, author = {Susanne Bobzien and Ian Rumfitt}, title = {Intuitionism and the Modal Logic of Vagueness}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {2}, pages = {221--248}, abstract = {Intuitionistic logic provides an elegant solution to the Sorites Paradox. Its acceptance has been hampered by two factors. First, the lack of an accepted semantics for languages containing vague terms has led even philosophers sympathetic to intuitionism to complain that no explanation has been given of why intuitionistic logic is the correct logic for such languages. Second, switching from classical to intuitionistic logic, while it may help with the Sorites, does not appear to offer any advantages when dealing with the so-called paradoxes of higher-order vagueness. We offer a proposal that makes strides on both issues. ... }, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;vagueness;} } @article{ boccuni_f-panza_m:2022a, author = {Francesca Boccuni and Marco Panza}, title = {Frege's Theory of Real Numbers: A Consistent Rendering}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {624--667}, topic = {Frege;logicism;analysis;} } @incollection{ bochenski_im:1962a, author = {Innocentius M. Bochenski}, title = {The Problem of Universals}, booktitle = {Logico-Philosophical Studies}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1962}, editor = {Albert Menne}, pages = {118--136}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ bochenski_im-etal:1956b, author = {Innocentius M. Bochenski and Alonzo Church and Nelson Goodman}, title = {The Problem of Universals}, booktitle = {The Problem of Universals: A Symposium}, publisher = {Notre Dame University Press}, year = {1956}, editor = {Innocentius M. Bochenski}, pages = {35--54}, address = {Notre Dame, Indiana}, xref = {Reviews: hempel_cg:1957a, lazerowitz_m:1958a}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ bochman_a:1994a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {On the Relation Between Default and Modal Consequence Relations}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {63--74}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;default-logic;modal-logic;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ bochman_a:1995a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {On Bimodal Nonmonotonic Logics and Their Unimodal and Nonmodal Equivalents}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {1518--1524}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;autoepistemic-logic;negation-as-failure;} } @incollection{ bochman_a:1996a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {Biconsequence Relations for Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {482--492}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;4-valued-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;negation-as-failure; bilattices;kr-course;} } @article{ bochman_a:1998a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}f $P$ then $Q$}, by {D}avid {H}. {S}anford}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1998}, volume = {26}, number = {1--2}, pages = {237--250}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ bochman_a:1998b, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {On the Relation between Default and Modal Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {101}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--34}, topic = {default-logic;modal-logic;nonmonotonic-logic; autoepistemic-logic;} } @article{ bochman_a:1999a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {A Foundational Theory of Belief and Belief Change}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {108}, number = {1--2}, pages = {309--352}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ bochman_a:2000a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {A Foundationalist View of the {AGM} Theory of Belief Change}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {116}, number = {1--2}, pages = {237--263}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ bochman_a:2000b, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {Belief Contraction as Nonmonotonic Inference}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {65}, number = {2}, pages = {605--626}, topic = {belief-revision;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ bochman_a:2002a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {Entrenchment Versus Dependence: Coherence and Foundations in Belief Change}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2002}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {3--27}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @incollection{ bochman_a:2004a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {A Causal Logic of Logic Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {427--437}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {causality;action-formalisms;frame-problem; nonmonotonic-reasoning;logic-programming;causal-reasoning;} } @article{ bochman_a:2004b, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {A Causal Approach to Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {160}, number = {1--2}, pages = {105--143}, topic = {causality;action-formalisms;frame-problem; nonmonotonic-reasoning;logic-programming;causal-reasoning;} } @book{ bochman_a:2005a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {Explanatory Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, publisher = {World Scientific Publishing Company}, year = {2005}, address = {Singapore}, ISBN-13 = {978-9812561015}, abstract = {This book gives a logical formalization of the original, explanatory approach to nonmonotonic reasoning. It uses the basic formalism of biconsequence relations, as well as derived systems of default, autoepistemic and causal inference, to cover in a single framework such diverse systems as default logic, autoepistemic and modal nonmonotonic logics, input/output and causal logics, argumentation theory, and semantics of general logic programs with negation as failure.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ bochman_a:2007a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 8: The Many Valued and Nonmonotonic Turn in Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2007}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {557--632}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;nonmonotonic-reasoning-survey;} } @incollection{ bochman_a:2008a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {Default Theory of Defeasible Entailment}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {466--475}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {We suggest a new representation of defeasible entailment and specificity in the framework of default logic. The representation is based on augmenting the underlying classical language with the language of conditionals having its own (monotonic) internal logic. It is shown, in particular, that nonmonotonic inheritance reasoning can be naturally represented in this framework, and generalized to the full classical language. }, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;specificity;} } @inproceedings{ bochman_a:2014a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {Dynamic Causal Calculus}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {188--197}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We introduce dynamic causal calculus, a nonmonotonic formalism that can be viewed as a direct logical counterpart of the action description language C+ from (Giunchiglia et al. 2004). We formulate a nonmonotonic semantics of the associated causal language, and compare this semantics with the indirect, two-stage semantics for C+, given in (Giunchiglia et al. 2004). It will be shown, in particular, that the suggested semantics allows us to alleviate syntactic distinctions between propositional atoms, maintained by C+, as well as type restrictions imposed on its causal laws. We will describe also a logical formalism of dynamic causal inference that constitutes a complete description of the logic that is adequate for this dynamic calculus. }, topic = {kr;action-formalisms;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ bochman_a:2016a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {On Logics and Semantics of Indeterminate Causation}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {401--410}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We will explore the use of disjunctive causal rules for representing indeterminate causation. We provide first a logical formalization of such rules in the form of a disjunctive inference relation, and describe its logical semantics. Then we consider a nonmonotonic semantics for such rules, described in (Turner 1999). It will be shown, however, that, under this semantics, disjunctive causal rules admit a stronger logic in which these rules are reducible to ordinary, singular causal rules. This semantics also tends to give an exclusive interpretation of disjunctive causal effects, and so excludes some reasonable models in particular cases. To overcome these shortcomings, we will introduce an alternative nonmonotonic semantics for disjunctive causal rules, called a covering semantics, that permits an inclusive interpretation of indeterminate causal information. Still, it will be shown that even in this case there exists a systematic procedure, that we will call a normalization, that allows us to capture precisely the covering semantics using only singular causal rules. This normalization procedure can be viewed as a kind of nonmonotonic completion, and it generalizes established ways of representing indeterminate effects in current theories of action. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;causal-reasoning;nonmonotonic-logic;action-formalisms;causality;} } @incollection{ bochman_a:2018a, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {Introduction to Formal Philosophy}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2018}, editor = {Sven Ove Hansson and Vincent F. Hendricks}, pages = {93--104}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ bochman_a:2018b, author = {Alexander Bochman}, title = {On Laws and Counterfactuals in Causal Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {494--503}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We explore the relationships between causal rules and counterfactuals, as well as their relative representation capabilities, in the logical framework of the causal calculus. It will be shown that, though counterfactuals are readily definable on the basis of causal rules, the reverse reduction is achievable only up to a certain logical threshold (basic equivalence). As a result, we will argue that counterfactuals cannot distinguish causal theories that justify different claims of actual causation, which could be seen as the main source of the problem of 'structural equivalents' in counterfactual approaches to causation. ... }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {conditionals;causaluty;causal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ bochman_gv-gecsei:1977a, author = {G.V. Bochman and J. Gecsei}, title = {A Unified Method for the Specification and Verification of Protocols}, booktitle = {Information Processing 77}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1977}, editor = {B. Gilchrist}, pages = {229--234}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {distributed-systems;communication-protocols;} } @article{ bochnak_nr:2016a, author = {M. Ryan Bochnak}, title = {Past Time Reference in a Language with Optional Tense}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2016}, volume = {39}, number = {4}, pages = {247--294}, abstract = {In this paper, I analyze the verbal suffix '-unil' in {W}asho as an optional past tense. $\ldots$}, topic = {nl-tense;native-languages-of-North-America;} } @article{ bochner_g:2014a, author = {Gregory Bochner}, title = {The Anti-Individualist Revolution in the Philosophy of Language}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2014}, volume = {37}, number = {2}, pages = {91--120}, abstract = {The canonical arguments against the description theory of names are usually taken to have established that the reference of a name as used on a given occasion is not semantically determined by the qualitative descriptions that the speaker may have in mind. The deepest moral of these arguments, on the received view, would be that the speaker's narrow mental states play no semantic role in fixing reference. My central aim in this paper is to challenge this common understanding by highlighting that the same argumentative schemas can be adapted to undermine a related non-description theory, according to which the reference of a name as used on a given occasion would semantically depend on broad mental states of the speaker. $\ldots$}, topic = {proper-names;definite-descriptions;reference-fixing;} } @incollection{ bochvar:1994a, author = {D.A. Bochvar}, title = {Some Aspects of the Investigation of Reification Paradoxes}, booktitle = {Intensional Logic: Theory and Applications}, publisher = {The Philosophical Society of Finland}, year = {1994}, editor = {Ilkka Niiniluoto and Esa Saarinen}, pages = {229--238}, address = {Helsinki}, topic = {multivalued-logic;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ bock_c-lengauer_t:2008a, author = {Christoph Bock and Thomas Lengauer}, title = {Computational Epigenetics}, journal = {Bioinformatics}, year = {2008}, volume = {24}, number = {1}, pages = {1--10}, abstract = {Epigenetic research aims to understand heritable gene regulation that is not directly encoded in the DNA sequence. ... Here, we review pioneering computational studies that have contributed to epigenetic research. In addition, we give a brief introduction into epigenetics - targeted at bioinformaticians who are new to the field - and we outline future challenges in computational epigenetics.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe22}, topic = {computational-genetics;epigenetics;} } @book{ bod:1998a, author = {Rens Bod}, title = {Beyond Grammar: An Experience-Based Theory of Language}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1998}, address = {Stanford University}, xref = {review:collins_m:1999a.}, topic = {statistical-parsing;TAG-grammar;nlp-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ bod:1998b, author = {Rens Bod}, title = {Spoken Dialogue Interpretation with the {DOP} Model}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {138--144}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {discourse-interpretation;} } @book{ bod:1999a, author = {Rens Bod}, title = {Beyond Grammar---An Experience-Based Theory of Language}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {Paperback ISBN 1-57586-150-x $19.95 Hardcover ISBN 1-57586-151-8 $59.95}, topic = {foundations-of-grammar;corpus-linguistics;} } @book{ bod-etal:2003a, editor = {Rens Bod and Remko Scha and Khalil Sima'an}, title = {Data-Oriented Parsing}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2003}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-57586-435-5}, xref = {Review: klein_d1:2004a, schmid_h:2005a.}, topic = {statistical-parsing;} } @inproceedings{ bod-kaplan_rm:1998a, author = {Rens Bod and Ronald M. Kaplan}, title = {A Probabilistic Corpus-Driven Model for Lexical-Functional Analysis}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, missinginfo = {pages = {145--}}, topic = {LFG;data-oriented-parsing;statistical-parsing;} } @article{ bodanza-tohme:2005a, author = {Gustavo A. Bodanza and Fernando A. Tohm\'e}, title = {Local Logics, Non-Monotonicity and Defeasible Argumentation}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2005}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {1--12}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;situation-theory;} } @techreport{ boddy:1989a, author = {Mark Boddy and Thomas Dean}, title = {Solving Time-Dependent Planning Problems}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, Brown University}, number = {CS--89--03}, year = {1989}, address = {Providence, Rhode Island}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {planning;temporal-reasoning}, topic = {planning;temporal-reasoning;} } @article{ boddy-dean_t:1994a, author = {Mark Boddy and Thomas L. Dean}, title = {Deliberation Scheduling for Problem Solving in Time-Constrained Environments}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {67}, number = {2}, pages = {245--285}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We are interested in the problem faced by an agent with limited computational capabilities, embedded in a complex environment with other agents and processes not under its control. Careful management of computational resources is important for complex problem-solving tasks in which the time spent in decision making affects the quality of the responses generated by a system. This paper describes an approach to designing systems that are capable of taking their own computational resources into consideration during planning and problem solving. In particular, we address the design of systems that manage their computational resources by using expectations about the performance of decision-making procedures and preferences over the outcomes resulting from applying those procedures. Our approach is called deliberation scheduling. Deliberation scheduling involves the explicit allocation of computational resources to decision-making procedures based on the expected effect of those allocations on the system's performance.}, topic = {limited-rationality;pr-course;} } @techreport{ boddy_m-etal:1989a, author = {Mark Boddy and Robert P. Goldman and Keiji Kanazawa and Lynn Andrea Stein}, title = {Investigations of Model-Preference Defaults}, institution = {Computer Science Department, Brown University}, number = {CS-89-13}, year = {1989}, address = {Providence, Rhode Island}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de22}, abstract = {In this paper, we explore the expressive and computational properties of the logic of model-preference defaults (MPD). ... We compare MPD with the approaches to nonmonotonic reasoning represented by default logic and circumscription. Finally, we discuss MPD's suitability for various applications of nonmonotonic reasoning, including inheritance, temporal reasoning, and knowledge representation. In doing so, we show that MPD provides tractable solutions to the problems of temporal projection and mixing strict and defeasible inheritance.}, topic = {model-preference;nonmonotonic-logic;inheritance-theory;default-logic;} } @phdthesis{ bode_jr:1973a, author = {James R. Bode}, title = {A Logic for Conditional Statements}, school = {The Ohio State University}, year = {1973}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Columbus, Ohio}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ bode_m-etal:2001a, author = {M. Bode and O. Freyd and J. Fischer and F.-J. Niedernostheide and H.-J. Schulze}, title = {Hybrid Hardware for a Highly Parallel Search in the Context of Learning Classifiers}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {130}, number = {1}, pages = {75--84}, topic = {machine-learning;parallel-processing;search;} } @book{ boden_ma:1977a1, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Natural Man}, publisher = {Harvester Press}, year = {1977}, address = {Brighton}, missinginfo = {Check topic.}, rtnote = {UMich Media Library, tQ335 .B561.}, xref = {Second edition is: boden_ma:1977a2.}, topic = {philosophy-of-AI;} } @book{ boden_ma:1977a2, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Natural Man}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Basic Books}, year = {1987}, address = {New York}, missinginfo = {Check topic.}, rtnote = {UMich Media Library, Q335 .B561 1987.}, xref = {First edition is: boden_ma:1977a1.}, topic = {philosophy-of-AI;} } @book{ boden_ma:1981a, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Minds and Mechanisms: Philosophical Psychology and Computational Models}, publisher = {Harvester Press}, year = {1981}, address = {Brighton}, ISBN = {0710800053}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, X2 H 5062.}, topic = {philosophical-psychology;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ boden_ma:1984a, author = {Margaret Boden}, title = {Methodological Links between {AI} and Other Disciplines}, booktitle = {The Mind and the Machine: Philosophical Aspects of Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood, Ltd.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Steve B. Torrance}, pages = {125--132}, address = {Chichester}, xref = {Original pulication in machlup-mansfield:1984a.}, topic = {philosophy-and-AI;} } @book{ boden_ma:1988a, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Computer Models of Mind: Computational Approaches In Theoretical Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1988}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052124868X}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Bf39.5 .B631 1988.}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;} } @book{ boden_ma:1989a, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Artificial Intelligence in Psychology: Interdisciplinary Essays}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0465014526}, rtnote = {UMich Buhr BF39.5 .B631}, topic = {AI-and-psychology;AI-general;cognitive-psychology;} } @book{ boden_ma:1990a, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {The Creative Mind: Myths and Mechanisms}, publisher = {Basic Books}, year = {1990}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0465014526}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Bf 408 .B551 1990.}, xref = {Reviews: haase:1995a,lustig:1995a,perkins:1995a, ram-etal:1995a,schank_rc-foster_da:1995a,turner_sr:1995a, shanker:1993a}, topic = {creativity;} } @book{ boden_ma:1990b, editor = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {The Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198248555}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF 311 .P56 1990.}, xref = {Review: maloney_jc:1995a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. MM Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-AI;} } @incollection{ boden_ma:1993a, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {The Impact of Philosophy}, booktitle = {The Simulation of Human Intelligence}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {Donald Broadbent}, pages = {178--197}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @book{ boden_ma:1994a, editor = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Dimensions of Creativity}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262023687}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Bf 408 .D561 1994.}, xref = {Review: gall:1996a,.}, topic = {creativity;} } @article{ boden_ma:1994b, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {New Breakthroughs or Dead-Ends?}, journal = {Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Series A: Physical Sciences and Engineering}, year = {1994}, volume = {349}, number = {1689}, pages = {1--13}, note = {Available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/09628428.html}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Zip Drive.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;cognitive-architectures;} } @article{ boden_ma:1995a, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {{AI}'s Half-Century}, journal = {{AI} Magazine}, year = {1995}, volume = {16}, number = {4}, pages = {96--99}, topic = {AI-survey;philosophy-of-AI;} } @incollection{ boden_ma:1995b, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Could a Robot Be Creative---And Would We Know}, booktitle = {Android Epistemology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Kenneth M. Ford and Clark Glymour and Patrick J. Hayes}, pages = {51--72}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {philosophy-AI;creativity;} } @book{ boden_ma:1996a, editor = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {The Philosophy of Artificial Life}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198751559 (alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Bd 418.8 .P65 1996.}, isbn = {0-19-875154-0, 0-19-875155-9}, xref = {Review: ruse:1999a}, topic = {artificial-life;} } @article{ boden_ma:1998a, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Creativity and Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {103}, number = {1--2}, pages = {347--356}, topic = {creativity;scientific-discovery;} } @book{ boden_ma:2006a, author = {Margaret Boden}, title = {Mind as Machine: A History of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN13 = {9780199241446}, note = {Two volumes}, xref = {Reviews: chomsky_n:2006a, feldman:2007a, thagard_p:2007a}, topic = {cognitive-science;} } @incollection{ boden_ma:2008a, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Evaluation of Computational Modeling in Cognitive Science}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Computational Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ron Sun}, pages = {667--683}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-modeling;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ boden_ma:2008b, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Odd Man Out: Reply to Reviewers}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {18}, pages = {1944--1964}, xref = {Reply to: chomsky_n:2006a, feldman:2007a, thagard_p:2007a}, xref = {Reply to review of: boden_ma:2006a.}, topic = {cognitive-science;} } @incollection{ boden_ma:2008c, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {D'Arcy Thompson: A Grandfather of {A}-Life}, booktitle = {The Mechanical Mind in History}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Phil Husbands and Owen Holland and Michael Wheeler}, pages = {41--60}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @article{ boden_ma:2009a, author = {Margaret A. Boden}, title = {Computer Models of Creativity}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2009}, volume = {30}, number = {3}, pages = {23--34}, topic = {computational-creativity;} } @book{ boden_ma-etal:1994b, editor = {Margaret A. Boden and Alan Bundy and Roger M. Needham}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and the Mind: New Breakthroughs or Deadends?}, publisher = {Royal Society of London}, year = {1994}, address = {London}, note = {Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Series A: Physical Sciences and Engineering, Vol. 349, No. 1689. Available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/09628428.html.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Margaret A. Boden, "New Breakthroughs or Dead-Ends?", pp. 1--13 2. Michael Brady and Huosheng Hu, "The Mind of a Robot", pp. 15--28 3. Bonnie Webber and M. Brady, "The Mind of Robot: Discussion", p. 28 4. J.C.T. Hallam and C.A. Malcolm, "Behaviour: Perception, Action and Intelligence---The View from Situated Robotics", pp. 29--42 5. D. Partridge and J. C. T. Hallam and M. Brady and R. Hudson, "Behaviour: Perception, Action and Intelligence---The View from Situated Robotics: Discussion", p. 42 6. Aaron Sloman, "Semantics in an Intelligent Control System", pp. 43--57 7. A. Prescott and A. Sloman and N. Shadbolt and M. Steedman, "Semantics in an Intelligent Control System: Discussion", pp. 57--58 8. Fred I. Dretske, "The Explanatory Role of Information", pp. 59--69 9. Alan Bundy, "A Subsumption Architecture for Theorem Proving?", pp. 71--84 10. D. Dennett, A. Bundy, M. Sharples, M. Brady, D. Partridge, "A Subsumption Architecture for Theorem Proving?: Discussion", pp. 84--85 11. David Willshaw, "Non-Symbolic Approaches to Artificial Intelligence and the Mind", pp. 87--101 12. D. Dennett, D. Willshaw, D. Partridge, "Non-Symbolic Approaches to Artificial Intelligence and the Mind: Discussion", pp. 101--102 13. H. Christopher Longuet-Higgins, "Artificial Intelligence and Musical Cognition", pp. 103--112 14. B. Webber, C. Longuet-Higgins, W. Cameron, A. Bundy, R. Hudson, L. Hudson, J. Ziman, A. Sloman, M. Sharples, D. Dennett, "Artificial Intelligence and Musical Cognition: Discussion", pp. 112--113 15. Mark Steedman, "The Well-Tempered Computer", pp. 115--130 16. T. N. Rutherford, M. Steedman, T. Addis, R. Cahn, B. Larvor, E. Clarke, "The Well-Tempered Computer: Discussion", pp. 130--131 17. Daniel C. Dennett, "The Practical Requirements for Making a Conscious Robot", pp. 133--146 18. F. Dretske, D. C. Dennett, S. Shurville, A. Clark, I. Aleksander, J. Cornwell, "The Practical Requirements for Making a Conscious Robot: Discussion", p. 146 19. J. R. Lucas, "A View of One's Own", pp. 147--152 20. M. Elton, J. R. Lucas, A. Sloman, "A View of One's Own: Discussion", p. 152 21. Bruce G. Buchanan, "The Role of Experimentation in Artificial Intelligence", pp. 153--165 22. H. Hendriks-Jansen, B. G. Buchanan. I, T. Addis, "The Role of Experimentation in Artificial Intelligence: Discussion", pp. 165--166 }, topic = {philosophy-AI;AI-and-music;} } @incollection{ bodington-elleby:1988a, author = {Rob Bodington and Peter Elleby}, title = {Justification and Assumption-Based Truth Maintenance Systems: When and How to Use Them for Constraint Satisfaction}, booktitle = {Reason Maintenance Systems and Their Applications}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood, Ltd.}, year = {1988}, editor = {Barbara Smith and Gerald Kelleher}, pages = {114--133}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {truth-maintenance;constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ bodirsky-kutz_m:2006a, author = {Manuel Bodirsky and Martin Kutz}, title = {Determining the Consistency of Partial Tree Descriptions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {2--3}, pages = {185--196}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;graph-based-reasoning;} } @mastersthesis{ bodkin:1992a, author = {Ronald J. Bodkin}, title = {Extending Computational Game Theory: Simultaneity, Multiple Agents, Chance and Metareasoning}, school = {Massachusetts Institute of Technology}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {concurrence;game-theory;metareasoning;} } @incollection{ bodnar:2014a, author = {Istvan Bodnar}, title = {Aristotle's Natural Philosophy}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2014/entries/aristotle-natphil/}, year = {2014}, topic = {Aristotle;ancient-physics;ancient-science}, } @book{ bodnar-etal:1988a, editor = {Istv\'an Bodn\'ar and Andr\'as M\'at\'e and L\'aszl\'o P\'olos}, title = {Intentional Logic, History of Philosophy and Methodology}, publisher = {K\'ezirat Gyan\'ant}, year = {1988}, address = {Budapest}, ISBN = {963462255 0}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {modal-logic;history-of-philosophy;} } @article{ boehner:1946a, author = {Philotheus Boehner}, title = {Ockham's Theory of Supposition and the Notion of Truth}, journal = {Franciscan Studies}, year = {196}, volume = {6}, pages = {261--292}, topic = {medieval-logic;} } @incollection{ boella_g-etal:2000a, author = {Guido Boella and Rossana Damiano and Leonardo Lesmo}, title = {Social Goals in Conversational Cooperation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First {SIGdial} Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Laila Dybkjaer and Koiti Hasida and David R. Traum}, pages = {84--93}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;cooperation;} } @inproceedings{ boella_g-etal:2005a, author = {Guido Boella and Joris Hulstijn and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {A Logic of Abstract Argumentation}, booktitle = {Argumentation in Multi-Agent Systems: Second International Workshop, Arg{MAS}}, year = {2005}, editor = {Simon Parsons and Nicolas Maudet and Pavlos Moraitis and Iyad Rahwan}, pages = {29--41}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {... we introduce a logic of abstract argumentation capturing Dung's theory of abstract argumentation, based on connectives for attack and defend. We extend it to a modal logic of abstract argumentation to generalize Dung's theory and define variants of it. Moreover, we use the logic to relate Dung's theory of abstract argumentation to more traditional conditional and comparative formalisms, and we illustrate how to reason about arguments in meta-argumentation.}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;modal-logic;} } @article{ boella_g-etal:2008a, author = {Guido Boella and Leendert van der Torre and Harko Verhagen}, title = {Introduction to the Special Issue on Normative Multiagent Systems}, journal = {Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems}, year = {2008}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {1--10}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr17}, topic = {multiagent-systems;deontic-logic;} } @article{ boella_g-etal:2009a, author = {Guido Boella and Dov M. Gabbay and Leendert van der Torre and Serena Villata}, title = {Meta-Argumentation Modelling {I}: Methodology and Techniques}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2009}, volume = {93}, number = {2--3}, pages = {297--355}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ boella_g-etal:2010a, author = {Guido Boella and Guido Governatori and Antonino Rotolo and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {A Logical Understanding of Legal Interpretation}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {563--565}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {If compliance with a norm does not achieve its purpose, then its applicability must dynamically be restricted or expanded. Legal interpretation is a mechanism from law allowing norms to be adapted to unforeseen situations. We model this mechanism for norms regulating computer systems by representing the purpose of norms by social goals and by revising the constitutive rules defining the applicability of norms. We illustrate the interpretation mechanism ...}, topic = {reasoning-about-obligation;legal-reaasoning;} } @inproceedings{ boella_g-lesmo:2001a, author = {Guido Boella and Leonardo Lesmo}, title = {An Approach to Anaphora Based on Mental Models}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {413--416}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;anaphora;mental-models;} } @article{ boella_g-pigozzi_g:2016a, author = {Guido Boella and Gabriella Pigozzi}, title = {{AGM} Contraction and Revision of Rules}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2016}, volume = {25}, number = {3--4}, pages = {273--297}, topic = {belief-revision;input-output-logics;} } @incollection{ boella_g-vandertorre_l:2004a, author = {Guido Boella and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Regulative and Constitutive Norms in Normative Multiagent Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {255--265}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, topic = {multiagent-systems;deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ boella_g-vandertorre_l:2004b, author = {Guido Boella and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {$\Delta$: The Social Delegation Cycle}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic in Computer Science}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2004}, editor = {Alessio Lomuscio and Donald Nute}, pages = {29--42}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. In \fe19\Lomuscio.pdf}, abstract = {In this paper we consider the relation between desires and obligations in normative multiagent systems. We introduce a model of their relation based on what we call the social delegation cycle, which explains the creation of norms from agent desires in three steps. ... We formalize the social delegation cycle by formalizing goal generation as a merging process of the individual agent desires, we formalize norm creation as a planning process for both the obligation and the associated sanctions or rewards, and we formalize the acceptance relation as both a belief of agents that the fulfilment of the norm leads to achievement of their desires, and the belief that other agents will act according to the norm.}, topic = {deontic-logic;desire;agent-architectures;} } @article{ boer_s:1979a, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er}, title = {Meaning and Contrastive Stress}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1979}, volume = {88}, number = {2}, pages = {263--298}, topic = {contrastive-stress;} } @article{ boer_se:1972a, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er}, title = {On {S}earle's Analysis of Reference}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1972}, volume = {32}, number = {5}, pages = {154--159}, topic = {reference;} } @article{ boer_se:1978b, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er}, title = {\,`Who' and `Whether': Towards a Theory of Indirect Question Clauses}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1978}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {307--345}, topic = {nl-semnatics;interrogatives;} } @article{ boer_se:1980a, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er}, title = {Review of \emph{{W}ays of Meaning}, by {M}ark {P}latts}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {141--156}, xref = {Review of platts:1979a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ boer_se:1989a, author = {Steven E. Boer}, title = {Neo-{F}regean Thoughts}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 3: Philosophy of Mind and Action Theory}, publisher = {Ridgeview Publishing Company}, year = {1989}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {187--224}, address = {Atasacadero, California}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;individual-attitudes;} } @article{ boer_se:1994a, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}alk about Beliefs}, by {M}ark {C}rimmins}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1994}, volume = {103}, number = {2}, pages = {362--364}, xref = {Review of crimmins_m:1992a.}, topic = {belief;} } @article{ boer_se:2003a, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er}, title = {Thought-Contents and the Formal Ontology of Sense}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2003}, volume = {32}, number = {1}, pages = {43--114}, topic = {belief;intensionality;} } @article{ boer_se:2009a, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er}, title = {Propositions and the Substitution Anomaly}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {38}, number = {5}, pages = {549--586}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;propositions;syntactic-attitudes; referential-opacity;} } @article{ boer_se-edelstein:1979a, author = {Steven E. Boer and Roy Edelstein}, title = {Some Numerical Constructions in {E}nglish}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1979}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {261--288}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;plural;} } @article{ boer_se-lycan_wg:1973a, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er and William G. Lycan}, title = {Invited Inferences and Other Unwelcome Guests}, journal = {Papers in Linguistics}, year = {1973}, volume = {6}, pages = {453--506}, topic = {implicature;speaker-meaning;} } @book{ boer_se-lycan_wg:1978a, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er and William G. Lycan}, title = {The Myth of Semantic Presupposition}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1978}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 46405}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @article{ boer_se-lycan_wg:1980a, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er and William G. Lycan}, title = {A Performadox in Truth-Conditional Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {71--100}, topic = {performative-analysis;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @article{ boer_se-lycan_wg:1980b, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er and William G. Lycan}, title = {Who Me?}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1980}, volume = {89}, number = {3}, pages = {427--466}, topic = {first-person;} } @book{ boer_se-lycan_wg:1986a, author = {Steven E. Bo\"er and William G. Lycan}, title = {Knowing Who}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1986}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: sterelny:1984a.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {knowing-who;} } @article{ boettcher-percus_o:2000a, author = {Stefan Boettcher and Allon Percus}, title = {Nature's Way of Optimizing}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {119}, number = {1--2}, pages = {275--286}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We propose a general-purpose method for finding high-quality solutions to hard optimization problems, inspired by self-organizing processes often found in nature. The method, called Extremal Optimization, successively eliminates extremely undesirable components of sub-optimal solutions. Drawing upon models used to simulate far-from-equilibrium dynamics, it complements approximation methods inspired by equilibrium statistical physics, such as Simulated Annealing. With only one adjustable parameter, its performance proves competitive with, and often superior to, more elaborate stochastic optimization procedures. We demonstrate it here on two classic hard optimization problems: graph partitioning and the traveling salesman problem. }, topic = {optimization;search;AI-algorithms;simulated-annealing;} } @inproceedings{ bogaerts_b-etal:2016a, author = {Bart Bogaerts and Tomi Janhunen and Shahab Tasharrofi}, title = {Declarative Solver Development: Case Studies}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {74--83}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... In this paper, we introduce a new framework that enables us to declaratively specify a given semantics in second-order logic and to automatically generate a solver from that specification. ... Technically, our framework builds on a recent approach for nesting SAT solvers based on lazy clause generation. We evaluate our framework in the context of Dung's argumentation frameworks, logic programming, and propositional logic subject to standard and non-standard semantics. We show for each of those formalisms that one can easily specify its semantics using a few second-order sentences and that one can effectively obtain a solver for that semantics using our automated solver generation procedure. For instance, in the case of argumentation frameworks, we obtain 16 different solvers, each solving one of four inference tasks for one of four major argumentation semantics and show that our solvers (slightly) outperform the best solver from the last system competition despite not being tuned forargumentation instances. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;higher-order-logic;model-checking;software-engineering;} } @article{ bogardus_t:2016a, author = {Tomas Bogardus}, title = {Only All Naturalists Should Worry About Only One Evolutionary Debunking Argument}, journal = {Ethics}, year = {2016}, volume = {126}, number = {2}, pages = {636--661}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc16}, abstract = {Evolutionary debunking arguments abound, but they're all murky where it counts most: exactly which epistemic principle combines with the facts of evolution to undermine moral realism? I'll identify some possible principles but show that most are false, spoiling the arguments built upon them. And every argument threatens only "representationalist" views of moral psychology, on which moral judgments rely on mental intermediaries, for example, sentiments. Only one argument remains a menace: a new "Argument from Symmetry." But it should worry only all naturalists, pressing a trilemma: abandon moral realism, accept a rationalism incongruous with naturalism, or reject naturalism. Nonnaturalists are free and clear.}, topic = {naturalism;} } @book{ bogart:2000a, author = {Kenneth P. Bogart}, title = {Introductory Combinatorics}, edition = {3}, publisher = {Harcourt Science and Technology}, year = {2000}, address = {San Diego}, ISBN = {0121108309}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Mathematics shelves.}, topic = {combinatorics;} } @book{ bogdan_rj:1997a, author = {Radu J. Bogdan}, title = {Interpreting Minds}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, contentnote = {Evolutionary theory of other-modeling.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ bogdan_rj-niiniluoto_i:1973a, editor = {Radu J. Bogdan and Ilkka Niiniluoto}, title = {Logic, Language and Probability: A Selection of Papers Contributed to Sections {IV}, {VI}, and {XI} of the Fourth International Congress for Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science, {B}ucharest, {S}eptember 1971}, publisher = {D. Reidel}, year = {1973}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {978-94-010-2570-6}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Alan Ross Anderson, "An Intensional Interpretation of Truth-Values", pp. 3--28 2. Aldo Bressan, "Intensional Descriptions and Relative Completeness in the General Interpreted Modal Calculus MCv", pp. 29--40 3. Dragan Stoianovici, "Singular Terms and Statements of Identity", pp. 41--48 4. Roman Suszko, "Adequate Models for the Non-Fregean Sentential Calculus (Sci)", pp. 49--54 5. William J. Thomas, "Doubts about Some Standard Arguments for {C}hurch's Thesis", pp. 55--62 6. Mariana Beli\c{s}, "On the Causal Structure of Random Processes", pp. 65--77 7. L. Jonathan Cohen, "The Paradox of Anomaly", pp. 78--82 8. N.K. Kossovsky, "Some Problems in the Constructive Probability Theory", pp. 83--99 9. Keith Lehrer, "Evidence and Conceptual Change", pp. 100--107 10. Ilkka Niiniluoto, "Empirically Trivial Theories and Inductive Systematization", pp. 108--114 11. Tom Settle, "Are some Propensities Probabilities?", pp. 115--120 12. Klemens Szaniawski, "Questions and Their Pragmatic Value", pp. 121--123 13. Giuseppe Trautteur, "Prediction, Complexity, and Randomness", pp. 124--128 14. John M. Vickers, "Rules for Reasonable Belief Change", pp. 129--142 15. Teun A. van Dijk, "Models for Text Grammars", pp. 145--180 16. Walther L. Fischer, "Tolerance Spaces and Linguistics", pp. 181--188 } , topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @article{ boghossian_p:2016a, author = {Paul Boghossian}, title = {Rationality, Reasoning and Rules: Reflections on {B}roome's Rationality through Reasoning}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2016}, volume = {173}, number = {12}, pages = {3385--3397}, xref = {Commentary on: broome_j:2013a}, topic = {'ought';reasons-for-action;reasoning-about-obligation;practical-reasoning; rationality;} } @article{ boghossian_pa:1989a, author = {Paul A. Boghossian}, title = {Content and Self-Knowledge}, journal = {Philosophical Topics}, year = {1989}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {5--26}, topic = {content-externalism;self-knowledge;} } @incollection{ boghossian_pa:1994a, author = {Paul A. Boghossian}, title = {The Transparency of Mental Content}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 8: Logic and Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {33--50}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {internalism/externalism;twin-earth;} } @incollection{ boghossian_pa:2003a, author = {Paul A. Boghossian}, title = {The Normativity of Content}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {31--45}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {normativity;foundations-of-semantics;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ boghossian_pa:2010a, author = {Paul A. Boghossian}, title = {Review of \emph{{W}hen Truth Gives Out}, by {M}ark {R}ichard}, journal = {Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews}, year = {2010}, url = {https://ndpr.nd.edu/news/24355-when-truth-gives-out/}, xref = {Review of: richard_m:2008a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;emotivism;predicates-of-taste;} } @incollection{ boghossian_pa:2011a, author = {Paul A. Boghossian}, title = {Three Kinds of Relativism}, booktitle = {A Companion to Relativism}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, year = {2011}, editor = {Steven D. Hales}, pages = {53--69}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {relativism;} } @article{ boghossian_pa:2012a, author = {Paul A. Boghossian}, title = {What is Inference?}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2012}, volume = {1}, number = {169}, pages = {1--18}, topic = {inference;philosophy-of-logic;} } @incollection{ boghossian_pa:2012b, author = {Paul Boghossian}, title = {Blind Rule-Following}, booktitle = {Mind, Meaning, and Knowledge: Themes from the Philosophy of {C}rispin {W}right}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Annalisa Coliva}, pages = {27--48}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {...a new problem about rule-following is outlined ... The upshot might be called, following Kant, an antinomy of pure reason: we both mustand cannot make sense of someone's following a rule. The chapter explores various ways out of this antinomy without here endorsing any of them.}, topic = {rule-following;} } @incollection{ boghossian_pa:2017a, author = {Paul Artin Boghossian}, title = {Analyticity}, booktitle = {A Companion to the Philosophy of Language, Second Edition}, publisher = {John Wiley \&\ Sons}, volume = {2}, year = {2017}, editor = {Bob Hale and Crispin Wright and Alexander Miller}, pages = {578--618}, address = {New York}, abstract = {This chapter aims to provide materials with which to substantiate the claim that, under the appropriate circumstances, the notion of analyticity can help explain how one might have a priori knowledge even in the strong sense. It argues that Implicit Definition, properly understood, is completely independent of any form of irrealism about logic. The chapter defends the thesis of Implicit Definition against Quine's criticisms, and examines the sort of account of the apriority of logic that this doctrine is able to provide. The chapter shows that, against the background of a rejection of indeterminacy, its insolubility cannot be conceded. It also argues that neither a non-factualism about Frege-analyticity, nor an error thesis about it, can plausibly fall short of an outright rejection of meaning itself. The chapter shows how the doctrine that appears to offer the most promising account of how we grasp the meanings of the logical constants. }, topic = {analyticity;} } @book{ boguraev:1989a, author = {Branimir Boguraev and Ted Briscoe}, title = {Computational Lexicography for Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1989}, address = {London}, topic = {computational-lexical-semantics;machine-translation; computational-lexicography;} } @incollection{ boguraev:1993a, author = {Branamir Boguraev}, title = {The Contribution of Computational Lexicography}, booktitle = {Challenges in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Madeleine Bates and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {99--132}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-lexical-semantics;computational-lexicography; transitivity-alternations;} } @incollection{ boguraev:1994a, author = {Branamir Boguraev}, title = {Machine-Readable Dictionaries and Computational Linguistics Research}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Computational Linguistics: Essays in Honour of {D}on {W}alker}, publisher = {Giardini Editori e Stampatori and Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {Antonio Zampolli and Nicoletta Calzolari and Martha Palmer}, pages = {119--154}, address = {Pisa and Dordrecht}, topic = {computational-lexicography;machine-readable-dictionaries;} } @inproceedings{ boguraev-pustejovsky_j:1990a, author = {Branamir Boguraev and James Pustejovsky}, title = {Lexical Ambiguity and the Role of Knowledge Representation in Lexicon Design}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1990}, pages = {36--42}, missinginfo = {editor, organization, publisher, address}, topic = {computational-lexical-semantics;computational-lexicography;} } @article{ bohanan:1966a1, author = {Laura Bohanan}, title = {Shakespeare in the Bush}, journal = {Natural History Magazine}, year = {1966}, month = {August/September}, missinginfo = {volume, number, pages}, xref = {Republication: bohanan:1966a2.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. This is an interesting case history in the cultural determination of interpretation.}, topic = {cultural-anthropology;literary-interpretation;} } @incollection{ bohanan:1966a2, author = {Laura Bohanan}, title = {Shakespeare in the Bush}, booktitle = {Anthropology: Contemporary Perspectives}, publisher = {Little, Brown and Company}, year = {1987}, editor = {Phillip Whitten and David {E.K. Hunter}}, chapter = {22}, pages = {149--153}, address = {Boston}, xref = {Original publication: bohanan:1966a1.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. This is an interesting case history in the cultural determination of interpretation.}, topic = {cultural-anthropology;literary-interpretation;} } @inproceedings{ bohlin-etal:1999a, author = {Peter Bohlin and Robin Cooper and Elizabet Engdahl and Staffan Larsson}, title = {Information States and Dialogue Move Engines}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Knowledge and Reasoning in Practical Dialogue Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jan Alexandersson}, pages = {25--31}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;information-state;} } @unpublished{ bohlin-larsson_s:1999a, author = {Peter Bohlin and Staffan Larsson}, title = {Go{D}is and the Dialogue Move Engine Toolkit}, year = {1999}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, G\"oteborg University}, url = {http://www.ling.gu.se/~sl/acl99.ps}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under "Larsson".}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @book{ bohm:1957a, author = {David Bohm}, title = {Causality and Chance in Modern Physics}, publisher = {Kegan Paul}, year = {1957}, address = {London}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;chance;causality;(in)determinism;} } @book{ bohm-hiley:1993a, author = {David Bohm and B.J. Hiley}, title = {The Undivided Universe: An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1993}, address = {London}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @article{ bohnemeyer-swift_m:2004a, author = {J\"urgen Bohnemeyer and Mary Swift}, title = {Event Realization and Default Aspect}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {263--296}, topic = {Aktionsarten;tense-aspect;} } @article{ bohnert:1945a, author = {Herbert Bohnert}, title = {On the Semiotic Status of Commands}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1945}, volume = {12}, pages = {302--305}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Review: fitch_fb:1946b}, topic = {imperatives;} } @incollection{ bohnert:1986a, author = {Herbert G. Bohnert}, title = {{Q}uine on Analyticity}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {W}.{V}. {Q}uine}, publisher = {Open Court}, year = {1986}, editor = {Lewis E. Hahn and Paul A. Schilpp}, pages = {77--92}, address = {La Salle, Illinois}, topic = {Quine;analyticity;} } @article{ bohus-etal:2011a, author = {Dan Bohus and Eric Horvitz and Takayuki Kanda and Bilge Mutlu and Antoine Raux}, title = {Introduction to the Special Issue on Dialog with Robots }, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2011}, volume = {32}, number = {4}, pages = {15--16}, topic = {computational-dialogue;embodied-nlp;} } @article{ boisvert:2008a, author = {Daniel R. Boisvert}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, pages = {169--203}, title = {Expressive-Assertivism}, volume = {89}, year = {2008}, topic = {expressivism;} } @incollection{ boisvert-ludwig_k:2006a, author = {Daniel Boisvert and Kirk Ludwig}, title = {Semantics for Nondeclaratives}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {864--892}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantics;imperatives;interrogatives;} } @article{ bojadziev:1995a, author = {Damjan Bojad\v{z}iev}, title = {Sloman's view of G\"odel's Sentence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {74}, number = {2}, pages = {389--393}, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;foundations-of-AI;} } @article{ bojadziev-gams:1998a, author = {Damjan Bojad\v{z}iev and Matja\v{z} Gams}, title = {Addendum to `{S}loman's View of {G}\"odel's Sentence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {98}, number = {1--2}, pages = {363--365}, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;foundations-of-AI;} } @article{ bojinov-etal:2002a, author = {Hristo Bojinov and Arancha Casal and Tad Hogg}, title = {Multiagent Control of Self-Reconfigurable Robots}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {142}, number = {2}, pages = {99--120}, topic = {multiagent-systems;robotics;distributed-control;} } @book{ bok:1998a, author = {Hilary Bok}, title = {Freedom and Responsibility}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, topic = {freedom;volition;blameworthiness;} } @book{ bolander-etal:2006a, editor = {Thomas Bolander and Vincent F. Hendricks and Stig Andur Pedersen}, title = {Self-Reference}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2006}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-57586-516-4 (pbk); 1-57586-515-7 (cloth)}, xref = {Review: cook_rt:2009a}, topic = {self-reference;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ bolander-etal:2016a, author = {Thomas Bolander and Hans van Ditmarsch and Andreas Herzig and Emiliano Lorini and Pere Pardo and Fran\c{c}ois Schwartzwbruber}, title = {Announcements to Attentive Agents}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2016}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {1--35}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;mutual-belief;} } @inproceedings{ bolander_t-etal:2018a, author = {Thomas Bolander and Thorsten Engesser and Robert Mattm\"uller and Bernhard Nebel}, title = {Better Eager Than Lazy? How Agent Types Impact the Successfulness of Implicit Coordination}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {445--453}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... In recent work, we proposed a new notion of strong policies with implicit coordination. With this it is possible to solve planning tasks with joint goals from a single-agent perspective without the agents having to negotiate about and commit to a joint policy at plan time. We study how and under which circumstances the decentralized application of those policies leads to the desired outcome. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {epistemic-planning;multiagent-planning;} } @inproceedings{ bolander_t-etal:2021a, author = {Thomas Bolander and Lasse Dissing and Nicolai Herrmann}, title = {{DEL}-based Epistemic Planning for Human-Robot Collaboration: Theory and Implementation}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {120--129}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we build on previous work in epistemic planning with implicit coordination. We introduce a new notion of indistinguishability between epistemic states based on bisimulation, and provide a novel partition refinement algorithm for computing unique representatives of sets of indistinguishable states. We provide an algorithm for computing implicitly coordinated plans using these new constructs, embed it in a perceive-plan-act agent loop, and implement it on a robot. The planning algorithm is benchmarked against an existing epistemic planning algorithm, and the robotic implementation is demonstrated on human-robot collaboration scenarios requiring implicit coordination.}, topic = {epistemic-planning;dynamic-epistemic-logic;ognitive-robotics;} } @incollection{ boldini:1997a, author = {Pascal Boldini}, title = {Vagueness and Type Theory}, booktitle = {{LACL}'96: First International Conference on Logical Aspects of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1997}, editor = {Christian Retor/'e}, pages = {134--148}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-and-nl-processing;vagueness; higher-order-logic;} } @article{ bolender:2003a, author = {John Bolender}, title = {The Genealogy of the Moral Modules}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2003}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {233-255}, abstract = {This paper defends a cognitive theory of those emotional reactions which motivate and constrain moral judgment. }, topic = {emotions;moral-judgements;} } @article{ boley:1977a, author = {Harold Boley}, title = {Directed Recursive Labelnode Hypergraphs: A New Representation-Language}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1977}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {49--85}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Directed recursive labelnode hypergraphs (DR\underline{L}Hs) are defined as a new representation-language combining 3 generalizations of directed labeled graphs. DR\underline{L}Hs are shown to overcome certain difficulties of conventional representation-languages and to be capable of specializing to them. The analysis of natural language strings into DR\underline{L}Hs and their processing is done with pattern-matching rules.}, topic = {kr;graph-based-representations;semantic-nets;} } @incollection{ boley:1992a, author = {Harold Boley}, title = {Declarative Operations on Nets}, booktitle = {Semantic Networks in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Pergamon Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Fritz Lehmann}, pages = {601--637}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {kr;semantic-networks;kr-course;} } @book{ bolinger_g:1961a, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Generality, Gradience, and the All-Or-None.}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1962}, address = {The Hague}, rtnote = {Hillman PE1139.5 .B65 1986}, topic = {prosody;phonetics;} } @article{ bolinger_g:1961b, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Contrastive Accent and Contrastive Stress}, journal = {Language}, year = {1961}, volume = {37}, number = {1}, pages = {83--96}, topic = {contrastive-stress;intonation;} } @incollection{ bolinger_g:1967a, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {The Imperative In {E}nglish}, booktitle = {To Honour {R}oman {J}akobson: Essays on the Occasion of His Seventieth Birthday}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1967}, editor = {Morris Halle and H.G. Lunt and H. McLean}, pages = {335--362}, address = {The Hague}, note = {Janua Linguarum, Ser. Major 31.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name}, topic = {imperatives;} } @article{ bolinger_g:1967b, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Adjectives in {E}nglish: Attribution and Predication}, journal = {Lingua}, year = {1967}, volume = {18}, pages = {1--34}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {adjectives;semantics-of-adjectives;} } @book{ bolinger_g:1968a, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Aspects of Language}, publisher = {Harcourt, Brace \& World}, year = {1968}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {Hillman P201 .B64}, topic = {discourse-analysis;} } @book{ bolinger_g:1971a, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {The Phrasal Verb in {E}nglish}, publisher = {Harvard Univesity Press}, year = {1977}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {Hillman. PE1319 .B6}, topic = {discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @book{ bolinger_g:1972a, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {That's That}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1972}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {semantics-of-adjectives;vagueness;} } @book{ bolinger_g:1972b, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Degree Words}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1972}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {semantics-of-adjectives;vagueness;} } @book{ bolinger_g:1977a, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Pronouns and Repeated Nouns}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {pronouns;anaphora;} } @book{ bolinger_g:1977b, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Meaning and Form}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1977}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {Hillman. P222 B59 1989}, topic = {discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @book{ bolinger_g:1977c, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Neutrality, Norm, and Bias}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1977}, address = {Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {Hillman. PE1585 .B57}, topic = {discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ bolinger_g:1978a, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Yes--No Questions Are Not Alternative Questions}, booktitle = {Questions}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1978}, editor = {Henry Hi\.z}, pages = {87--105}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @incollection{ bolinger_g:1978b, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Asking More Than One Thing at a Time}, booktitle = {Questions}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1978}, editor = {Henry Hi\.z}, pages = {107--150}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @book{ bolinger_g:1980a, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Language: The Loaded Weapon: the Use and Abuse of Language Today}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1980}, address = {London}, rtnote = {Not in Hillman. JOHNSTOWN CAMPUS P 106 .B594 1980 Check topics.}, topic = {sociolinguistics;rhetoric;} } @article{ bolinger_g:1983a, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Where Does Intonation Belong?}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1983}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {101--120}, abstract = {Though intonation has many ties to the central arbitrary manifestations of human language - to syntax, phonology, and to some extent lexicon - its most intimate connections are with the general scheme of iconic nonverbal communication, particularly the now spontaneous, now simulated or ritualized, gestures of the face, head, hands and body. Its meanings are based on inferences from concepts of up and down often associated with actual up-down movements in other parts of the gestural complex - plus metaphorical extensions of those concepts. Supposed grammaticizations are contradictory unless seen as intersections of two relatively autonomous systems: word-based language, and intonational and physical gesture. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe11}, topic = {intonation;} } @book{ bolinger_g:1986a, author = {Dwight Bolinger}, title = {Intonation and Its Uses: Melody in Spoken {E}nglish}, publisher = {Stanford University Press}, year = {1986}, address = {Stanford}, contentnote = {TC: Part I: Introduction Part II: Accentual Prosody Part III: Melodic Prosody }, xref = {Review: ladd_dr:1990a.}, topic = {intonation;prosody;punctuation;} } @article{ bolker_ed:1967a, author = {Ethan D. Bolker}, title = {A Simultaneous Axiomatization of Utility and Subjective Probability}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1967}, volume = {34}, number = {4}, pages = {333--340}, topic = {utility;} } @incollection{ bolker_ed:2000a, author = {Ethan D. Bolker}, title = {An Existence Theorem for the Logic of Decision}, booktitle = {{PSA}'1998: Proceedings of the 1998 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2000}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {S14--S32}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {decision-theory;} } @book{ bolles:1975a, author = {Robert C. Bolles}, title = {Theory of Motivation}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Harper and Row}, year = {1975}, address = {New York}, ISBN-13 = {978-0060465261}, topic = {motives;emotion;cognitive-psychology;} } @incollection{ bollinger_t-etal:1987a, author = {Toni Bollinger and Karl-Hans Bl\"asius and Uli Hedst\"uck}, title = {Knowledge Processing in the {LILOG} Project---From the First to the Second Prototype}, booktitle = {Natural Language and Logic}, year = {1987}, editor = {Rudi Studer}, pages = {26--49}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {knowledge-representation;computational-semantics;} } @incollection{ bollinger_t-pletat:1992a, author = {Toni Bollinger and Udo Pletat}, title = {An Order-Sorted Logic with Sort Literals and Disjointness Constraints}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {413--424}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;theorem-proving;hybrid-kr-architectures;sort-hierarchies;} } @incollection{ bolton_d:1995a, author = {Derek Bolton}, title = {Self-Knowledge, Error and Disorder}, booktitle = {Mental Simulation: Evaluations and Applications}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Martin Davies and Tony Stone}, pages = {209--234}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {introspection;} } @article{ bolton_de:1979a, author = {D.E. Bolton}, title = {Quine on Meaning and Translation}, journal = {Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {54}, number = {209}, pages = {329--346}, topic = {indeterminacy-of-translation;} } @article{ bolton_r:1998a, author = {Robert Bolton}, title = {Essentialism and Semantic Theory in {A}ristotle: {\it Posterior Analytics} II, 7--10}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1998}, volume = {108}, number = {4}, pages = {514--544}, topic = {Aristotle;essentialism;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ boly_m-etal:2013a, author = {Melanie Boly and Robert D. Sanders and George A. Mashour and Steven Laureys}, title = {Consiousness and Responsiveness}, journal = {Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology}, year = {2013}, volume = {26}, number = {4}, doi = {http://doi.org/10.1097/ACO.0b013e3283628b5d}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {consciousness;} } @article{ boman_m:1999a, author = {Magnus Boman}, title = {Norms in Artificial Decision Making}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence and Law}, year = {1999}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {17--35}, abstract = {A method for forcing norms onto individual agents in a multi-agent system is presented. ... Norms act as global constraints on the evaluations performed in the decision module and hence no action that violates a norm will be suggested to any agent. Further constraints on action may then be added locally. The method strives to characterise real-time decision making in agents, in the presence of risk and uncertainty.}, topic = {social-institutions;multiagent-systems;} } @inproceedings{ bomanson_j-etal:2018a, author = {Jori Bomanson and Tomi Janhunen and Antonius Weinzierl}, title = {Towards Lazy Grounding with Lazy Normalization in Answer-Set Programming---Extended Abstract}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {625--626}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Traditional evaluation of answer-set programs takes place in two phases: grounding and solving. Grounding incurs an up-to exponential increase in space, termed the grounding bottleneck of ASP, which is often encountered in practice. Lazy grounding avoids this bottleneck but is restricted to normal rules, significantly limiting the expressive power of this approach. We propose a framework to handle aggregates by normalizing them on demand during the lazy grounding process; we call this approach lazy normalization. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {answer-sets;AI-algorithms;} } @article{ bonanno_g:1996a, author = {Giacomo Bonanno}, title = {On the Logic of Common Belief}, journal = {Mathematical Logic Quarterly}, year = {1996}, volume = {42}, pages = {305--311}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {mutual-belief;epistemic-logic;} } @unpublished{ bonanno_g:1998a, author = {Giacomo Bonanno}, title = {The Logic of Prediction}, year = {1998}, month = {September}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Economics, University of California at Davis}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {branching-time;} } @article{ bonanno_g:2003a, author = {Giacomo Bonanno}, title = {Memory of Past Beliefs and Actions}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2003}, volume = {75}, number = {1}, pages = {7--30}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ bonanno_g:2005a, author = {Giacomo Bonanno}, title = {A Simple Modal Logic for Belief Revision}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2005}, volume = {147}, number = {2}, pages = {193--228}, topic = {modal-logic;belief-revision;} } @article{ bonanno_g:2006a, author = {Giacomo Bonanno}, title = {Axiomatic Characterization of the {AGM} Theory of Belief Revision in a Temporal Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {2--3}, pages = {144--160}, topic = {belief-revision;branching-time;} } @article{ bonanno_g:2007a, author = {Giacomo Bonanno}, title = {Temporal Interaction of Information and Belief}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {86}, number = {2}, pages = {375--401}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @incollection{ bonanno_g:2008a, author = {Giacomo Bonanno}, title = {A Syntactic Approach to Rationality in Games with Ordinal Payoffs}, booktitle = {Dynamic Formal Epistemology: Proceedings of Logic and Foundations of Game Theory and Decision Theory (LOFT) 2007}, publisher = {University of Amsterdam Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Giacomo Bonanno and Wiebe van der Hoek and Michael Wooldridge}, pages = {59--86}, address = {Amsterdam}, abstract = {We consider strategic-form games with ordinal payoffs and provide a syntactic analysis of common belief/knowledge of rationality, which we define axiomatically. ... The first [axiom] says that a player is irrational if she chooses a particular strategy while believing that another strategy is better. ... The second axiom says that a player is irrational if she chooses a particular strategy while believing that a different strategy is at least as good and she considers it possible that this alternative strategy is actually better than the chosen one. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. See \fe20\LOFT7.pdf}, topic = {game-theory;rationality;mutual-belief;} } @article{ bonanno_g:2009a, author = {Giacomo Bonanno}, title = {Rational Choice and {AGM} Belief Revision}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {12--13}, pages = {1194--1203}, topic = {rational-choice;belief-revision;} } @article{ bonanno_g:2012a, author = {Giacomo Bonanno}, title = {Belief Change in Branching Time: AGM-consistency and Iterated Revision}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {41}, number = {1}, pages = {201--236}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @book{ bonanno_g-etal:2008a, editor = {Giacomo Bonanno and Wiebe van der Hoek and Michael Wooldridge}, title = {Proceedings of the Seventh Conference on Logic and the Foundations of Game and Decision Theory (LOFT 2007)}, publisher = {Amsterdam University Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20\LOFT7.pdf}, topic = {game-thepory;decision-theory;} } @incollection{ bonanno_g-etal:2008b, author = {Giacomo Bonanno and Wiebe van der Hoek and Michael Wooldridge}, title = {Preface}, booktitle = {Dynamic Formal Epistemology: Proceedings of Logic and Foundations of Game Theory and Decision Theory (LOFT) 2007}, publisher = {University of Amsterdam Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Giacomo Bonanno and Wiebe van der Hoek and Michael Wooldridge}, pages = {7--10}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. See \fe20\LOFT7.pdf}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;dynamic-logic;dynamic-epistemic-logic;} } @book{ bonanno_g-etal:2010a, editor = {Giacomo Bonanno and Benedikt L\"owe and Wiebe van der Hoek}, title = {Logic and the Foundations of Game and Decision Theory (LOFT) 8)}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2010}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN-13 = {978-3642151637}, topic = {epistemic-logic;game-theory;} } @article{ bonanno_g-etal:2012a, author = {Giacomo Bonanno and James Delgrande and Hans Rott}, title = {Guest Editors' Introduction}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2012}, note = {Introduction to a special issue on multiple belief change, iterated belief change, and preference aggregation}, volume = {41}, number = {1}, pages = {1--5}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ bonanno_g-nehring_k:1998a, author = {Giacomo Bonnano and Klaus Nehring}, title = {Understanding Common Priors under Incomplete Information}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Seventh Conference ({TARK} 1998)}, year = {1998}, editor = {Itzhak Gilboa}, pages = {147--160}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;common-prior-assumption;} } @book{ bonanno_g-wooldridge_m:2008a, editor = {Giacomo Bonanno and Wiebe van der Hoek and Michael Wooldridge}, title = {Dynamic Formal Epistemology: Proceedings of Logic and Foundations of Game Theory and Decision Theory (LOFT) 2007}, publisher = {University of Amsterdam Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {978 90 8964 026 0}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Giacomo Bonanno and Wiebe van der Hoek and Michael Wooldridge, "Preface", pp. 7--10 2. Alexandru Baltag and Sonja Smets, "A Qualitative Theory of Dynamic Interactive Belief Revision", pp. 11--58 3. Giacomo Bonanno, "A Syntactic Approach to Rationality in Games with Ordinal Payoffs", pp. 59--86 4. Hans van Ditmarsch and Barteld Kooi, "Semantic Results for Ontic and Epistemic Change", pp. 87--118 5. Wiebe van der Hoek and Mark Roberts and Michael Wooldridge, "Social Laws and Anti-Social Behaviour", pp. 119--152 6. Alexander Nittka and Richard Booth, "A Method for Reasoning about Other Agents' Beliefs from Observations", pp. 153--182 7. Ramaswamy Ramanujam and Sunil Simon, "A Logical Structure for Strategies", pp. 183--208 8. Giacomo Sillari, "Models of Awareness", pp. 209--240 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe\20\LOFT7.pdf}, topic = {game-theory;epistemif-logic;dynamic-logic;dynamic-epistemic-logic;} } @article{ bonardi_p:2019a, author = {Paolo Bonardi}, title = {Manifest Validity and Beyond: An Inquiry into the Nature of Coordination and the Identity of Guises and Propositional-Attitude States}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {42}, number = {5}, pages = {475--515}, abstract = {This manuscript focuses on a problem for Millian Russellianism raised by fine_k:2007a "[Assuming] that we are in possession of the information that a Fs and the information that a Gs, it appears that we are sometimes justified in putting this information 'together' and inferring that a both Fs and Gs. But how?" It will be my goal to determine a Millian-Russellian solution to this problem. ... the most plausible way to individuate guises is by means of the equivalence classes (if any) of coordination itself. But, if so, the guise-based strategy to solve Fine's problem risks being circular; in addition, there are serious doubts that coordination is transitive. An alternative Millian-Russellian solution to Fine's problem will then be explored ... .}, xref = {Discusses: fine_k:2007a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;reference;anaphora;non-co-reference; discourse-referents;referential-indices;} } @incollection{ bonatti-etal:2006a, author = {Piero Bonatti and Carsten Lutz and Frank Wolter}, title = {Description Logics with Circumscription}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {400--410}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {description-logics;circumscription;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ bonatti-peron:2004a, author = {Piero A. Bonatti and A. Peron}, title = {On the Undecidability of Logics with Converse, Nominals, Recursion, and Counting}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {158}, number = {1}, pages = {75--96}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;(un)decidability;description-logics;} } @incollection{ bonatti_pa-sauro_l:2022a, author = {Piero A. Bonatti and Luigi Sauro}, title = {Sticky Policies in {OWL}2: Extending {PL} with Fixpoints and Transitive Closure}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {73--80}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {PL is a low-complexity profile of OWL2, expressly designed to encode data usage policies and personal data protection regulations - such as the GDPR - in a machine understandable way. In this paper, we extend PL to support "sticky policies". They are a sort of license that applies to data transfers, and specifies how the recipient can use the data. [Our] results justify a specialized, low complexity approach to encoding sticky policies.}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;description-logics;} } @article{ bonawitz_e-etal:2014a, author = {Elizabeth Bonawitz and Stephanie Denison and Alison Gopnik and Thomas L. Griffiths}, title = {Win-Stay, Lose-Sample: A Simple Sequential Algorithm for Approximating {B}ayesian Inference}, journal = {Cognitive Psychology}, year = {2014}, volume = {74}, number = {1}, pages = {35--65}, abstract = {People can behave in a way that is consistent with Bayesian models of cognition, despite the fact that performing exact Bayesian inference is computationally challenging. What algorithms could people be using to make this possible? We show that a simple sequential algorithm "Win-Stay, Lose-Sample", inspired by the Win-Stay, Lose-Shift (WSLS) principle, can be used to approximate Bayesian inference. We investigate the behavior of adults and preschoolers on two causal learning tasks to test whether people might use a similar algorithm. These studies use a "mini-microgenetic method", investigating how people sequentially update their beliefs as they encounter new evidence. Experiment 1 investigates a deterministic causal learning scenario and Experiments 2 and 3 examine how people make inferences in a stochastic scenario. The behavior of adults and preschoolers in these experiments is consistent with our Bayesian version of the WSLS principle. This algorithm provides both a practical method for performing Bayesian inference and a new way to understand people's judgments.}, topic = {cognitive-modeling;Bayesian-reasoning;limited-rationality;} } @article{ bonawitz_e-etal:2014b, author = {Elizabeth Bonawitz and Stephanie Denison and Thomas L. Griffiths and Alison Gopnik}, title = {Probabilistic Models, Learning Algorithms, and Response Variability: Sampling in Cognitive Development}, journal = {Trends in Cognitive Sciences}, year = {2014}, volume = {18}, number = {10}, pages = {497--500}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se14\bonawitz2.pdf}, abstract = {Although probabilistic models of cognitive development have become increasingly prevalent, one challenge is to account for how children might cope with a potentially vast number of possible hypotheses. We propose that children might address this problem by "sampling" hypotheses from a probability distribution. We discuss empirical results demonstrating signatures of sampling, which offer an explanation for the variability of children's responses. The sampling hypothesis provides an algorithmic account of how children might address computationally intractable problems and suggests a way to make sense of their "noisy" behavior.}, topic = {cognitive-modelling;limited-rationality;developmental-psychology; learning-algorithms;learning;probability;} } @article{ bonay:2008a, author = {Dennis Bonay}, title = {Logicality and Invariance}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {29--68}, topic = {logical-constants;} } @article{ bonay-egre_p:2009a, author = {Denis Bonay and Paul \'Egr\'e}, title = {Inexact Knowledge with Introspection}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {38}, number = {2}, pages = {179--227}, topic = {epistemic-logic;vagueness;limited-rationality;pr-course;} } @book{ bond_a-glasser:1988a, editor = {Alan Bond and Les Glasser}, title = {Readings in Distributed Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, year = {1988}, topic = {distributed-AI;} } @article{ bond_ej:1979a, author = {Edward J. Bond}, title = {Desire, Action, and the Good}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1979}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, pages = {53--59}, topic = {motives;practical-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ bond_f-etal:1998a, author = {Francis Bond and Daniela Kurz and Satoshi Shirai}, title = {Anchoring Floating Quantifiers in {J}apanese-to-{E}nglish Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {152--159}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {quantifier-float;machine-translation;Japanese-language;} } @article{ bondarenko-etal:1997a, author = {Andrei Bondarenko and Phan Minh Dung and Robert A. Kowalski and Francesca Toni}, title = {An Abstract, Argumentation-Theoretic Approach to Default Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {93}, number = {1--2}, pages = {63--101}, xref = {Discussion: dimopoulos_y:etal:2002a}, topic = {argument-based-defeasible-reasoning;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ boneh_n:2012a, author = {Nora Boneh}, title = {Hab and Gen in the Expression of Habituality}, booktitle = {Genericity}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Alda Mari and Claire Beyssade and Fabio Del Prete}, pages = {176--191}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {generics;} } @article{ bonet_b:2009a, author = {Blai Bonet}, title = {Conformant Plans and Beyond: Principles and Complexity}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {174}, number = {3--4}, pages = {245--269}, topic = {planning;modal-logic;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ bonet_b-etal:2020a, author = {Blai Bonet and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Hector Geffner and Fabio Patrizi and Sasha Rubin}, title = {High-level Programming via Generalized Planning and {LTL} Synthesis}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {152--161}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We look at program synthesis where the aim is to automatically synthesize a controller that operates on data structures and from which a concrete program can be easily derived. ... we first show that a program synthesis task can be modeled as a generalized planning problem. ... we discuss how the resulting generalized planning problem can be reduced to an LTL synthesis problem, thus making available any LTL synthesis engine for obtaining the controllers. We illustrate the effectiveness of the approach on a series of examples.}, topic = {DL-Lite;program-synthesis;abstraction;} } @inproceedings{ bonet_b-geffner:1999a, author = {Blai Bonet and H\'ector Geffner}, title = {General Planning Tool (GPT)}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {planning-algorithms;} } @article{ bonet_b-geffner:2001a, author = {Blai Bonet and H\'ector Geffner}, title = {Planning as Heuristic Search}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {129}, number = {1--2}, pages = {5--33}, topic = {heuristics;search;planning;} } @article{ bonet_b-geffner:2001b, author = {Blai Bonet and Hector Geffner}, title = {Heuristic Search Planner 2.0}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2001}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {77--80}, topic = {planning;planning-algorithms;planning-systems;} } @incollection{ bonet_b-geffner:2006a, author = {Blai Bonet and Hector Geffner}, title = {Heuristics for Planning with Penalties and Rewards using Compiled Knowledge}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {451--462}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {planning-algorithms;heuristics;} } @article{ bonet_b-geffner:2008a, author = {Blai Bonet and H\'ector Geffner}, title = {Heuristics for Planning with Penalties and Rewards Formulated in Logic and Computed through Circuits}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {12--13}, pages = {1579--1604}, topic = {heuristics;planning-algorithms;} } @article{ bonet_ml-etal:2007a, author = {Mar\'ia Luisa Bonet and Jordi Levy and Felip Many\`a}, title = {Resolution for Max-{SAT}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {8--9}, pages = {606--618}, topic = {model-checking;resolution;} } @article{ bonevac_d:1984a, author = {Daniel Bonevac}, title = {Semantics for Clausally Complemented Verbs}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1984}, volume = {59}, number = {2}, pages = {187--218}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;situation-semantics;} } @article{ bonevac_d:1990a, author = {Daniel Bonevac}, title = {Paradoxes of Fulfillment}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1990}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {229--252}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @article{ bonevac_d:1998a, author = {Daniel Bonevac}, title = {Against Conditional Obligation}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1998}, volume = {32}, number = {1}, pages = {37--53}, topic = {conditional-obligation;deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ bonevac_d:2012a, author = {Daniel Bonevac}, title = {A History of Quantification}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 11: Logic, a History of its Central Concepts}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2012}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Francis Jeffry Pelletier and John Woods}, pages = {63--126}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;quantification;} } @article{ bonevac_d:2018a, author = {Daniel Bonevac}, title = {Defaulting on Reasons}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {52}, number = {2}, pages = {229--259}, xref = {Critical comments on: horty_jf:2012a}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic;deontic-logic;reasons-for-action; ethics;reasons-for-conclusions;practical-reasoning;pr-course; default-logic;reasoning-about-norms;prioritized-default-logic;} } @incollection{ bonevac_d-dever_j:2012a, author = {Daniel Bonevac and Josh Dever}, title = {A History of The Connectives}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 11: Logic, a History of its Central Concepts}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2012}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Francis Jeffry Pelletier and John Woods}, pages = {175--233}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;logical-connectives;} } @article{ bonevac_d-etal:2006a, author = {Daniel Bonevac and Josh Dever and David Sosa}, title = {The Conditional Fallacy}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2006}, volume = {115}, number = {3}, pages = {273--316}, topic = {dispositionals;conditionals;} } @unpublished{ bonevac_d-etal:2008a, author = {Daniel Bonevac and Josh Dever and David Sosa}, title = {A Buyer's Guide to Conditionals}, year = {2008}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Texas}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Bonevac.pdf}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ bonevac_d-kamp_jaw:2017a, author = {Daniel Bonevac and Hans Kamp}, title = {Quantifiers Defined by Parametric Extensions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {2}, pages = {169--213}, abstract = {This paper develops a metaphysically flexible theory of quantification broad enough to incorporate many distinct theories of objects. Quite different, mutually incompatible conceptions of the nature of objects and of reference find representation within it. Some conceptions yield classical first-order logic; some yield weaker logics. Yet others yield notions of validity that are proper extensions of classical logic.}, topic = {foundations-of-logic;philosophical-ontology;quantifiers;} } @book{ bonfantini:1987a, author = {Massimo Bonfantini}, title = {La Semiosi e l'Abduzione}, publisher = {Bompiani}, year = {1987}, address = {Mailand}, topic = {semiotics;abduction;} } @article{ bonfietti-etal:2014a, author = {Alessio Bonfietti and Michele Lombardi and Luca Benini and Michela Milano}, title = {{CROSS} Cyclic Resource-Constrained Scheduling Solver}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2014}, volume = {206}, pages = {25--52}, topic = {scheduling;} } @article{ boniolo-valentini:2008a, author = {Giovanni Boniolo and Silvio Valentini}, title = {Vagueness, {K}ant and Topology: A Study of Formal Topology}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {37}, number = {2}, pages = {141--168}, topic = {vagueness;} } @book{ bonissone-etal:1991a, editor = {P.O Bonissone and Max Henrion and L.N. Kanal and J.F. Lemmer}, title = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, Volume 6}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Co.}, year = {1991}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ bonjour_l:1991a, author = {Laurence Bonjour}, title = {Is Thought a Symbolic Process?}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1991}, volume = {89}, number = {3}, pages = {331--352}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;} } @incollection{ bonjour_l:2005a, author = {Laurence BonJour}, title = {In Defense of the a Priori}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {177--184}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;a-priori;} } @incollection{ bonjour_l:2005b, author = {Laurence BonJour}, title = {Is There a Priori Knowledge? Reply to {D}evitt}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {195--196}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: devitt_m:2005a}, topic = {knowledge;a-priori;} } @incollection{ bonjour_l:2005c, author = {Laurence BonJour}, title = {Is There a Priori Knowledge? Last Rejoinder}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {2-1}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: devitt_m:2005b}, topic = {knowledge;a-priori;} } @book{ bonk:2003a, editor = {Thomas Bonk}, title = {Language, Truth, and Knowledge: Contribution to the Philosophy of {R}udolf {C}arnap}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2003}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Review: uebel:2005a.}, topic = {logical-empiricism;history-of-philosophy;} } @article{ bonnano_b:2007a, author = {Giacomo Bonnano}, title = {Axiomatic Characterization of {AGM} Belief Revision in a Temporal Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {2--3}, pages = {144--160}, abstract = {Since belief revision deals with the interaction of belief and information over time, branching-time temporal logic seems a natural setting for a theory of belief change. We propose two extensions of a modal logic that, besides the next-time temporal operator, contains a belief operator and an information operator. The first logic is shown to provide an axiomatic characterization of the first six postulates of the AGM theory of belief revision, while the second, stronger, logic provides an axiomatic characterization of the full set of AGM postulates.}, topic = {belief-revision;temporal-logic;branching-time;} } @article{ bonnano_g:2004a, author = {Giacomo Bonnano}, title = {Memory and Perfect Recall in Extensive Games}, journal = {Games and Economic Behaviour}, year = {2004}, volume = {47}, pages = {237--256}, abstract = {... We provide a syntactic and semantic characterization of perfect recall based on two independent notions of memory: (1) memory of past knowledge and (2) memory of past actions.}, topic = {game-theory;perfect-recall;} } @article{ bonnano_g-battigalli_p:1999a, author = {Giacomo Bonnano and Pierpaolo Battigalli}, title = {Recent Results on Belief, Knowledge and the Epistemic Foundations of Game Theory}, journal = {Research in Economics}, year = {1999}, volume = {53}, number = {2}, pages = {149--225}, abstract = {We provide a self-contained, selective overview of the literature on the role of knowledge and beliefs in game theory. We focus on recent results on the epistemic foundations of solution concepts, including correlated equilibrium, rationalizability in dynamic games, forward and backward induction.}, topic = {game-theory;epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ bonnay_d-agre_p:2011a, author = {Denis Bonnay and Paul \'Agr\'e}, title = {Knowing One's Limits: An Analysis in Centered Dynamic Epistemic Logic}, booktitle = {Dynamic Formal Epistemology}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2011}, editor = {Patrick Girard and Mathieu Marion and Olivier Roy}, pages = {103--126}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {... We propose a dynamic analysis of the process whereby a subject reflects on the reliability conditions of her perceptual knowledge. Following earlier work on Centered Semantics for epistemic logic, we show how to combine it with Dynamic Epistemic Logic and introduce a variation on the standard semantics for epistemic updates. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;Fitch-paradox;} } @article{ bonnay_d-westerstahl_d:2012a, author = {Denis Bonnay and Dag Westerst{\aa}hl}, title = {Consequence Mining: Constants versus Consequence Relations}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {41}, number = {4}, pages = {671--709}, topic = {logical-constants;logical-consequence;} } @inproceedings{ bonnema-etal:1997a, author = {Remko Bonnema and Rens Bod and Remko Scha}, title = {A {DOP} Model for Semantic Interpretation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {159--167}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-semantics;statistical-nlp;} } @incollection{ bonnema-etal:1999a, author = {Remko Bonnema and Paul Buying and Remko Scha}, title = {A New Probability Model for Data Oriented Parsing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {85--90}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;statistical-parsing;} } @article{ bonney_wl:1965a, author = {W.L. Bonney}, title = {Mr. {D}eutscher on Saying and Disbelieving}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1965}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {17--20}, xref = {Commentary on: deutscher:1965a}, xref = {Reply: deutscher:1967a}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;} } @book{ bonney_wl:1982a, author = {W.L. Bonney}, title = {Problems in the Grammar and Logic of {E}nglish Complementation}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Bonney"}, topic = {nl-syntax;definiteness;anaphora;syntactic-control;} } @article{ bonomi:1977a, author = {Andrea Bonomi}, title = {Existence, Presupposition and Anaphoric Space}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {239--267}, topic = {(non)existence;presupposition;pragmatics;anaphora;} } @article{ bonomi:1997a, author = {Andrea Bonomi}, title = {Aspect, Quantification, and When-Clauses in {I}talian}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {20}, number = {5}, pages = {469--514}, topic = {Italian-language;tense-aspect;} } @article{ bonomi:1997b, author = {Andrea Bonomi}, title = {The Progressive and the Structure of Events}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1997}, volume = {14}, number = {2}, pages = {173--205}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn09}, abstract = {In the analysis of the progressive proposed in the paper, two notions play a crucial role. On the one hand, since the same event can be embedded into several possible developments that are relevant to the truth-conditions of the progressive, a first task of the analysis is to account for the part-of relation which connects an event with its possible continuations. On the other hand, this kind of connection is largely dependent on contextual factors, and a second task of the paper is to analyze this notion of context both in terms of events in the world (the concomitant facts selected as relevant) and in terms of the situation of the discourse (the conversational background that makes those facts relevant). After presenting, in section 2, the so-called imperfective paradox, in section 3, I address a problem of ambiguity engendered by the underdetermination of the data whilst a related issue is discussed in section 4. The new examples analyzed in this section are an interesting illustration of the intensional character of the progressive. In section 5, I discuss the role of mereological relations in the semantics of the progressive, whilst in section 6, I take into consideration the use of this aspectual form in connection withimprobable courses of events. In the final sections, all these problems are considered from the point of view of asemantics for the progressive in which a mereological analysis of eventualities (based on the part-of relation) is combined with a contextualist approach. }, topic = {tense-aspect;} } @article{ bonomi:2002a, author = {Andrea Bonomi}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}emantics, Tense, and Time: An Essay in the Metaphysics of Natural Language}, by {P}eter {L}udlow}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {81--95}, xref = {Review of: ludlow_p:1999a.}, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;metaphysics;} } @article{ bonomi:2006a, author = {Andrea Bonomi}, title = {Truth and Reference in Context}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2006}, volume = {23}, issue = {2}, pages = {107--134}, abstract = {In communicative exchanges one of the most familiar phenomena is accommodation, which enables the addressee to incorporate a missing piece of information into her own view of the common ground. A less familiar, but equally important, phenomenon is what I call discommodation, whose main feature consists in the fact that the missing piece of information, although essential to the comprehension of the utterance, cannot be shared by the addressee because it sounds problematic or even false to her. In such cases it is possible to open a presuppositional slot to take into account the assumptions that serve to select the reference of the noun phrase, but that are not incorporated into the revised context. One of the main purposes of the paper is to propose a definition of truth (with respect to a presuppositional apparatus) that does not ignore the role of discommodation when different views of the common ground are involved. }, topic = {accommodation;presupposition;} } @incollection{ bonomi:2007a, author = {Andrea Bonomi}, title = {Fictional Contexts}, booktitle = {Perspectives on Context}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2007}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {215--249}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {context;fiction;} } @article{ bonomi-casalegno:1993a, author = {Andrea Bonomi and Paolo Casalegno}, title = {`{O}nly': Association with Focus in Event Semantics}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1993}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {1--45}, topic = {nl-semantics;sentence-focus;events;pragmatics;} } @article{ bonotto-anardo:1989a, author = {Cinzia Bonotto and Alberto Zanardo}, title = {A Non-Compactness Phenomenon in Logics with Hyperintensional Predication}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1989}, volume = {18}, number = {4}, pages = {383--398}, topic = {hyperintensionality;intensional-logic;} } @incollection{ bontcheva-etal:2002a, author = {Kalina Bontcheva and Hamish Cunningham and Valentin Tablan and Diana Maynard and Oana Hamza}, title = {Using {GATE} as an Environment for Teaching {NLP}}, booktitle = {Effective Tools and Methodologies for Teaching {NLP} and {CL}}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dragomir Radev and Chris Brew}, pages = {53--61}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nlp-pedagogy;} } @article{ bonzio_s-etal:2023a, author = {S. Bonzio and V. Fano and M. Pra Baldi}, title = {A Logical Modeling of Severe Ignorance}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2023}, volume = {52}, number = {4}, pages = {1053--1080}, abstract = {... we introduce and investigate a modal logic having a primitive epistemic operator I, modeling ignorance. Our modal logic is essentially constructed on the modal logics based on weak Kleene three-valued logic ... We axiomatize, prove completeness and decidability for the logic of reflexive (three-valued) Kripke frames, which we find the most suitable candidate for our novel proposal and, finally, compare our approach with the most traditional one. }, topic = {epistemic-logic;multi-valued-logic;} } @inproceedings{ bonzon:1995a, author = {Pierre E. Bonzon}, title = {A Meta-Level Inference Architecture for Contexts}, booktitle = {Formalizing Context}, year = {1995}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, pages = {47--54}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ bonzon:1997a, author = {Pierre E. Bonzon}, title = {A Reflective Proof System for Reasoning in Contexts}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Howard Shrobe and Ted Senator}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, pages = {398--403}, topic = {context;contextual-reasoning;logic-of-context;} } @incollection{ bonzon:2000a, author = {Pierre Bonzon}, title = {Contextual Learning: Towards Using Contexts to Achieve Generality}, booktitle = {Formal Aspects of Context}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Pierre Bonzon and Marcos Cavalcanti and Rolf Nossum}, pages = {127--141}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {context;machine-learning;metareasoning;logic-programming;} } @book{ bonzon-etal:2000a, editor = {Pierre Bonzon and Marcos Cavalcanti and Rolf Nossum}, title = {Formal Aspects of Context}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-7923-6350-7}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Dov M. Gabbay, "Editorial Preface", p. vii 2. Pierre Bonzon and Marcos Cavalcanti and Rolf Nossum, "Introduction", pp. ix--x 3. Kees van Deemter and Jan Odijk, "Formal and Computational Models of Context for Natural Language Generation", pp. 1--21 4. Harry Bunt, "Requirements for Dialogue Context Management", pp. 23--36 5. Julia Lavid, "Contextual Constraints on Thematization in Written Discourse: An Empirical Study", pp. 37--47 6. Mark Galliker and Daniel Weimer, "Context and Implicitness: Consequences for Traditional and Computer-Assisted Text Analysis", pp. 49--63 7. Alessandro Cimatti and Luciano Serafini, "A Context-Based Mechanization of Multi-Agent Reasoning", pp. 65--83 8. Paul Piwek and Emiel Krahmer, "Presuppositions in Context: Constructing Bridges", pp. 85--106 9. Vagan Y. Terziyan and Seppo Puuronen, "Reasoning with Multilevel Contexts in Semantic Metanetworks", pp. 107--126 10. Pierre Bonzon, "Contextual Learning: Towards Using Contexts to Achieve Generality", pp. 127--141 11. Leon W.N. van der Torre and Yao-Hua Tan, "Contextual Deontic Logic", pp. 143--160 12. Fausto Giunchiglia and Chiara Ghidini, "A Local Models Semantics for Propositional Attitudes", pp. 161--174 13. Luciano Serafini and Chiara Ghidini, "Context-Based Semantics for Information Integration", pp. 175--192 14. Dov M. Gabbay and Rolf Nossum, "Structured Contexts with Fibred Semantics", pp. 193--209 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, xref = {Review: thomason_rh:2001a.}, topic = {context;} } @incollection{ bonzon-etal:2000b, author = {Pierre Bonzon and Marcos Cavalcanti and Rolf Nossum}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Formal Aspects of Context}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Pierre Bonzon and Marcos Cavalcanti and Rolf Nossum}, pages = {ix--x}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ bonzon_e-delobelle_j:2018a, author = {Elise Bonzon and J\'er\v{o}me Delobelle}, title = {Combining Extension-Based Semantics and Ranking-Based Semantics for Abstract Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {118--127}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... Extension-based semantics evaluate the acceptability of sets of arguments, while ranking-based semantics evaluate the strength of each argument. ... After discussing pros and cons of both approaches, we study how to combine them, in order to take benefits from both.We propose six new families of semantics for abstract argumentation combining extension-based and ranking-based semantics. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;ranking-based-semantics;} } @book{ booch:1994a, author = {Grady Booch}, title = {Object-Oriented Analysis and Design with Applications}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Benjamin Cummings}, year = {1994}, address = {Redwood City, California}, topic = {object-oriented-analysis;domain-modeling;} } @article{ boogerd_fc-etal:2005a, author = {Fred C. Boogerd and Frank J. Bruggeman and R.C. Richardson and A. Stephan and H.V. Westerhoff}, title = {Emergence and its Place in Nature: A Case Study of Biochemical Networks}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2005}, volume = {145}, number = {1}, pages = {131--164}, abstract = {We will show that there is a strong form of emergence in cell biology. Beginning with C.D. Broad's classic discussion of emergence, we distinguish two conditions sufficient for emergence. Emergence in biology must be compatible with the thought that all explanations of systemic properties are mechanistic explanations and with their sufficiency. Explanations of systemic properties are always in terms of the properties of the parts within the system. Nonetheless, systemic properties can still be emergent. If the properties of the components within the system cannot be predicted, even in principle, from the behavior of the system's parts within simpler wholes then there also will be systemic properties which cannot be predicted, even in principle, on basis of the behavior of these parts. We show in an explicit case study drawn from molecular cell physiology that biochemical networks display this kind of emergence, even though they deploy only mechanistic explanations. This illustrates emergence and its place in nature.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my17}, topic = {emergence;} } @book{ boogerd_fc-etal:2007a, editor = {Fred C. Boogerd and Frank J. Bruggeman and Jan-Hendrik S. Hofmeyr and Hans V. Westerhoff}, title = {Systems Biology: Philosophical Foundations}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2007}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {1-281-00380-8, 9786611003807, 0-08-047527-2}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Fred C. Boogerd and Frank J. Bruggeman and Jan-Hendrik S. Hofmeyr and Hans V. Westerhoff, "Towards Philosophical Foundations of Systems Biology: Introduction", pp. 3--19 2. Hans V. Westerhoff and Douglas B. Kell, "The Methodologies of Systems Biology", pp. 23--70 3. Robert G. Shulman, "Methodology is Philosophy", pp. 71--86 4. David A. Fell, "How Can We Understand Metabolism?", pp. 87--101 5. William C. Wimsatt, "On Building Reliable Pictures with Unreliable Data:1 An Evolutionary and Developmental Coda for the New Systems Biology", pp. 103--120 6. Robert C. Richardson and Achim Stephan, "Mechanism and Mechanical Explanation in Systems Biology1", pp. 123--144 7. Kenneth F. Schaffner, "Theories, Models, and Equations in Systems Biology", pp. 145--162 8. Olaf Wolkenhauer and Mukhtar Ullah, "All Models Are Wrong: Some More Than Others", pp. 163--179 9. Ulrich Krohs and Werner Callebaut, "Data without Models Merging with Models without Data", pp. 181--213 10. Jan-Hendrik S. Hofmeyr, "The Biochemical Factory that Autonomously Fabricates Itself: A Systems Biological View of the Living Cell", pp. 217--242 11. Alvaro Moreno, "A Systemic Approach to the Origin of Biological Organization", pp. 243--268 12. William Bechtel, "Biological Mechanisms: organized to Maintain Autonomy1", pp. 269--302 13. Evelyn Fox Keller, "The Disappearance of Function from 'Self-Organizing Systems{'}", pp. 303--317 14. Fred C. Boogerd and Frank J. Bruggeman and Jan-Hendrik S. Hofmeyr and Hans V. Westerhoff, "Afterthoughts as Foundations for Systems Biology", pp. 321--336 } , topic = {philosophy-of-biology;mechanisms;systems-biology;} } @incollection{ boogerd_fc-etal:2007b, author = {Fred C. Boogerd and Frank J. Bruggeman and Jan-Hendrik S. Hofmeyr and Hans V. Westerhoff}, title = {Towards Philosophical Foundations of Systems Biology: Introduction}, booktitle = {Systems Biology: Philosophical Foundations}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2007}, editor = {Fred C. Boogerd and Frank J. Bruggeman and Jan-Hendrik S. Hofmeyr and Hans V. Westerhoff}, pages = {3--19}, address = {New York}, topic = {systems-biology;} } @incollection{ boogerd_fc-etal:2007c, author = {Fred C. Boogerd and Frank J. Bruggeman and Jan-Hendrik S. Hofmeyr and Hans V. Westerhoff}, title = {Afterthoughts as Foundations for Systems Biology}, booktitle = {Systems Biology: Philosophical Foundations}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2007}, editor = {Fred C. Boogerd and Frank J. Bruggeman and Jan-Hendrik S. Hofmeyr and Hans V. Westerhoff}, pages = {321--336}, address = {New York}, topic = {systems-biology;} } @incollection{ booij:1992a, author = {Geert Booij}, title = {Morphology, Semantics and Argument Structure}, booktitle = {Thematic Structure: Its Role in Grammar}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1992}, editor = {Iggy M. Roca}, pages = {47--64}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {thematic-roles;argument-structure;} } @book{ booij:2004a, author = {Gert Booij}, title = {The Grammar of Words}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-926664-6}, topic = {morphology;linguistics-intro;} } @article{ booker-etal:1989a, author = {L.B. Booker and D.E. Goldberg and J.H. Holland}, title = {Classifier Systems and Genetic Algorithms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {40}, number = {1--3}, pages = {235--282}, topic = {automatic-classification;genetic-algorithms; machine-learning;} } @article{ boolos_g:1969a, author = {George Boolos}, title = {Review of `{M}inds, Machines, and {G}\"odel', by {J}ohn {R}. {L}ucas and `{G}od, the Devil and {G}\"odel', by {P}aul {B}enacerraf }, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1969}, volume = {33}, number = {4}, pages = {613--615}, xref = {Review of: lucas_jr:1961a, benacerraf:1965a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;goedels-first-theorem; mechanistic-thesis;} } @book{ boolos_g:1979a, author = {George Boolos}, title = {The Unprovability of Consistency}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1979}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {goedels-second-theorem;semantic-reflection;provability-logic;} } @article{ boolos_g:1980a, author = {George Boolos}, title = {Provability, Truth, and Modal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {1--7}, topic = {modal-logic;provability-logic;} } @article{ boolos_g:1984a, author = {George Boolos}, title = {Don't Eliminate Cut}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1984}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, pages = {373--378}, topic = {proof-theory;cut-free-deduction;complexity-theory;} } @article{ boolos_g:1985b, author = {George Boolos}, title = {Nominalist Platonism}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1985}, volume = {94}, number = {3}, pages = {327--344}, xref = {Commentary: linnebo_o:2002a.}, topic = {plural;higher-order-logic;nominalism;plural-quantification;} } @article{ boolos_g:1987a, author = {George Boolos}, title = {A Curious Inference}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1987}, volume = {16}, pages = {1--12}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {proof-theory;proof-complexity;higher-order-logic; large-numbers;} } @book{ boolos_g:1990a, editor = {George Boolos}, title = {Meaning and Method: Essays in Honor of {H}ilary {P}utnam}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-36083-8}, xref = {Review: levin_y}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ boolos_g:1991a, author = {George Boolos}, title = {Zooming Down the Slippery Slope}, journal = {No{\^u}s}, year = {1991}, volume = {25}, pages = {695--706}, topic = {vagueness;} } @book{ boolos_g:1993a, author = {George Boolos}, title = {The Logic of Provability}, publisher = {Cambridge Universoti Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: tait:1999a.}, topic = {modal-logic;provability-logic;goedels-second-theorem;} } @article{ boolos_g:1997a, author = {George Boolos}, title = {Constructing {C}antorian Counterexamples}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1997}, volume = {26}, number = {3}, pages = {237--239}, topic = {set-theory;} } @book{ boolos_g:1998a, author = {George Boolos}, title = {Logic, Logic, and Logic}, publisher = {Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge}, ISBN = {0674537661}, note = {Introductions and afterword by John P. Burgess; edited by Richard Jeffrey.}, rtnote = {UMich Science, BC 51 .B581 1998}, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @article{ boolos_g-sambin:1985a, author = {George Boolos and Giovanni Sambin}, title = {An Incomplete System of Modal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1985}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {351--358}, topic = {modal-logic;provability-logic;} } @book{ boons-leclere:1976a, author = {{A.G. Jean-Paul} Boons and C. Leclere}, title = {La Structure des Phrases Simples en {F}rancais: Constructions Intransitives}, publisher = {Libraire Droz}, year = {1976}, address = {Gen\'eve-Paris}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {transitivity-alternations;French-language;} } @article{ boorse_c:1978a, author = {Christopher Boorse}, title = {Wright on Functions}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1976}, volume = {85}, number = {1}, pages = {70--86}, topic = {philosophy-of-biology;} } @article{ boot_m:2009a, author = {Martijn Boot}, title = {Parity, Incomparability and Rationally Justified Choice}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, number = {1}, pages = {75--92}, volume = {146}, year = {2009}, topic = {decision-making;preferences;} } @incollection{ booth_r:2002a, author = {Richard Booth}, title = {Social Contraction and Belief Negotiation}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {375--384}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;belief-revision;knowledge-integration;} } @article{ booth_r-chandler_j:2017a, author = {Richard Booth and Jake Chandler}, title = {The Irreducibility of Iterated to Single Revision}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {4}, pages = {405--418}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ booth_r-chandler_j:2018a, author = {Richard Booth and Jake Chandler}, title = {On Strengthening the Logic of Iterated Belief Revision: Proper Ordinal Interval Operators}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {210--219}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {we supplement the Darwiche-Pearl postulates and (P) with a number of novel conditions. ... our new principles notably govern the relation between two posterior conditional belief sets obtained from a common prior by different revisions. We show that operators from the resulting family ... can be represented as relating belief states associated with a 'proper ordinal interval' (POI) assignment, a structure more fine-grained than a simple ordering of worlds.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ booth_r-etal:2005a, author = {Richard Booth and Samir Chopra and Aditya Ghose and Thomas Meyer}, title = {Belief Liberation (and Retraction)}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2005}, volume = {79}, number = {1}, pages = {47--72}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @incollection{ booth_r-etal:2006a, author = {Richard Booth and Thomas Meyer and Ka-Shu Wong}, title = {A Bad Day Surfing Is Better than a Good Day Working: How to Revise a Total Preorder}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {230--238}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {belief-revision;preferences;} } @article{ booth_r-etal:2010a, author = {Richard Booth and Samir Chopra and Thomas Meyer and Aditya Ghose}, title = {Double Preference Relations for Generalised Belief Change}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {16--17}, pages = {1339--1368}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ booth_r-etal:2012a, author = {Richard Booth and Thomas Meyer and Chattrakul Sombattheera}, title = {A General Family of Preferential Belief Removal Operators}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {41}, number = {4}, pages = {711--733}, topic = {belief-revision;preferences;} } @inproceedings{ booth_r-etal:2012b, author = {Richard Booth and Eduardo Ferm\'e and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Ramon Pino P\'erez}, title = {Credibility-Limited Revision Operators in Propositional Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {116--125}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we study credibility-limited revision operators when the information is represented in propositional logic, like in the Katsuno and Mendelzon framework. We propose a set of postulates and a representation theorem for credibility-limited revision operators. Then we explore how to generalize these definitions to the Iterated Belief Revision case, using epistemic states in the Darwiche and Pearl style. }, topic = {belief-revision;credability;} } @inproceedings{ booth_r-etal:2014a, author = {Richard Booth and Edmond Awad and Iyad Rahwan}, title = {Interval Methods for Judgment Aggregation in Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {594--597}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we ... [introduce] a family of operators called interval aggregation methods, which contain existing operators as instances. ... we show that it is possible to transform a given aggregation method into one that does always yield collectively rational labellings. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {knowledge-integration;} } @incollection{ booth_r-meyer_t:2008a, author = {Richard Booth and Thomas Meyer}, title = {Equilibria in Social Belief Removal}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {145--155}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {In studies of multi-agent interaction, especially in game theory, the notion of equilibrium often plays a prominent role. A typical scenario for the belief merging problem is one in which several agents pool their beliefs together to form a consistent "group" picture of the world. The aim of this paper is to define and study new notions of equilibria in belief merging. To do so, we assume the agents arrive at consistency via the use of a social belief removal function, in which each agent, using his own individual removal function, removes some belief from his stock of beliefs. We examine several notions of equilibria in this setting, assuming a general framework for individual belief removal due to Booth et al. We look at their inter-relations as well as prove their exitstance or otherwise. We also show how our equilibria can be seen as a generalisation of the idea of taking maximal consistent subsets of agents. }, topic = {multiagent-systems;belief-pooling;} } @article{ booth_r-meyer_t:2011a, author = {Richard Booth and Thomas Meyer}, title = {How to Revise a Total Preorder}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {40}, number = {2}, pages = {193--238}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ booth_r-paris_jb:1998a, author = {Richard Booth and J.B. Paris}, title = {A Note on the Rational Closure of Knowledge Bases with Both Positive and Negative Knowledge}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1998}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {165--190}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ booth_rj:2022a, author = {Richard Jefferson Booth}, title = {Necessity Modals, Disjunctions, and Collectivity}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 26}, year = {2022}, editor = {Daniel Gutzmann and Sophie Repp}, pages = {187--205}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Cologne}, address = {Cologne}, url = {https://bit.ly/Proceedings-of-SuB-26}, abstract = {Upward monotonic semantics for necessity modals give rise to Ross's Puzzle: they predict that []p implies [](pVq), but common intuitions about arguments of this form suggest they are invalid. It is widely assumed that the intuitive judgments involved in Ross's Puzzle can be explained in terms of the licensing of 'Diversity' inferences: from [](pvq) nfer that the truth of each disjunct is compatible with the relevant set of worlds. I introduce two pieces of data that this analysis fails to explain. Analyzing this data, I argue, suggests that necessity modals with embedded disjunctions license 'Independence' inferences: from the truth of [](pvq), nterpreters infer that p-without-q and q-without-p are each compatible with the relevant set of worlds. I outline a bilateral inquisitive semantics for necessity modals that predicts the validity of the Independence inferences. I then argue that the resulting theory should be understood as one on which disjunctions denote pluralities of propositions, and necessity modals behave like collective predicates applied to these pluralities.}, topic = {Ross'-paradox;inquisitive-semantics;} } @article{ booth_rj:2023a, author = {Richard Jefferson Booth}, title = {Underspecifying Desires}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {5}, pages = {1131--1160}, abstract = {According to a simple theory of the relationship between ‘want' ascriptions and the desires they ascribe, when I learn that A wants p is true, I learn that the truth of p is necessary and sufficient for satisfying one of A's desires. I argue that this simple theory is false: A wants p can be true and underspecific: p may be necessary but not sufficient for the satisfaction of one of A's desires. I show that existing semantics for 'want' cannot account for this kind of underspecificity, and I propose a desire-based semantics for 'want' that can. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se23}, topic = {desire;} } @book{ booth_wc:1974a, author = {Wayne C. Booth}, title = {A Rhetoric of Irony}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1974}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {0226065529}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library PN56 .I65 B72}, topic = {irony;literary-criticism;} } @article{ borchardt:1979a, author = {Edward Borchardt}, title = {The Semantics of Imperatives}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1979}, volume = {22}, number = {85}, pages = {191--205}, topic = {imperatives;} } @inproceedings{ bordeaux_l-etal:2012a, author = {Lucas Bordeaux and Mikolas Janota and Joao Marques-Silva and Pierre Marquis}, title = {On Unit-Refutation Complete Formulae with Existentially Quantified Variables}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {75--84}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We analyze, along the lines of the knowledge compilation map, both the tractability and the succinctness of the propositional language URC of unit-refutation complete propositional formulae, as well as its disjunctive closure URC[V, and a superset of URC where variables can be existentially quantified and unit-refutation completeness concerns only consequences built up from free variables. }, topic = {knowledge-compilation;} } @article{ borenstein_j-arkin_rc:2016a, author = {Jason Borenstein and Ronald C. Arkin}, title = {Robotic Nudges: The Ethics of Engineering a More Socially Just Human Being}, journal = {Science and Engineering Ethics}, year = {2016}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {31--46}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja17}, abstract = {In response to problems raised by Bench-Capon, this paper shows how two models of precedential constraint can be broadened to include legal information represented through dimensions, as well as standard factors.}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @article{ borenstein_j-arkin_rc:2016b, author = {Jason Borenstein and Ronald C. Arkin}, title = {Nudging for Good: Robots and the Ethical Appropriateness of Nurturing Empathy and Charitable Behavior}, journal = {{AI} and Society}, year = {2016}, doi = {10.1007/s00146-016-0684-1}, note = {Online First}, abstract = {An under-examined aspect of human-robot interaction that warrants further exploration is whether robots should be permitted to influence a user's behavior for that person's own good. Yet an even more controversial practice could be on the horizon, which is allowing a robot to 'nudge' a user's behavior for the good of society. In this article, we examine the feasibility of creating companion robots that would seek to nurture a user's empathy toward other human beings. As more and more computing devices subtly and overtly influence human behavior, it is important to draw attention to whether it would be ethically appropriate for roboticists to pursue this type of design pathway. Our primary focus is on whether a companion robot could encourage humans to perform charitable acts; this design possibility illustrates the range of socially just actions that a robot could potentially elicit from a user and what the associated ethical concerns may be.}, missinginfo = {volume, number, pages}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja17}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @book{ borenstein_ns:1991a, author = {Nathaniel S. Borenstein}, title = {Software Conflict: Essays on the Art and Science of Software Engineering}, publisher = {Prentice Hall}, year = {1991}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0138261571}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.758 .G531 1991.}, topic = {software-engineering;} } @inproceedings{ borg_am-bex_f:2021a, author = {AnneMarie Borg and Floris Bex}, title = {Enforcing Sets of Formulas in Structured Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {130--140}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we study enforcement in a general structured argumentation setting. In particular, we study conditions on the argumentation setting and the knowledge base that ensure (or prevent) the acceptability of sets of formulas for structured argumentation frameworks.}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ borg_e:2001a, author = {Emma Borg}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}eaning}, by {P}aul {H}orwich}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {1}, pages = {101--104}, xref = {Review of horwich_p:1998a.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ borg_e:2004a, author = {Emma Borg}, title = {Minimal Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0199270252}, note = {Umich Graduate Library P325 .B595 2004}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ borg_e:2004b, author = {Emma Borg}, title = {Formal Semantics and Intentional States}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {3}, pages = {215--223}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de16}, topic = {nl-semantics;context;intention;} } @incollection{ borg_e:2005a, author = {Emma Borg}, title = {Saying What You Mean: Unarticulated Constituents and Communication}, booktitle = {Ellipsis and Non-Sentential Speech}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2005}, editor = {Reinaldo Elugardo and Robert J. Stainton}, pages = {237--262}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {pragmatics;ellipsis;} } @incollection{ borg_e:2006a, author = {Emma Borg}, title = {Intention-Based Semantics}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {250--266}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {intention;nl-semantics;speaker-meaning;} } @article{ borg_e:2009a1, author = {Emma Borg}, title = {On Three Theories of Implicature: Default Theory, Relevance Theory and Minimalism}, journal = {International Review of Pragmatics}, year = {2009}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {63--83}, rtnote = {In RHT collection \au19}, xref = {Republication: borg_e:2009a2}, topic = {Grice;implicature;} } @incollection{ borg_e:2009a2, author = {Emma Borg}, title = {On Three Theories of Implicature: Default Theory, Relevance Theory and Minimalism}, booktitle = {Meaning and Analysis: New Essays on {G}rice}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2010}, editor = {Klaus Petrus}, pages = {268--287}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: borg_e:2009a1}, topic = {Grice;implicature;} } @book{ borg_e:2012a, author = {Emma Borg}, title = {Pursuing Meaning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199588374}, xref = {Review: sennet_a:2015a}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ borg_e:2019a, author = {Emma Borg}, title = {Explanatory Roles for Minimal Content}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2019}, volume = {53}, number = {3}, pages = {413--539}, topic = {pragmatics;semantic-content;assertion;speaker-meaning;} } @incollection{ borg_e-lepore_e:2002a, author = {Emma Borg and Ernest Lepore}, title = {Symbolic Logic and Natural Language}, booktitle = {A Companion to Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dale Jacquette}, pages = {86--101}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @article{ borgelt_c-kruse_r:2003a, author = {Christof Borgelt and Rudolf Kruse}, title = {Operations and Evaluation Measures for Learning Possibilistic Graphical Models}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {148}, number = {1--2}, pages = {385--418}, topic = {possibility-theory;machine-learning;} } @book{ borger:1987a, editor = {Egon B\"orger}, title = {Computation Theory and Logic}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1987}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0387181709}, rtnote = {Umich Media Union Library, QA267 .C5881 1987.}, topic = {theoretical-cs-general;} } @book{ borger:1988a, editor = {Egon B\"orger}, title = {Trends in Theoretical Computer Science}, publisher = {Computer Science Press}, year = {1988}, address = {Rockville}, ISBN = {0881750840}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA76 .T78 1987.}, topic = {theoretical-cs-general;} } @book{ borger:1995a, editor = {Egon B\"orger}, title = {Specification and Validation Methods}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198538545}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.7 .S641 1995.}, topic = {program-specification;} } @book{ borger-etal:1997a, author = {Egon B\"orger and Erich Gr\"adel and Yuri Gurevich}, title = {The Classical Decision Problem}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1997}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Review: marx_m:1999a.}, topic = {undecidability;decidability;} } @article{ borgers:1964a, author = {Alfons Borgers}, title = {Review of `{A}re Logic and Mathematics Identical?', by {L}eon {H}enkin}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1964}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {141--142}, xref = {Review of: henkin_l:1962a.}, topic = {logic-survey;foundations-of-mathematics;logicism;} } @article{ borghuis:1998a, author = {Tun Borghuis}, title = {Modal Pure Type Systems}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1998}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {265--296}, topic = {modal-logic;higher-order-logic;proof-theory;} } @incollection{ borghus:1993a, author = {Tijn Borghus}, title = {Interpreting Modal Natural Deduction in Type Theory}, booktitle = {Diamonds and Defaults}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, editor = {Maarten de Rijke}, year = {1993}, pages = {67--102}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {modal-logic;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ borgida_a:1985a, author = {Alex Borgida}, title = {Language Features for Flexible Handling of Exceptions in Information Systems}, journal = {{ACM} Transactions on Database Systems}, year = {1985}, volume = {10}, pages = {563--603}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {applied-nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ borgida_a:1992a, author = {Alex Borgida}, title = {Towards the Systematic Development of Description Logic Reasoners: {CLASP} reconstructed}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {259--269}, address = {San Mateo, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {kr;description-logics;extensions-of-kl1;kr-course;} } @article{ borgida_a:1996a, author = {Alex Borgida}, title = {On the Relative Expressive Completeness of Description Logics and Predicate Logics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {96}, volume = {82}, number = {1--2}, pages = {353--367}, topic = {taxonomic-logic;} } @article{ borgida_a-etal:1985a, author = {Alexander Borgida and Sol Greenspan and John Mylopoulos}, title = {Knowledge Representation as the Basis for Requirements Specifications}, journal = {{IEEE} Computer}, year = {1985}, volume = {18}, number = {4}, pages = {82--90}, topic = {knowledge-representation;software-engineering;} } @inproceedings{ borgida_a-etal:1989a, author = {Alexander Borgida and Ronald J. Brachman and Deborah L. McGuinness and Lori A. Resnik}, title = {{CLASSIC}: A Structural Data Model for Objects}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1989 ACM {SIGMOD} International Conference on Management of Data }, year = {1989}, editor = {James Clifford and Bruce G. Lindsay and David Maier}, pages = {58--67}, organization = {ACM}, publisher = {ACM}, address = {New York}, topic = {kr;description-logics;} } @incollection{ borgida_a-etal:2003a, author = {Alex Borgida and Maurizio Lenzerini and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {Description Logics for Databases}, booktitle = {The Description Logic Handbook: Theory, Implementation and Applications}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Franz Baader and Diego Calvanese and Deborah L. McGuinness and Daniele Nardi and Peter Patel-Schneider}, pages = {462--484}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {description-logics;AI-applications;databases;} } @inproceedings{ borgida_a-etal:2016a, author = {Alexander Borgida and David Toman and Grant Weddell}, title = {On Referring Expressions in Query Answering over First Order Knowledge Bases}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {319--328}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {[We] explore how [queries] can be usefully extended by allowing a class of more general formulas, called Singular Referring Expressions, to replace constants ... we apply this framework in the context of tractable description logic dialects, showing how identification properties can be determined at compile-time for conjunctive queries, and how off-the-shelf conjunctive query evaluation for these dialects can be used in query evaluations, preserving, in all cases, underlying tractability. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;knowledge-base-queries;description-logics;} } @incollection{ borgida_a-etherington:1989a, author = {Alex Borgida and David W. Etherington}, title = {Hierarchical Knowledge Bases and Efficient Disjunctive Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {33--43}, address = {San Mateo, California}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {kr;vivid-reasoning;inheritance;description-logics;kr-course;} } @incollection{ borgida_a-mcguinness_dl:1996a, author = {Alex Borgida and Deborah L. McGuinness}, title = {Asking Queries about Frames}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {340--349}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;classic;description-logics;generating-explanations;kr-course;} } @article{ borgida_a-patelschneider:1994a, author = {Alex Borgida and Peter Patel-Schneider}, title = {A Semantics and Complete Algorithm for Subsumption in the {CLASSIC} Description Logic}, journal = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research}, year = {1994}, volume = {1}, pages = {277--308}, topic = {kr;CLASSIC;subsumption-algorithms;kr-course;} } @book{ borgmann:1974a, author = {Albert Borgmann}, title = {The Philosophy of Language: Historical Foundations and Contemporary Issues}, publisher = {Martinus Nijhoff}, year = {1974}, address = {The Hague}, ISBN = {902471589X}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ borgo-etal:1996a, author = {Stefano Borgo and Nicola Guarino and Claudio Masolo}, title = {A Pointless Theory of Space Based on Strong Connection and Congruence}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {220--229}, address = {San Francisco, California}, rtnote = {Got to love this title.}, topic = {kr;spatial-reasoning;kr-course;} } @article{ borgo-masolo:2010a, author = {Stefano Borgo and Claudio Masolo}, title = {Full Mereogeometries}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {3}, number = {4}, pages = {521--567}, topic = {mereology;formalizations-of-geometry;} } @inproceedings{ borgwardt_s-etal:2014a, author = {Stefan Borgwardt and Felix Distel and Rafael Pe\~naloza}, title = {Decidable {G}\"odel Description Logics without the Finitely-Valued Model Property}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {228--237 }, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... not much is known about the complexity of reasoning in fuzzy description logics w.r.t. witnessed models over the Goedel t-norm. We show that in the logic G-IALC, reasoning cannot be restricted to finitely-valued models in general. Despite this negative result, we also show that all the standard reasoning problems can be solved in exponential time, matching the complexity of reasoning in classical ALC. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {kr;description-logics;fuzzy-logic;} } @inproceedings{ borgwardt_s-etal:2021a, author = {Stefan Borgwardt and J\"org Hoffmann and Alisa Kovtunova and Marcel Steinmetz}, title = {Making {DL}-Lite Planning Practical}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {641--645}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we design a PDDL pre-compiler realizing a polynomial DNF transformation. We leverage a particular PDDL language feature, derived predicates, to avoid the need for excessive control structure. Our pre-compiler turns out to be quite effective: the previous bottleneck disappears, and experiments on a broad range of benchmarks demonstrate the first practical technology for DL-Lite planning.}, topic = {DL-Lite;planning-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ borgwardt_s-penaloza_r:2012a, author = {Stefan Borgwardt and Rafael Pe\~naloza}, title = {Undecidability of Fuzzy Description Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {232--242}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we formalize this idea and provide sufficient conditions for proving undecidability of a fuzzy DL. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach by strengthening all previously-known undecidability results and providing new ones. In particular, we show that undecidability may arise even if only crisp axioms are considered. }, topic = {description-logics;fuzzy-logic;(un)decidability;} } @article{ boricic:1985a, author = {Branislaw R. Bori\v{c}i\v{c}}, title = {On Sequence-Conclusion Natural Deduction Systems}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1985}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {359--377}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @article{ borisavljevic:2008a, author = {Miriana Borisavljevi\v{c}}, title = {Normal Derivations and Sequent Derivations}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {37}, number = {1}, pages = {521--548}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;proof-theory;cut-elimination;} } @article{ borkin:1972a, author = {Ann Borkin}, title = {Coreference and Beheaded NPs}, journal = {Papers in Linguistics}, year = {1972}, volume = {5}, pages = {28--45}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-syntax;metonymy;} } @book{ born:1988a, editor = {Rainer Born}, title = {Artificial Intelligence: The Case Against}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1988}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0415002893, 9780415002899}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ bornscheuer-etal:1998a, author = {S.-E. Bornscheuer et al.}, title = {Massively Parallel Reasoning}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {II}, Systems and Implementation Techniques}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @article{ boros-etal:1999a, author = {Endre Boros and Toshihide Ibaraki and Kazuhara Makino}, title = {Logical Analysis of Binary Data with Missing Bits}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {107}, number = {2}, pages = {219--263}, topic = {kr-complexity-analysis;data-mining;logic-in-AI;} } @article{ borowski_ej:1973a, author = {Ephrain J. Borowski}, title = {On the Extent of {J}ohn's Height}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1973}, volume = {10}, number = {3}, pages = {419--422}, topic = {comparative-constructions;nl-semantics;} } @article{ borowski_ej:1974a, author = {E.J. Borowski}, title = {Adverbials in Action Sentences}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1974}, volume = {28}, number = {3/4}, pages = {483--512}, contentnote = {Argues against Davidson}, topic = {adverbs;Davidson;} } @article{ borowski_ej:1979a, author = {Ephraim J. Borowski}, title = {Sentence Meaning and Word Meaning {II}}, journal = {Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1979}, volume = {29}, number = {115}, pages = {111--124}, rtnote = {To a large extent commentary on heal_j:1979a, but better informed about the relevant linguistics. }, topic = {philosophy-of-language;sentence-meaning;} } @book{ borsuk-smielew:1960a, author = {Karol Borsuk and Wanda Smielew}, title = {Foundations of Geometry. Part {I}: {E}uclidean and {B}olyai-{L}obachevskian Geometry. Part {II}: Projective Geometry}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Co.}, year = {1960}, address = {Amsterdam}, note = {English edition; translated by Erwin Marquit.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Mathematics shelves.}, topic = {geometry;formalizations-of-geometry;} } @incollection{ bos_ep-sundholm_g:2002a, author = {E.P. Bos and G\"oran Sundholm}, title = {History of Logic: Medieval}, booktitle = {A Companion to Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dale Jacquette}, pages = {24--34}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {medieval-logic;history-of-logic;} } @incollection{ bos_j:1994a, author = {Johan Bos}, title = {Presupposition and {VP}-Ellipsis}, booktitle = {{COLING}'94: The Fifteenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1994}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, editor = {Yorick WIlks}, pages = {1184--1190}, topic = {presupposition;VP-ellipsis;} } @article{ bos_j:2003a, author = {Johan Bos}, title = {Implementing the Binding and Accommodation Theory for Anaphora Resolution and Presupposition Projection}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2003}, volume = {29}, number = {2}, pages = {179--210}, topic = {accommodation;anaphora;nl-processing;} } @article{ bos_j:2004a, author = {Johan Bos}, title = {Computational Semantics in Discourse: Underspecification, Resolution, and Inference}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2004}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {139--157}, topic = {computational-semantics;discourse-representation-theory; semantic-underspecification;} } @inproceedings{ bos_j:2008a, author = {Johan Bos}, title = {Wide-Coverage Semantic Analysis With {B}oxer}, booktitle = {Semantics in Text Processing. ({STEP} 2008)}, year = {2008}, editor = {Johan Bos and Rodolfo Delmonte}, pages = {277--206}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-semantics;} } @article{ bos_j:2016a, author = {Johan Bos}, title = {Expressive Power of Abstract Meaning Representations}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2016}, volume = {42}, number = {3}, pages = {527--535}, abstract = {The syntax of abstract meaning representations (AMRs) can be defined recursively, and a systematic translation to first-order logic (FOL) can be specified, including a proper treatment of negation. AMRs without recurrent variables are in the decidable two-variable fragment of FOL. The current definition of AMRs has limited expressive power for universal quantification (up to one universal quantifier per sentence). A simple extension of the AMR syntax and translation to FOL provides the means to represent projection and scope phenomena.}, topic = {semantic-representations;expressive-power;} } @inproceedings{ bos_j-etal:1998a, author = {Johan Bos and C.J. Rupp and Bianka Buschbeck-Wolf and Michael Dorna}, title = {Managing Information at Linguistic Interfaces}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {160--166}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {spoken-dialogue-systems;machine-translation;} } @book{ bos_j-etal:2002a, editor = {Johan Bos and Mary Ellen Foster and Colin Mathesin}, title = {{EDILOG} 2002: Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Centre, University of Edinburgh}, year = {2002}, address = {Edinburgh}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Susan Brennan, "Audience Design and Discourse Processes: Do Speakers and Addressees", p. 1 2. Enric Vallduv\'i, "Information Packaging and Dialog", p. 4 3. J. Gabriel Amores and Jos\'e Quesada, "Cooperation and Collaboration in Natural Language Command Dialogues", pp. 5--11 4. Anne H. Anderson and Barbara Howarth, "Referential Form and Word Duration in Video-Mediated and Face-to-Face Dialogues ", pp. 13--28 5. Michael L. Anderson and Yoshi A. Okamoto and Darsana Josyula and Don Perlis, "The Use-Mention Distinction and its Importance to {HCI}", pp. 21--28 6. Ellen Gurman Bard and Matthew P. Aylett and Robin J. Lickley, "Towards a Psycholinguistics of Dialogue: Defining Reaction Time and Error Rate in a Dialogue Corpus", pp. 29--36 7. Adam Buchwald and Oren Schwartz and Amanda Seidl and Paul Smolensky, "Recoverability Optimality Theory: Discourse Anaphora in a Bi-Directional Framework", pp. 37--44 8. Robin Cooper and Jonathan Ginzburg, "Using Dependent Record Types in Clarification Ellipsis", pp. 45--52 9. Floriana Grasso, "Towards a Framework for Rhetorical Argumentation", pp. 53--60 10. Samson de Jager and Alistair Knott and Ian Bayard, "A {DRT}-Based Framework for Presupposition in Dialogue Management ", pp. 61--68 11. Ruth Kempson and Masayuki Otsuka, "Dialogue as Collaborative Tree Growth", pp. 69--76 12. Peter Krause, "An Algorithm for Processing Referential Definite Descriptions in Dialogue Based on Abductive Inference", pp. 77--84 13. J\"orn Kreutel and Colin Matheson, "From Dialogue Acts to Dialogue Act Offers: Building Discourse Structure as an Argumentative Process", pp. 85--92 14. Ivana Kruijff-Korbayov\'a and Elena Karagjosova and Staffan Larsson, "Enhancing Collaboration with Conditional Responses in Information-Seeking Dialogues", pp. 93--100 15. Markus L\"ockelt and Tilman Becker and Norbert Pfleger and Jan Alexandersson, "Making Sense of Partial", pp. 101--107 16. William Mann, "Dialogue Analysis for Diverse Situations", pp. 109--116 17. Emiliano G. Padilha and Jean Carletta, "A Simulation of Small Group Discussion", pp. 117--124 18. Allison Pease and Simon Colton and Alan Smaill and John Lee, "Semantic Negotiation: Modelling Ambiguity in Dialogue", pp. 125--132 19. Orin Percus, "Modelling the Common Ground: The Relevance of Copular Questions", pp. 133--140 20. Paul Piwek and Kees van Deemter, "Towards Automated Generation of Scripted Dialogue: Some Time-Honoured Strategies", pp. 141--148 21. J.F. Quesada and J.G. Amores, "Knowledge-Based Reference Resolution for Dialogue Management in a Home Domain Environment", pp. 149--154 22. Robert van Rooy, "Relevance Only", pp. 155--160 23. David Schlangen and Alex Lascarides, "Resolving Fragments Using Discourse Information", pp. 161--168 24. Matthew Stone and Richmond H. Thomason, "Context in Abductive Interpretation", pp. 169--176 25. Maite Taboada, "Centering and Pronominal Reference: In Dialogue, in {S}panish", pp. 177--184 26. Dimitra Tsovaltzi and Colin Matheson, "Formalizing Hinting in Tutorial Dialogues", pp. 185--192 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, topic = {computational-dialogue;pragmatics;discourse;} } @book{ bos_j-pulman_sg:2011a, editor = {Johan Bos and Stephen G. Pulman}, title = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference on Computational Semantics (IWCS 2011)}, year = {2011}, url = {http://www.meaningfactory.com/bos/pubs/BosPulman2011.pdf}, contentsnote = {TC: 1. Harry Bunt, "The Semantics of Dialogue Acts", pp. 1--14 2. Eduard Hovy, "A New Semantics: Merging Propositional and Distributional Information", p. 14 3. Hiyan Alshawi and Pi-Chuan Chang and Michael Ringgaard, "Deterministic Statistical Mapping of Sentences to Underspecified Semantics", pp. 15--24 4. Carmen Banea and Rada Mihalcea, "Word Sense Disambiguation with Multilingual Features", pp. 25--34 5. Chitta Baral and Juraj Dzifcak and Marcos Alvarez Gonzalez and Jiayu Zhou, "Using Inverse lambda and Generalization to Translate {E}nglish to Formal Languages", pp. 35--44 6. Eduardo Blanco and Dan Moldovan, "A Model for Composing Semantic Relations", pp. 45--54 7. James Blythe and Jerry Hobbs and Pedro Domingos and Rohit Kate and Raymond Mooney, "Implementing Weighted Abduction in Markov Logic", pp. 55--64 8. Guillaume Bonfante and Bruno Guillaume and Mathieu Morey and Guy Perrier, "Modular Graph Rewriting to Compute Semantics", pp. 65--74 9. Oliver Bott and Fabian Schlotterbeck and Jakub Szymanik, "Interpreting tractable versus intractable reciprocal sentences", pp. 75--84 10. Susan Windisch Brown and Dmitriy Dligach and Martha Palmer, "VerbNet Class Assignment as a WSD Task", pp. 85--94 11. Manaal Faruqui and Sebastian Pado, "Acquiring entailment pairs across languages and domains: A Data Analysis", pp. 95--104 12. Dan Garrette and Katrin Erk and Raymond Mooney, "Integrating Logical Representations with Probabilistic Information using Markov Logic", pp. 105--114 13. Voula Gotsoulia, "An Abstract Schema for Representing Semantic Roles and Modelling the Syntax-Semantics Interface", pp. 115--124 14. Edward Grefenstette and Mehrnoosh Sadrzadeh and Stephen Clark and Bob Coecke and Stephen Pulman, "Concrete Compositional Sentence Spaces", pp. 125--134 15. Emiliano Raul Guevara, "Computing Semantic Compositionality in Distributional Semantics", pp. 135--144 16. Andrey Gusev and Nathanael Chambers and Divye Raj Khilnani and Pranav Khaitan and Steven Bethard and Dan Jurafsky, "Using Query Patterns to Learn the Duration of Events", pp. 145--154 17. Yoshihiko Hayashi, "A Representation Framework for Cross-lingual/Interlingual Lexical Semantic Correspondences", pp. 155--164 18. Aurelie Herbelot and Ann Copestake, "Formalising and specifying underquantification", pp. 165--174 19. Blake Stephen Howald and E. Graham Katz, "The Exploitation of Spatial Information in Narrative Discourse", pp. 175--184 20. Chee Wee Leong and Rada Mihalcea, "Measuring the semantic relatedness between words and images", pp. 185--194 21. Niloofar Montazeri and Jerry Hobbs, "Elaborating a Knowledge Base for Deep Lexical Semantics", pp. 195--204 22. Elisabeth Niemann and Iryna Gurevych, "The Peoples Web meets Linguistic Knowledge: Automatic Sense Alignment of Wikipedia andWordNet", pp. 205--214 23. Megumi Ohki and Eric Nichols and Suguru Matsuyoshi and Koji Murakami and Junta Mizuno and Shouko Masuda and Kentaro Inui and Yuji Matsumoto, "Recognizing Confinement inWeb Texts", pp. 215--224 24. Ekaterina Ovchinnikova and Niloofar Montazeri and Theodore Alexandrov and Jerry Hobbs and Michael C. McCord and Rutu Mulkar-Mehta, "Abductive Reasoning with a Large Knowledge Base for Discourse Processing", pp. 225--234 25. Volha Petukhova and Harry Bunt, "Incremental dialogue act understanding", pp. 235--244 26. Hilke Reckman and Jeff Orkin and Deb Roy, "Extracting aspects of determiner meaning from dialogue in a virtual world environment", pp. 245--255 27. Livio Robaldo, "On the Maximalization of the witness sets in Independent Set readings", pp. 255--264 28. Jason Utt and Sebastian Pado, "Ontology-based Distinction between Polysemy and Homonymy", pp. 265--274 29. Nervo Verdezoto and Laure Vieu, "Towards semi-automatic methods for improving WordNet", pp. 275--284 30. Justin Washtell, "Compositional Expectation: A Purely Distributional Model of Compositional Semantics", pp. 285--294 31. Stephen Wu and William Schuler, "Structured Composition of Semantic Vectors", pp. 295--304 32. Tafseer Ahmed and Miriam Butt, "Discovering Semantic Classes for Urdu N-V Complex Predicates", pp. 305--309 33. Lee Becker and Wayne Ward and Sarel Van Vuuren and Martha Palmer, "DISCUSS: A dialogue move taxonomy layered over semantic representations", pp. 310--314 34. Armelle Boussidan and Sabine Ploux, "Using Topic Salience and Connotational Drifts to Detect Candidates to Semantic Change", pp. 315--319 35. Elena Cabrio and Bernardo Magnini, "Towards Component-Based Textual Entailment", pp. 320--324 36. Daoud Clarke and David Weir and Rudi Lutz and Ben Campion, "Algebraic Approaches to Compositional Distributional Semantics", pp. 325--329 37. Rachel Cotterill, "Question Classification for Email", pp. 330--334 38. Normunds Gruzitis and Guntis Barzdins, "Towards a More Natural Multilingual Controlled Language Interface to OWL", pp. 335--339 39. Ezra Keshet and Terrence Szymanski and Stephen Tyndall, "BALLGAME: A Corpus for Computational Semantics", pp. 340--344 40. Leonardo Lesmo and Alessandro Mazzei and Daniele P. Radicioni, "An Ontology Based Architecture for Translation", pp. 345--349 41. Roser Morante and Sarah Schrauwen and Walter Daelemans, "Corpus-based approaches to processing the scope of negation cues: an evaluation of the state of the art ", pp. 350--354 42. Jaouad Mousser, "Classifying Arabic Verbs Using Sibling Classes", pp. 355--359. 43. Rutu Mulkar-Mehta and Jerry Hobbs and Eduard Hovy, "Granularity in Natural Language Discourse", pp. 360--364 44. Matthew Purver and Arash Eshghi and Julian Hough, "Incremental Semantic Construction in a Dialogue System", pp. 365--369 45. Kevin Reschke and Pranav Anand, "Extracting Contextual Evaluativity", pp. 370--374 46. Lina Maria Rojas-Barahona and Thierry Bazillon and Matthieu Quignard and Fabrice Lef\`evre, "Using MMIL for the High Level Semantic Annotation of the French MEDIA Dialogue Corpus", pp. 375--379 47. Masoud Rouhizadeh and Margit Bowler and Richard Sproat and Bob Coyne, "Collecting Semantic Data from Mechanical Turk for a Lexical Knowledge Resource in a Text to Picture Generating System", pp. 380--384 48. Steve Spagnola and Carl Lagoze, "Edge dependent pathway scoring for calculating semantic similarity in ConceptNet", pp. 385--389 49. Pia-Ramona Wojtinnek and Stephen Pulman, "Semantic Relatedness from Automatically Generated Semantic Networks", pp. 390--394 50. Deyu Zhou and Yulan He, "Semantic Parsing for Biomedical Event Extraction", pp. 395--399 }, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, topic = {computational-semantics;} } @incollection{ bosch_p:1979a, author = {Peter Bosch}, title = {Vagueness, Ambiguity and All the Rest. An Explication and an Intuitive Test}, booktitle = {{S}prachstructur, {I}ndividuum und {G}esellschaft. {A}kten des 13 {L}inguistischen {K}olloquiums. {B}and I.}, publisher = {Niemeyer}, year = {1979}, pages = {9--19}, address = {{T}\"ubingen}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;vagueness;ambiguity;} } @incollection{ bosch_p:1983a, author = {Peter Bosch}, title = {`{V}agueness' is Context-Dependence: A Solution to the Sorites Paradox}, booktitle = {Approaching Vagueness}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1983}, editor = {Thomas T. Ballmer and Manfred Pinkal}, pages = {189--210}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. FIle Drawers, "Bosch"}, topic = {vagueness;context;sorites-paradox;} } @book{ bosch_p:1983b, author = {Peter Bosch}, title = {Agreement and Anaphora: A Study of the Role of Pronouns in Syntax and Discourse}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1983}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0121188205}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 279 .B6711 1983.}, topic = {pronouns;anaphora;} } @book{ bosch_p:1984a, author = {Peter Bosch}, title = {Lexical Learning, Context Dependence, and Metaphor}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1984}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library P325 .B74x 1984}, topic = {context;metaphor;word-acquisition;} } @article{ bosch_p:1984b, author = {Peter Bosch}, title = {Review of \emph{{W}ords, Worlds, and Contexts: New Approaches to Word Semantics}, edited by {H}ans-{J}\"urgen {E}ikmeyer and {H}annes {R}ieser}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1984}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {261--275}, xref = {Review of: eikmeyer-rieser_h:1981a}, topic = {nl-semantics;context;lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ bosch_p:1987a, author = {Peter Bosch}, title = {Indexicality and Representation}, booktitle = {Natural Language and Logic}, year = {1987}, editor = {Rudi Studer}, pages = {50--61}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {indexicals;} } @book{ bosch_p-vandersandt:1999a, editor = {Peter Bosch and Rob {van der Sandt}}, title = {Focus: Linguistic, Cognitive, and Computational Perspectives}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521583055 (hardbound)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 299 .F63 F631 1998.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Kees van Deemter, "Contrastive Stress, Contrariety, and Focus", pp. 3--17 2. Carsten G\"unter and Claudia Maienborn and Andrea Schopp, "The Processing of Information Structure", pp. 18--42 3. Carlos Gusenhaven, "On the Limits of Focus Projection in English", pp. 43--55 4. Joachim Jacobs, "Informational Autonomy", pp. 56--81 5. Ellen F. Price, "Subject Prodrop in Yiddish", pp. 82--103 6. Peter I. Block and Kurt Eberle, "What is the Alternative? The Computation of Focus Alternatives from Lexical and Sortal Information", pp. 105--120 7. Daniel B\"uring, "Topic", pp. 121--141 8. Regina Eckhart, "Focus with Nominal Quantifiers", pp. 166--185 9. Gerhard J\"ager, "Topic, Focus, anfd Weak Quantifiers", pp. 187--212 10. Barbara H. Partee, "Focus, Quantification, and Semantics-Pragmatics Issues", pp. 213--231 11. Mats Rooth, "Association with Focus or Association with Presupposition?", pp. 232--245 12. Nicholas Asher, "Discourse and the Focus/Background Distinction", pp. 247--267 13. Bart Guerts and Rob van der Sandt, "Domain Restriction", pp. 268--292 14. Jeanette K. Gundel, "On Different Kinds of Focus", pp. 293--305 15. Megumi Kameyama, "Stressed and Unstressed Pronouns: Complementary Preferences", pp. 306--321 16. Kjell Johan S{\ae}b{\o}, "Discourse Linking and Discourse Subordination", pp. 322--335 17. Henri\"ette de Swart, "Position and Meaning: Time Adverbials in Context", pp. 336--362 }, topic = {sentence-focus;} } @inproceedings{ bosco-bazzanella_c:2001a, author = {Cristina Bosco and Carla Bazzanella}, title = {Context and Multi-Media Corpora}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {417--420}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;multimedia-corpora;} } @book{ boskovic:1997a, author = {\v{Z}eljko Bo\v{s}kovi\'c}, title = {The Syntax of Nonfinite Complementation}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {nl-syntax;complementation;} } @incollection{ bosse_t-etal:2005a, author = {Tibor Bosse and Catholijn M. Jonker and Jan Treur}, title = {Simulation and Representation of Body, Emotion and Core Consciousness}, booktitle = {{AISB}'05: Social Intelligence and Interaction in Animals, Robots and Agents: Proceedings of the Symposium on Next Generation Approaches to Machine Consciousness Imagination, Development, Intersubjectivity and Embodiment}, publisher = {The Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and the Simulation of Behaviour}, year = {2005}, editor = {Ron Chrisley and Rob Clowes and Steve Torrance}, pages = {95--103}, address = {Bath, England}, abstract = {This paper contributes an analysis and formalisation of Damasio's theory on core consciousness. Three important concepts in this theory are 'emotion', 'feeling', and 'feeling a feeling' (or core consciousness). In particular, a simulation model is described of the neural dynamics leading via emotion and feeling to core consciousness, and dynamic properties are formally specified that hold for these dynamics. These properties have been automatically checked for the simulation traces. Moreover, a formal analysis is made and verified of relevant notions of representation.}, topic = {machine-consciousness;consciousness;} } @inproceedings{ bosser_ag-etal:2018a, author = {Anne-Gwenn Bosser and Pedro Cabalar and Mart\'in Di\'eguez and Torsten Schaub}, title = {Introducing Temporal Stable Models for Linear Dynamic Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {12--21}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We propose a new temporal extension of the logic of Here-and-There (HT) and its equilibria obtained by combining it with dynamic logic over (linear) traces. Unlike previous temporal extensions of HT based on linear temporal logic, the dynamic logic features allow us to reason about the composition of actions. For instance, this can be used to exercise fine grained control when planning in robotics, as exemplified by GOLOG. In this paper, we lay the foundations of our approach, and refer to it as Linear Dynamic Equilibrium Logic, or simply DEL. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {stable-models;temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ bossi-etalle:1994a, author = {Annalisa Bossi and Sandro Etalle}, title = {More on Unfold/Fold Transformations of Normal Programs: Preservation of {F}itting's Semantics'}, booktitle = {Logic Programming Synthesis and Transformation, Meta-Programming in Logic: Fourth International Workshops, {LOBSTR}'94 and {META}'94, Pisa, Italy}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Laurent Fribourg and Franco Turini}, pages = {311--331}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {program-transformations;} } @article{ bossu_g-siegel_p:1985a, author = {Genevieve Bossu and Pierre Siegel}, title = {Saturation, Nonmonotonic Reasoning and the Closed-World Assumption}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {13--63}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;nonmonotonic-logic; closed-world-reasoning;} } @incollection{ boster_js:1991a, author = {James S. Boster}, title = {The Information Economy Model Applied to Biological Similarity Judgment}, booktitle = {Perspectives on Socially Shared Cognition}, publisher = {American Psychological Association}, year = {1991}, editor = {Lauren B. Resnick and John M. Levine and Stephanie D. Teasley}, pages = {203--225}, address = {Washington, D.C.}, topic = {social-psychology;shared-cognition;} } @article{ bostock_d:1980a, author = {David Bostock}, title = {A Study of Type-Neutrality}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {211--296}, topic = {polymorphism;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ bostock_d:1980b, author = {David Bostock}, title = {A Study of Type-Neutrality, Part {II}: Relations}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {363--414}, topic = {polymorphism;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ bostock_d:2011a, author = {David Bostock}, title = {Note on Heterologicality}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {2}, pages = {252--259}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @book{ bostock_d:2012a, author = {David Bostock}, title = {Russell's Logical Atomism}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0199651443}, xref = {Review: colomina:2014a}, topic = {Russell;history-of-analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ bostock_s:2008a, author = {Simon Bostock}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}eadings on Laws of Nature}, edited by {J}ohn {W}. {C}arroll}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2008}, volume = {75}, number = {3}, pages = {409--411}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;causality;natural-laws;} } @article{ bostrom_n:2002a, author = {Nick Bostrom}, title = {Self-Locating Belief in Big Worlds: Cosmology's Missing Link}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {99}, number = {12}, pages = {607--623}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;} } @article{ bostrom_n:2006a, author = {Nick Bostrom}, title = {Quantity of Experience: Brain-Duplication and Degrees of Consciousness}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2006}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {185--200}, abstract = {If a brain is duplicated so that there are two brains in identical states, are there then two numerically distinct phenomenal experiences or only one? There are two, I argue, and given computationalism, this has implications for what it is to implement a computation. I then consider what happens when a computation is implemented in a system that either uses unreliable components or possesses varying degrees of parallelism. I show that in some of these cases there can be, in a deep and intriguing sense, a fractional (non-integer) number of qualitatively identical phenomenal experiences. This, in turn, has implications for what lessons one should draw from neural replacement scenarios such as Chalmers' "Fading Qualia" thought experiment. }, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;cognitive-states;qualia;} } @article{ bostrom_n:2012a, author = {Nick Bostrom}, title = {The Superintelligent Will: Motivation and Instrumental Rationality in Advanced Artificial Agents}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2012}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {71--85}, abstract = {This paper discusses the relation between intelligence and motivation in artificial agents, developing and briefly arguing for two theses. The first, the orthogonality thesis, holds (with some caveats) that intelligence and final goals (purposes) are orthogonal axes along which possible artificial intellects can freely vary -- more or less any level of intelligence could be combined with more or less any final goal. The second, the instrumental convergence thesis, holds that as long as they possess a sufficient level of intelligence, agents having any of a wide range of final goals will pursue similar intermediary goals because they have instrumental reasons to do so. In combination, the two theses help us understand the possible range of behavior of superintelligent agents, and they point to some potential dangers in building such an agent. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe13\bostrom.pdf}, topic = {intelligence;philosophy-of-AI;} } @book{ bostrom_n:2014a, author = {Nick Bostrom}, title = {Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-873983-8}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Fall, 2017}, xref = {Critical Notices: wilks_y:2017a, davis_e:2015a}, topic = {technological-singularity;AI-editorial;} } @incollection{ bostrom_n-yudkowsky_e:2014a, author = {Nick Bostrom and Eliezer Yudkowsky}, title = {The Ethics of Artificial Intelligence}, booktitle = {The Cambridge Handbook of Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Keith Frankish and William M. Ramsey}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @book{ botha_rp:1971a, author = {Rudolf P. Botha}, title = {Methodological Aspects of Transformational Generative Phonology}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1971}, address = {The Hague}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {phonology;linguistics-methodology;} } @incollection{ botha_rp:1976a, author = {Rudolf P. Botha}, title = {On the Analysis of Linguistic Argumentation}, booktitle = {Assessing Linguistic Arguments}, publisher = {Hemisphere Publishing Corporation}, year = {1976}, editor = {Jessica R. Wirth}, pages = {1--34}, address = {Washington, D.C.}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;foundations-of-linguistics;} } @inproceedings{ bothorel-chevalier:2003a, author = {C\'ecile Bothorel and Karine Chevalier}, title = {How to Use Enriched Browsing Context to Personalize Web Site Access}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {419--426}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;context-aware-computing;} } @incollection{ botne:2012a, author = {Robert Botne}, title = {Remoteness Distinctions}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {536--562}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;remoteness;} } @inproceedings{ botoeva_e-etal:2014a, author = {Elena Botoeva and Roman Kontchakov and Vladislav Ryzhikov and Frank Wolter and Michael Zakharyaschev}, title = {Query Inseparability for Description Logic Knowledge Bases}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {238--247}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We investigate conjunctive query inseparability of description logic (DL) knowledge bases (KBs) with respect to a given signature, a fundamental problem for KB versioning, module extraction, forgetting and knowledge exchange. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {query-answering;description-logics;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ bott_l-noveck:2004a, author = {Lewis Bott and Ira A. Noveck}, title = {Some Utterances are Underinformative: The Onset and Time Course of Scalar Inferences}, journal = {Journal of Memory and Language}, year = {2004}, volume = {51}, number = {3}, pages = {437--457}, topic = {psycholinguistics;scalar-implicature;} } @incollection{ bott_o-etal:2011a, author = {Oliver Bott and Sam Featherson and Lanina Rad\'o and Britta Stolterfoht}, title = {The Application of Experimental Methods in Semantics}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {305--319}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {experimental-semantics;} } @article{ bottner:1992a, author = {Michael B\"ottner}, title = {Variable-Free Semantics for Anaphora}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1992}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {375--390}, topic = {nl-semantics;anaphora;algebraic-logic;} } @article{ bouchard:1987a, author = {Denis Bouchard}, title = {A Few Remarks on Past Participle Agreement}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1987}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {449--474}, topic = {nl-syntax;government-binding-theory;French-language;} } @book{ bouchard:1995a, author = {Denis Bouchard}, title = {The Semantics of Syntax: A Minimalist Approach to Grammar}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Chicago}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Shelf.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ bouchard:2013a, author = {Yves Bouchard}, title = {Epistemic Contexts and Indexicality}, booktitle = {Epistemology, Context, Formalism}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Franck Lihoreau and Manuel Rebuschi}, pages = {49--79}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {knowledge;context;} } @article{ bouchard-smith_cs:1987a, author = {Denis Bouchard and Carlota S. Smith}, title = {Introduction}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1987}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, contentnote = {Intro to a symposium on syntax and semantics.}, pages = {429--431}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @article{ boucher:1997a, author = {Andrew Boucher}, title = {Parallel Machines}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {543--551}, abstract = {Because it is time-dependent, parallel computation is fundamentally different from sequential computation. Parallel programs are non-deterministic and are not effective procedures. Given the brain operates in parallel, this casts doubt on AI's attempt to make sequential computers intelligent. }, topic = {parallel-processing;machine-intelligence;} } @book{ bouillon-busa:2001a, editor = {Pierette Bouillon and Federika Busa}, title = {The Language of Word Meaning}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-78048-9}, rtnote = {UMich Grad P 325 .L2951 2001}, contentnote = {TC: 1. James Pustejovsky, "Preface" 2. Pierrette Bouillon and Federica Busa, "Introduction: Word Meaning and Creativity" 3. Federica Busa and Pierrette Bouillon, "Introduction to Part I: Linguistic Creativity and the Lexicon" 4. James McGilvray, "Chomsky on the Creative Aspect of Language Use and Its Implications for Lexical Semantic Studies" 5. Jerry A. Fodor and Ernie Lepore, "The Emptiness of the Lexicon: Critical Reflections on J. Pustejovsky's 'The Generative Lexicon'" 6. James Pustejovsky, "Generativity and Explanation in Semantics: A Reply to Fodor and Lepore" 7. Yorick Wilks, "The 'Fodor'-FODOR fallacy bites back" 8. Federica Busa and Pierrette Bouillon, "Introduction to Part II: The Syntax of Word Meaning" 9. James Pustejovsky" Type construction and the logic of concepts" 10. Jacques Jayez, "Underspecification, Context Selection and Generativity" 11. Pierrette Bouillon and Federica Busa, "Qualia and the Structuring of Verb Meaning" 12. Patrick Saint-Dizier, "Sense Variation and Lexical Semantics Generative operations" 13. Salvador Climent, "Individuation by Partitive Constructions in Spanish" 14. Laurence Danlos, "Event Co-Reference in Causal Discourses" 15. Federica Busa and Pierrette Bouillon, "Introduction to Part III: Interfacing the Lexicon" 16. Julius M. Moravcsik, "Metaphor, Creative Understanding and the Generative Lexicon" 17. Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides, "Metaphor in discourse" 18. Jerry Hobbs, "Syntax and Metonymy" 19. Adam Kilgarriff, "Generative Lexicon Meets Corpus Data: The Case of Non-Standard Word Uses" 20. Federica Busa and Pierrette Bouillon, "Introduction to Part IV: Building Resources" 21. Federica Busa, Nicoletta Calzolari and Alessando Lenci, "Generative Lexicon and the SIMPLE Model: Developing Semantic Resources for NLP " 22. Nilda Ruimy, Elisabetta Gola and Monica Monachini, "Lexicography Informs Lexical Semantics: the SIMPLE Experience 23. Net Piek Vossen."Condensed meaning in EuroWord" }, topic = {lexical-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ bouillon-etal:1992a, author = {Pierre Bouillon and Katharina Boesefeldt and Graham Russell}, title = {Compound Nouns in a Unification-based MT System}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third Conference on Applied Natural Language Processing}, year = {1992}, pages = {209--222}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, location = {Trento, Italy}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3115/974499.974537}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Morristown, NJ, USA}, topic = {compound-nominals;machine-translation;} } @incollection{ boulanger-bruynooghe_m:1994a, author = {Dmitri Boulanger and Maurice Bruynooghe}, title = {Using Call/Exit Analysis for Logic Program Transformation}, booktitle = {Logic Programming Synthesis and Transformation, Meta-Programming in Logic: Fourth International Workshops, {LOBSTR}'94 and {META}'94, Pisa, Italy}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Laurent Fribourg and Franco Turini}, pages = {36--50}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @article{ boulding_ke:1956a, author = {Kenneth E. Boulding}, title = {Some Contributions of Economics to the General Theory of Value}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1956}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {1--14}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my18}, topic = {foundations-of-economics;multiattribute-utility;market-dynamics;} } @inproceedings{ boulis-ostendorf:2005a, author = {Constantinos Boulis and Mari Ostendorf}, title = {A Quantitative Analysis of Lexical Differences Between Genders in Telephone Conversations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {435--442}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1054}, topic = {sociolinguistics;corpus-linguistics;} } @inproceedings{ boullier:1996a, author = {Pierre Boullier}, title = {Another Facet of {LIG} Parsing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {87--94}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;linear-indexed-grammars;} } @article{ bouma_g:1992a, author = {Gosse Bouma}, title = {Feature Structures and Nonmonotonicity}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, volume = {18}, year = {1992}, pages = {165--172}, topic = {nm-ling;default-unification;} } @book{ bouma_g-etal:1999a, editor = {Gosse Bouma and Erhard Hinrichs and Geert-Jan M. Kruif and Richard Oehrle}, title = {Constraints and Resources in Natural Language Syntax and Semantics}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1999}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {HPSG;resource-limited-reasoning;nl-processing;} } @book{ bouquet-etal:1999a, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, title = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Varol Akman and Ferda Nur Alpaslan, "Strawson on Intended Meaning and Context", pp. 1--14 2. Horacio Arl\'o Costa, "Epistemic Context, Defeasible Inference, and Conversational Implicature", pp. 15--27 3. John A. Barnden and Mark G. Lee, "An Implemented Context System that Combines Belief Reasoning, Metaphor-Based Reasoning and Uncertainty Handling", pp. 28--41 4. John Bell, "Pragmatic Reasoning: Inferring Contexts", pp. 42--53 5. Cathy Berthouzoz, "A Model of Context Adapted to Domain-Independent Machine Translation", pp. 54--66 6. Claudia Bianchi, "Three Forms of Contextual Dependence", pp. 67--76 7. Harry Bunt, "Context Representation for Dialogue Management", pp. 77--90 8. Antonella de Angeli and Laurent Romary and Frederic Wolf, "Ecological Interfaces: Extending the Pointing Paradigm by Visual Context", pp. 91--104 9. Anna-Maria Di Sciullo, "Formal Context and Morphological Analysis", pp. 105--118 10. Bruce Edmonds, "The Pragmatic Roots of Context", pp. 119--144 11. Anita Fetzer, "Non-Acceptance: Re- or Un-Creating Context?", pp. 133--144 12. Chiara Ghidini, "Modelling (Un)Bounded Beliefs", pp. 145--158 13. Chiara Ghidini and Luigi Serfini, "A Context-Based Logic for Distributed Knowledge Representation and Reasoning", pp. 159--172 14. Guillaume Giraudet and Corinne Rounes, "Independence from Context Information Provided by Spatial Signature Learning in a Natural Object Identification Task", pp. 173--185 15. Wolfram Hinzen, "Contextual Dependence and the Epistemic Foundations of Dynamic Semantics", pp. 186--199 16. Boicho Kokinov, "Dynamics and Automaticity of Context: A Cognitive Modeling Approach", pp. 200--213 17. Soichi Kozai, "A Mental Space Account for Speaker's Empathy: {J}apanese Profiling Identity vs. {E}nglish Shading Identity", pp. 214--227 18. Tomoko Matsui, "On the Role of Context in Relevance-Based Accessibility Ranking of Candidate Referents", pp. 228--241 19. Christof Monz, "Contextual Inference in Computational Semantics", pp. 242--255 20. Renate Motschnig-Pitrik, "Contexts and Views in Object-Oriented Languages", pp. 256--269 21. Carlo Penco, "Objective and Cognitive Context", pp. 270--283 22. Jean-Charles Pomerol and Patrick br\'ezillon, "Dynamics between Contextual Knowledge and Proceduralized Context", pp. 284--295 23. Yannick Prei\'e and Alain Mille and Jean-Marie Pinon, "A Context-Based Audiovisual Represention Model for Audiovisual Information Systems", pp. 296--309 24. M. Andrea Rodr\'iguez and Max J. Eigenhofer, "Putting Similarity Assessments into Context: Matching Functions with the User's Intended Operations", pp. 310--323 25. Marina Sbis\'a, "Presupposition, Implicature and Context in Text Understanding", pp. 324--338 26. Barry Smith and Achille C. Varzi, "The Formal Structure of Ecological COntexts", pp. 339--351 27. Richmond H. Thomason, "Type Theoretic Foundations for Context, Part 1: Contexts as Complex Type-Theoretic Objects", pp. 352--374 28. Roy M. Turner, "A Model of Explicit Context Representation and Use for Intelligent Agents", pp. 375--388 29. Nikolai Vazov, "Context-Scanning Strategy in Temporal Reasoning", pp. 389--402 30. Wayne Wobcke, "The Role of Context in the Analysis and Design of Agent Programs", pp. 403--416 31. R.A. Young, "Context and Supercontext", pp. 417--441 33. Alfs Berztiss, "Contexts, Domains, and Software", pp. 443--446 33. Alex B\"ucher and John G. Hughes and David A. Bell, "Contextual Data and Domain Knowledge Discovery Systems", 447--451 34. Maud Champagne and Jacques Virbel and Jean-Luc Nespoulous, "The Differential (?) Processing of Literal and Non-Literal Speech Acts: A Psycholinguistic Approach", pp. 451--454 35. Henning Christiansen, "Open Theories and Abduction for Context and Accommodation", pp. 455--462 36. Thorstein Fretheim and Wim A. van Dommelen, "Building Context with Intonation", pp. 463--466 37. Sabine Geldof, "Parrot-Talk Requires Multiple Context Dimensions", 467--470 38. Alain Giboin, "Contextual Divorces: Towards a Framework for Identifying Critical Context Issues in Collaborative-Argumentation System Design", pp. 471--474 39. Jeanette K. Gundel and Kaja Borthen and Thorstein Fretheim, "The Role of Context in {E}nglish and {N}orwegian", pp. 475--478 40. Timo Honkela, "Connectionist Analysis and Creation of Context for Natural Language Understanding and Knowledge Management", pp. 479--482 41. Roland Klemke, "The Notion of Context in Organizational Memories", pp. 483--487 42. S\'everine M\'erand and Charles Tijus and S\'ebastien Poitrenaud, "The Effect of Context Complexity on the Memorization of Objects", pp. 487--490 43. Yasunori Morishima, "Effects of Discourse Context on Inference Computation during Comprehension", pp. 491--494 44. Rolf Nossum and Michael Thielscher, "Counterfactual Reasoning by Means of a Calculus of Narrative Context", pp. 495--501 45. Laurent Pasquier and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Jean-Charles Pomerol, "Context and Decision Graphs for Incident Management on a Subway Line", pp. 499--502 46. Gerhard Peter and Brigitte Grote, "Using Context to Guide Information Search for Preventative Quality Management", pp. 503--506 47. Fabio Pianesi and Achille C. Varzi, "The Context-Dependency of Temporal Reference in Event Semantics", pp. 507--510 48. B\'eatrice Pudelko and ELizabeth Hamilton and Denis Legros and Charles Tijus, "How Context Contributes to Metaphor Understanding", pp. 511--514 49. Jamie Sherrah and Shaogang Gong, "Exploiting Context in Gesture Recognition", pp. 515--518 50. L.M. Tovena, "The Use of Context in the Analysis of Negative Concord and {N}-Words, pp. 519--522 51. Elise H. Turner and Roy M. Turner and John Phelps and Mark Neal and Charles Grunden and Jason Mailmen, "Aspects of Context for Understanding Multi-Modal Communication", pp. 523--526 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ bouquet-etal:2003a, author = {Paolo Bouquet and Bernardo Magnini and Luciano Serafini and Stefano Zanobini}, title = {A {SAT}-Based Algorithm for Context Matching}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {66--79}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;AI-algorithms;} } @article{ bouquet-etal:2004a, author = {Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini and Stefano Zanobini}, title = {Peer-to-Peer Semantic Coordination}, journal = {Journal of Web Semantics}, year = {2004}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {81--97}, rtnote = {In RHT collection}, topic = {world-wide-web;semantic-web;computational-ontology;knowledge-integration;} } @book{ bouquet-etal:2007a, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini and Richmond H. Thomason}, title = {Perspectives on Context}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2007}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN-13 = {978-1-57586-538-6 (pbk)}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini and Richmond H. Thomason, "Introduction: Perspectives on Context", pp. vii-xiv 2. Massimo Benerecetti and Paolo Bouquet and Chiara Ghidini, "On the Dimensions of Context Dependence", pp. 1--18 3. Chiara Ghidini and Fausto Giunchiglia, "What is Local Models Semantics?", pp. 19--41 4. Richmond H. Thomason, "Contextual Intensional Logic: Type-Theoretic and Dynamic Considerations", pp. 43--63 5. John Perry, "The Search for the Semantic Grail", pp. 65--77 6. Varol Akman, "On a Proposal of {S}trawson Concerning Context vs. `What is Said'", pp. 79--94 7. Horacio Arl\'o Costa, "Epistemological Foundations for the Representation of Discourse Context", pp. 95--140 8. Wolfram Hinzen, "Context and Logical Form", pp. 141--169 9. Fran\c{c}ois R\'ecanati, "Truth-Conditional Pragmatics: An Overview", pp. 171--188 10. Carlo Penco, "Context and Contract", pp. 189--213 11. Andrea Bonomi, "Fictional Contexts", pp. 215--249 12. Roger A. Young, "Context and Philosophy of Science", pp. 251--279 }, topic = {context;} } @incollection{ bouquet-etal:2007b, author = {Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini and Richmond H. Thomason}, title = {Introduction: Perspectives on Context}, booktitle = {Perspectives on Context}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2007}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {vii-xiv}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {context;} } @article{ bouquet-giunchiglia_f:1995a, author = {Paolo Bouquet and Fausto Giunchiglia}, title = {Reasoning about Theory Adequacy. {A} New Solution to the Qualification Problem}, journal = {Fundamenta Informaticae}, year = {1995}, volume = {23}, number = {2--4}, pages = {247--262}, month = {June,July,August}, note = {Also IRST-Technical Report 9406-13, IRST, Trento, Italy}, topic = {context;qualification-problem;} } @inproceedings{ bouquet-serafini_l:2001a, author = {Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini}, title = {Two Formalizations of Context: A Comparison}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {87--101}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;logic-of-context;} } @inproceedings{ bouquet-serafini_l:2003a, author = {Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serafini}, title = {On the Difference between Bridge Rules and Lifting Axioms}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {80--93}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;logic-in-AI;} } @incollection{ bouraoui_z-etal:2022a, author = {Zied Bouraoui and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Thanh Ma and Nicolas Schwind and Ivan Varzinczak}, title = {Region-Based Merging of Open-Domain Terminological Knowledge}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {81--90}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {This paper introduces a novel method for merging open-domain terminological knowledge. It takes advantage of the Region Connection Calculus (RCC5), a formalism used to represent regions in a topological space and to reason about their set-theoretic relationships. To this end, we first propose a faithful translation of terminological knowledge provided by several and potentially conflicting sources into region spaces. The merging is then performed on these spaces, and the result is translated back into the underlying language of the input sources. Our approach allows us to benefit from the expressivity and the flexibility of RCC5 while dealing with conflicting knowledge in a principled way.}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {knowledge-integration;} } @book{ bourdieu:1998a, author = {Pierre Bourdieu}, title = {Practical Reason: On the Theory of Action}, publisher = {Polity Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0745616240}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, HM 201 .B6853 1998.}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @incollection{ bourely-etal:1996a, author = {Christophe Bourely and Gilles Difourneaux and Nicolas Peltier}, title = {Building Proofs or Counterexamples by Analogy in a Resolution Framework}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence: European Workshop, {Jelia}'96, Ivora, Portugal, September 30 - October 3, 1996.}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Ewa Orlowska}, pages = {34--49}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {analogical-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ bourgaux_c-etal:2021a, author = {Camille Bourgaux and David Carral and Markus Kr\"otzsch and Sebastian Rudolph and Micha\"el Thomazo}, title = {Capturing Homomorphism-Closed Decidable Queries with Existential Rules}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {141--150}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we show the converse: every decidable query that is closed under homomorphism can be expressed by an existential rule set for which the standard chase universally terminates. Membership in this fragment is not decidable, but we show via a diagonalisation argument that this is unavoidable.}, topic = {kb-query-processing;complexity-in-AI;existential-rules;} } @incollection{ bourgaux_c-etal:2022a, author = {Camille Bourgaux and Pierre Bourhis and Liat Peterfreund and Micha\"el Thomazo}, title = {Revisiting Semiring Provenance for Datalog}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {91--101}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Data provenance consists in bookkeeping meta information during query evaluation, in order to enrich query results with their trust level, likelihood, evaluation cost, and more. ... we propose and investigate several provenance semantics, based on different approaches for defining classical Datalog semantics. We study the relationship between these semantics, and introduce properties that allow us to analyze and compare them.}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {metadata;} } @book{ bourgine-nadal:2003a, editor = {Paul Bourgine and Jean-Pierre Nadal}, title = {Cognitive Economics: An Interdisciplinary Approach}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2003}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-3-642-07336-6}, topic = {cognitive-economics;adaptive-systems;rationality;} } @book{ bourgine_p-nadal_jp:2003a, editor = {Paul Bourgine and Jean-Pierre Nadal}, title = {Cognitive Economics: An Interdisciplinary Approach}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2003}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-3-540-24708-1}, topic = {economics;statistics;} } @inproceedings{ bourhis_p-lutz_c:2016a, author = {Pierre Bourhis and Carsten Lutz}, title = {Containment in Monadic Disjunctive Datalog, {MMSNP}, and Expressive Description Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {207--216}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We study query containment in three closely related formalisms: monadic disjunctive Datalog (MDDLog), MMSNP (a logical generalization of constraint satisfaction problems), and ontology-mediated queries (OMQs) based on expressive description logics and unions of conjunctive queries. Containment in MMSNP was known to be decidable due to a result by Feder and Vardi, but its exact complexity has remained open. We prove 2NExpTime-completeness and extend this result to monadic disjunctive Datalog and to OMQs. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {query-containment;complexity-in-AI;} } @book{ bourigault-etal:2001a, editor = {Didier Bourigault and Christian Jacquemin and Marie-Claude L'Homme}, title = {Recent Advances in Computational Terminology}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {2001}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {1-58811-016-8}, xref = {Review: gaizauskas:2003a}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;word-acquisition;} } @article{ bourne_c:2004a, author = {Craig Bourne}, title = {Future Contingents, Non-Contradiction, and the Law of Excluded Middle Muddle}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {2}, pages = {122--128}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;truth-value-gaps;} } @article{ bourne_ec:2013a, author = {Emily Caddick Bourne}, title = {Fictionalism}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2013}, volume = {73}, number = {1}, pages = {147--162}, topic = {fictionalism;metaphysics;philosophical-ontology;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:1989a1, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {On the Semantics of Stable Inheritance Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, pages = {1134--1139}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, CA}, xref = {Journal publication: boutilier_c:1989a2.}, topic = {model-preference;nonmonotonic-logic;inheritance-theory;} } @article{ boutilier_c:1989a2, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {On the Semantics of Stable Inheritance Reasoning}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {73--110}, topic = {model-preference;nonmonotonic-logic;inheritance-theory;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:1989b, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {A Semantical Approach to Stable Inheritance Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, pages = {1134--1139}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, CA}, rtnote = {Extended Version: boutilier_c:1989a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Boutilier1.pdf}, topic = {model-preference;nonmonotonic-logic;inheritance-theory;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:1990a, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Conditional Logics of Normality as Modal Systems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, editor = {Thomas G. Dietterich and William Swartout}, pages = {594--599}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {deontic-logic;conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:1990b, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Viewing Conditional Logics of Normality as Extensions of the Modal System {S4}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, editor = {Thomas G. Dietterich and William Swartout}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {nonmonotonic-conditionals;} } @techreport{ boutilier_c:1992a, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Conditional Logics for Default Reasoning and Belief Revision}, institution = {Computer Science Department, University of Toronto}, number = {KRR--TR--92--1}, year = {1992}, address = {Toronto, Ontario}, rtnote = {This is the PhD Dissertation.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {kr;conditionals;belief-revision;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ boutilier_c:1992b, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Normative, Subjunctive, and Autoepistemic Defaults: Adopting the {R}amsey Test}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {685--696}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-reasoning;belief-revision;CCCP;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:1993b, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {A Modal Characterization of Defeasible Deontic Conditionals and Conditional Goals}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Reasoning about Mental States}, year = {1993}, pages = {30--39}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {Unpublished other than distribution to conferees. --RT}, rtnote = {Rtrnote: Reading notes on file. Rnotes files "misc"}, topic = {kr;conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:1993c, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Belief Revision and Nested Conditionals}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {519--523}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Boutilier10.pdf}, topic = {belief-revision;conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:1994a, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Toward a Logic for Qualitative Decision Theory}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {75--86}, address = {San Francisco, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Boutilier.}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @unpublished{ boutilier_c:1994b, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Defeasible Preferences and Goal Derivation}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, 1994. Department of Computer Science, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z4. Available at http://www.cs.ubc.ca/spider/cebly/craig.html.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Boutilier"}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preferences;} } @article{ boutilier_c:1994c, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Unifying Default Reasoning and Belief Revision in a Modal Framework}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {33--85}, topic = {modal-logic;default-logic;belief-revision; nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ boutilier_c:1994d, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Conditional Logics of Normality: A Modal Approach}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {87--154}, topic = {nonmonotonbic-logic;conditionals;modal-logic;} } @article{ boutilier_c:1995a, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Abduction as Belief Revision}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {77}, number = {1}, pages = {95--128}, topic = {kr;belief-revision;abduction;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:1995b, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Generalized Update: Belief Change in Dynamic Settings}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {1550--1556}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Boutilier8.pdf}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ boutilier_c:1996a, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Iterated Revision and Minimal Change of Conditional Beliefs}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages = {263--305}, topic = {belief-revision;conditionals;} } @article{ boutilier_c:1996b, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Abduction to Plausible Causes: An Event-Based Model of Belief Update}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {83}, number = {1}, pages = {143--166}, topic = {abduction;belief-revision;} } @incollection{ boutilier_c:1996c, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Planning, Learning and Coordination in Multiagent Decision Processes}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge: Proceedings of the Sixth Conference ({TARK} 1996)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Yoav Shoham}, pages = {195--210}, address = {San Francisco}, contentnote = {Introduces the idea of a multiagent Markov decision process.}, topic = {multiagent-planning;cooperation;} } @article{ boutilier_c:1998a, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {A Unified Model of Qualitative Belief Change: A Dynamical Systems Perspective}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {98}, number = {1--2}, pages = {281--316}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:1999a, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {The Role of Logic in Stochastic Decision Processes}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {decision-theoretic-planning;Markov-decision-processes;} } @article{ boutilier_c:1999b, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Multiagent Systems: Challenges and Opportunities for Decision-Theoretic Planning}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, pages = {35--43}, topic = {multiagent-planning;decision-theoretic-planning;} } @incollection{ boutilier_c:1999c, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Knowledge Representation for Stochastic Decision Processes}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence Today}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Michael Wooldridge and Manuela Veloso}, pages = {111--152}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {Reasoning about stochastic dynamical systems and planning under uncertainty has come to play a fundamental role in AI research and applications. The representation of such systems, in particular, of actions with stochastic effects, has accordingly been given increasing attention in recent years. In this article, we survey a number of techniques for representing stochastic processes and actions with stochastic effects using dynamic Bayesian networks and influence diagrams, and briefly describe how these support effective inference for tasks such as monitoring, forecasting, explanation and decision making. We also compare these techniques to several action representations adopted in the classical reasoning about action and planning communities, describing how traditional problems such as the frame and ramification problems are dealt with in stochastic settings, and how these solutions compare to recent approaches to this problem in the classical (deterministic) literature. We argue that while stochastic dynamics introduce certain complications when it comes to such issues, for the most part, intuitions underlying classical models can be extended to the stochastic setting. }, topic = {stochastic-processes;reasoning-about-uncertainty; decision-theoretic-planning;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:2002a, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {A {PDMP} Formulation of Preference Elicitation Problems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {239--246}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {preference-elicitation;POMDPs;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:2002b, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {Solving Concisely Expressed Combinatorial Auction Problems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {359--366}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {auction-protocols;AI-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c:2003a, author = {Craig Boutilier}, title = {On the Foundations of Expected Expected Utility}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, editor = {Georg Gottlob and Toby Walsh}, pages = {285--290}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn14}, abstract = {We examine the conditions under which EEU provides for sensible decisions by appeal to the foundational axioms of decision theory. We also discuss the im- pact these conditions have on the enterprise of preference elicitation more broadly.}, topic = {expected-utility;foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @techreport{ boutilier_c-becher:1993a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Ver\'onica Becher}, title = {Abduction as Belief Revision}, institution = {University of British Columbia, Computer Science Department}, number = {93--23}, year = {1991}, address = {Vancouver, British Columbia}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Journal Publication: boutilier_c-becher:1995a.}, topic = {belief-revision;abduction;} } @article{ boutilier_c-becher:1995a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Ver\'onica Becher}, title = {Abduction as Belief Revision }, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {77}, number = {1}, pages = {43--94}, topic = {belief-revision;abduction;} } @article{ boutilier_c-brafman_r:2001a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Ronen I. Brafman}, title = {Partial-Order Planning with Concurrent Interacting Actions}, journal = {Journal of {AI} Research}, year = {2001}, volume = {14}, pages = {105--136}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Boutilier3.pdf}, topic = {planning;concurrency;} } @article{ boutilier_c-dean_t:2003a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Thomas Dean}, title = {Editorial}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {147}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--4}, contentnote = {Introduction to a special issue on planning with uncertainty and incomplete information.}, topic = {planning;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @unpublished{ boutilier_c-etal:1995a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Thomas Dean and Steve Hanks}, title = {Planning under Uncertainty: Structural Assumptions and Computational Leverage}, year = {1995}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, 1995.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Get publication info: European Planning Workshop?}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja14.}, topic = {planning;uncertainty-in-AI;foundations-of-planning;} } @article{ boutilier_c-etal:1995b, author = {Craig Boutilier and Thomas Dean and Steve Hanks}, title = {Planning under Uncertainty: Structural Assumptions and Computational Leverage}, journal = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research}, year = {1999}, volume = {11}, pages = {1--94}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja14}, topic = {planning;uncertainty-in-AI;foundations-of-planning;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c-etal:1997a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Ronen Brafman and Christopher Geib and David L. Poole}, title = {A Constraint-Based Approach to Preference Elicitation and Decision Making}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Qualitative Preferences in Deliberation and Practical Reasoning}, year = {1997}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {19--28}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Boutilier2.pdf}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Boutilier"}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preferences;preference-elicitation;} } @article{ boutilier_c-etal:1997b, author = {Craig Boutilier and Yoav Shoham and Michael P. Wellman}, title = {Economic Principles of Multi-Agent Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {94}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--6}, contentnote = {This is an editorial for a special issue of Artificial Intelligence.}, topic = {AI-and-economics;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c-etal:1997c, author = {Craig Boutilier and Ronen Brafman and Christopher Geib}, title = {Prioritized Goal Decomposition of {M}arkov Decision Processes: Towards a Synthesis of Classical and Decision Theoretic Planning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Martha Pollack}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {1156--1163}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Boutilier5.pdf}, topic = {decision-theoretic-planning;} } @article{ boutilier_c-etal:1999a, title = {Decision Theoretic Planning: Structural Assumptions and Computational Leverage}, author = {Craig Boutilier and Thomas Dean and Steve Hanks}, journal = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research}, year = {1999}, volume = {10}, pages = {to appear}, topic = {decision-theoretic-planning;} } @unpublished{ boutilier_c-etal:1999b1, author = {Craig Boutilier and Ronen I. Brafman and Holger H. Hoos and David L. Poole}, title = {Reasoning with Conditional Ceteris Paribus Preference Statements}, year = {1999}, note = {Unpublished manuscript. Available at\\ http://www.cs.ubc.ca/cebly/Papers/\_download\_/CPnets.ps}, topic = {preference;qdt;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c-etal:1999b2, author = {Craig Boutilier and Ronen I. Brafman and Holger H. Hoos and David L. Poole}, title = {Reasoning with Conditional Ceteris Paribus Preference Statements}, booktitle = {UAI '99: Proceedings of the Fifteenth Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, editor = {Henri Prade and Kathryn Laskey}, pages = {71--80}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Boutilier4.pdf.}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;} } @article{ boutilier_c-etal:2000a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Richard Dearden and Mosi\'es Goldszmidt}, title = {Stochastic Dynamic Programming with Factored Representations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {121}, number = {1--2}, pages = {49--107}, topic = {Markov-decision-processes;Bayesian-networks;decision-trees; dynamic-programming;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c-etal:2000b, author = {Craig Boutilier and Raymond Reiter and Mikhail Soutchanski and Sebastian Thrun}, title = {Decision-Theoretic, High-Level Agent Programming in the Situation Calculus}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventeenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, editor = {Henry A. Kautz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {355--362}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, abstract ={We propose a framework for robot programming which allows the seamless integration of explicit agent programming with decision-theoretic planning. Specifically, the DTGolog model allows one to partially specify a control program in a highlevel, logical language, and provides an interpreter that, given a logical axiomatization of a domain, will determine the optimal completion of that program (viewed as a Markov decision process). We demonstrate the utility of this model with results obtained in an office delivery robotics domain. }, topic = {decision-theoretic-planning;Golog;} } @article{ boutilier_c-etal:2003a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Ronen I. Brafman and Carmel Domschlak and Holger H. Hoos and David L. Poole}, title = {{CP}-Nets: A Tool for Representing and Reasoning with Conditional Ceteris Paribus Preference Statements}, journal = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research}, year = {2003}, volume = {21}, pages = {135--191}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers. \ap14}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Research Notes. "Preferences"}, topic = {cp-nets;qualitative-utility;} } @article{ boutilier_c-etal:2004a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Ronen I. Brafman and Holger H. Hoos and David L. Poole}, title = {Preference-Based Constrained Optimization with {CP}-Nets}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {137--157}, topic = {cp-nets;qualitative-utility;} } @article{ boutilier_c-etal:2006a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Relu Patrascu and Pascal Poupart and Dale Schuurmans}, title = {Constraint-Based Optimization and Utility Elicitation Using Minimax Decision Criterion}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {8--9}, pages = {686--713}, topic = {utility-function-learning;constraint-satisfaction;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c-friedman_n:1995a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Nir Friedman}, title = {Nondeterministic Actions and the Frame Problem}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Extending Theories of Action: Formal Theories and Practical Applications}, year = {1995}, organization = {Association for the Advancement of Arrificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Association for the Advancement of Arrificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Boutilier7.pdf}, topic = {action-formalisms;frame-problem;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c-goldszmidt:1993a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Mois\'es Goldszmidt}, title = {Revision by Conditional Beliefs}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Richard E. Fikes and Wendy Lehnert}, pages = {649--654}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Boutilier9.pdf}, topic = {kr;belief-revision;conditionals;kr-course;} } @incollection{ boutilier_c-goldszmidt:1995a, author = {Craig Boutilier and Mois\'es Goldszmidt}, title = {On the Revision of Conditional Belief Sets}, booktitle = {Conditionals: From Philosophy to Computer Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Gabriella Crocco and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig}, pages = {267--300}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {conditionals;belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ boutilier_c-poole_dl:1996a, author = {Craig Boutilier and David Poole}, title = {Computing Optimal Policies for Partially Observable Decision Processes Using Compact Representations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Eighth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, Vol. 2}, year = {1996}, editor = {William J. Clancey and Dan Weld}, pages = {1168--1175}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Boutilier6.pdf}, topic = {Markov-decision-processes;decision-theoretic-planning;} } @article{ boutsinas-vrahatis:2001a, author = {Basilis Boutsinas and Michael N. Vrahatis}, title = {Artificial Nonmonotonic Neural Networks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {132}, number = {1}, pages = {1--38}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;connectionist-models;} } @article{ bouveret-lemaitre:2009a, author = {Sylvain Bouveret and Michel Lema\^itre}, title = {Computing Leximin-Optimal Solutions in Constraint Networks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {2}, pages = {343--364}, topic = {constraint-programming;constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ bouwer-etal:2011a, author = {Patricia Bouwer and Franck Cassez and Fran\c{c}ois Laroussine}, title = {Timed Modal Logics for Real-Time Systems---Specification, Verification, and Control}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2011}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {169--203}, topic = {model-checking;timed-modal-logics;} } @article{ bouzy-cazenave:2001a, author = {Bruno Bouzy and Tristan Cazenave}, title = {Computer Go: An {AI} Oriented Survey}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {132}, number = {1}, pages = {39--103}, topic = {computer-games;} } @article{ bovens:1995a, author = {Luc Bovens}, title = {\,\`P and I Will Believe that not-P': Diachronic Constraints on Rational Belief}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1995}, volume = {104}, number = {416}, pages = {737--760}, topic = {philosophy-of-belief;will-to-believe;belief;rationality;} } @incollection{ bovens:2009a, author = {Luc Bovens}, title = {The Ethics of \emph{Nudge}}, booktitle = {Preference Change: Approaches from Philosophy, Economics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Till Gr\"une-Yadoff and Sven O. Hansson}, pages = {207--219}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {incentivizing;preference-dynamics;} } @inproceedings{ bovens-hartmann_s:2001a, author = {Luc Bovens and Stephan Hartmann}, title = {Belief Expansion, Contextual Fit and the Reliability of Information Sources}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {425--428}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;} } @article{ bovens-hartmann_s:2002a, author = {Luc Bovens and Stephan Hartmann}, title = {Bayesian Networks and the Problem of Unreliable Instruments}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2002}, volume = {69}, number = {1}, pages = {29--72}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ bowen_ka:1975a, author = {Kenneth A. Bowen}, title = {Normal Modal Model Theory}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1975}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {97--131}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @book{ bowen_ka:1979a, author = {Kenneth A. Bowen}, title = {Model Theory for Modal Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel}, year = {1978}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {978-94-015-7642-0}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ bowen_ka:1980a, author = {Kenneth A. Bowen}, title = {Interpretation in Loop-Free Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1980}, volume = {39}, number = {2-3}, pages = {297--310}, abstract = {Model-theoretic methods are used to extend Craig's Interpolation Theorem to the loop-free portion of Pratt's dynamic logic of programs with simple assignments.}, topic = {dynamic-loguc;proof-theory;} } @article{ bowen_ka:1987a, author = {Kenneth A. Bowen}, title = {On the Use of Logic: Reflections on {M}c{D}ermott's Critique of Pure Reason}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {3}, issue = {3}, pages = {165--168}, xref = {Commentary on: mcdermott_d:1987a}, topic = {kr;foundations-of-kr;logic-in-AI;} } @techreport{ bowen_ka-dejongh_d:1986a, author = {Kenneth Bowen and Dick de Jongh}, title = {Some Complete Logics for Branched Time. Part {I}: Well-Founded Time, Forward Looking Operators}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {86--05}, year = {1991}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Bowen"}, topic = {branching-time;} } @incollection{ bowen_ka-kowalski_ra:1982a, author = {Kenneth A. Bowen and Robert A. Kowalski}, title = {Amalgamating Language and Metalanguage in Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Logic Programming}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1982}, address = {New York}, editor = {Keith L. Clark and Sten-{\AA}ke T{\aa}rnlund}, missinginfo = {pages.}, topic = {metaprogramming;logic-programming;} } @incollection{ bower-clapper:1989a, author = {Gordon H. Bower and John P. Clapper}, title = {Experimental Methods in Cognitive Science}, booktitle = {Foundations of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, editor = {Michael I. Posner}, chapter = {7}, pages = {245--300}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;empirical-methods-in-cogsci;} } @incollection{ bowerman_m:1986a, author = {Melissa Bowerman}, title = {First Steps in Acquiring Conditionals}, booktitle = {On Conditionals}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Elizabeth Traugott and Alice {ter Meulen} and Judy Reilly and Charles Ferguson}, pages = {285--308}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {conditionals;L1-acquisition;} } @article{ bowerman_m:1990a, author = {Melissa Bowerman}, title = {Mapping Thematic Roles onto Syntactic Functions: Are Children Helped by Innate Linking Rules?}, journal = {Linguistics}, year = {1990}, volume = {28}, pages = {1253--1289}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {thematic-roles;semantics-acquisition;L1-acquisition;} } @incollection{ bowerman_m:1996a, author = {Melissa Bowerman}, title = {Learning How to Structure Space for Language: A Crosslinguistic Perspective}, booktitle = {Language and Space}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {P. Bloom and M.A. Peterson and L. Nadel and M.F. Garrett}, pages = {385--436}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {spatial-language;semantics-acquisition;L1-acquisition;} } @inproceedings{ bowerman_m:1996b, author = {Melissa Bowerman}, title = {Argument Structure and Learnability: Is a Solution in Sight?}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 22nd Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society}, year = {1996}, publisher = {Berkeley Linguistics Society}, editor = {Jan Johnson and Matthew L. Juge and Jeri L. Moxley}, pages = {454--468}, address = {Berkeley, California}, topic = {argument-structure;L1-acquisition;} } @book{ bowers_js:1971a, author = {John S. Bowers}, title = {Adjectives and Adverbs in {E}nglish}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1971}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {adjectives;adverbs;} } @unpublished{ bowers_js:1974a, author = {John S. Bowers}, title = {On Restrictive and Nonrestrictive Relative Clauses}, year = {1974}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Cornell University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-syntax;relative-clauses;nonrestrictive-relative-clauses;} } @book{ bowers_js:1981a, author = {John S. Bowers}, title = {The Theory of Grammatical Relations}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1981}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, ISBN = {0-8014-1079-7}, topic = {nl-syntax;grammatical-relations;} } @inproceedings{ bowers_js:1991a, author = {John S. Bowers}, title = {The Syntax and Semantics of Nominals}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {I}}, year = {1991}, editor = {Steven Moore and {Adam Zachary} Wyner}, pages = {1--30}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nominal-constructions;nominalization;} } @inproceedings{ bowers_js:1993a, author = {John S. Bowers}, title = {The Structure of {I}-Level and {S}-Level Predicates}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {III}}, year = {1993}, editor = {Utpal Lahiri and Zachary Wyner}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {i-level/s-level;} } @article{ bowers_js-reichenbach_ukh:1979a, author = {John S. Bowers and Uwe K.H. Reichenbach}, title = {Montague and Transformational Grammar: A Review of {\it Formal Philosophy: Selected Papers of {R}ichard {M}ontague}}, journal = {Linguistic Analysis}, year = {1979}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {195--247}, xref = {Review of montague_r1:1974a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {montague-grammar;nl-semantics;} } @article{ bowie:1979a, author = {G. Lee Bowie}, title = {The Similarity Approach to Counterfactuals: Some Problems}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1979}, volume = {13}, pages = {477--498}, number ={4}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my14}, topic = {conditionals;counterfactual-similarity;} } @article{ bowie:1982a, author = {G. Lee Bowie}, title = {Lucas' Number is Finally Up}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {279--285}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;goedels-first-theorem;mechanistic-thesis;} } @inproceedings{ bowler_m:2014a, author = {Margit Bowler}, title = {Conjunction and Disjunction in a Language without 'and{'}}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XXIV}}, year = {2014}, editor = {Todd Snider Sarah D'Antonio and Mia Weigand}, publisher = {Linguistic Society of America}, address = {Washington, DC}, pages = {137--155}, abstract = {Warlpiri (Pama-Nyungan, Australia) has a single coordinator, manu. This coordinator occurs in constructions of the form P manu Q. In the following paper, I argue that manu has a non-strengthened disjunctive denotation which can undergo pragmatic strengthening to conjunction.}, topic = {conjunction;Walbiri-language;} } @book{ box-tiao:1973a, author = {George E. Box and George C. Tiao}, title = {Bayesian Inference in Statistical Analysis}, publisher = {Addison Wesley}, year = {1984}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, topic = {Bayesian-statistics;} } @book{ boyd-richerson:1985a, author = {Robert Boyd and Peter J. Richerson}, title = {Culture and the Evolutionary Process}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {0226069311}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, GN360 .B681 1985.}, topic = {social-change;} } @incollection{ boyd-richerson:2002a, author = {Robert Boyd and Peter J. Richerson}, title = {Norms and Bounded Rationality}, booktitle = {Bounded Rationality: The Adaptive Toolbox}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Gerd Gigerenzer and Reinhard Selten}, pages = {281--296}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {limited-rationality;social-norms;pr-course;} } @inproceedings{ boye-etal:1999a, author = {Johan Boye and Mats Wir\'en and Manny Rayner and Ian Lewin and David Carter and Ralph Becket}, title = {Language-Proccessing Strategies for Mixed-Initiative Dialogues}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Knowledge and Reasoning in Practical Dialogue Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jan Alexandersson}, pages = {17--23}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {spoken-dialogue-systems;computational-dialogue; mixed-initiative-systems;} } @incollection{ boye-wiren:2003a, author = {Johan Boye and Mats Wir\'en}, title = {Negotiative Spoken-Dialogue Interfaces to Databases}, booktitle = {Diabruck 2003: Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Universit\"at des Saarlandes}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ivana Kruijff-Korbayov\'a and Claudia Kosny}, pages = {7--14}, address = {Saarbr\"ucken}, topic = {computational-dialogue;nl-interfaces;negotiation;} } @book{ boyer:1991a, editor = {Robert S. Boyer}, title = {Automated Reasoning: Essays in Honor of {W}oody {B}ledsoe}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1991}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0792314093 (HB)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .A96 A921 1991}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @incollection{ boyer-etal:1991a, author = {Robert S. Boyer and David M. Goldschag and Matt Kaufman and J. Strother Moore}, title = {Functional Instantiation in First-Order Logic}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Mathematical Theory of Computation}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Vladimir Lifschitz}, pages = {7--26}, address = {San Diego}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @incollection{ boyer-moore_js:1972a, author = {Robert S. Boyer and J. Strother Moore}, title = {The Sharing of Structure in Theorem-Proving Programs}, booktitle = {Machine Intelligence 7}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, year = {1972}, editor = {Donald Michie and Bernard Meltzer}, pages = {101--116}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @incollection{ boyer-moore_js:1996a, author = {Robert S. Boyer and J. Strother Moore}, title = {Mechanized Reasoning about Programs and Computing Machines}, booktitle = {Automated Reasoning and Its Applications: Essays in Honor of {L}arry {W}os}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {R. Veroff}, pages = {146--176}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, topic = {theorem-proving;program-verification;} } @article{ boyle_cf:1994a, author = {C. Franklin Boyle}, title = {Computation as an Intrinsic Property}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {451--467}, abstract = {In an effort to uncover fundamental differences between computers and brains, this paper identifies computation with a particular kind of physical process $\ldots$ The causal mechanism associated with computation is pattern matching, which is physically defined as the fitting of physical structures such that they cause a "simple" change. It is argued that information processing in the brain is based on a causal mechanism different than pattern matching so defined $\ldots$ }, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;cognitive-states;} } @article{ boyne:1972a, author = {Chris Boyne}, title = {Vagueness and Colour Predicates}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1972}, volume = {81}, number = {324}, pages = {576--577}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ bozdag_s-debenedetto_m:2022a, author = {Sena Bozdag and Matteo De Benedetto}, title = {Taking Up {T}hagard's Challenge: A Formal Model of Conceptual Revision}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {4}, pages = {791--824}, abstract = {... Thagard challenged belief revision theorists, claiming that traditional belief-revision systems are able to model only the two most conservative types of changes in his framework, but not the more radical ones. The main aim of this work is to take up Thagard's challenge, presenting a belief-revision-like system able to mirror radical types of conceptual change. We will do that with a conceptual revision system, i.e. a belief-revision-like system that takes conceptual structures as units of revisions. We will show how our conceptual revision and contraction operations satisfy analogous of the AGM postulates at the conceptual level and are able to mimic Thagard's radical types of conceptual change.}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ bozickovic:2008a, author = {Vorslav Bozickovic}, title = {Cognitive Significance and Reflexive Content}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {31}, number = {5}, pages = {545--554}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;indexicals;} } @inproceedings{ bozsahin:1998a, author = {Cem Bozsahin}, title = {Deriving the Predicate-Argument Structure for a Free Word Order Language}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {167--173}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {categorial-grammar;free-word-order;} } @inproceedings{ bozzato_l-etal:2018a, author = {Loris Bozzato and Luciano Serafini and Thomas Eiter}, title = {Reasoning with Justifiable Exceptions in Contextual Hierarchies}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {329--338}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we consider the Contextualized Knowledge Repository (CKR) framework. ... we develop a proposal, based on a recent principle for exception handling for inheritance in description logics, that allows CKRs with context dependent defeasible axioms which can be overridden by more specific local knowledge. We provide an alternative semantics for a core (simple) version of CKR that copes with contextual defeasible axioms, and we define a datalog translation generating programs that are complete w.r.t. instance checking under the proposed semantics in the case of ranked contextual hierarchies. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {contextual-reasoning;inheritance;description-logics;} } @inproceedings{ bozzelli_l-etal:2018a, author = {Laura Bozzelli and Alberto Molinari and Angelo Montanari and Adriano Peron}, title = {Decidability and Complexity of Timeline-Based Planning over Dense Temporal Domains}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {627--628}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we address decidability and complexity issues for timeline-based planning over dense temporal domains without resorting to any form of discretization. We first prove that the general problem is undecidable, and then we show that decidability can be recovered by constraining the logical structure of synchronization rules.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {planning;temporal-logic;complexity-in-AI;continuity;} } @inproceedings{ bozzelli_l-etal:2020a, author = {Laura Bozzelli and Aniello Murano and Adriano Peron}, title = {Module Checking of Pushdown Multi-agent Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {162--171}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {In this paper, we investigate the module-checking problem of pushdown multi-agent systems (PMS) against ATL and ATL* specifications. We establish that for ATL, module checking of PMS is 2EXPTIME-complete, which is the same complexity as pushdown module-checking for CTL. On the other hand, we show that ATL* module-checking of PMS turns out to be 4EXPTIME-complete, hence exponentially harder than both CTL* pushdown module-checking and ATL* model-checking of PMS. Our result for ATL* provides a rare example of a natural decision problem that is elementary yet but with a complexity that is higher than triply exponential-time.}, topic = {multiagent-systems;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ brachman_rj:1979a1, author = {Ronald J. Brachman}, title = {On the Epistemological Status of Semantic Networks}, booktitle = {Associative Networks: Representation and Use of Knowledge by Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {N.V. Findler}, pages = {3--50}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republished in Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque; Readings in Knowledge Representation. See brachman_rj:1979a2.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Brachman"}, topic = {kr;semantic-nets;kr-course;} } @incollection{ brachman_rj:1979a2, author = {Ronald J. Brachman}, title = {On the Epistemological Status of Semantic Networks}, booktitle = {Readings in Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1995}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque}, address = {Los Altos, California}, pages = {191--216}, xref = {Originally published in N.V. Findler; Associative Networks: Representation and Use of Knowledge by Computers; Academic Press; 1979. See brachman_rj:1979a1.}, topic = {kr;semantic-nets;kr-course;} } @article{ brachman_rj:1983a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman}, title = {What {IS-A} Is and Isn't: An Analysis of Taxonomic Links in Semantic Networks}, journal = {Computer}, year = {1983}, volume = {16}, number = {10}, pages = {30--36}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {kr;semantic-nets;taxonomies;} } @article{ brachman_rj:1985a, author = {Ronald Brachman}, title = {I Lied about the Trees or, Defaults and Definitions in Knowledge Representation}, journal = {AI Magazine}, year = {1985}, volume = {6}, pages = {80--93}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-reasoning;kr-course;} } @article{ brachman_rj:1987a, author = {Ronald Brachman}, title = {The Myth of the One True Logic}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {3}, issue = {3}, pages = {168--172}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Research Notes. "McD Critique"}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja14}, xref = {kr;foundations-of-kr;logic-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ brachman_rj:1990a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman}, title = {The Future of Knowledge Representation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, pages = {1082--1092}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, volume = {2}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {kr;foundations-of-kr;kr-course;} } @incollection{ brachman_rj:1992a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman}, title = {``{R}educing'' {\sc classic} to Practice: Knowledge Representation Theory Meets Reality}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {247--258}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;description-logics;applied-kr;kr-course;} } @incollection{ brachman_rj:2003a, author = {Alex Borgida and Ronald J. Brachman}, title = {Conceptual Modeling with Description Logics}, booktitle = {The Description Logic Handbook: Theory, Implementation and Applications}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Franz Baader and Diego Calvanese and Deborah L. McGuinness and Daniele Nardi and Peter Patel-Schneider}, pages = {349--372}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {description-logics;kr;} } @article{ brachman_rj:2005a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman}, title = {Getting Back to `The Very Idea{'}}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2005}, volume = {26}, number = {4}, pages = {48--50}, topic = {AI-editorial;} } @article{ brachman_rj:2006a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman}, title = {{(AA)AI}: More than the Sum of Its Parts}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2006}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {19--34}, topic = {AI-editorial;history-of-AI;} } @article{ brachman_rj-etal:1983a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and Richard E. Fikes and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {{\sc krypton}: A Functional Approach to {KR}}, journal = {{I}{E}{E}{E} Computer}, year = {1983}, volume = {16}, pages = {67--73}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {kr;description-logics;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ brachman_rj-etal:1983b, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and Richard E. Fikes and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {{\sc krypton}: Integrating Terminology and Assertion}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, pages = {31--35}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, contentnote = {This is the paper introducing the term {hybrid systems}, and I guess the first dogma of KR. --RT}, topic = {kr;description-logics;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ brachman_rj-etal:1985a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and Victoria Pigman Gilbert and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {An Essential Hybrid Reasoning System: Knowledge and Symbol Level Accounts of {KRYPTON}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, editor = {Arivind Joshi}, pages = {532--539}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {description-logics;} } @inproceedings{ brachman_rj-etal:1989a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and Alex Borgida and Deborah L. McGuinness and Lori A. Resnik}, title = {The {CLASSIC} Knowledge Representation System, or, {KL-ONE}: The Next Generation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, CA}, missinginfo = {Pages. CHECK THIS I HAVE A PREPRINT ONLY}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {description-logics;krcourse;} } @book{ brachman_rj-etal:1989b, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, title = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, address = {San Mateo, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Fahiem Bacchus, Josh D. Tenenberg, and Johannes A. G. M. Koomen, "A Non-Reified Temporal Logic", pp. 2-10 2. Andrew B. Baker "A Simple Solution to the Yale Shooting Problem", pp. 11-20 3. John A. Barnden, "Belief, "Metaphorically Speaking", pp. 21-32 4. Alexander Borgida and David W. Etherington, "Hierarchical Knowledge Bases and Efficient Disjunctive Reasoning", pp. 33-43 5. Tom Bylander, Dean Allemang, Michael C. Tanner, and John R. Josephson, "Some Results Concerning the Computational Complexity of Abduction", pp. 44-54 6. Anthony G. Cohn, "On the Appearance of Sortal Literals: a Non Substitutional Framework for Hybrid Reasoning", pp. 55-66 7. James M. Crawford and Benjamin Kuipers, "Towards a Theory of Access-Limited Logic for Knowledge Representation", pp. 67-78 8. Ernest Davis, "Solutions to a Paradox of Perception with Limited Acuity", pp. 79-82 9. Rina Dechter, Itay Meiri, and Judea Pearl, "Temporal Constraint Networks", pp. 83-93 10. Jon Doyle and Michael P. Wellman, "Impediments to Universal Preference-Based Default Theories", pp. 94-102 11. Mark Drummond, "Situated Control Rules", pp. 103-113 12. Oren Etzioni, "Tractable Decision-Analytic Control", pp. 114-125 13. Alan M. Frisch, "A General Framework for Sorted Deduction: Fundamental Results on Hybrid Reasoning", pp. 126-136 14. Hector Geffner, "Default Reasoning, "Minimality and Coherence", pp. 137-148 15. Nicolas Helft, "Induction as Nonmonotonic Inference", pp. 149-156 16. Graeme Hirst, "Ontological Assumptions in Knowledge Representation", pp. 157-169 17. Yoshiteru Ishida, "A Framework for Dynamic Representation of Knowledge: A Minimum Principle in Organizing Knowledge Representation", pp. 170-179 18. Simon Kasif, "Parallel Solutions to Constraint Satisfaction Problems", pp. 180-188 19. Henry A. Kautz ane Bart Selman, "Hard Problems for Simple Default Logics", pp. 189-197 20. Johannes A. G. M. Koomen, "Localizing Temporal Constraint Propagation", pp. 198-202 21. Phyllis Koton and Melissa P. Chase, "Knowledge Representation in a Case-Based Reasoning System: Defaults and Exceptions", pp. 203-211 22. Daniel J. Lehmann, "What Does a Conditional Knowledge Base Entail? 212-222 23. Debbie Leishman, "Analogy as a Constrained Partial Correspondence Over Conceptual Graphs", pp. 223-234 24. Vladimir Lifschitz, "Between Circumscription and Autoepistemic Logic", pp. 235-244 25. Fangzhen Lin and Yoav Shoham, "Argument Systems: A Uniform Basis for Nonmonotonic Reasoning", pp. 245-255 26. Ronald Prescott, "Analogical Reasoning, Defeasible Reasoning, and the Reference Class", pp. 256-265 27. Eliezer L. Lozinskii, "Plausible World Assumption", pp. 266-275 28. V. Wiktor Marek, Miroslaw Truszczynski, "Relating Autoepistemic and Default Logics", pp. 276-288 29. David A. McAllester, Robert Givan, and Tanveer Fatima, "Taxonomic Syntax for First Order Inference", pp. 289-300 30. Bernhard Nebel, "A Knowledge Level Analysis of Belief Revision", pp. 301-311 31. Eric Neufeld, "Defaults and Probabilities; Extensions and Coherence", pp. 312-323 32. Edwin P. D. Pednault, "ADL: Exploring the Middle Ground between STRIPS and the Situation Calculus", pp. 324-332 33. David L. Poole, "What the Lottery Paradox Tells Us About Default Reasoning", pp. 333-340 34. Teodor C. Przymusinski, "Three-Valued Formalizations of Non-Monotonic Reasoning and Logic Programming", pp. 341-348 35. Arcot Rajasekar, Jorge Lobo, and Jack Minker, "Skeptical Reasoning and Disjunctive Programs", pp. 349-356 36. David A. Randell and Anthony G. Cohn, "Modelling Topological and Metrical Properties in Physical Processes", pp. 357-368 37. Anand S. Rao and Norman Y. Foo, "Formal Theories of Belief Revision", pp. 369-380 38. Manny Rayner, "Did Newton Solve the "Extended Prediction Problem?", pp. 381-385 39. Stanley J. Rosenschein, "Synthesizing Information-Tracking Automata from Environment Descriptions", pp. 386-393 40. Francesca Rossi and Ugo Montanari, "Exact Solution in Linear Time of Networks of Constraints Using Perfect Relaxation", pp. 394-399 41. Stuart J. Russell and Eric Wefald, "Principles of Metareasoning", pp. 400-411 42. Erik Sandewall, "Combining Logic and Differential Equations for Describing Real-World Systems", pp. 412-420 43. Manfred Schmidt-Schau, "Subsumption in KL-ONE is Undecidable", pp. 421-431 44. James G. Schmolze, "Terminological Knowledge Representation Systems Supporting N-ary Terms", pp. 432-443 45. Lenhart K. Schubert and Chung Hee Hwang, "An Episodic Knowledge Representation for Narrative Texts", pp. 444-458 46. Edward P. Stabler Jr., "Syntactic Equality in Knowledge Representation and Reasoning", pp. 459-466 47. Devika Subramanian and John Woodfill, "Making Situation Calculus Indexical", pp. 467-474 48. Josh D. Tenenberg, "Inheritance in Automated Planning", pp. 475-485 49. Wlodek Zadrozny, "Cardinalities and Well Orderings in a Common-Sense Set Theory", pp. 486-497 }, topic = {kr;} } @incollection{ brachman_rj-etal:1991a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and Deborah L. McGuinness and Peter F. Patel-Schneider and Lori A. Resnik}, title = {Living with {\sc classic}: When and How to Use a {\sc kl-one}-Like Language}, booktitle = {Principles of Semantic Networks}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {John F. Sowa}, pages = {401--456}, address = {San Mateo, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {kr;description-logics;classic;kr-course;} } @article{ brachman_rj-etal:1991b, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Ray Reiter}, title = {Introduction to the Special Volume on Knowledge Representation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {49}, number = {3}, pages = {1--3}, topic = {kr;} } @book{ brachman_rj-etal:1992a, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, title = {Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {kr-survey;} } @article{ brachman_rj-etal:1993a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and Peter G. Selfridge and Loren G. Terveen and Boris Altman and Fern Halper and Thomas Kirk and Alan Lazar and Deborah L McGuiness and Lori Alperin Resnikj}, title = {Integrated Support For Data Archaeology}, journal = {Journal of Cooperative Information Systems}, year = {1993}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {159--185}, topic = {data-mining;} } @article{ brachman_rj-etal:1999a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and }, title = {``{R}educing'' {\sc classic} to Practice: Knowledge Representation Theory Meets Reality}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {114}, number = {1--2}, pages = {203--237}, topic = {kr;description-logics;applied-kr;kr-course;} } @article{ brachman_rj-etal:2020a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and David Gunning and Murray Burke}, title = {Integrated AI Systems}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2020}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {49--65}, abstract = {... From the earliest days of AI, it was apparent that a robust, generally intelligent system should include a complete set of capabilities: perception, memory, reasoning, learning, planning, and action; and when DARPA initiated AI research in the 1960s, ambitious projects such as Shakey the Robot went after the complete package. ... In the 1980s, DARPA's Strategic Computing Initiative took on challenges of integrated AI projects such as the Autonomous Land Vehicle and the Pilot's Associate. These did not succeed, but instead set the stage for the several decades of more siloed research that followed, until it was time to try again. In the 2000s, DARPA took on the integrated AI problem again with its Grand Challenges, which led to the first self-driving cars, and projects such as the Personalized Assistant that Learns, which produced Apple's Siri. ... This is the story of DARPA's persistent long-term support for this essential premise of AI.}, topic = {history-of-AI;robotics;integrated-AI-systems;} } @book{ brachman_rj-levesque_hj:1985a, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Readings in Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1985}, address = {Los Altos, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {kr;kr-course;kr-survey;} } @article{ brachman_rj-levesque_hj:1991a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Look What They've Done to My Dogma! On Limitations in Knowledge Representation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {50}, number = {1}, topic = {kr;description-logics;kr-course;} } @book{ brachman_rj-levesque_hj:2004a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector Levesque}, title = {Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2004}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {1558609326}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, Q387 .731 2004}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file for some parts. "Brachman" .}, xref = {Review: morgenstern_l:2006a.}, topic = {kr;AI-intro;AI-text;} } @article{ brachman_rj-schmolze:1991a, author = {Ronald J. Brachman and James Schmolze}, title = {An Overview of the {\sc Kl-One} Knowledge Representation System}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1991}, volume = {9}, pages = {171--216}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Brachman"}, topic = {kr;description-logics;kr-course;} } @book{ brackbill-cohen_bi:1985a, editor = {Jeremiah U. Brackbill and Bruce I. Cohen}, title = {Multiple Time Scales}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1985}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0121234207}, rtnote = {UMich Science, QA377 .M9461 1985}, topic = {nonlinear-mathematics;} } @article{ bracken:1973a, author = {H. Bracken}, title = {Minds and Learning: The {C}homskyian Revolution}, journal = {Metaphilosophy}, year = {1973}, volume = {4}, pages = {229--245}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {Chomsky;L1-acquisition;} } @article{ braddonmitchell_d:2003a, author = {David Braddon-Mitchell}, title = {Qualia and Analytical Conditionals}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {100}, number = {3}, pages = {111--135}, topic = {mind-body-problem;} } @article{ braddonmitchell_d:2004a, author = {David Braddon-Mitchell}, title = {How Do We Know It Is Now Now?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {3}, pages = {199--203}, xref = {Commentary: forrest_p:2004a}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;'now';} } @book{ braddonmitchell_d-jackson_f:1996a, author = {David Braddon-Mitchell and Frank Jackson}, title = {The Philosophy of Mind and Cognition}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631191674 (hbk)}, xref = {Review: litch:1991a}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD 418.3 .B721 1996}, rtnote = {Might be useful for LOT.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-cogsci;functionalism;} } @incollection{ bradfield_j1-stitling_c:2006a, author = {Jill Bradfield and Colin Stitling}, title = {Modal Mu-Calculi}, booktitle = {Handbook of Modal Logic}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan van Benthem and Frank Wolter}, pages = {721--756}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Inc.}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Bradfield".}, topic = {modal-logic;temporal-logic;program-verification;mu-calculus;} } @article{ bradford_pg-wollowski:1995a, author = {Philip G. Bradford and Michael Wollowski}, title = {A Formalization of the {T}uring Test}, journal = {{SIGART} Bulletin}, year = {1995}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {3--10}, abstract = {By formalizing the Turing Test as an interactive proof system and by employing results from complexity theory, this paper investigates the power and limitations of the Turing Test. In particular, if human intelligence subsumes machine intelligence, and human intelligence is not simulatable by any bounded machine, then the Turing Test can distinguish humans and machines to within arbitrarily high probability.}, topic = {Turing-test;} } @article{ bradley_d:2012a, author = {Darren Bradley}, title = {Four Problems of Self-Locating Belief}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2012}, volume = {121}, number = {2}, pages = {149--177}, topic = {sleeping-beauty-problem;self-locating-constructions;} } @article{ bradley_d:2014a, author = {Darren Bradley}, title = {A Relevant Alternatives Solution to the Bootstrapping and Self-Knowledge Problems}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2014}, volume = {111}, number = {7}, pages = {379--393}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;skepticism;} } @article{ bradley_d:2014b, author = {Darren Bradley}, title = {Functionalism and the Independence Problems}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2014}, volume = {48}, number = {3}, pages = {545--74}, topic = {indexicals;self-locating-constructions;} } @article{ bradley_e-etal:2001a, author = {Elizabeth Bradley and Matthew Easley and Reinhard Stolle}, title = {Reasoning about Nonlinear System Identification}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {133}, number = {1--2}, pages = {139--188}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;qualitative-physics;kr;} } @book{ bradley_fh:1893a, author = {Francis H. Bradley}, title = {The Principles of Logic}, publisher = {K. Paul, Trench \&\ Company}, year = {1883}, address = {London}, topic = {history-of-logic;idealism;} } @book{ bradley_fh:1927a, author = {F.H. Bradley}, title = {Ethical Studies (Second Edition)}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, year = {1927}, topic = {ethics;} } @article{ bradley_r:1999a, author = {Richard Bradley}, title = {More Triviality}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {28}, number = {2}, pages = {129--139}, topic = {conditionals;CCCP;} } @incollection{ bradley_r:2000a, author = {Richard Bradley}, title = {Conditionals and the Logic of Decision}, booktitle = {{PSA}'1998: Proceedings of the 1998 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2000}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {S18--S32}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {decision-theory;conditionals;} } @article{ bradley_r:2000b, author = {Richard Bradley}, title = {A Preservation Condition for Conditionals}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2000}, volume = {60}, number = {3}, pages = {219--222}, topic = {conditionals;CCCP;} } @article{ bradley_r:2006a, author = {Richard Bradley}, title = {Adams Conditionals and Non-Monotonic Probabilities}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2006}, volume = {15}, number = {1--2}, pages = {65--81}, topic = {conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;probability-semantics; CCCP;} } @incollection{ bradley_r:2009a, author = {Richard Bradley}, title = {Preference Kinematics}, booktitle = {preference Change: Approaches from Philosophy, Economics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Till Gr\"une-Yadoff and Sven O. Hansson}, pages = {221--242}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {preference-dynamics;} } @article{ bradley_r:2012a, author = {Richard Bradley}, title = {Multidimensional Possible-Worlds Semantics for Conditionals}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2012}, volume = {121}, number = {4}, pages = {539--571}, topic = {conditionals;probability;} } @incollection{ bradley_r:2018a, author = {Richard Bradley}, title = {Decision Theory: A Formal Philosophical Introduction}, booktitle = {Introduction to Formal Philosophy}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2018}, editor = {Sven Ove Hansson and Vincent F. Hendricks}, pages = {611--655}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {decision-theory;} } @article{ bradley_r-stefansson_o:2017a, author = {Richard Bradley and H. Orri Stef\'ansson}, title = {Counterfactual Desirability}, journal = {The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year = {2017}, volume = {68}, number = {2}, pages = {485--533}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja20\Bradley.pdf}, abstract = {The desirability of what actually occurs is often influenced by what could have been. Preferences based on such value dependencies between actual and counterfactual outcomes generate a class of problems for orthodox decision theory, the best-known perhaps being the so-called Allais paradox. In this article we solve these problems by extending Richard Jeffrey's decision theory to counterfactual prospects, using a multidimensional possible-world semantics for conditionals, ...}, rtnote = {Rnotes begun but not carried very far.}, topic = {conditionals;desire;} } @article{ bradley_rd:1959a, author = {Raymond D. Bradley}, title = {Must the Future Be What it Is Going to Be?}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1959}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {193--208}, xref = {Review: butler_rj:1960b}, xref = {Commenrary: montague_r2:1960a}, topic = {(in)determinism;} } @article{ bradley_rd:1962a, author = {Raymond D. Bradley}, title = {\,`Ifs', `Cans' and Determinism}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1962}, volume = {40}, pages = {146--158}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {JL-Austin;conditionals;(in)determinism;freedom;} } @article{ bradley_rd:1964a, author = {Raymond D. Bradley}, title = {Geometry and Necessary Truth}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1964}, volume = {73}, number = {1}, pages = {59--75}, topic = {psychology-of-mathematics;necessary-truth;geometry;} } @book{ bradshaw:1996a, editor = {Jeffrey M. Bradshaw}, title = {Software Agents}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {agency;distributed-systems;communications-protocols;} } @incollection{ brady_ah:1988a, author = {Allen H. Brady}, title = {The Busy Beaver Game and the Meaning of Life}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {259--277}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {automata-theory;} } @book{ brady_g:2000a, author = {Geraldine Brady}, title = {From {P}eirce to {S}kolem: A Neglected Chapter in the History of Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2000}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Review: corcoran:2008a.}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @article{ brady_m:1980a, author = {Mike Brady}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}echniques of Artificial Intelligence}, by {S}tuart {C}. {S}hapiro}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1980}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {109--110}, xref = {Review of shapiro_sc:1979a.}, topic = {AI-intro;AI-text;} } @article{ brady_m:1981a, author = {Michael Brady}, title = {Preface---The Changing Shape of Computer Vision}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, volume = {17}, number = {1--3}, pages = {1--15}, topic = {computer-vision;} } @article{ brady_m:1982a, author = {Michael Brady}, title = {Computer Vision}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1982}, volume = {1982}, number = {1}, pages = {7--16}, topic = {computer-vision;} } @article{ brady_m:1983a, author = {Michael Brady}, title = {Parallelism in Vision}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, volume = {21}, number = {3}, pages = {271--283}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The past year has seen a continuing flood of papers and new ideas spanning the entire range of computer vision. In this report we provide pointers to two areas that have received particular attention, namely (i) image processing hardware and parallel image understanding algorithms, including connectionist theories of perception and cognition, and (ii) robotic vision. Finally, we provide an annotated review of the literature as in (Brady, 1982a; Sections 2 and 3).}, topic = {computer-vision;parallel-processing;connectionist-models;} } @article{ brady_m:1985a, author = {Michael Brady}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Robotics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {79--121}, topic = {robotics;} } @incollection{ brady_m:1993a, author = {Michael Brady}, title = {Computational Vision}, booktitle = {The Simulation of Human Intelligence}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {Donald Broadbent}, pages = {121--150}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {computer-vision;} } @book{ brady_m-berwick_rc:1983a, title = {Computational Models of Discourse}, editor = {Michael Brady and Robert C. Berwick}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {nl-interpretation;nl-generation;} } @article{ brady_m-hu_hs:1994a, author = {Michael Brady and Huosheng Hu}, title = {The Mind of a Robot}, journal = {Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Series A: Physical Sciences and Engineering}, year = {1994}, volume = {349}, number = {1689}, pages = {5--28}, note = {Available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/09628428.html}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Zip Drive.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;robotics;behavioral-robotics; motion-planning;reasoning-about-uncertainty;computer-vision;} } @article{ brady_rt:1990a, author = {Ross T. Brady}, title = {The {G}entzenization and Decidability of {RW}}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1990}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {35--73}, topic = {relevance-logic;proof-theory;} } @article{ brady_rt:1991a, author = {Ross T. Brady}, title = {Gentzenization and Decidability of Some Contraction-Less Relevant Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1991}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {97--117}, topic = {proof-theory;relevance-logic;} } @article{ brady_rt:1992a, author = {Ross T. Brady}, title = {Hierarchical Semantics for Relevant Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1992}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {357--374}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ brady_rt:1994a, author = {Ross T. Brady}, title = {Rules in Relevant Logic---{I}: Semantic Classification}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1994}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {111--137}, topic = {relevance-logic;inference-rules;} } @article{ brady_rt:1996a, author = {Ross T. Brady}, title = {Relevant Implication and the Case for a Weaker Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {151--183}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ brady_rt:1996b, author = {Ross T. Brady}, title = {Gentzenization of Relevant Logics Without Distribution, {I}}, journal = {The Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {61}, number = {2}, pages = {353--378}, topic = {relevance-logic;cut-free-deduction;} } @article{ brady_rt:1996c, author = {Ross T. Brady}, title = {Gentzenization of Relevant Logics Without Distribution, {II}}, journal = {The Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {61}, number = {2}, pages = {379--401}, topic = {relevance-logic;cut-free-deduction;} } @article{ brady_rt:1996d, author = {Ross T. Brady}, title = {Gentzenization of Relevant Logics With Distribution}, journal = {The Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {61}, number = {2}, pages = {402--420}, topic = {relevance-logic;cut-free-deduction;} } @book{ brady_rt:2002a, author = {Ross T. Brady}, title = {Relevant Logics and Their Rivals, Volume {II}}, publisher = {Ashgate Publishing Co.}, year = {2002}, address = {Brookfield, Vermont}, ISBN = {0 7546 1113 2}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ brady_rt:2010a, author = {Ross Thomas Brady}, title = {Free Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {39}, number = {5}, pages = {511--529}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ brady_rt:2014a, author = {Ross T. Brady}, title = {The Simple Consistency of Naive Set Theory using Metavaluations}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {2--3}, pages = {261--281}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;metavaluations;} } @book{ brafman_o-brafman_r:2008a, author = {Ori Brafman and Rom Brafman}, title = {Sway: The Irresistible Pull of Irrational Behavior}, publisher = {Doubleday}, year = {2008}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {978-0-585-550606}, topic = {irrationality;rationality;behavioral-economics;} } @inproceedings{ brafman_r-etal:2010a, author = {Ronen Brafman and Francesca Rossi and Domenico Salvagnin and K. Brent Venable and Toby Walsh}, title = {Finding the Next Solution in Constraint- and Preference-Based Knowledge Representation Formalisms}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {425--433}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we study the computational complexity of finding the next solution in some common preference-based representation formalisms. We show that this problem is hard in general CSPs, but it can be easy in tree-shaped CSPs and tree-shaped fuzzy CSPs. However, it is difficult in weighted CSPs, even if we restrict the shape of the constraint graph. We also consider CP-nets, showing that the problem is easy in acyclic CP-nets, as well as in constrained acyclic CP-nets where the (soft) constraints are tree-shaped and topologically compatible with the CP-net.}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;CP-nets;} } @incollection{ brafman_ri:1996a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman}, title = {\,`Statistical' First Order Conditionals}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {398--409}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {conditionals;probability;nonmonotonic-conditionals;} } @incollection{ brafman_ri:2008a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman}, title = {Preferences, Planning and Control}, booktitle = {Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference (KR2008)}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {2--5}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {Preference handling is a problem of much theoretical and practical interest. In planning, preferences arises naturally when one considers richer notions of goals, as well as over-subscribed planning problems. In knowledge representation, it is a core issue with much recent work on preference languages and algorithms. In system design, preferences can be used to control choices and provide a personalized experience or adapt to varying context. In this talk I will discuss some of my work, together with many colleagues, in these areas. I will consider some of the challenges we face when designing a preference specification formalism and describe a simple graphical input language, CP-nets - which attempts to address some of these challenges. Surprisingly, CP-nets are closely related to an important analysis tool in planning - the causal graph, and the problem of inference in these networks has important links to the question of the complexity of plan generation. Moreover, the problem of finding a preferred plan given a rich goal specification can be solved by using techniques developed for constrained optimization in CP-nets. But CP-network are inherently a propositional specification language, whereas many control applications require a relational language. Time permitting, I will explain why this problem arises naturally in intelligent control applications. I will show how some recent and richer relational languages can be used to address this problem, and how closely they are related to probabilistic relational models. }, topic = {preferences;reasoning-about-preferences;CP-nets;causal-networks;} } @incollection{ brafman_ri:2008b, author = {Ronen I. Brafman}, title = {Relational Preference Rules for Control}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {552--559}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {Much like relational probabilistic models, the need for relational preference models arises naturally in real-world applications where the set of object classes is fixed, but object instances vary from one application to another as well as within the run-time of a single application. To address this problem, we suggest a rule-based preference specification language. This language extends regular rule-based languages and leads to a much more flexible approach for specifying control rules for autonomous systems. It also extends standard generalized-additive value functions to handle a dynamic universe of objects: given any specific set of objects it induces a generalized-additive value function. Throughout the paper we use the example of a decision support system for command and control centers we are currently developing to motivate the need for such models and to illustrate them. }, topic = {preference-representation;reasoning-about-preferences; procedural-control;} } @article{ brafman_ri:2011a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman}, title = {Relational Preference Rules for Control}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {7--8}, pages = {1180--1193}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;preference-representation;} } @inproceedings{ brafman_ri-dimopoulos_y:2003a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Yannis Dimopoulos}, title = {A New Look at the Semantics and Optimization Methods of {CP}-Networks}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, editor = {Georg Gottlob and Toby Walsh}, pages = {1033--1038}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {CP-nets;} } @article{ brafman_ri-dimopoulos_y:2004a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Yannis Dimopoulos}, title = {Extended Semantics and Optimization Algorithms for {CP}networks}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {218--245}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my14.}, topic = {CP-nets;} } @article{ brafman_ri-domshlak:2008a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Carmel Domshlak}, title = {Graphically Structured Value-Function Compilation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {2--3}, pages = {325--349}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preferences;} } @article{ brafman_ri-domshlak:2009a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Carmel Domshlak}, title = {Preference Handling---An Introductory Tutorial}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2009}, volume = {30}, number = {1}, pages = {58--86}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;} } @article{ brafman_ri-domshlak:2013a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Carmel Domshlak}, title = {On the Complexity of Planning for Agent Teams and its Implications for Single Agent Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {198}, pages = {52--71}, topic = {multiagent-planning;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ brafman_ri-etal:1994a, author = {Ronen Brafman and J.-C. Latombe}, title = {Knowledge as a Tool in Motion Planning Under Uncertainty}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fifth Conference ({TARK} 1994)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Ronald Fagin}, pages = {208--224}, address = {San Francisco}, missinginfo = {Au's 1st name.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;cognitive-robotics;} } @article{ brafman_ri-etal:1998a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Joseph Y. Halpern and Yoav Shoham}, title = {On the Knowledge Requirements of Tasks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {98}, number = {1--2}, pages = {317--349}, topic = {cognitive-robotics;knowledge-based-programming;} } @inproceedings{ brafman_ri-etal:2006a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Carmel Domshlak and Solomon E. Shimony and Yael Silver}, title = {Preferences over Sets}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-First National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, editor = {Yolanda Gil and Raymond Mooney}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, missinginfo = {pages}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;} } @article{ brafman_ri-etal:2006b, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Carmel Domshlak and Solomon E. Shimony}, title = {On Graphical Modeling of Preference and Importance}, journal = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research}, year = {2006}, volume = {25}, pages = {389--424}, url = {http://www.jair.org/media/1895/live-1895-2605-jair.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se10}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;CP-nets;TCP-nets;} } @inproceedings{ brafman_ri-friedman_n:1995a, author = {Ronen Brafman and Nir Friedman}, title = {On Decision-Theoretic Foundations for Defaults}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {Read this}, pages = {1458--1465}, topic = {decision-theory;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ brafman_ri-friedman_n:2001a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Nir Friedman}, title = {On Decision-Theoretic Foundations for Defaults}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {133}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--33}, topic = {foundations-of-nonmonotonic-logic;decision-theory; nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ brafman_ri-shoham_y1:1995a, author = {Ronen Brafman and Yoav Shoham}, title = {Knowledge Considerations in Robotics and Distribution of Robotic Tasks}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {96--102}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr23\brafman2.pdf}, topic = {kr;kr-course;reasoning-about-knowledge; foundations-of-robotics;distributed-systems;task-allocation;} } @incollection{ brafman_ri-tennenholtz:1994a, author = {Ronen Brafman and Moshe Tennenholtz}, title = {Belief Ascription and Mental-Level Modeling}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {87--98}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;propositional-attitudes;agent-modeling;belief; reasoning-about-mental-states;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ brafman_ri-tennenholtz:1995a, author = {Ronen Brafman and Moshe Tennenholtz}, title = {Towards Action Prediction Using a Mental-Level Model}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {2010--2016}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;reasoning-about-mental-states;} } @inproceedings{ brafman_ri-tennenholtz:1997a1, author = {Ronen Brafman and Moshe Tennenholtz}, title = {On the Axiomatization of Qualitative Decision Criteria}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Qualitative Preferences in Deliberation and Practical Reasoning}, year = {1997}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {29--34}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, xref = {Conference publication: brafman_ri-tennenholtz:1997a2.}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @inproceedings{ brafman_ri-tennenholtz:1997a2, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Moshe Tennenholtz}, title = {On the Axiomatization of Qualitative Decision Criteria}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Vol. ???}, year = {1997}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {76--81}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr23\brafman1.pdf}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @inproceedings{ brafman_ri-tennenholtz:1997b, author = {Ronen Brafman and Moshe Tennenholtz}, title = {On Decision-Theoretic Foundations for Defaults}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {qualitative-utility;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ brafman_ri-tennenholtz:1997c, author = {Ronen Brafman and Moshe Tennenholtz}, title = {Modeling Agents as Qualitative Decision Makers}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {94}, number = {1--2}, pages = {217--268}, topic = {qualitative-utility;agent-modeling;} } @inproceedings{ brafman_ri-tennenholtz:1998a, author = {Ronan Brafman and Moshe Tennenholtz}, title = {On the Axiomatization of Qualitative Decision Criteria}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Ninth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference}, year = {1998}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {76--81}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @article{ brafman_ri-tennenholtz:2000a, author = {Ronen I. Brafman and Moshe Tennenholtz}, title = {A Near-Optimal Polynomial Time Algorithm for Learning in Certain Classes of Stochastic Games}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {121}, number = {1--2}, pages = {31--47}, topic = {stochastic-games;multiagent-systems;machine-learning;} } @article{ brafman_ri-tennenholtz:2004a, author = {Ronen I. Brafmam and Moshe Tennenholtz}, title = {Efficient Learning Equilibrium}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {159}, number = {1--2}, pages = {27--47}, topic = {multiagent-learning;repeated-games;} } @article{ braillard_pa:2010a, author = {Pierre-Alain Braillard}, title = {Systems Biology and the Mechanistic Framework}, journal = {History and Philosophy of Life Sciences}, year = {2010}, volume = {32}, number = {1}, pages = {43--62}, abstract = {... I examine the emerging field of systems biology and argue that some of its approaches do not fit the mechanistic framework. I present an example of what can be called design explanation and show how it differs from classical mechanistic explanations.}, topic = {systems-biology;philosophy-of-biology;mechanisms;} } @book{ braillard_pa-malaterre_c:2015a, author = {Pierre-Alain Braillard and Christophe Malaterre}, title = {Explanation in Biology: An Enquiry into the Diversity of Explanatory Patterns in the Life Sciences}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2015}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN-13 = {978-9401798211}, topic = {philosophy-of-biology;mechanisms;explanation;} } @article{ braine:1974a, author = {Martin D.S. Braine}, title = {On What Might Constitute Learnable Phonology}, journal = {Language}, year = {1974}, volume = {50}, pages = {270--299}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {phonology;learnability;} } @article{ braine:1979a, author = {Martin D.S. Braine}, title = {On Some Claims about {\em If-Then}}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {35--47}, contentnote = {Braine claims that the counterexamples to transitivity are flawed.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @book{ braine-obrian_dp:1997a, editor = {Martin D.S. Braine and David P. O'Brian}, title = {Mental Logic}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1997}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0-8058-2388-3}, xref = {Review: tanaka_k2:2001b.}, topic = {logic-and-cognition;} } @article{ braisby:1998a, author = {Nick Braisby}, title = {Compositionality and the Modelling of Complex Concepts}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {479--507}, abstract = {This paper outlines the way in which RVC -- a Relational View of Concepts -- accommodates a range of complex concepts, cases which have been argued to be non-compositional. }, topic = {concepts;situation-theory;} } @book{ braithwaite_rb:1931a, editor = {Richard B. Braithwaite}, title = {The Foundations of Mathematics: Collected Papers of {F}rank {P}. {R}amsey}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1931}, address = {London}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, xref = {Review: church_a:1932a}, topic = {logic-classics;} } @article{ braithwaite_rb:1938a, author = {Richard B. Braithwaite}, title = {The Relevance of Psychology to Logic}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1938}, note = {Supplementary Series, Volume 17}, pages = {19--41}, contentnote = {This is really about the relation of epistemology to logic.}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ braithwaite_rb:1993a, author = {Richard B. Braithwaite}, title = {Imaginary Objects}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1993}, volume = {93}, note = {Supplementary Series}, pages = {18--70}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de16\ryle2}, topic = {(non)existence;imagination;} } @article{ brame:1975a, author = {Michael K. Brame}, title = {On the Abstractness of Syntactic Structure: The {VP} Controversy}, journal = {Linguistic Analysis}, year = {1975}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {191--203}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Brame"}, topic = {nl-syntax;} } @book{ brame:1976a, author = {Michael K. Brame}, title = {Conjectures and Refutations in Syntax and Semantics}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1976}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-semantics;generative-semantics;} } @article{ brame:1977a, author = {Michael K. Brame}, title = {Alternatives to the Tensed {S} and Specified Subject Conditions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {381--411}, topic = {transformational-grammar;nl-syntax;} } @incollection{ brame:1978a, author = {Michael K. Brame}, title = {The Base Hypothesis and the Spelling Prohibition: Extraposition, Expletives, and Auxiliaries}, booktitle = {Semantics and Grammmatical Theory}, publisher = {Haven Publishing Company}, year = {1978}, editor = {Michael Brame and Richard Smaby and Emmon Bach and Raphael Stern}, pages = {41--58}, address = {New York}, topic = {transformational-grammar;} } @book{ brame-etal:1978a, author = {Michael Brame and Richard Smaby and Emmon Bach and Raphael Stern}, title = {Semantics and Grammmatical Theory}, publisher = {Haven Publishing Company}, year = {1978}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-930586-14-x}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Emmon Bach, "A Framework for Syntax and Semantics", pp. 17--40 2. Michael K. Brame, "The Base Hypothesis and the Spelling Prohibition: Sentential Subjects, Extraposition, Expletives, and Auxiliaries", pp. 41--58 3. Raphael Stern, "Alethic Semantics: Adumbrations on a Theme", pp. 59--83 4. Richard Smaby, "Informing with Pronouns: Extending Truth-Semantics, pp. 85--102 }, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @article{ brams_sj-etal:2001a, author = {Steven J. Brams and Paul H. Edelman and Peter C. Fishburn}, title = {Paradoxes of Fair Division}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2001}, volume = {98}, number = {6}, pages = {300--314}, topic = {welfare-economics;rationality;} } @incollection{ brams_sj-fishburn_pc:2002a, author = {Steven J. Brams and Peter C. Fishburn}, booktitle = {Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare}, editor = {Kenneth J. Arrow and Amartya K. Sen and Kotaro Suzumura}, pages = {173--236}, publisher = {Elsevier}, series = {Handbook of Social Choice and Welfare}, title = {Voting Procedures}, volume = {1}, year = {2002}, topic = {Arrow's-theorem;aggregation;} } @article{ branch:1977a, author = {Taylor Branch}, title = {New Frontiers in {A}merican Philosophy}, journal = {The New York Times Magazine}, year = {1977}, note = {August 14, 1977}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Kripke"}, topic = {Kripke;analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ brand_d:1976a, author = {D. Brand}, title = {Analytic Resolution in Theorem Proving}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1976}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {285--318}, topic = {theorem-proving;resolution;} } @article{ brand_m:1970a, author = {Myles Brand}, title = {Causes of Actions}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1970}, volume = {67}, number = {21}, pages = {932--947}, topic = {action;causality;} } @book{ brand_m:1970b, editor = {Myles Brand}, title = {The Nature of Human Action}, publisher = {Scott, Foresman and Company}, year = {1970}, address = {Glenview, California}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: BD 450 .B82 1970}, contentnote = {TC: 1. A.I. Melden, "Physiological Happenings and Bodily Action", pp. 22--26 2. A.I. Melden, "Action Equals Bodily Movement Plus Motive", pp. 27--31 3. Gilbert Ryle, "The Distinction between Voluntary and Involuntary", pp. 36--40 4. H.A. Pritchard, "Acting, Willing, Deciding", pp. 41--49 5. Richard Taylor, "Simple Action and Volition", pp. 50--60 6. Gilbert Ryle, "The Will", pp. 61--66 7. Donald Davidson, "Actions, Reasons, and Causes", pp. 67--79 8. T.F. Daveney, "Choosing", pp. 83--90 9. A.I. Melden, "Action", pp. 91--99 10. Kurt Baier, "Responsibility and Action", pp. 100--116 11. P.T. Geach, "Ascrkiptivism", pp. 117--120 12. Storrs McCall, "Ability as a Species of Possibility", pp. 139--147 13. G.E. Moore, "Free Will", pp. 148--156 14. P.H. Nowell-Smith, "Freedom and Responsibility", pp. 157--160 15. J.L. Austin, "Ifs and Cans", pp. 161--170 16. Keith Lehrer, "Ifs, Cans, and Causes", pp. 179--181 17. Bruce Goldberg and Herbert Heidelberger, "Mr. Lehrer on the Constitution of Cans", pp. 182--183 18. Keith Lehrer, "Cans and Conditionals: A Rejoinder", pp. 184--186 19. Roderick M. Chisholm, "J.L. Austin's Philosophical Papers", pp. 187--191 20. Arnold S. Kaufman, "Ability", pp. 191--203 21. Timothy Duggan and Bernard Gert, "Voluntary Abilities", pp. 204--216 22. Nicholas Rescher, "On the Characterization of Actions", pp. 247--254 23. Arthur C. Danto, "Basic Actions", pp. 255--264 24. Richard Taylor, "Thought and Purpose", pp. 265--282 25. Roderick M. Chisholm, "Freedom and Action", pp. 283--292 26. Roderick M. Chisholm, "He Could Have Done Otherwise", pp. 293--301 27. Georg Henrick von Wright, "The Logic of Change and Action", pp. 302--330 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {action;} } @book{ brand_m:1976a, editor = {Myles Brand}, title = {The Nature of Causation}, publisher = {University of Illinois Press}, year = {1976}, address = {Urbana, Illinois}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Phil collections shelf.}, contentnote = {This contains a useful survey in the introductory chapter on the problem of defining causation.}, topic = {causality;} } @book{ brand_m:1984a, author = {Myles Brand}, title = {Intending and Acting: Toward a Naturalized Action Theory}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {HILLMAN B105.A35 B73 1984}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @incollection{ brand_m:1986a, author = {Myles Brand}, title = {Intentional Acts and Plans}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {X}: Studies in the Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {213--230}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {intention;action;volition;} } @incollection{ brand_m:1989a, author = {Myles Brand}, title = {Proximate Causation of Action}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 3: Philosophy of Mind and Action Theory}, publisher = {Ridgeview Publishing Company}, year = {1989}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {423--442}, address = {Atasacadero, California}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {reasons-for-action;} } @book{ brand_m-walton_dn:1976a, editor = {Myles Brand and Douglas Walton}, title = {Action Theory: Proceedings of the {W}innipeg Conference On Human Action, held at {W}innipeg, {M}anitoba, {C}anada, 9-11 {M}ay 1975}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1976}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {9027706719}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD450 .W541 1975.}, xref = {Review: tomberlin_je:1980a}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @inproceedings{ brandano:1999a, author = {Sergio Brandano}, title = {${\cal K}$-{RAC}i}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Action and Change}, year = {1999}, editor = {Michael Thielscher}, pages = {9--16}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {action-formalisms;reasoning-about-continuous-time; concurrent-actions;continuous-change;} } @article{ brandenberger_a:2007a, author = {Adam Brandenberger}, title = {The Power of Paradox: Some Recent Developments in Interactive Epistemology}, journal = {International Journal of Game Theory}, year = {2007}, volume = {35}, number = {4}, pages = {465--492}, contentnote = {The "paradoxes" are backwards induction and iterated weak dominance. }, topic = {game-theory;epistemology;} } @article{ brandenberger_a-dekel_e:1987a, author = {Adam Brandenberger and Eddie Dekel}, title = {Common Knowledge With Probability {I}}, journal = {Journal of Mathematical Economics}, year = {1987}, volume = {16}, number = {3}, pages = {237--245}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au18}, topic = {mutual-belief;probability;} } @article{ brandenberger_a-keisler_hj:2006a, author = {Adam Brandenberger and H. Jerome Keisler}, title = {An Impossibility Theorem on Beliefs and Games}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2006}, volume = {84}, number = {2}, pages = {211--240}, xref = {Commentary: pacuit_e:2007a}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;foundations-of-game-theory;} } @incollection{ brandl:2000a, author = {Johannes L. Brandl}, title = {Do Events Recur?}, booktitle = {Speaking of Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2000}, editor = {James Higginbotham and Fabio Pianesi and Achille C. Varzi}, pages = {95--104}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {events;metaphysics;} } @article{ brandom_r:1994a, author = {Robert Brandom}, title = {Asserting}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1994}, volume = {49}, number = {3}, pages = {637--650}, topic = {assertion;speech-acts;} } @book{ brandom_rb:1994a, author = {Robert B. Brandom}, title = {Making It Explicit: Reasoning, Representing, and Discursive Commitment}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {067454319X (alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 106 .B6941 1994.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves}, xref = {Commentary: gibbard_af:1996a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;inferentialism;} } @article{ brandom_rb:1994b, author = {Robert B. Brandom}, title = {Unsuccessful Semantics}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1994}, volume = {54}, number = {3}, pages = {175--178}, xref = {Commentary on: whyte_jt:1990a,whyte_jt:1991a}, topic = {belief;intentionality;} } @incollection{ brandom_rb:1998a, author = {Robert Brandom}, title = {Actions, Norms, and Practical Reasoning}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 12: Language, Mind, and Ontology}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {127--139}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {ethics;practical-reasoning;pr-course;volition;} } @book{ brandom_rb:2000a, author = {Robert Brandom}, title = {Articulating Reasons: An Introduction to Inferentialism}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780674006928}, xref = {Review: child_w:2001a; Commentary: fodor_ja-lepore_e:2007a}, topic = {inferentialism;} } @article{ brandom_rb:2007a, author = {Robert B. Brandom}, title = {Inferentialism and Some of Its Challenges}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {2007}, volume = {74}, number = {3}, pages = {651--675}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc18}, topic = {inferentialism;} } @article{ brandt_f-etal:2009a, author = {Felix Brandt and Felix Fischer and Paul Harrenstein and Yoav Shoham}, title = {Ranking Games}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {2}, pages = {221--239}, topic = {game-theory;complexity-theory;} } @incollection{ brandt_r:1963a, author = {Richard Brandt}, title = {Toward a Credible Form of Utilitarianism}, booktitle = {Morality and the Language of Conduct}, editor = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda and George Nakhnikian}, publisher = {Wayne State University Press}, year = {1963}, pages = {107--144}, topic = {utilitarianism;ethics;} } @article{ brandt_r:1983b, author = {Richard Brandt}, title = {The Concept of Rational Action}, journal = {Social Theory and Practice}, year = {1983}, volume = {9}, pages = {143--163}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {rational-action;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ brandt_r-kim_jw:1963a, author = {Richard Brandt and Jaegwon Kim}, title = {Wants as Explanations of Actions}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1963}, volume = {63}, number = {18}, pages = {425--435}, topic = {mind-body-problem;philosophy-of-action;desires;} } @article{ brandt_r-kim_jw:1964a, author = {Richard Brandt and Jaegwon Kim}, title = {The Logic of the Identity Theory}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1964}, volume = {62}, number = {24}, pages = {515--537}, topic = {mind-body-problem;} } @book{ brandt_rb:1959a, author = {Richard B. Brandt}, title = {Ethical Theory}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1959}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Shelves. }, topic = {ethics;} } @incollection{ brandt_s-etal:2002a, author = {Sebastian Brandt and Ralf K\"usters and Anni-Yasmin Turhan}, title = {Approximation and Difference in Description Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {203--214}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;description-logics;knowledge-integration;} } @inproceedings{ branko:1998a, author = {Ant\'onio Branko}, title = {The Logical Structure of Binding}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {181--185}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {binding-thoery;quantification;} } @article{ branquinho_j:1990a, author = {Jo\~ao Branquinho}, title = {Are {S}almon's `Guises' Disguised {F}regean Senses?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1990}, volume = {50}, number = {1}, pages = {19--24}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;sense-reference;} } @incollection{ branquinho_j:2003a, author = {Joa\~o Branquinho}, title = {In Defense of Obstinacy}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 17: Language and Philosophical Linguistics, 2003}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2003}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Dean Zimmerman}, pages = {1--23}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {"Obstinacy" is the idea that certain NPs are obstinately rigid.}, topic = {semantics-of-proper-names;reference;rigid-designators;} } @book{ bransford:1979a, author = {John D. Bransford}, title = {Human Cognition: Learning, Understanding, and Remembering}, publisher = {Wadsworth Publishing Co.}, year = {1979}, address = {Belmont, California}, ISBN = {053400699X}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Bf311 .B71551 Graduate Library Call No: BF311 .B71551}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ branting:1991a, author = {L. Karl Branting}, title = {Building Explanations from Rules and Structured Cases}, journal = {International Journal of Man-Machine Studies}, volume = {34}, number = {6}, pages = {797--837}, year = {1991}, topic = {explanation;case-based-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ branting:1991b, author = {L. Karl Branting}, title = {Reasoning with Portions of Precedents}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law (ICAIL-91)}, publisher = {ACM Press}, year = {1991}, pages = {145--154}, topic = {legal-AI;} } @article{ branting:1994a, author = {L. Karl Branting}, title = {A Computational Model of {\em Ratio Decidendi}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence and Law}, volume = {2}, pages = {1--31}, year = {1994}, topic = {legal-AI;} } @article{ branting:2003a, author = {L. Karl Branting}, title = {A Reduction-Graph Model of Precedent in Legal Analysis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {150}, number = {1-2}, pages = {59--95}, topic = {AI-and-law;legal-reasoning;case-based-reasoning;} } @article{ branting-roos:1997a, author = {L. Karl Branting and Patrick B. Roos}, title = {Automated Acquisition of User Preferences}, journal = {International Journal of Human-Computer Studies}, year = {1997}, volume = {46}, number = {1}, pages = {55--77}, topic = {preference-elicitation;} } @incollection{ brants:1996a, author = {Thorston Brants}, title = {Better Language Models with Model Merging}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Eric Brill and Kenneth Church}, pages = {60--68}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {corpus-statistics;} } @incollection{ brants-etal:1997a, author = {Thorstein Brants and Wojciech Skut and Brigitte Krenn}, title = {Tagging Grammatical Functions}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {64--74}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {empirical-methods-in-nlp;corpus-linguistics; part-of-speech-tagging;} } @incollection{ brants-skut:1998a, author = {Thorsten Brants and Wojciech Skut}, title = {Automation of Treebank Annotation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Natural Language Learning: {NeMLaP3/CoNLL98}}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {49--57}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {corpus-annotation;automated-corpus-annotation;statistical-nlp; treebank-annotation;} } @book{ braroe:1974a, author = {Eva E. Braroe}, title = {The Syntax and Semantics of {E}nglish Tense Markers}, publisher = {CEBE Grafiska}, year = {1974}, address = {Stockholm}, ISBN = {91-7222-073-2}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-tense;} } @article{ brasoveanu_a:2008a, author = {Adrian Brasoveanu}, title = {Donkey Pluralities: Plural Information States Versus Non-Atomic Individuals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {31}, number = {2}, pages = {129--209}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;discourse-representation-theory; donkey-anaphora;plural;pluralities;information-state;} } @article{ brasoveanu_a:2010a, author = {Adrian Brasoveanu}, title = {Decomposing Modal Quantification}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2010}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {437--527}, abstract = {Providing a compositional interpretation procedure for discourses in which descriptions of complex dependencies between interrelated objects are incrementally built is a key challenge for natural language semantics. This article focuses on the interactions between the entailment particle therefore, modalized conditionals and modal subordination. It shows that the dependencies between individuals and possibilities that emerge out of such interactions can receive a unified compositional account in a system couched in classical type logic that integrates and simplifies van den Berg's dynamic plural logic and the classical Lewis-Kratzer analysis of modal quantification. ...}, topic = {modals;modal-subordination;dynamic-semantics;} } @incollection{ brasoveanu_a:2011a, author = {Adrian Brasoveanu}, title = {Plural Discourse Reference}, booktitle = {Handbook of Logic and Language}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {2011}, editor = {Johan {van Benthem} and Alice {ter Meulen}}, pages = {1035--1057}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {nl-semantics;pluralities;plural;discourse-representation-theory;} } @article{ brasoveanu_a:2011b, author = {Adrian Brasoveanu}, title = {Sentence-Internal \emph{Different} as Quantifier-Internal Anaphora}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2011}, volume = {34}, number = {2}, pages = {93--168}, abstract = {The paper proposes the first unified account of deictic/sentence-external and sentence-internal readings of singular different. The empirical motivation for such an account is provided by a cross-linguistic survey and an analysis of the differences in distribution and interpretation between singular different, plural different and same (singular or plural) in English. $\ldots}, topic = {anaphora;`different';} } @article{ brasoveanu_a:2013a, author = {Adrian Brasoveanu}, title = {The Grammar of Quantification and The Fine Structure of Interpretation Contexts}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2015}, volume = {190}, number = {15}, pages = {3001--3051}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de15}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;generalized quantifiers; modal-subordination;} } @article{ brasoveanu_a-farkas_df:2011a, author = {Adrian Brasoveanu and Donka F. Farkas}, title = {How Indefinites Choose Their Scope}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2011}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {1--55}, abstract = {The paper proposes a novel solution to the problem of scope posed by natural language indefinites that captures both the difference in scopal freedom between indefinites and bona fide quantifiers and the syntactic sensitivity that the scope of indefinites does nevertheless exhibit. Following the main insight of choice functional approaches, we connect the special scopal properties of indefinites to the fact that their semantics can be stated in terms of choosing a suitable witness. This is in contrast to bona fide quantifiers, the semantics of which crucially involves relations between sets of entities. We provide empirical arguments that this insight should not be captured by adding choice/Skolem functions to classical first-order logic, but in a semantics that follows Independence-Friendly Logic, in which scopal relations involving existentials are part of the recursive definition of truth and satisfaction. $\ldots$These scopal relations are resolved automatically as part of the interpretation of existentials. Additional support for this approach is provided by dependent indefinites, a cross-linguistically common class of special indefinites that can be straightforwardly analyzed in our semantic framework.}, topic = {indefiniteness;independence-friendly-logic;plural-logics; epsilon-operator;} } @incollection{ brasoveanu_a-farkas_df:2016a, author = {Adrian Brasoveanu and Donka F. Farkas}, title = {Indefinites}, booktitle = {Cambridge Handbook of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Maria Aloni and Paul Dekker}, pages = {238--266}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;} } @inproceedings{ brass:1993a, author = {Stephen Brass}, title = {On the Semantics of Supernormal Defaults}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {578--583}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, contentnote = {A supernormal default has form True:A/A, i.e., ~~> A. This has a semantics with completeness result.}, Url = {https://www.ijcai.org/Proceedings/93-1/Papers/081.pdf}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic;} } @incollection{ brass-etal:1996a, author = {Stefan Brass and J\"urgen Dix and Teodor C. Przymusinski}, title = {Super Logic Programs}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {529--539}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;logic-programming;kr-course;} } @incollection{ brass-etal:1998a, author = {Stefan Brass and J\"urgen Dix and Ilkka Niemel\"a and Teodor C. Przmusinski}, title = {A Comparison of the Static and the Disjunctive Well-Founded Semantics and its Implementation}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {74--85}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;logic-programming;disjunctive-logic-programming;kr-course;} } @article{ brass-etal:1999a, author = {Stefan Brass and J\"urgen Dix and Teodor C. Przymusinski}, title = {Computation of the Semantics of Autoepistemic Belief Theories}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {112}, number = {1--2}, pages = {233--250}, topic = {autoepistemic-logic;} } @article{ brastmckie_b:2021a, author = {Benjamin Brast-McKie}, title = {Identity and Aboutness}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {6}, pages = {1471--1503}, abstract = {This paper develops a theory of propositional identity which distinguishes necessarily equivalent propositions that differ in subject-matter. Rather than forming a Boolean lattice as in extensional and intensional semantic theories, the space of propositions forms a non-interlaced bilattice. ... I provide a Finean state semantics for a novel theory of propositions, presenting arguments against the convexity and nonvacuity constraints which Fine introduces. ... The paper concludes by extending PI1 to include axioms and rules for a subject-matter operator, providing a much broader theory of subject-matter than the principles with which I will begin.}, topic = {propositions;aboutness;} } @article{ bratko-suc:2003a, author = {Ivan Bratko and Dorian Suc}, title = {Learning Qualitative Models}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2003}, volume = {24}, number = {4}, pages = {107--119}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;qualitative-modeling;machine-learning;} } @article{ bratman_me:1984a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Two Faces of Intention}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1984}, volume = {93}, pages = {375--405}, number = {3}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe14}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Bratman.}, topic = {intention;} } @incollection{ bratman_me:1985a, author = {Michael Bratman}, title = {Davidson's Theory of Intention}, booktitle = {Actions and Events: Perspectives on the Philosophy of Donald Davidson}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell Ltd.}, year = {1985}, editor = {Ernest LePore and Brian P. McLaughlin}, pages = {14--28}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Donald-Davidson;intention;} } @incollection{ bratman_me:1986a, author = {Michael Bratman}, title = {Intention and Evaluation}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {X}: Studies in the Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {185--189}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {intention;} } @book{ bratman_me:1987a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Intentions, Plans and Practical Reason}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1987}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Bratman"}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {action;practical-reasoning;pr-course;foundations-of-planning;} } @incollection{ bratman_me:1989a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Intention and Personal Policies}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 3: Philosophy of Mind and Action Theory}, publisher = {Ridgeview Publishing Company}, year = {1989}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {443--469}, address = {Atasacadero, California}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Zip disk.}, topic = {intention;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @incollection{ bratman_me:1990a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {What is Intention?}, booktitle = {Intentions in Communication}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1990}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Jerry Morgan and Martha Pollack}, pages = {15--32}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {intention;practical-reasoning;pr-course;foundations-of-planning;} } @article{ bratman_me:1992a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Planning and the Stability of Intention}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1992}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {1--16}, xref = {Commentary: smith_g:1992a.}, topic = {intention;planning;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ bratman_me:1992b, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Review of \emph{Kathleen Lennon, Explaining Human Action}, by}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1992}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {203--206}, xref = {Review of: lennon:1990a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @article{ bratman_me:1992c, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Shared Cooperative Activity}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1992}, volume = {101}, number = {2}, pages = {327--341}, topic = {group-action;cooperation;} } @article{ bratman_me:1992d, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Practical Reasoning and Acceptance in a Context}, journal = {Mind}, year = {201}, volume = {101}, number = {401}, pages = {1--16}, abstract = {In practical reasoning and action we seek to realize our intentions and satisfy our desires in the light of what we believe. Or so we are taught to say. In this essay I question the last clause and suggest that the cognitive attitudes guiding practical reasoning and action go beyond our beliefs. I begin by locating my problem within the planning conception of practical reasoning I have developed elsewhere.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no21}, topic = {belief;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ bratman_me:1993a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Shared Intention}, journal = {Ethics}, year = {1993}, volume = {104}, number = {1}, pages = {97--113}, topic = {mutual-attitudes;intention;} } @inproceedings{ bratman_me:1995a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Plans and Resource-Bounded Practical Reasoning}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Extending Theories of Action: Formal Theories and Applications}, year = {1995}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {action;foundations-of-planning;} } @book{ bratman_me:1999a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Faces of Intention}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052163727}, ISBN-13 = {î 978-0521637275}, topic = {intention;philosophy-of-action;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ bratman_me:1999b, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Practical Reasoning and Weakness of Will}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1999}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {153--172}, rtnote = {Rtrnote: Reading notes on file. "Bratman"}, topic = {intention;akrasia;} } @article{ bratman_me:2000a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Reflection, Planning, and Temporally Extended Agency}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2000}, volume = {109}, number = {1}, pages = {35--61}, topic = {agancy;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @incollection{ bratman_me:2000b, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Valuing and the Will}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 14: Action and Freedom}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {249--265}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {desire;volition;} } @incollection{ bratman_me:2001a, author = {Michael Bratman}, title = {Taking Plans Seriously}, booktitle = {Varieties of Practical Reasoning}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Elijah Millgram}, pages = {203--220}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Bratman.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe14.}, topic = {plans;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ bratman_me:2003a, author = {Michael Bratman}, title = {A Desire of One's Own}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {100}, number = {5}, pages = {221--243}, topic = {desire;freedom;} } @book{ bratman_me:2007a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Structures of Agency}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {9780195187717}, contentnote = {TC: Chapter 1 Introduction Part I Planning, Temporally Extended Agency, and Self-Governance Chapter 2 Reflection, Planning, and Temporally Extended Agency Chapter 3 Valuing and the Will Chapter 4 Hierarchy, Circularity, and Double Reduction Chapter 5 Two Problems about Human Agency Chapter 6 Nozick on Free Will Chapter 7 A Desire of One's Own Chapter 8 Autonomy and Hierarchy Chapter 9 Three Forms of Agential Commitment: Reply to Cullity and Gerrans Chapter 10 Planning Agency, Autonomous Agency Chapter 11 Three Theories of Self-Governance Part II Extending the Theory Chapter 12 Temptation Revisited Chapter 13 Shared Valuing and Frameworks for Practical Reasoning}, topic = {intention;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ bratman_me:2009a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Intention, Practical Rationality, and Self-Governance}, journal = {Ethics}, year = {2009}, volume = {119}, number = {3}, pages = {411--443}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn12.}, topic = {rationality;intention;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @incollection{ bratman_me:2012a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Time, Rationality, and Self-Governance}, booktitle = {Action Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {73--88}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {intention;plan-maintenance;rationality;} } @book{ bratman_me:2014a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Shared Agency: A Planning Theory of Acting Together}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199897933}, abstract = {Human beings act together in characteristic ways; and these forms of shared activity matter to us a great deal. ... a rich account of individual planning agency facilitates the step to such sociality. ... The planning theory of individual agency highlights distinctive roles and norms of intentions, understood as plan states. Appeal to these planning structures provides resources -- conceptual, metaphysical, and normative -- for an account of basic forms of sociality, including shared intention, and shared intentional and shared cooperative action. Shared agency emerges, both functionally and rationally, from structures of interconnected planning agency.}, xref = {Review: blomberg_o:2015a}, topic = {planning;intentions;group-action;cooperation;mutual-attitudes; shared-cognition;group-attitudes;group-planning;group-plans;} } @incollection{ bratman_me:2022a, author = {Michael E. Bratman}, title = {Planning Agency}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Handbook of Philosophy of Agency}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2022}, editor = {Luca Ferrero}, pages = {348--356}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-agency;agency;plsnning;} } @article{ bratman_me-etal:1988a1, author = {Michael E. Bratman and David Israel and Martha Pollack}, title = {Plans and Resource-Bounded Practical Reasoning}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {4}, pages = {349--355}, contentnote = {This is the original IRMA paper. Idea: a plan's main purpose is to filter future intentions, thus keeping an agent from constantly replanning. Suggest an architecture for resource bounded agents w/ compatibility filter and filter override mechanism, that allows means-ends reasoning. The trick is to allow replanning only via a filter override. Can show it is impossible to design an optimal agent, introduce notions of cautious agent vs. bold agent.}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Files. Also \fe14\bratman3.pdf}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, xref = {Reprinted in cummins_r-pollock_jl:1991a, pp. 7--22.}, topic = {foundations-of-planning;plan-execution;plan-maintenance;} } @incollection{ bratman_me-etal:1988a2, author = {Michael E. Bratman and David Israel and Martha Pollack}, title = {Plans and Resource-Bounded Practical Reasoning}, booktitle = {Philosophy and {AI}: Essays at the Interface}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Robert Cummins and John L. Pollock}, pages = {1--22}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of bratman_me-etal:1988a1.}, topic = {foundations-of-planning;} } @incollection{ bratt-dowding_j:2003a, author = {Elizabeth Owen Bratt and John Dowding}, title = {Syntactic and Semantic Input to Prosodic Markup in {C}ommand{T}alk}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Natural Language Generation in Spoken and Written Dialogue}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Reva Freedman and Charles Callaway}, pages = {1--5}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {nl-generation;computational-dialogue;prosody;} } @article{ brattico:2010a, author = {Pauli Brattico}, title = {Recursion Hypothesis Considered as a Research Program for Cognitive Science}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {213--241}, abstract = {Humans grasp discrete infinities within several cognitive domains, such as in language, thought, social cognition and tool-making. It is sometimes suggested that any such generative ability is based on a computational system processing hierarchical and recursive mental representations. One view concerning such generativity has been that each of the mind's modules defining a cognitive domain implements its own recursive computational system. In this paper recent evidence to the contrary is reviewed and it is proposed that there is only one supramodal computational system with recursion in the human mind. $\ldots$ }, topic = {recursion;foundations-of-cognition;} } @unpublished{ braude:1980a, author = {Stephen Braude}, title = {Why Tenses are Not Demonstratives}, year = {1980}, note = {Unpublished manuscript}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, topic = {nl-tense;} } @article{ brauer_e:2018a, author = {Ethan Brauer}, title = {Second-order Logic and the Power Set}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {1}, pages = {123--142}, topic = {higher-order-logic;foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ brauer_e:2020a, author = {Ethan Brauer}, title = {Relevance for Classical Logicians}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {436--457}, abstract = {... In this article I offer a formal explication of the notion of relevance in deductive logic and argue that this notion has an interesting place in the study of classical logic. The main idea is that a premise is relevant to an argument when it contributes to the validity of that argument. I then argue that the sequents which best embody this ideal of relevance are the so-called perfect sequents -- that is, sequents which are valid but have no proper subsequents that are valid. Church's theorem entails that there is no recursively axiomatizable proof-system that proves all and only the perfect sequents, so the project that emerges from studying perfection in classical logic is not one of finding a perfect subsystem of classical logic, but is rather a comparative study of classifying subsystems of classical logic according to how well they approximate the ideal of perfection.}, topic = {relevance;proof-theory;} } @article{ brauer_e-tennant_n:2021a, author = {Ethan Brauer and Neil Tennant}, title = {Transmission of Verification}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {866--881}, topic = {truthmaking;} } @article{ braun_d:1995a, author = {David Braun}, title = {What is Character?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {227--240}, topic = {demonstratives;indexicals;context;} } @article{ braun_d:1996a, author = {David Braun}, title = {Demonstratives and Their Linguistic Meanings}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1996}, volume = {30}, number = {2}, pages = {145--173}, abstract = {In this paper, I present a new semantics for demonstratives. ... I argue below that Kaplan's theory fails to describe the linguistic meanings of 'that' and other true demonstratives. }, topic = {demonstratives;indexicals;context;} } @article{ braun_d:1998a, author = {David Braun}, title = {Understanding Belief Reports}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1998}, volume = {107}, number = {4}, pages = {555--595}, topic = {belief;referring-expressions;referential-opacity;} } @incollection{ braun_d:2001a, author = {David Braun}, title = {Indexicals}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {Stanford University}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2001/entries/indexicals/}, year = {Fall 2001}, topic = {indexicals;} } @article{ braun_d:2003a, author = {David Braun}, title = {Review of \emph{{B}eyond Rigidity: The Unfinished Semantic Agenda of `Naming and Necessity'}, by {S}cott {S}oames}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {26}, number = {3}, pages = {367--379}, topic = {reference;modal-logic;philosophy-of-language;proper-names;} } @article{ braun_d:2005a, author = {David Braun}, title = {Empty Names, Fictional Names, Mythical Names}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2005}, volume = {39}, number = {4}, pages = {596--631}, topic = {reference;fiction;reference-gaps;truth-value-gaps;} } @incollection{ braun_d:2006a, author = {David Braun}, title = {Now You Know Who {H}ong {O}ak {Y}un Is}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {24--42}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowing-who;} } @incollection{ braun_d:2006b, author = {David Braun}, title = {Names and Natural Kind Terms}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {490--515}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {proper-names;natural-kinds;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ braun_d:2008a, author = {David Braun}, title = {Complex Demonstratives and Their Singular Contents}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {31}, number = {1}, pages = {57--99}, topic = {nl-semantics;complex-demonstratives;} } @incollection{ braun_d:2012a, author = {David Braun}, title = {Extensions, Intensions, Character, and Beyond}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Companion to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Gillian Russell and Delia Graff Fara}, pages = {9--17}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;nl-semantics;} } @article{ braun_d:2012b, author = {David Braun}, title = {An Invariantist Theory of 'Might' Might Be Right}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2012}, volume = {35}, number = {6}, pages = {461--489}, abstract = {Invariantism about 'might' says that 'might' semantically expresses the same modal property in every context. This paper presents and defends a version of invariantism. According to it, 'might' semantically expresses the same weak modal property in every context. However, speakers who utter sentences containing 'might' typically assert propositions concerning stronger types of modality, including epistemic modality. This theory can explain the phenomena that motivate contextualist theories of epistemic uses of 'might', and can be defended from objections of the sort that relativists mount against contextualist theories.}, xref = {Commentary: yanovich_i:2013a.}, topic = {epistemic-modals;context;} } @article{ braun_d:2013a, author = {David Braun}, title = {Invariantism about `Can' and `May' (as Well as `Might')}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {36}, number = {2}, pages = {181--185}, abstract = {Braun (2012) argued for a non-relativist, invariantist theory of 'might'. Yanovich (2013) argues that Braun's theory is inconsistent with certain facts concerning diachronic meaning changes in 'might', 'can', and 'may'. This paper replies to Yanovich's objection.}, xref = {Reply to: braun_d:2013a}, xref = {Defense of: braun_d:2012a.}, topic = {epistemic-modals;context;} } @incollection{ braun_d:2015a, author = {David Braun}, title = {Indexicals}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url ={http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2015/entries/indexicals/}, year = {2015}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {indexicals;} } @article{ braun_d-sider_t:2007a, author = {David Braun and Theodore Sider}, title = {Vague, So Untrue}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2007}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {133--156}, topic = {vagueness;truth;} } @incollection{ brauner_t:2001a, author = {Torben Bra\"uner}, title = {Homophonic Theory of Truth for Tense Logic}, booktitle = {Advances in Modal Logic, Volume 3}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2001}, editor = {Frank Wolter and Heinrrich Wansing and Maarten de Rijke and Michael Zakharyaschev}, pages = {59--72}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {Davidson-semantics;modal-logic;tense-logic;} } @article{ brauner_t:2002a, author = {Torben Bra\"uner}, title = {Modal Logic, Truth, and the Master Modality}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {359--386}, topic = {modal-logic;Davidson-semantics;truth-definitions;} } @article{ brauner_t:2004a, author = {Torben Bra\"uner}, title = {Two Natural Deduction Systems for Hybrid Logic: A Comparison}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2004}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {1--23}, topic = {combining-logics;natural-deduction;} } @article{ brauner_t:2006a, author = {Torben Br\"auner}, title = {Axioms for Classical, Intuitionistic, and Paraconsistent Hybrid Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2006}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {179--194}, topic = {hybrid-modal-logics;intuitionistic-logic;paraconsistency;} } @book{ brauner_t:2011a, author = {Torben Br\"auner}, title = {Hybrid Logic and its Proof-Theory}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2011}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-94-007-0001-7}, xref = {Review: fitting_mc:2012a}, topic = {hybrid-modal-logics;} } @incollection{ brauner_t:2014a, author = {Torben Bra\"uner}, title = {Hybrid Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {XVII}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2014}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {1--77}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {hybrid-logic;} } @article{ brauner_t:2014b, author = {Torben Brauner}, title = {Hybrid-Logical Reasoning in the Smarties and {S}ally-{A}nne Tasks}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2014}, volume = {23}, number = {4}, pages = {415--439}, topic = {reasoning-about-attitudes;} } @article{ brauner_t:2018a, author = {Torben Bra\"uner}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}ogic and Discrete Mathematics}, by {W}illem {C}omradie and {V}alentin {G}oranko}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2018}, volume = {106}, number = {3}, pages = {671--673}, xref = {Review of: conradie-goranko_v,:2015a}, topic = {discrete-mathematics;logic-intro;} } @inproceedings{ brauner_t-etal:1998a, author = {Torben Bra\"uner and Per Hasle and Peter {\O}hrstr{\o}m}, title = {Ockhamistic Logics and True Futures of Counterfactual Moments}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifth international Workshop on Temporal Representation and Reasoning}, year = {1998}, editor = {L. Khatib and R. Morris}, pages = {132--139}, publisher = {{IEEE} Computer Society Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Various Ockhamistic logics are compared, with the aim of making clear the role of true futures of counterfactual moments, i.e. true futures of moments outside the true chronicle. First, we give an account of A.N. Prior's (1967) original Ockhamistic semantics ... We prove that this is equivalent to a semantics put forward by Thomason and Gupta ... Later, we discuss how two options considered by Belnap and Green (1994) might be formalised. ... We propose a new Ockhamistic semantics [a certain formula] is valid, and furthermore, where true features of counterfactual moments are taken into account. Finally, we discuss possible applications within artificial intelligence.}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;branching-time;} } @incollection{ brauner_t-etal:2000a, author = {Torben Br\"auner and Per Hasle and Peter {\O}hrstr{\o}m}, title = {Determinism and the Origins of Temporal Logic}, booktitle = {Advances in Temporal Logic}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2000}, editor = {Howard Barringer and Michael Fisher and Dov M. Gabbay and Graham Gough}, pages = {185--206}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {The founder of symbolic temporal logic, A. N. Prior was to a great extent motivated by philosophical concerns. The philosophical problem with which he was most concerned was determinism versus free will. The aim of this paper is to point out some crucial interrelations between this philosophical problem and temporal logic. ...}, topic = {Prior;indeterminist-time;future-contingent-propositions;} } @incollection{ brauner_t-ghilardi_s:2006a, author = {Torben Br\"auner and Silvio Ghilardi}, title = {First-Order Modal Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Modal Logic}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan van Benthem and Frank Wolter}, pages = {549--620}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Inc.}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Brauner".}, topic = {modal-logic;first-order-modal-logic;counterpart-theory; quantifying-in-modality;} } @incollection{ bray_d:2012a, author = {Dennis Bray}, title = {Brain Versus Machine}, booktitle = {Singularity Hypotheses: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2012}, editor = {Amnon H. Eden and James H. Moor and Johnny H. S{\o}raker and Eric Steinhart}, pages = {269--270}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {technological-singularity;} } @book{ brazdil-konolige_k:1990a, editor = {Pavel B. Brazdil and Kurt Konolige}, title = {Machine Learning, Meta-Reasoning, and Logics}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1990}, address = {Boston}, ISBN = {0792390474}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, Q 335 .M181 1990.}, topic = {machine-learning;logic-in-AI;} } @book{ brazil-etal:1980a, author = {D. Brazil and M. Coulthard and C. Johns}, title = {Discourse Intonation and Language Teaching}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1980}, address = {London}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {discourse;intonation;pragmatics;} } @article{ braziunas-boutilier_c:2008a, author = {Darius Braziunas and Craig Boutilier}, title = {Elicitation and Factored Utilities}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2008}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {79--92}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;preference-elicitation;} } @book{ breazeal:2002a, author = {Cynthia Breazeal}, title = {Designing Sociable Robots}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2002}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {HCI;synthesized-emotions;} } @incollection{ breazeal-brooks_ra:2005a, author = {Cynthia Breazeal and Rodney Brooks}, title = {Robot Emotion: A Functional Perspective}, booktitle = {Who Needs Emotions? The Brain Meets the Robot}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Jean-Marc Fellous and Michael A. Arbib}, pages = {271--310}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;social-cognition;} } @book{ breckenridge_w:2018a, author = {Wylie Breckenridge}, title = {Visual Experience: A Semantic Approach}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: rudolph_re:2021a}, topic = {visual-language;logic-of-perception;} } @incollection{ bredenkamp-etal:1997a, author = {Andres Bredenkamp and Louisa Sadler and Andrew Spencer}, title = {Investigating Argument Structure: The {R}ussian Nominalization Database}, booktitle = {Linguistic Databases}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1997}, editor = {John Nerbonne}, pages = {137--159}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;argument-structure;Russian-language;} } @article{ bredeweg-etal:2013a, author = {Bert Bredeweg and Jochem Liem and Wouter Beek and Floris Linnebank and Jorge Gracia and Esther Lozano and Michael Wi{\ss}ner and Ren\'e B\"uhling and Paulo Salles and Richard Noble and Andreas Zitek and Petya Borisova and David Mioduser}, title = {DynaLearn---An Intelligent Learning Environment for Learning Conceptual Knowledge}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2013}, volume = {34}, number = {4}, pages = {46--65}, topic = {intelligent-tutoring;qualitative-methods;} } @article{ bredeweg-forbus_kd:2003a, author = {Bert Bredeweg and Ken Forbus}, title = {Qualitative Modeling in Education}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2003}, volume = {24}, number = {4}, pages = {35--46}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;intelligent-tutoring;} } @article{ bredewig-struss:2003a, author = {Burt Bredewig and Peter Struss}, title = {Current Topics in Qualitative Reasoning}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2003}, volume = {24}, number = {4}, pages = {13--16}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;} } @article{ bree:1982a, author = {David Br\'ee}, title = {Counterfactuals and Causality}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1982}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {147--185}, abstract = {There are three parts to this paper. In the first part the difference between hypothetical and counterfactual conditionals is examined. Both Adams's argument that indicative and subjunctive conditionals differ in the degree to which they are justified and Lewis's contention that counterfactuals differ from hypotheticals in that they fail to contrapose are both shown to be unfounded. Standard tests confirm Karttunen's claim that the difference lies not in the truth conditions but in the falsity of the antecedent being presupposed and the truth value of the consequent being a conversational implicature. There is also a pragmatic difference: counterfactuals are more difficult to verify. In the second part 4 solutions to the counterfactual problem are criticized partly in light of the differences found in the first part. Goldstick's extension of Goodman's classic solution is shown to be an incomplete algorithim. Lewis's possible world solution reduces the problem to finding a criterion by which to order possible worlds. Kratzer's solution, also in the possible worlds tradition, requires a heuristic for partitioning propositions. It is only the older solution of Rescher and Simon, based on causal ordering, that is adequate for causally based counterfactuals with false consequents. In the last part of the paper Simon and Rescher's method is extended to accidental counterfactuals and counterfactuals with true consequents. }, topic = {conditionals;causality;} } @inproceedings{ breese_js-fehling_mr:1990a, author = {John S. Breese and Michael R. Fehling}, title = {Control of Problem Solving: Principles and Architecture}, booktitle = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence 4}, year = {1990}, editor = {Ross D. Shachter and T.S.Levitt and J. Lemmer and L.N. Kanal}, pages = {59--68}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {decision-theoretic-planning;decision-theoretic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ breese_js-horvitz_ej:1990a, author = {John S. Breese and Eric J. Horvitz}, title = {Ideal Reformulation of Belief Networks}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, pages = {64--72}, month = {July}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;} } @incollection{ breheny_r:2003a, author = {Richard Breheny}, title = {A Lexical Account of Implicit (Bound) Contextual Dependence}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XIII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2003}, editor = {Robert B. Young and Yuping Zhou}, pages = {55--72}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;context;nl-quantifiers;} } @article{ breheny_r:2006a, author = {Richard Breheny}, title = {Communication and Folk Psychology}, journal = {Mind and Language}, year = {2006}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {74--104}, abstract = {Prominent accounts of language use (those of Grice, Lewis, Stalnaker, Sperber and Wilson among others) have viewed basic communicative acts as essentially involving the attitudes of the participating agents. Developmental data poses a dilemma for these accounts, since it suggests children below age four are competent communicators but would lack the ability to conceptualise communication if philosophers and linguists are right about what communication is. This paper argues that this dilemma is quite serious and that these prominent accounts would be undermined if an adequate more minimal alternative were available. Just such a minimalist account of communication is offered, drawing on ideas from relevance theory and situation theory. }, topic = {pragmatics;developmental-psychology;} } @article{ breheny_r-etal:2006a, author = {Richard Breheny and Napoleon Katsos and John Williams}, title = {Are Generalised Scalar Implicatures Generated by Default? An On-Line Investigation into the Role of Context in Generating Pragmatic Inferences}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {2006}, volume = {100}, number = {3}, pages = {434--463}, topic = {psycholinguistics;scalar-implicature;} } @article{ bremer:2003a, author = {Manuel E. Bremer}, title = {Do Logical Truths Carry Information?}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2003}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {567--575}, topic = {hyperintensionality;} } @book{ bremer:2005a, author = {Manuel Bremer}, title = {An Introduction to Paraconsistent Logics}, publisher = {Peter Lang}, year = {2005}, address = {Frankfurt}, xref = {Review: mcguiness_cn:2005a.}, topic = {paraconsistency;relevance-logic;} } @article{ bremer:2005b, author = {Manuel Bremer}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Description Logic Handbook}, edited by {F}ranz {B}aader and {D}iego {C}alvanese and {D}eborah {L}. {M}cGuinness and {D}aniele {N}ardi and {P}eter {P}atel-{S}chneider}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2005}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {126--129}, xref = {Review of: baader_f-etal:2003a.}, topic = {description-logics;concept-definitions;} } @article{ bremer:2005c, author = {Manuel Bremer}, title = {Review of \emph{Modal Logic}, by {P}atrick {B}lackburn, {M}aarten de {R}ijke and {Y}de {V}enema}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2005}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {126--129}, xref = {Review of: blackburn_p-etal:2001a.}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ bremer:2008a, author = {Manuel Bremer}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}onsciousness: Essays from a Higher-Order Perspective}, by {P}eter {C}arruthers}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {409--411}, xref = {Review of: carruthers:2005a}, topic = {consciousness;mental-language;language-of-thought;animal-cognition;} } @article{ bremer:2008b, author = {Manuel Bremer}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}ow the Body Shapes the Mind}, by {S}haun {G}allagher}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {413--415}, xref = {Review of: gallagher_s:2006a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;embodiment;} } @article{ bremer:2008c, author = {Manuel Bremer}, title = {Review of \emph{Ontological Semantics}, by Sergei Nirenburg and Victor Raskin}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {2}, pages = {293--295}, xref = {Review of: nirenburg_s-raskin:2004a.}, topic = {computational-ontology;nl-processing;} } @incollection{ bremer_m:2011a, author = {Manuel Bremer}, title = {Truth Value Talk Without Quotation}, booktitle = {Understanding Quotation}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Elke Brendel and J\"org Meibauer and Markus Steinbach}, pages = {47--58}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {direct-discourse;arithmetization;semantic-paradoxes;paraconsistency;} } @incollection{ bremermann:1967a, author = {H.J. Bremermann}, title = {Quantifiable Aspects of Goal-Seeking Self-Organizing Systems}, booktitle = {Progress in Theoretical Biology, Volume 1}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1967}, editor = {Fred M. Snell}, pages = {59--77}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {UMich Science QH 301 .P79}, topic = {Bremmermann's-limit;} } @book{ brendel_e-etal:2011a, editor = {Elke Brendel and J\"org Meibauer and Markus Steinbach}, title = {Understanding Quotation}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {9783110240054}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Elke Brendel and J\"org Meibauer and Markus Steinbach, "Exploring the Meaning of Quotation ", pp. 1--34 2. Barbara Abbott, "Attitudes toward Quotation", pp. 35--46 3. Manuel Bremer, "Truth Value Talk Without Quotation", pp. 47--58 4. Sarah-Jane Conrad, "Disquotational Indirect Reports in Focus", pp. 59--84 5. Cathrine Fabricius-Hansen and Kjell Johan S{\ae}b\'o, "Behabitive Reports", pp. 85--106 6. Manuel Garc\'ia-Carpintero, "Double-duty Quotation, Conventional Implicatures and What Is Said", pp. 107--138 7. Mario G\'omez-Torrente, "What Quotations Refer To", pp. 139--160 8. Daniel Gutzmann and Erik Stei, "Quotation Marks and Kinds of Meaning. Arguments in Favor of a Pragmatic Account", pp. 161--194 9. Manfred Harth, "Quotation and Pictoriality", pp. 195--208 10. Michael Johnson, "The Punctuation Theory of Quotation", pp. 209--230 11. Michael Johnson and Ernie Lepore, "Misrepresenting Misrepresentation", pp. 231--248 12. J\"urgen Pafel, "Two Dogmas on Quotation", pp. 249--276 13. Josep Quer, "Reporting and Quoting in Signed Discourse", pp. 237--302 14. Paul Saka, "The Act of Quotation", pp. 303--322 15. Savas L. Tsohatzidis, "Axioms of Reference and Rules of Quotation", pp. 323--330}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ brendel_e-etal:2011b, author = {Elke Brendel and J\"org Meibauer and Markus Steinbach}, title = {Exploring the Meaning of Quotation}, booktitle = {Understanding Quotation}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Elke Brendel and J\"org Meibauer and Markus Steinbach}, pages = {1--34}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ brennan_a-lo_ys:2008a, author = {Andrew Brennan and Yeuk-Sze Lo}, title = {Environmental Ethics}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {Stanford University}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2008/entries/ethics-environmental/}, year = {Spring 2008}, topic = {environmental-ethics;} } @incollection{ brennan_g:2008a, author = {Geoffrey Brennan}, title = {Lessons for Ethics from Economics?}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {249--271}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {ethics;game-theory;utility-theory;} } @phdthesis{ brennan_se:1990a, author = {Susan E. Brennan}, title = {Seeking and Providing Evidence for Mutual Understanding}, school = {Stanford Universityt}, year = {1990}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {psychology-of-discourse;mutual-belief;} } @inproceedings{ brennan_se:1996a, author = {Susan E. Brennan}, title = {Lexical Entrainment in Spontaneous Dialog}, booktitle = {International Symposium on Spoken Dialog}, year = {1996}, pages = {41--44}, publisher = {Acoustical Society of Japan}, missinginfo = {author, address}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {discourse;entrainment;} } @incollection{ brennan_se:1997a, author = {Susan E. Brennan}, title = {Centering as a Psychological Resource for Achieving Joint Reference in Spontaneous Discourse}, booktitle = {Centering Theory in Discourse}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Marilyn A. Walker and Arivind K. Joshi and Ellen Prince}, pages = {227--249}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {anaphora-resolution;discourse;pragmatics;centering; psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ brennan_se:2000a, author = {Susan E. Brennan}, title = {The Vocabulary Problem in Spoken Language Systems}, booktitle = {Automatic Spoken Dialog Systems}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2000}, editor = {Susann Luperfoy}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {computational-dialogue;lexical-selection;entrainment;} } @incollection{ brennan_se:2002a, author = {Susan E. Brennan}, title = {Audience Design and Discourse Processes: Do Speakers and Addressees}, booktitle = {{EDILOG} 2002: Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Centre, University of Edinburgh}, year = {2002}, editor = {Johan Bos and Mary Ellen Foster and Colin Mathesin}, pages = {1}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {entrainment;psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ brennan_se-clark_hh:1996a, author = {Susan E. Brennan and Herbert H. Clark}, title = {Conceptual Pacts and Lexical Choice in Conversation}, journal = {Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition}, year = {1996}, volume = {22}, number = {6}, pages = {1482--1493}, topic = {lexical-choice;pragmatics;entrainment;psychology-of-discourse;} } @book{ brennan_se-etal:1999a, editor = {Susan E. Brennan and Alain Giboin and David R. Traum}, title = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Psychological Models of Communication in Collaborative Systems}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. David Albritton and Johanna D. Moore, "Discourse Cues in Narrative Text: Using Production to Predict Conversation", pp. 1--8 2. A.H. Anderson and J. Mullin and E. Katsavras and R. McEwan and E. Grattan and P. Brundell, "Understanding Multiparty Multimedia Interactions", pp. 9--16 3. Rainer Bromme and Matthias N\"uckles and Riklef Rambow, "Adaptivity and Anticipation in Expert-Laypeople Communication", pp. 17--24 4. Janet E. Cahn and Susan E. Brennan, "A Psychological Model of Grounding and Repair in Dialog", pp. 25--33 5. Justine Cassell and Matthew Stone, "Living Hand to Mouth: Psychological Theories about Speech and Gesture in Interactive Dialogue Systems", pp. 34--42 6. Herbert H. Clark, "How Do Real People Communicate with Virtual Partners?", pp. 43--47 7. Mark G. Core and Lenhart K. Schubert, "A Model of Speech Repairs and Other Disruptions", pp. 48--53 8. Patrick G.T. Healey, "Accounting for Communication: Estimating Effort, Transparency and Coherence", pp. 54--60 9. Jean-Claude Martin, "{TYCOON}, Six Primitive Types of Cooperation for Observing, Estimating, and Specifying Cooperations", pp. 61--66 10. Michael Matessa and John Anderson, Towards an {ACT-R} Model of Communication in Problem Solving", pp. 67--72 11. Andrew Monk, "Participatory Status in Electronically Mediated Collaborative Work", pp. 73--80 12. Eamonn O'Neill and Peter Johnson, "Task Knowledge Structures and the Design of Collaborative Systems", pp. 81--84 13. Tim Paek and Eric Horvitz, "Uncertainty, Utility, and Misunderstanding: A Decision-Theoretic Perspective on Grounding in Conversational Systems", pp. 85--92 14. Donald Perlis and Khemdut Purang and Darsana Purushothaman and Carl Anderson and David R. Traum, "Modeling Time and Meta-Reasoning in Dialogue via Inductive Logic", pp. 93--99. 15. Charles Rich and Candace L. Sidner, "{COLLAGEN}: Project Summary and Discussion Questions", pp. 100--107 16. Michael F. Schober and Frederic G. Conrad and Jonathan E. Bloom, "Enhancing Collaboration in Computer-Administered Survey Interviews", pp. 108--115 17. Amy Soller and Alan Lesgold and Frank Linton and Brad Goodwin, "What Makes Peer Interaction Effective? Modeling Effective Communication in an Intelligent CSCL", pp. 116--124 18. David R. Traum, "Computational Models of Grounding in Collaborative Systems", pp. 124--131 19. Teresa Zollo, "A study of Human Dialogue Strategies in the presence of Speech Recognition Errors", pp. 132--139 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, topic = {discourse;collaboration;} } @phdthesis{ brennan_v:1993a, author = {Virginia Brennan}, title = {Root and Epistemic Modal Auxiliary Verbs}, school = {University of Massachusetts at Amherst}, year = {1993}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, url = {http://proquest.umi.com/pqdlink?did=746513971&Fmt=7&clientId=1566&RQT=309&VName=PQD}, topic = {modals;epistemic-modals;} } @book{ brennenstuhl:1982a, author = {Waltraud Brennenstuhl}, title = {Control and Ability: Towards a Biocybernetics of Language}, publisher = {J. Benjamins Pub. Co.}, year = {1982}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {9027225222 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Hm 131 .G4351 1996}, topic = {ability;} } @unpublished{ brennenstuhl:1983a, author = {Waltrund Brennenstuhl}, title = {A Door's Closing---A Contribution to the Semantics of Tense and Aspect}, year = {1974}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Institut f\"ur Linguistik, Technische Universit\"at Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {First sections overlap with brennenstuhl:1983b.}, topic = {vagueness;tense-aspect;} } @incollection{ brennenstuhl:1983b, author = {Waltrund Brennenstuhl}, title = {A Door's Closing---A Contribution to the Vagueness Semantics of Tense and Aspect}, booktitle = {Approaching Vagueness}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1983}, editor = {Thomas T. Ballmer and Manfred Pinkal}, pages = {293--316}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {vagueness;tense-aspect;} } @book{ brent_mr:1996a, author = {Michael R. Brent}, title = {Computational Approaches to Language Generation}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {machine-language-learning;L1-acquisition;} } @book{ brent_mr:1997a, editor = {Michael R. Brent}, title = {Computational Approaches to Language Acquisition}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262522292}, xref = {Review: kanazawa:2004a.}, topic = {machinep-learning;L1-acquisition;} } @incollection{ brentano_f:1960a, author = {Franz Brentano}, title = {The Distinction Between Mental and Physical Phenomena}, booktitle = {Realism and the Background of Phenomenology}, publisher = {Free Press of Glencoe}, year = {1960}, editor = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, chapter = {}, pages = {39--61}, address = {Glencoe, Illinois}, topic = {psychology;intentionality;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ brentano_f:1995a, author = {Franz Brentano}, title = {Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint}, publisher = {Rooutledge}, edition = {2}, year = {1995}, address = {London}, note = {Translated by A.C. Rancurello, D.B. Terrell, and L. McAlister}, topic = {psychology;intentionality;} } @article{ bresnan_jw:1970a, author = {Joan W. Bresnan}, title = {On Complementizers toward a Syntactic Theory of Complement Types}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1970}, volume = {6}, pages = {297--321}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nl-syntax;complementation;} } @article{ bresnan_jw:1972a, author = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {Stress and Syntax: A Reply}, journal = {Language}, year = {1972}, volume = {48}, pages = {326--342}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {s-topic;pragmatics;} } @article{ bresnan_jw:1975a, author = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {Comparative Deletion and Constraints on Transformations}, journal = {Linguistic Analysis}, year = {1975}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {25--74}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-syntax;comparative-constructions;} } @article{ bresnan_jw:1976a, author = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {Evidence for a Theory of Unbounded Transformations}, journal = {Linguistic Analysis}, year = {1976}, volume = {2}, number = {4}, pages = {353--393}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-syntax;long-distance-dependencies;} } @incollection{ bresnan_jw:1977a, author = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {Variables in the Theory of Transformations Part {I}: Bounded Versus Unbounded Transformations}, booktitle = {Formal Syntax}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1977}, editor = {Peter W. Culicover and Thomas Wasow and Adrian Akmajian}, pages = {157--196}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;} } @incollection{ bresnan_jw:1977b, author = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {Transformations and Categories in Syntax}, booktitle = {Basic Problems in Methodology and Linguistics}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1977}, editor = {Robert E. Butts and Jaakko Hintikka}, pages = {261--282}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-syntax;syntactic-categories;LF;} } @incollection{ bresnan_jw:1978a, author = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {A Realistic Transformational Grammar}, booktitle = {Linguistic Theory and Psychological Reality}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Morris Halle and Joan Bresnan and George A. Miller}, pages = {1--59}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {transformational-grammar;nl-syntax;psychological-reality;} } @book{ bresnan_jw:1978b, author = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {Further Classes of Adjectives}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1978}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;} } @techreport{ bresnan_jw:1980a, author = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {The Passive in Lexical Theory}, institution = {Center for Cognitive Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology}, number = {Occasional Paper No. 7}, year = {1980}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Year is a guess}, topic = {passive;LFG;} } @article{ bresnan_jw:1981a, author = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {An Approach to Universal Grammar and the Mental Representation of Language}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {1981}, volume = {10}, pages = {39--52}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {foundations-of-universal-grammar;nl-syntax-and-cognition;} } @book{ bresnan_jw:1982a, editor = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {The Mental Representation of Grammatical Relations}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1982}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: schachter_p:1985a.}, ISBN = {0262021587}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library P158.6 .M461 1982.}, topic = {grammatical-relations;nl-syntax;LFG;} } @book{ bresnan_jw:2001a, author = {Joan Bresnan}, title = {Lexical-Functional Syntax}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2001}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631209735}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 291 .B7261 2001.}, topic = {LFG;} } @incollection{ bresnan_jw-mchombo:1987a, author = {Joan Bresnan and Sam A. Mchombo}, title = {Topic, Pronoun, and Agreement in Chiche\^wa}, booktitle = {Working Papers in Grammatical Theory and Discourse Structure}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, year = {1987}, editor = {Masayo Iida Stephen Wechsler and Draga Zec}, pages = {1--59}, address = {Stanford, California}, contentnote = {This is a detailed attempt to account for a language in which topic plays a prominent role in the grammar.}, topic = {s-topic;pragmatics;} } @book{ bressan:1972a, author = {Aldo Bressan}, title = {A General Interpreted Modal Calculus}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, year = {1972}, address = {New Haven, Connecticut}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ bressan:1974a, author = {Aldo Bressan}, title = {On the Semantics for the Language {ML}$^{\nu}$ Based on a Type System, and those for the Type-Free Language {ML}$^{\infty}*$}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1974}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {171--194}, topic = {intensional-logic;} } @article{ bressan:1993a, author = {Aldo Bressan}, title = {On {G}upta's Book {\it {T}he Logic of Common Nouns}}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1993}, volume = {22}, number = {4}, pages = {335--383}, xref = {Review of: gupta_a1:1980a.}, topic = {semantics-of-common-nouns;} } @inproceedings{ bresson_r-etal:2021a, author = {Roman Bresson and Johanne Cohen and Eyke H\"ullermeier and Christophe Labreuche and Mich\'ele Sebag}, title = {On the Identifiability of Hierarchical Decision Models}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {151--162}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... This paper focuses on the Choquet integral (CI) models and their hierarchical extensions (HCI). ... The main contribution is to establish the identifiability property of HCI under mild conditions: two HCIs implementing the same aggregation function on the criteria space necessarily have the same hierarchical structure and aggregation parameters. The identifiability property holds even when the marginal utility functions are learned from the data. }, topic = {decision-making;aggregation;} } @inproceedings{ bretier-etal:1995a, author = {P. Bretier and F. Panaget and M.D. Sadek}, title = {Integrating Linguistic Capabilities into the Formal Model of a Rational Agent: Application to Cooperative Spoken Dialogue}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Rational Agency: Concepts, Theories, Models, and Applications}, year = {1995}, editor = {Michael Fehling}, pages = {15--14}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {communications-modeling;} } @inproceedings{ bretier-sadek:1995a, author = {F. Bretier and M.D. Sadek}, title = {Designing and Implementing a Theory of Rational Interaction to be the Core of a Cooperative Spoken Dialogue System}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Rational Agency: Concepts, Theories, Models, and Applications}, year = {1995}, editor = {Michael Fehling}, pages = {10--19}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {communications-modeling;cooperation;} } @article{ brew:2001a, author = {Chris Brew}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}exicon Development for Speech and Language Processing}, edited by {F}rank {V}an {E}ynde and {D}affyd {G}ibbon}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2001}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {459--461}, xref = {Review of: vaneynde-gibbon:2000a.}, topic = {computational-lexicography;} } @article{ brew:2003a, author = {Chris Brew}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he {C}ambridge Grammar of the {E}nglish Language}, by {R}odney {H}uddleston and {G}eoffrey {K}. {P}ullum}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2003}, volume = {29}, number = {1}, pages = {144--147}, xref = {Review of: huddleston-pullum_gk:2002a.}, topic = {reference-grammars;English-language;} } @incollection{ brewer_b:2017a, author = {Bill Brewer}, title = {Consciousness and Content in Perception}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 31: Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2017}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {41--54}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {perception;consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ brewer_s:1996a, author = {Scott Brewer}, title = {Exemplary Reasoning: Semantics, Pragmatics, and the Rational Force of ` Legal Argument by Analogy}, journal = {Harvard Law Review}, year = {1996}, volume = {109}, number = {5}, pages = {923--1028}, topic = {analogy;legal-reasoning;} } @book{ brewer_s:1998a, editor = {Scott Brewer}, title = {The Philosophy of Legal Reasoning: The Philosophy of Legal Reasoning: A Collection of Essays by Philosophers and Legal Scholars.}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1998}, address = {London}, topic = {philosophy-of-law;legal-reasoning;} } @article{ brewer_t:2002a, author = {Talbot Brewer}, title = {Maxims and Virtues}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2002}, volume = {111}, number = {4}, pages = {539--572}, topic = {maxims;Kant;ethics;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ brewer_wf-etal:1998a, author = {William F. Brewer and Clark A. Chinn and Ala Samarapungavan}, title = {Explanation in Scientists and Children}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {119--136}, topic = {explanation;cognitive-psychology;} } @incollection{ brewka_g:1987a, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {The Logic of Frames With Exceptions}, booktitle = {The Frame Problem in Artificial Intelligence: Proceedings of the 1987 Workshop}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1987}, editor = {Frank M. Brown}, pages = {77--87}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {kr;inheritance-theory;specificity;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g:1987b, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {The Logic of Inheritance in Frame Systems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, pages = {483--488}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, editor = {John McDermott}, topic = {inheritance-theory;frames;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g:1989a, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {Preferred Subtheories: An Extended Logical Theory for Default Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, pages = {1043--1048}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ brewka_g:1991a, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {Assertional Default Theories}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {120--124}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {default-logic;} } @book{ brewka_g:1991b, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {Nonmonotonic Reasoning: Logical Foundations of Commonsense}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Shelves.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ brewka_g:1991c, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {Cumulative Default Logic: in Defense of Nonmonotonic Inference Rules}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {50}, number = {2}, pages = {183--205}, topic = {default-logic;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g:1994a, author = {Gerhardt Brewka}, title = {Reasoning about Priorities in Default Logic}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, editor = {Barbara Hayes-Roth and Richard Korf}, pages = {940--945}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-prioritization;kr-course; default-logic;} } @incollection{ brewka_g:1994b, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {Adding Priorities and Specificity to Default Logic}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence: Proceedings of {E}uropean Workshop {JELIA} '94, {Y}ork, {UK}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Craig Mac{N}ish and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and David Pearce}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Brewka"}, pages = {247--260}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-prioritization;kr-course; default-logic;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g:1994c, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {A Reconstruction of {R}escher's Theory of Formal Disputation Based on Default Logic}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh European Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, editor = {A. Cohn}, pages = {366--370}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Editor's 1st name}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;argumentation;} } @article{ brewka_g:1996a, author = {Gerhardt Brewka}, title = {Well-Founded Semantics for Extended Logic Programs with Dynamic Preferences}, journal = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research}, year = {1996}, volume = {4}, pages = {19--36}, contentnote = {Prioritized reasoning in logic programs with two negations. Legal example.}, topic = {logic-programming;nonmonotonic-prioritization; extended-logic-programming;} } @book{ brewka_g:1996b, editor = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {Principles of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1996}, address = {Stanford, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Didier Dubois and Henri Prade, "Non-standard Theories of Uncertainty in Plausible Reasoning", pp. 1--32 2. Judea Pearl and Mois\'es Goldszmidt, "Probabilistic foundations of reasoning with conditionals", pp. 33--68 3. Vladimir Lifschitz, "Foundations of Logic Programming", pp. 69--127 4. Kurt Konolige, "Abductive Theories in Artificial Intelligence", pp. 129--152 5. Stefan Wrobel, "Inductive Logic Programming", pp. 153--189 6. Francesco M. Donini and Maurizio Lenzerini and Daniele Nardi and Andrea Schaerf, "Reasoning in Description Logics", pp. 191--236 7. Bernhard Nebel, "Artificial Intelligence: A Computational Perspective", pp. 237--266 8. Oskar Dressler and Peter Strauss, "The Consistency-Based Approach to Automated Diagnosis of Devices", pp. 267--311 }, ISBN = {1575860570}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD 161 .P97 1996.}, topic = {kr;kr-course;kr-survey;} } @article{ brewka_g:2001a, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {Representing Meta-Knowledge in {P}oole Systems}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {67}, number = {2}, pages = {153--165}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;metareasoning;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g:2002a1, author = {Gerard Brewka}, title = {Logic Programming with Ordered Disjunction}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {100--105}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {disjunctive-logic-programming;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ brewka_g:2002a2, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {Logic Programming with Ordered Disjunction}, booktitle = {Preferences in {AI} and {CP}: Symbolic Approaches}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Ulrich Junker}, pages = {1--8}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {disjunctive-logic-programming;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ brewka_g:2004a, author = {Gerhard Brewka}, title = {Complex Preferences for Answer Set Optimization}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {213--223}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preference-representation; answer-sets;} } @incollection{ brewka_g-dix_j:2005a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and J\"urgen Dix}, title = {Knowledge Representation with Logic Programs}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {XII}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {1--85}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {kr;logic-programming;} } @incollection{ brewka_g-eiter_t:1998a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Thomas Eiter}, title = {Preferred Answer Sets for Extended Logic Programs}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {86--97}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;logic-programming;kr-course;extended-logic-programming;} } @article{ brewka_g-eiter_t:1999a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Thomas Eiter}, title = {Preferred Answer Sets for Extended Logic Programs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {109}, number = {1--2}, pages = {297--356}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;default-preferences; logic-programming;extended-logic-programming;} } @incollection{ brewka_g-eiter_t:2000a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Thomas Eiter}, title = {Prioritizing Default Logic}, booktitle = {Intellectics and Computational Logic, Papers in Honor of {W}olfgang {B}ibel}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Steffen H\"olldobler}, pages = {27--45}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {default-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-prioritization;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g-eiter_t:2007a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Thomas Eiter}, title = {Equilibria in Heterogeneous Nonmonotonic Multi-Context Systems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Nineteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, editor = {Robert C. Holte and Adele Howe}, pages = {385--390}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, abstract = {We propose a general framework for multi-context reasoning which allows us to combine arbitrary monotonic and nonmonotonic logics. Nonmonotonic bridge rules are used to specify the information flow among contexts. We investigate several notions of equilibrium representing acceptable belief states for our multi-context systems. The approach generalizes the heterogeneous monotonic multi-context systems developed by F. Giunchiglia and colleagues as well as the homogeneous nonmonotonic multi-context systems of Brewka, Serafini and Roelofsen.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no12\brewka.pdf}, topic = {context;contextial-reasoning;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g-eiter_t:2009a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Thomas Eiter}, title = {Argumentation Context Systems: A Framework for Abstract Group Argumentation}, booktitle = {Logic Programming and Nonmonotonic Reasoning: 10th International Conference}, year = {2009}, editor = {Esra Erdem and Fangzhen Lin and Torsten Schaub}, pages = {44--57}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {We introduce a modular framework for distributed abstract argumentation where the argumentation context, that is information about preferences among arguments, values, validity, reasoning mode (skeptical vs. credulous) and even the chosen semantics can be explicitly represented. ... The framework can be used in different directions; e.g., for hierarchic argumentation as typically found in legal reasoning, or to model group argumentation processes.}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;group-reasoning;} } @incollection{ brewka_g-etal:1991a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and David C. Makinson and Karl Schlechta}, title = {Cumulative Inference Relations for {JTMS} and Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Nonmonotonic and Inductive Logics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {J\"urgen Dix and Klaus P. Jantke and P.H. Schmidt}, pages = {1--12}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;truth-maintenance;stable-models;cumulativity;} } @book{ brewka_g-etal:1993a, editor = {Gerhardt Brewka and Klaus P. Jantke and P.H. Schmidt}, title = {Nonmonotonic and Inductive Logics: Proceedings of the Second International Workshop, Reinhardsbrunn Castle, Germany, December 2--6, 1991.}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1993}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name}, ISBN = {3-540-56433-0}, contentnote = {Blurb: The volume opens with an extended version of a tutorial on nonmonotonic logic by G. Brewka, J. Dix, and K. Konolige. Fifteen selected papers follow, on a variety of topics. The majority of papers belong either to the area of nonmonotonic reasoning or to the field of inductive inference, but some papers integrate research from both areas. The first workshop in this series was held at the University of Karlsruhe in December 1990 and its proceedings were published as Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence Volume 543. }, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;induction;inductive-inference;} } @book{ brewka_g-etal:1997a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and J\"urgen Dix and Kurt Konolige}, title = {Nonmonotonic Reasoning: An Overview}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1997}, address = {Stanford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Books.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @book{ brewka_g-etal:1997b, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and Christopher Habel and Bernhard Nebel}, title = {Ki-97, Advances in Artificial Intelligence: 21st Annual {G}erman Conference on Artificial Intelligence, Freiburg, Germany, September 9-12, 1997}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1997}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540634932 (softcover)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, Q 334 .G4661 1997}, topic = {AI-general;} } @incollection{ brewka_g-etal:2002a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Salem Benferhat and Daniel Le Berre}, title = {Qualitative Choice Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {158--169}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {model-preference;} } @article{ brewka_g-etal:2004a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Salem Benferhat and Daniel Le Berre}, title = {Qualitative Choice Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {157}, number = {1--2}, pages = {203--237}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;model-preference;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g-etal:2007a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Floris Roelofsen and Luciano Serafini}, title = {Contextual Default Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twentieth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, editor = {Manuela Veloso}, pages = {268--273}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {In this paper we introduce a multi-context variant of Reiter's default logic. The logic provides a syntactical counterpart of Roelofsen and Serafini's information chain approach (IJCAI-05), yet has several advantages: it is closer to standard ways of representing nonmonotonic inference and a number of results from that area come `for free'; it is closer to implementation, in particular the restriction to logic programming gives us a computationally attractive framework; and it allows us to handle a problem with the information chain approach related to skeptical reasoning.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my13}, topic = {default-logic;contextual-reasoning;} } @article{ brewka_g-etal:2008a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Ikka Niemel\"a and Miroslaw Truszcyndki}, title = {Preferences and Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2008}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {69--78}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ brewka_g-etal:2008b, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Ilkka Niemel\"a and Miroslaw Truscy\'nski}, title = {Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {Handbook of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2008}, editor = {Frank van Harmelen and Vladimir Lifschitz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {239--284}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoningl;} } @article{ brewka_g-etal:2016a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Thomas Eiter and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, title = {Answer Set Programming: An Introduction to the Special Issue}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2016}, volume = {37}, number = {3}, pages = {5--6}, topic = {answer-sets;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g-gordon_t:1994a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Thomas Gordon}, title = {How to Buy a {P}orsche: An Approach to Defeasible Decision Making}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI}-94 Workshop on Computational Dialectics}, editor = {Thomas F. Gordon}, year = {1994}, pages = {28--38}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;practical-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g-hertzberg:1993a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and J. Hertzberg}, title = {How to Do Things with Worlds: On Formalizing Actions and Plans}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {517--532}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {action-formalisms;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g-konolige_k:1993a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Kurt Konolige}, title = {An Abductive Framework for General Logic Programs and Other Nonmonotonic Systems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, pages = {9--15}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {kr;abduction;nonmonotonic-reasoning;kr-course;} } @book{ brewka_g-lang_j:2008a, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, title = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Ronen I. Brafman, "Preferences, Planning and Control", pp. 2--5 2. Joseph Y. Halpern, "Beyond Nash Equilibrium: Solution Concepts for the 21st Century", pp. 6--15 3. Natasha Alechina, Mehdi Dastani, Brian S. Logan, and John-Jules Ch. Meyer, "Reasoning about Agent Deliberation", pp. 16--26 4. Ana Casali, Llu\'is Godo, and Carles Sierra, "A Logical Framework to Represent and Reason about Graded Preferences and Intentions", pp. 27--37 5. Emiliano Lorini, Dominique Longin, "A Logical Account of Institutions: From Acceptances to Norms via Legislators", pp. 38--48 5. R. Ramanujam and Sunil Easaw Simon, "Dynamic Logic on Games with Structured Strategies", pp. 49--58 6. Gerardo I. Simari, Matthias Broecheler, V.S. Subrahmanian, Sarit Kraus, "Promises Kept, Promises Broken: An Axiomatic and Quantitative Treatment of Fulfillment", pp. 59--68 7. Andrea Cali, Georg Gottlob, Michael Kifer, "Taming the Infinite Chase: Query Answering under Expressive Relational Constraints", pp. 70--80 8. lvaro Corts-Calabuig, Marc Denecker, Ofer Arieli and Maurice Bruynooghe, " Accuracy and Efficiency of Fixpoint Methods for Approximate Query Answering in Locally Complete Databases", pp. 81--91 9. Timothy L. Hinrichs and Michael R. Genesereth, "Injecting the How into the What: Investigating a Finite Classical Logic", pp. 92--101 10. Johan Wittocx, Maarten Marin, and Marc Denecker, "Approximate Reasoning in First-Order Logic Theories", pp. 103--112 11. Leila Amgoud, Yannis Dimopoulos, and Pavlos Moraitis, "Making Decisions through Preference-Based Argumentation", pp. 113--123 12. Claudette Cayrol, Florence Dupin de Saint-Cyr, and Marie-Christine Lagasquie-Schiex, "Revision of an Argumentation System", pp. 124--134 13. Diego C. Mart\'inez, Alejandro J. Garca, and Guillermo R. Simari, "An Abstract Argumentation Framework with Varied-Strength Attacks", pp. 135--143 14. Richard Booth and Thomas Meyer, "Equilibria in Social Belief Removal", pp. 145--155 15. James P. Delgrande, "Horn Clause Belief Change: Contraction Functions", pp. 156--165 16. Gabriele Kern-Isberner, "Linking Iterated Belief Change Operations to Nonmonotonic Reasoning", pp. 166-- 17. S\'ebastien Konieczny and Ramn Pino Prez, "Improvement Operators", pp. 177--186 18. Florence Dupin de Saint-Cyr, "Scenario Update Applied to Causal Reasoning", pp. 188--197 19. Joseph Y. Halpern, "Defaults and Normality in Causal Structures", pp. 198--208 20. Ron van der Meyden,, "On Notions of Causality and Distributed Knowledge", pp. 209--218 21. Meghyn Bienvenu, "Complexity of Abduction in the EL Family of Lightweight Description Logics", pp. 220--230 22. Diego Calvanese, Giuseppe De Giacomo, Domenico Lembo, Maurizio Lenzerini, and Riccardo Rosati, "Path-Based Identification Constraints in Description Logics", pp. 231--241 23. Diego Calvanese, Giuseppe De Giacomo, Maurizio Lenzerini, and Riccardo Rosati, "View-Based Query Answering over Description Logic Ontologies", pp. 242--251 24. Birte Glimm, Ian Horrocks, and Ulrike Sattler, "Unions of Conjunctive Queries in SHOQ", pp. 252--262 25. Torsten Hahmann and Michael Gruninger, "Model-Theoretic Characterization of Asher and Vieu's Ontology of Mereotopology", pp. 263--273 26. Yevgeny Kazakov, "{RIQ} and {SROIQ} Are Harder than {SHOIQ}", pp. 274--284 27. Roman Kontchakov, Frank Wolter, and Michael Zakharyaschev, "Can You Tell the Difference Between DL-Lite Ontologies?", pp. 285--295 28. Boris Motik, Bernardo Cuenca Grau, Ian Horrocks, and Ulrike Sattler, "Representing Structured Objects using Description Graphs", pp. 296--306 29. Lutz Schr\"oder and Dirk Pattinson, "How Many Toes Do I Have? Parthood and Number Restrictions in Description Logics", pp. 307--317 30. Nwe Ni Tun and Jin Song Dong, "Ontology Generation through the Fusion of Partial Reuse and Relation Extraction", pp. 318--327 31. Arnold Binas and Sheila A. McIlraith, "Peer-to-Peer Query Answering with Inconsistent Knowledge", pp. 329--339 32. Nathalie Chetcuti-Sperandio and Sylvain Lagrue, "How to Choose Weightings to Avoid Collisions in a Restricted Penalty Logic", pp. 340--347 33. Patricia Everaere, Sbastien Konieczny, and Pierre Marquis, "Conflict-Based Merging Operators", pp. 348--357 34. Anthony Hunter and S\'ebastien Konieczny, "Measuring Inconsistency through Minimal Inconsistent Sets", pp. 358--366 35. Maria Vanina Martinez, Francesco Parisi, Andrea Pugliese, Gerardo I. Simari, and V. S. Subrahmanian, "Inconsistency Management Policies", pp. 367--376 36. Loizos Michael and Leslie G. Valiant, "A First Experimental Demonstration of Massive Knowledge Infusion", pp. 378--388 37. Anastasia Analyti, Grigoris Antoniou, and Carlos Viegas Damsio, "A Principled Framework for Modular Web Rule Bases and Its Semantics", pp. 390--400 38. Xiaoping Chen, Jianmin Ji, and Fangzhen Lin, "Computing Loops with at Most One External Support Rule", pp. 401--410 39. James Delgrande, Torsten Schaub, Hans Tompits, and Stefan Woltran, "Belief Revision of Logic Programs under Answer Set Semantics", pp. 411--421 40. Christian Drescher, Martin Gebser, Torsten Grote, Benjamin Kaufmann, Arne K\"onig, Max Ostrowski, and Torsten Schaub, "Conflict-Driven Disjunctive Answer Set Solving", pp. 422--432 41. Wolfgang Faber, Hans Tompits, and Stefan Woltran, "Notions of Strong Equivalence for Logic Programs with Ordered Disjunction", pp. 433--443 42. Joohyung Lee and Yunsong Meng, "On Loop Formulas with Variables", pp. 444--453 43. Fangzhen Lin and Yisong Wang, "Answer Set Programming with Functions", pp. 454--464 44. Alexander Bochman, "Default Theory of Defeasible Entailment", pp. 466--475 46. Katarina Britz, Johannes Heidema, Thomas Meyer, "Semantic Preferential Subsumption", pp. 476--484 47. Jos de Bruijn, Thomas Eiter, and Hans Tompits, "Embedding Approaches to Combining Rules and Ontologies into Autoepistemic Logic", pp. 485--495 48. Espen H. Lian and Arild Waaler, "Computing Default Extensions by Reductions on $O^R$", pp. 496--506 49. Safa Yahi, Salem Benferhat, Sylvain Lagrue, Mariette Srayet, and Odile Papini, "A Lexicographic Inference for Partially Preordered Belief Bases", pp. 507--517 50. Patrick Eyerich, Michael Brenner, and Bernhard Nebel, "On the Complexity of Planning Operator Subsumption", pp. 518--527 51. Martin Magnusson and Patrick Doherty, "Deductive Planning with Inductive Loops", pp. 528--534 52. Jussi Rintanen, "Planning Graphs and Propositional Clause-Learning", pp. 535--543 53. Gabriele R\"oger, Malte Helmert, and Bernhard Nebel, "On the Relative Expressiveness of ADL and Golog: The Last Piece in the Puzzle", pp. 544--551 54. Ronen I. Brafman, "Relational Preference Rules for Control", pp. 552--559 55. Patrick Doherty and Andrzej Szalas, "Reasoning with Qualitative Preferences and Cardinalities using Generalized Circumscription", pp. 560--570 56. Maria Silvia Pini, Francesca Rossi, Kristen Brent Venable, and Toby Walsh, "Dealing with Incomplete Agents' Preferences and an Uncertain Agenda in Group Decision Making via Sequential Majority Voting", pp. 571--578 57. Joel Uckelman and Ulle Endriss, "Preference Modeling by Weighted Goals with Max Aggregation", pp. 579--587 58. Jens Classen and Gerhard Lakemeyer, "A Logic for Non-Terminating Golog Programs", pp. 589--599 59. Christian Fritz, Jorge A. Baier, Sheila A. McIlraith, "ConGolog, Sin Trans: Compiling ConGolog into Basic Action Theories for Planning and Beyond", pp. 600--610 60. Ryan F. Kelly and Adrian R. Pearce, "Complex Epistemic Modalities in the Situation Calculus", pp. 611--620 61. Fangzhen Lin, "Proving Goal Achievability", pp. 621--628 62. Ronald P. A. Petrick, "Cartesian Situations and Knowledge Decomposition in the Situation Calculus", pp. 629--639 63. Sebastian Sardina, Fabio Patrizi, and Giuseppe De Giacomo, "Behavior Composition in the Presence of Failure", pp. 640--650 64. Ivan Jos\'e Varzinczak, "Action Theory Erasure and Minimal Change", pp. 651--661 65. Stavros Vassos, Gerhard Lakemeyer, and Hector J. Levesque, "First-Order Strong Progression for Local-Effect Basic Action Theories", pp. 662--672 66. Alessandro Artale, Nicola Guarino, and C. Maria Keet, "Formalising Temporal Constraints on Part-Whole Relations", pp. 673--683 67. Franz Baader, Silvio Ghilardi, and Carsten Lutz, "LTL over Description Logic Axioms", pp. 684--694 68. Philippe Balbiani, "Time Representation and Temporal Reasoning from the Perspective of Non-Standard Analysis", pp. 695--704 69. Francesco Belardinelli and Alessio Lomuscio, "A Complete First-Order Logic of Knowledge and Time", pp. 705--714 70. Jochen Renz and Jason Jingshi Li, "Automated Complexity Proofs for Qualitative Spatial and Temporal Calculi", pp. 715--723 71. David Toman and Grant Weddell, "Identifying Objects Over Time with Description Logics", pp. 724--734 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS Conference shelves. Out for reading, Spring 11.}, topic = {kr;} } @article{ brewka_g-peppas_p:2005a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Pavlos Peppas}, title = {Preface}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2005}, volume = {79}, number = {1}, note = {Introduction to a special issue on reasoning about action and change.}, pages = {3--5}, topic = {action-formalisms;} } @inproceedings{ brewka_g-woltran_s:2010a, author = {Gerhard Brewka and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Abstract Dialectical Frameworks}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {102--111}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we introduce dialectical frameworks, a powerful generalization of Dung-style argumentation frameworks where each node comes with an associated acceptance condition. This allows us to model different types of dependencies, e.g. support and attack, as well as different types of nodes within a single framework. We show that Dung's standard semantics can be generalized to dialectical frameworks, in case of stable and preferred semantics to a slightly restricted class which we call bipolar frameworks. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc22}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ brey:2005a, author = {Philip Brey}, title = {The Epistemology and Ontology of Human-Computer Interaction}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2005}, volume = {15}, number = {3-4}, pages = {383--398}, abstract = {This paper analyzes epistemological and ontological dimensions of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) through an analysis of the functions of computer systems in relation to their users. It is argued that the primary relation between humans and computer systems has historically been epistemic: computers are used as information-processing and problem-solving tools that extend human cognition, }, topic = {foundations-of-HCI;} } @book{ brezillon:1997a, editor = {Patrick Br\'ezillon}, title = {Proceedings of the First International and Interdisciplinary Conference on Modeling and Using Context, Context-97}, url = {http://www-poleia.lip6.fr/~brezil/Pages2/Publications/CONTEXT-97/}, year = {1997}, publisher = {Laboratoire d'Informatique de Paris 6}, address = {Pariw}, contentnote = {TC: 1. L.W.N. Van der Torre and Y.H. Tan, "Contextual Deontic Logic", pp. 1--10. 2. A. Cimatti and L. Serafini, "A Context-Based Mechanization of Multi-Agent Reasoning", pp. 11--20. 3. V.Y. Teriyan and S. Puuronen, "Multilevel Context Representation Using Semantic Metanetwork", pp. 21--32. 4. L. Serafini and C. Ghidini, "Context-Based Semantics for Federated Databases", pp. 33--45. 5. D.M. Gabbay and R.T. Nossum, "Structured Contexts with Fibred Semantics", pp. 46--56. 6. E. Krahmer and P. Piwek, "Exploiting Context for Filling Presuppositional Gaps", pp. 56--65. 7. L.H.B. Manara and A. De Roeck, "Context as Partial Beliefs, and the Pragmatic Modelling of Presuppositions", pp. 66--74. 8. K. Van Deemter and J. Odijk, "Context Modeling for Language and Speech Generation", pp. 75--87. 9. C. Reed and D. Long and M. Fox M., "Context and Focusing in Argumentative Discourse Planning", pp. 88--99. 10. M.P. McGough, "Inside Auction Talk: A Different Turn Taking System", pp. 100--106. 11. J. Lavid, "Controlling Thematic Choices in Discourse: Towards a Specification of Contextual Constraints", pp. 107--118. 12. C. Zhai, "Exploiting Context to Identify Lexical Atoms---A Statistical View of Linguistic Context", pp. 119--129. 13. H. Bunt, "Dialogue Context Modelling", pp. 130--149. 14. M. Galliker and D. Weimer, "Context and Implicitness: Consequences for Qualitative and Quantitative Context Analysis", pp. 151--163. 15. B. Moulin, "An Agent Centered Approach to Conversatonal Context", pp. 164--176. 16. P.E. Bonzon, "Learning Meta-Level Operators in Hierarchical Contexts", pp. 177--188. 17. J.-P. Descles and E. Cartier and A. Jackiewicz and J.-L. Minel, "Textual Processing and Contextual Exploration Method", pp. 189--197. 18. P. Ozturk and A. Aamodt, "Towards a Model of Context for Case-Based Diagnostic Problem Solving", pp. 198--208. 19. P. Br\'ezillon and C. Gentile and I. Saker and M. Secron, "{SART}: A System for Supporting Operators with Contextual Knowledge", pp. 209--222. 20. F. Br\'emond and M. Thonnat, "Issues in Representing Context Illustrated by Scene Interpretation Applications", pp. 223--232. 21. R.M. Turner, "Determining the Context-Dependent Meaning of Fuzzy Subsets", pp. 233--242. 22. C. Staff, "Hypercontext: Using Context in Adaptive Hypertext", pp. 243--255. 23. P. Br\'ezillon and J.-Ch. Pomerol, "Contextual Issues in the Framework of Multicriteria Decision Making", pp. 256--268. 24. C.L. Mallen, "Using Design to Provide Context in an Intelligent Help System", pp. 269--278. 25. B. Bouzy and T. Cazenave, "Using the Object Oriented Paradigm to Model Context in Computer Go", pp. 279--289. 26. A. Edman and A. Hamfelt, "A Basis for a System Development Methodology for User Cooperative System", pp. 290--302. 27. H.B. Funk and C.A. Miller, "{'}Context Sensitive' Interface Design", pp. 303--318. 28. N. Martini-Bigolin and P. Br\'ezillon, "An Experience Using Context in Translation from System's Requirements to Conceptual Model", pp. 319--330. 29. M. Sala, "On the Importance of Context to Improve Knowledge Discovery", pp. 331--342. 30. KYacef and L. Alem, "The role of Context in the Assessment of Operational Skills: A Case in Air Traffic Control", pp. 343--350. 31. J. Agabra-Joyaux and I. Alvarez-Dabas and P. Br\'ezillon, "Contextual Knowledge Based System: A Study and Design in Enology", pp. 351--362. 32. F. Giunchiglia F. and C. Ghidini, "A Local Model Semantics for Propositional Attitudes", pp. 363--372. }, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ brezillon:2003a, author = {Patrick Br\'ezillon}, title = {Context Dynamic and Explanation in Contextual Graphs}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {94--106}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;explanation;conceptual-graphs;} } @incollection{ brezillon:2005a, author = {Patrick Br\'ezillon}, title = {Task-Realization Models in Contextual Graphs}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {55--68}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;graph-based-representations;plan-execution;} } @article{ brice-fennema:1970a, author = {Claude R. Brice and Claude L. Fennema}, title = {Scene Analysis Using Regions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1970}, volume = {1}, number = {3--4}, pages = {205--226}, topic = {computer-vision;} } @article{ brickhill_h-horsten_l:2018a, author = {Hazel Brickhill and Leon Horsten}, title = {Triangulating Non-{A}rchimedean Probability}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {519--546}, abstract = {We relate Popper functions to regular and perfectly additive such non-Archimedean probability functions by means of a representation theorem: every such non-Archimedean probability function is infinitesimally close to some Popper function, and vice versa. We also show that regular and perfectly additive non-Archimedean probability functions can be given a lexicographic representation. Thus Popper functions, a specific kind of non-Archimedean probability functions, and lexicographic probability functions triangulate to the same place: they are in a good sense interchangeable.}, topic = {nonstandard-probability;} } @inproceedings{ bridgeland-huhns:1990a, author = {David M. Bridgeland and Michael N. Huhns}, title = {Distributed Truth Maintenance}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, editor = {Thomas G. Dietterich and William Swartout}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {truth-maintenance;distributed-systems;} } @book{ bridgeman-etal:1965a, author = {Loraine I. Bridgeman and Dale Dillinger and Constance Higgins and P. David Seaman and Floyd A. Shank}, title = {Further Classes of Adjectives}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {adjectives;} } @article{ bridges_ds:1995a, author = {Douglas S. Bridges}, title = {Constructive Mathematics and Unbounded Operators---A Reply to {H}ellman}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {24}, number = {5}, pages = {549--561}, xref = {Comment on hellman:1993a.}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @article{ bridges_ds:1999a, author = {Douglas S. Bridges}, title = {Can Constructive Mathematics Be Applied in Physics?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {28}, number = {5}, pages = {439--453}, topic = {constructive-mathematics; foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @article{ bridges_ds:2000a, author = {Douglas S. Bridges}, title = {Can Constructive Mathematics Be Applied in Physics?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {29}, number = {5}, pages = {439--453}, topic = {constructive-mathematics;mathematics-in-the-sciences;} } @article{ bridges_ds:2002a, author = {Douglas Bridges}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}omputable Calculus}, by Oliver Aberth}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {426--428}, xref = {Review of: aberth_o:2001a.}, topic = {constructive-mathematics;automated-algebra;} } @article{ bridges_j:2012a, author = {Jason Bridges}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Philosophy of Animal Minds}, edited by {R}obert {K}. {L}urz}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {3}, pages = {625--627}, xref = {Review of: lurz_rk:2009a}, topic = {animal-cognition;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ brigandt:2015a, author = {Ingo Brigandt}, title = {Evolutionary Developmental Biology and the Limits of Philosophical Accounts of Mechanistic Explanation}, booktitle = {Explanation in Biology: An Enquiry into the Diversity of Explanatory Patterns in the Life Sciences}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2015}, editor = {Pierre-Alain Braillard and Christophe Malaterre}, pages = {135--173}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {expmanation;mechanisms;philosophy-of-biology;} } @article{ briggs_r:2008a, author = {Rachael Briggs}, title = {Distorted Reflection}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2008}, volume = {118}, number = {1}, pages = {59--85}, topic = {epistemic-kinematics;probability-kinematics;} } @article{ briggs_r:2010a, author = {Rachael Briggs}, title = {Decision Theoretic Paradoxes as Voting Paradoxes}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2010}, volume = {119}, number = {2}, pages = {1--30}, topic = {decision-theory;Arrow's-theorem;} } @article{ briggs_r:2015a, author = {Rachael Briggs}, title = {Foundations of Probability}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {6}, pages = {625--640}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @article{ briggs_r:2015b, author = {Rachael Briggs}, title = {Foundations of Probability}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {6}, pages = {625--640}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @inproceedings{ briggs_w-cook_d:1995a, author = {Will Briggs and Diane Cook}, title = {Flexible Social Laws}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {688--693}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, contentnote = {Cost of communication.}, topic = {multiagent-planning;distributed-AI;} } @article{ brigham_d:2016a, author = {Daniel Brigham}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}ssertion: on the Philosophical Significance of Assertoric Speech}, By {S}anford {G}. {G}oldberg}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2016}, volume = {76}, number = {3}, pages = {389--391}, DOI = {doi:10.1093/analys/anw043}, xref = {Review of: goldberg_sc:2014a}, topic = {assertion;} } @article{ brighton_j:2016a, author = {Jude Brighton}, title = {Cut Elimination for {GLS} Using the Terminability of its Regress Process}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2016}, volume = {45}, number = {2}, pages = {147--153}, topic = {provability-logic;cut-elimination;} } @techreport{ brill_d:1993a, author = {David Brill}, title = {{LOOM} Reference Manual Version 2.0}, institution = {University of Southern California}, year = {1993}, address = {Los Angeles California}, topic = {description-logics;}, } @inproceedings{ brill_e:1992a, author = {Eric Brill}, title = {A Simple Rule-Based Part-of-Speech Tagger}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {ANLP}-92, 3rd Conference on Applied Natural Language Processing}, address = {Trento}, pages = {152--155}, year = {1992}, note = {URL: citeseer.nj.nec.com/brill92simple.html}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {part-of-speech-tagging;} } @inproceedings{ brill_e:1994a, author = {Eric Brill}, title = {A Report of Recent Progress in Transformation-Based Error-Driven Learning.}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, editor = {Barbara Hayes-Roth and Richard Korf}, pages = {722--727}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {part-of-speech-tagging;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ brill_e:1995a, author = {Eric Brill}, title = {Unsupervised Learning of Disambiguation Rules for Part of Speech Tagging}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Very Large Corpora}, year = {1995}, editor = {David Yarovsky and Kenneth Church}, pages = {1--13}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {corpus-tagging;part-of-speech-tagging;machine-learning; corpus-linguistics;} } @article{ brill_e:1995b, author = {Eric Brill}, title = {Transformation-Based Error-Driven Learning and Natural Language Processing: A Case Study in Part-of-Speech Tagging}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1995}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {543--565}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {part-of-speech-tagging;machine-learning;} } @incollection{ brill_e:2000a, author = {Eric Brill}, title = {Pattern-Based Disambiguation for Natural Language Processing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2000 Joint {SIGDAT} Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Hinrich Sch\"utze and Keh-Yih Su}, pages = {1--8}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {disambiguation;} } @book{ brill_e-church_kw:1996a, editor = {Eric Brill and Kenneth Church}, title = {Proceedings of the Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, contentnote = {TC: 1. I. Dan Melamed, "A Geometric Approach to Mapping Bitext Correspondence" 2. Xuanyin Xia and Dekai Wu, "Parsing {C}hinese with Almost-Context-Free Grammar" 3. R. Basili and A. Marziali and M.T. Pazienza and P. Velardi, "Unsupervised Learning of Syntactic Knowledge: Methods and Measures" 4. Marie Meteer and Rukmini Iyer, "Modeling Conversational Speech for Speech Recognition" 5. Mesaaki Nagata, "Automatic Extraction of New Words from {J}apanese Texts Using Generalized Forward-Backward Search" 6. Thorston Brants, "Better Language Models with Model Merging" 7. Kemal Oflazer and Gokhan Tur, "Combining Hand-Crafted Rules and Unsupervised Learning in Constraint-Based Morphological Disambiguation" 8. Raymond J. Mooney, "Comparative Experiments on Disambiguating Word Senses: An Illustration of the Role of Bias in Machine Learning" 9. John Carroll and Ted Briscoe, "Apportioning Development Effort in a Probabilistic {LR} Parsing System through Evaluation 10. Rebecca Bruce and Janyce Wiebe and Ted Pedersen, "Automating Feature Set Selection for Case-Based Learning of Linguistic Knowledge" 11. Claire Cardie, "Automating Feature Set Selection for Case-Based Learning of Linguistic Knowledge" 12. Sharon A. Carabello and Eugene Charniak, "Figures of Merit for Best-First Probabilistic Chart Parsing" 13. Adwait Ratnaparkhi, "A Maximum Entropy Model for Part-of-Speech Tagging" 14. Joshua Goodman, "Efficient Algorithms for Parsing the {DOP} Model" }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, topic = {empirical-methods-in-nlp;} } @inproceedings{ brill_e-etal:1998a, author = {Eric Brill and Radu Florian and John C. Henderson and Lidia Mangu}, title = {Beyond N-Grams: Can Linguistic Sophistication Improve Language Modeling?}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {186--190}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {part-of-speech-tagging;} } @article{ brill_e-mooney_rj:1998a, author = {Eric Brill and Raymond J. Mooney}, title = {An Overview of Empirical Natural Language Processing}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1998}, volume = {18}, number = {4}, pages = {13--24}, topic = {natural-language-processing;corpus-linguistics;corpus-statistics;} } @inproceedings{ brill_e-wu_j1:1998a, author = {Eric Brill and Jun Wu}, title = {Classifier Combination for Improved Lexical Disambiguation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {191--195}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;} } @article{ bringmann-etal:2013a, author = {Karl Bringmann and Tobias Friedrich and Christian Igel and Thomas Vo{\ss}}, title = {Speeding up Many-Objective Optimization by {M}onte {C}arlo Approximations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {204}, pages = {22--29}, topic = {evolutionary-algorithms;} } @article{ bringmann-friedrich_t:2013a, author = {Karl Bringmann and Tobias Friedrich}, title = {Approximation Quality of the Hypervolume Indicator}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {195}, pages = {265--290}, topic = {evolutionary-computation;optimization;} } @article{ bringsjord_s:1984a, author = {Selmer Bringsford}, title = {Are There Set Theoretic Possible Worlds?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1984}, missinginfo = {number, volume, pages}, topic = {foundations-of-possible-worlds;intensional-paradoxes;} } @book{ bringsjord_s:1992a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {What Robots Can and Can't Be}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1992}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-7923-1662-2}, xref = {Review: hauser_l:1997b.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;machine-intelligence;} } @article{ bringsjord_s:1994a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {Computation, among Other Things, Is Beneath Us}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {469--488}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;cognitive-states;machine-intelligence;} } @incollection{ bringsjord_s:1995a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {Could, How Could We Tell if, and Why Should---Androids Have Inner Lives?}, booktitle = {Android Epistemology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Kenneth M. Ford and Clark Glymour and Patrick J. Hayes}, pages = {93--121}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @article{ bringsjord_s:2000a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Mystery of Consciousness}, by}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {3}, pages = {457--459}, xref = {Review of: searle_jr:1997a}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ bringsjord_s:2001b, author = {Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {In Computation, Parallel is Nothing, Physical Everything}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {95--99}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-computation;} } @article{ bringsjord_s:2004a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {On Building Robot Persons: Response to {Z}latev}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2004}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {381--385}, abstract = {Zlatev offers surprisingly weak reasoning in support of his view that robots with the right kind of developmental histories can have meaning. We ought nonetheless to praise Zlatev for an impressionistic account of how attending to the psychology of human development can help us build robots that appear to have intentionality. }, topic = {machine-intelligence;intentionality;} } @inproceedings{ bringsjord_s:2005a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {Ethical Robots: The Future Can Heed Us}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Machine Ethics}, year = {2005}, editor = {G. Michael Anderson and Susan Leigh Anderson and Chris Arme}, pages = {24--29}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Bill Joy's deep pessimism is now famous. "Why The Future Doesn't Need Us," his defense of that pessimism, has been read by, it seems, everyone---and many of these readers, apparently, have been converted to the dark side, or rather more accurately, to the future-is-dark side. Fortunately (for us; unfortunately for Joy), the defense, at least the part of it that pertains to AI and robotics, fails. Ours may be a dark future, but we can't know that on the basis of Joy's reasoning. On the other hand, we ought to fear a good deal more than fear itself: we ought to fear not robots, but what some of us may do with robots. }, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ bringsjord_s:2008a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {Declarative/Logic-Based Cognitive Modeling}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Computational Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ron Sun}, pages = {127--169}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;} } @incollection{ bringsjord_s:2009a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {If {I} Were Judge}, booktitle = {Parsing the {T}uring Test: Philosophical and Methodological Issues in the Quest for the Thinking Computer}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert Epstein and Gary Roberts and Grace Beber}, pages = {89--102}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de12}, topic = {Turing-test;philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ bringsjord_s:2011a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord}, title = {Piagetian Roboethics via Category Theory: Moving beyond Mere Formal Operations to Engineer Robots Whose Decisions Are Guaranteed to be Ethically Correct}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {361--374}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @article{ bringsjord_s-etal:2000a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord and Clarke Caporale and Ron Noel}, title = {Animals, Zombanimals, and the Total {T}uring Test}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {397--418}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;Turing;} } @article{ bringsjord_s-etal:2001a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord and Paul Bello and David Ferrucci}, title = {Creativity, the {T}uring Test, and the (Better) {L}ovelace Test}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {3--27}, abstract = {$\ldots$ A better test is one that insists on a certain restrictive epistemic relation between an artificial agent (or system) A, its output o, and the human architect H of A -- a relation which, roughly speaking, obtains when H cannot account for how A produced o. We call this test the ``Lovelace Test'' in honor of Lady Lovelace, who believed that only when computers originate things should they be believed to have minds. }, topic = {Turing-test;creativity;} } @incollection{ bringsjord_s-etal:2012a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord and Alexander Bringsjord and Paul Bello}, title = {Belief in The Singularity is Fideistic}, booktitle = {Singularity Hypotheses: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2012}, editor = {Amnon H. Eden and James H. Moor and Johnny H. S{\o}raker and Eric Steinhart}, pages = {395--412}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {technological-singularity;} } @article{ bringsjord_s-ferrucci:1998a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord and David A. Ferrucci}, title = {Logic and Artificial Intelligence: Divorced, Still Married, Separated $\ldots$?}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {273--308}, abstract = {$\ldots$ This paper is an attempt to answer these questions [AI & Logic] via a review of six books. Encapsulated, our answer is that (i) logic and AI, despite tabloidish reports to the contrary, still enjoy matrimonial bliss, and (ii) only their future robotic offspring (as opposed to the children of connectionist AI) will mark real progress in the attempt to understand cognition. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn12}, topic = {philosophy-AI;logic-AI-project;} } @article{ bringsjord_s-ferrucci:1998b, author = {Selmer Bringsjord and David A. Ferrucci}, title = {Reply to {G}lymour and {T}hayse}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {313--315}, xref = {Response to: thayse:1998a, glymour_c:1998b.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;logic-AI-project;} } @book{ bringsjord_s-ferrucci:2000a, author = {Selmer Bringsford and David A. Ferrucci}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Literary Creativity: Inside the Mind of {BRUTUS}, a Storytelling Machine}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {2000}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0-8058-1987-8 (pbk)}, xref = {Review: desousa:2000a.}, topic = {automated-creative-writing;} } @incollection{ bringsjord_s-noel_r:2002a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord and Ron Noel}, title = {Real Robots and the Missing Thought Experiment in the {C}hinese Room Dialectic}, booktitle = {Views into the {C}hinese Room: New Essays on {S}earle and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {John Preston and Mark Bishop}, pages = {144--166}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-AI;} } @article{ bringsjord_s-patterson_b:1995a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord and Bill Patterson}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Rediscovery of the Mind}, by {J}ohn {R}. {S}earle}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1995}, volume = {5}, number = {2}, pages = {302--307}, xref = {Review of: searle_jr:1992b}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-AI;} } @incollection{ bringsjord_s-taylor_j:2012a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord and Joshua Taylor}, title = {The Divine-Command Approach to Robot Ethics}, booktitle = {Robot Ethics: Mapping the Issues for a Mechanized World}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Patrick Lin and Keith Abney and George Bekey}, pages = {85--108}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @article{ bringsjord_s-zenzen_m:2002a, author = {Selmer Bringsjord and Michael Zenzen}, title = {Toward a Formal Philosophy of Hypercomputation}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {241--258}, topic = {hypercomputation;} } @phdthesis{ brink_c:1992a, author = {Chris Brink}, title = {Power Structures and Their Applications}, school = {Univeristy of Johannesburg}, year = {1992}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Johannesburg}, abstract = {... an investigation of power structures, and their applications in various fields. A power construction is an attempt to lift whatever structure may exist between the elements of a set to subsets of that set. The notions of structure considered here are algebraic, relational and topological.}, topic = {power-structures;aggregation;domain-theory;} } @article{ brink_c:1997a, author = {Chris Brink}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}ogic and Information Flow}, by {J}an van {E}ijk and {A}lbert {V}isser}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1997}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {337--338}, xref = {Review of vaneijck_j-visser_a:1994a.}, topic = {theory-of-computation;dynamic-logic;information-processing; information-flow-theory;theories-of-information;} } @article{ brink_c-rewitzky:2002a, author = {Chris Brink and Ingrid Rewitzky}, title = {Three Dual Ontologies}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {31}, number = {6}, pages = {569--590}, contentnote = {Proves that formalizations of various approaches to ontology -- nominalistic, realistic, and factualistic -- are intertranslateable.}, topic = {ontology;metaphysics;logic-and-ontology;logic-and-philosophy;} } @incollection{ brink_c-schmidt_ph:1992a, author = {Chris Brink and Renate A. Schmidt}, title = {Subsumption Computed Algbraically}, booktitle = {Semantic Networks in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Pergamon Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Fritz Lehmann}, pages = {329--342}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {An abstact, algebraic semantics for description logics. See dionne-etal:1992a.}, topic = {kr;classifier-algorithms;equational-logic;kr-course; description-logics;algebraic-semantics;} } @article{ brink_do:1994a, author = {David O. Brink}, title = {Moral Conflict and Its Structure}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1994}, volume = {103}, number = {2}, pages = {215--248}, topic = {moral-conflict;} } @article{ brink_do:2007a, author = {David O. Brink}, title = {Review of \emph{Thinking How to Live}, by {A}llen {G}ibbard}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2007}, volume = {116}, number = {2}, pages = {267--272}, xref = {Review of: gibbard_af:2003b}, topic = {ethics;expressivism;} } @article{ brinton_lj:1985a, author = {Laurel J. Brinton}, title = {Verb Particles in English: Aspect or {A}ktionsart?}, journal = {Studia Linguistica}, year = {1985}, volume = {39}, number = {2}, pages = {157--168}, topic = {verb-particle-combinations;tense-aspect;Aktionsarten;} } @book{ briscoe:1987a, author = {Ted Briscoe}, title = {Modelling Human Speech Comprehension: A Computational Approach}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood}, year = {1987}, address = {Chichester}, ISBN = {047021032X (Halsted Press)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, BF 463 .S64 B751 1987.}, topic = {speech-recognition;} } @incollection{ briscoe:1991a, author = {Ted Briscoe}, title = {Lexical Issues in Natural Language Processing}, booktitle = {Natural Language and Speech}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Ewan Klein and Frank Veltman}, pages = {39--68}, address = {Berlin}, url = {http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.51.2380&rep=rep1&type=ps}, topic = {computational-lexicography;nl-processing;lexical-processing;} } @techreport{ briscoe:1994a, author = {Ted Briscoe}, title = {Parsing (with) Punctuation}, institution = {Rank Xerox Research Centre}, address = {Grenoble, France }, year = {1994}, topic = {punctuation;} } @inproceedings{ briscoe:1997a, author = {Ted Briscoe}, title = {Co-Evolution of Language and of the Language Acquisition Device}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {418--427}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {language-learning;parameter-setting;categorial-grammar; inheritance;inheritance-reasoning;} } @book{ briscoe:2002a, editor = {Ted Briscoe}, title = {Linguistic Evolution through Language Acquisition: Formal and Computational Models}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2002}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-66299-0}, xref = {Review: arbib:2003a}, topic = {language-learning;language-and-evolution;} } @inproceedings{ briscoe-carroll_jm:1995b, author = {Ted Briscoe and John M. Carroll}, title = {Developing and Evaluating a Probabilistic {LR} Parser of Part-of-Speech and Punctuation Labels}, pages = {48--58}, booktitle = {Proceedings of International Workshop on Parsing Technologies}, year = {1995}, address = {Prague, Czech Republic}, month = {September}, topic = {punctuation;} } @article{ briscoe-copestake:1999a, author = {Ted Briscoe and Ann Copestake}, title = {Lexical Rules in Constraint-Based Grammars}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, volume = {25}, number = {4}, pages = {487--526}, topic = {constraint-based-grammar;lexical-rules;} } @book{ briscoe-etal:1993a, editor = {Ted Briscoe and Valeria de Paiva and Ann Copestake}, title = {Inheritance, Defaults, and the Lexicon}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, England}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Bob Carpenter, "Skeptical and Credulous Default Unification with Applications to Templates and Inheritance" 2. Roger Evans and Gerald Gazdar and Lionel Moser, "Prioritised Multiple Inheritance in {DATR}" 3. Lynne J. Cahill, "Some Reflections on the Conversion of the {TIC} Lexicon into {DATR}" 4. Michael Morreau, "Norms or Inference Tickets? A Frontal Collision between Intuitions" 5. R\'emi Zajac, "Issues in the Design of a Language for Representing Linguistic Information Based on Inheritance and Feature Structures" 6. Hans-Ulrich Krieger and John Nerbonne, "Feature-Based Inheritance Networks for Computational Lexicons" 7. Graham Russell et al., "A Practical Approach to multiple Default Inheritance for Unification-Based Lexicons" 8. Ann Copestake et al., "The {ACQUILEX} {LKB}: An Introduction" 9. Valeria De Paiva, "Types and Constraints in the {LKB}" 10. Antonio Sanfilippo, "Defaults in Lexical Representation" 11. Ann Copestake, "{LKB} Encoding of Lexical Knowledge" 12. Piek Vossen and Ann Copestake, "Untangling Definition Structure into Knowledge Representation" }, ISBN = {0521430275 (hardback)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library P 326 .I541 1993}, topic = {inheritance;computational-lexicography;} } @incollection{ briscoe-etal:1995a, author = {Ted Briscoe and Ann Copestake and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Blocking}, booktitle = {Computational Lexical Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Patrick Saint-Dizier and Evelyne Viegas}, pages = {273--302}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-kr;computational-lexical-semantics;nm-ling;} } @inproceedings{ brisson:1997a, author = {Christine Brisson}, title = {On Definite Plural {NP}'s and the Meaning of All}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1997}, editor = {Aaron Lawson}, pages = {55--72}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;nl-quantifiers;} } @article{ brisson:2003a, author = {C. Brisson}, title = {Plurals, {\em All}, and the Nonuniformity of Collective Predication}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {26}, number = {2}, pages = {129--184}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;nl-quantifiers;} } @book{ britton-graesser_ac:1996a, editor = {Bruce K. Britton and Arthur C. Grasser}, title = {Models of Understanding Text}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1996}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, topic = {text-understanding;psycholinguistics;} } @article{ britz_k:1999a, author = {K. Britz}, title = {Algebra for Theory Change}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1999}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {429--443}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @incollection{ britz_k-etal:2008a, author = {Katarina Britz and Johannes Heidema and Thomas Meyer}, title = {Semantic Preferential Subsumption}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {476--484}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {We present a general preferential semantic framework for plausible subsumption in description logics, analogous to the KLM preferential semantics for propositional entailment. We introduce the notion of ordered interpretations for description logics, and use it to define two mutually dual non-deductive subsumption relations. We outline their properties and explain how they may be used for inductive and abductive reasoning respectively. We show that the preferential semantics for subsumption can be reduced to standard semantics of a sufficiently expressive description logic. This has the advantage that standard DL algorithms can be extended to reason about our notions of plausible subsumption. }, topic = {description-logics;model-preference;} } @article{ britz_k-etal:2009a, author = {Katarina Britz and Johannes Heidema and Willem Labuschagne}, title = {Semantics for Dual Preferential Entailment}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {38}, number = {4}, pages = {433--446}, topic = {modal-logic;model-preference;modal-logic;} } @article{ britz_k-varzinczak_ij:2018a, author = {Katarina Britz and Ivan Varzinczak}, title = {Preferred Accessibility and Preferred Worlds}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2018}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {133--155}, topic = {modal-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;model-preference;} } @book{ broad_cd:1938a, author = {Charles D. Broad}, title = {Examination of McTaggart's Philosophy, Vol. II}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1938}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {metaphysics;philosophy-of-time;} } @article{ broad_cd:1944a1, author = {Charles D. Broad}, title = {Review of {J}ulian {S}. {H}uxley's \emph{Evolutionary Ethics}}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1944}, volume = {53}, number = {312}, pages = {344--367}, xref = {Republication: broad_cd:1944a2}, topic = {metaethics;} } @incollection{ broad_cd:1944a2, author = {Charles D. Broad}, title = {Review of {J}ulian {S}. {H}uxley's \emph{Evolutionary Ethics}}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {564--586}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: broad_cd:1944a1}, topic = {metaethics;} } @article{ broad_cd:1946a1, author = {Charles D. Broad}, title = {Some of the Main Problems of Ethics}, journal = {Philosophy}, year = {1946}, volume = {21}, number = {79}, pages = {99--117}, xref = {Republication: broad_cd:1946a2}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;metaethics;} } @incollection{ broad_cd:1949a, author = {Charles D. Broad}, title = {Some of the Main Problems of Ethics}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {547--564}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: broad_cd:1946a1}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;metaethics;} } @incollection{ broad_cd:1949b, author = {Charles D. Broad}, title = {The `Nature' of a Continuant}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {472--481}, address = {New York}, xref = {Pp. 264-268 of broad_cd:1938a}, topic = {metaphysics;individuation;} } @book{ broadbent:1993a, editor = {Donald Broadbent}, title = {The Simulation of Human Intelligence}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Roger Penrose, "Setting the Scene: The Claim and the Issues", pp. 1--32 2. Allen Newell and Richard Young and Thad Polk, "The Approach through Symbols", pp. 33--70 3. Dana H. Ballard, "Sub-Symbolic Modeling of Hand-Eye Coordination", pp. 71--102 4. Edmund T. Rolls, "Networks in the Brain", pp. 103--120 5. Michael Brady, "Computational Vision", pp. 121--150 6. Gerald Gazdar, "The Handling of Natural Language", pp. 151--177 7. Margaret A. Boden, "The Impact of Philosophy", pp. 178--197 10. Donald Broadbent, "Comparison with Human Experiments", pp. 198--217 }, topic = {foundations-of-AI;philosophy-AI;AI-survey;} } @incollection{ broadbent:1993b, author = {Donald Broadbent}, title = {Comparison with Human Experiments}, booktitle = {The Simulation of Human Intelligence}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {Donald Broadbent}, pages = {198--217}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-AI;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ broadie_a:1968a, author = {Alexander Broadie}, title = {The Practical Syllogism}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1968}, volume = {29}, number = {1}, pages = {26--28}, topic = {Aristotle;practical-syllogism;practical-reasoningt;} } @article{ broadie_a:1972a, author = {Alexander Broadie}, title = {Imperatives}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1972}, volume = {81}, number = {322}, pages = {179--190}, contentnote = {Pays attention to grammar of imperatives.}, topic = {imperative-logic;imperatives;} } @article{ brock_dc:2018a, author = {David C. Brock}, title = {Learning from Artificial Intelligence's Previous Awakenings: The History of Expert Systems}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2018}, volume = {39}, number = {3}, pages = {3--15}, topic = {history-of-AI;expert-systems;} } @article{ brock_s:2004a, author = {Stuart Brock}, title = {The Ubiquitous Problem of Empty Names}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {101}, number = {6}, pages = {277--298}, topic = {proper-names;reference-gaps;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ brockriede-ehringer:1960a1, author = {Wayne E. Brockriede and Douiglas Ehringer}, title = {Toulmin on Argument: An Interpretation and Application}, journal = {Quarterly Journal of Speech}, year = {1960}, volume = {46}, pages = {44--55}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Reprinted in golden-etal:1976a, see brockriede-ehringer:1960a2}, topic = {rhetoric;argumentation;} } @incollection{ brockriede-ehringer:1960a2, author = {Wayne E. Brockriede and Douiglas Ehringer}, title = {Toulmin on Argument: An Interpretation and Application}, booktitle = {The Rhetoric of {W}estern Thought}, publisher = {Kendall/Hunt Publishing Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {James L. Golden and Goodwin F. Berquist and William E. Coleman}, pages = {175--198}, address = {Dubuque, Iowa}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection, under "Brockriede".}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Reprinted see brockriede-ehringer:1960a1}, topic = {rhetoric;argumentation;} } @article{ brodbeck_m:1957a, author = {May Brodbeck}, title = {A Note on Descriptions}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1957}, volume = {8}, number = {6}, pages = {95--96}, contentnote = {A not well thought through and irrelevant criticism of Hardin's paper, hardin_cl:1957a}, topic = {Russell;descriptions;} } @article{ broderick:2004a, author = {Paul Bohan Broderick}, title = {On Communication and Computation}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2004}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {1--19}, abstract = {$\ldots$ communication and computation $\ldots$ are often not conceptually distinguishable. Turing Machines and (Shannon-style) information sources, are considered. The most significant difference lies in the types of state-transitions allowed in each sort of model. This difference does not correspond to the difference that would be expected after considering the ordinary usage of these terms. However, the natural usage of these terms are surprisingly difficult to distinguish from each other. $\ldots$ }, topic = {communication;foundations-of-computation;} } @article{ broderick:2007a, author = {Paul Bohan Broderick}, title = {Review of \emph{{N}atural Born Cyborgs}, by {A}ndy {C}lark}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2007}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {117--120}, xref = {Review of: clark_a1:2003a.}, topic = {brain-computer-interfaces;AI-editorial;} } @incollection{ brodie:1984b, author = {Michael L. Brodie}, title = {On the Development of Data Models}, booktitle = {On Conceptual Modelling: Perspectives from Artificial Intelligence, Databases and Programming Languages}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1984}, editor = {Michael L. Brodie and John Mylopoulos and Joachim W. Schmidt}, pages = {19--83}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {databases;data-models;} } @book{ brodie-etal:1984a, editor = {Michael L. Brodie and John Mylopoulos and Joachim W. Schmidt}, title = {On Conceptual Modelling: Perspectives from Artificial Intelligence, Databases and Programming Languages}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1984}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {Computer Sci Lib (200 QA76.9.C65 O5 1984 Information Sciences QA76.9.C65 O5 1984}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. In pieces. See authors.}, topic = {kr;databases;} } @article{ brodley-etal:2012a, author = {Carla E. Brodley and Umaa Rebbapragada and Kevin Small and Byron C. Wallace}, title = {Challenges and Opportunities in Applied Machine Learning}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2012}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {11--24}, topic = {machine-learning;AI-applications;} } @article{ brody_ba:1967a, author = {Baruch A. Brody}, title = {The Equivalence of Act and Rule Utilitarianism}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1967}, volume = {43}, number = {6}, pages = {81--87}, topic = {utilitarianism;} } @article{ brody_ba:1967b, author = {Baruch A. Brody}, title = {Natural Kinds and Real Essences}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {74}, volume = {1967}, number = {14}, pages = {431--446}, contentnote = {Discusses the concept of substance. Claims Aristotle and Kant use different criteria for identification, and so differ on substantival change. }, topic = {individuation;Aristotle;Kant;} } @article{ brody_ba:1969a, author = {Baruch A. Brody}, title = {Choosing and Doing}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1969}, volume = {20}, number = {6}, pages = {92--95}, topic = {deliberation;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ brody_ba:1973a, author = {Baruch A. Brody}, title = {Why Settle for Anything Else Than Good Old-Fashioned {A}ristotelian Essentialism?}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1973}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {351--365}, topic = {essentialism;} } @incollection{ brody_ba:1978a, author = {Baruch A. Brody}, title = {Kripke on Proper Names}, booktitle = {Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {75--80}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {reference;proper-names;} } @incollection{ brody_m:1982a, author = {Michael Brody}, title = {On Circular Readings}, booktitle = {Mutual Knowledge}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1982}, editor = {N.V. Smith}, pages = {133--147}, address = {London}, topic = {Bach-Peters-sentences;anaphora;} } @book{ brody_m:1995a, author = {Michael Brody}, title = {Lexico-Logical Form: A Radically Minimalist Theory}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {nl-semantics;minimalist-syntax;} } @incollection{ brody_m:2002a, author = {Michael Brody}, title = {On the Status of Representations and Derivations}, booktitle = {Derivation and Explanation in the Minimalist Program}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishing}, year = {2002}, editor = {Samuel David Epstein and T. Daniel Seeley}, pages = {19--41}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {minimalist-syntax;} } @incollection{ brody_m-manzini_mr:1988a, author = {Michael Brody and M. Rita Manzini}, title = {On Implicit Arguments}, booktitle = {Mental Representations: The Interface Between Language and Reality}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Ruth Kempson}, pages = {105--130}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-semantics;ellipsis;argument-structure;} } @book{ broeder:2000a, editor = {Peter Broeder}, title = {Models of Language Acquisition: Inductive and Deductive Approaches}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-824138-0 (hardback)}, topic = {L1-acquisition;} } @incollection{ broersen_j-etal:2013a, author = {Jan Broersen and Dov Gabbay and Andreas Herzig and Emilliano Lorini and John-Jules Meyer and Xavier Parent and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Deontic Logic}, booktitle = {Agreement Technologies}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Sascha Ossowski}, pages = {171--179}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @phdthesis{ broersen_jm:2003a, author = {Jan M. Broersen}, title = {Modal Action Logics for Reasoning about Reactive Systems}, school = {Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam}, year = {2003}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Amsterdam}, url = {http://www.cs.vu.nl/res/theses/broersen.html}, contentnote = {The central problem of this Ph.D. thesis is to develop a formal framework for specifying and reasoning about reactive systems. We develop a modal action logic framework that combines reasoning about (1) action composition, (2) time, (3) action description assumptions, and (4) deontic modalities. The operations for action composition we consider are: non-deterministic choice, sequence, concurrency, iteration, converse and complement. In particular, we define and study a relativized action complement, that is intuitively more satisfactory than existing alternatives discussed in the literature. Concerning time, we study how to combine modal logics of non-deterministic action (e.g. dynamic logics) with modal logics of branching time (e.g. CTL, modal mu-calculus). Examples of action description assumptions are the `frame problem', which can be described as the question how to deal with an assumption about effects of actions, and the `qualification problem', which concerns an assumption about the possibility of actions. We study semantic solutions in terms of preference orderings over modal action models. Finally, we consider modal logics for the normative (deontic) modalities `permission', `prohibition' and `obligation' over complex action. An important distinction we make is that between action goal norms and process norms. The first type of norms can only be violated at the point of completion of an action, whereas process norms can also be violated during execution of a complex action. }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic authored shelves.}, topic = {action-formalisms;reactive-systems;dynamic-logic; deontic-logic;branching-time;} } @incollection{ broersen_jm:2004a, author = {Jan Broersen}, title = {Designing a Deontic Logic of Deadlines}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic in Computer Science}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2004}, editor = {Alessio Lomuscio and Donald Nute}, pages = {43--56}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. In \fe19\Lomuscio.pdf}, abstract = {This paper studies the logic of a dyadic modal operator for being obliged to meet a condition $\rho$ before a condition $\delta$ becomes true. ... We show that this notion of deadline obligation can be characterized in the branching time logic CTL. The defined operator obeys intuitive logic properties, ... and avoids some counterintuitive properties. ...}, topic = {deontic-logic;scheduling;} } @article{ broersen_jm:2011a, author = {Jan M. Broersen}, title = {Making a Start with the \emph{stit} Logic Analysis of Intentional Action}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {40}, number = {4}, pages = {499--530}, topic = {stit;intention;} } @inproceedings{ broersen_jm:2011b, author = {Jan M. Broersen}, title = {Modeling Attempt and Action Failure in Probabilistic Stit Logic}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-Second International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, editor = {Toby Walsh}, pages = {792--797}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my15}, topic = {stit;attempting;} } @incollection{ broersen_jm:2014a, author = {Jan M. Broersen}, title = {On the Reconciliation of Logics of Agency and Logics of Event Types}, booktitle = {{K}rister {S}egerberg on Logic of Actions}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2014}, editor = {Robert Trypuz}, pages = {41--59}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {agency;logic-of-agency;} } @inproceedings{ broersen_jm-etal:2001a, author = {Jan Broersen and Mehdi Dastani and Joris Hulstijn and Zisheng Huang and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {The {BOID} architecture: Conflicts between Beliefs, Obligations, Intentions, and Desires}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifth InternationalConference on Autonomous Agents ({AGENTS-01})}, publisher = {{ACM} Press}, editor = {Elisabeth Andr\'e and Sandip Sen and Claude Frasson and J\"org P. M\"uller}, year = {2001}, pages = {9--16}, abstract = {In this paper we introduce the so-called Beliefs-ObligationsIntentions -Desires or BOID architecture. It contains feedback loops to consider all effects of actions before committing to them, and mechanisms to resolve conicts between the outputs of its four components. Agent types such as realistic or social agents correspond to specific types of conict resolution embedded in the BOID architecture.}, topic = {inhtentions;conflict-resolution;agent-architectures;} } @inproceedings{ broersen_jm-etal:2001b, author = {Jan M. Broersen and Mehdi Dastani and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Wishful thinking}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 5th Dutch-German Workshop on Nonmonotonic Reasoning and Its Applications (DGNMR'01)}, year = {2001}, missinginfo = {Editor, publisher, address, pages}, rtnote = {In RHT collection \ja19\Broersen1.pdf}, topic = {desires;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ broersen_jm-etal:2001c, author = {Jan M. Broersen and Mehdi Dastani and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Formalizing No Wishful Thinking}, journal = {Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {3--4}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my15}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {desires;practical-reasoning;} } @incollection{ broersen_jm-etal:2001d, author = {Jan M. Broersen and Mehdi Dastani and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Resolving Conflicts between Beliefs, Obligations, Intentions, and Desires}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches to Reasoning with Uncertainty}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Salem Benferhat and Philippe Besnard}, pages = {568--579}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my15}, topic = {epistemic-logic;deontic-logic;BDI-architectures;conflict-resolution;} } @article{ broersen_jm-etal:2002a, author = {Jan M. Broersen and Mehdi Dastani and Joris Hulstijn and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Goal Generation in the {BOID} Architecture}, journal = {Cognitive Science Quarterly}, year = {2002}, volume = {2}, number = {3--4}, pages = {428--447}, url = {http://people.cs.uu.nl/mehdi/publication/goalgeneration.ps}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my10}, topic = {goals;goal-formation;} } @article{ broersen_jm-etal:2002b, author = {Jan M. Broersen and Mehdi Dastani and Leon van der Torre}, title = {Realistic Desires}, journal = {Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {287--308}, abstract = {Realism for agents with unconditional beliefs, desires and intentions (BDI agents) has been analyzed in modal logic. This paper provides a logical analysis of realism for agents with conditional beliefs and desires in a rule based approach analogous to Reiter's default logic. We distinguish two types of realism, which we call 'a priori' and 'a posteriori' realism. We analyze whether these two new properties are compatible with other properties discussed in the literature, such as existence of extensions. We show that Reiter's default logic is too strong, in the sense that a weaker notion of maximality of extensions is needed to satisfy realism. Finally we show that several existing approaches do not satisfy the new realism properties, and we introduce a new construction that does satisfy them.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe16, \mr20}, topic = {BDI-architectures;desire;goal-formation;} } @article{ broersen_jm-etal:2005a, author = {Jan M. Broersen and Mehdi Dastani and Leon van der Torre}, title = {Beliefs, Obligations, Intentions and Desires as Components in Agent Architectures}, journal = {International Journal of Intelligent Systems}, year = {2005}, volume = {20}, number = {9}, pages = {893--919}, abstract = {In this article we discuss how cognitive attitudes like beliefs, obligations, intentions, and desires can be represented as components with input/output functionality. We study how to break down an agent specification into a specification of individual components and a specification of their coordination. A typical property discussed at the individual component specification level is whether the input is included in the output, and a typical property discussed at the coordination level is whether beliefs override desires to ensure realism. At the individual level we show how proof rules of so-called input/output logics correspond to properties of functionality descriptions, and at the coordination level we show how global constraints coordinating the components formalize coherence properties.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl19}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;agent-architectures;belief;intentions;desires;} } @article{ broersen_jm-etal:2006a, author = {Jan Broersen and Andreas Herzig and Nicolas Troquard}, title = {Embedding Alternating-Time Temporal Logic in Strategic {S}tit Logic of Agency}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2006}, volume = {16}, number = {5}, pages = {559--578}, topic = {alternating-time-logic;Stit;} } @article{ broersen_jm-etal:2009a, author = {Jan M. Broersen and Andreas Herzig and Nicolas Troquard}, title = {What Groups Do, Can Do, and Know They Can Do: A Normal Modal Logic Analysis}, journal = {Journal of Applied Non-classical Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {261--289}, topic = {group-action;agency;epistemic-logic;ability;} } @incollection{ broersen_jm-etal:2012a, author = {Jan Broersen and Dov Gabbay and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Discussion Paper: Changing Norms Is Changing Obligation Change}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic in Computer Science: 11th International Conference, {DEON} 2012}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2012}, editor = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Jan Broersen and Dag Elgesem}, pages = {199--214}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {deontic-logic;obligation-update;} } @incollection{ broersen_jm-meyer_jcc:2013a, author = {Jan M. Broersen and John-Jules Charles Meyer}, title = {Action, Failure and Free Will Choice in Epistemic \emph{stit} Logic}, booktitle = {Epistemology, Context, Formalism}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Franck Lihoreau and Manuel Rebuschi}, pages = {139--166}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {stit;attempting;freedom;volition;} } @article{ broersen_jm-vandertorre_l:2003a, author = {Jan Broersen and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {What an Agent Ought To Do: a Review of {J}ohn {H}orty's `Agency and Deontic Logic{'}}, journal = {{AI} and Law}, year = {2003}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {45--61}, xref = {Review of: horty_jf:2001a}, topic = {deontic-logic;practical-reasoning;pr-course; ability;stit;foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @inproceedings{ broersen_jm-vandertorre_l:2005b, author = {Jan M. Broersen and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Semantic Analysis of {C}hisholm's Paradox}, booktitle = {BNAIC-2005: Proceedings of the 17th Belgium-Netherlands Artificial Intelligence Conference}, year = {2005}, editor = {Katja Verbeeck and Karl Tuyls and Ann Now\'e and Bernard Manderick and Bart Kuijpers}, pages = {28--34}, publisher = {Koninklijke Vlaamse Academie van Belie voor Wetenschappen en Kunsten}, address = {Brussels}, topic = {deontic-logic;conditional-obligation;reparational-obligations;} } @inproceedings{ broersen_jm-vandertorre_l:2007a, author = {Jan Broersen and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Reasoning About Norms, Obligations, Time and Agents}, booktitle = {Agent Computing and Multi-Agent Systems, 10th Pacific Rim International Conference on Multi-Agents, PRIMA 2007}, year = {2007}, editor = {Aditya Ghose and Guido Governatori and Ramakoti Sadanada}, pages = {171--182}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, abstract = {... we introduce a representation of normative systems that distinguishes between norms and the detached obligations of agents over time, leading to a simple and therefore practical way to reason about norms, obligations, time and agents. ... We show how norms can be used to define the persistence of obligations of agents over time. We illustrate our approach by discussing three ways to relate norms and obligations of agents over time. ...}, topic = {practical-reasoning;reasoning-about-norms;temporal-reasoning;} } @article{ brogaard_b:2002a, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}indware: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Cognitive Science}, by {A}ndy {C}lark}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {151--156}, xref = {Review of: clark_a1:2001a}, topic = {philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @article{ brogaard_b:2008a, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {Sea Battle Semantics}, journal = {Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {2008}, volume = {58}, number = {231}, pages = {326--335}, abstract = {According to a commonly held intuition, today's occurrence of the sentence 'There will be a sea battle tomorrow', while truth-valueless today, will have a determinate truth-value by tomorrow night. ... Relativistic semantics has been claimed to do a better job [than traditional] of accommodating intuitions about future contingents than non-relativistic semantics does. However ... despite the initial appearances, standard non-relativistic semantics (plus an account of truth-value gaps) can accommodate both intuitions about future contingents.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl22}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;} } @incollection{ brogaard_b:2011a, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {Primitive Knowledge Disjunctivism}, booktitle = {The Epistemology of Perception}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2011}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Berit Brogard}, pages = {45--73}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {perception;knowledge;epistemology;} } @incollection{ brogaard_b:2011b, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {Centered Worlds and the Content of Perception}, booktitle = {A Companion to Relativism}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, year = {2011}, editor = {Steven D. Hales}, pages = {137--158}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {self-locating-attitudes;perception;} } @article{ brogaard_b:2012a, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {Review of \emph{Truth-Conditional Pragmatics}, by {F}ran\c{c}ois {R}\'ecanati}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {4}, pages = {846--849}, xref = {Review of: recanati_f:2011a}, topic = {semantics-pragmatics;foundations-of-semantics;context;} } @book{ brogaard_b:2012b, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {Transient Truths: An Essay in the Metaphysics of Propositions}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199796908}, xref = {Review: hanks_p1:2014a}, abstract = {What are the things that we assert, believe, and desire? The orthodox view among philosophers is eternalism: these are contents that have their truth-values eternally. Transient Truths provides the first book-length exposition and defense of the opposing view, temporalism: these are contents that can change their truth-values along with changes in the world. ...}, topic = {context;propositions;philosophy-of-time;} } @incollection{ brogaard_b:2014a, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {A Partial Defense of Extended Knowledge}, booktitle = {Extended Knowledge}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2014}, editor = {J. Adam Carter and Jesper Kallestrup and Orestis Palermos and Duncan Pritchard}, pages = {39--63}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {embedded-cognition;epistemology;knowing-how;} } @article{ brogaard_b:2016a, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {Perception and Its Objects}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2016}, volume = {76}, number = {3}, pages = {374--380}, DOI = {doi:10.1093/analys/anw023}, topic = {perception;epistemology;} } @incollection{ brogaard_b:2017a, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {Seeing Things}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 31: Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2017}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {55--72}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {logic-of-perception;} } @incollection{ brogaard_b:2017b, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {Time and Tense}, booktitle = {A Companion to the Philosophy of Language, Second Edition}, publisher = {John Wiley \&\ Sons}, volume = {2}, year = {2017}, editor = {Bob Hale and Crispin Wright and Alexander Miller}, pages = {765--786}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Two of the main debates in philosophy of language concerning time and tense are the debate about the semantics of the tenses in the English language and the debate over whether propositions can be transiently true or false as opposed to always being eternally true or false. The latter quarrel is also known as the 'temporalism-eternalism debate'. This chapter focuses primarily on these two debates. It briefly looks at the relevance of debates about tense and eternalism/temporalism to metaphysical debates about time. The chapter argues that the debates in philosophy of language are not logically independent of the debates in metaphysics. Kaplan's argument for temporalism rests on the premise that there are tense operators in the English language. This makes the debate about tenses directly relevant to the debate about temporalism versus eternalism. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc18}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ brogaard_b:2019a, author = {Berit Brogaard}, title = {What can Neuroscience Tell us About Reference?}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Reference}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Jeannette Gundel and Barbara Abbott}, pages = {365--383}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reference;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ brogaard_b-salerno_j:2008a, author = {Berit Brogaard and Joe Salerno}, title = {Counterfactuals and Context}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2008}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {39--46}, contentnote = {Argues that alleged counterexamples to transitivity, strengthening the antecedent are contextual fallacies.}, topic = {conditionals;context;} } @article{ brogan_ap:1967a, author = {A.P. Brogan}, title = {Aristotle's Logic of Statements about Contingency}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1967}, volume = {76}, number = {301}, pages = {49--61}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1093/mind/LXXVI.301.49}, topic = {Aristotle;modal-logic;} } @incollection{ brogard_b:2017a, author = {Berit Brogard}, title = {Seeing Things}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 31: Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2017}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {55--72}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {perception;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ brogi-contiero:1994a, author = {Antonio Brogi and Simone Contiero}, title = {{G}\"odel as a Meta-Language for Composing Logic Programs}, booktitle = {Logic Programming Synthesis and Transformation, Meta-Programming in Logic: Fourth International Workshops, {LOBSTR}'94 and {META}'94, Pisa, Italy}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Laurent Fribourg and Franco Turini}, pages = {377--394}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {metaprogramming;} } @incollection{ brogi-turini_f:1991a, author = {Antonio Brogi and Franco Turini}, title = {Metalogic for Knowledge Representation}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {61--69}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;logic-programming;semantic-reflection;metareasoning; kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ broker:1998a, author = {Norbert Br\"oker}, title = {Separating Surface Order and Syntactic Relations in a Dependency Grammar}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {174--180}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {dependency-grammar;} } @incollection{ bromberger_s:1962a, author = {Sylvan Bromberger}, title = {What Are Effects?}, booktitle = {Analytical Philosophy, First Series}, publisher = {Barnes and Noble}, year = {1962}, editor = {Ronald J. Butler}, pages = {15--20}, address = {New York}, xref = {Comments on: vendler:1962a.}, topic = {ordinary-language-philosophy;causality;} } @incollection{ bromberger_s:1965a, author = {Sylvan Bromberger}, title = {An Approach to Explanation}, booktitle = {Analytical Philosophy, Second Series}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell}, year = {1965}, editor = {Ronald J. Butler}, pages = {72--105}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {explanation;interrogatives;why-questions;} } @incollection{ bromberger_s:1992a, author = {Sylvain Bromberger}, title = {Types and Tokens in Linguistics}, booktitle = {On What We Know We Don't Know}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Sylvain Bromberger}, pages = {170--208}, address = {Chicago}, topic = {type-token;philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @article{ bromberger_s:2011a, author = {Sylvain Bromberger}, title = {What Are Words? Comments on {K}aplan (1990)}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2011}, volume = {108}, number = {9}, pages = {486--503}, xref = {Commentary on: kaplan_d:1990a, hawthorne_j2-lepore_e:2011a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;referring-expressions;reference;} } @inproceedings{ bromme-etal:1999a, author = {Rainer Bromme and Matthias N\"uckles and Riklef Rambow}, title = {Adaptivity and Anticipation in Expert-Laypeople Communication}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Psychological Models of Communication in Collaborative Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Susan E. Brennan and Alain Giboin and David R. Traum}, pages = {17--24}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {discourse;expert-nonexpert-communication;} } @article{ bronckhart_jp-sinclair_j:1973a, author = {J.P. Bronckhart and H. Sinclair}, title = {Time, Tense, and Aspect}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {1973}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {107--130}, topic = {developmental-psychology;nl-tense;} } @incollection{ bronfman_a-dowell_jl:2016a, author = {Aaron Bronfman and J.L. Dowell}, title = {Contextualism about Deontic Conditionals}, booktitle = {Deontic Modality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Nate Charlow and Matthew Chrisman}, pages = {117--142}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {'ought';modality;deontic-modals;conditionals;context;contextualism;} } @book{ bronstein_d:2016a, author = {David Bronstein}, title = {Aristotle on Knowledge and Learning: The `Posterior Analytics{'}}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: fait_p:2018a}, topic = {Aristotle;history-of-logic;} } @article{ bronxvall-jonsson_p:2003a, author = {Matthias Bronxvall and Peter Jonsson}, title = {Point Algebras for Temporal Reasoning: Algorithms and Complexity}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {149}, number = {2}, pages = {179--220}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;constraint-satisfaction;} } @book{ brooks_fp:1975a, author = {Frederic P. {Brooks, Jr.}}, title = {The Mythical Man-Month}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley Publishing Co}, year = {1975}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, xref = {Revision: brooks_fp:1995a.}, ISBN = {0201006502}, rtnote = {Media Union Library Call No: QA 76.6 .B87}, topic = {software-engineering;} } @article{ brooks_fp:1987a, author = {Frederic P. {Brooks, Jr.}}, title = {No Silver Bullet---Essence and Accidents of Software Engineering}, journal = {{IEEE} Computer}, year = {1987}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, pages = {10--19}, topic = {software-engineering;} } @book{ brooks_fp:1995a, author = {Frederic P. {Brooks, Jr.}}, title = {The Mythical Man-Month}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley Publishing Co}, year = {1995}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, note = {Revised, anniversary edition}, ISBN = {0-201-83595-9}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library QA 76.6 .B87 1995}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Revision: brooks_fp:1975a.}, topic = {software-engineering;} } @book{ brooks_mz:1975a, author = {by Maria Zagorska Brooks}, title = {Polish Reference Grammar}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1975}, address = {The Hague}, ISBN = {9027933138}, rtnote = {UMich GRAD REFERENCE (Non-Circulating), PG 6112 .B87.}, topic = {Polish-language;reference-grammars;} } @inproceedings{ brooks_r:1991a, author = {Rodney Brooks}, title = {Intelligence without Reason}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {Barbara Grosz and John Mylopoulos}, pages = {569--595}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {behavior-based-AI;robotics;} } @article{ brooks_ra:1981a, author = {Rodney A. Brooks}, title = {Symbolic Reasoning among {3-D} Models and {2-D} Images}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, volume = {17}, number = {1--3}, pages = {285--348}, topic = {computer-vision;three-D-reconstruction;} } @article{ brooks_ra:1990a, author = {Rodney A. Brooks}, title = {Elephants Don't Play Chess}, journal = {Robotics and Autonomous Systems}, year = {1990}, volume = {6}, number = {1--2}, pages = {3--15}, topic = {behavioral-robotics;} } @article{ brooks_ra:1991a, author = {Rodney A. Brooks}, title = {Intelligence without Representation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {47}, number = {1--3}, pages = {139--159}, topic = {behavioral-robotics;reactive-AI;foundations-of-AI;krcourse;} } @inproceedings{ brooks_ra:1991b, author = {Rodney A. Brooks}, title = {Intelligence without Reason}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {Barbara Grosz and John Mylopoulos}, pages = {569--595}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {behavior-based-AI;behavioral-robotics;} } @book{ brooks_ra:1999a, author = {Rodney A. Brooks}, title = {Cambrian Intelligence: The Early History of the New {AI}}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-52263-2}, xref = {Review: prince_cg:2002a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, topic = {behavioral-robotics;reactive-AI;behavior-based-AI;situated-robotics;} } @book{ brooks_ra:2002a, author = {Rodney A. Brooks}, title = {Flesh and Machines: How Robots Will Change Us}, publisher = {Pantheon Books}, year = {2002}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-375-42079-7}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci shelves.}, topic = {robotics;AI-editorial;popular-AI;} } @article{ brooks_rr-etal:1996a, author = {R.R. Brooks and S.S. Iyengar and J. Chen}, title = {Automatic Correlation and Calibration of Noisy Sensor Readings Using Elite Genetic Algorithms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {84}, number = {1--2}, pages = {339--354}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper explores an image processing application of optimization techniques which entails interpreting noisy sensor data. The application is a generalization of image correlation; we attempt to find the optimal gruence which matches two overlapping gray scale images corrupted with noise. Both tabu search and genetic algorithms are used to find the parameters which match the two images. A genetic algorithm approach using an elitist reproduction scheme is found to provide significantly superior results.}, topic = {genetic-algorithms;reasoning-about-noisy-sensors; noise-reduction;} } @book{ broome_j:1991a, author = {John Broome}, title = {Weighing Goods: Equality, Uncertainty, and Time}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1991}, rtnote = {GSPIA/Economics Lib HB72 B76 1991}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {multiattribute-utility;} } @article{ broome_j:1995a, author = {John Broome}, title = {The Two-Envelope Paradox}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1995}, volume = {55}, number = {1}, pages = {6--11}, topic = {two-envelope-paradox;} } @incollection{ broome_j:1997a, author = {John Broome}, title = {Is Incommensurability Vagueness?}, booktitle = {Incommensurability, Incomparability, and Practical Reason}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Ruth Chang}, pages = {67--89}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {incommensurability-of-preference;preference;vagueness;} } @article{ broome_j:1999a, author = {John Broome}, title = {Normative Requirements}, journal = {Ratio}, year = {1999}, volume = {12}, missinginfo = {number}, pages = {398--419}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;reasons-for-action;conditional-obligation;} } @incollection{ broome_j:2004a, author = {John {Broome}}, title = {Reasons}, booktitle = {Reason and Value: Themes From the Moral Philosophy of {J}oseph {R}az}, pages = {28--55}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, year = {2004}, topic = {practical-reasoning;reasons-for-action;} } @book{ broome_j:2013a, author = {John Broome}, title = {Rationality Through Reasoning}, publisher = {John Wiley \&\ Sons}, year = {2013}, address = {Chichester}, ISBN-13 = {978-1118656051}, ISBN-10 = {9781118656051}, xref = {Review: horty_jf:2015a}, xref = {Commentary: boghossian_p:2016a,}, abstract = {Gives an account of what reasons are and argues that the connection between rationality and reasons is much less close than many philosophers have thought. Contains rigorous new accounts of oughts including owned oughts, agent-relative reasons, the logic of requirements, instrumental rationality, the role of normativity in reasoning, following a rule, the correctness of reasoning, the connections between intentions and beliefs, and much else. Offers a new answer to the 'motivation question' of how a normative belief motivates an action.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Summer, 2020}, topic = {'ought';reasons-for-action;reasoning-about-obligation;practical-reasoning; rationality;} } @incollection{ broome_j:2013b, author = {John Broome}, title = {Reasons Versus Ought}, booktitle = {Normativity}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2013}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Ram Neta}, pages = {80--97}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {normativity;reasons;} } @article{ broome_j:2014a, author = {John Broome}, title = {Normativity in Reasoning}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {2014}, volume = {95}, number = {4}, pages = {622--633}, abstract = {Reasoning is a process through which premise-attitudes give rise to a conclusion-attitude. ... I argue that to follow a rule is to manifest a particular sort of disposition, which can be interpreted as an intention. An intention is itself a guiding disposition. It can guide you to comply with a rule, and no normative belief is required.}, topic = {reasoning;intention;rule-following;} } @article{ broome_ja:1984a, author = {J.A. Broome}, title = {Indefiniteness in Identity}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1984}, volume = {44}, pages = {263--287}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {vagueness;identity;} } @book{ broughton:2002a, author = {Janet Broughton}, title = {Descartes' Method of Doubt}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {2002}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, xref = {Review: newman_l:2004a}, topic = {Descartes;epistemology;skepticism;} } @article{ brouwer_lej:1913a, author = {L.E.J. Brouwer}, title = {Intuitionism and Formalism}, journal = {Bulletin of the {A}merican {M}athematical {S}ociety}, year = {1913}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {81--96}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Brouwer"}, topic = {intuitionistic-mathematics;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @inproceedings{ brouwer_lej:1948a, author = {L.E.J. Brouwer}, title = {Consciousness, Philosophy, and Mathematics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {X}th International Congress of Philosophy}, year = {1948}, pages = {1235--1249}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Co.}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Brouwer"}, topic = {intuitionistic-mathematics;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ brouwer_t-hansen_cs:2015a, author = {Thomaw Brouwer and Casper Storm Hansen}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}lural Logic}, by {A}lex {O}liver and {T}imothy {S}miley}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2015}, volume = {103}, number = {1}, pages = {1095-1100}, xref = {Review of: oliver_a-smiley_t:2013a}, topic = {plural;plural-logics;} } @book{ browder:1992a, editor = {Felix E. Browder}, title = {Mathematics into the Twenty-First Century: 1988 Centennial Symposium, August 8--12}, publisher = {Providence, R.I. American Mathematical Society}, year = {1992}, address = {Providence}, ISBN = {0821801678}, rtnote = {UMich Science, QA 1 .M42533 1992.}, topic = {mathematics-general;} } @article{ brown_al-etal:1993a, author = {Allen L. {Brown Jr.} and Surya Mantha and Toshiro Wakayama}, title = {Exploiting the Normative Aspect of Preference: A Deontic Logic without Actions}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {9}, number = {1--2}, pages = {167--203}, topic = {deontic-logic;preference;} } @article{ brown_b:1999a, author = {Bryson Brown}, title = {Yes, {V}irginia, There Really Are Paraconsistent Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {28}, number = {5}, pages = {489--500}, topic = {paraconsistency;} } @article{ brown_b:1999b, author = {Bryson Brown}, title = {Adjunction and Aggregation}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1999}, volume = {33}, number = {2}, pages = {273--283}, topic = {lottery-paradox;} } @article{ brown_b:2000a, author = {Bryson Brown}, title = {Yes, {V}irginia, There Really Are Paraconsistent Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {29}, number = {5}, pages = {489--500}, topic = {paraconsistency;philosophy-of-logic;} } @incollection{ brown_b:2007a, author = {Bryson Brown}, title = {Preservationism: A Short History}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic, Volume 8: The Many Valued and Nonmonotonic Turn in Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {2007}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {95--127}, abstract = {Preservationist consequence relations dispense with the usual assumption that the semantic and syntactic properties preserved by consequence must be truth and consistency. Instead, this family of consequence relations draws on other semantic and syntactic features of premise sets, conclusion sets and even of consequence relations themselves. Preserving those features across extensions of sets of sentences, or a range of cases, provides new accounts of consequence. In general, an interesting preservable property of premise sets will be preserved under some but not all extensions of the premise set. This chapter gives an account of the familiar classical consequence relation, emphasizing its preservational character. The main early motivation for preservationism emerges from this account: the need for a consequence relation that deals more constructively with inconsistent premises. The chapter discusses the history of preservationism in rough chronological order, the main preservationist systems, and what is known (and not yet known) about them.}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;preservationism;paraconsistent-reasoning;} } @article{ brown_b-priest_g:2004a, author = {Bryson Brown and Graham Priest}, title = {Chunk and Permeate, a Paraconsistent Inference Strategy. Part {I}: The Infinitesimal Calculus}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {33}, number = {4}, pages = {379--388}, topic = {paraconsistency;infinitesimals;} } @article{ brown_b-scotch_pk:1999a, author = {Bryson Brown and Peter K. Scotch}, title = {Logic and Aggregation}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {28}, number = {3}, pages = {265--287}, topic = {paraconsistency;} } @incollection{ brown_c1:1986a, author = {Curtis Brown}, title = {What Is a Belief State?}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {X}: Studies in the Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {357--378}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {belief;mental-states;} } @article{ brown_c1:1991a, author = {Curtis Brown}, title = {Believing the Impossible}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1991}, volume = {89}, number = {3}, pages = {353--364}, topic = {belief;Pierre-puzzle;} } @article{ brown_c1-luperfoy_s:1991a, author = {Curtis Brown and Steven Luper-Foy}, title = {Belief and Rationality}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1991}, volume = {89}, number = {3}, pages = {323--329}, topic = {belief;rationality;hyperintensionality;self-deception;} } @article{ brown_c2:2014a, author = {Campbell Brown}, title = {Minding the Is-Ought Gap}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {53--69}, topic = {is-ought-gap;} } @article{ brown_cd:1965a, author = {Charles D. Brown}, title = {Fallacies in {R}ichard {T}aylor's `Fatalism{'}}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1965}, volume = {62}, number = {13}, pages = {340--353}, xref = {Commentary on: taylor_r:1962a.}, topic = {(in)determinism;} } @book{ brown_dg:1968a, author = {Donald George Brown}, title = {Action}, publisher = {University of Toronto Press}, year = {1968}, address = {Toronto}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @article{ brown_fm:1977a, author = {F. Malloy Brown}, title = {Doing Arithmetic without Diagrams}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1977}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {175--200}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We describe a theorem prover for elementary number theory which proves theorems not by representing them as diagrams as in a semantic net, but rather by representing them in the traditional manner as lists. This theorem prover uses no chaining rules, forward or backward, but instead interaction between equations is based upon the use of many truth-value preserving transformations. These transformations are used in a manner similar to that in which a LISP interpreter executes LISP functions.}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @article{ brown_fm:1978a, author = {Frank M. Brown}, title = {Towards the Automation of Set Theory and its Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1978}, volume = {10}, number = {3}, pages = {281--316}, topic = {set-theory;theorem-proving;computer-assisted-mathematics;} } @article{ brown_fm:1980a, author = {Frank Malloy Brown}, title = {An Investigation into the Goals of Research in Automatic Theorem Proving as Related to Mathematical Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1980}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {221--242}, topic = {theorem-proving;computer-assisted-mathematics;} } @article{ brown_fm:1986a, author = {Frank Malloy Brown}, title = {An Experimental Logic Based on the Fundamental Deduction Principle}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1986}, volume = {30}, number = {2}, pages = {117--263}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Experimental logic can be viewed as a branch of logic dealing with the actual construction of useful deductive systems and their application to various scientific disciplines. In this paper we describe an experimental deductive system called the SYMbolic EVALuator (i.e. SYMEVAL) which is based on a rather simple, yet startling principle about deduction, namely that deduction is fundamentally a process of replacing expressions by logically equivalent expressions. This principle applies both to logical and domain-dependent axioms and rules. Unlike more well-known logical inference systems which do not satisfy this principle, herein is described a system of logical axioms and rules called the SYMMETRIC LOGIC which is based on this principle. Evidence for this principle is given by proving theorems and performing deduction in the areas of set theory, logic programming, natural language analysis, program verification, automatic complexity analysis, and inductive reasoning.}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;set-theory;} } @book{ brown_fm:1987a, editor = {Frank Malloy Brown}, title = {The Frame Problem in Artificial Intelligence: Proceedings of the 1987 Workshop}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1987}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {kr;frame-problem;} } @article{ brown_fm-tarnlund:1979a, author = {Frank Malloy Brown and Sten-{\AA}ke T{\aa}rnlund}, title = {Inductive Reasoning on Recursive Equations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1979}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {207--229}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We investigate several methods of inductive reasoning in the domain of recursive equations, including the method of generalization with beliefs, the method of successive refinement, and temporal methods based on comparisons with previously solved problems. }, topic = {learning-theory;inductive-reasoning;} } @book{ brown_g1:1989a, author = {Geoffrey Brown}, title = {Minds, Brains and Machines}, publisher = {St. Martin's Press}, year = {1989}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-312-03144-0}, xref = {Review: dipert:1994a.}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ brown_g1:1995a, author = {Gillian Brown}, title = {Speakers, Listeners, and Communication: Explorations in Discourse Analysis}, publisher = {Cambridge Univesity Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, England}, contentnote = {This is about the "map task".}, xref = {Review: mcroy_s:1996a.}, topic = {discourse;discourse-analysis;referring-expressions; definite-descriptions;anaphora;pragmatics;} } @book{ brown_g1-yule:1983a, author = {Gillian Brown and George Yule}, title = {Discourse Analysis}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Reading notes files, "Brown-Yule"}, topic = {discourse;discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @article{ brown_gp:1980a, author = {Gretchen P. Brown}, title = {Characterizing Indirect Speech Acts}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, volume = {6}, year = {1980}, pages = {150--166}, topic = {pragmatics;speech-acts;indirect-speech-acts;} } @incollection{ brown_ja:2008a, author = {Jessica A. Brown}, title = {The Knowledge Norm for Assertion}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {89--103}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap11}, topic = {knowledge;assertion;} } @article{ brown_ja:2010a, author = {Jessica A. Brown}, title = {Knowledge and Assertion}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {2010}, volume = {81}, number = {3}, pages = {549--566}, abstract = {... While much of the literature has focussed on the idea that knowledge is necessary for warranted assertion, here I focus on the idea that knowledge is sufficient for warranted assertion.}, topic = {knowledge;assertion;} } @incollection{ brown_ja:2011a, author = {Jessica A. Brown}, title = {Fallibilism and the Knowledge Norm for Assertion and Practical Reasoning}, booktitle = {Assertion: New Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Jessica A. Brown and Herman Cappelen}, pages = {153--174}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {assertion;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ brown_ja:2012a, author = {Jessica A. Brown}, title = {Assertion and Practical Reasoning: Common or Divergent Epistemic Standards}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {2012}, volume = {84}, number = {1}, pages = {123--157}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de21}, topic = {assertion;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ brown_ja:2013a, author = {Jessica A. Brown}, title = {Knowing-How: Linguistics and Cognitive Science}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2013}, volume = {73}, number = {2}, pages = {220--227}, xref = {Commentary on: stanley_j:2011b}, topic = {knowing-how;} } @incollection{ brown_ja:2013b, author = {Jessica A. Brown}, title = {Cognitive Diversity and Epistemic Norms}, booktitle = {Epistemic Agency}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2013}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Baron Reed}, pages = {326--342}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {belief;assertion;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ brown_ja:2013c, author = {Jessica A. Brown}, title = {Infallibilism, Evidence and Pragmatics}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2013}, volume = {73}, number = {4}, pages = {626--635}, topic = {probability;knowledge;evidence;} } @article{ brown_ja:2013d, author = {Jessica A. Brown}, title = {Experimental Philosophy, Contextualism and Subject-Sensitive Invariantism}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {2013}, volume = {86}, number = {2}, pages = {233--261}, topic = {experimental-philosophy;knowledge;contextualism;} } @article{ brown_ja:2014a, author = {Jessica A. Brown}, title = {Impurism, Practical Reasoning, and the Threshold Problem}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2014}, volume = {48}, number = {1}, pages = {179--192}, abstract = {I consider but reject one broad strategy for answering the threshold problem for fallibilist accounts of knowledge, namely what fixes the degree of probability required for one to know? According to the impurist strategy to be considered, the required degree of probability is fixed by one's practical reasoning situation. I distinguish two different ways to implement the suggested impurist strategy. According to the Relevance Approach, the threshold for a subject to know a proposition at a time is determined by the practical reasoning situations she is then in to which that particular proposition is relevant. According to the Unity Approach, the threshold for a subject to know any proposition whatsoever at a time is determined by a privileged practical reasoning situation she then faces, most plausibly the highest stakes practical reasoning situation she is then in. I argue that neither way of implementing the impurist strategy succeeds and so impurism does not offer a satisfactory response to the threshold problem.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my14.}, topic = {probability;knowledge;} } @book{ brown_ja-cappelen_h:2011a, editor = {Jessica A. Brown and Herman Cappelen}, title = {Assertion: New Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {9780199573004}, xref = {Review: sennet_a:2012a}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Jessica Brown and Herman Cappelen, "Introduction and Overview", pp. 1--17 1. Herman Cappelen, "Against Assertion", pp. 21--48 2. Max K\"olbel, "Conversational Score, Assertion and Testimony", pp. 49--78 3. John MacFarlane, "What is Assertion?", pp. 79--96 4. Peter Pagin, "Information and Assertoric Force", pp. 97--136 5. Robert Stalnaker, "The Essential Contextual", pp. 137--149 6. Jessica Brown, "Fallibilism and the Knowledge Norm for Assertion and Practical Reasoning", pp. 153--174 7. Sanford Goldberg, "Putting the Norm of Assertion to Work: the Case of Testimony", pp. 175--196 8. Patrick Greenough, "Truth-Relativism, Norm-Relativism and Assertion", pp. 197--232 9. Jonathan L. Kvanvig, "Norms of Assertion", pp. 233--250 10. Jennifer Lackey, "Assertion and Isolated Secondhand Knowledge", pp. 251--276 11. Ishani Maitra, "Assertion, Norms, and Games", pp. 277--296}, topic = {assertion;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ brown_ja-cappelen_h:2011b, author = {Jessica A. Brown and Herman Cappelen}, title = {Assertion: An Introduction and Overview}, booktitle = {Assertion: New Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Jessica Brown and Herman Cappelen}, pages = {1--17}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {assertion;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ brown_jr:2004a, author = {James Robert Brown}, title = {Peeking into {P}lato's Heaven}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2004}, volume = {71}, number = {5}, pages = {1126--1138}, note = {Philosophy of Science: Proceedings of the 2002 Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part 2: Symposia Papers. Edited by Sandra D. Mitchell.}, topic = {scientific-thought-experiments;} } @book{ brown_jr:2008a, author = {James Robert Brown}, edition = {2}, title = {Philosophy of Mathematics: A Contemporary Introduction to the World of Proofs and Pictures}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2008}, address = {London}, ISBN13 = {9780415960489}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;foundations-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ brown_jr-fehige_y:2014a, author = {James Robert Brown and Yiftach Fehige}, title = {Thought Experiments}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url ={http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2014/entries/thought-experiment/}, year = {2014}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {thought-exeriments;} } @article{ brown_ma:1990a, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {Generalized {S2}-Like Systems of Propositional Modal Logic}, journal = {Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1990}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {53--61}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ brown_ma:1990b, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {Questions and Quantifiers}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1990}, volume = {51}, number = {1--2}, pages = {95--84}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @article{ brown_ma:1990c, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {Action and Ability}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1990}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {95--114}, topic = {action;ability;} } @article{ brown_ma:1992a, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {{`}On Denoting' Updated}, journal = {Acta Analytica}, year = {1992}, volume = {8}, pages = {7--32}, topic = {definite-descriptions;generalized-quantifiers;} } @article{ brown_ma:1992b, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {Normal Bimodal Logics of Ability and Action}, journal = {Srudia Logica}, year = {1992}, volume = {51}, pages = {51900532}, topic = {modal-logic;ability;} } @unpublished{ brown_ma:1993a, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {Semantically Complex Modal Operators}, year = {1993}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Syracuse University; invited address at the May, 1993. meetings of the Association for Symbolic Logic}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "MA Brown"}, topic = {complex-modalities;} } @article{ brown_ma:1995a, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {Stit in Time}, journal = {Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {1}, pages = {88--89}, note = {Abstract.}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {stit;} } @article{ brown_ma:1995b, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {On the Logic of Ability}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {17}, pages = {1--26}, number = {1}, topic = {ability;} } @article{ brown_ma:1995c, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {Action and Ability}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {95--114}, topic = {ability;} } @article{ brown_ma:1996a, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {A Logic of Comparative Obligation}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1996}, volume = {57}, number = {1}, pages = {117--137}, topic = {deontic-logic;qualitative-utility;moral-conflict;} } @incollection{ brown_ma:1999a, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {Agents with Changing and Conflicting Commitments: A Preliminary Study}, booktitle = {Norms, Logics and Information Systems. New Studies in Deontic Logic and Computer Science}, publisher = {IOS Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul McNamara and Henry Prakken}, pages = {109--128}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {deontic-logic;obligation;moral-conflict;commitment; practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ brown_ma:2004a, author = {Mark A. Brown}, title = {Rich Deontic Logic: A Preliminary Study}, journal = {Journal of Applied Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {19--37}, topic = {deontic-logic;branching-time;action-formalisms;} } @book{ brown_ma-carmo:1996a, editor = {Mark A. Brown and Jos\'e Carmo}, title = {Deontic Logic, Agency and Normative Systems: $\Delta${EON}'96, Third International Workshop on Deontic Logic in Computer Science, Sesimbra, Portugal, 11--13 January 1996}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540760156 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 75.5 .D461 1996.}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ brown_ma-goranko_v:1999a, author = {Mark A. Brown and Valentin Goranko}, title = {An Extended Branching-Time {O}ckhamist Temporal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1999}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {143--166}, topic = {branching-time;} } @incollection{ brown_p:2008a, author = {Paul Brown}, title = {The Mechanization of Art}, booktitle = {The Mechanical Mind in History}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Phil Husbands and Owen Holland and Michael Wheeler}, pages = {259--282}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {history-of-AI;computational-creativity;} } @article{ brown_p1:1964a, author = {Patterson Brown}, title = {St. {T}homas' Doctrine of Necessary Being}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1964}, volume = {1973}, pages = {76--90}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {Aquinas;metaphysics;} } @incollection{ brown_p2-levinson_sc:1978a, author = {Penelope Brown and Stephen C. Levinson}, title = {Universals in Language Usage: Politeness Phenomena}, booktitle = {Questions and Politeness: Strategies in Social Interaction}, editor = {Esther N. Goody}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, year = {1978}, pages = {56--289}, topic = {pragmatics;sociolinguistics;speech-acts;} } @incollection{ brown_p2-levinson_sc:1979a, author = {Penelope Brown and Stephen C. Levinson}, title = {Social Structure, Groups and Interaction}, booktitle = {Social Markers in Speech}, editor = {Esther N. Goody}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, year = {1979}, pages = {291--347}, topic = {pragmatics;discourse;sociolinguistics;} } @book{ brown_p2-levinson_sc:1987a, author = {Penelope Brown and Stephen C. Levinson}, title = {Politeness: Some Universals in Language Use}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521308623}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, P40.5.E75 B761 1987}, topic = {pragmatics;sociolinguistics;speech-acts;} } @book{ brown_r1-rollins_cd:1969a, editor = {Robert Brown and Calvin D. Rollins}, title = {Contemporary Philosophy in {A}ustralia}, publisher = {Humanities Press}, year = {1960}, address = {New York}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ brown_r1-watling_j:1950a, author = {Robert Brown and John Watling}, title = {Hypothetical Statements and Phenomenalism}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1950--1952}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {355--366}, xref = {Review: anderson_ar:1954d}, topic = {conditionals;dispositionals;phenomenalism;} } @article{ brown_r1-watling_j:1952a, author = {Robert Brown and John Watling}, title = {Counterfactual Conditionals}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1952}, volume = {61}, pages = {70--71}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Review: anderson_ar:1954d.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @techreport{ brown_r2-etal:1989a, author = {Ralf Brown and Donna M. Gates and Kenneth Goodman and Todd Kaufmann and Marion R. Kee and Lori Levin and Rita McCardell and Teruko Mitamura and Ira A. Monarch and Steven E. Morrison and Sergei Nirenburg and Eric H. {Nyberg, 3rd} and Koichi Takeda and Margalit Zabludowski}, title = {KBMT-89 Project Report}, institution = {Center for Machine Translation, Carnegie Mellon University}, year = {1989}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Shelf.}, topic = {machine-translation;} } @book{ brown_r3:1973a, author = {Roger Brown}, title = {A First Language: The Early Stages}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1961}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-674-30326}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {developmental-psychology;L1-acquisition;} } @article{ brown_t:1993a, author = {Ted Brown}, title = {Unkind Cuts: Rethinking the Rhetoric of Academic Job Rejection Letters}, journal = {College {E}nglish}, year = {1993}, volume = {55}, number = {7}, pages = {770--778}, topic = {academic-ethics;} } @article{ brown_w-etal:2019a, author = {William Brown and Zal\'an Gyenis and Mikl\'os R\'edei}, title = {The Modal Logic of Bayesian Belief Revision}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {5}, pages = {809--824}, abstract = {In Bayesian belief revision a Bayesian agent revises his prior belief by conditionalizing the prior on some evidence using Bayes' rule. We define a hierarchy of modal logics that capture the logical features of Bayesian belief revision. Elements in the hierarchy are distinguished by the cardinality of the set of elementary propositions on which the agent's prior is defined. ... By linking the modal logics in the hierarchy to the strongest modal companion of Medvedev's logic of finite problems it is shown that the modal logic of belief revision determined by probabilities on a finite set of elementary propositions is not finitely axiomatizable. }, topic = {belief-revision;modal-logic;} } @article{ browne_d:1996a, author = {Derek Browne}, title = {Cognitive Versatility}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {507--523}, topic = {cognitive-modularity;} } @book{ browne_gd:1966a, author = {G.D. Browne}, title = {The Philosophy of Logic: 1880--1908}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1966}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @incollection{ brownell-carriger:1991a, author = {Celia A. Brownell and Michael Sean Carriger}, title = {Collaborations among Toddler Peers: Individual Contributions to Social Contexts}, booktitle = {Perspectives on Socially Shared Cognition}, publisher = {American Psychological Association}, year = {1991}, editor = {Lauren B. Resnick and John M. Levine and Stephanie D. Teasley}, pages = {384--397}, address = {Washington, D.C.}, topic = {social-psychology;shared-cognition;} } @inproceedings{ brownschmidt-etal:2002a, author = {Sarah Brown-Schmidt and Ellen Campana and Michael K. Tanenhaus}, title = {Reference Resolution in the Wild: On-line Circumscription of Referential Domains in a Natural Interactive Problem-Solving Task}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Cognitive Science Society}, year = {2002}, editor = {Wayne D. Gray and Christian D. Schunn}, pages = {148--153}, publisher = {Taylor and Francis}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {referring-expressions;psycholinguistics;} } @incollection{ brownschmidt-tanenhaus_mm:2003a, author = {Sarah Brown-Schmidt and Michael M. Tanenhaus}, title = {Referential Domains and the Interpretation of Referring Expressions in Interactive Conversation}, booktitle = {Diabruck 2003: Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Universit\"at des Saarlandes}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ivana Kruijff-Korbayov\'a and Claudia Kosny}, pages = {15--20}, address = {Saarbr\"ucken}, topic = {psycholinguistics;discourse;referring-expressions;} } @inproceedings{ broxval:2002a, author = {Mathias Broxvall}, title = {A Method for Metric Temporal Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {513--518}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ broxvall:2002a, author = {Matthias Broxvall}, title = {Constraint Satisfaction on Infinite Domains: Composing Domains and Decomposing Constraints}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {509--520}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ broxvall-etal:2002a, author = {Mathias Broxvall and Peter Jonsson and Jochen Renz}, title = {Disjunctions, Independence, Refinements}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {140}, number = {1--2}, pages = {153--173}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ bruce_bc:1972a, author = {Bertram C. Bruce}, title = {A Model for Temporal References and its Application in a Question Answering Program}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1972}, volume = {3}, number = {1--3}, pages = {1--25}, topic = {question-answering;temporal-reference;} } @article{ bruce_bc:1975a, author = {Bertram C. Bruce}, title = {Case Systems for Natural Language}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1975}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {327--360}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In many languages (e.g. Latin, Greek, Russian, Turkish, German) the relationship of a noun phrase to the rest of a sentence is indicated by altered forms of the noun. The possible relationships are called (surface) ``cases''. Because (1) it is difficult to specify semantic-free selection rules for the cases, and (2) related phenomena based on prepositions or word order appear in apparently case-less languages, many have argued that studies of cases should focus on meaning, i.e. on ``deep cases''. Deep cases bear a close relationship to the modifiers of a concept. In fact, one could consider a deep case to be a special, or distinguishing, modifier. Several criteria for recognizing deep cases are considered here in the context of the problem of describing an event. Unfortunately, none of the criteria serves as a completely adequate decision procedure. A notion based on the context-dependent ``importance'' of a relation appears as useful as any rule for selecting deep cases. A representative sample of proposed case systems is examined. Issues such as surface versus deep versus conceptual levels of cases, and the efficiency of the representations implicit in a case system are also discussed. }, topic = {nl-semantics;computational-semantics;argument-structure;} } @incollection{ bruce_bc:1986a, author = {Bertram C. Bruce}, title = {Generation as a Social Action}, booktitle = {Readings in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1986}, editor = {Barbara J. Grosz and Karen Sparck Jones and Bonnie L. Webber}, pages = {419--422}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @article{ bruce_bc-newman_d:1978a, author = {Bertram C. Bruce and Denis Newman}, title = {Interacting Plans}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1978}, volume = {2}, pages = {195--233}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {planning;} } @article{ bruce_r:1998a, author = {Rebecca Bruce}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}orpus-Based Methods in Language and Speech Processing}, edited by {S}teve {Y}oung and {G}errit {B}loothooft}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {317--318}, ISBN = {0-7923-4463-4}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;} } @incollection{ bruce_r-etal:1996a, author = {Rebecca Bruce and Janyce Wiebe and Ted Pedersen}, title = {The Measure of a Model}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Eric Brill and Kenneth Church}, pages = {101--112}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {part-of-speech-tagging;software-evaluation;} } @article{ bruce_r-wiebe:1999a, author = {Rebecca F. Bruce and Jance M. Wiebe}, title = {Decomposible Modeling in Natural Language Processing}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {195--207}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;statistical-nlp;} } @incollection{ bruckner:2003a, author = {Anthony Bruckner}, title = {Tensed Sentences, Tenseless Truth Conditions, and Beliefs}, booktitle = {Time, Tense, and Reference}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Alexander Joki\'c and Quentin Smith}, pages = {199--205}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ brueckner_a:1994a, author = {Anthony Brueckner}, title = {Knowledge of Content and Knowledge of the World}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1994}, volume = {103}, number = {2}, pages = {327--343}, topic = {content-externalism;twin-earth;} } @article{ brueckner_a:1999a, author = {Anthony Brueckner}, title = {Difficulties in Generating Scepticism about Knowledge of Content}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1999}, volume = {59}, number = {1}, pages = {59--62}, xref = {Reply: goldberg_sc:1999a}, topic = {content-externalism;} } @article{ brueckner_a:2000a, author = {Anthony Brueckner}, title = {Ambiguity and Knowledge of Content}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2000}, volume = {60}, number = {3}, pages = {257--260}, xref = {Reply to: goldberg_sc:1999a}, xref = {Reply: goldberg_sc:2000a}, topic = {content-externalism;} } @incollection{ brueckner_a:2003a, author = {Anthony Brueckner}, title = {Trees, Computer Program Features, and Skeptical Hypotheses}, booktitle = {The Sceptics: Contemporary Essays}, publisher = {Ashgate}, year = {2003}, editor = {Steven Luper}, pages = {217--226}, address = {Burlington, Vermont}, topic = {content-externalism;} } @article{ brueckner_a:2003b, author = {Anthony Brueckner}, title = {Not Wanting to Know}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2003}, volume = {63}, number = {3}, pages = {250--256}, xref = {Commentary on: nathan_nml:2000a}, topic = {skepticism;knowledge;reasoning-about-knowledge;} } @article{ brueckner_a:2004a, author = {Anthony Brueckner}, title = {Strategies for Refuting Closure for Knowledge}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {4}, pages = {333--335}, topic = {epistemic-logic;knowledge;} } @article{ brueckner_a:2006a, author = {Anthony Brueckner}, title = {Justification and {M}oore's Paradox}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2006}, volume = {66}, number = {3}, pages = {264--266}, xref = {Commentary on: williams_jn:2004a}, topic = {belief;epistemic-logic;Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ brueckner_a:2009a, author = {Anthony Brueckner}, title = {More on Justification and {M}oore's Paradox}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2009}, volume = {69}, number = {3}, pages = {497--499}, xref = {Response to: williams_jn:2009a}, doi = {10.1093/analys/anp065}, topic = {Moore's Paradox;} } @incollection{ brueckner_a:2011a, author = {Anthony Brueckner}, title = {$\sim{\rm K}\sim{\rm SK}$}, booktitle = {The Epistemology of Perception}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2011}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Berit Brogard}, pages = {74--89}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {skepticism;} } @unpublished{ bruffaerts-henin:1990a, author = {A. Bruffaerts and R. Henin}, title = {Non-Monotonic Multiple Inheritance of Attributes: A Logical Reconstruction}, year = {1990}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philips Research Laboratory Belgium.}, rtnote = {Published in Journal of Logic Programming?}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @book{ brugman:1988a, author = {Claudia M. Brugman}, title = {The Story of `Over': Polysemy, Semantics, and the Structure of the Lexicon}, publisher = {Garland Publishing Company}, year = {1988}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0824051777}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 165 .C631 1999}, topic = {lexical-semantics;nl-polysemy;spatial-semantics;} } @incollection{ brugnara:1998a, author = {Fabio Brugnara and Renato de Mori}, title = {Acoustic Modeling}, booktitle = {Spoken Dialogues with Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Renato de Mori}, pages = {141--170}, address = {New York}, topic = {speech-recognition;acoustic-modeling;hidden-Markov-models;} } @incollection{ brugnara-demori:1998b, author = {Fabio Brugnara and Renato de Mori}, title = {Training of Acoustic Models}, booktitle = {Spoken Dialogues with Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Renato de Mori}, pages = {171--197}, address = {New York}, topic = {speech-recognition;acoustic-modeling;hidden-Markov-models;} } @inproceedings{ brun:1998a, author = {Caroline Brun}, title = {Terminology Finite-state Preprocessing for Computational {LFG}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {196--201}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {LFG;compound-nouns;} } @article{ bruner_js:1975a, author = {J.S. Bruner}, title = {The Ontogenesis of Speech Acts}, journal = {Journal of Child Language}, year = {1975}, volume = {2}, pages = {1--19}, topic = {speech-acts;psycholinguistics;} } @article{ brunero_j:2013a, author = {John {Brunero}}, title = {Reasons as Explanations}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, number = {3}, pages = {805--824}, volume = {165}, year = {2013}, topic = {reasons-for-action;} } @article{ bruni_r-sillari_g:2018a, author = {Riccardo Bruni and Giacomo Sillari}, title = {A Rational Way of Playing: Revision Theory for Strategic Interaction}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {3}, pages = {419--448}, topic = {truth;semantic-paradoxes;revision-rules;} } @inproceedings{ bruninghaus-ashley_kd:1991a, author = {Stefanie Bruninghaus and Kevin D. Ashley}, year = {1999}, title = {Toward Adding Knowledge to Learning Algorithms for Indexing Legal Cases}, booktitle = {Seventh International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law}, publisher = {Association of Computing Machinery, New York}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {legal-AI;case-based-reasoning;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ bruninghaus-ashley_kd:1999a, author = {Stefanie Bruninghaus and Kevin D. Ashley}, year = {1999}, title = {Bootstrapping Case Base Development with Annotated Case Summaries}, booktitle = {Third International Conference on Case-Based Reasoning}, address = {Berlin}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, topic = {case-based-reasoning;} } @article{ brunner_lj:1979a, author = {Lawrence J. Brunner}, title = {Smiles Can Be Back Channels}, journal = {Journal of Personality and Social Psychology}, volume = {37}, number = {5}, pages = {728--734}, year = {1979}, topic = {gestures;discourse;pragmatics;} } @book{ brunsson:1985a, author = {Nils Brunsson}, title = {The Irrational Organization: Irrationality as a Basis for Organizational Action and Change}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1985}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0471907952}, rtnote = {UMich SOCIAL WORK, HD58.8 .B781 1985.}, topic = {irrationality;corporate-management;sociology;} } @book{ brunvand:1984a, author = {Jan Harold Brunvand}, title = {The Choking {D}oberman and Other ``New'' Urban Legends}, publisher = {W. W. Norton}, address = {New York}, year = {1984}, topic = {urban-legends;} } @article{ brusoni-etal:1995a, author = {Vittorio Brusoni and Luca Console and Paolo Terenziani}, title = {On the Computational Complexity of Querying Bounds on Differences Constraints}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {74}, number = {2}, pages = {367--379}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Given a consistent knowledge base formed by a set of constraints, efficient query answering (e.g., checking whether a set of constraints is consistent with the knowledge base or necessarily true in it) is practically very important. In the paper we consider bounds on differences (which are an important class of constraints based on linear inequalities) and we analyze the computational complexity of query answering. More specifically, we consider various common types of queries and we prove that if the minimal network produced by constraint satisfaction algorithms (and characterizing the solutions to a set of constraints) is maintained, then the complexity of answering a query depends only on the dimension of the query and not on the dimension of the knowledge base (which is usually much larger than the query). We also analyse how the approach can be used to deal efficiently with a class of updates to the knowledge base. Some applications of the results are sketched in the conclusion.}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;reasoning-about-consistency; complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ brusoni-etal:1998a, author = {Vittorio Brusoni and Luca Console and Paolo Terenziani and Daniele Theseider Dupr\'e}, title = {A Spectrum of Definitions for Temporal Model-Based Diagnosis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {102}, number = {1}, pages = {39--79}, topic = {diagnosis;temporal-reasoning;} } @article{ bruthiaux:1993a, author = {Paul Bruthiaux}, title = {Knowing When to Stop - Investigating the Nature of Punctuation}, journal = {Language and Communication}, year = {1993}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {27--43}, topic = {punctuation;} } @article{ bruthiaux:1995a, author = {Paul Bruthiaux}, title = {The Rise and Fall of the Semicolon: {E}nglish Punctuation Theory and {E}nglish Teaching Practice}, journal = {Applied Linguistics}, year = {1995}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, topic = {punctuation;} } @book{ bruynooghe_m:1994a, editor = {Maurice Bruynooghe}, title = {Logic Programming: Proceedings of the 1994 International Symposium}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262521911}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.63 .L636 1994.}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @article{ bruynooghe_m-etal:2016a, author = {Maurice Bruynooghe and Marc Denecker and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, title = {First Order Logic with Inductive Definitions for Model-Based Problem Solving}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2016}, volume = {37}, number = {3}, pages = {69--80}, topic = {answer-sets;} } @inproceedings{ bry-torge:1996a, author = {F. Bry and S. Torge}, title = {Minimal Model Generation with Positive Unit Hyper-Resolution Tableaux}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {TABLEUX}'96}, year = {1996}, pages = {143--159}, missinginfo = {A's 1st names, publisher, org, address, editor}, topic = {model-checking;minimal-models;} } @phdthesis{ bryan_r:1980a, author = {Robert Bryan}, title = {Elements of an Improved Treatment of Tense, Aspect, and Temporal Deixis in a {M}ontague Framework}, school = {Department of Linguistics, University of Kansas}, year = {1980}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Lawrence, Kansas}, topic = {Montague-grammar;tense-aspect;} } @inproceedings{ bryan_r:1982a, author = {Robert Bryan}, title = {On the Complexity of Temporal Indices: Theoretic Treatment of Tense}, booktitle = {Mid-America Linguistics Conference Papers: 1982}, year = {1982}, editor = {Frances Ingeman}, pages = {33--38}, publisher = {Department of Linguistics, University of Kansas}, address = {Lawrence, Kansas}, topic = {nl-tense;} } @article{ bryant_j:1977a, author = {John Bryant}, title = {The Logic of Relative Modality and the Paradoxes of Deontic Logic}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {78--88}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ bryant_j:1977b, author = {John Bryant}, title = {Austin on Hyoptheticals and Conditionals}, journal = {International Logic Review}, year = {1977}, volume = {16}, pages = {229--231}, topic = {JL-Austin;conditionals;} } @article{ bryce-etal:2008a, author = {Daniel Bryce and Subbarao Kambhampati and David E. Smith}, title = {Sequential {M}onte {C}arlo in Reachability Heuristics for Probabilistic Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {6--7}, pages = {685--715}, topic = {probabilistic-planning;} } @article{ bryce-etal:2011a, author = {Daniel Bryce and William Cushing and Subbarao Kambhampati}, title = {State Agnostic Planning Graphs: Deterministic. Non-Deterministic, And Probabilistic Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {3--4}, pages = {848--889}, topic = {planning-graphs;} } @incollection{ brynjarsdottir_em:2010a, author = {Eyja M. Brynjarsd\'ottir}, title = {Is Relativity a Requirement for Mind-Dependence?}, booktitle = {Context-Dependence, Perspective and Relativity}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fran\c{c}ois R\'ecanati and Isidora Stojanovic and Neftali Villanueva}, pages = {317--332}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {According to a common intuition, a property is subjective or mind-dependent if it is a matter of taste whether an object possesses it or not, and such matters are open to so-called faultless disagreement. ... two people may disagree about whether something is funny, yet both be right. If this intuition is correct, the possibility of subjective properties seems to depend on the possibility of faultless disagreement, which again seems to rely on some type of relativism about truth or facts. ... In this paper, I argue that the mind-dependence of properties does not require faultless disagreement and that indexical relativism, or contextualism, has the resources needed for a coherent notion of subjective property. While contextualism may have its flaws, failure to account for subjective properties is not one of them.}, topic = {context;contextualism;} } @article{ bryson:2006a, author = {Joanna J. Bryson}, title = {The Attentional Spotlight}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2006}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, pages = {29--41}, abstract = {One of the interesting and occasionally controversial aspects of Dennett's career is his direct involvement in the scientific process. This article describes some of Dennett's participation on one particular project conducted at MIT, the building of the humanoid robot named Cog. One of the intentions of this project, not to date fully realized, was to test Dennett's multiple drafts theory of consciousness. I describe Dennett's involvement and impact on Cog from the perspective of a graduate student. I also describe the problem of coordinating distributed intelligent systems, drawing examples from robot intelligence, human intelligence, and the Cog project itself. }, topic = {Daniel-Dennett;consciousness;robotics;} } @book{ bub:1974a, author = {Jeffery Bub}, title = {The Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1974}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ bub:1977a, author = {Jeffrey Bub}, title = {Von {N}eumann's Projection Postulate as a Probability Conditionalization Rule in Quantum Mechanics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {381--390}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @incollection{ bub:1979a, author = {Jeffrey Bub}, title = {The Measurement Problem in Quantum Mechanics}, booktitle = {Problems in the Foundations of Physics}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1979}, editor = {G. Toraldo di Francia}, pages = {71--124}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @book{ bub:1997a, author = {Jeffrey Bub}, title = {Interpreting the Quantum World}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: dickson:1999a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @book{ bub:1999a, author = {Jeffrey Bub}, title = {Interpreting the Quantum World}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052165386-X}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @incollection{ bubenko:1987a, author = {Janis A. {Bubenko, Jr.}}, title = {Information Analysis and Conceptual Modeling}, booktitle = {Databases}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {J. Paradaens}, pages = {141--192}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed with hull:1987a.}, topic = {databases;} } @book{ bublitz-etal:2011a, editor = {Wolfram Bublitz and Andreas H. Jucker and Klaus P. Schneider}, title = {Handbook of Pragmatics, Volume 1: Foundations of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {9786613398383}, rtnote = {Didn't look worth indexing in detail}, topic = {pragmatics;} } @article{ bucalo:1994a, author = {Anna Bucalo}, title = {Modalities in Linear Logic Weaker Than Exponential `Of Course'': Algebraic and Relational Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1994}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {211--232}, topic = {linear-logic;modal-logic;} } @incollection{ buccafurri-etal:1998a, author = {Francesco Buccafurri and Nicola Leone and Pasquale Rullo}, title = {Disjunctive Ordered Logic: Semantics and Expressiveness}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {416--429}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;disjunctive-logic-programming;inheritance;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ buccafurri-etal:1999a, author = {Francesco Buccafurri and Thomas Eiter and Georg Gottlob and Nicola Leone}, title = {Applying Abduction Techniques to Verification}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {abduction;diagnosis;program-verification;} } @article{ buccafurri-etal:1999b, author = {Francesco Buccafurri and Thomas Eiter and Georg Gottlob and Nicola Leone}, title = {Enhancing Model Checking in Verification by {AI} Techniques}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {112}, number = {1--2}, pages = {57--104}, topic = {model-checking;program-verification;} } @article{ buccola_b-etal:2022a, author = {Brian Buccola and Manuel Kri\v{z} and Emmanuel Chemla}, title = {Conceptual Alternatives}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {2}, pages = {265--291}, abstract = {... It is sometimes assumed, explicitly or implicitly, that any word counts [in generating an alternative], as long as that word could have replaced one that was actually pronounced. ... we argue that the level of words is not the right (or at least not the only) level of analysis for alternatives. ... we provide theoretical and experimental arguments that the relation between alternatives and words may be indirect, and that alternatives are not merely linguistic objects in the traditional sense. ... we propose that competition in language is significantly determined by general reasoning preferences ... We propose that such non-linguistic preferences can be measured and that these measures can be used to explain linguistic competition, non-linguistically, and more in depth.}, topic = {alternatives;common-sense-reasoning;} } @article{ buccola_b-spector_b:2016a, author = {Brian Buccola and Benjamin Spector}, title = {Modified Numerals and Maximality}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2016}, volume = {39}, number = {3}, pages = {151--199}, abstract = {In this article, we describe and attempt to solve a puzzle arising from the interpretation of modified numerals like less than five and between two and five. The puzzle is this: such modified numerals seem to mean different things depending on whether they combine with distributive or non-distributive predicates. $\ldots$}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;} } @article{ buchanan_bg:1994a, author = {Bruce G. Buchanan}, title = {The Role of Experimentation in Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Series A: Physical Sciences and Engineering}, year = {1994}, volume = {349}, number = {1689}, pages = {153--165}, note = {Available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/09628428.html}, topic = {experimental-AI;foundations-of-AI;} } @article{ buchanan_bg:2001a, author = {Bruce G. Buchanan}, title = {Creativity at the Metalevel}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2001}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {13--28}, topic = {creativity;} } @article{ buchanan_bg:2005a, author = {Bruce G. Buchanan}, title = {A (Very) Brief History of Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2005}, volume = {26}, number = {4}, pages = {53--60}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @article{ buchanan_bg-etal:1990a, author = {Bruce G. Buchanan and Daniel Bobrow and Randall Davis and John McDermott and Edward H. Shortliffe}, title = {Knowledge-Based Systems}, journal = {Annual Review of Computer Science}, year = {1990}, volume = {4}, pages = {395--416}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {AI-survey;knowledge-engineering;} } @article{ buchanan_bg-etal:2013a, author = {Bruce G. Buchanan and Joshua Eckroth and Reid G. Smith}, title = {A Virtual Archive for the History of {AI}}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2013}, volume = {34}, number = {2}, pages = {85--98}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @article{ buchanan_bg-feigenbaum:1978a1, author = {Bruce G. Buchanan and Edward A. Feigenbaum}, title = {{\sc Dendral} and {\sc Meta-Dendral}: Their Applications Dimension}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1978}, volume = {11}, number = {1--2}, pages = {5--24}, xref = {Republication: buchanan_bg-feigenbaum:1978a2.}, topic = {expert-systems;knowledge-engineering;} } @incollection{ buchanan_bg-feigenbaum:1978a2, author = {Bruce G. Buchanan and Edward Feigenbaum}, title = {{\sc Dendral} and {\sc Meta-Dendral}: Their Applications Dimension}, booktitle = {Readings in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1981}, editor = {Bonnie Webber and Nils J. Nilsson}, pages = {313--322}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: buchanan_bg-feigenbaum:1978a1.}, topic = {expert-systems;knowledge-engineering;} } @book{ buchanan_bg-shortliffe:1984a, author = {Bruce Buchanan and Edward H. Shortliffe}, title = {Rule-Based Expert Systems: The {MYCIN} Experiments of the {S}tanford Heuristic Programming Project}, publisher = {Addison Wesley}, year = {1984}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, topic = {expert-systems;knowledge-engineering;} } @book{ buchanan_jg-tullock:1965a, author = {James M. Buchanan and Gordon Tullock}, title = {The Calculus of Consent: Logical Foundations of Constitutional Democracy}, publisher = {University of Michigan Press}, year = {1965}, address = {Ann Arbor}, ISBN = {0792381106}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, AS 6 .B63 1998.}, topic = {voting-theory;} } @article{ buchanan_r:2010a, author = {Ray Buchanan}, title = {A Puzzle about Meaning and Communication}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2010}, volume = {43}, number = {2}, pages = {340--371}, topic = {propositions;speaker-meaning;context;} } @article{ bucheli_s-etal:2011a, author = {Samuel Bucheli and Roman Kuznets and Thomas Studer}, title = {Justifications for Common Knowledge}, journal = {Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {35--60}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au18}, topic = {multiagent-systems;mutual-knowledge;} } @incollection{ bucher-etal:1999a, author = {Alex B\"ucher and John G. Hughes and David A. Bell}, title = {Contextual Data and Domain Knowledge Discovery Systems}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {447--451}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;knowledge-acquisition;} } @article{ buchheit-etal:1998a, author = {M. Buchheit and Francesco M. Donini and Werner Nutt and Andrea Schaerf}, title = {A Refined Architecture for Terminological Systems: Terminology $=$ Schema $+$ Views}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {99}, number = {2}, pages = {209--260}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {kr;description-logics;kr-course;subsumption;} } @inproceedings{ buchman_d-poole_d:2016a, author = {David Buchman and David Poole}, title = {Negation Without Negation in Probabilistic Logic Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {529--532}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We show how allowing negative noise probabilities allows us to represent arbitrary conditional probabilities without negations. Noise probabilities for non-exclusive rules are difficult to interpret and unintuitive to manipulate; to alleviate this we define "probability-strengths" which provide an intuitive additive algebra for combining rules. For acyclic programs we prove what constraints on the strengths allow for proper distributions on the non-noise variables and allow for all non-extreme distributions to be represented. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {probabilistic-logic-programming;} } @book{ buchstaller-alphen:2012a, editor = {Isabelle Buchstaller and Ingrid van Alphen}, title = {Quotatives: Cross-Linguistic and Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {2012}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {9789027239051 }, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ buchwald_a-etal:2002a, author = {Adam Buchwald and Oren Scwartz and Amanda Seidl and Paul Smolensky}, title = {Recoverability Optimality Theory: Discourse Anaphora in a Bidirectional Framework}, booktitle = {{EDILOG} 2002: Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, pages = {37--44}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Centre, University of Edinburgh}, year = {2002}, editor = {Johan Bos and Mary Ellen Foster and Colin Matheson}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {referring-expressions;optimality-theory;anaphora;} } @article{ buck_r:1991a, author = {Ross Buck}, title = {Social Factors in Facial Display and Communication: A Reply to {Chovil} and Others}, journal = {Journal of Nonverbal Behavior}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {155--161}, year = {1991}, xref = {Reply to chovil:1991a. Reply: chovil-fridlund:1991a.}, topic = {gestures;discourse;} } @incollection{ buck_rc:1962a, author = {Roger C. Buck}, title = {Non-Other Minds}, booktitle = {Analytical Philosophy, First Series}, publisher = {Barnes and Noble}, year = {1962}, editor = {Ronald J. Butler}, pages = {187--210}, address = {New York}, topic = {other-minds;other-modeling;} } @article{ buck_rc:1965a, author = {Roger C. Buck}, title = {Clark on Natural Necessity}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1965}, volume = {62}, number = {21}, pages = {625--629}, xref = {Commentary on: clark_r1:1965a.}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;natural-laws;causality; nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ buckareff:2012a, author = {Andrei A. Buckareff}, title = {An Action-Theoretic Problem for Intraleval Mental Causation}, booktitle = {Action Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {89--105}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {agency;causality;} } @inproceedings{ buckingham_d-etal:2020a, author = {David Buckingham and Daniel Kasenberg and Matthias Scheutz}, title = {Simultaneous Representation of Knowledge and Belief for Epistemic Planning with Belief Revision}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {172--181}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We propose a novel approach to the problem of false belief revision in epistemic planning. Our state representations are pointed Kripke models with two binary relations over possible worlds: one representing agents' necessarily true knowledge, and one representing agents' possibly false beliefs. State transition functions maintain S5n properties in the knowledge relation and KD45n properties in the belief relation. ...}, topic = {epistemic-planning;belief-revision;} } @book{ buckles-petry:1992a, author = {Bill Buckles and Frederic E. Petry}, title = {Genetic Algorithms}, publisher = {{IEEE} Computer Science Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Los Alimatos, California}, topic = {genetic-algorithms;} } @article{ buckner_d-smith_p:1986a, author = {Dean Buckner and Peter Smith}, title = {Quotation and the Liar Paradox}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1986}, volume = {46}, number = {1}, pages = {65--68}, topic = {direct-discourse;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ buckner_dk:1984a, author = {D. K. Buckner}, title = {Goldstein on Quotation}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1984}, volume = {44}, number = {4}, pages = {189--190}, xref = {Commentary on: goldstein_l:1984a}, topic = {type-token;direct-discourse;} } @article{ buckwalter-schaffer_j:2015a, author = {Wesley Buckwalter and Jonathan Schaffer}, title = {Knowledge, Stakes, and Mistakes}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2015}, volume = {49}, number = {2}, pages = {201--234}, topic = {knowledge;risk-sensitivity;} } @inproceedings{ budan_mc-etal:2012a, author = {Maximiliano Celmo Bud\'an and Mauro G\'omez Lucero and Carlos Iv\'an Ches\~nevar and Guillermo Ricardo Simari}, title = {Modelling Time and Reliability in Structured Argumentation Frameworks}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {578--582}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we introduce a novel framework, called Extended Temporal Argumentation Framework (E-TAF), extending TAF with the capability of modeling availability of attacks among arguments, which allows for instance to model reliability of arguments varying over time. We show how E-TAF can be enriched by considering Structured Abstract Argumentation, adding compositional elements to the abstract arguments involved based on a simplified version of the recently introduced Dynamic Argumentation Frameworks.}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;temporal-reasoning;} } @book{ buechner_j:2008a, author = {Jeff Buechner}, title = {G\"odel, {P}utnam, and Functionalism: A New Reading of Representation and Reality}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780262026239 (hardcover : alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate B 835 .B865 2008}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Fall, 2018}, abstract = {... Hilary Putnam was one of the primary architects of functionalism and was the first to propose computational functionalism, which views the human mind as a computer or an information processor. But, in the early 1970s, Putnam began to have doubts about functionalism, and in his masterwork Representation and Reality (MIT Press, 1988), he advanced four powerful arguments against his own doctrine of computational functionalism. ... Buechner systematically examines Putnam's arguments against functionalism and contends that they are unsuccessful. Putnam's first argument uses G\"odel's incompleteness theorem to refute the view that there is a computational description of human reasoning and rationality; his second, the "triviality argument" demonstrates that any computational description can be attributed to any physical system; his third, the multirealization argument, shows that there are infinitely many computational realizations of an arbitrary intentional state; his fourth argument buttresses this assertion by showing that there cannot be local computational reductions because there is no computable partitioning of the infinity of computational realizations of an arbitrary intentional state into a single package or small set of packages (equivalence classes).}, xref = {Review: hensel_wm-milkowski_m:2014a}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;philosophy-of-mind;functionalism; physical-realizations-of-computation;Hilary-Putnam;} } @article{ buechner_j:2010a, author = {Jeff Buechner}, title = {Artificial Moral Agents: Saviors or Destroyers?}, journal = {Ethics and Information Technology}, pages = {363--370}, year = {2010}, volume = {12}, issue = {4}, note = {Review of \emph{{M}oral Machines: Teaching Robots Right from Wrong}, by {W}endell {W}allach and {C}olin {A}llen}, xref = {Review of: wallach-allen_c:2009a}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10676-010-9238-2}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja12}, topic = {popular-AI;computational-ethics;} } @article{ buechner_j:2018a, author = {Jeff Buechner}, title = {Two New Philosophical Problems for Robo-Ethics}, journal = {Information}, year = {2018}, volume = {9}, number = {10}, doi = {10.3390/info9100256}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no18}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ buehner_mj-cheng_pw:2005a, author = {Marc J. Buehner and Patricia W. Cheng}, title = {Causal Learning}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Keith J. Holyoak and Robert G. Morrison}, pages = {143--168}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;causality;learning;} } @article{ bueno_o:2005a, author = {Otavio Bueno}, title = {On the Referential Indeterminacy of Logical and Mathematical Concepts}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2005}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {63--79}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ bueno_o-colyvan_m:2003a, author = {Ot\'avio Bueno and Mark Colyvan}, title = {Paradox without Satisfaction}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2003}, volume = {63}, number = {2}, pages = {152--156}, xref = {Commentary on: priest_g:1997c}, xref = {Commentary: ketland_j:2004a}, topic = {Yablo-paradox;} } @article{ bueno_o-colyvan_m:2011a, author = {Ot\'avio Bueno and Mark Colyvan}, title = {An Inferential Conception of the Application of Mathematics}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2011}, volume = {44}, number = {2}, pages = {345--374}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ bueno_o-etal:2002a, author = {Ot\'avio Bueno and Steven Frence and James Ladyman}, title = {On Representing the Relationship between the Mathematical and the Empirical}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2002}, volume = {69}, number = {3}, pages = {497--518}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;philosophy-of-physics;} } @book{ bueno_o-french_s:2018a, author = {Ottavio Bueno and Steven French}, title = {Applying Mathematics: Immersion, Inference, Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780198815044}, xref = {Review: wilson_m:2020a}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;philosophy-of-physics;} } @article{ bueno_o-shalkowski:2013a, author = {Ot\'avio Bueno and Scott A. Shalkowski}, title = {Logical Constants: A Modalist Approach}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2013}, volume = {46}, number = {1}, pages = {1-24}, topic = {logical-constants;} } @article{ buffett-aberdeen_d:2009a, author = {Olivier Buffet and Douglas Aberdeen}, title = {The Factored Policy-Gradient Planner}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {5--6}, pages = {722--747}, topic = {planning;reinforcement-learning;} } @article{ bugajski:1978a, author = {S{\l}awomir Bugajski}, title = {Probability Inplication in the Logics of Classical and Quantum Mechanics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1978}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {95--106}, topic = {probability;quantum-logic;} } @article{ bugajski:1983a, author = {S{\l}awomir Bugajski}, title = {Languages of Similarity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1983}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {1--118}, contentnote = {Actually, this is extracting a general logical account from ql. But it is hard to classify the topic.}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @article{ bugard-etal:1999a, author = {Wolfram Bugard and Armin B. Cremers and Dieter Fox and Dirk H\"ahnel and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Dirk Schultz and Walter Steiner and Sebastian Thrun}, title = {Experiences with an Interactive Museum Tour Robot}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {114}, number = {1--2}, pages = {3--55}, topic = {robotics;robot-navigation;GoLog;robot-human-interaction;} } @inproceedings{ bui-etal:1996a, author = {H.H. Bui and D. Kieronska and S. Venkatesh}, title = {Learning Other Agents' Preferences in Multiagent Negotiation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Eighth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, Vol. 2}, year = {1996}, editor = {William J. Clancey and Dan Weld}, pages = {114--119}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {distributed-processing;preference-modeling;} } @incollection{ buitclaar_p:2013a, author = {Paul Buitclaar}, title = {Web Semantics}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 3}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {2917--2930}, address = {The Hague}, abstract = {This article presents an overview of web semantics, i.e., the use and study of semantics in the context of the Web. We differentiate between explicit web semantics, building on Semantic Web standards for web-based knowledge representation (ontologies) and reasoning, and implicit web semantics, building on text and link mining from web resources.}, topic = {world-wide-web;n;nlp;computational-semantics;} } @incollection{ buitelaar:1996a, author = {Paul Buitelaar}, title = {Underspecified First Order Logics}, booktitle = {Semantic Ambiguity and Underspecification}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Kees {van Deemter} and Stanley Peters}, address = {Cambridge, England}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {semantic-underspecification;} } @article{ buldt_b-etal:2008a, author = {Bernd Buldt and Benedikt L\"owe and Thomas M\"uller }, title = {Towards a New Epistemology of Mathematics }, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2008}, volume = {68}, number = {3}, pages = {309--329}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;epistemology;} } @unpublished{ bulhak:1996a, author = {Andrew C. Bulhak}, title = {On the Simulation of Postmodernism and Mental Debility Using Recursive Transition Networks}, year = {1996}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Computer Science, Monash University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, url = {citeseer.ist.psu.edu/380936.html}, topic = {nl-generation;postmodernism;} } @article{ bulitko-wilkins_dc:2003a, author = {Vadim Bulitko and David C. Wilkins}, title = {Qualitative Simulation of Temporal Concurrent Processes Using Time Interval {P}etri Nets}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {144}, number = {1--2}, pages = {95--124}, topic = {Petri-nets;temporal-reasoning;qualitative-simulation; limited-rationality;pr-course;} } @article{ bull_ra:1964a, author = {Robert A. Bull}, title = {A Note on the Modal Calculi {S}4.2 and {S}4.3}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"ur mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik}, year = {1964}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {53--55}, xref = {Review: makinson_dc:1968a}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ bull_ra:1965a, author = {Robert A. Bull}, title = {A Class of Extensions of the Modal System {S4} with the Finite Model Property}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"ur mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik}, year = {1965}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {127--132}, xref = {Review: makinson_dc:1968a}, topic = {modal-logic;finite-model-property;} } @article{ bull_ra:1966a, author = {Robert A. Bull}, title = {That All Normal Extensions of {S4.3} Have the Finite Model Property}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"ur mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik}, year = {1966}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {341--344}, xref = {Review: makinson_dc:1968a}, topic = {modal-logic;finite-model-property;} } @article{ bull_ra:1968a, author = {Robert A. Bull}, title = {An Algebraic Study of Tense Logics with Linear Time}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1968}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {27--38}, topic = {temporal-logic;algebraic-logic;} } @article{ bull_ra:1968b, author = {Robert A. Bull}, title = {On Possible Worlds in Propositional Calculi}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1968}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {171--182}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ bull_ra:1969a, author = {Robert A. Bull}, title = {On Modal Logic with Propositional Quantifiers}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1969}, volume = {34}, number = {2}, pages = {257--263}, contentnote = {Provides completeness proofs with nonstandard models.}, topic = {modal-logic;propositional-quantifiers;} } @article{ bull_ra:1970a, author = {Robert A. Bull}, title = {An Approach to Tense Logic}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1970}, volume = {36}, number = {3}, pages = {282--300}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @incollection{ bull_ra:1996a, author = {Robert A. Bull}, title = {Logics Without Contraction {I}}, booktitle = {Logic and Reality: Essays on the Legacy of {A}rthur {P}rior}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jack Copeland}, pages = {317--336}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {proof-theory;relevance-logic;} } @incollection{ bull_ra-segerberg_k:1984a, author = {Robert A. Bull and Krister Segerberg}, title = {Basic Modal Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {II}: Extensions of Classical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther}, pages = {1--88}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @incollection{ bull_ra-segerberg_k:2001a, author = {Robert Bull and Krister Segerberg}, title = {Basic Modal Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {III}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2001}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {1--82}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ buller_dj:1993a, author = {David J. Buller}, title = {Confirmation and the Computational Paradigm (Or: Why Do You Think They Call it Artificial Intelligence?)}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {155--181}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;mind-body-problem;} } @book{ buller_dj:2005a, author = {David J. Buller}, title = {Adapting Minds: Evolutionary Psychology and the Persistent Quest for Human Nature}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780262025799}, xref = {Review: machery_e-barrett_hc:2016a}, topic = {philosophy-of-psychology;evolutionary-psychology;} } @incollection{ bullock_s:2008a, author = {Seth Bullock}, title = {Charles Babbage and the Emergence of Automated Reason}, booktitle = {The Mechanical Mind in History}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Phil Husbands and Owen Holland and Michael Wheeler}, pages = {19--40}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @article{ bullock_s-todd_pm:1999a, author = {Seth Bullock and Peter M. Todd}, title = {Made to Measure: Ecological Rationality in Structured Environments}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1999}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {497--541}, abstract = {$\ldots$ Here we explore the impact of frequency and significance structure on the performance of a range of candidate decision-making mechanisms. We show that the character of this impact is complex, since structured environments demand that decision-makers trade off general performance against performance on important subsets of test items. $\ldots$ Failing to appreciate the role of environment structure in shaping cognition can lead to mischaracterising adaptive behavior as irrational. }, topic = {decision-making;satisficing;rationality;} } @incollection{ bullot:2005a, author = {Nicholas J. Bullot}, title = {Context-Dependent and Epistemic Uses of Attention for Perceptual-Demonstrative Identification}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {69--82}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;attention;cognitive-psychology;} } @book{ bulmer:1967a, author = {M.G. Bulmer}, title = {Principles of Statistics}, publisher = {Dover Publications}, year = {1967}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Statistics and information theory shelves.}, topic = {statistics;} } @article{ bulthuis_n:2017a, author = {Nathaniel Bulthuis}, title = {Review of \emph{Linguistic Content: New Essays on the History of Philosophy of Language}, edited by {M}argaret {C}ameron and {R}obert {J}. {S}tainton}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2017}, volume = {126}, number = {4}, pages = {536--541}, xref = {Review of: cameron_m-stainton_rj:2015a}, topic = {history-of-philosophy;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ bumford_d:2017a, author = {Dylan Bumford}, title = {Split-Scope Definites: Relative Superlatives and {H}addock Descriptions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2017}, volume = {40}, number = {6}, pages = {549--593}, abstract = {... I propose that the meaning of 'the' comprises two distinct compositional operations. The first builds a set of witnesses that satisfy the restricting noun phrase. The second tests this set for uniqueness. The motivation for decomposing the denotation of the definite determiner in this way comes from split-scope intervention effects. ... In particular, I analyze well-known examples of mutually recursive definite descriptions like 'the rabbit in the hat' (when there are two rabbits and two hats but only one rabbit in a hat and only one hat with a rabbit in it) as examples of definites whose referent-introducing and referent-testing components are interleaved rather than nested. I further demonstrate that this picture leads to a new theory of relative superlative descriptions like 'the kid who climbed the highest tree' (when there is no highest tree per se, only a highest tree-climbing kid), which explains the previously mysterious role of the definite determiner in licensing such readings.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, contentnote = {'The rabbit in the hat' is a "Haddock sentence", and is claimed to be felicitous only if only 1 salient hat contains a rabbit, and it turns out to contain only 1 rabbit. See }, topic = {definite-descriptions;uniqueness;} } @article{ bumford_d-barker_c:2013a, author = {Dylan Bumford and Chris Barker}, title = {Association with Distributivity and the Problem of Multiple Antecedents for Singular \emph{Different}}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {36}, number = {5}, pages = {355--369}, abstract = {Brasoveanu (2011) argues that 'different' exhibits what he calls association with distributivity: a distributive operator such as 'each' creates a two-part context that propagates through the compositional semantics in a way that can be accessed by a subordinate 'different'. We show that Brasoveanu's analysis systematically undergenerates, failing to provide interpretations of sentences such as 'Every1 boy claimed every girl read a different1 poem', in which 'different' can associate with a non-local distributive operator. We provide a generalized version of association with distributivity, implemented using de Groote's (in: Proceedings of semantics and linguistic theory XVI, 2006) continuation-based dynamic semantics. $\ldots$}, topic = {nl-semantics;'different';} } @inproceedings{ bumford_d-rett_j:2021a, author = {Dylan Bumford and Jessica Rett}, title = {Rationalizing Evaluativity}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 25}, year = {2021}, editor = {Patrick Grosz and Luisa Marti and Hazel Pearson and Yasutada Sudo and Sarah Zobel}, pages = {187--204}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/issue/view/29}, abstract = {Many degree constructions are evaluative in the sense that they require a measure of some sort to exceed a contextually-determined norm. We assume that this inference is always an implicature (Rett, 2015b), and we develop a game-theoretic pragmatic treatment to explain how and when it arises. Our analysis is couched in a Rational Speech Act (RSA) model of communication, building on the theory of vagueness-resolution proposed in Lassiter and Goodman 2014. ...}, topic = {degree-semantics;implicature;game-theoretic-semantics;vagueness;} } @article{ bunder:1992a, author = {M.W. Bunder}, title = {A Simplified Form of Condensed Detachment}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1992}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {169--173}, topic = {resolution;} } @incollection{ bunder:1996a, author = {Martin Bunder}, title = {Logics Without Contraction {II}}, booktitle = {Logic and Reality: Essays on the Legacy of {A}rthur {P}rior}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jack Copeland}, pages = {337--349}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {proof-theory;relevance-logic;} } @incollection{ bunder:2002a, author = {Martin Bunder}, title = {Combinators, Proofs and Implicational Logics}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {VI}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {229--286}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {implicational-logics;combinatory-logic;proof-theory;} } @incollection{ bundgen:1998a, author = {R. B\"undgen et al.}, title = {Parallel Term Rewriting with {P}a{R}e{D}u{X}}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {II}, Systems and Implementation Techniques}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @incollection{ bundgen:1998b, author = {R. B\"undgen}, title = {Rewrite Based Hardware Verification with {R}e{D}u{X}}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {III}, Applications}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @article{ bundy:1978a, author = {Alan Bundy}, title = {Will it Reach the Top? Prediction in the Mechanics World}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1978}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {129--146}, topic = {qualitative-physics;} } @article{ bundy:1983a, author = {Alan Bundy}, title = {The Nature of {AI}: A Reply to {S}chank}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1998}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {29--31}, xref = {Reply to: schank_rc:1983a}, topic = {AI-editorial;} } @incollection{ bundy:1984a, author = {Alan Bundy}, title = {Meta-Level Inference and Consciousness}, booktitle = {The Mind and the Machine: Philosophical Aspects of Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood, Ltd.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Steve B. Torrance}, pages = {156--167}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-and-AI;metareasoning;} } @book{ bundy:1994a, editor = {Alan Bundy}, title = {Twelfth International Conference on Automated Deduction {CADE}94}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, address = {Berlin}, series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science}, volume = {814}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .A96 A851 2000}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @article{ bundy:1994b, author = {Alan Bundy}, title = {A Subsumption Architecture for Theorem Proving?}, journal = {Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Series A: Physical Sciences and Engineering}, year = {1994}, volume = {349}, number = {1689}, pages = {4--85}, note = {Available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/09628428.html}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Zip disk.}, contentnote = {This paper contains a useful summary of work in theorem proving.}, topic = {theorem-proving;behavioral-modules;theorem-proving-tactics;} } @article{ bundy:2012a, author = {Alan Bundy}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}omputational Logic and Human Thinking: How to Be Artificially Intelligent}, by {R}obert {K}owalski}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {191--192}, pages = {96--97}, xref = {Review of: kowalski:2011a.}, xref = {Repetition: bundy:2013a}, topic = {logic-programming;reasoning;} } @article{ bundy:2013a, author = {Alan Bundy}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}omputational Logic and Human Thinking: How to Be Artificially Intelligent}, by {R}obert {K}owalski}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {199--200}, pages = {122--123}, xref = {Repetition of: bundy:2013a.}, topic = {logic-programming;reasoning;} } @unpublished{ bundy-etal:1985a, author = {Alan Bundy and Ben du Boulay and Jim Howe and Gordin Plotkin}, title = {The Researcher's Bible}, year = {1985}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Might be useful in preparing guides for graduate students.}, topic = {student-guides;} } @article{ bundy-etal:1985b, author = {Alan Bundy and Bernard Silver and Dave Plummer}, title = {An Analytical Comparison of Some Rule-Learning Programs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {137--181}, topic = {rule-learning;machine-learning;cognitive-architectures;} } @article{ bundy-etal:1993a, author = {Alan Bundy and Andrew Stevens and Frank van Harmelen and Andrew Ireland and Alan Smaill}, title = {Rippling: A Heuristic for Guiding Inductive Proofs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {62}, number = {2}, pages = {185--253}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We describe rippling: a tactic for the heuristic control of the key part of proofs by mathematical induction. This tactic significantly reduces the search for a proof of a wide variety of inductive theorems. We first present a basic version of rippling, followed by various extensions which are necessary to capture larger classes of inductive proofs. Finally, we present a generalised form of rippling which embodies these extensions as special cases. We prove that generalised rippling always terminates, and we discuss the implementation of the tactic and its relation with other inductive proof search heuristics.}, topic = {search;induction;theorem-proving;} } @article{ bundy-etal:1996a, author = {Alan Bundy and Fausto Giunchiglia and Roberto Sebastiani and Toby Walsh}, title = {Calculating Criticalities}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {88}, number = {1--2}, pages = {39--67}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We present a novel method for building ABSTRIPS style abstraction hierarchies in planning. The aim of this method is to minimize search by limiting backtracking both between abstraction levels and within an abstraction level. Previous approaches for building ABSTRIPS style abstractions have determined the criticality of operator preconditions by reasoning about plans directly. Here, we adopt a simpler and faster approach where we use numerical simulation of the planning process. We develop a simple but powerful theory to demonstrate the theoretical advantages of our approach. We use this theory to identify some simple properties lacking in previous approaches but possessed by our method. We demonstrate the empirical advantages of our approach by a set of four benchmark experiments using the ABTWEAK system. We compare the quality of the abstraction hierarchies generated with those built by the ALPINE and HIGHPOINT algorithms. }, topic = {abstraction;planning-algorithms;} } @article{ bundy-welham:1981a, author = {Alan Bundy and Bob Welham}, title = {Using Meta-Level Inference for Selective Application of Multiple Rewrite Rule Sets in Algebraic Manipulation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {189--212}, topic = {algebraic-computation;metareasoning;} } @book{ bunge_m:1959a, author = {Mario Bunge}, title = {Causality}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1959}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ bunge_m:1968a, author = {Mario Bunge}, title = {Physical Time: the Objective and Relational Theory}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1968}, volume = {35}, number = {4}, pages = {355-388}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;philosophy-of-physics;} } @article{ bunge_m:1974a, author = {Mario Bunge}, title = {The Relations of Logic and Semantics to Ontology}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1974}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {195--209}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;logic-and-ontology;} } @article{ bunn:2000a, author = {James H. Bunn}, title = {Universal Grammar or Common Syntax? A Critical Study of {J}ackendoff's \emph{Patterns in the Mind}}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {119--128}, xref = {Review of: }, topic = {universal-grammar;innate-ideas;} } @book{ bunnin-tsuijames:1996a, editor = {Nicholas Bunnin and E.P. Tsui-James}, title = {The {B}lackwell Companion To Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Reference,\}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631187898 (pbk)}, topic = {philosophy-reference;} } @incollection{ bunt_h:2000a, author = {Harry Bunt}, title = {Dialogue Pragmatics and Context Specification}, booktitle = {Abduction, Belief, and Context in Dialogue: Studies in Computational Pragmatics}, publisher = {Benjamins}, year = {2000}, editor = {Harry Bunt and William Black}, pages = {81--150}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja243}, topic = {computational-dialogue;context;} } @incollection{ bunt_hc:1978a, author = {Harry Bunt}, title = {A Formal Semantic Analysis of Mass Terms and Amount Terms}, booktitle = {Amsterdam Papers in Formal Grammar, Volume 2}, publisher = {University of Amsterdam}, year = {1978}, editor = {Jeroen Groenendijk and Martin Stokhof}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {nl-semantics;mass-term-semantics;} } @incollection{ bunt_hc:1981a, author = {Harry Bunt}, title = {Parsing with Discontinuous Phrase Structure Grammar}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Parsing Technology}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1981}, editor = {Masaru Tomita}, pages = {49--63}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;discontinuous-constituents;} } @book{ bunt_hc:1985a, author = {Harry C. Bunt}, title = {Mass Terms and Model-Theoretic Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: 805 C185 v.42}, topic = {mass-term-semantics;} } @incollection{ bunt_hc:1989a, author = {Harry C. Bunt}, title = {Information Dialogues as Communication Dialogues in Relation to User Modeling and Information Processing}, booktitle = {The Structure of Multimodal Dialogue, Volume 1}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Co.}, year = {1989}, editor = {M.M. Taylor and F. N\'eel and and D.G. Bouwhuis}, pages = {47--73}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @article{ bunt_hc:1994a, author = {Harry C. Bunt}, title = {Context and Dialogue Control}, journal = {{THINK} Quarterly}, year = {1994}, volume = {3}, pages = {19--31}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {context;computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ bunt_hc:1996a, author = {Harry C. Bunt}, title = {Dynamic Interpretation and Dialogue Theory}, booktitle = {The Structure of Multimodal Dialogue, Volume 2}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {1996}, editor = {Michael M. Taylor and F. N\'eel and and Don G. Bouwhuis}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;computational-dialog;} } @incollection{ bunt_hc:1998a, author = {Harry C. Bunt}, title = {Iterative Context Specification and Dialogue Analysis}, booktitle = {Abduction, Belief, and Context in Dialogue: Studies in Computational Pragmatics}, publisher = {University College Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Harry C. Bunt and W.J. Black}, pages = {73--129}, address = {London}, topic = {context;computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ bunt_hc:1998b, author = {Harry C. Bunt}, title = {Dialogue Pragmatics and Context Specification}, booktitle = {Abduction, Belief, and Context in Dialogue: Studies in Computational Pragmatics}, publisher = {University College Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Harry C. Bunt and W.J. Black}, pages = {81--150}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja23}, topic = {context;computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ bunt_hc:1999a, author = {Harry Bunt}, title = {Context Representation for Dialogue Management}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {77--90}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;discourse;computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ bunt_hc:2000a, author = {Harry Bunt}, title = {Requirements for Dialogue Context Management}, booktitle = {Formal Aspects of Context}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Pierre Bonzon and Marcos Cavalcanti and Rolf Nossum}, pages = {23--36}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {context;computational-dialogue;speech-acts;} } @inproceedings{ bunt_hc:2003a, author = {Harry Bunt}, title = {Modular Partial Models: A Formalism for Context Representation}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {427--434}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;partial-logic;} } @inproceedings{ bunt_hc:2005a, author = {Harry Bunt}, title = {Quantification and Modification Represented as Feature Structures}, booktitle = {Proceedings 6th International Workshop on Computational Semantics (IWCS-6)}, year = {2005}, editor = {Harry C. Bunt and and J. Geertzen}, pages = {54--65}, publisher={Tilburg University, Computational Linguistics \&\ AI Group}, address = {Tilburg}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;feature-structures;} } @book{ bunt_hc-beun:2001a, editor = {Harry Bunt and Robbert-Jan Beun}, title = {Cooperative Multimodal Communication: Second International Conference, {CMC}'98, {T}ilburg, {T}he {N}etherlands, {J}anuary 28-30, 1998}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {ISBN: 3540428062 (softcover)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library Call No: QA 76.9 .H85 I5961 1998}, topic = {multimodal-communication;} } @book{ bunt_hc-black_w:2000a, editor = {Harry Bunt and William Black}, title = {Abduction, Belief, and Context in Dialogue: Studies in Computational Pragmatics}, publisher = {Benjamins}, year = {2000}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {1556197942}, topic = {abduction;context;computational-pragmatics;computational-dialogue;} } @book{ bunt_hc-etal:1998a, editor = {Harry Bunt and Robbert-Jan Beun and Tijn Borhguis}, title = {Multimodal Human-Computer Communication: Systems, Techniques, and Experiments}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {354064380X (paper)}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Harry Bunt, "Issues in Multimodal Human-Computer Communication" 2. Mark T. Maybury, "Towards Cooperative Multimedia Interaction" 3. Harry Bunt et al., "Multimodal Cooperation with the Den{K} System" 4. Catherine Pelachaud et al., "Synthesizing Cooperative Conversation" 5. Bonnie Webber, "Instructing Animated Agents: Viewing Language in Behavioral Terms" 6. Jacques Siroux et al., "Modeling and Processing of Oral and Tactile Activities in the {GEORAL} System" 7. Adam Cheyer and Luc Julia, "Multimodal Maps: An Agent-Based Approach" 10. Yi Han and Ingrid Zukerman, "Using Cooperative Agents to Plan Multimodal Presentations" 11.Jean-Claude Martin and Remko Veldman and Dominique B\'eroule, "Developing Multimodal Interfaces: A Theoretical Framework and Guided Propagation Networks" 12. Patrick Bourdot and Mike Krus and Rachid Gherbi, "Cooperation between Reactive 3D Objects and a Multimodal {X} Window Kernel for {CAD}" 13. Fergal McCaffery and Michael McTear and Maureen Murphy, "A Multimedia Interface for Circuit Board Assembly" 14. Kent Wittenburg, "Visual Language Parsing: If I Had a Hammer $\ldots$" 15. John Lee and Keith Stenning, "Anaphora in Multimodal Discourse" 16. Laurel Fais, Kyung-ho Loke-Kim and Young-Duk Park, "Speakers' Responses to Requests for Repetition in a Multimedia Language Processing Environment" 17. Anita Cremers, "Object Reference in Task-Oriented Keyboard Dialogues" 16. Tsuneaki Kato and Yukiko I. Nakano, "Referent Identification Requests in Multi-Modal Dialogs" 17. Carla Huls and Edwin Bos, "Studies into Full Integration of Language and Action" 18. Marie-Christine Bressolle and Bruno Pavard and Marcel Leroux, "The Role of Multimodal Communication in Cooperation: The Cases of Air Traffic Control" }, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 M841 1998.}, topic = {multimodal-communication;} } @book{ bunt_hc-etal:1999a, editor = {Harry Bunt and Reinhard Muskens and Elias Thijsse}, title = {Computing Meaning, Volume 2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1999}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {ISBN 1402001754 (v. 2)}, topic = {computational-semantics;} } @article{ bunt_hc-etal:2009a, author = {Andrea Bunt and Cristina Conati and Joanna McGrenere}, title = {Mixed-Initiative Interface Personalization as a Case Study in Usable {AI}}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2009}, volume = {30}, number = {4}, pages = {58--73}, topic = {HCI;} } @book{ bunt_hc-muskens_r:1999a, editor = {Harry Bunt and Reinhard Muskens}, title = {Computing Meaning, Volume 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1999}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0792361083 (v. 1: HB)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: P 325.5 .D38 C671 1999}, xref = {Review: winter_y:2001a.}, topic = {computational-semantics;} } @book{ bunt_hc-nijholt:2000a, editor = {Harry Bunt and Anton Nijholt}, title = {Advances in Probabilistic and Other Parsing Technologies}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0792366166 (hc)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library Call No: QA 76.9 .N38 A381 2000}, topic = {probabilistic-parsers;parsing-algorithms;statistical-parsing;} } @book{ bunt_hc-tomita:1996a, editor = {Harry Bunt and Masaru Tomita}, title = {Recent Advances in Parsing Technology}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1996}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0792361083}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;nl-processing;} } @incollection{ bunt_hc-vandersloot:1996a, author = {Harry Bunt and K. van der Sloot}, title = {Parsing as Dynamic Interpretation of Feature Structures}, booktitle = {Recent Advances in Parsing Technology}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1996}, editor = {Harry Bunt and Masaru Tomita}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;feature-structures;} } @article{ buntine:1988a, author = {Wray Buntine}, title = {Generalized Subsumption and Its Applications to Induction and Redundancy}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {36}, number = {2}, pages = {149--176}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A theoretical framework and algorithms are presented that provide a basis for the study of induction of definite (Horn) clauses. These hinge on a natural extension of theta-subsumption that forms a strong model of generalization. The model allows properties of inductive search spaces to be considered in detail. A useful by-product of the model is a simple but powerful model of redundancy. Both induction and redundancy control are central tasks in a learning system, and, more broadly, in a knowledge acquisition system. The results also demonstrate interaction between induction, redundancy, and change in a system's current knowledge---with subsumption playing a key role. }, topic = {Horn-clause-abduction;induction;machine-learning;subsumption;} } @techreport{ buntine:1990a, author = {Wray Buntine}, title = {Modelling Default and Likelihood Reasoning as Probabilistic}, institution = {{NASA} Ames Research Center}, number = {FIA--90--09--11-01}, year = {1990}, address = {Moffett Field, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;probability-semantics;} } @article{ buntine:1995a, author = {Wray L. Buntine}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}achine Learning: An Artificial Intelligence Approach}, edited by {Y}ves {K}odratoff and {R}yszard {S}. {M}ichalski}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1995}, volume = {5}, number = {2}, pages = {261--264}, xref = {Review of: kodratoff-michalski:1990a.}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @article{ bunzl:1979a, author = {Martin Bunzl}, title = {Causal Overdetermination}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {76}, pages = {134--150}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ bunzl_m-kreuter_r:2003a, author = {Martin Bunzl and Richard Kreuter}, title = {Conventions Made too Simple?}, journal = {Philosophy of the Social Sciences}, year = {2003}, volume = {33}, number = {4}, pages = {417--426}, abstract = {For Ruth Millikan, convention consists of patterns that are produced by reproduction which proliferate due partly to weight of precedent. The authors argue that on Millikan's account, a lot more is going to count as conventional than seems reasonable on any plausible account of convention. Moreover, at least some things that the authors think ought to be counted as conventions are going to get left out.}, topic = {convention;} } @article{ buraliforti:1897a, author = {Cesare Burali-Forti}, title = {Una Questione sui Numeri Transfiniti}, journal = {Reconditi del Circolo matematico di Palermo {II}}, year = {1897}, volume = {11}, pages = {154--164}, xref = {Reprinted: vanheijenoort:1967a, pp. 104-111}, topic = {set-theory;paradoxes;} } @article{ buras:2006a, author = {Todd Buras}, title = {Counterpart Theory, Natural Properties, and Essentialism}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2006}, volume = {103}, number = {1}, pages = {27--50}, topic = {counterpart-theory;essentialism;} } @incollection{ burbidge_jw:2004a, author = {John W. Burbidge}, title = {Hegel's Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 3: The Rise of Modern Logic: From {L}eibniz to {F}rege}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2004}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Francis Jeffry Pelletier and John Woods}, pages = {131--175}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;Hegel;} } @incollection{ burch:1992a, author = {Robert W. Burch}, title = {Valential Aspects of {P}eircean Algebraic Logic}, booktitle = {Semantic Networks in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Pergamon Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Fritz Lehmann}, pages = {665--677}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {CS-Peirce;history-of-logic;} } @book{ burchfield:1987a, editor = {Robert Burchfield}, title = {Studies in Lexicography}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198119453}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, PE1611 .S781 1987.}, topic = {lexiography;} } @book{ burdea:1996a, author = {Grigore C. Burdea}, title = {Force and Touch Feedback for Virtual Reality}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1996}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0471021415 (alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 B861 1996.}, topic = {HCI;} } @book{ burdea-coiffet:1994a, author = {Grigore Burdea and Philippe Coiffet}, title = {Virtual Reality Technology}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1994}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0471086320}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 B8713 1994.}, topic = {virtual-reality;} } @book{ burdet-etal:2013a, author = {Etienne Burdet and David W. Franklin and Theodore E/ Milner}, title = {Human Robotics}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2013}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-01953-0}, topic = {psychophysics;} } @article{ burdick:1991a, author = {Howard Burdick}, title = {What was Leibniz's Problem about Relations?}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1991}, volume = {88}, number = {2}, pages = {1--13}, topic = {history-of-logic;history-of-philosophy;relations;Leibniz;} } @incollection{ burg-vanderiet:1998a, author = {J.F.M. Burg and R.P. van de Riet}, title = {{COLOR$_{\mbox{X}}$}: Using Knowledge from {W}ord{N}et for Conceptual Modeling}, booktitle = {Word{N}et: An Electronic Lexical Database}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christaine Fellbaum}, pages = {353--377}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {wordnet-software-engineering;} } @article{ burge_t:1972a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Truth and Mass Terms}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1972}, volume = {69}, pages = {263--282}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nl-semantics;mass-term-semantics;} } @article{ burge_t:1973a1, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Reference and Proper Names}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1973}, volume = {70}, number = {14}, pages = {425--439}, xref = {Republication: burge_t:1973a2.}, topic = {reference;semantics-of-proper-names;} } @incollection{ burge_t:1973a2, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Reference and Proper Names}, booktitle = {The Logic of Grammar}, publisher = {Dickenson Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {200-- 209}, address = {Encino, California}, xref = {Original Publication: burge_t:1973a1.}, topic = {reference;semantics-of-proper-names;} } @article{ burge_t:1974a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Reference and Singular Terms}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1974}, volume = {8}, pages = {309--325}, topic = {reference;reference-gaps;} } @article{ burge_t:1974b, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Demonstrative Constructions, Reference, and Truth}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1974}, volume = {71}, number = {7}, pages = {205--223}, topic = {demonstratives;context;} } @article{ burge_t:1974c, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Truth and Singular Terms}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1974}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {309--325}, topic = {reference-gaps;} } @article{ burge_t:1974d, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {A Theory of Aggregates}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1977}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {92--117}, topic = {mereology;nominalism;} } @article{ burge_t:1975a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Mass Terms, Count Terms, and Change}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1975}, volume = {69}, pages = {459--478}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {mass-term-semantics;individuation;} } @article{ burge_t:1975b, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {On Knowledge and Convention}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1975}, volume = {84}, pages = {249--255}, topic = {convention;} } @article{ burge_t:1976a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Belief and Synonymy}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1976}, volume = {75}, pages = {119--338}, topic = {belief;synonymy;hyperintensionality;} } @article{ burge_t:1977a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Belief De Re}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {74}, number = {6}, pages = {338--362}, topic = {belief;individual-attitudes;} } @article{ burge_t:1977b, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Belief De Re}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {74}, number = {6}, pages = {338--362}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;reference;} } @article{ burge_t:1978a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Buridan and Epistemic Paradox}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1978}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {21--35}, topic = {intensional-paradoxes;Buridan;} } @article{ burge_t:1979a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Semantical Paradox}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {76}, number = {4}, pages = {169--198}, rtnote = {Reading notes on file. "Burge".}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ burge_t:1979b, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Individualism and the Mental}, journal = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {73--121}, topic = {content-externalism;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ burge_t:1980a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {The Content of Propositional Attitudes}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1980}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {53--58}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ burge_t:1981a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {The Liar Paradox: Tangles and Chains}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1981}, volume = {41}, pages = {353--366}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ burge_t:1982a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Two Thought Experiments Reviewed}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {23}, number = {3}, pages = {284--293}, contentnote = {Twin earth, arthritis}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ burge_t:1984a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Epistemic Paradox}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1984}, volume = {81}, number={1}, pages={5--29}, topic = {surprise-examination-paradox;} } @incollection{ burge_t:1986a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {On {D}avidson's `Saying that'}, booktitle = {Truth and Interpretation: Perspectives on the Philosophy of {D}onald {D}avidson}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1986}, editor = {Ernest Lepore}, address = {Oxford}, pages = {190--208}, topic = {indirect-discourse;propositional-attitudes;propositions;Davidson; philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ burge_t:1989a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Individuation and Causation in Psychology}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1989}, volume = {70}, number = {4}, pages = {303--332}, topic = {content-externalism;} } @incollection{ burge_t:1990a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Wherein is Language Social?}, booktitle = {Propositional Attitudes: The Role of Content in Logic, Language, and Mind}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, year = {1990}, editor = {C. Anthony Anderson and Joseph Owens}, pages = {113--130}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {foundations-of-linguistic;} } @article{ burge_t:1992a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Philosophy of Language and Mind: 1950--1990}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1992}, volume = {101}, number = {1}, pages = {3--51}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ burge_t:1993a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Content Preservation}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1993}, volume = {102}, number = {4}, pages = {457--458}, topic = {a-priori;justification;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ burge_t:1993b, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Mind-Body Causation and Explanatory Practice}, booktitle = {Mental Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {John Heil and Alfred R. Mele}, pages = {97--120}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {mind-body-problem;causality;explanation;} } @incollection{ burge_t:1998a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Computer Proof, Apriori Knowledge, and Other Minds}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 12: Language, Mind, and Ontology}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {1--37}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {a-priori;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ burge_t:1999a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {A Century of Deflation and a Moment about Self-Knowledge}, journal = {Proceedings and Addresses of the {A}merican {P}hilosophical {A}ssociation}, year = {1999}, volume = {72}, number = {2}, pages = {25--46}, topic = {introspectiono;phenomenalism;} } @article{ burge_t:2007a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Predication and Truth}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2007}, volume = {104}, number = {11}, pages = {580--608}, xref = {Review of: davidson_d:2005a}, topic = {truth;Davidson-semantics;} } @article{ burge_t:2017a, author = {Tyler Burge}, title = {Review of \emph{{W}hat Kind of Creatures Are We?}, by {N}oam {C}homsky}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2017}, volume = {114}, number = {6}, pages = {324--332}, xref = {Review of: chomsky_n:2016a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;philosophy-of-science;} } @inproceedings{ burger_jd:1998a, author = {John D. Burger and David Palmer and Lynette Hirschman}, title = {Named Entity Scoring for Speech Input}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {201--205}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {speech-recognition;named-entity-tagging;} } @book{ burger_w-bhanu:1992a, author = {Wilhelm Burger and Bir Bhanu}, title = {Qualitative Motion Planning}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1992}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0792392515}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library Call No: TJ 211.4 .B871 1992}, topic = {motion-planning;} } @article{ burgess_a:2011a, author = {Alexis Burgess}, title = {Mainstream Semantics + Deflationary Truth}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2011}, volume = {34}, number = {5}, pages = {397--410}, abstract = {Recent philosophy of language has been profoundly impacted by the idea that mainstream, model-theoretic semantics is somehow incompatible with deflationary accounts of truth and reference. The present article systematizes the case for incompatibilism, debunks circularity and "modal confusion" arguments familiar in the literature, and reconstructs the popular thought that truth-conditional semantics somehow "presupposes" a correspondence theory of truth as an inference to the best explanation. The case for compatibilism is closed by showing that this IBE argument fails to rule out two kinds of deflationism: the position Field famously accused Tarski of having; and a less familiar version of the view that defines reference in terms of a deflated notion of truth. Finally, the distinction between unifying and constitutive explanation is used to forestall the response that correspondence theory is literally part of mainstream semantics.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;deflationary-analyses;} } @book{ burgess_a-sherman_b:2014a, editor = {Alexis Burgess and Brett Sherman}, title = {Metasemantics: New Essays on the Foundations of Meaning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199669592}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Alexis Burgess and Brett Sherman, "Introduction: A Plea for the Metaphysics of Meaning", pp. 1--16 1. Seth Yalcin, "Semantics and Metasemantics in the Context of Generative Grammar", pp. 17--54 2. Michael Caie, "Metasemantics and Metaphysical Indeterminacy", pp. 55--96 3. Jeffrey C. King, "The Metasemantics of Contextual-Sensitivity", pp. 97--118 4. Alejandro P\'erez Carballo, "Semantic Hermeneutics", pp. 119--146 5. Mark Greenberg, "Troubles for Content {I}", pp. 147--168 6. Mark Greenberg, "Troubles for Content {II}: Explaining Grounding", pp. 169--184 7. Amie L. Thomasson, "Deflationism in Semantics and Metaphysics", pp. 185--215 8. Sam Cumming, "Discourse Content", pp. 214--230 9. Karen S. Lewis, "Do We Need Dynamic Semantics?", pp. 231--258 10. Michael Glanzberg, "Explanation and Partiality in Semantic Theory", pp. 259--292 11. Matti Eklund, "Replacing Truth?", pp. 293--310 12. Isidora Stojanovic, "Prepragmatics: Widening the Semantics/Pragmatics Boundary", pp. 311--326 13. Richard G. Heck, Jr., "Semantics and Context-Dependence: Towards a {S}trawsonian Account", pp. 327--364 }, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ burgess_a-sherman_b:2014b, author = {Alexis Burgess and Brett Sherman}, title = {Introduction: A Plea for the Metaphysics of Meaning}, booktitle = {Metasemantics: New Essays on the Foundations of Meaning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Alexis Burgess and Brett Sherman}, pages = {1--16}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ burgess_hs:1990b, author = {H.A. Burgess}, title = {The Sorites Paradox and Higher-Order Vagueness}, journal = {Synthese}, year = {1990}, volume = {85}, pages = {417--474}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @article{ burgess_ja:1989a, author = {John A. Burgess}, title = {Vague Identity: {E}vans Misrepresented}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1989}, volume = {49}, pages = {112--119}, number = {3}, xref = {Commentary on: lewis_dk:1988a1}, topic = {vagueness;identity;} } @article{ burgess_ja:1990a, author = {John A. Burgess}, title = {The Sorites Paradox and Higher-Order Vagueness}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1990}, volume = {84}, number = {3}, pages = {417--474}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @article{ burgess_ja:1990b, author = {John A. Burgess}, title = {Vague Objects and Indefinite Identity}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1990}, volume = {59}, pages = {253--287}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @article{ burgess_ja:1997a, author = {John A. Burgess}, title = {Supervaluations and the Propositional Attitude Constraint}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {103--119}, rtnote = {This is not the John Burgess at Princeton.}, topic = {supervaluations;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ burgess_ja:1997b, author = {John A. Burgess}, title = {What Is Minimalism about Truth?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1997}, volume = {57}, number = {4}, pages = {259--267}, topic = {truth;deflationary-analyses;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1978a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {The Unreal Future}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1978}, volume = {44}, number = {3}, pages = {157--179}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my16}, topic = {branching-time;actualism;temporal-logic; future-contingent-propositions;(in)determinism;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1979a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Logic and Time}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1979}, volume = {44}, pages = {566--582}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Burgess".}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1980b, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Decidability for Branching Time}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, number = {2--3}, pages = {203--218}, topic = {decidability;branching-time;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1981a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {The Completeness of Intuitionistic Propositional Calculus for Its Intended Interpretation}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {17--28}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1981b, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Relevance: A Fallacy?}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {97--104}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1981c, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Quick Completeness Proofs for Some Logics of Conditionals}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {76--84}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr22}, topic = {conditionals;modal-logics;completeness-proofs;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1982a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Axioms for Tense Logic {II}: Time Periods}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {23}, number = {4}, pages = {375--383}, abstract = {The present note provides an axiomatizability result for the period-based tense logic of the rationals and the reals...}, topic = {interval-logic;temporal-logic;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1982b, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Axioms for Tense Logic {I}: `Since' and `Until{'} }, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {23}, number = {4}, pages = {367--383}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1984a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Beyond Tense Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1984}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {235--248}, note = {Review of {The Logic of Time}, by {J}ohan van {B}enthem.}, xref = {Review of vanbenthem_j:1983a.}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1984b, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Synthetic Mechanics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1984}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, pages = {379--395}, topic = {nominalism;formalizations-of-physics;logic-and-ontology; formalizations-of-geometry;} } @incollection{ burgess_jp:1984c, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Basic Tense Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {II}: Extensions of Classical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther}, pages = {89--133}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1986a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {The Truth is Never Simple}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1986}, volume = {51}, number = {3}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {truth;semantic-hierarchies;} } @article{ burgess_jp:1991a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Synthetic Mechanics Revisited}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1991}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {121--130}, topic = {nominalism;formalizations-of-physics;logic-and-ontology; formalizations-of-geometry;} } @incollection{ burgess_jp:2001a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Set Theory}, booktitle = {The {B}lackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2001}, editor = {Lou Goble}, pages = {55--71}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {set-theory;} } @article{ burgess_jp:2002a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}ruth and the Absence of Fact}, by {H}artry {F}ield}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2000}, volume = {111}, number = {4}, pages = {603--604}, xref = {Review of: field:2001a}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;truth;} } @incollection{ burgess_jp:2002b, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Basic Tense Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {VII}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {1--42}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @book{ burgess_jp:2005a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Fixing {F}rege}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Princetin, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0691122318}, sref = {Review: parsons_c:2009a}, topic = {Frege;logicism;} } @book{ burgess_jp:2009a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, xref = {Review: humberstone_il:2010a}, topic = {temporal-logic;modal-logic;conditionals;relevance-logic; intuitionistic-logicl;} } @incollection{ burgess_jp:2012a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Model Theory: What it Is and What it Isn't}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Companion to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Gillian Russell and Delia Graff Fara}, pages = {569--578}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;model-theory;} } @article{ burgess_jp:2013a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}xiomatic Theories of Truth}, by {V}olker {H}albach}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2013}, volume = {101}, number = {3}, pages = {637--639}, xref = {Review of: halbach_v:2011a}, topic = {truth;} } @article{ burgess_jp:2014a, author = {John P. Burgess}, title = {Madagascar Revisited}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2014}, volume = {74}, number = {2}, pages = {195--201}, topic = {proper-names;reference;} } @book{ burgess_jp-rosen_g:1997a, author = {John P. Burgess and Gideon Rosen}, title = {A Subject With No Object: Strategies for Nominalistic Interpretation of Mathematics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Phil Sci Shelves.}, xref = {Review: colyvan_m:2001a.}, topic = {nominalism;nominalistic-semantics;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @inproceedings{ burgess_s-dambrosio_b:1996a, author = {Scott Burgess and Bruce D'Ambrisio}, title = {An Efficient Approach for Finding the {MPE} in Belief Networks}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 12th Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence (UAI96)}, year = {1996}, pages = {194--202}, editor = {Eric Horvitz and Finn Jensen}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {probabilistic-reasoning;Bayesian-networks;} } @article{ burghardt_j:2005a, author = {Jochem Burghardt}, title = {E-Generalization Using Grammars}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {165}, number = {1}, pages = {1--35}, topic = {inductive-logic-programming;} } @incollection{ burghardt_w:1978a, author = {Wolfgang Burghardt}, title = {Tense Logic}, booktitle = {Logic and the Formal Theory of Natural Language}, publisher = {H. Buske}, year = {1978}, editor = {J\'anos S. Pet\"ofi}, pages = {252-271}, address = {Hamburg}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @book{ burghardt_w-holker:1979a, editor = {Wolfgang Burghardt and Klaus H\"olker}, title = {Text Processing: Papers in Text Analysis and Text Description}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1979}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3110075652}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P302 .T35.}, topic = {discourse-analysis;} } @book{ burian_r:2004a, author = {Richard Burian}, title = {The epistemology of development, evolution, and genetics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780511610271}, abstract = {...[embryology, evolutionary biology, and genetics] were in conflict for much of the twentieth century and the essays in this collection examine key methodological problems within these disciplines and the difficulties faced in overcoming the conflicts between them.}, topic = {philosophy-of-biology;evolutionary-biology;genetics;developmental-biology;} } @inproceedings{ buring_d:1995a1, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {The Great Scope Inversion Conspiracy}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {V}}, year = {1995}, editor = {Mandy Simons and Teresa Galloway}, pages = {37--53}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, xref = {Journal Publication: buring_d:1995a2.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifier-scope;topic;sentence-focus;pragmatics;} } @article{ buring_d:1995a2, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {The Great Scope Inversion Conspiracy}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {175--194}, xref = {Republication of: buring_d:1995a1.}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;} } @inproceedings{ buring_d:1996a, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {A Weak Theory of Strong Readings}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1996}, editor = {Teresa Galloway and Justin Spence}, pages = {17--34}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;sentence-focus;} } @inproceedings{ buring_d:1998a, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {Identity, Modality, and the Candidate Behind the Wall}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VIII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1998}, editor = {Devon Strolovitch and Aaron Lawson}, pages = {36--54}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;identity;} } @incollection{ buring_d:1999a, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {Topic}, booktitle = {Focus: Linguistic, Cognitive, and Computational Perspectives}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {Peter Bosch and Rob {van der Sandt}}, pages = {121--141}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {sentence-topic;} } @inproceedings{ buring_d:2001a, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {A Situation Semantics for Binding out of {DP}}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2001}, editor = {Rachel Hastings and Brendan Jackson and Zsofia Zvolenszky}, pages = {56--75}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;situation-semantics;binding-theory;} } @article{ buring_d:2003a, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {Crossover Situations}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2004}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {23--62}, topic = {situation-semantics;anaphora;crossover;} } @article{ buring_d:2003b, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {On {D}-Trees, Beans, And {B}-Accents}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {26}, number = {5}, pages = {511--545}, abstract = {This paper presents a comprehensive pragmatic theory of contrastive topic and its relation to focus in English. In discussing various constructions involving contrastive topics,it argues that they make reference to complex, hierarchical aspects of discourse structure. In this, it follows and spellsout a proposal sketched in (Roberts 1996), using the formal tools found in B\"uring (1994,1997). It improves on existing accounts in the accuracy with which it predicts the non-occurrence of the accent patterns associated with focus and contrastive topic, and locates the analysis of contrastive topics within a broader picture of discourse and information structure.}, topic = {contrastive-stress;prosody;} } @article{ buring_d:2004a, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {Focus Suppositions}, journal = {Theoretical Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {1}, pages = {65--76}, xref = {Commentary on: geurts_b-vandersandt_r:2004a}, topic = {sentence-focus;presupposition;'only';'too';} } @book{ buring_d:2005a, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {Binding Theory}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0 521 81280 (hbk)}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {binding-theory;} } @incollection{ buring_d:2011a, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {Pronouns}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {971--995}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;pronouns;anaphora;} } @incollection{ buring_d:2012a, author = {Daniel B\"uring}, title = {Focus and Intonation}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Companion to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Gillian Russell and Delia Graff Fara}, pages = {103--115}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;sentence-focus;intonation;} } @unpublished{ buring_d:2016a, author = {Danial B\"uring}, title = {A Beginner's Guide to Unalternative Semantics}, year = {2016}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Vienna}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/jVmZjAxN/buring.2016.unalternative_semantics.beginners_guide.pdf}, abstract = {Unalternative Semantics (UAS), the theory introduced here, presents a new way to calculate focus alternatives. It directly and compositionally calculates focus alternatives from stress patterns, without the mediation of [F]-markers or similar devices. These alternatives, once assigned to the tree by the semantic rules of UAS, can then be put to use in pretty much the same way as in all other theories. There are other differences, and potential for even more radical changes, but these are not discussed in this paper, the aim of which is to give an informal, yet concise presentation of the basic ideas and techniques, leaving out technical details (for which see B\"uring, 2015, forthcoming.) }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn16}, topic = {sentence-focus;alternatives;intonation;} } @book{ burke_e:1996a, author = {Edmund Burke}, title = {Logic and Its Applications}, publisher = {Prentice Hall}, year = {1996}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0130302635}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.63 .B871 1996.}, topic = {logic-in-cs;logic-in-cs-intro;} } @book{ burke_k:1962a, author = {Kenneth Burke}, title = {A Grammar of Motives and a Rhetoric of Motives}, publisher = {The World Publishing Company}, year = {1962}, address = {Cleveland, Ohio}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {literary-criticism;} } @inproceedings{ burke_l:2019a, author = {Luke Burke}, title = {{P-HYPE}: A Monadic Situation Semantics for Hyperintensional Side Effects}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 23}, year = {2019}, editor = {M. Teresa Espinal and Elena Castroviejo and Manuel Leonetti and Louise McNally and Cristina Real-Puigdollers}, pages = {201--218}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/issue/view/25}, abstract = {P-HYPE is a hyperintensional situation semantics in which hyperintensionality is modelled as a ‘side effect', as this term has been understood in natural language semantics, Charlow (2014); Shan (2007), and in functional programming. We use monads from category theory in order to ‘upgrade' an ordinary intensional semantics to a possible hyperintensional counterpart. ...}, topic = {hyperintensionality;perspective-sensitivity;situation-semantics;} } @article{ burke_mb:2004a, author = {Michael B. Burke}, title = {Dion, {T}heon, and the Many-Thinkers Problem}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {3}, pages = {242--250}, topic = {personal-identity;} } @article{ burke_rd-etal:1997a, author = {Robin D. Burke and Kristian J. Hammond and Vladimir Kulyukin and Steven L. Lytinen and Noriko Tomuro and Scott Schoenberg}, title = {Question Answering from Frequently Asked Question Files: Experiences with the {FAQ} {FINDER} System}, journal = {AI Magazine}, volume = {18}, number = {2}, year = {1997}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {question-answering;case-based-reasoning;wordnet;} } @incollection{ burkert_g:1995a, author = {Gerrit Burkert}, title = {Lexical Semantics and Terminological Knowledge Representation}, booktitle = {Computational Lexical Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Patrick Saint-Dizier and Evelyne Viegas}, pages = {165--184}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-kr;computational-lexical-semantics;description-logics;} } @article{ burkert_hj:1994a, author = {Hans-J\"urgen B\"urkert}, title = {A Resolution Principle for Constrained Logics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {66}, number = {2}, pages = {235--271}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We introduce a constrained logic scheme with a resolution principle for clauses whose variables are constrained by a constraint theory. Constraints can be seen as quantifier restrictions filtering out the values that any interpretation of the underlying constraint theory can assign to the variables of a formula with such restricted quantifiers. We present a resolution principle for constrained clauses, where unification is replaced by testing constraints for satisfiability over the constraint theory. We show that constrained resolution is sound and complete in that a set of constrained clauses is unsatisfiable over the constraint theory if and only if for each model of the constraint theory we can deduce a constrained empty clause whose constraint is satisfiable in that model. We demonstrate that we cannot require a better result in general. But we give conditions, under which at most finitely many such empty clauses are needed or even better only one empty clause as in classical resolution, sorted resolution or resolution with theory unification. }, topic = {resolution;theorem-proving;restricted-quantifiers; completeness-theorems;} } @article{ burkhard_hd-etal:1998a, author = {Hans-Dieter Burkhard and Markus Hannebauer and Jan Wendler}, title = {Belief-Desire-Intention Deliberation in Artificial Soccer}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1998}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {87--93}, topic = {planning;agent-architectures;cognitive-robotics;BDI-architectures;} } @book{ burkhardt_a:1990a, editor = {Armin Burkhardt}, title = {Speech Acts, Meaning and Intentions: Critical Approaches to the Philosophy of John Searle}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {19900}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0-89925-357-1}, topic = {speech-acts;intentionality'Searle;} } @incollection{ burkhardt_f-campbell_r:2015a, author = {Felix Burkhardt and Nick Campbell}, title = {Emotional Speech Synthesis}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {286--295}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;speech-generation;} } @book{ burkhardt_h-smith_b:1991a, editor = {Hans Burkhardt and Barry Smith}, title = {Handbook of Metaphysics and Ontology}, publisher = {Philosophia Verlag}, year = {1991}, address = {Munich}, ISBN = {388405080X}, rtnote = {UMich Grad Reference (Non-Circulating), BD 111 .H2251 1991.}, topic = {metaphysics;ontology;} } @article{ burks_aw:1946a, author = {Arthur W. Burks}, title = {Empiricism and Vagueness}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1946}, volume = {53}, pages = {477--486}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ burks_aw:1951a, author = {Arthur W. Burks}, title = {Reichenbach's Theory of Probability and Induction}, journal = {The Review of Metaphysics}, year = {1951}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {377--393}, topic = {induction;foundations-of-probability;Reichenbach;} } @article{ burks_aw:1951b, author = {Arthur W. Burks}, title = {The Logic of Causal Propositions}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1951}, volume = {60}, pages = {363--382}, contentnote = {Add a causal necessity operator, [c]. []-->[c]. Account for "counterfactual implication" as -A&[c][A-->B].}, number = {239}, topic = {causality;modal-logic;conditionals;} } @article{ burks_aw:1955a, author = {Arthur W. Burks}, title = {Dispositional Statements}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1955}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {175--193}, xref = {Review: berg_j1:1968a}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ burks_aw:1955b, author = {Arthur W. Burks}, title = {On the Presuppositions of Induction}, journal = {The Review of Metaphysics}, year = {1955}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {576--611}, topic = {induction;} } @book{ burks_aw:1963a, author = {Arthur W. Burks}, title = {Chance, Cause, Reason}, publisher = {The University of Chicago Press}, year = {1963}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {0-226-08087-0}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;natural-laws;induction; decision-theory;causality;dispositions;} } @incollection{ burks_aw:1988a, author = {Arthur W. Burks}, title = {The Logic of Evolution, and the Reduction of Holistic-Coherent Systems to Hierarchical-Feedback Systems}, booktitle = {Causation in Decision, Belief Change, and Statistics, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1988}, editor = {William L. Harper and Brian Skyrms}, pages = {135--191}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;philosophy-of-biology; foundations-of-evolution;} } @inproceedings{ burks_aw:2000a, author = {Arthur W. Burks}, title = {Turing's Theory of Infinite Computing Machines (1936-1937) and Its Relation to the Invention of the Finite Electronic Computers (1939-1949)}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Cellular Automata for Research and Industry: Theoretical and Practical Issues on Cellular Automata}, year = {2000}, editor = {Stefania Bandini and Thomas Worsch}, pages = {179--197}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {Turing;history-of-computer-science;} } @article{ burks_aw:2002a, author = {Arthur W. Burks}, title = {The Invention of the Universal Electronic Computer---How the Electronic Computer Revolution Began}, journal = {Future Generation Computer Systems}, year = {2002}, volume = {18}, pages = {871--892}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {history-of-computer-science;} } @article{ burks_aw-copi_im:1956a, author = {Arthur W. Burks and Irving M. Copi}, title = {The Logical Design of an Idealized General-Purpose Digital Computer}, journal = {Journal of the {F}ranklin {I}nstitute}, year = {1956}, volume = {261}, number = {4}, pages = {421--436}, topic = {history-of-computer-science;} } @article{ burnett_h:2014a, author = {Heather Burnett}, title = {A Delineation Solution to the Puzzles of Absolute Adjectives}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2014}, volume = {37}, number = {1}, pages = {1--39}, abstract = {The paper presents both new data and a new analysis of the semantic and pragmatic properties of the class of absolute scalar adjectives (ex. dry, wet, straight, bent, flat, empty, full...) within an extension of a well-known logical framework for the analysis of gradable predicates: the delineation semantics framework (see Klein 1980; van Benthem\, Pac Philos Q 63:193-203, 1982; van Rooij, J Semant 28:335-358, 2011b, among many others). $\ldots$}, topic = {nl-semantics;comparative-constructions;delineation-semantics;} } @article{ burnett_h:2015a, author = {Heather Burnett}, title = {Comparison across Domains in Delineation Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2015}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {233--265}, topic = {nl-semantics;comparative-constructions;delineation-semantics;} } @article{ burnett_h:2019a, author = {Heather Burnett}, title = {Signalling Games, Sociolinguistic Variation and the Construction of Style}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {42}, number = {5}, pages = {419--450}, abstract = {This paper develops a formal model of the subtle meaning differences that exist between grammatical alternatives in socially conditioned variation (called variants) and how these variants can be used by speakers as resources for constructing personal linguistic styles. ... this paper introduces a new formal system, called social meaning games (SMGs), which allows for the unification of variationist sociolinguistics and game-theoretic pragmatics ...}, topic = {socialistics;game-theory;linguistic-style;linguistic-variation;} } @book{ burns:1991a, author = {Linda Claire Burns}, title = {Vagueness: An Investigation into Natural Language and the Sorites Paradox}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1991}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {Hillman P37 B87 1991}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @inproceedings{ burns:1995a, author = {Linda Burns}, title = {Something To Do With Vagueness}, booktitle = {Spindel Conference 1994: Vagueness}, journal = {The Southern Journal of Philosophy, {\rm supplement}}, year = {1995}, editor = {Terry Horgan}, volume = {33}, pages = {23--48}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ burns_b-zach_r:2021a, author = {Samara Burns and Richard Zach}, title = {Cut-Free Completeness for Modular Hypersequent Calculi for Modal Logics {K}, {T}, and {D}}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {910--929}, topic = {modal-logic;proof-theory;cut-free-deduction;} } @incollection{ burnyeat_m:1980a, author = {Myles Burnyeat}, title = {Can the Sceptic Live his Scepticism?}, booktitle = {Doubt and Dogmatism: Studies in {H}ellenistic Epistemology}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1980}, editor = {Malcolm Schofield and Myles Burnyeat and Jonathan Barnes}, pages = {19--53}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Burnyeat"}, topic = {skepticism;} } @book{ burnyeat_m:2001a, author = {Myles Burnyeat}, title = {A Map of {M}etaphysics {Z}eta}, publisher = {Mathesis Publications}, year = {2001}, address = {Pittsburgh}, ISBN = {093522503X}, xref = {Review: macfarlane_j:2003a}, rtnote = {UMich GRADUATE LIBRARY, B 434 .B841 2001.}, topic = {Aristotle;metaphysics;} } @article{ burnyeat_m:2006a, author = {Myles Burnyeat}, title = {The Truth of Tripartition}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {2006}, volume = {106}, number = {1}, pages = {1--23}, topic = {Plato;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ burnyeat_m-frede_m:1997a, editor = {Myles Burnyeat and Michael Frede}, title = {The Original Sceptics: A Controversy}, publisher = {Hackett Publishing Co.}, year = {1997}, address = {Indianapolis}, contentnote = {TC: 1. M. Frede, "The Sceptic's Beliefs" 2. M. Burnyeat, "Can the Sceptic Live His Scepticism?" 3. J. Barnes, "The Beliefs of a Pyrrhonist" 4. M. Burnyeat, "The Sceptic in His Place and Time" 5. M. Frede, "The Sceptic's Two Kinds of Assent" }, topic = {skepticism;Hellenistic-philosophy;} } @article{ buro:2002a, author = {Michael Buro}, title = {Improving Heuristic Mini-Max Search by Supervised Learning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {134}, number = {1--2}, pages = {85--99}, topic = {game-trees;search;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ buron_m-etal:2021a, author = {Maxime Buron and Marie-Laure Mugnier and Micha\"el Thomazo}, title = {Parallelisable Existential Rules: a Story of Pieces}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {163--173}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {In this paper, we consider existential rules, an expressive formalism well adapted to the representation of ontological knowledge, as well as data-to-ontology mappings in the context of ontology-based data integration. The chase is a fundamental tool to do reasoning with existential rules as it computes all the facts entailed by the rules from a database instance. We introduce parallelisable sets of existential rules, for which the chase can be computed in a single breadth-first step from any instance. ...}, topic = {computational-ontology;AI-algorithms;existential-rules;} } @article{ burrell:1964a, author = {David Burrell}, title = {Aristotle and Future Contingencies}, journal = {Philosophical Studies (Ireland)}, year = {1964}, volume = {13}, pages = {37--52}, topic = {Aristotle;future-contingent-propositions;} } @book{ burris:1998a, author = {Stanley N. Burris}, title = {Logic for Mathematics and Computer Science}, publisher = {Prentice Hall}, year = {1998}, address = {Upper Saddle River, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0132859742}, rtnote = {UMich Science, QA 9 .B861 1998}, topic = {logic-in-CS;logic-in-CS-intro;} } @inproceedings{ burrows-etal:1988a, author = {Michael Burrows and Martin Abadi and Roger Needham}, title = {Authentication: A Practical Study in Knowledge and Action}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge}, year = {1988}, editor = {Moshe Y. Vardi}, pages = {325--342}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {distributed-systems;protocol-analysis;} } @inproceedings{ burstein_jc-etal:1998a, author = {Jill C. Burstein and Karen Kukich and Susanne Wolff and Chi Lu and Martin Chodorow and Lisa Braden-Harder and Mary Dee Harris}, title = {Automated Scoring Using a Hybrid Feature Identification Technique}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {206--210}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {nl-processing;automated-test-scoring;} } @incollection{ burstein_jc-etal:1998b, author = {Jill C. Burstein and Karen Kukich and Susanne Wolff and Chi Lu and Martin Chodorow}, title = {Enriching Automated Essay Scoring Using Discourse Marking}, booktitle = {Discourse Relations and Discourse Markers: Proceedings of the Conference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Manfred Stede and Leo Wanner and Eduard Hovy}, pages = {15--21}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {discourse-cue-words;discourse-structure; computer-assisted-educational-testing;} } @book{ burstein_jc-leacock:1997a, editor = {Jill C. Burstein and Claudia Leacock}, title = {From Research to Commercial Applications: Making {NLP} Work in Practice}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Chinatsu Aone and John Maloney, "Re-Use of a Proper Noun Recognition System in Commercial and Operational {NLP} Applications", pp. 1--6 2. Cornelia Tschichold and Franck Bodmer and Etienne Cornu and Francois Grosjean and Lysiane Grojean and Natalie Kubler and Nicholas Lewy and Corinne Tschumi, "Developing a New Grammar Checker for {E}nglish as a Second Language", pp. 7--12 3. Karen Kukich and Rebecca Passaneau and Kathleen McKeown and Dragomir Radev and Vasileios Hataivassiloglou and Hongyan Jing, "Software Re-Use and Evolution in Text Generation Applications", pp. 13--21 4. James Nolan, "Estimating the True Performance of Classification-Based {NLP} Technology", pp. 23--28 5. Ehud Reiter and Liesl Osman, "Tailored Patient Information: Some Issues and Questions", 29--34 6. John Tait and Huw Sanderson and Jeremy Ellman and Anna Maria Martinez San Jose and Peter Hellwig and Periklis Tsagheas, "Practical Considerations in Building a Multi-Lingual Authoring System for Business Letters", pp. 35--42 7. Gary Adams and Philip Resnik, "A Language Identification Application Built on the {J}ava Client-Server Platform", pp. 43--47 8. Michael Gamon and Carmen Lozano and Jessie Pinkham and Tom Reutter, "Practical Experience with Grammar Sharing in Multilingual {NLP}", pp. 49--56 9. Leo Obrst and Krishna Jha, "{NLP} and Industry: Transfer and Reuse of Technologies", pp. 57--63 10. Manny Rayner and David Carter and Ivan Bretan and Robert Eklund and Mats Wir\'en and Steffen Leo Hanssen and Sabine Kirchmeier-Andersen and Christina Philip and Finn S{\o}rensen and Hanne Erdman Thomsen, "Recycling Lingware in a Multilingual {MT} System", pp. 65--70 }, topic = {nlp-technology;} } @book{ burstein_jc-leacock:1998a, editor = {Jill C. Burstein and Claudia Leacock}, title = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Walter Daelemans, "Abstraction is Harmful in Language Learning", pp. 1 2. Michael Towsey and Joachim Diederich, and Ingo Schellhammer and Stephen Chalup and Claudia Brugman, "Natural Language Learning by Recurrent Neural Networks: A Comparison with Probabilistic Approaches", pp. 3--10 3. Sandra K\"ubler, "Learning a Lexicalized Grammar for {G}erman", pp. 11--18 4. Ren\'e Schneider, "A Lexically-Intensive Algorithm for Domain-Specific Knowledge Acquisition", pp. 19--28 5. Andr\'e Kempe, "Look-Back and Look-Ahead in the Conversion of Hidden {M}arkov Models into Finite State Transducers", pp. 29--37 6. Mark Johnson, "The Effect of Alternative Tree Representations on Tree Bank Grammars", pp. 39-48- 7. Thorsten Brants and Wojciech Skut, "Automation of Treebank Annotation", pp. 49--57 8. Hamish Cunningham and Mark Stevenson and Yorick Wilks, "Implementing a Sense Tagger in a General Architecture for Text Engineering", pp. 59--71 9. Ingo Schellhammer and Joachim Diederich and Michael Towsey and Claudia Brugman, "Knowledge Extraction and Recurrent Neural Networks: An Analysis of an {E}lman Network Trained on a Natural Language Learning Task", pp. 73--78 10. Jason L Hutchens and Michael D. Alder, "Finding Structure Via Compression", pp. 79--82 11. Christer Samuelson, "Linguistic Theory in Statistical Language Learning", pp. 83--89 12. Richard McConachy and Kevin B. Korb and Ingrid Zuckerman, "A {B}ayesian Approach to Automating Argumentation", pp. 91--100 13. Stephen J. Green, "Automatically Generating Hypertext in Newspaper Articles by Computing Semantic Relatedness", pp. 101--110 14. Emin Erkan Korkmaz and G\"okt\"urk \"U\c{c}oluk, "Choosing a Distance Metric for Automatic Word Categorization", pp. 111--120 15. Patrick Saint-Dizier, "Sense Variation and Lexical Semantics Generative Operations", pp. 121--130 16. Harold L. Somers, "An Attempt to Use Weighted Cusums to Identify Sublanguages", pp. 131--139 17. Patrick Juola, "Cross-Entropy and Linguistic Typology", pp. 141--149 18. David M.W. Powers, "Applications and Explanations of {Z}ipf's Law", pp. 151--160 19. Peter Wallis and Edmund Yuen and Greg Chase, "Proper Name Classification in an Information Extraction Toolset", pp. 161--162 20. Robert Steele and David Powers, "Evolution and Evaluation of Document Retrieval Properties", pp. 163--164 21. Ilyas Cicekli and Turgay Korkmaz, "Generation of Simple {T}urkish Sentences with Systemic-Functional Grammar", pp. 165--173 22. Ian Thomas and Ingrid Zuckerman and Bhavani Raskutti, "Extracting Phoneme Pronunciation Information from Corpora", pp. 175--183 23. Antal van der Bosch and Ton Weijters and Walter Daelemans, "Modularity in Inductively-Learned Word Pronunciation Systems", pp. 185--194 24. Antal van der Bosch and Walter Daelemans, "Do Not Forget: Full Memory in Memory-Based Learning of Word Pronunciation", pp. 195--204 25. V. kamphuis and J.J. Sarbo, "Natural Language and Concept Analysis", pp. 205--214 26. Jim Entwisle and David Powers, "The Present Use of Statistics in the Evaluation of {NLP} Parsers", pp. 215--224 27. Hiroki Imai and Hozumi Tanaka, "A Method of Incorporating Bigram Constraints into an {LR} Table and its Effectiveness in Natural Language Processing", pp. 225--233 28. James M. Hogan and Joachim Diderich and Gerald D. Finn, "Selective Attention and the Acquisition of Spatial Semantics", pp. 235--244 29. Hideki Kozuma and Akira Iro, "Towards Language Acquisition by an Attention-Sharing Robot", pp. 245--246 30. Michael Carl, "A Constructivist Approach to Machine Translation", pp. 247--256 31. Michael Carl and Antje Schmidt-Wigger, "Shallow Post Morphological Processing with {KURD}", pp. 257--265 32. Erica F. de Lima, "Induction of a Stem Lexicon for Two-Level Morphological Analysis", pp. 267--268 33. Jason L. Hutchens and Michael D. Alder, "Introducing {M}ega{H}al", pp. 271--274 34. V\'eronique Bastin and Denis Cordier, "Methods and Tricks Used in an Attempt to Pass the {T}uring Test", pp. 275--277 35. David M.W. Powers, "The Total {T}uring Test and the {L}oebner Prize", pp. 279--280 36. Zenshiro Kawasaki and Keiji Takida and Masato Tajima, "Language Model and Sentence Structure Manipulations for Natural Language Applications Systems", pp. 281--286 37. Bradley P. Custer, "Position Paper on Appropriate Audio/Visual {T}uring Test", pp. 287--288 38. Tony C. Smith, "Learning Feature-Value Grammars from Plain Text", pp. 291--294 39. Herv\'e D\'ejean, "Morphemes as Necessary Concept for Structures Discovery from Untagged Corpora", pp. 295--298 40. Christopher D. Manning, "The Segmentation Problem in Morphology Learning", pp. 299--305 41. David M.W. Powers, "Reconciliation of Unsupervised Clustering Segmentation and Cohesion", pp. 307--310 42. Isabelle Tellier, "Syntactico-Semantic Learning of Categoriacal Grammars", pp. 311--314 }, topic = {nl-processing;} } @article{ burstein_mh-mcdermott_d:2005a, author = {Mark H. Burstein and Drew V. McDermott}, title = {Ontology Translation for Interoperability among Semantic Web Services}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2005}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {71--82}, topic = {knowledge-integration;computational-ontology;semantic-web;} } @book{ burt:1971a, author = {Marina K. Burt}, title = {From Deep to Surface Structure: An Introduction to Transformational Syntax}, publisher = {Harper \&\ Row}, year = {1971}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-syntax;} } @book{ burton:1993a, editor = {Robert G. Burton}, title = {Natural and Artificial Minds}, publisher = {State University of New York Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Albany}, ISBN = {0-7914-1508-2}, xref = {Review: franklin_s:1999a}, topic = {cognitive-science-general;} } @article{ burtonroberts:1984a, author = {Noel Burton-Roberts}, title = {Modality and Implicature}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {181--206}, topic = {implicature;nl-modality;} } @book{ burtonroberts:1989a, author = {Noel Burton-Roberts}, title = {The Limits to Debate: A Revised Theory of Semantic Presupposition}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521361508}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: 805 C185 v.51}, topic = {nl-semantics;presupposition;} } @book{ burtonroberts-etal:2000a, editor = {Noel Burton-Roberts and Philip Carr and Gerard Docherty}, title = {Phonological Knowledge: Conceptual and Empirical Issues}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0199245770 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {Umich Graduate Library Call No: P 217 .P4821 2000}, topic = {phonology;linguistics-methodology;} } @article{ burtsev_m-etal:2020a, author = {Michael Burtsev and Varvana Logacheva}, title = {Conversational Intelligence Challenge: Accellerating Research with Crowd Science and Open Source}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2020}, volume = {41}, number = {3}, pages = {18--27}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @book{ busa-etal:1998a, editor = {Federica Busa and Inderjeet Mani and Patrick Saint-Dizier}, title = {The Computational Treatment of Nominals: Proceedings of the Workshop}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Toni Badia and Roser Saur\'i, "The Representation of Syntactically Unexpressed Complements to Nouns", pp. 1--9 2. Ralf Naumann, "A Dynamic Temporal Logic of Events, Interval and States for Nominalization in Natural Language", pp. 10--19 3. Evelyne Viegas and Wanying Jin and Ron Dolan and Stephen Beale, "Representation and Processing of {C}hinese Nominals and Compounds", pp. 20--24 4. Adam Meyers and Catherine Macleod and Roman Yangarber and Ralph Grishman and Leslie Barret and Ruth Reeves, "Using {\sc Nomlex} to Produce Nominalization Patterns for Information Extraction", pp. 25--32 5. Sadao Kurohashi and Masaka Murata and Yasunori Yata and Mitsunobu Shimada and Makoto Nagao, "Construction of {J}apanese Nononal Semantic Dictionary Using `{A} {NO} {B}' Phrases in Corpora", pp. 33--38 6. Alexandra Klein and Johannes Matiasek and Harald Trost, "The Treatment of Noun Phrase Queries in a Natural Language Database Access System", pp. 39--45 7. Michael O'Donnell and Hua Cheng and Janet Hitzeman, "Integrating Referring and Informing in {NP} Planning", pp. 46--55 8. Kees van Deemter and Richard Power, "Coreference in Knowledge Editing", pp. 56--60 9. John Goldsmith and Tom Reutter, "Automatic Collection and Analysis of {G}erman Compounds", pp. 61--69 10. Nina Wacholder, "Simplex {NP}s Clustered by Head: A Method for Identifying Significant Topics within a Document", pp. 70--79 11. Jean Senellart, "Tools for Locating Noun Phrases with Finite State Transducers", pp. 80--84 12. Mohsen Rais-Ghasem and Jean-Pierre Corriveau, "Exemplar-Based Sense Modulation", pp. 85--93 13. Boyan Onyshkevich, "Nominal Metonymy Processing", pp. 94--102 14. Helmut Horacek, "The Role of Cardinality in Metonymic Extension to Nouns", pp. 103--112}, topic = {nlp;nominal-constructions;} } @book{ busa_f-bouillon_p:2001a, editor = {Federika Busa and Pierette Bouillon}, title = {The Language of Word Meaning}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780511896316}, topic = {lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ busemann-horacek:1998a, author = {Stephen Busemann and Helmut Horacek}, title = {A Flexible Shallow Approach to Text Generation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Workshop on Natural Language Generation}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Eduard Hovy}, pages = {238--247}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @incollection{ busemeyer-johnson_jg:2008a, author = {Jerome R. Busemeyer and Joseph G. Johnson}, title = {Micro-Process Models of Decision Making}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Computational Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ron Sun}, pages = {302--321}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;decision-making;} } @unpublished{ bush_r:2000a, author = {Ryan Bush}, title = {Broad and Narrow Identificational Foci}, year = {2000}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of California at Santa Cruz.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {s-focus;} } @article{ bushinsky:2009a, author = {Shay Bushinsky}, title = {Deus Ex Machina---A Higher Creative Species in the Game of Chess}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2009}, volume = {30}, number = {3}, pages = {71--70}, topic = {computational-creativity;computer-chess;game-playing;} } @article{ buss_s:1997a, author = {Sarah Buss}, title = {Weakness of Will}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1997}, volume = {78}, pages = {13-44}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {akrasia;} } @article{ buss_s:1997b, author = {Sarah Buss}, title = {Justified Wrongdoing}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1997}, volume = {31}, number = {3}, pages = {37--369}, rtnote = {Useful to compare this to the arguments of Jonathan Edwards.}, topic = {ethics;moral-responsibility;} } @article{ buss_s:2004a, author = {Sarah Buss}, title = {The Irrationality of Unhappiness and the Paradox of Despair}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {101}, number = {1}, pages = {167--196}, topic = {irrationality;emotion;philosophical-psychology;} } @incollection{ buss_s:2022a, author = {Sarah Buss}, title = {Agency and (the Limits of) Volitional Conflict}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Handbook of Philosophy of Agency}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2022}, editor = {Luca Ferrero}, pages = {307--316}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-agency;akrasia;conflict;} } @incollection{ buss_s-westlund_a:2018a, author = {Sarah Buss and Andrea Westlund}, title = {Personal Autonomy}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2018/entries/personal-autonomy/}, year = {2018}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, topic = {autonomy;} } @book{ buss_sr:1998a, editor = {Samuel R. Buss}, title = {Handbook of Proof Theory}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1998}, address = {Amsterdam}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Samuel R. Buss, "Preface", p. v 2. Samuel R. Buss, "An Introduction to Proof Theory", pp. 1--78 3. Samuel R. Buss, "First-Order Proof Theory of Arithmetic", pp. 79--147 4. Matt Fairtlough and Stanley S. Wainer, "Hierarchies of Provably Recursive Functions", pp. 149--207 5. Wolfram Pohlers, "Subsystems of Set Theory and Second-Order Number Theory", pp. 209--335 6. Jeremy Avigad and Solomon Feferman, "G\"odel's Funcional (`Dialectica') Interpretation", pp. 337--405 7. A.S. Troelstra, "Realizability", pp. 407--473 8. Giorgi Japaridze and Dick de Jongh, "The Logic of Provability", pp. 475--536 9. Pavel Pudl\'ak, "The Length of Proofs", pp. 547--637 10. Gerhard J\"ager and Robert F. St\"ark, "A Proof-Theoretic Framework for Logic Programming", pp. 639--682 }, xref = {Review: arai_t:2000a.}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @incollection{ buss_sr:1998b, author = {Samuel R. Buss}, title = {An Introduction to Proof Theory}, booktitle = {Handbook of Proof Theory}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Samuel R. Buss}, pages = {1--78}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Review: arai_t:1998b.}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @incollection{ buss_sr:1998c, author = {Samuel R. Buss}, title = {First-Order Proof Theory of Arithmetic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Proof Theory}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Samuel R. Buss}, pages = {79--147}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Review: arai_t:1998a.}, topic = {proof-theory;higher-order-logic;formalizations-of-arithmetic;} } @article{ buss_sr-etal:2001a, author = {Samuel R. Buss and Alexander S. Kechris and Anand Pillay and Richard A. Shore}, title = {The Prospects for Mathematical Logic in the Twenty-First Century}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {169--196}, topic = {mathematical-logic;logic-editorial;} } @incollection{ buszkowski:1988a, author = {Wojciech Buszkowski}, title = {Three Theories of Categorial Grammar}, booktitle = {Categorial Grammar}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {1988}, editor = {Wojciech Buszkowski and Witold Marcisziewski and Johan van Benthem}, pages = {57--84}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {categorial-grammar;} } @techreport{ buszkowski:1993a, author = {Wojciech Buszkowski}, title = {On the Equivalence of Lambek Categorial Grammars and Basic Categorial Grammars}, institution = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, number = {ILLC LP-93-07}, year = {1997}, address = {Amtsterdam}, topic = {categorial-grammar;} } @article{ buszkowski:1994a, author = {Wojciech Buszkowski}, title = {Extending {L}ambek Grammars to Basic Categorial Grammars}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1994}, volume = {5}, number = {3--4}, pages = {279--295}, topic = {Lambek-calculus;categorial-grammar;} } @incollection{ buszkowski:1996a, author = {Wojciech Buszkowski}, title = {Mathematical Linguistics and Proof Theory}, booktitle = {Handbook of Logic and Language}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {1996}, editor = {Johan {van Benthem} and Alice {ter Meulen}}, pages = {683--736}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {grammar-formalisms;proof-theory;type-theory;} } @article{ buszkowski:2007a, author = {Wojciech Buszkowski}, title = {Type Logics and Pregroups}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {87}, number = {2--3}, pages = {145--169}, topic = {higher-order-logic;pregroups;} } @book{ buszkowski-etal:1988a, editor = {Wojciech Buszkowski and Witold Marcisziewski and Johan van Benthem}, title = {Categorial Grammar}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {1988}, address = {Amsterdam}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Witold Marcisziewski, "A Chronicle of Categorial Grammar", pp. 7--21 2. Johan van Benthem, "New Trends in Categorial Grammar", pp. 23--33 3. Johan van Benthem, "The Semantics of Variety in Categorial Grammar", pp. 37--55 4. Wojciech Buszkowski, "Three Theories of Categorial Grammar", pp. 57--84 5. Michal P. Chytil and Hans Karlgren, "Categorial Grammars and List Automata for Strata of non-CF-Languages", pp. 85--112 6. Max J. Cresswell, "Categorial Languages", pp. 113--126 7. Peter T. Geach, "A Program for Syntax", pp. 127--140 8. Maciej Kandulski, "The Non-Associative {L}ambek Calculus", pp. 141--151 9. Joachim Lambek, "The Mathematics of Sentence Structure", pp. 153--172 10. Harold D. Levin, "A Philosophical Introduction to Categorial and Extended Categorial Grammar", pp. 173--195 11. Witold Marcisziewski, "How Freely Can Categories Be Assigned to Expressions of Natural Language? A Case Study", pp. 197--220 12. Timothy C. Potts, "Fregean Grammar: A Formal Outline", pp. 221--242 13. Kosta Do\v{s}en, "Second-Order Logic without Variables", pp. 245--264 14. Henry Hi\.z, "Grammar Logicism", pp. 265--382 15. Pavel Materna and Petr Sgall and Eva Haji\v{c}ov\'a, "{`}Linguistic Constructions' in Transparent Intensional Logic", pp. 283--300 16. Ewa Orlawska, "Montague Grammar and Its Extensions", pp. 301--323 17. Maria Semeniuk-Polkowska, "Configurations and Pseudoconfigurations in Algebraic Linguistics", pp. 325--332 18. Kazimierz A. Sroka, "Grammatical Categories: Their Nature and Interlanguage Variation", pp. 333--356 19. Marek Tokarz, "Towards a Formal Semiotics", pp. 357--365 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, ISBN = {9027215308}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 1 .L74 v.25.}, topic = {categorial-grammar;nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @article{ buszkowski-moortgat:2002a, author = {Wojciech Buszkowski and Michael Moortgat}, title = {Introduction (to a Special Issue on the {L}ambek Calculus in Logic and Linguistics}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2002}, volume = {71}, number = {3}, pages = {261--276}, topic = {Lambek-calculus;linear-logic;} } @incollection{ butchvarov:1978a, author = {Panayot Butchvarov}, title = {Identity}, booktitle = {Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {159--178}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {identity;(non)existence;philosophy-of-language;} } @inproceedings{ butler_a:2001a, author = {Alastair Butler}, title = {Degree Relatives are Ordinary Relatives}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2001}, editor = {Rachel Hastings and Brendan Jackson and Zsofia Zvolenszky}, pages = {76--94}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;relative-clauses;} } @article{ butler_a:2007a, author = {Alistair Butler}, title = {Scope Control and Grammatical Dependencies}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2007}, volume = {16}, number = {3}, pages = {241--264}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;donkey-anaphora;binding-theory;} } @article{ butler_a:2011a, author = {Alastair Butler}, title = {Semantically Restricted Argument Dependencies}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2011}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {69--114}, topic = {nl-semantics;variable-binding;} } @article{ butler_j:2003a, author = {Jonny Butler}, title = {A Minimalist Treatment of Modality}, journal = {Lingua}, year = {2003}, volume = {113}, number = {10}, pages = {967--996}, doi = {10.1016/S0024-3841(02)00146-8. }, topic = {modals;} } @article{ butler_k:1994a, author = {Keith Butler}, title = {Neural Constraints in Cognitive Science}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {129--162}, topic = {cognitive-neuroscience;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ butler_rj:1954a, author = {Ronald J. Butler}, title = {The Scaffolding of {R}ussell's Theory of Descriptions}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1954}, volume = {63}, number = {3}, pages = {350--364}, xref = {Review: JSL XXXIV 143}, topic = {Russell;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ butler_rj:1955a, author = {Ronald J. Butler}, title = {Aristotle's Sea-Fight and Three-Valued Logic}, journal = {Philosophical-Review}, year = {1955}, volume = {64}, pages = {264--274}, number = {2}, xref = {Review: lemmon:1957b}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ butler_rj:1960a, author = {Ronald J. Butler}, title = {Review of `{A} Sea Fight Tomorrow', by {J}ohn {T}urk {S}aunders}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1960}, volume = {25}, number = {4}, pages = {343--344}, xref = {Review of: saunders_jt:1958a}, topic = {Aristotle;future-contingent-propositions;} } @article{ butler_rj:1960b, author = {Ronald J. Butler}, title = {Review of `{M}ust the Future Be What it Is Going to Be?', by {R}aymond {D}. {B}radley, and `{T}ruth, Futurity and Contingency', by {P}eter {W}olff}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1960}, volume = {25}, number = {4}, pages = {344--345}, xref = {Review of: saunders_jt:1958a, wolff_p1:1960a}, topic = {Aristotle;future-contingent-propositions;} } @book{ butler_rj:1962a, editor = {Ronald J. Butler}, title = {Analytical Philosophy, First Series}, publisher = {Barnes and Noble}, year = {1962}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Zeno Vendler, "Effects, Results, and Consequences", pp. 1--15 2. Sylvan Bromberger, "What Are Effects?", pp. 15--20 3. W.H. Dray, "Must Effects Have Causes?", pp. 20--25 4. Zeno Vendler, "Reactions and Retractions", pp. 25--31 5. J.R. Lucas, "Causation", pp. 32--65 6. J.L. Mackie, "Counterfactuals and Causal Laws", pp. 66--80 7. Richard Cartwright, "Propositions", pp. 81--103 8. J.F. Thomson, "On Some Paradoxes", pp. 104--119 9. Arthur N. Prior, "Nonentities", pp. 120--132 10. H. Paul Grice, "Some Remarks about the Senses", pp. 133-- 11. D. Gasking, "Avowals", pp. 154--169 12. M.E. Lean, "{M}r. {G}asking on Avowals", pp. 169--186 13. R.C. Buck, "Non-Other Minds", pp. 187--210 14. Hilary Putnam, "Dreaming and `Depth Grammar{'}", pp. 211--235 }, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: B808.5 .B98 1963}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP edited Shelves.}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @book{ butler_rj:1965a, editor = {Ronald J. Butler}, title = {Analytical Philosophy, Second Series}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell}, year = {1965}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Hilary Putnam, "Brains and Behavior", pp. 1--19 2. David Savan, "Socrates' Logic and the Unity of Wisdom and Temperance", pp. 20--26 3. Bede Rundle, "Modality and Quantification", pp. 27--39 4. David Wiggins, "Identity-Statements", pp. 40--71 5. Sylvan Bromberger, "An Approach to Explanation", pp. 72--105 6. Julius Moravcsik, "Strawson and Ontological Priority", pp. 106--119 7. Michael J. Woods, "Identity and Individuation", pp. 120--130 8. Richard M.P. Malpas, "The Location of Sound", pp. 131--144 9. J.M. Shorter, "Causality, and a Method of Analysis", pp. 145--157 10. G.E.M. Anscombe, "The Intentionality of Sensation", pp. 158--180 11. Ronald J. Butler, "{M}essrs. {G}oodman, {G}reen and {G}rue", pp. 181--193 }, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: B808.5 .B98 1965}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP edited Shelves.}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ butler_t:2002a, author = {Travis Butler}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}ristotle on Meaning and Essence}, by {D}avid {C}harles}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2002}, volume = {111}, number = {2}, pages = {302--305}, xref = {Review of: charles_d:2002a}, topic = {Aristotle;metaphysics;} } @book{ butt-etal:1999a, author = {Mirian Butt and Tracy Holloway King and Mar\'ia-Eugenia Ni\~no and Fr\'ed\'erique Segond}, title = {A Grammar Writer's Cookbook}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1999}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-57586-170-4}, xref = {Review: maxwell:2000a.Review: johnson_c:2001a.}, topic = {grammatical-writing;} } @book{ butt-geuder:1998a, editor = {Miriam Butt and Wilhelm Geuder}, title = {The Projection of Arguments: Lexical and Compositional Factors}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1998}, address = {Stanford}, ISBN = {1575861119}, contentnote = {TC: 1. William Croft, "Event Structure in Argument Linking" 2. Gillian Catriona Ramchand, "Deconstructing the Lexicon" 3. Malka Rappaport Hovav and Beth C. Levin, "Building Verb Meanings" 4. Elizabeth Ritter and Sara Thomas Rosen, "Delimiting Events in Syntax" 5. K.P. Mohanan and Tara Mohanan, "Strong and Weak Projection, Lexical Reflexives and Reciprocals" 6. Eloise Jelinek, "Voice and Transitivity as Functional Projections in {Y}aqui" 7. Veerle van Geenhoven, "On the Argument Structure of Some Noun Incorporating Verbs in {W}est {G}reenlandic" 8. Paul Kiparsky, "Partitive Case and Aspect" 9. Ad Neeleman and Tanya Reinhart, "Scrambling and the {PF} Interface" }, rtnote = {UMich GRADUATE LIBRARY, P 295 .P751 1998.}, topic = {lexical-semantics;event-structure;argument-structure;} } @book{ butt-king_tw:2001a, editor = {Miriam Butt and Tracy Holloway King}, title = {Time Over Matter: Diachronic Perspectives On Morphosyntax}, publisher = {CLSI Publications}, year = {2001}, address = {Stanford}, ISBN = {1575862816}, rtnote = {UMich GRADUATE LIBRARY, No call number available.}, topic = {morphology;syntax;historical-linguistics;} } @book{ buttcher-etal:2013a, author = {Steffan B\"uttcher and Charles L.A. Cooke and Gordon V. Cormack}, title = {Information Retrieval}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-}, topic = {information-retrieval;} } @article{ butterfield:2014a, author = {Jeremy Butterfield}, title = {Reduction, Evergence, and Renormalization}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2014}, volume = {111}, number = {1}, pages = {5--49}, topic = {emergence;philosophy-of-physics;renormalization;reduction;} } @article{ butterfield_j-stirling_c:1987a, author = {Jeremy Butterfield and Colin Stirling}, title = {Predicate Modifiers in Tense Logic}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1987}, volume = {30}, number = {117--118}, pages = {31--50}, abstract = {We explain two ways of revising a tense logic like kripke's (1963) modal logic by adding predicate modifiers. First we show that modifiers allow us to render valid some mixing formulas--conditionals reversing the order of a quantifier and an operator--within a complete bivalent system. Then we show how modifiers enable a tense logic to give analyses close to the surface form for sentences with temporal qualifications of singular terms...}, topic = {temporal-logic;adverbs;} } @incollection{ butterfill_s:2017a, author = {Stephen Butterfill}, title = {Coordinating Joint Action}, booktitle = {The Routledge Handbook of Collective Intentionality}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2017}, editor = {Marija Jankovic and Kirk Ludwig}, pages = {68--89}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {group-action;group-attitudes;cooperation;} } @book{ butterworth_b:1980a, editor = {Brian Butterworth}, title = {Language Production, Volume 1: Speech and Talk}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1980}, address = {London}, topic = {psycholinguistics;nl-production ;} } @incollection{ butterworth_g:1994a, author = {George Butterworth}, title = {Infant Intelligence}, booktitle = {What is Intelligence?}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jean Khalfa}, pages = {49--71}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {intelligence;developmental-psychology;} } @book{ button_g-etal:1995a, author = {Graham Button and Jeff Coulter and John R. E. Lee and Wes Sharrock}, title = {Computers, Minds, and Conduct}, publisher = {Polity Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, UK}, ISBN = {0-7456-1287-3}, xref = {Review: gottfried-traiger:1997a}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ button_g-etal:2000a, author = {Graham Button and Jeff Coulter and John R.E. Lee and Wes Sharrock}, title = {Re-Entering the {C}hinese Room}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {149--152}, xref = {Commentary on: gottfried-traiger:1997a.}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ button_t:2006a, author = {Tim Button}, title = {There's No Time Like the Present}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2006}, volume = {66}, number = {2}, pages = {130--135}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;'now';} } @article{ button_t:2017a, author = {Tim Button}, title = {Exclusion Problems and the Cardinality of Logical Space}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {6}, pages = {611--623}, topic = {Wittgenstein;logical-space;} } @article{ button_t:2021a, author = {Tim Button}, title = {Level Theory, Part 1: Axiomatizing the Bare Idea of a Cumulative Hierarchy of Sets}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {436--460}, abstract = {The following bare-bones story introduces the idea of a cumulative hierarchy of pure sets: "Sets are arranged in stages. Every set is found at some stage. At any stage S: for any sets found before S, we find a set whose members are exactly those sets. We find nothing else at S". Surprisingly, this story already guarantees that the sets are arranged in well-ordered levels, and suffices for quasi-categoricity. I show this by presenting Level Theory, a simplification of set theories due to Scott, Montague, Derrick, and Potter.}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ button_t:2021b, author = {Tim Button}, title = {Level Theory, Part 2: Axiomatizing the Bare Idea of a Potential Hierarchy}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {461--484}, abstract = {Potentialists think that the concept of set is importantly modal. Using tensed language as a heuristic, the following bare-bones story introduces the idea of a potential hierarchy of sets: "Always: for any sets that existed, there is a set whose members are exactly those sets; there are no other sets". Surprisingly, this story already guarantees well-foundedness and persistence. Moreover, if we assume that time is linear, the ensuing modal set theory is almost definitionally equivalent with non-modal set theories; specifically, with Level Theory, as developed in Part 1.}, topic = {modal-logic;foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ button_t-trueman_r:2022a, author = {Tim Button And Robert Trueman}, title = {Against Cumulative Type Theory}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {15}, number = {4}, pages = {907--949}, topic = {higher-order-logic;;} } @book{ button_t-walsh_s:2018a, author = {Tim Button and Sean Walsh}, title = {Philosophy and Model Theory}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-879039-6, 978-0-19-879040-2}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Winter, 2019}, xref = {Review: arana_a:2020a}, topic = {logic-and-philosophy;model-theory;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @book{ butts-hintikka_j:1977a, editor = {Robert E. Butts and Jaakko Hintikka}, title = {Basic Problems in Methodology and Linguistics}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1977}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @unpublished{ buvac:1995a, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, title = {Ambiguity Via Formal Theory of Context}, year = {1995}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Buvac"}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Stanford University}, topic = {context;ambiguity;} } @unpublished{ buvac:1995b, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, title = {Semantics of Translation}, year = {1995}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Available from http://www-formal.stanford.edu/buvac.}, topic = {context;} } @book{ buvac:1995c, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, title = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Formalizing Context}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Barbara Grosz, "Essential Ambiguity: The Role of Context in Natural-Language Processing", p. 1 2. Ramanathan Guha, "Mechanisms in Implemented {KR} Systems", p. 2 3. Patrick Hayes, "What is a Context?", p. 3 4. Carl Hewitt, "From Contexts to Negotiation Forums", pp. 4--5 5. John McCarthy, "Varieties of Formalized Contexts and Subcontexts", p. 6 6. Robert Stalnaker, "On the Representation of Context", pp. 7--8 7. Giuseppe Attardi and Maria Simi, "Beppo Had a Dream", pp. 9--22 8. Varol Akman and Mehmet Surav, "Contexts, Oracles, and Relevance", pp. 23--30 9. Phillipe Besnard and Yao-Hua Tan, "A Modal Logic with Context-Dependent Inference for Non-Monotonic Reasoning", pp. 31--38 10. Raj Bhatnagar, "Probabilistic Contexts for Reasoning", pp. 39--46 11. Pierre E. Bonzon, "A Meta-Level Inference Architecture for Contexts", pp. 47--54 12. Robert Demolombe, "Reasoning about Topics: Towards a Formal Theory", pp. 55--59 13. Fabio Massacci, "Superficial Tableau for Contextual Reasoning", pp. 60--67 14. L. Thorne McCarty, "An Implementation of Eisner v. Macomber", pp. 68--78 15. Narinder Singh and Omar Tawakol and Michael Genesereth, "A Name-Space Context Graph for Multi-Context, Multi-Agent Systems", pp. 79--84 16. John Sowa, "Syntax, Semantics, and Pragmatics of Contexts", pp. 85--96 17. Alice ter Meulen, "Content in Context", pp. 97--109 18. Kees van Deemter, "Semantic Vagueness and Context-Dependence", pp. 110--117 }, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ buvac:1996a, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, title = {Quantificational Logic of Context}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Eighth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, Vol. 2}, year = {1996}, editor = {William J. Clancey and Dan Weld}, pages = {600--606}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Buvac2}, topic = {context;logic-of-context;} } @incollection{ buvac:1996b, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, title = {Resolving Lexical Ambiguity Using a Formal Theory of Context}, booktitle = {Semantic Ambiguity and Underspecification}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Kees {van Deemter} and Stanley Peters}, address = {Cambridge, England}, pages = {101--124}, topic = {context;ambiguity;semantic-underspecification; lexical-disambiguation;disambiguation;} } @inproceedings{ buvac:1997a, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, title = {Pragmatical Considerations on Logical {AI}}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Context in Knowledge Representation and Natural Language}, year = {1997}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and {\L}ucia Iwa\'nska}, pages = {38--40}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ buvac:2003a, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, title = {A Deduction Theorem for Normal Modal Propositional Logic}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {107--115}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ buvac-etal:1995a, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and Vanja Buva\v{c} and Ian Mason}, title = {The Semantics of Propositional Contexts}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth International Symposium on Methodologies for Intelligent Systems}, year = {1995}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {pages}, note = {Available from http://www-formal.stanford.edu/buvac.}, topic = {context;logic-of-context;} } @article{ buvac-etal:1995b, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and Vanja Buva\v{c} and Ian Mason}, title = {Metamathematics of Contexts}, journal = {Fundamenta Informaticae}, volume = {23}, number = {3}, year = {1995}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Buvac1.pdf}, topic = {context;logic-of-context;} } @inproceedings{ buvac-fikes_re:1995a, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and Richard E. Fikes}, title = {A Declarative Formalization of Knowledge Translation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {ACM} {CIKM}: the Fourth International Conference in Information and Knowledge Management}, year = {1995}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Available from http://www-formal.stanford.edu/buvac.}, missinginfo = {editor, publisher, address, pages}, topic = {context;knowledge-integration;} } @inproceedings{ buvac-fikes_re:1995b, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and Richard E. Fikes}, title = {Preface}, booktitle = {Formalizing Context}, year = {1995}, editor = {Sasa Buva\v{c}}, pages = {iii--iv}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {Abstract.}, topic = {context;ambiguity;logic-of-context;} } @book{ buvac-iwanska:1997a, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and {\L}ucia Iwa\'nska}, title = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Context in Knowledge Representation and Natural Language}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;} } @article{ buvac-kameyama:1998a, author = {Sas\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and Megumi Kameyama}, title = {Introduction: Toward a Unified Theory of Context?}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1998}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {1--2}, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ buvac-mason_m:1993a, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and Ian Mason}, title = {Propositional Logic of Context}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Richard E. Fikes and Wendy Lehnert}, pages = {412--419}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Buvac3.pdf}, topic = {context;logic-of-context;logic-of-context;} } @incollection{ buvac-mccarthy_j1:1996a, author = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c} and John McCarthy}, title = {Combining Planning Contexts}, booktitle = {Advanced Planning Technology: Technological Achievements of the {ARPA}/Rome Laboratory Planning Initiative}, year = {1996}, editor = {Austin Tate}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {context;planning;} } @article{ buxton-gong:1995a, author = {Hilary Buxton and Shaogang Gong}, title = {Visual Surveillance in a Dynamic and Uncertain World}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {78}, number = {1--2}, pages = {431--459}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Advanced visual surveillance systems not only need to track moving objects but also interpret their patterns of behaviour. This means that solving the information integration problem becomes very important. We use conceptual knowledge of both the scene and the visual task to provide constraints. We also control the system using dynamic attention and selective processing. Bayesian belief networks support this and allow us to model dynamic dependencies between parameters involved in visual interpretation. We illustrate these arguments using experimental results from a traffic surveillance application. In particular, we demonstrate that using expectations of object trajectory, size and speed for the particular scene improves robustness and sensitivity in dynamic tracking and segmentation. We also demonstrate behavioral evaluation under attentional control using a combination of a static BBN TASKNET and dynamic network. The causal structure of these networks provides a framework for the design and integration of advanced vision systems. }, topic = {Bayesian-networks;visual-surveillance;motion-tracking; computer-vision;} } @article{ buzaglo_m:2010a, author = {Meir Buzaglo}, title = {A Note on Parity and Modality}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2010}, volume = {107}, number = {9}, pages = {491--498}, topic = {necessary-truth;} } @book{ bybee-fleischman:1995a, editor = {Joan Bybee and Suzanne Fleischman}, title = {Modality in Grammar and Discourse}, publisher = {J. Benjamins}, year = {1995}, address = {Amsterdamy}, ISBN = {9027229252}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 1 .T98 v.32.}, topic = {nl-semantics;modals;nl-modality;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ bybee_j:1995a, author = {Joan Bybee}, title = {The Semantic Development of Past Tense Modals in {E}nglish}, booktitle = {Modality in Grammar and Discourse}, publisher = {J. Benjamins}, year = {1995}, editor = {Joan Bybee and Suzanne Fleischman}, pages = {502--517}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {historical-linguistics;English-language;nl-modals;} } @book{ bybee_j-etal:1994a, author = {Joan Bybee and Revere Perkins and William Pagliuca}, title = {The Evolution of Grammar: Tense, Aspect, and Modality in the Languages of the World}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {0-226-08663-1}, topic = {language-change;tense-aspect;nl-modality;} } @article{ bykvist_k:2002a, author = {Krister Bykvist}, title = {Alternative Actions and the Spirit of Consequentialism}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2002}, volume = {107}, number = {1}, pages = {45--68}, doi = {doi:10.1023/A:1013191909430}, abstract = {The simple idea behind act-consequentialism is that we ought to choose the action whose outcome is better than that of any alternative action. In a recent issue of this journal, Erik Carlson has argued that given a reasonable interpretation of alternative actions this simple idea cannot be upheld but that the new theory he proposes nevertheless preserves the act-consequentialist spirit. My aim in this paper is to show that Carlson is wrong on both counts. His theory, contrary to his own intentions, is not an act-consequentialist theory. By building on a theory formulated by Holly Smith, I will show that the simple idea can be upheld. The new theory I will propose has all the merits of Carlson's theory without sharing its demerits.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my22}, topic = {utilitarianism;alternatives-for-action;} } @article{ bykvist_k:2012a, author = {Krister Bykvist}, title = {Review of \emph{{D}esire, Practical Reason, and the Good}, edited by {S}ergio {T}ennenbaum}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {1}, pages = {200--202}, xref = {Review of: tennenbaum_s:2010a}, topic = {moral-psychology;} } @incollection{ bylander:1991a1, author = {Tom Bylander}, title = {The Monotonic Abduction Problem: A Functional Characterization on the Edge of Tractability}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {70--77}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Journal publication: bylander-etal:1991a2.}, topic = {kr;abduction;kr-complexity-analysis;kr-course;} } @article{ bylander:1994a, author = {Tom Bylander}, title = {The Computational Complexity of Propositional {STRIPS} Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {69}, number = {1--2}, pages = {165--204}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;planning;STRIPS;} } @article{ bylander:1996a, author = {Tom Bylander}, title = {A Probabilistic Analysis of Propositional {STRIPS} Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {81}, number = {1--2}, pages = {241--271}, topic = {search;experiments-on-theorem-proving-algs; computational-phase-transitions;} } @article{ bylander:1998a, author = {Tom Bylander}, title = {Worst-Case Analysis of the Perceptron and Worst-Case Exponentiated Update Algorithms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {106}, number = {2}, pages = {335--352}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;perceptrons;} } @incollection{ bylander-etal:1989a1, author = {Tom Bylander and Dean Allemang and Michael C. Tanner and John R. Josephson}, title = {Some Results Concerning the Computational Complexity of Abduction}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {44--54}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Journal publication: bylander-etal:1989a1.}, topic = {kr;kr-course;abduction;kr-complexity-analysis;} } @article{ bylander-etal:1991a2, author = {Tom Bylander and Dean Allemang and Michael C. Tanner and John R. Josephson}, title = {The Computational Complexity of Abduction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {49}, number = {1--3}, pages = {25--60}, xref = {Conference publication: bylander-etal:1991a1.}, topic = {kr-complexity-analysis;abduction;} } @article{ byrd_m:1973a, author = {Michael Byrd}, title = {Knowledge and True Belief in {H}intikka's Epistemic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1973}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {181--192}, topic = {epistemic-logic;belief;} } @article{ byrd_m:1978a, author = {Michael Byrd}, title = {The Extensions of {BAlt}$_3$---Revisited}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1978}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {407--413}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ byrd_m:1978b, author = {Michael Byrd}, title = {Megarian Necessity in Forward-Branching Backward-Linear Time}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1978}, volume = {12}, number = {4}, pages = {463--479}, topic = {branching-time;temporal-necessity;} } @incollection{ byrd_rj:1994a, author = {Roy J. Byrd}, title = {Discovering Relationships Among Word Senses}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Computational Linguistics: Essays in Honour of Don Walker}, publisher = {Giardini Editori e Stampatori and Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {Antonio Zampolli and Nicoletta Calzolari and Martha Palmer}, pages = {177--189}, address = {Pisa and Dordrecht}, rtnote = {This is a technology/technique paper.}, topic = {computational-lexical-semantics;} } @article{ byrne_a:2001a, author = {Alex Byrne}, title = {Intentionalism Defended}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {2}, pages = {199--240}, topic = {philosophy-of-perception;} } @article{ byrne_a:2002a, author = {Alex Byrne}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}urple Haze: The Puzzle of Consciousness}, by {J}oseph {L}evine}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2000}, volume = {111}, number = {4}, pages = {594--597}, xref = {Review of: levine_j2:2001a.}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;mind-body-problem;} } @article{ byrne_a:2004a, author = {Alex Byrne}, title = {How Hard Are the Skeptical Paradoxes?}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2004}, volume = {38}, number = {2}, pages = {299--235}, topic = {skepticism;paradoxes;knowledge;} } @incollection{ byrne_a:2007a, author = {Alex Byrne}, title = {Possibility and Imagination}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2007}, editor = {John Hawthorne}, pages = {125--144}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {possibility;imaginability;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ byrne_a-logue_h:2009a, editor = {Alex Byrne and Heather Logue}, title = {Disjunctivism: Contemporary Readings}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-524902}, topic = {perception;illusions;} } @book{ byrne_c:2018a, author = {Christopher Byrne}, title = {Aristotle's Science of Matter and Motion}, publisher = {University of Toronto Press}, year = {2018}, address = {Toronto}, abstract = {...Aristotle's Science of Matter and Motion focuses on refuting this misconception [of A as a backward unsystematic physicisy], arguing that Aristotle actually offered a systematic account of matter, motion, and the basic causal powers found in all physical objects. ...}, topic = {Aristotle;history-of-physics;} } @book{ byrne_d-kolbel_m:2009a, editor = {Darragh Byrne and Max K\"olbel}, title = {Arguing about Language}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2009}, address = {London}, ISBN = {978-0-415-462440}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ byrne_rm:2016a, author = {Ruth M. Byrne}, title = {Counterfactual Thought}, journal = {Annual Review of Psychology}, year = {2016}, volume = {67}, pages = {135--157}, abstract = {he loss of the ability to imagine alternatives as a result of injuries to the prefrontal cortex is devastating. The basic cognitive processes that compute counterfactuals mutate aspects of the mental representation of reality to create an imagined alternative, and they compare alternative representations. The ability to create counterfactuals develops throughout childhood and contributes to reasoning about other people's beliefs, including their false beliefs. Knowledge affects the plausibility of a counterfactual through the semantic and pragmatic modulation of the mental representation of alternative possibilities.}, topic = {counterfactual-cognition;} } @article{ byrne_rmj:1989a, author = {Ruth M.J. Byrne}, title = {Suppressing Valid Inferences with Conditionals}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {1989}, volume = {31}, number = {3}, pages = {61--83}, abstract = {Three experiments are reported which show that in certain contexts subjects reject instances of the valid modus ponens and modus tollens inference form in conditional arguments. For example, when a conditional premise, such as: If she meets her friend then she will go to a play, is accompanied by a conditional containing an additional requirement: If she has enough money then she will go to a play, subjects reject the inference from the categorical premise She meets her friend, to the conclusion: She will go to a play. $\ldots$}, topic = {conditionals;psycholinguistics;} } @book{ byrne_rmj:2007a, author = {Ruth M.J. Byrne}, title = {The Rational Imagination: How People Create Alternatives to Reality}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780-262-52474-2}, topic = {imagination;cognitive-psychology;possibility;imaginability;} } @article{ byron_dk:2001a, author = {Donna K. Byron}, title = {The Uncommon Denominator: A Proposal for Consistent Reporting of Pronoun Resolution Results}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2001}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {569--577}, topic = {anaphora-resolution;} } @incollection{ byron_dk-etal:2005a, author = {Donna K. Byron and Thomas Mampilly and Vinay Sharma and Tianfang Xu}, title = {Utilizing Visual Attention for Cross-Modal Coreference Interpretation}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {83--96}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;attention;anaphora-resolution;} } @book{ byron_m:2004a, editor = {Michael Byron}, title = {Satisficing and Maximizing: Moral Theorists on Practical Reason}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780521010054}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Michael Byron, "Introduction", pp. 1--13 2. Michael A. Slote, "Two Views of Satisficing", pp. 14--29 3. David Schmidtz, "Satisficing as a Humanly Rational Strategy", pp. 30--58 4. Jan Narveson, "Maxificing: Life on a Budget or, if you Would Maximize, Then Satisfice", pp. 59--70 5. Thomas Hurka, "Satisficing and Substantive Values", pp. 71--76 6. Michael Weber, "A New Defense of Satisficing", pp. 77--105 7. Henry S. Richardson, "Satisficing: Not Good Enough", pp. 106--130 8. James Dreier, "Why Ethical Satisficing Makes Sense and Rational Satisficing Doesn't", pp. 131--154 9. Mark van Roojen, "The Plausibility of Satisficing and the Role of Good in Ordinary Thought", pp. 155--175 10. Christine Swanton, "Satisficing and Perfectionism in Virtue Ethics", pp. 176--189 11. Michael Byron, " Could {A}ristotle Satisfice?", pp. 190--212 12. Tyler Cowen, "How do Economists Think about Rationality?", pp. 213--236 }, topic = {satisficing;practical-reasoning;rationality;} } @incollection{ byron_m:2004b, author = {Michael Byron}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Satisficing and Maximizing: Moral Theorists on Practical Reason}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Michael Byron}, pages = {1--13}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {satisficing;practical-reasoning;rationality;} } @incollection{ byron_m:2004c, author = {Michael Byron}, title = {Could {A}ristotle Satisfice?}, booktitle = {Satisficing and Maximizing: Moral Theorists on Practical Reason}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Michael Byron}, pages = {190--212}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {satisficing;Aristotle;} } @book{ bystrov-sadovsky:1996a, editor = {Peter I. Bystrov and Vadim N. Sadovsky}, title = {Philosophical Logic and Logical Philosophy: Essays in Honour of {V}ladimir {A}. {S}mirnov}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1996}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0792342704 (alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BC 135 .P6431 1996.}, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @inproceedings{ cabalar:2002a, author = {Pedro Cabalar}, title = {A Three-Valued Characterization for Strong Equivalence of Logic Programs}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {106--111}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {logic-programming;stable-models;multivalued-logic;} } @incollection{ cabalar:2003a, author = {Pedro Cabalar}, title = {A Preliminary Study on Reasoning about Causes}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Logical Formalization of Commonsense Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John McCarthy and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {43--50}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {action-formalisms;causality;} } @incollection{ cabalar:2011a, author = {Pedro Cabalar}, title = {Logic Programs and Causal Proofs}, booktitle = {Logical Formalizations of Commonsense Reasoning: Papers from the {AAAI} 2011 Spring Symposium ({SS}-11-06)}, publisher = {Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, editor = {Ernest Davis and Patrick Doherty and Esra Erdem}, pages = {30--35}, address = {Palo Alto}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. SSS11-CD}, topic = {logic-program;causality;frame-problem;} } @article{ cabalar-santos_pe:2011a, author = {Pedro Cabalar and Paulo E. Santos}, title = {Formalising the {F}isherman's {F}olly Puzzle}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {1}, pages = {346--377}, topic = {problem-solving;common-sense-reasoning;spatial-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ cabalar_p-dieguez_m:2014a, author = {Pedro Cabalar and Mart\'in Di\'eguez}, title = {Strong Equivalence of Non-Monotonic Temporal Theories}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {598--601}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In this paper we solve the following open problem: we prove that equivalence in the logic of Temporal Here-and-There (THT) is not only a sufficient, but also a necessary condition for strong equivalence of two Temporal Equilibrium Logic (TEL) theories. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ cabalar_p-etal:2020a, author = {Pedro Cabalar and Jorge Fandinno and Torsten Schaub and Philipp Wanko}, title = {A Uniform Treatment of Aggregates and Constraints in Hybrid ASP}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {193--202}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {Characterizing hybrid ASP solving in a generic way is difficult since one needs to abstract from specific theories. Inspired by lazy SMT solving, this is usually addressed by treating theory atoms as opaque. Unlike this, we propose a slightly more transparent approach that includes an abstract notion of a term. ...}, topic = {answer-sets;} } @inproceedings{ cabalar_p-santos_pe:2020a, author = {Pedro Cabalar and Paulo E. Santos}, title = {Spatial Reasoning about String Loops and Holes in Temporal {ASP}}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {182--192}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {This paper introduces a new formalism for the automated solution of spatial scenarios involving strings and holed objects. ... As a representation language, we have used Temporal Answer Set Programming since it provides a simple and natural way to deal with time and inertia while, at the same time, it is accompanied by the automated tool 'telingo' that allows a systematic testing of the effects of any sequence of actions. ...}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;} } @article{ caccamo-kowaltowski:1998a, author = {Mario-Jos\'e C\'accamo and Tomasz Kowaltowski}, title = {Review of \emph{{F}inite-State Language Processing}, edited by {E}mmanual {R}oche and {Y}ves {S}chabes}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {24}, number = {4}, pages = {641--643}, topic = {finite-state-nlp;} } @incollection{ cacciari-glucksberg:1991a, author = {Cristina Cacciari and Sam Glucksberg}, title = {Understanding Idiomatic Expressions: The Contribution of Word Meanings}, booktitle = {Understanding Word and Sentence}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {1991}, editor = {Greg B. Simpson}, pages = {217--240}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {idioms;psycholinguistics;} } @book{ cacciari-tabossi:1993a, author = {Cristina Cacciari and Patrizia Tabosi}, title = {Idioms: Processing, Structure, and Interpretation}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1993}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, topic = {psycholinguistics;idioms;} } @article{ cadilhac-etal:2015a, author = {Anais Cadilhac and Nicholas Asher and Alex Lascarides and F Benamara}, title = {Preference Change}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2015}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {267--288}, topic = {preferences;reasoning-about-preferences;} } @incollection{ cadoli_g-schaerf_m:1992a, author = {Grigori Cadoli and Marco Schaerf}, title = {Approximate Reasoning and Non-Omniscient Agents}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fourth Conference ({TARK} 1992)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Yoram Moses}, pages = {169--183}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {epistemic-logic;resource-limited-reasoning; hyperintensionality;} } @article{ cadoli_m-etal:1992a, author = {Marco Cadoli and Thomas Eiter and Georg Gottlob}, title = {An Efficient Method for Eliminating Varying Predicates from a Circumscription}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {54}, number = {3}, pages = {397--410}, topic = {circumscription;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ cadoli_m-etal:1994a, author = {Marco Cadoli and Francesco Domini and Marco Schaerf}, title = {Is Intractability of Non-Monotonic Logic a Real Drawback?}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, editor = {Barbara Hayes-Roth and Richard Korf}, pages = {946--951}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-reasoning;kr-complexity-analysis;kr-course;} } @incollection{ cadoli_m-etal:1994b, author = {Marco Cadoli and Thomas Eiter and Georg Georg Gottlob}, title = {Default Logic as a Query Language}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {99--108}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;default-logic;query-languages;kr-course;} } @incollection{ cadoli_m-etal:1996a, author = {Marco Cadoli and Francesco M. Donini and Paolo Liberatore and Marco Schaerf}, title = {Comparing Space Efficiency of Propositional Knowledge Representation Formalisms}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {364--373}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;kr-complexity-analysis;nonmonotonic-reasoning;kr-course;} } @article{ cadoli_m-etal:1996b, author = {Marco Cadoli and Francesco M. Donini and Marco Schaerf}, title = {Is Intractability of Nonmonotonic Reasoning a Real Drawback?}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {88}, number = {1--2}, pages = {215--251}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ cadoli_m-etal:1999a, author = {Marco Cadoli and Francesco M. Donini and Paolo Liberatore and Marco Schaerf}, title = {The Size of a Revised Knowledge Base}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {115}, number = {1}, pages = {25--64}, topic = {belief-revision;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ cadoli_m-mancini:2004a, author = {Marco Cadoli and Toni Mancini}, title = {Automated Reformulation of Specifications by Safe Delay of Constraints}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {388--398}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {problem-solving;problem-specification;constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ cadoli_m-mancini:2006a, author = {Marco Cadoli and Toni Mancini}, title = {Automated Reformulation of Specifications by Safe Delay of Constraints}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {8--9}, pages = {779--803}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ cadoli_m-scarcello:2000a, author = {Marco Cadoli and Francesco Scarcello}, title = {Semantical and Computational Aspects of {H}orn Approximations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {119}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--17}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Selman and Kautz proposed a method, called Horn approximation, for speeding up inference in propositional Knowledge Bases. Their technique is based on the compilation of a propositional formula into a pair of Horn formulae: a Horn Greatest Lower Bound (GLB) and a Horn Least Upper Bound (LUB). In this paper we focus on GLBs and address two questions that have been only marginally addressed so far: 1. what is the semantics of the Horn GLBs? 2. what is the exact complexity of finding them? We obtain semantical as well as computational results. The major semantical result is: The set of minimal models of a propositional formula and the set of minimum models of its Horn GLBs are the same. The major computational result is: Finding a Horn GLB of a propositional formula in CNF is NP -equivalent. }, topic = {Horn-approximation;knowledge-compilation;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ cadoli_m-schaerf_a:2005a, author = {Marco Cadoli and Andrea Schaerf}, title = {Compiling Problem Specifications into {SAT}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {162}, number = {1--2}, pages = {89--120}, topic = {problem-reformulation;model-checking;} } @incollection{ cadoli_m-schaerf_m:1992b, author = {Marco Cadoli and Marco Schaerf}, title = {Approximation in Concept Description Languages}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {330--341}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {description-logics;approximation;} } @incollection{ caenepeel_m-moens_m:1994a, author = {Mimo Caenepeel and Marc Moens}, title = {Temporal Structure and Discourse Structure}, booktitle = {Tense and Aspect in Discourse}, year = {1994}, editor = {Co Vet and Carl Vetters}, pages = {5--20}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-tense;tense-aspect;discourse-representation-theory;} } @book{ caferra-salzer:2000a, editor = {Ricardo Caferra and Gernot Salzer}, title = {Automated Deduction in Classical and Non-Classical Logics: Selected Papers}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2000}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Gilles Dowek, "Automated theorem proving in first-order logic modulo: on the difference between type theory and set theory" 2. Melvin Fitting, "Higher-order Modal Logic--A Sketch" 3. Deepak Kapur and G. Sivakumar, "Proving Associative-Commutative Termination Using RPO-Compatible Orderings" 4. Alexander Leitsch, "Decision Procedures and Model Building, or How to Improve Logical Information in Automated Deduction" 5. David A. Plaisted and Yunshan Zhu, "Replacement Rules with Definition Detection" 6. Thierry Boy de la Tour, "On the Comlexity [sic] of Finite Sorted Algebras" 7. Domenico Cantone and Marianna Nicolosi Asmundo, "A Further and Effective Liberalization of the Delta-Rule in Free Variable Semantic Tableaux" 8. Domenico Cantone and Calogero G. Zarba, "A New Fast Tableau-Based Decision Procedure for an Unquantified Fragment of Set Theory" 9. Ingo Dahn, "Interpretation of a Mizar-Like Logic in First-Order Logic" 10. St\'ephane Demri and Rajeev Gor\'e, "An $O((n{\cdot}log n)^3$)-time transformation from {Grz} into Decidable Fragments of Classical First-Order Logic" 11. Christian G. Ferm\"uller, "Implicational Completeness of Signed Resolution" 12. Andrea Fromisano and Eugenio Omodeo, "An Equational Re-Engineering of Set Theories" 13. Ullrich Hustadt andz Renate A. Schmidt, "Issues of Decidability for Description Logics in the Framework of Resolution" 14. Reinhard Pichler, "Extending Decidable Clause Classes Via Constraints" 15. Reinhard Pichler, "Completeness and Redundancy in Constrained Clause Logic" 16. Aida Pliu\v{s}keviciene, "Effective Properties of Some First-Order Intuitionistic Modal Logics" 17. Grigore Rosu and Joseph Goguen, "Hidden Congruent Deduction" 18. Viorica Sofronie-Stokkermans, "Resolution-based theorem proving for SH$_n$-logics" 19. Claus-Peter Wirth "Full First-Order Sequent and Tableau Calculi with Preservation of Solutions and the Liberalized Delta-Rule but without Skolemization" }, ISBN = {3540671900 (softcover)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .A96 A851 2000.}, topic = {theorem-proving;modal-logic;} } @incollection{ caffi_c:2013a, author = {Claudia Caffi}, title = {Mitigation}, booktitle = {Pragmatics of Speech Actions}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Marina Sbis\'a and Ken Turner}, pages = {235--286}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {hedging;rhetoric;} } @article{ cagnoni:1977a, author = {Donatella Cagnoni}, title = {A Note on the Elimination Rules}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {269--281}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @unpublished{ cahill_lj:1996a1, author = {Lynne J. Cahill}, title = {Morphonology in the Lexicon}, year = {1996}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Date is a guess.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences, University of Sussex.}, xref = {Conference publication: cahill_lj:1996a2}, topic = {computational-lexicography;nm-ling;} } @inproceedings{ cahill_lj:1996a2, author = {Lynne J. Cahill}, title = {Morphonology in the Lexicon}, booktitle = {Proceedings, Sixth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1993}, pages = {87--96}, organization = {{A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, missinginfo = {editor, publisher, address}, abstract = {In this paper we present a means of defining morphonological phenomena in an inheritance based lexicon. We make use of the theory behind the formal language MOLUSC, in which morphological alternations were defined as mappings between sequences of tree-structured syllables. We discuss how the alternations can be defined in the inheritance-based lexical representa- tion language DATR, and how the phonological aspects can be built upon to bring it closer to an integrated lexicon with representations which can be used by both the morphology and phonology of a language.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {computational-morphology;nm-ling;} } @unpublished{ cahill_lj-gazdar_g:1996a, author = {Lynne J. Cahill and Gerald Gazdar}, title = {Multilingual Lexicons for Related Languages}, year = {1996}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Date is a guess.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences, University of Sussex.}, topic = {computational-lexicography;} } @inproceedings{ cahn_je-brennan_se:1999a, author = {Janet E. Cahn and Susan E. Brennan}, title = {A Psychological Model of Grounding and Repair in Dialog}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Psychological Models of Communication in Collaborative Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Susan E. Brennan and Alain Giboin and David R. Traum}, pages = {25--33}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {discourse;conversational-record;} } @article{ cahn_sm:1964a, author = {Steven M. Cahn}, title = {Fatalistic Arguments}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1964}, volume = {62}, number = {10}, pages = {295--305}, xref = {Commentary on: taylor_r:1962a. Also see: taylor:1964a.}, topic = {(in)determinism;} } @book{ cahn_sm:1967a, author = {Steven M. Cahn}, title = {Fate, Logic, and Time}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, year = {1967}, address = {New Haven}, xref = {Criticism: chapman:1972a.}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;(in)determinism;} } @article{ cahn_sm:1974a, author = {Steven M. Cahn}, title = {Statements of Future Contingencies}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1974}, volume = {81}, number = {332}, pages = {574}, xref = {Reply to chapman:1972a.}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In a note in ``Mind,'' Tobias Chapman claims that the solution to the fatalist's paradox which I offer in my book ``Fate, Logic, and Time" is defective in two respects. In this article I argue that both Chapman's objections are mistaken. First, he erroneously assumes that all statements are tensed. Second, he erroneously assumes that a three-valued logic must be purely truth-functional. }, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;} } @article{ cai_sw-etal:2011a, author = {Shaowei Cai and Kaile Su and Abdul Sattar}, title = {Local Search with Edge Weighting and Configuration Checking Heuristics for Minimum Vertex Cover}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {9--10}, pages = {1672--1696}, topic = {minimum-vertex-cover;} } @article{ cai_sw-su_kl:2013a, author = {Shaowei Cai and Kaile Su}, title = {Local Search for {B}oolean {S}atisfiability with Configuration Checking and Subscore}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {204}, pages = {75--98}, topic = {model-checking;} } @incollection{ caicedo:1995a, author = {Xavier Caicedo}, title = {Continuous Operations on Spaces of Functions}, booktitle = {Quantifiers: Logic, Models, and Computation, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Micha{\l} Krynicki and Marcin Mostowski and Les{\l}aw W. Szczerba}, pages = {263--296}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {model-theory;topology;} } @article{ caie_m:2012a, author = {Michael Caie}, title = {Belief and Indeterminacy}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2012}, volume = {121}, number = {1}, pages = {1--54}, topic = {truth-value-gaps;belief;propositional-attitudes;semantic-paradoxes;} } @incollection{ caie_m:2014a, author = {Michael Caie}, title = {Metasemantics and Metaphysical Indeterminacy}, booktitle = {Metasemantics: New Essays on the Foundations of Meaning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Alexis Burgess and Brett Sherman}, pages = {55--96}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;vagueness;} } @article{ caie_m:2015a, author = {Michael Caie}, title = {Review of \emph{Unruly Words}, by {D}iana {R}affman}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2015}, volume = {122}, number = {3}, pages = {415--419}, xref = {Review of: raffman:2014a}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ caie_m:2016a, author = {Michael Caie}, title = {Agreement Theorems for Self-Locating Belief}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2016}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {380--407}, topic = {centered-propositions;mutual-attitudes;} } @article{ caie_m:2018a, author = {Michael Caie}, title = {Agreement and Updating For Self-Locating Belief}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {3}, pages = {513--547}, topic = {self-locating-constructions;sleeping-beauty-problem;} } @incollection{ caie_m:2018b, author = {Michael Caie}, title = {Semantic Indecision}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 32: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2018}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {108--143}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {vagueness;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ caie_m:2020a, author = {Michael Caie}, title = {Bunder's Paradox}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, pages = {829--844}, abstract = {Systems of illative logic are logical calculi formulated in the untyped $\lambda$-calculus supplemented with certain logical constants. In this short paper, I consider a paradox that arises in illative logic. I note two prima facie attractive ways of resolving the paradox. The first is well known to be consistent, and I briefly outline a now standard construction used by Scott and Aczel that establishes this. The second, however, has been thought to be inconsistent. I show that this isn't so, by providing a nonempty class of models that establishes its consistency. I then provide an illative logic which is sound and complete for this class of models. ...}, topic = {illiative-logic;lambda-calculus;} } @article{ cajori:1915a, author = {Florian Cajori}, title = {The History of {Z}eno's Arguments on Motion}, journal = {American Mathmatical Monthly}, year = {1915}, volume = {22}, pages = {1--6; 39--47, 77--82; 109--115; 143--149; 179--186; 215--220; 253--258; 292--297}, topic = {paradoxes-of-motion;Zeno;} } @incollection{ calabar-etal:2006a, author = {Pedro Calabar and Sergei Odintsov and David Pearce}, title = {Logical Foundations of Well-Founded Semantics}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {25--35}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {well-founded-semantics;stable-models;partial-equilibrium-logic;} } @article{ calabrese:2003a, author = {Philip G. Calabrese}, title = {Operating on Functions with Variable Domains}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2003}, volume = {32}, number = {1}, pages = {1--18}, topic = {truth-value-gaps;conditional-constructions;} } @article{ calabrese:2005a, author = {Philip G. Calabrese}, title = {Toward a More Natural Expression of Quantum Logic with {B}oolean Fractions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2005}, volume = {34}, number = {4}, pages = {403--421}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @article{ calabrese_pg:2018a, author = {Philip G. Calabrese}, title = {Conditional Events and Quantum Logic}, journal = {Journal of Applied Mathematics and Physics}, year = {2018}, volume = {6}, number = {6}, pages = {1278--1289}, abstract = {This paper ... recounts a relatively recent algebraic extension of the Boolean algebra of probabilistic events to 'conditional events' (order pairs of events). The main point is to show that a so-called 'superposition' of two (or more) quantum events (usually with mutually inconsistent initial conditions) can be represented in this algebra of conditional events and assigned a consistent conditional probability. There is no need to imagine that a quantum particle can simultaneously straddle two inconsistent possibilities.}, topic = {quantum-algebras;conditionals;} } @phdthesis{ calardo_e:2013a, author = {Erica Calardo}, title = {Non-Normal Modal Logics, Quantification, and Deontic Dilemmas}, school = {Alma Mater Studiorum, Universit\`a di Bologna}, year = {2013}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Bologna}, topic = {deontic-logic;moral-conflict;} } @incollection{ calardo_e-etal:2014a, author = {Erica Calarado and Guido Governatori and Antonio Rotolo}, title = {A Preference-Based Semantics for {CTD} Reasoning}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic and Normative Systems: {DEON} 2014}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2014}, editor = {Fabrizio Cariani and Davide Grossi and Joke Mehens and Xavier Parent}, pages = {49--64}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {deontic-logic;reparational-obligations;} } @article{ calardo_e-rotolo_a:2017a, author = {Erica Calardo and Antonino Rotolo}, title = {Quantification in Some Non-Normal Modal Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {5}, pages = {541--576}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ calautti_m-etal:2020a, author = {Marco Calautti and Sergio Greco and Cristian Molinaro and Irina Trubitsyna}, title = {Preference-based Inconsistency-Tolerant Query Answering under Existential Rules}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {203--212}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we propose a framework for querying inconsistent knowledge bases under user preferences for existential rule languages. We provide generalizations of popular inconsistency-tolerant semantics taking preferences into account and study the data and combined complexity of different relevant problems.}, topic = {kb-query-processing;reasoning-about-inconsistency;existential-rules;} } @incollection{ calder:1997a, author = {Jo Calder}, title = {On Aligning Trees}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {75--80}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {empirical-methods-in-nlp;corpus-linguistics; corpus-tagging;} } @article{ caleiro_c-etal:2003a, author = {Carlos Caleiro and Walter A. Carnielli and M.E. Coniglio and A. Sernidas and C. Sernidas}, title = {Fibring Non-Truth-Functional Logics: Completeness Preservation}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2003}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {183--211}, topic = {fibred-semantics;combining-logics;paraconsistency;} } @incollection{ caleiro_c-etal:2005a, author = {Carlos Caleiro and Walter A. Carnielli and Jo\~ao Rasga and Cristina Sernadas}, title = {Fibring of Logics as a Universal Construction}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {XIII}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {122--180}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {fibring-logics;combining-logics;} } @book{ calhoun-solomon_rc:1984a, editor = {Cheshire Calhoun and Robert C. Solomon}, title = {What is an Emotion? Classic Readings in Philosophical Psychology}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {emotion;} } @incollection{ cali-etal:2006a, author = {Andrea Cali and Georg Gottlob and Michael Kifer}, title = {Taming the Infinite Chase: Query Answering under Expressive Relational Constraints}, booktitle = {Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference (KR2008)}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {70--91}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {A crucial task in Knowledge Representation is answering queries posed over a knowledge base, represented as a set of facts plus a set of rules. In this paper we address the problem of answering conjunctive queries posed over knowledge bases where rules are an extension of Datalog rules, and may have existentially quantified variables in the head; this kind of rules are traditionally called tuple-generating dependencies (TGDs) in the database literature, but they are broadly used in description logics and in ontological reasoning. In this setting, the chase algorithm is an important tool for query answering. So far, most of the research has concentrated on cases where the chase terminates. We define and study large classes of TGDs under which the query evaluation problems remain decidable even in case the chase does not terminate. We provide tight complexity bounds for such cases. Our results immediately extend to query containment. }, topic = {knowledge-base-queries;} } @incollection{ cali-etal:2008a, author = {Andrea Cali and Georg Gottlob and Michael Kifer}, title = {Taming the Infinite Chase: Query Answering under Expressive Relational Constraints}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {70--80}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {query-answering;Datalog;} } @article{ cali-etal:2012a, author = {Andrea Cali and Georg Gottlob and Andreas Pieris}, title = {Towards More Expressive Ontology Languages: The Query Answering Problem}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {193}, pages = {87--128}, topic = {computational-ontology;question-answering;} } @incollection{ calif-mooney_rj:1998a, author = {Mary Elaine Calif and Raymond J. Mooney}, title = {Relational Learning of Pattern-Match Rules for Information Extraction}, booktitle = {{CoNLL97}: Computational Natural Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {T. Mark Ellison}, pages = {9--15}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;information-retrieval;} } @article{ calis:1984a, author = {G\'e Calis}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}ntentionality: an Essay in the Philosophy of Mind}, by {J}ohn {R}. {S}earle}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1984}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {295--299}, xref = {Review of: searle_jr:1983a}, topic = {intentionality;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ call_j-tomasello_m:2005a, author = {Josep Call and Michael Tomasello}, title = {Reasoning and Thinking in Nonhuman Primates}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Keith J. Holyoak and Robert G. Morrison}, pages = {607--632}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;primatology;} } @incollection{ call_j-tomasello_m:2005b, author = {Josep Call and Michael Tomasello}, title = {What Chimpanzees Know about Seeing Revisited: An Explanation of the Third Kind}, booktitle = {Joint Attention: Communication and Other Minds}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Naomi Eilan and Christoph Hoerl and Teresa McCormack and Johannes Roessler}, pages = {45--64}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {animal-cognition;} } @incollection{ callaghan:2010a, author = {Casey O'Callaghan}, title = {Experiencing Speech}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2010}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {305--332}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;perception;} } @incollection{ callaway:2003a, author = {Charles B. Callaway}, title = {Do We Need Deep Generation of Disfluent Dialogue?}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Natural Language Generation in Spoken and Written Dialogue}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Reva Freedman and Charles Callaway}, pages = {6--11}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {nl-generation;computational-dialogue;disfluency;} } @article{ callaway-lester_jc:2002a, author = {Charles B. Callaway and James C. Lester}, title = {Narrative Prose Generation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {139}, number = {2}, pages = {213--252}, topic = {nl-generation;fiction;narrative-generation;} } @article{ callendar_c:1998a, author = {Craig Callendar}, title = {Review of \emph{{B}angs, Crunches, Whimpers, and Shrieks: Singularities and Acausalities in Relativistic Spacetime}, by {J}ohn {E}arman}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1998}, volume = {107}, number = {1}, pages = {142--146}, xref = {Review of earman_j:1995a}, topic = {spacetime-singularities;philosophy-of-physics;} } @article{ callendar_c:1999a, author = {Craig Callender}, title = {Reducing Thermodynamics to Statistical Mechanics: The Case of Entropy}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {96}, number = {7}, pages = {348--373}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;foundations-of-thermodynamics; theory-reduction;} } @incollection{ callendar_c:2000a, author = {Craig Callendar}, title = {Shedding Light on Time}, booktitle = {{PSA}'1998: Proceedings of the 1998 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2000}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {S587--S599}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;philosophy-of-physics;} } @incollection{ callendar_c:2008a, author = {Craig Callendar}, title = {The Common Now}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {339--362}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc20}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;`now';} } @book{ callendar_c:2017a, author = {Craig Callendar}, title = {What Makes Time Special?}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780198797302}, xref = {Reviews: price_h:2019a, weatherall_jo:2020a}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;} } @book{ callendar_c-huggert:2000a, editor = {Craig Callendar and Nick Huggert}, title = {Physics Meets Philosophy at the {P}lanck Scale: Contemporary Theories in Quantum Gravity}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052166445-4}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;quantum-gravity;} } @inproceedings{ callisonburch_c-etal:2005a, author = {Chris Callison-Burch and Colin Bannard and Josh Schroeder}, title = {Scaling Phrase-Based Statistical Machine Translation to Larger Corpora and Longer Phrases}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {255--262}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1032}, topic = {machine-translation;statistical-nlp;} } @techreport{ callon_m:2006a, author = {Michel Callon}, title = {What Does it Mean to say that Economics is Performative?}, institution = {Working Paper Series, Centre de Sociologie de L'Innovation, Ecole des Mines de Paris}, year = {2006}, address = {Paris}, note = {https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00091596/document}, topic = {philosophy-of-economics;} } @article{ calloway-etal:2005a, author = {Charles Calloway and Elena Not and Alessandra Novello and Cesare Rocchi and Oliviero Stock and Massimo Zancanaro}, title = {Automatic Cinematography and Multilingual {NLG} for Generating Video Documentations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {165}, number = {1}, pages = {57--89}, topic = {nl-generation;automatic-cinematography;} } @incollection{ calmes-etal:2002a, author = {Martine de Calm\'es and Didier Dubois and Eyke H\"ullermeier and Henri Prade and Florecne S\'edes}, title = {A Fuzzy Set Approach to Flexible Case-Based Querying: Methodology and Experimentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {449--458}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;query-planning;} } @book{ calmet-etal:1996a, editor = {Jacques Calmet and John A. Campbell and Jochen Pfalzgraf}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Mathematical Computation: International Conference, {AISC}-3, Steyr, Austria, September 23-25, 1996, Proceedings}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540617329}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, Q 334 .A7661 1996.}, topic = {logic-programming;theorem-proving;} } @book{ calmet-plaza_j:1998a, editor = {Jacques Calmet and Jan Plaza}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation: Proceedings of {AISC'98}}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Luc De Raedt, "An Inductive Logic Programming Query Language for Database Mining (Extended Abstract)" 2. Melvin Fitting, "Bertrand {R}ussell, {H}erbrand's Theorem, and the Assignment Statement" 3. Richmond H. Thomason, "Representing and Reasoning with Context" 4. Alessandro Armado and Silvio Ranise, "From Integrated Reasoning Specialists to `Plug and Play' Reasoning Components" 5. Clemens Ballarin and Lawrence C. Paulson, "Reasoning about Coding Theory: The Benefits We Get From Computer Algebra" 6. Michael Beeson, "Automatic Generation of Epsilon-Delta Proofs of Continuity" 7. Belaid Benhamou and Laurent Heocque, "Finite Model Search for Equational Theories (FMSET)" 8. P.G. Bertoli nd J. Calmet and Fausto Giunchiglia and K. Homann, "Specification and Integration of Theorem Provers and Computer Algebra Systems" 9. Carlos Castro, "{COLLETTE}, Prototyping {CSP} Problem Solvers Using a Rule-Based Language" 10. Martin Damsbo and Peder Thusgaard Ruboff, "An Evolutionary Algorithm for Welding Task Sequence Ordering" 11. Uwe Egli and Stephen Schmitt, "Intuitionistic Proof Transformations and Their Application to Constructive Program Synthesis" 12. St\'ephane F\'evre and Dongming Wang, "Combining Algebraic Computing and Term-Rewriting for Geometry Theorem Proving" 13. Dirk Fuchs, "Cooperation between Top-Down and Bottom-Up Theorem Provers by Subgoal Clause Transfer" 14. Ken-etzu Fujita, "Polymorphic Call-by-Value Calculus Based on Classical Proofs" 15. L.M. Laita and E. Roanes-Lozano and Y. Maojo, "Inference and Verification in Medical Appropriateness Criteria Using {G}r\"obner Bases" 16. Christopher Lynch, "The Unification Problem for One Relation {T}hue Systems" 17. Christopher Lynch and Christelle Scharff, "Basic Completion with E-Cycle Simplification" 18. Eric Monfroy and Christophe Ringeissen, "Sole{X}: A Domain Independent Scheme for Constraint Solver Extension" 19. Ian Horrocks and Peter F. Patel-Schneider, "Optimising Propositional Modal Satisfiability for Description Logic Subsumption" 20. Brigitte Pientka and Christoph Kreitz, "Instantiation of Existentially Quantified Variables in Induction Specification Proofs" 21. Zbigniew Ra\'s and Jiyun Zheng, "Knowledge Discovery Objects and Queries in Distributed Knowledge Systems" 22. Fritz Schwartz, "{ALLTYPES}: An Algebraic Language and {TYPE} System" 23. J. Rafael Sendra and Franz Winkler, "Real Parametrization of Algebraic Curves" 24. Zbigniew Stachniak, "Non-Clausal Reasoning with Propositional Theories" }, topic = {logic-programming;theorem-proving;} } @article{ calo:2011a, author = {M. Ryan Calo}, title = {Peeping Hals}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {5}, pages = {940--941}, topic = {social-political-implications-of-AI;} } @article{ calo_mr:2011a, author = {M. Ryan Calo}, title = {Open Robotics}, journal = {Maryland Law Review}, year = {2011}, volume = {70}, number = {3}, pages = {101--142}, abstract = {... I will advance several hypotheses about the commercial prospects of robotics in the United States. I will argue that to fulfill its enormous promise personal robotics must be sufficiently 'open' to third party innovation and that paving the way toward such openness may require modest legal intervention.}, topic = {AI-editorial;robotics;open-source-software;} } @article{ calosi_c:2023a, author = {Claudio Calosi}, title = {Extended Simples, Unextended Complexes}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2023}, volume = {52}, number = {2}, pages = {643--668}, abstract = {... I make a detailed plea to supplement this notion of extension with a different one that is phrased in terms of measure theory. ... I provide new characterizations of both extended simples and unextended complexes, that help re-evaluating the question of whether such entities are metaphysically possible. Finally, I advance several suggestions as to how different notions of extension relate, first, to one another and, second, to mereological structure.}, topic = {mereology;} } @incollection{ calude:2000a, author = {Cristian S. Calude}, title = {A Glimpse into Algorithmic Information Theory}, booktitle = {Logic, Language, and Computation, Volume 3}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2000}, editor = {Lawrence Cavedon and Patrick Blackburn and Nick Braisby and Atushi Shimojina}, pages = {67--83}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {algorithmic-information-theory;randomness;} } @article{ calude:2002a, author = {Cristian S. Calude}, title = {Incompleteness, Complexity, Randomness and Beyond}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {4}, pages = {503--517}, abstract = {G\"odel's Incompleteness Theorems have the same scientific status as Einstein's principle of relativity, Heisenberg's uncertainty principle, and Watson and Crick's double helix model of DNA. Our aim is to discuss some new faces of the incompleteness phenomenon unveiled by an information-theoretic approach to randomness and recent developments in quantum computing. }, topic = {in)completeness;randomness;quantum-computing;} } @incollection{ calvanese_d:1996a, author = {Diego Calvanese}, title = {Finite Model Reasoning in Description Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {292--303}, address = {San Francisco, California}, contentnote = {Considers eg how to add lists and trees to KL1.}, topic = {kr;description-logics;extensions-of-kl1;finite-models;kr-course;} } @incollection{ calvanese_d-degiacomo_g:2003a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe de Giacomo}, title = {Expressive Description Logics}, booktitle = {The Description Logic Handbook: Theory, Implementation and Applications}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Franz Baader and Diego Calvanese and Deborah L. McGuinness and Daniele Nardi and Peter Patel-Schneider}, pages = {178--218}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {description-logics;kr-systems;extensions-of-kl1;} } @article{ calvanese_d-degiacomo_g:2005a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo}, title = {Data Integration: A Logic-Based Perspective}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2005}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {59--70}, topic = {data-integration;} } @incollection{ calvanese_d-etal:1998a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe de Giacomo and Maurizio Lenzarini and Daniele Nardi and Ricardo Rosati}, title = {Description Logic Framework for Knowledge Integration}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {2--13}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;knowledge-integration;taxonomic-logics;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ calvanese_d-etal:2000a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {Containment of Conjunctive Regular Path Queries with Inverse}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {176--185}, abstract = {A fundamental form of reasoning on queries is checking containment, i.e., verifying whether one query yields necessarily a subset of the result of another query. ... we address the problem of query containment in the context of semistructured knowledge bases, where the basic querying mechanism, namely regular path queries, asks for all pairs of objects that are connected by a path conforming to a regular expression. ... }, topic = {reasoning-with-queries;} } @incollection{ calvanese_d-etal:2002a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {Reasoning about Action and Planning in {LTL} Action Theories}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {593--602}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;planning-formalisms;reasoning-about-actions;} } @incollection{ calvanese_d-etal:2004a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Domenico Lembo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {What to Ask to a Peer: Ontology-Based Query Reformulation}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {469--478}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {computational-ontology;kb-query-processing;} } @incollection{ calvanese_d-etal:2006a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Dominico Lembo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Ricardo Rosati}, title = {Data Complexity of Query Answering in Description Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {260--270}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {description-logics;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ calvanese_d-etal:2008a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Domenico Lembo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {Path-Based Identification Constraints in Description Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {231--241}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {In spite of the importance of identification mechanisms in ontology engineering, the Description Logics at the basis of current reasoners do not include modeling features for expressing identification constraints. In this paper, we consider a powerful class of identification constraints, which allow for using roles, inverses, and paths, thus capturing sophisticated forms of identifications often needed in real-world applications. We show that, when used with no limitations, such path-based identification constraints are problematic with respect to effectiveness/efficiency of reasoning. We then propose a restricted form of these constraints, called local, requiring that at least one of the component paths of the concept identifier is a direct property of the concept. We argue that such a restriction is not a severe limitation in practice, and we show that local path-based identification constraints do not increase the complexity of reasoning both in very expressive Description Logics and in the tractable DL-Lite family. }, topic = {description-logics;identity;} } @incollection{ calvanese_d-etal:2008b, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {View-Based Query Answering over Description Logic Ontologies}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {242--251}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {View-based query answering is the problem of answering a query based only on the answers precomputed for a set of views. $\ldots$ In this paper, we first present a general framework for view-based query answering, where we address the above semantical problems by defining a spectrum of notions of view-based query answering over ontologies, all based on the idea that the precomputed answers to views are the certain answers to the corresponding queries. We also relate such notions to relevant issues in ontology management, in particular ontology access authorization. Then, we provide decidability results, algorithms, and data complexity characterizations for view-based query answering in several Description Logics, ranging from the DL-Lite family to very expressive Description Logics. }, topic = {dl-lite;description-logics;query-answering;} } @inproceedings{ calvanese_d-etal:2012a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Magdalena Ortiz and Mantas Simkus and Giorgio Stefanoni}, title = {The Complexity of Explaining Negative Query Answers in {DL}-{L}ite}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {583--587}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We [adopt] abductive reasoning, that is, we look for additions to the ABox that force a given tuple to be in the result. As reasoning tasks we consider existence and recognition of an explanation, and relevance and necessity of a certain assertion for an explanation. We characterize the computational complexity of these problems for subset minimal and cardinality minimal explanations.}, topic = {kb-query-processing;complexity-in-AI;explainable-AI;} } @article{ calvanese_d-etal:2013a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Domenico Lembo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {Data Complexity of Query Answering in Description Logics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {195}, pages = {335--360}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;description-logics;} } @inproceedings{ calvanese_d-etal:2016a, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {Regular Open {API}s}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, pages = {329--338}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Open APIs [application program interfaces] are software intermediaries that make it possible for application programs to interact with data and processes ... We make the assumption that the semantics of services is specified by means of ... regular languages. As a result, we get a rich analysis framework, where composition shows similarities to conformant and conditional planning. We describe composition principles and automated synthesis techniques for each of the two settings }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;query-answering;finite-state-automata;} } @inproceedings{ calvanese_d-etal:2016b, author = {Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Marco Montali and Fabio Patrizi}, title = {On First-Order $\mu$-Calculus over Situation Calculus Action Theories}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {411--420}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In this paper we study verification of situation calculus action theories against first-order mu-calculus with quantification across situations. ... we show that for bounded situation calculus action theories, mu-La and mu-Lp have exactly the same expressive power. Finally, we prove decidability of verification of mu-La properties over bounded action theories, using finite faithful abstractions. Differently from the mu-Lp case, these abstractions must depend on the number of quantified variables in the mu-La formula. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;mu-calculus;situation-calculus;} } @book{ calvanese_d-etal:2020a, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, title = {{KR}2020: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, year = {2020}, address = {Vienna}, ISBN = {978-0-9992411-7-2}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2020/}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Heba Aamer and Bart Bogaerts and Dimitri Surinx and Eugenia Ternovska and Jan Van den Bussche, "Inputs, Outputs, and Composition in the Logic of Information Flows", pp. 2--11 2. Erman Acar and Rafael Pe\~naloza, "Reasoning with Contextual Knowledge and Influence Diagrams", pp. 12--21 3. Michael E. Akintunde and Elena Botoeva and Panagiotis Kouvaros and Alessio Lomuscio, "Verifying Strategic Abilities of Neural-symbolic Multi-agent Systems", pp. 22--32 4. Gianvincenzo Alfano and Marco Calautti and Sergio Greco and Francesco Parisi and Irina Trubitsyna, "Explainable Acceptance in Probabilistic Abstract Argumentation: Complexity and Approximation", pp. 33--43 5. Mario Alviano, "Answer Set Programming with Composed Predicate Names", pp. 44--48 6. Alexsander Andrade de Melo and Mateus De Oliveira Oliveira, "Symbolic Solutions for Symbolic Constraint Satisfaction Problems", pp. 49--58 7. Yaniv Aspis and Krysia Broda and Alessandra Russo and Jorge Lobo, "Stable and Supported Semantics in Continuous Vector Spaces", pp. 59--68 8. Marcello Balduccini and Michael Gelfond and Enrico Pontelli and Tran Cao Son, "An Answer Set Programming Framework for Reasoning about Agents' Beliefs and Truthfulness of Statements", pp. 69--78 9. Ringo Baumann and Gerhard Brewka and Markus Ulbricht, "Comparing Weak Admissibility Semantics to their Dung-style Counterparts -- Reduct, Modularization, and Strong Equivalence in Abstract Argumentation", pp. 79--88 10. Francesco Belardinelli and Vadim Malvone, "A Three-valued Approach to Strategic Abilities under Imperfect Information", pp. 89--98 11. Nahla Ben Amor and H\'el`ene Fargier and R\'egis Sabbadin and Meriem Trabelsi, "Ordinal Polymatrix Games with Incomplete Information", pp. 99--108 12. Michael Benedikt and Pierre Bourhis and Louis Jachiet and Efthymia Tsamoura, "Balancing Expressiveness and Inexpressiveness in View Design", pp. 109--118 13. Sara Bernardini and Fabio Fagnani and Santiago Franco, "An Optimization Approach to Robust Goal Obfuscation", pp. 119--129 14. Nicola Bertoglio and Gianfranco Lamperti and Marina Zanella and Xiangfu Zhao, "Explanatory Diagnosis of Discrete-Event Systems with Temporal Information and Smart Knowledge-Compilation", pp. 130--140 15. Meghyn Bienvenu and Camille Bourgaux, "Querying and Repairing Inconsistent Prioritized Knowledge Bases: Complexity Analysis and Links with Abstract Argumentation", pp. 141--151 16. Blai Bonet and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Hector Geffner and Fabio Patrizi and Sasha Rubin, "High-level Programming via Generalized Planning and LTL Synthesis", pp. 152--161 17. Laura Bozzelli and Aniello Murano and Adriano Peron, "Module Checking of Pushdown Multi-agent Systems", pp. 162--171 18. David Buckingham and Daniel Kasenberg and Matthias Scheutz, "Simultaneous Representation of Knowledge and Belief for Epistemic Planning with Belief Revision", pp. 172--181 19. Pedro Cabalar and Paulo E. Santos, "Spatial Reasoning about String Loops and Holes in Temporal ASP", pp. 182--192 20. Pedro Cabalar and Jorge Fandinno and Torsten Schaub and Philipp Wanko, "A Uniform Treatment of Aggregates and Constraints in Hybrid ASP", pp. 193--202 21. Marco Calautti and Sergio Greco and Cristian Molinaro and Irina Trubitsyna, "Preference-based Inconsistency-Tolerant Query Answering under Existential Rules", pp. 203--212 22. Giovanni Casini and Thomas Meyer and Ivan Varzinczak, "Rational Defeasible Belief Change", pp. 213--222 23. \.Ismail \.Ilkan Ceylan and Thomas Lukasiewicz and Enrico Malizia and Cristian Molinaro and Andrius Vaicenavi\v{c}ius, "Explanations for Negative Query Answers under Existential Rules", pp. 223--232 24. Jake Chandler and Richard Booth, "Revision by Conditionals: From Hook to Arrow", pp. 233--242 25. Gianluca Cima and Maurizio Lenzerini and Antonella Poggi, "Non-Monotonic Ontology-based Abstractions of Data Services", pp. 243--252 26. Jens Cla{\ss}en and James Delgrande, "Dyadic Obligations over Complex Actions as Deontic Constraints in the Situation Calculus", pp. 253--263 27. Marco Console and Matthias Hofer and Leonid Libkin, "Reasoning about Measures of Unmeasurable Sets", pp. 264--273 28. Martin Cooper and Andreas Herzig and Fr\ed\'eric Maris and Elise Perrotin and Julien Vianey, "Lightweight Parallel Multi-Agent Epistemic Planning", pp. 274--283 29. Konrad K. Dabrowski and Peter Jonsson and Sebastian Ordyniak and George Osipov, "Fine-Grained Complexity of Temporal Problems", pp. 284--293 30. Giuseppe De Giacomo and Bastien Maubert and Aniello Murano, "Nondeterministic Strategies and their Refinement in Strategy Logic", pp. 294--303 31. Giuseppe De Giacomo and Antonio Di Stasio and Moshe Y. Vardi and Shufang Zhu, "Two-Stage Technique for LTLf Synthesis Under LTL Assumptions", pp. 304--314 32. Massimiliano de LeoniPaolo FelliMarco Montali, "Strategy Synthesis for Data-Aware Dynamic Systems with Multiple Actors", pp. 315--325 33. James Delgrande, "A Preference-Based Approach to Defeasible Deontic Inference", pp. 326--335 34. Florence Dupin De Saint-Cyr and Henri Prade, "Jokes and Belief Revision", pp. 336--340 35. Wolfgang Dvo\v{r}\'ak and Anna Rapberger and Stefan Woltran, "Argumentation Semantics under a Claim-centric View: Properties, Expressiveness and Relation to SETAFs", pp. 341--350 36. Thorsten Engesser and Robert Mattmüller and Bernhard Nebel and Felicitas Ritter, "Token-based Execution Semantics for Multi-Agent Epistemic Planning", pp. 351--360 37. Renyan Feng and Erman Acar and Stefan Schlobach and Yisong Wang and Wanwei Liu, "On Sufficient and Necessary Conditions in Bounded CTL: A Forgetting Approach", pp. 361--370 38. Diego Figueira and Adwait Godbole and S. Krishna and Wim Martens and Matthias Niewerth and Tina Trautner, "Containment of Simple Conjunctive Regular Path Queries", pp. 371--380 39. Diego Figueira and Santiago Figueira and Edwin Pin Baque, "Finite Controllability for Ontology-Mediated Query Answering of CRPQ", pp. 381--391 40. Robert Ganian and Tom\'a\v{s} Peitl and Friedrich Slivovsky and Stefan Szeider, "Fixed-Parameter Tractability of Dependency QBF with Structural Parameters", pp. 392--402 51. Olg\'a Gerasimova and Stanislav Kikot and Agi Kurucz and Vladimir Podolskii and Michael Zakharyaschev, "A Data Complexity and Rewritability Tetrachotomy of Ontology-Mediated Queries with a Covering Axiom", pp. 403--413 52. Fausto Giunchiglia and Mattia Fumagalli, "Entity Type Recognition -- Dealing with the Diversity of Knowledge", pp. 414--423 53. Tomasz Gogacz and V\'ictor Guti\'errez-Basulto and Albert Gutowski and Yazm\'in Ib\'a\~nez-Garc\'ia and Filip Murlak, "On Finite Entailment of Non-Local Queries in Description Logics", pp. 424--432 54. Tomasz Gogacz and Sanja Lukumbuzya and Magdalena Ortiz and Mantas \v{S}imkus, "Datalog Rewritability and Data Complexity of ALCHOIF with Closed Predicates", pp. 434--444 55. Georg Gottlob and Marco Manna and Andreas Pieris, "Multi-Head Guarded Existential Rules Over Fixed Signatures", pp. 445--454 56. Davide Grossi and Wiebe van der Hoek and Louwe B. Kuijer, "Logics of Preference when There Is No Best", pp. 455--464 57. Jonas Philipp Haldimann and Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Christoph Beierle, "Syntax Splitting for Iterated Contractions", pp. 465--475 58. Joseph Y. Halpern and Evan Piermont, "Dynamic Awareness", pp. 476--484 59. Markus Hecher, "Treewidth-aware Reductions of Normal ASP to SAT - Is Normal ASP Harder than SAT after All?", pp. 485--495 60. Anthony Hunter, "Reasoning with Inconsistent Knowledge using the Epistemic Approach to Probabilistic Argumentation", pp. 496--505 71. Yazm\'in Ib\'a\~nez-Garc\'ia and V\'ictor Guti\'errez-Basulto and Steven Schockaert, "Plausible Reasoning about EL-Ontologies using Concept Interpolation", pp. 506--516 72. Jean Christoph Jung and Carsten Lutz and Hadrien Pulcini and Frank Wolter, "Logical Separability of Incomplete Data under Ontologies", pp. 517--528 73. Jean Christoph Jung and Carsten Lutz and Thomas Zeume, "On the Decidability of Expressive Description Logics with Transitive Closure and Regular Role Expressions", pp. 529--538 74. Magdalena Kacprzak and Artur Niewiadomski and Wojciech Penczek, "SAT-Based ATL Satisfiability Checking", pp. 539--549 75. Sarah Keren and Sara Bernardini and Kofi Kwapong and David C. Parkes, "Reasoning About Plan Robustness Versus Plan Cost for Partially Informed Agents", pp. 550--559 76. Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Christoph Beierle and Gerhard Brewka, "Syntax Splitting = Relevance + Independence: New Postulates for Nonmonotonic Reasoning From Conditional Belief Bases", pp. 560--571 77. Toryn Q. Klassen and Sheila A. McIlraith and Hector J. Levesque, "Changing Beliefs about Domain Dynamics in the Situation Calculus", pp. 572--581 78. Roman Kontchakov and Vladislav Ryzhikov and Frank Wolter and Michael Zakharyaschev, "Boolean Role Inclusions in DL-Lite With and Without Time", pp. 582--591 79. Patrick Koopmann and Warren Del-Pinto and Sophie Tourret and Renate A. Schmidt, "Signature-Based Abduction for Expressive Description Logics", pp. 592--602 80. Markus Kr\"otzsch, "Computing Cores for Existential Rules with the Standard Chase and ASP", pp. 603--613 81. Nadia Labai and Magdalena Ortiz and Mantas \v{S}imkus, "An ExpTime Upper Bound for ALC with Integers", pp. 614--623 82. Gerhard Lakemeyer and Hector J. Levesque, "A First-Order Logic of Limited Belief Based on Possible Worlds", pp. 624--635 83. Tuomo Lehtonen and Johannes P. Wallner and Matti Järvisalo, "An Answer Set Programming Approach to Argumentative Reasoning in the ASPIC+ Framework", pp. 636--646 84. Jean-Guy Mailly and Julien Rossit, "Argument, I Choose You! Preferences and Ranking Semantics in Abstract Argumentation", pp. 647--651 85. Michael Mora and kLukas Chrpa and Wolfgang Faber and Daniel Fi\v{s}er, "On the Reversibility of Actions in Planning", pp. 652--661 86. Van Nguyen and Stylianos Loukas Vasileiou and Tran Cao Son and William Yeoh, "Explainable Planning Using Answer Set Programming", pp. 662--666 87. Andreas Niskanen and Matti Järvisalo, "Smallest Explanations and Diagnoses of Rejection in Abstract Argumentation", pp. 667--671 88. Rafael Pe\~naloza, "Towards a Logic of Meta-Analysis", pp. 672--676 89. Nico Potyka, "Bipolar Abstract Argumentation with Dual Attacks and Supports", pp. 677--686 90. Fillipe Resina and Marco Garapa and Renata Wassermann and Eduardo Ferm\'e and Maur\'icio Reis, "Choosing What to Believe - New Results in Selective Revision", pp. 687--691 91. Simon Rey and Ulle Endriss and Ronald de Haan, "Designing Participatory Budgeting Mechanisms Grounded in Judgment Aggregation", pp. 692--702 92. Adam Richard-Bollans and Luc\'ia G\'Omez \'alvarez and Anthony G. Cohn, "Modelling the Polysemy of Spatial Prepositions in Referring Expressions", pp. 703--712 93. Tjitze Rienstra and Matthias Thimm and Kristian Kersting and Xiaoting Shao, "Independence and D-separation in Abstract Argumentation", pp. 713--722 94. Tjitze Rienstra and Claudia Schon and Steffen Staab, "Concept Contraction in the Description Logic EL", pp. 723--732 95. Zeynep G. Saribatur and Thomas Eiter, "A Semantic Perspective on Omission Abstraction in ASP", pp. 733--737 96. Nicolas Schwind and S\'ebastien Konieczny, "Non-Prioritized Iterated Revision: Improvement via Incremental Belief Merging ", pp. 738--747 97. Michael Stewart and Wei Liu, "Seq2KG: An End-to-End Neural Model for Domain Agnostic Knowledge Graph (not Text Graph) Construction from Text", pp. 748--757 98. Etienne Toussaint and Paolo Guagliardo and Leonid Libkin, "Knowledge-Preserving Certain Answers for SQL-like Queries", pp. 758--767 99. Przemys{\l}aw A. Wa{\l}\c{e}ga and Bernardo Cuenca Grau and Mark Kaminski and Egor V. Kostylev, "DatalogMTL over the Integer Timeline", pp. 768--777 100. A (Simplified) Supreme Being Necessarily Exists, says the Computer: Computationally Explored Variants of G\"Odel's Ontological Argument., "Applications and System", pp. 779--789 101. Nikos Katzouris and Alexander Artikis, "WOLED: A tool for Online Learning Weighted Answer Set Rules for Temporal Reasoning Under Uncertainty", pp. 790--799 102. Andreas Niskanen and Matti Järvisalo, "$\mu$-Toksia: An Efficient Abstract Argumentation Reasoner", pp. 800--804 103. Antonio Rago and Oana Cocarascu and Christos Bechlivanidis and Francesca Toni, "Argumentation as a Framework for Interactive Explanations for Recommendations", pp. 805--815 104. Zhiwei Zeng and Zhiqi Shen and Benny Toh Hsiang Tan and Jing Jih Chin and Cyril Leung and Yu Wang and Ying Chi and Chunyan Miao, "Explainable and Argumentation-based Decision Making with Qualitative Preferences for Diagnostics and Prognostics of Alzheimer's Disease", pp. 816--826 105. Ralph Abboud and \.Ismail \.Ilkan Ceylan and Radoslav Dimitrov, "On the Approximability of Weighted Model Integration on DNF Structures", pp. 828--837 106. Gilles Audemard and Fr\'ed\'eric Koriche and Pierre Marquis, "On Tractable XAI Queries based on Compiled Representations", pp. 838--849 107. Jiaoyan Chen and Freddy L\'ecu\'e and Yuxia Geng and Jeff Z. Pan and Huajun Chen, "Ontology-Guided Semantic Composition for Zero-shot Learning", pp. 850--854 108. Fabio A. D'Asaro and Matteo Spezialetti and Luca Raggioli and Silvia Rossi, "Towards an Inductive Logic Programming Approach for Explaining Black-Box Preference Learning Systems", pp. 855--859 109. Giuseppe De Giacomo and Marco Favorito and Luca Iocchi and Fabio Patrizi and Alessandro Ronca, "Temporal Logic Monitoring Rewards via Transducers", pp. 860--870 110. Regis Riveret and Son Tran and Artur d'Avila Garcez, "Neuro-Symbolic Probabilistic Argumentation Machines", pp. 871--881 111. Weijia Shi and Andy Shih and Adnan Darwiche and Arthur Choi, "On Tractable Representations of Binary Neural Networks", pp. 882--892 112. Emile van Krieken and Erman Acar and Frank van Harmelen, "Analyzing Differentiable Fuzzy Implications", pp. 893--903 113. Agnese Chiatti and Enrico Motta and Enrico Daga, "Towards a Framework for Visual Intelligence in Service Robotics: Epistemic Requirements and Gap Analysis", pp. 905--916 114. Alessandro Umbrico and Gabriella Cortellessa and Andrea Orlandini and Amedeo Cesta, "Modeling Affordances and Functioning for Personalized Robotic Assistance", pp. 917--926 } , topic = {kr;} } @incollection{ calvanese_m-etal:1994a, author = {Marco Calvanese and Maurizio Lenzerini and Daniele Nardi}, title = {A Unified Framework for Class-Based Representation Formalisms}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {109--120}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;description-logics;frames;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ calverley_dj:2005a, author = {David J. Calverley}, title = {Additional Thoughts Concerning the Legal Status of a Non-Biological Machine}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Machine Ethics}, year = {2005}, editor = {G. Michael Anderson and Susan Leigh Anderson and Chris Arme}, pages = {30--37}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Law, as a pragmatic tool, provides us with a way to test, at a conceptual level, whether a humanly created non-biological machine could be considered a legal person. This paper looks first at the history of law in order to set the foundation for the suggestion that as a normative system it is based on a folk psychology model. Accepting this as a starting point allows us to look to empirical studies in this area to gather support for the idea that intentionality, in the folk psychology sense, can give us a principled way to argue that non-biological machines can become legal persons. In support of this argument I also look at corporate law theory. However, as is often the case, because law has historically been viewed as a human endeavor, complications arise when we attempt to apply its concepts to non-human persons. The distinction between human, person and property is discussed in this regard, with particular note being taken of the concept of slavery. The conclusion drawn is that intentionality in the folk sense is a reasonable basis upon which to rest at least one leg of an argument that a nonbiological machine can be viewed as a legal person.}, topic = {robot-legal-and-ethical-status;} } @incollection{ calverley_dj:2005b, author = {David J. Calverley}, title = {Toward A Method for Determining the Legal Status of a Conscious Machine}, booktitle = {{AISB}'05: Social Intelligence and Interaction in Animals, Robots and Agents: Proceedings of the Symposium on Next Generation Approaches to Machine Consciousness Imagination, Development, Intersubjectivity and Embodiment}, publisher = {The Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and the Simulation of Behaviour}, year = {2005}, editor = {Ron Chrisley and Rob Clowes and Steve Torrance}, pages = {75--84}, address = {Bath, England}, topic = {consciousness;blameworthiness;} } @incollection{ calverley_dj:2011a, author = {David J. Calverley}, title = {Legal Rights for Machines: Some Fundamental Concepts}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {213--243}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {robot-legal-and-ethical-status;} } @article{ calvert-knight_jf:2006a, author = {Wesley Calvert and Julia F. Knight}, title = {Classification from a Computable Viewpoint}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2006}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {191--218}, topic = {classification-theory;computability;isomorphisms;} } @incollection{ calvo_ra:2015a, author = {Rafael A. Calvo}, title = {Affect-Aware Reflective Writing Studios}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {447--458}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {emotional-computing;HCI;computer-assisted-writing;} } @book{ calvo_ra-etal:2015a, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, title = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199942237}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas, "Introduction to Affective Computing", pp. 1--10 1. Rosalind W. Picard, "The Promise of Affective Computing", pp. 11--20 2. Rainer Reisenzein, "A Short History of Psychological Perspectives on Emotion", pp. 21--37 3. Andrew H. Kemp and Jonathan Krygier and Eddie Harmon-Jones, "Neuroscientific Perspectives of Emotion", pp. 38--53 4. Jonathan Gratch and Stacy Marsella, "Appraisal Models", pp. 34--67 5. Brian Parkinson, "Emotions in Interpersonal Life: Computer Mediation, Modeling, and Simulation", pp. 68--83 6. Maja Pantic and Alessandro Vinciarelli, "Social Signal Processing", pp. 84--93 7. Christine Lisetti and Eva Hudlicka, "Why and How to Build Emotion-Based Agent Architectures", pp. 94--109 8. Despina Kakoudaki, "Affect and Machines in the Media", pp. 110--129 9. Jeffrey F. Cohn and Fernando De la Torre, "Automated Face Analysis for Affective Computing", pp. 131--150 10. Nadia Bianchi-Berthouze and Andrea Kleinsmith, "Automatic Recognition of Affective Body Expressions", pp. 151--169 11. Chi-Chun Lee, Jangwon Kim, Angeliki Metallinou, Carlos Busso, Sungbok Lee, and Shrikanth S. Narayanan, "Speech in Affective Computing", pp. 170--183 12. Carlo Strapparava and Rada Mihalcea, "Affect Detection in Texts", pp. 184--203 13. Jennifer Healey, "Physiological Sensing of Emotion", pp. 204--216 14. Christian M\"uhl, Dirk Heylen, and Anton Nijholt, "Affective Brain-Computer Interfaces: Neuroscientific Approaches to Affect Detection", pp. 217--232 15. Ryan S. J. D. Baker and Jaclyn Ocumpaugh, "Interaction-Based Affect Detection in Educational Software", pp. 233--245 16. Ginevra Castellano, Hatice Gunes, Christopher Peters, and Bj\"orn Schuller, "Multimodal Affect Recognition for Naturalistic Human-Computer and Human-Robot Interactions", pp. 246--259 17. Magalie Ochs, Radoslaw Niewiadomski, and Catherine Pelachaud, "Facial Expressions of Emotions for Virtual Characters", pp. 261--272 18. Margaux Lhommet and Stacy C. Marsella, "Expressing Emotion Through Posture and Gesture", pp. 273--285 19. Felix Burkhardt and Nick Campbell, "Emotional Speech Synthesis", pp. 286--295 20. Ana Paiva, Iolanda Leite, and Tiago Ribeiro, "Emotion Modeling for Social Robots", pp. 296--308 21. Elisabeth Andr\'e, "Preparing Emotional Agents for Intercultural Communication", pp. 309-- 321 22. Bj\"orn Schuller, "Multimodal Affect Databases: Collection, Challenges, and Chances", pp. 323--333 23. Roddy Cowie, "Ethical Issues in Affective Computing", pp. 334--348 24. M. Sazzad Hussain, Sidney K. D'Mello, and Rafael A. Calvo, "Research and Development Tools in Affective Computing", pp. 349--358 25. Shazia Afzal and Peter Robinson, "Emotion Data Collection and Its Implications for Affective Computing", pp. 359--370 26. Jacqueline M. Kory and Sidney K. D'Mello, "Affect Elicitation for Affective Computing", pp. 371--383 27. Robert R. Morris and Daniel McDuff, "Crowdsourcing Techniques for Affective Computing", pp. 384--394 28. Marc Schr\"oder and Paolo Baggia and Felix Burkhardt and Catherine Pelachaud and Christian Peter, and Enrico Zovato, "Emotion Markup Language", pp. 395--405 29. Ashish Kapoor, "Machine Learning for Affective Computing: Challenges and Opportunities", pp. 406--417 30. Sidney K. D'Mello and Art C. Graesser, "Feeling, Thinking, and Computing with Affect-Aware Learning Technologies", pp. 419--434 31. H. Chad Lane, "Enhancing Informal Learning Experiences with Affect-Aware Technologies", pp. 435--446 32. Rafael A. Calvo, "Affect-Aware Reflective Writing Studios", pp. 447--458 33. Georgios N. Yannakakis and Ana Paiva, "Emotion in Games", pp. 459--471 34. Egon L. van den Broek, Joris H. Janssen, and Joyce H. D. M. Westerink, "Autonomous Closed-Loop Biofeedback: An Introduction and a Melodious Application", pp. 472--493 35. Ronald C. Arkin and Lilia Moshkina. "Affect in Human-Robot Interaction", pp. 494-502 36. Jakki O. Bailey and Jeremy N. Bailenson, "Virtual Reality and Collaboration", pp. 503--502 37. Aaron Elkins, Stefanos Zafeiriou, Maja Pantic, and Judee Burgoon, "Unobtrusive Deception Detection", pp. 503--515 38. Daniel S. Messinger, Leticia Lobo Duvivier, Zachary E. Warren, Mohammad Mahoor, Jason Baker, Anne Warlaumont, and Paul Ruvolo, "Affective Computing, Emotional Development, and Autism", pp. 516--536 39. Timothy W. Bickmore, "Relational Agents in Health Applications: Leveraging Affective Computing to Promote Healing and Wellness", pp. 537--546 40. Giuseppe Riva, Rafael A. Calvo, and Christine Lisetti, "Cyberpsychology and Affective Computing", pp. 547--558 }, topic = {emotional-computing;synthesized-emotions;} } @incollection{ calvo_ra-etal:2015b, author = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, title = {Introduction to Affective Computing}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {1--10}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn19}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;emotional-computing;} } @book{ calvo_ra-symons:2014a, editor = {Paco Calvo and John Symons}, title = {The Architecture of Cognition: Rethinking {F}odor and {P}ylyshyn's Systematicity Challenge}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-02723-6}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;C-systematicity;} } @incollection{ calzolari_n:1994a, author = {Nicoletta Calzolari}, title = {Issues for Lexicon Building}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Computational Linguistics: Essays in Honour of {D}on {W}alker}, publisher = {Giardini Editori e Stampatori and Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {Antonio Zampolli and Nicoletta Calzolari and Martha Palmer}, pages = {267--281}, address = {Pisa and Dordrecht}, topic = {computational-lexicography;} } @inproceedings{ camacho_a-etal:2018a, author = {Alberto Camacho and Meghyn Bienvenu and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Finite {LTL} Synthesis with Environment Assumptions and Quality Measures}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {454--463}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we investigate the problem of synthesizing strategies for linear temporal logic (LTL) specifications that are interpreted over finite traces -- a problem that is central to the automated construction of controllers, robot programs, and business processes. ... Our algorithms utilize an automata-game approach, positioning them well for future implementation via existing state-of-the-art techniques.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {linear-temporal-logic;program-synthesis;} } @book{ cameron_d-rosenblatt_b:1991a, author = {Debra Cameron and Bill Rosenblatt}, title = {Learning Gnu Emacs}, publisher = {O'Reilly}, year = {1991}, address = {Sebastopol, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Computer Manuals Shelf.}, topic = {emacs-manual;} } @article{ cameron_jr:2000a, author = {J.R. Cameron}, title = {Numbers as Types}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2000}, volume = {97}, number = {10}, pages = {529--563}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @book{ cameron_m-stainton_rj:2015a, editor = {Margaret Cameron and Robert J. Stainton}, title = {Linguistic Content: New Essays on the History of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: bulthuis_n:2017a}, topic = {history-of-philosophy;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ cameron_pj:1994a, author = {Peter J. Cameron}, title = {Combinatorics: Topics, Techniques, Algorithms}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Mathematics Shelves.}, topic = {combinatorics;} } @book{ cameron_r:2015a, author = {Ross Cameron}, title = {The Moving Spotlight: An Essay on Time and Ontology}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780198713296}, xref = {Review: deasy_d:2016a}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;A-series-B-series;} } @article{ cameron_w:2008a, author = {William Cameron}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}anguage: A Biological Model}, by {R}uth {G}arrett {M}illikan}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {127--131}, xref = {Review of: millikan_rg:2005a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;foundations-of-semantics;convention;} } @inproceedings{ caminada_m:2006a, author = {Martin Caminada}, title = {On the Issue of Reinstatement in Argumentation}, booktitle = {{JELIA} 2006: Logics in Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, editor = {Michael Fisher and Wiebe van der Hoek and Boris Konev and Alexei Lisitsa}, pages = {111--123}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ caminada_m-amgoud_l:2007a, author = {Martin Caminada and Leila Amgoud}, title = {On the Evaluation of Argumentation Formalisms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {5--6}, pages = {286--310}, topic = {argument-systems;AI-system-evaluation;} } @article{ caminada_m-gabbay_dm:2009a, author = {Martin Caminada and Dov M. Gabbay}, title = {A Logical Account of Formal Argumentation}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2009}, volume = {93}, number = {2--3}, pages = {109--145}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ caminada_mwa:2006a, author = {Martin W.A. Caminada}, title = {On the Issue of Reinstatement in Argumentation}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence: 10th European Conference, {JELIA} 2006}, year = {2006}, editor = {Michael Fisher and Wiebe van der Hoek and Boris Konev and Alexei Lisitsa}, pages = {111--123}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ caminada_mwa:2006b, author = {Martin W.A. Caminada}, title = {Semi-Stable Semantics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2006 conference on Computational Models of Argument: {COMMA} 2006}, year = {2006}, editor = {Paul E. Dunne and Trevor J.M. Bench-Capon}, pages = {121--130}, publisher = {IOS Press}, address = {Amsterdam}, abstract = {... One of the advantages of semi-stable semantics is that there exists at least one semi-stable extension. Furthermore, if there also exists at least one stable extension, then the semi-stable extensions coincide with the stable extensions. This, and other properties, make semi-stable semantics an attractive alternative for the more traditional stable semantics, which until now has been widely used in fields such as logic programming and answer set programming.}, topic = {stable-models;} } @inproceedings{ caminada_mwa:2007a, author = {Martin W.A. Caminada}, title = {Comparing Two Unique Extension Semantics for Formal Argumentation: Ideal and Eager}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Nineteenth Belgium/Netherlands Artificial Intelligence Conference (BNAIC-2007)}, year = {2007}, editor = {Mohammad Mehdi Dastani and Edwin de Jong}, pages = {81--87}, publisher = {Katholieke Universiteit Leuven}, address = {Leuven}, abstract = {In formal argumentation, grounded semantics is well known for yielding exactly one unique extension. Since grounded semantics has a very sceptical nature, one can ask the question whether it is possible to define a unique extension semantics that is more credulous. Recent work of Dung, Mancarella and Toni proposes what they call ideal semantics, which is a unique extension semantics that is more credulous than grounded semantics. In the current paper, we define a unique extension semantics called eager semantics that is even more credulous than ideal semantics. ...}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ caminada_mwa:2011a, author = {Martin W.A. Caminada}, title = {A Labelling Approach for Ideal and Stage Semantics}, journal = {Argument and Computation}, year = {2011}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {1--21}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ caminada_mwa-etal:2011a, author = {Martin W.A. Caminada and Walter A. Carnielli and Paul E. Dunne}, title = {Semi-Stable Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2011}, volume = {22}, number = {5}, pages = {1207--1254}, topic = {stable-models;} } @article{ camp_e:2005a, author = {Elisabeth Camp}, title = {Metaphors and Demonstratives: Josef {S}tern's, \emph{{M}etaphor in Context}}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2005}, volume = {39}, number = {4}, pages = {715--731}, xref = {Review of: stern_j1:2000a.}, topic = {metaphor;} } @incollection{ camp_e:2007a, author = {Elisabeth Camp}, title = {Thinking With Maps}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2007}, editor = {John Hawthorne}, pages = {145--182}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {language-of-thought;philosophy-of-mind;visual-reasoning;} } @incollection{ camp_e:2009a, author = {Elisabeth Camp}, title = {A Language of Baboon Thought?}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of Animal Minds}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert K. Lurz}, pages = {108--127}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {animal-cognition;mental-language;} } @article{ camp_e:2012a, author = {Elizabeth Camp}, title = {Sarcasm, Pretense, and the Semantics/Pragmatics Distinction}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2012}, volume = {45}, number = {4}, pages = {587--634}, topic = {sarcasm;speaker-meaning;illocutionary-force;speech-acts;} } @incollection{ camp_e:2017a, author = {Elisabeth Camp}, title = {Perspectives in Imaginative Engagement with Fiction}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 31: Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2017}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {73--102}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {imagination;perspective-sensitive-reasoning;fiction;suspended-attitudes;} } @incollection{ camp_e:2018a, author = {Elisabeth Camp}, title = {Insinuation, Common Ground, and the Conversational Record}, booktitle = {New Work on Speech Acts}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Daniel Fogal and Daniel W. Harris and Matt Moss}, pages = {40--66}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {Most philosophical and linguistic theorizing about meaning focuses on cooperative forms of communication, and for good reasons. However, a significant amount of verbal communication involves parties whose interests are not fully aligned, or who do not know their degree of alignment. ... I argue that insinuation is a form of speaker's meaning in which speakers communicate potentially risky attitudes and contents without adding them to the conversational record, or sometimes even to the common ground.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de119}, topic = {conversational-record;} } @incollection{ camp_e-hawthorne_j2:2008a, author = {Elizabeth Camp and John Hawthorne}, title = {Sarcastic `Like': A Case Study in the Interface of Syntax and Semantics}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 22, 2008: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {John Hawthorne}, pages = {1--21}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {sarcasm;speech-acts;} } @incollection{ campbell_a-shapiro_sc:1998a, author = {Alistair Campell and Stuart C. Shapiro}, title = {Algorithms for Ontological Mediation}, booktitle = {Use of {W}ord{N}et in Natural Language Processing Systems: Proceedings of the Conference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Sanda Harabagiu}, pages = {102--107}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-processing;WordNet;computational-ontology;} } @article{ campbell_c:1951a, author = {Charles A. Campbell}, title = {Is Free Will a Pseudo-Problem?}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1951}, volume = {60}, number = {240}, pages = {441--465}, topic = {freedom;determinism;} } @incollection{ campbell_j:2005a, author = {John Campbell}, title = {Joint Attention and Common Knowledge}, booktitle = {Joint Attention: Communication and Other Minds}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Naomi Eilan and Christoph Hoerl and Teresa McCormack and Johannes Roessler}, pages = {287--297}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {joint-attention;mutial-attitudes;} } @incollection{ campbell_j1-lifschitz_v:2003a, author = {Jonathan Campbell and Vladimir Lifschitz}, title = {Reinforcing a Claim in Commonsense Reasoning}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Logical Formalization of Commonsense Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John McCarthy and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {51--56}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;common-sense-psychology; argumentation;} } @incollection{ campbell_j2:2007a, author = {John Campbell}, title = {The Metaphysics of Perception}, booktitle = {The Metaphysics of Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2007}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {1--15}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {perception;epistemology;} } @incollection{ campbell_j2:2008a, author = {John Campbell}, title = {Interventionism, Control Variables and Causation in the Qualitative World}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {426--445}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {causality;} } @incollection{ campbell_j2:2010a, author = {John Campbell}, title = {Independence of Variables in Mental Causation}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2010}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {64--79}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;reasons-for-action;} } @incollection{ campbell_j2:2017a, author = {John Campbell}, title = {Joint Attention}, booktitle = {The Routledge Handbook of Collective Intentionality}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2017}, editor = {Marija Jankovic and Kirk Ludwig}, pages = {115--129}, address = {New York}, topic = {group-attitudes;attention;} } @article{ campbell_ja-hearn:1970a, author = {J.A. Campbell and Anthony C. Hearn}, title = {Symbolic Analysis of {F}eynman Diagrams by Computer}, journal = {Journal of Computational Physics}, year = {1970}, volume = {5}, pages = {280--327}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {computer-assisted-physics;computer-assisted-science;} } @article{ campbell_k:1965a, author = {Keith Campbell}, title = {Family Resemblance Predicates}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1965}, volume = {2}, pages = {238--244}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {vagueness;cluster-concepts;} } @article{ campbell_k:1974a, author = {Keith Campbell}, title = {The Sorites Paradox}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1974}, volume = {26}, pages = {175--191}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @article{ campbell_ks:1989a, author = {Kim Sydow Campbell}, title = {Book Review: A Linguistic Study of American Punctuation}, journal = {College Composition and Communication}, year = {1989}, volume = {40}, number = {2}, pages = {242--243}, topic = {punctuation;} } @article{ campbell_m-etal:2002a, author = {Murray Campbell and A. Joseph {Hoane, Jr.} and Feng-Hsiung Hsu}, title = {Deep Blue}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {134}, number = {1--2}, pages = {57--83}, topic = {computer-chess;game-trees;search;} } @article{ campbell_ms-marsland:1983a, author = {Murray S. Campbell and T.A. Marsland}, title = {A Comparison of Minimax Tree Search Algorithms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, pages = {347--367}, topic = {search;AI-algorithms-analysis;} } @article{ campbell_r1:1964a, author = {Richard Campbell}, title = {Modality {\it de dicto} and {\it de re}}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1964}, volume = {42}, pages = {345--359}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {modality;quantifying-in-modality;singular-propositions;} } @article{ campbell_r1:1974a, author = {Richard Campbell}, title = {Real Predicates and `Exists{'}}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1974}, volume = {83}, number = {329}, pages = {95--99}, topic = {(non)existence;Kant;} } @article{ campbell_r2:1974a, author = {Richmond Campbell}, title = {The Sorites Paradox}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1974}, volume = {26}, pages = {175--191}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ campbell_r2:1985a, author = {Richmond Campbell}, title = {Background for the Uninitiated}, booktitle = {Paradoxes of Rationality and Cooperation}, publisher = {The University of British Columbia Press}, year = {1985}, pages = {3--41}, address = {Vancouver}, topic = {rationality;foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @book{ campbell_r2-sowdon:1985a, editor = {Richmond Campbell and Lanning Sowden}, title = {Paradoxes of Rationality and Cooperation: Prisoner's Dilemma and {N}ewcomb's Problem}, publisher = {The University of British Columbia Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Vancouver}, rtnote = {Hillman BC185 .P37 1985}, topic = {foundations-of-decision-theory;rationality;cooperation; Newcomb-problem;prisoner's-dilemma;} } @article{ campbellmoore_c:2014a, author = {Catrin Campbell-Moore}, title = {How to Express Self-Referential Probability: A {K}ripkean Proposal}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {680--704}, topic = {higher-order-probability;} } @article{ campbellmoore_c:2019a, author = {Catrin Campbell-Moore}, title = {Limits in the Revision Theory}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {1}, pages = {11--35}, topic = {truth-definitions;} } @article{ campbellmoore_c-etal:2019a, author = {Catrin Campbell-Moore and Leon Horsten and Hannes Leitgeb}, title = {Probability for the Revision Theory of Truth}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {1}, pages = {87--112}, topic = {truth-definitions;probability;} } @book{ campe:1994a, author = {Petra Campe}, title = {Case, Semantic Roles, and Grammatical Relations: A Comprehensive Bibliography}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {1994}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {grammatival-relations;} } @book{ camperon_r:2015a, author = {Ross Camperon}, title = {The Moving Spotlight: An Essay on Time and Ontology}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: deasy_d:2016a}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;} } @article{ camrud_c-dosanjh_r:2023a, author = {Caleb Camrud and Ranpal Dosanjh}, title = {Continuous Accessibility Modal Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2023}, volume = {52}, number = {1}, pages = {221--266}, abstract = {In this paper, we present a uniform and systematic treatment of modal semantics with a continuous accessibility relation alongside the continuous accessibility modal logics that they model. We develop several such logics for a variety of philosophical applications. Our main conclusions are as follows. Modal logics with a continuous accessibility relation are sound and complete in their natural classes of models. The class of Kripke frames where a continuous accessibility relation has a magnitude characterizing its degree of accessibility is not modally definable, and this has unappreciated significance to completeness proofs for such logics, revealing a methodological advantage of using classical multimodal semantics over fuzzy modal semantics. There is a pseudometric space modal logic that is complete in the class of pseudometric spaces, a natural semantic setting for quantitative modal reasoning about similarity. There is a metric space modal logic that is complete in the class of metric spaces, a natural semantic setting for quantitative modal reasoning about neighborhoods and counterfactual stability. There is a real line continuous temporal logic that is canonical for real lines, a natural semantic setting for quantitative modal reasoning about time.}, topic = {continuous-modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ canamero_d:1997a, author = {Dolores Ca\~namero}, title = {Modeling Motivations and Emotions as a Basis for Intelligent Behavior}, booktitle = {AGENTS '97 Proceedings of the First International Conference on Autonomous agents}, year = {1997}, editor = {Sanmay Das and Edmund Durfee}, pages = {148--155}, organization = {Association for Computing Machinery}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de17}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Misc".}, topic = {emotional-computing;} } @incollection{ canamero_d:2002a, author = {Dolores Ca\~namero}, title = {Designing Emotions for Activity Selection in Autonomous Agents}, booktitle = {Emotions in Humans and Artifacts}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Robert Trappl and Paolo Petta and Sabine Payr}, pages = {115--148}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr17}, abstract = {This paper advocates a "bottom-up" philosophy for the design of emotional systems for autonomous agents that is guided by functional concerns, and considers the particular case of designing emotions as mechanisms for action selection. The concrete realization of these ideas implies that the design process must start with an analysis of the requirements that the features of the environment, the characteristics of the action-selection task, and the agent architecture impose on the emotional system. This is particularly important if we see emotions as mechanisms that aim at modifying or maintaining the relation of the agent with its (external and internal) environment (rather than modifying the environment itself) in order to preserve the agent's goals. Emotions can then be selected and designed according to the roles they play with respect to this relation.}, topic = {emotions;emotional-computing;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ canavotto_i-giordani_a:2019a, author = {Ilaria Canavotto and Alessandro Giordani}, title = {Enriching Deontic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2019}, volume = {29}, number = {2}, pages = {241--263}, abstract = {It is well known that systems of action deontic logic emerging from a standard analysis of permission in terms of possibility of doing an action without incurring in a violation of the law are subject to paradoxes. ... [We] introduce a paradox-free deontic action system by (i) identifying the basic intuitions leading to the emergence of the paradoxes and (ii) exploiting these intuitions in order to develop a consistent deontic framework, where it can be shown why some phenomena seem to be paradoxical and why they are not so if interpreted in a correct way.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja23}, topic = {deontic-logic;ability;permission;;} } @unpublished{ canavotto_i-horty_jf:2023a, author = {Ilaria Canavotto and John F. Horty}, title = {Reasoning with Hierarchies of Open-Textured Predicates}, year = {2023}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Maryland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe23}, topic = {legal-reasoning;} } @article{ canavotto_i-pacuit_ic:2022a, author = {Ilaria Canavotto and Eric Pacuit}, title = {Choice-Driven Counterfactuals}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {2}, pages = {297--345}, abstract = {... we investigate the semantics and logic of choice-driven counterfactuals, that is, of counterfactuals whose evaluation relies on auxiliary premises about how agents are expected to act, i.e., about their default choice behavior. ... A key component of our semantics for counterfactuals is to distinguish between deviant and non-deviant actions at a moment, where an action available to an agent at a moment is deviant when its performance does not agree with the agent's default choice behavior at that moment. ...}, topic = {conditionals;stit;} } @incollection{ cancedda-samuelson_c:2000a, author = {Nicola Cancedda and Christer Samuelson}, title = {Corpus-Based Grammar Specialization}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {7--12}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;disambiguation; grammar-specialization;} } @inproceedings{ candito:1996a, author = {Marie-H\'el\'ene Candito}, title = {Generating an {LTAG} out of a Principle-Based Hierarchical Representation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {342--344}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {TAG-grammar;computational-lexicography;} } @inproceedings{ candito:1998a, author = {Marie-H\'el\`en Candito}, title = {Building Parallel Lexicalized Tree Adjoining Grammars for {I}talian and {F}rench}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {211--218}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {TAG-grammar;Italian-language;French-language;} } @article{ canfield_jv:1962a, author = {John V. Canfield}, title = {Knowing about Future Decisions}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1962}, volume = {22}, number = {6}, pages = {127--129}, xref = {Discussion of: ginet_c:1962a, hampshire_s-hart_hla:1958a}, xref = {Commentary: swiggart_p:1962a}, topic = {volition;self-knowledge;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ canfield_jv:1962b, author = {John V. Canfield}, title = {The Compatibility of Free Will and Determinism}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1962}, volume = {71}, number = {3}, pages = {352--368}, topic = {freedom;determinism;} } @article{ canfield_jv-gustavson_df:1962a, author = {John V. Canfield and Don F. Gustavson}, title = {Self-Deception}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1962}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {32--36}, topic = {self-deception;} } @article{ canfield_jv-mcnally_p:1961a, author = {John V. Canfield and Patrick McNally}, title = {Paradoxes of Self-Deception}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1961}, volume = {21}, number = {6}, pages = {140--144}, topic = {self-deception;belief;attention;} } @book{ cangelosi-schlesinger_m:2015a, author = {Andrew Cangelosi and Matthew Schlesinger}, title = {Developmental Robotics}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-02801-1}, topic = {developmental-robotics;robotics;} } @book{ cann_r:1993a, author = {Ronnie Cann}, title = {Formal Semantics: An Introduction}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0 521 37610 6 (pbk)}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves. (2 copies)}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ cann_r:2003a, author = {Ronnie Cann}, title = {Interpreting `Be'}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 7}, editor = {Matthias Weisgerber}, year = {2003}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz, Arbeitspapier 114}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TE3NGVlY/}, abstract = {This paper proposes an approach to the interpretation of copular sentences in English that analyses be as a one-place predicate with underspecified semantic con- tent. The interpretation of a copula clause is determined through the interaction of syntactic and pragmatic processes and depends on the properties of expressions collocated with be and general contextual factors, both local and non-local. Analy- ses are provided for predicational, specificational and equative sentences using the framework of Dynamic Syntax.}, pages = {95--109}, topic = {nl-semantics;copula;} } @incollection{ cann_r:2011a, author = {Ronnie Cann}, title = {Sense Relations}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {456--478}, address = {The Hague}, abstract = {This article explores the definition and interpretation of the traditional paradigmatic sense relations such as hyponymy, synonymy, meronymy, antonymy, and syntagmatic relations such as selectional restrictions. ...}, topic = {nl-semantics;intensionality;sortal-incorrectness;} } @incollection{ cann_r-etal:2012a, author = {Ronnie Cann and Ruth Kempson and Daniel Wedgwood}, title = {Representationalism and Linguistic Knowledge}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Linguistics}, publisher = {North Holland}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruth Kempson and Tim Fernando and Nicholas Asher}, pages = {357--401}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @article{ canning:1992a, author = {S. Canning}, title = {Rationality, Computability and {N}ash Equilibrium}, journal = {Econometirca}, year = {1992}, volume = {60}, pages = {877--888}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {game-theory;} } @article{ canny:1988a, author = {John Canny}, title = {Constructing Roadmaps of Semi-Algebraic Sets {I}: Completeness}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {37}, number = {1--3}, pages = {203--222}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper describes preliminary work on an algorithm for planning collision-free motions for a robot manipulator in the presence of obstacles. The physical obstacles lead to forbidden regions in the robots configuration space, and for collision-free motion we need paths through configuration space which avoid these regions. Our method is to construct a certain one-dimensional subset or ``roadmap'' of the space of allowable configurations. If S denotes the set of allowable configurations, the roadmap has the property that any connected component of S contains a single connected component of the roadmap. It is also possible, starting from an arbitrary point p S to rapidly construct a path from p to a point on the roadmap. Thus given any two points in S we can rapidly determine whether they lie in the same connected component of S, and if they do, we can return a candidate path between them. We do not give a complete description of the algorithm here, but we define the roadmap geometrically, and verify that it has the necessary connectivity. }, topic = {robotics;motion-planning;collision-avoidance;} } @incollection{ cano-etal:1991a, author = {Jos\'e Cano and Miguel Delgado and Seraf\'in Moral}, title = {Propagation of Uncertainty in Dependance Graphs}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {42--47}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;dependency-graphs;} } @incollection{ canrijn_h-taagen_na:2016a, author = {Hedderik van Rijn and Niels A. Taagen}, title = {An Integrative Account of Psychological Time}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Susan E.F. Chipman}, pages = {151--168}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;temporal-cognition;cognitive-architectures;} } @inproceedings{ cantall_wr:1972a, author = {William R. Cantall}, title = {Relative Identity}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society}, year = {1972}, pages = {22--31}, publisher = {Chicago Linguistics Society}, editor = {Paul M. Peranteau and Judith N. Levi and Gloria C. Phares}, address = {Chicago University, Chicago, Illinois}, contentnote = {Attempt to use sets to analyze payckeck pronouns.}, topic = {anaphora;sloppy-identity;} } @article{ cantini_a:1988a, author = {Andrea Cantini}, title = {Notes on Formal Theories of Truth}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"ur Mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik}, year = {1988}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {97--130}, topic = {axiomatic-truth;} } @book{ cantini_a:1996a, author = {Andrea Cantini}, title = {Logical Frameworks for Truth and Abstraction: An Axiomatic Study}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {1996}, address = {Amsterdam}, abstract = {This English translation of the author's original work has been thoroughly revised, expanded and updated. The book covers logical systems known as type-free or self-referential. These traditionally arise from any discussion on logical and semantical paradoxes. This particular volume, however, is not concerned with paradoxes but with the investigation of type-free sytems ...}, ISBN = {0444823069, 9780444823069}, topic = {type-free-theories;self-reference;} } @incollection{ cantini_a:2007a, author = {Andrea Cantini}, title = {Paradoxes and Contemporary Logic}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {Stanford University}, year = {Winter 2007}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2007/entries/paradoxes-contemporary-logic/}, topic = {paradoxes;semantic-paradoxes;Russell-paradox;} } @incollection{ cantini_a:2009a, author = {Andrea Cantini}, title = {Paradoxes, Self-Reference and Truth in the 20th Century}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 5: Logic from {R}ussell to {C}hurch}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2009}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {875--1013}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;paradoxes;self-reference;truth;} } @article{ cantwell_j:1998a, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {Resolving Conflicting Information}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1998}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {191--220}, topic = {belief-revision;coherence;} } @article{ cantwell_j:1999a, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {Some Logics of Iterated Belief Change}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1999}, volume = {63}, number = {1}, pages = {49--84}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ cantwell_j:2000a, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {Logics of Belief Change without Linearity}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {65}, number = {4}, pages = {1556--1575}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ cantwell_j:2003a, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {On the Foundations of Pragmatic Arguments}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {100}, number = {8}, pages = {383--402}, topic = {rationality;Dutch-book-argument;} } @article{ cantwell_j:2003b, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {Eligible Contraction}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2003}, volume = {75}, number = {2}, pages = {167--182}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ cantwell_j:2005a, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {A Formal Model of Multi-Agent Belief-Interaction}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2005}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {397--422}, topic = {belief-revision;multimodal-logic;} } @article{ cantwell_j:2006a, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {A Formal Model of Multi-Agent Belief-Interaction}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2006}, volume = {15}, number = {4}, pages = {303--329}, topic = {epistemic-logic;multiagent-systems;belief-revision;} } @article{ cantwell_j:2006b, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {The Logic of Dominance Reasoning}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2006}, volume = {35}, number = {1}, pages = {41--63}, topic = {dominance;conditionals;qualitative-utility;} } @article{ cantwell_j:2008a, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {Indicative Conditionals: Factual or Epistemic?}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2008}, volume = {88}, number = {1}, pages = {157--194}, rtnote = {Cantwell adopts an intermediate position: Indicative conditionals are true/false, but "gappy", and require "filling in with epsitemic conditions."}, topic = {indicative-conditionals;conditionals;} } @article{ cantwell_j:2008b, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {Changing the Modal Context}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {2008}, volume = {74}, number = {4}, pages = {331--351}, abstract = {Conditionals that contain a modality in the consequent give rise to a particular semantic phenomenon whereby the antecedent of the conditional blocks possibilities when interpreting the modality in the consequent. This explains the puzzling logical behaviour of constructions like "If you don't buy a lottery ticket, you can't win", "If you eat that poison, it is unlikely that you will survive the day" and "If you kill Harry, you ought to kill him gently". In this paper it is argued that ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr22}, topic = {conditionals;modals;modality;} } @incollection{ cantwell_j:2018a, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {Conditionals}, booktitle = {Introduction to Formal Philosophy}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2018}, editor = {Sven Ove Hansson and Vincent F. Hendricks}, pages = {131--146}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ cantwell_j:2022a, author = {John Cantwell}, title = {Revisiting {M}c{G}ee's Probabilistic Analysis of Conditionals}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {5}, pages = {973--1017 }, abstract = {... This paper calls for a re-appraisal of McGee's analysis of the semantics, logic and probabilities of indicative conditionals presented in his 1989 paper Conditional probabilities and compounds of conditionals. It will be argued that we need to give up neither [Ramsey Test nor the standard laws of probability] if we take the counterexamples as further evidence that the indicative conditional sometimes allows for a non-epistemic 'causal' interpretation alongside its usual epistemic interpretation.}, topic = {conditionals;probability;indicative-conditionals;} } @article{ cao_r:2014a, author = {Rosa Cao}, title = {Signaling in the Brain: In Search of Functional Units}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2014}, volume = {81}, number = {5}, pages = {891--901}, topic = {philosophy-of-neuroscience;} } @book{ cao_ty:1999a, editor = {Tian Yu Cao}, title = {Conceptual Foundations of Quantum Field Theory}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052163152-1}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;quantum-field-theory;} } @article{ caparu_mdi:2018a, author = {Mihnea D.I. Caparu}, title = {Note on the Individuation of Biological Traits}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2018}, volume = {115}, number = {4}, pages = {215--221}, topic = {philosophy-of-biology;teleology;} } @incollection{ capazzi-roncaglia:2009a, author = {Mirella Capazzi and Gino Roncaglia}, title = {Logic and Philosophy of Logic from Humanism to {K}ant}, booktitle = {The Development of Modern Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Leila Haaparanta}, pages = {78--158}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {history-of-logic;Leibniz;Kant;} } @book{ capitan-merrill_dd:1967a, editor = {William H. Capitan and Daniel D. Merrill}, title = {Art, Mind, and Religion}, publisher = {University of Pittsburgh Press}, year = {1967}, address = {Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library B 20.012 1965.}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ caplan:2003a, author = {Ben Caplan}, title = {Putting Things in Contexts}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2003}, volume = {112}, number = {2}, pages = {191--214}, topic = {indexicals;contexts;demonstratives;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ caplan_b:2006a, author = {Ben Caplan}, title = {On Sense and Direct Reference}, journal = {Philosophy Compass}, year = {2006}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {171--185}, abstract = {... Millianism can appeal to modes of pr esentation, and Fregeanism can appeal to objects. But this raises a further problem: namely, to explain why the proposition expressed by a sentence that contains a name matters in some cases but not in others.}, topic = {intensionality;reference;} } @book{ capozzi:1979a, author = {Gino Capozzi}, title = {Temporalit\`a e Norma}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Gianfranco Bertazzi \&\ Roberto Caimmi}, year = {1979}, address = {Naples}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;normativity;} } @book{ capozzi:1979b, author = {Gino Capozzi}, title = {L'Individuo il Tempo e la Storia}, publisher = {Gianfranco Bertazzi \&\ Roberto Caimmi}, year = {1979}, address = {Naples}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;} } @article{ cappelen_h:1999a, author = {Herman Cappelen}, title = {Intentions in Words}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1999}, volume = {33}, number = {3}, pages = {92--102}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;referring-expressions;reference;} } @unpublished{ cappelen_h:2000a, author = {Herman Cappelen}, title = {Saying, Implicating, and Canceling: In Defence of {G}rice on the Semantics-Pragmatics Distinction}, year = {2000}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Vassar College}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Cappelin".}, topic = {Grice;implicature;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ cappelen_h:2008a, author = {Herman Cappelen}, title = {The Creative Interpreter: Content Relativism and Assertion}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 22, 2008: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {John Hawthorne}, pages = {23--46}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {assertion;context;} } @incollection{ cappelen_h:2011a, author = {Herman Cappelen}, title = {Against Assertion}, booktitle = {Assertion: New Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Jessica A. Brown and Herman Cappelen}, pages = {21--48}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja20}, abstract = {The view defended in this paper -- I call it the No-Assertion view -- rejects the assumption that it is theoretically useful to single out a subset of sayings as assertionsa}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja20}, topic = {assertion;} } @book{ cappelen_h:2012a, author = {Herman Cappelen}, title = {Philosophy without Intuitions}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {9780199644865}, abstract = {No matter what area you happen to work in and what views you happen to hold in those areas, you are likely to think that philosophizing requires constructing cases and making intuitive judgments about those cases. ... The goal of this book is to argue that this concern is unwarranted since the claim is false ... At worst, analytic philosophers are guilty of engaging in somewhat irresponsible use of øintuitionù-vocabulary. ... this irresponsibility ... fundamentally misled meta-philosophers: It has encouraged meta-philosophical pseudo-problems and misleading pictures of what philosophy is.}, topic = {philosophical-methodology;intuitions;philosophical-thought-experiments;} } @incollection{ cappelen_h:2013a, author = {Herman Cappelen}, title = {Nonsense and Illusions of Thought}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 27: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2013}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {22--50}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {meaningfulness;} } @article{ cappelen_h-dever_j:2001a, author = {Herman Cappelen and Josh Dever}, title = {Believing in Words}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2001}, volume = {127}, pages = {279--301}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;syntactic-attitudes;} } @book{ cappelen_h-dever_j:2013a, author = {Herman Cappelen and Josh Dever}, title = {The Inessential Indexical: On the Philosophical Insignificance of Perspective and the First Person}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2013}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {... The Inessential Indexical is an exploration and defense of the view that perspectivality is a philosophically shallow aspect of the world. [The authors] argue that there are no such things as essential indexicality, irreducibly de se attitudes, or self-locating attitudes. ... Their goal is to show that the entire topic is an illusion--there's nothing there.}, ISBN = {9780199686742,0199686742}, xref = {Review: atkins_p:2016a}, topic = {indexicals;first-person;context;contextualism;} } @article{ cappelen_h-hawthorne_j2:2007a, author = {Herman Cappelen and John Hawthorne}, title = {Locations and Binding}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2007}, volume = {67}, number = {2}, pages = {95--105}, topic = {location;context;} } @book{ cappelen_h-hawthorne_j2:2009a, author = {Herman Cappelen and John Hawthorne}, title = {Relativism and Monadic Truth}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-10 = {0199560552}, ISBN-13 = {978-0199560554}, xref = {Review: almer-westerstahl_d:2010a}, xref = {Commentary: glanzberg_m:2011a, soames_s:2011a, cappelen_h-hawthorne_j2:2009a}, xref = {Summary: cappelen_h-hawthorne_j2:2011a}, topic = {propositons;relativism;context;} } @article{ cappelen_h-hawthorne_j2:2011a, author = {Herman Cappelen and John Hawthorne}, title = {Relativism and Monadic Truth}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {1}, pages = {109--111}, xref = {Summary of: cappelen_h-hawthorne_j2:2009a}, xref = {Commentary: glanzberg_m:2011a, soames_s:2011a}, topic = {propositons;relativism;context;} } @article{ cappelen_h-hawthorne_j2:2011b, author = {Herman Cappelen and John Hawthorne}, title = {Reply to Glanzberg, Soames and Weatherson}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {1}, pages = {143--156}, xref = {Reply to: glanzberg_m:2011a,soames_s:2011a, weatherson_b:2011a}, topic = {propositons;relativism;context;} } @article{ cappelen_h-lepore_e:1997a, author = {Herman Cappelen and Ernest Lepore}, title = {The Varieties of Quotation}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1997}, volume = {106}, pages = {429--450}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @article{ cappelen_h-lepore_e:2002a, author = {Herman Cappelen and Ernie Lepore}, title = {Indexicality, Binding, Anaphora and a Priori Truth}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2002}, volume = {62}, number = {4}, pages = {271--281}, topic = {context;anaphora;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ cappelen_h-lepore_e:2003a, author = {Herman Cappelen and Ernie Lepore}, title = {Context Shifting Arguments}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 17: Language and Philosophical Linguistics, 2003}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2003}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Dean Zimmerman}, pages = {25--50}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary: clapp_l:2009a, johnson_k:2009a}, topic = {nl-semantics;context-sensitivity;indexicals;} } @book{ cappelen_h-lepore_e:2005a, author = {Herman Cappelen and Ernest Lepore}, title = {Insensitive Semantics: A Defense of Semantic Minimalism and Speech Act Pluralism}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2005}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reviews: montminy_m:2006a, collins_j:2008a}, xref = {Discussion: szabo_zg:2006a}, topic = {context;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ cappelen_h-lepore_e:2006a, author = {Herman Cappelen and Ernie Lepore}, title = {Quotation, Context Sensitivity, Signs and Expressions}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {43--64}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {direct-discourse;context;} } @incollection{ cappelen_h-lepore_e:2006b, author = {Herman Cappelen and Ernest Lepore}, title = {Shared Content}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {1020--1055}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {shared-cognition;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ cappellen-lepore_e:2005b, author = {Herman Cappellen and Ernest Lepore}, title = {A Tall Tale: In Defense of Semantic Minimalism and Speech Act Pluralism}, booktitle = {Contextualism in Philosophy: Knowledge, Meaning, and Truth}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Gerhard Preyer and Georg Peter}, pages = {197--219}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {context;philosophy-of-language;speech-acts;} } @incollection{ carabello-charniak_e:1996a, author = {Sharon A. Carabello and Eugene Charniak}, title = {Figures of Merit for Best-First Probabilistic Chart Parsing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Eric Brill and Kenneth Church}, pages = {127--132}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;corpus-statistics;} } @article{ carabello-charniak_e:1998a, author = {Sharon A. Carabello and Eugene Charniak}, title = {New Figures of Merit for Best-First Probabilistic Chart Parsing}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {275--298}, topic = {probabilistic-parsers;} } @article{ caragiannis-etal:2012a, author = {Ioannis Caragiannis and Jason A. Covey and Michal Feldman and Christopher M. Homan and Christos Kaklamanis and Nikos Karanikolas and Ariel D. Procaccia and Jeffrey S. Rosenschein}, title = {On the Approximability of {D}odgson and {Y}oung Elections}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {187--188}, pages = {31--51}, topic = {voting-procedures;} } @article{ caragiannis-procaccia:2011a, author = {Ioannis Caragiannis and Ariel D. Procaccia}, title = {Voting almost Maximizes Social Welfare Despite Limited Communication}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {9--10}, pages = {1655--1671}, topic = {voting-procedures;} } @inproceedings{ carayol_a-esik_z:2016a, author = {Arnaud Carayol and Zoltan Esik}, title = {An Analysis of the Equational Properties of the Well-Founded Fixed Point}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {533--536}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We study the logical properties of the (parametric) well-founded fixed point operation. We show that the operation satisfies several, but not all of the equational properties of fixed point operations described by the axioms of iteration theories. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {fixpoints;} } @incollection{ carballo_ap:2014a, author = {Alejandro P\'erez Carballo}, title = {Semantic Hermeneutics}, booktitle = {Metasemantics: New Essays on the Foundations of Meaning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Alexis Burgess and Brett Sherman}, pages = {119--146}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {expressivism;compositionality;Frege-Geach-problem;} } @article{ carballo_ap:2018a, author = {Alejandro P\'erez Carballo}, title = {Rationality and Second-Order Preferences}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {52}, number = {1}, pages = {196--21}, topic = {rationality;preference;introspection;} } @book{ carberry_ms-etal:1979a, author = {M.S. Carberry and H.M. Khalil and J.F. Leathrum and L.S. Levy}, title = {Foundations of Computer Science}, publisher = {Computer Science Press, Inc.}, year = {1979}, address = {Potomac, Maryland}, ISBN = {0-914894-18-8}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Computer Science: Scientific and Historical Perspectives 2. Problem Solving on Computers 3. Programming Methodology 4. Computer Systems -- An Overview 5. Semiotics: Syntax, Semantics, and Pragmatics 6. Control Structures 7. Data Structures 8. Numerical Applications 9. Nonnumerical Applications 10. Social Issues in Computing 11. Artificial Intelligence 12. Computer Software 13. Interactive Computation 14. Mathematical Models of Machines 15. Programming a Pocket Calculator }, topic = {cs-intro;} } @inproceedings{ carberry_s:1985a, author = {Sandra Carberry}, title = {A Pragmatics Based Approach to Understanding Intersentential Ellipsis}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Chicago, Illinois}, pages = {188--197}, year = {1985}, topic = {pragmatics;ellipsis;} } @inproceedings{ carberry_s:1986a, author = {Sandra Carberry}, title = {{TRACK:} Toward a Robust Natural Language Interface}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth Canadian Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Montreal, Canada}, pages = {84--88}, year = {1986}, topic = {nl-interpretation;nl-interfaces;} } @inproceedings{ carberry_s:1986b, author = {Sandra Carberry}, title = {User Models: The Problem of Disparity}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, pages = {29--34}, address = {Bonn, West Germany}, year = {1986}, topic = {nl-interpretation;user-modeling;} } @techreport{ carberry_s:1989a, author = {Sandra Carberry}, title = {A New Look at Plan Recognition in Natural Language Dialogue}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, University of Delaware}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, year = {1989}, number = {90--08}, topic = {nl-interpretation;plan-recognition;} } @article{ carberry_s:1989b, author = {Sandra Carberry}, title = {A Pragmatics-Based Approach to Ellipsis Resolution}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {75--96}, year = {1989}, topic = {pragmatics;ellipsis;} } @incollection{ carberry_s:1989c, author = {Sandra Carberry}, title = {Plan Recognition and Its Use in Understanding Dialog}, booktitle = {User Models in Dialog Systems}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1989}, editor = {Alfred Kobsa and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {133--162}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {user-modeling;plan-recognition;discourse-interpretation;} } @inproceedings{ carberry_s:1990a, author = {Sandra Carberry}, title = {Incorporating Default Inferences Into Plan Recognition}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, editor = {Thomas G. Dietterich and William Swartout}, pages = {472--479}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {plan-recognition;pragmatics;nm-ling;} } @inproceedings{ carberry_s:1990b, author = {Sandra Carberry}, title = {A Model of Plan Recognition that Facilitates Default Inferences}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on User Modeling}, address = {Honolulu, Hawaii}, year = {1990}, topic = {plan-recognition;nonmonotonic-reasoning;nm-ling;} } @book{ carberry_s:1990c, author = {Sandra Carberry}, title = {Plan Recognition in Natural Language Dialogue}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {Chapter 2 In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Carberry"}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {plan-recognition;discourse;nl-interpretation; pragmatics;} } @article{ carberry_s:2001a, author = {Sandra Carberry}, title = {Techniques for Plan Recognition. User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction}, journal = {User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, pages = {31--48}, topic = {plan-recognition;computational-dialogue;} } @article{ carberry_s-lambert_l:1999a, author = {Sandra Carberry and Lynn Lambert}, title = {A Process Model for Recognizing Communicative Acts and Modeling Negotiation Subdialogues}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {1--53}, topic = {discourse-modeling;speech-act-recognition; negotiation-subdialogs;computational-dialogue;} } @article{ carbonell_j:1980a, author = {Jaime Carbonell}, title = {Default Reasoning and Inheritance Mechanisms of Type Hierarchies}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, pages = {107--109}, year = {1980}, missinginfo = {volume, number Check this reference.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @article{ carbonell_j:1980b, author = {Jaime G. Carbonell}, title = {Towards a Process Model of Human Personality Traits}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1980}, volume = {15}, number = {1--2}, pages = {49--74}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A goal-based analysis of human personality traits is presented with the objective of developing a comprehensive simulation model. It is shown that understanding trait attributions is an integral part of story comprehension and therefore much of natural language processing. The model of personality traits is derived from the goal trees in the POLITICS system, the notion of social prototypes, and planning/counterplanning strategies. It is argued that the goal-expectation setting, created from an analysis of personality traits attributed to actors in a story, establishes a best-first evaluation criterion that makes more tractable the search problem inherent in story understanding. }, topic = {personality-simulation;} } @article{ carbonell_j:1981a, author = {Jaime G. Carbonell}, title = {Counterplanning: A Strategy-Based Model of Adversary Planning in Real-World Situations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, volume = {16}, number = {3}, pages = {295--329}, topic = {strategic-planning;} } @techreport{ carbonell_j:1981b, author = {Jaime G. Carbonell}, title = {Metaphor Comprehension}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, Carnegie-Mellon University}, number = {CMU--CS--81--115}, year = {1981}, address = {Pittsburgh}, topic = {metaphor;} } @inproceedings{ carbonell_j:1983a, author = {Jaime Carbonell}, title = {Derivational Analogy in Problem Solving and Knowledge Acquisition}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Machine Learning Workshop}, year = {83}, pages = {12--18}, missinginfo = {editor, publisher, address}, topic = {analogy;analogical-reasoning;} } @incollection{ carbonell_j:1983b, author = {Jaime Carbonell}, title = {Learning by Analogy. Formulating and Generalizing Plans from Past Experience}, booktitle = {Machine Learning, a Artificial Intelligence Approach}, publisher = {Tioga Press}, year = {1983}, editor = {R. Michalski and J. Carbonell and T. Mitchell}, address = {Palo Alto, California}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name, pages}, topic = {analogy;machine-learning;} } @article{ carbonell_j:1989a, author = {Jaime G. Carbonell}, title = {Introduction: Paradigms for Machine Learning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {40}, number = {1--3}, pages = {1--9}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @book{ carbonell_j:1989b, editor = {Jaime G. Carbonell}, title = {Machine Learning: Paradigms and Methods}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @incollection{ carbonell_j:1991a, author = {Jaime G. Carbonell}, title = {Steps Towards Accurate Speech-to-Speech Translation}, year = {1991}, booktitle = {Natural Language and Speech: Symposium Proceedings {B}russels, November 26/27, 1991}, editor = {Ewan Klein and Frank Veltman}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, pages = {174--175}, topic = {machine-translation;speech-recognition;} } @techreport{ carbonell_j-minton:1983a, author = {Jaime G. Carbonell and Steven Minton}, title = {Metaphor and Common-Sense Reasoning}, institution = {Carnegie-Mellon University}, number = {CMU--CS--83--110}, year = {1983}, address = {Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {metaphor;common-sense-reasoning;} } @book{ card-etal:1983a, author = {Stuart K. Card and Thomas P. Moran and Allen Newell}, title = {The Psychology of Human-Computer Interaction}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1983}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0898592437}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA76.9.I58 C371 1983.}, topic = {HCI;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ carden:1970a, author = {Guy Carden}, title = {A Note on Confliction Idiolects}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1970}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {281--290}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;empirical-methods-in-linguistics;} } @book{ carden:1973a, author = {Guy Carden}, title = {English Quantifiers: Logical Structure and Linguistic Variation}, publisher = {Taishukan Publishing Company}, year = {1973}, address = {Tokyo}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;} } @article{ carden:1977a, author = {Guy Carden}, title = {Comparatives and Factives}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1977}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {586--590}, topic = {(counter)factive-constructions;indirect-discourse;} } @book{ carden-dieterich_tg:1976a, author = {Guy Carden and Thomas G. Dieterich}, title = {Coreference Evidence for a Transformationalist Analysis of Nominals}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1976}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;nominalization;} } @incollection{ cardie:1996a, author = {Claire Cardie}, title = {Automating Feature Set Selection for Case-Based Learning of Linguistic Knowledge}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Eric Brill and Kenneth Church}, pages = {113--126}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;} } @article{ cardie:1998a, author = {Claire Cardie}, title = {Empirical Methods in Information Extraction}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1998}, volume = {18}, number = {4}, pages = {65--79}, topic = {machine-learning;intelligent-information-retrieval; nl-processing;} } @book{ cardie-etal:2000a, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, title = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Dan Roth, "Learning in Natural Language: Theory and Algorithmic Approaches", pp. 1--6 2. Nicola Cancedda and Christer Samuelson, "Corpus-Based Grammar Specialization", pp. 7--12 3. R.I. Damper and Y. Marchand, "Pronunciation by Analogy in Normal and Impaired Readers", pp. 13--18 4. Guy de Pauw and Walter Daelemans, "The Role of Algorithm Bias vs. Information Source in Learning Algorithms for Morphosyntactic Disambiguation", pp. 19--24 5. John Elliott and Eric Antwell and Bill Whyte, "Increasing our Ignorance of Language: Identifying Language Structure in an Unknown `Signal{'}", pp. 25--30 6. Gerard Escudero and LLu\'is M\`arquez and German Rigau, "A Comparison between Supervised Learning Algorithms for Word Sense Disambiguation", pp. 31--36 7. George Foster, "Incorporating Position Information into a Maximum Entropy/Minimum Divergence Translation Model", pp. 37--42 8. Guido Minnen and Francis Bond and Ann Copestake, "Memory-Based Learning for Article Generation", pp. 43--48 9. Tony Mullen and Miles Osborne, "Overfitting Avoidance for Stochastic Modeling of Attribute-Value Grammars", pp. 49--54 10. Stephen Raaijmakers, "Learning Distributed Linguistic Classes", pp. 55--60 11. William Gregory Sakas, "Modeling the Effect of Cross-Language Ambiguity on Human Syntax Acquisition", pp. 61--66 12. Patrick Schone and Daniel Jurafsky, "Knowledge-Free Induction of Morphology Using Latent Semantic Analysis", pp. 67--72 13. Antal van den Bosch, "Using Induced Rules as Complex Features in Memory-Based Language Learning", pp. 73--78 14. F. Amaya and J.M. Bened\'i, "Using Perfect Sampling in Parameter Estimation of a Whole Sentence Maximum Entropy Language Model", pp. 79--82 15. Konstantin Biatov, "Experiments on Unsupervised Learning for Extracting Relevant Fragments from Spoken Dialog Corpus", pp. 83--86 16. Laurent Blin and Laurent Miclet, "Generating Synthetic Speech Prosody with Lazy Learning in Tree Structures", pp. 87--90 17. Alexander Clark, "Inducing Syntactic Categories by Context Distribution Clustering", pp. 91--94 18. Herv\'e D\'ejean, "{ALLiS}: A Symbolic Learning System for Natural Language Learning", pp. 95--98 19. Jos\'e M. G\'omez Hidalgo and Enrique Puertas Sanz, "Combining Text and Heuristics for Cost-Sensitive Spam Filtering", pp. 99--102 20. Anne Kool and Walter Daelemans and Jakub Zavrel, "Genetic Algorithms for Feature Relevance Assignment in Memory-Based Language Processing", pp. 103--106 21. Vasin Punyakanok and Dan Roth, "Shallow Parsing by Inferencing with Classifiers", pp. 107--110 22. Patrick Ruch and Robert Baud and Pierette Bouillon and Gilbert Robert, "Minimal Commitment and Full Lexical Disambiguation: Balancing Rules and Hidden {M}arkov Models", pp. 111--114 23. J. Turmo and H. Rodr\'iguez, "Learning {IE} Rules for a Set of Related Concepts", pp. 115--118 24. Hans van Halterin, "A Default First Order Family Weight Determination Procedure for {WPDV} Models", pp. 119--122 25. Jose Luis Verd\'u-Mas and Jorge Calera-Rubio and Rafael C. Carrasco, "A Comparison of {PCFG} Models", pp. 123--125 26. Erik Tjong Kim Sang and Sabine Buchholz, "Introduction to the {CoNLL-200} Shared Task: Chunking", pp. 127--132 27. Herv\'e D\'ejean, "Learning Syntactic Structures with {XML}", pp. 133--135 28. Christer Johansson, "A Context Sensitive Maximum Likelihood Approach to Chunking", 136--138 29. Rob Koeling, "Chunking with Maximum Entropy Models", pp. 139--141 30. Taku Kodeh and Yuji Matsumoto, "Use of Support Vector Learning for Chunk Identification", pp. 142--144 31. Miles Osborne, "Shallow Parsing as Part-of-Speech Tagging", pp. 145--147 32. Ferran Pla and Antonio Molina and Natividad Prieto, "Improving Chunking by Means of Lexical-Contextual Information in Statistical Language Models", pp. 148--150 33. Erik Tjong Kim Sang, "Text Chunking by System Combination", pp. 151--153 34. Hans van Halterin, "Chunking with {WPDV} Models", pp. 154--156 35. Jorn Veenstra and Antel van den Bosch, "Single-Classifier Memory-Based Phrase Chunking", pp. 157--159 36. Marc Vilain and David Day, "Phrase Parsing with Rule Sequence Processors: An Application to the Shared {CoNLL} Task", pp. 160--162 37. GuoDong Zhou and Jian Su and TongGuan Tey, "Hybrid Text Chunking", pp. 163--165 38. J\"org-Uwe Kietz and Raphael Volz and Alexander Maedche, "Extracting a Domain-Specific Ontology from a Corporate Intranet", pp. 167--175 39. Pieter Adriaans and Erik de Haas, "Learning from a Substructural Perspective", pp. 176--183 40. James Cussens and Stephen Pulman, "Incorporating Linguistics Constraints into Inductive Logic Programming", pp. 184--193 41. F. Esposito and S. Ferelli and N. Fanizzi and G. Semeraro, "Learning from Parsed Sentences with {INTHELEX}", pp. 194--198 42. Pascale S\'ebillot and Pierette Bouillon and C\'ecile Fabre, "Inductive Logic Programming for Corpus-Based Acquisition of Semantic Lexicons", pp. 199--208 43. Aline Villavicencio, "The Acquisition of Word Order by a Computational Learning System", pp. 209--218 44. Eva \v{Z}a\v{c}kov\'a and Lobo\v{s} Popelinsk\'y and Milo\v{s} Nepil, "Recognition and Tagging of Compound Verb Groups in {C}zech", pp. 219--225 }, topic = {language-learning;grammar-learning;machine-language-learning;} } @inproceedings{ cardie-pierce_d:1998a, author = {Claire Cardie and David Pierce}, title = {Error-Driven Pruning of Treebank Grammars for Base Noun Phrase Identification}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {218--224}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {corpus-tagging;information-extraction;} } @book{ cardie-weischedel:1997a, editor = {Claire Cardie and Ralph Weischedel}, title = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Adwait Ratnaparkhi, "A Linear Observed Time Statistical Parser Based on Maximal Entropy Models" 2. Joshua Goodman, "Global Thresholding and Multiple-Pass Parsing" 3. Carolyn Penstein Ros\'e and Alon Lavie, "An Efficient Distribution of Labor in a Two Stage Robust Interpretation Process" 4. Doug Beeferman and Adam Berger and John Lafferty, "Text Segmentation Using Exponential Models" 5. Korin Richmond and Andrew Smith and Einat Amitay, "Detecting Subject Boundaries within Text: A Language Independent Statistical Approach" 6. Ido Dagan and Yale Kerov and Dan Roth, "Mistake-Driven Learning in Text Categorization" 7. Thorstein Brants and Wojciech Skut and Brigitte Krenn, "Tagging Grammatical Functions" 8. Jo Calder, "On Aligning Trees" 9. Lawrence Saul and Fernando Pereira, "Aggregate and Mixed-Order {M}arkov Models for Statistical Language Processing" 10. Erika F. de Lima, "Assigning Grammatical Relations with a Back-Off Model" 11. I. Dan Melamed, "Automatic Discovery of Non-Compositional Compounds in Parallel Data" 12. Scott W. Bennett and Chinatsu Aone and Craig Lovell, " Learning to Tag Multilingual Texts through Observation" 14. Ellen Riloff and Jessica Shepherd, "A Corpus-Based Approach for Building Semantic Lexicons" 15. Roberto Basili and Gianluca de Rossi and Maria Teresa Pazienza, "Inducing Terminology for Lexical Acquisition" 16. Paul Thompson and Christopher C. Dozier, "Name Searching and Information Retrieval" 17. K.L. Kwock, "Lexicon Effects on {C}hinese Information Retrieval" 18. Paola Merlo and Matthew W. Crocker and Cathy Berthouzoz, "Attaching Multiple Prepositional Phrases: Generalized Back-Off Estimation" 19. Eric V. Siegel, "Learning Methods for Combining Linguistic Indicators to Classify Verbs" 20. Andrew Kehler, "Probabilistic Coreference in Information Extraction" 21. Janyce Wiebe and Tom O'Hara and Kenneth McKeever and Thorsten \"Ohrstr\"m-Sandgren, "An Empirical Approach to Temporal Reference Resolution" 22. Ji Donghong and Huang Changning, "Word Sense Disambiguation Based on Structured Semantic Space" 23. Ted Pedersen and Rebecca Bruce, "Distinguishing Word Senses in Untagged Text" 24. Hwee Tou Ng, "Exemplar-Based Word Sense Disambiguation: Some Recent Improvements" }, topic = {empirical-methods-in-nlp;} } @incollection{ cardona-etal:1991a, author = {L. Cardona and J. Kohlas and P.A. Monney}, title = {The Reliability of Reasoning with Unreliable Rules and Propositions}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {125--129}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {Dempster-Shafer-theory;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @incollection{ cardone_f-hindley_jr:2009a, author = {Felice Cardone and J. Roger Hindley}, title = {Lambda-Calculus and Combinators in the 20th Century}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 5: Logic from {R}ussell to {C}hurch}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2009}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {723--817}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;lambda-calculus;} } @article{ cardoso-etal:2009a, author = {Amilcar Cardoso and Tony Veale and Geraint A. Wiggins}, title = {Converging on the Divergent: {T}he History (and Future) of the International Joint Workshops in Computational Creativity}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2009}, volume = {30}, number = {3}, pages = {15--22}, topic = {computational-creativity;} } @book{ care-landesman:1968a, editor = {Norman S. Care and Charles Landesman}, title = {Readings in the Theory of Action}, publisher = {Indiana University Press}, year = {1968}, address = {Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {HILLMAN BD450 .C28}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @inproceedings{ carenini-moore_jd:1998a, author = {Giuseppe Carenini and Johanna D. Moore}, title = {Multimedia Explanations in {IDEA} Decision Support System}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Interactive and Mixed-Initiative Decision Theoretic Systems}, year = {1998}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publication = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, editor = {Peter Haddawy and Steve Hanks}, pages = {16--22}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection.}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {preference-modeling;explanation;mixed-initiative-systems;} } @article{ carenini-moore_jd:2006a, author = {Giuseppe Carenini and Johanna D. Moore}, title = {Generating and Evaluating Evaluative Arguments}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {11}, pages = {925--952}, topic = {n;-generation;argumentation;preferences;} } @incollection{ carenini-poole_dl:2002a, author = {Giuseppe Carenini and David L. Poole}, title = {Constructed Preferences and Value-Focussed Thinking: Implications for AI Research on Preference Elicitation}, booktitle = {Preferences in {AI} and {CP}: Symbolic Approaches}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Ulrich Junker}, pages = {9--15}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preference-elicitation;} } @book{ carey_jm:1995a, editor = {Jane M. Carey}, title = {Human Factors In Information Systems: Emerging Theoretical Bases}, publisher = {Ablex Pub. Corp.}, year = {1995}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0893919403 (cl)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, QA 76.9 .H85 H8671 1995.}, topic = {HCI;} } @incollection{ carey_s:1978a, author = {Susan Carey}, title = {The Child as Word Learner}, booktitle = {Linguistic Theory and Psychological Reality}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Morris Halle and Joan Bresnan and George A. Miller}, pages = {264--293}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {lexical-acquistion;} } @book{ carey_s:1985a, author = {Susan Carey}, title = {Conceptual Change in Childhood}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262031108}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF723.C5 C3651 1985.}, topic = {developmental-psychology;concept-formation;} } @book{ carey_s:1985b, author = {Susan Carey}, title = {Conceptual Change in Childhood}, publisher = {MIT PressMIT Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, MassachusettsCambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {(9780262530736}, topic = {concept-learning;developmental-psychology;} } @article{ carey_s:2009a, author = {Susan Carey}, title = {Where Our Number Concepts Come From}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2009}, volume = {106}, number = {4}, pages = {220--254}, topic = {psychology-of-mathematics;developmental-psychology;} } @book{ carey_s-gelman:1991a, editor = {Susan Carey and Rochel Gelman}, title = {The Epigenesis of Mind: Essays on Biology and Cognition}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1991}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0805804382}, contentnote = {TC: 1. C.R. Gallistel, Ann L. Brown, Susan Carey, Rochel Gelman, and Frank C. Keil, "Biological contributions to cognition--Lessons from animal learning for the study of cognitive development" 2. Peter Marler, "The instinct to learn" 3. Adele Diamond, "Neuropsychological insights into the meaning of object concept development" 4. Elissa L. Newport, "Contrasting concepts of the critical period for language" 5. Elizabeth S. Spelke, "Innate knowledge and beyond. Physical knowledge in infancy: reflections on Piaget's theory" 6. Annette Karmiloff-Smith, "Beyond modularity: innate constraints and developmental change" 7. Kurt W. Fischer and Thomas Bidell, "Constraining nativist inferences about cognitive capacities" 8. Frank C. Keil, "The emergence of theoretical beliefs as constraints on concepts" 9. Susan Carey, "Knowledge acquisition: enrichment or conceptual change?" 10. Rochel Gelman., "Epigenetic foundations of knowledge structures: initial and transcendent constructions" }, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF 311 .E5851 1991.}, topic = {developmental-psychology;biopsychology;} } @article{ cargile_j:1967a, author = {James Cargile}, title = {The Surprise Test Paradox}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1967}, volume = {64}, number = {21}, pages = {550--563}, topic = {surprise-examination-paradox;} } @article{ cargile_j:1967b, author = {James Cargile}, title = {On Believing You Believe}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1967}, volume = {27}, number = {6}, pages = {177--183}, topic = {belief;reflective-knowledge;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ cargile_j:1969a1, author = {James Cargile}, title = {The Sorites Paradox}, journal = {British Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year = {1969}, volume = {20}, pages = {193--202}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Republication: cargile_j:1969a1.}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @incollection{ cargile_j:1969a2, author = {James Cargile}, title = {The Sorites Paradox}, booktitle = {Vagueness: A Reader}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Rosanna Keefe and Peter Smith}, pages = {89--98}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of cargile_j:1969a1.}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @article{ cargile_j:1969b, author = {James Cargile}, title = {Review of `{O}n Sentences Verifiable By Their Use', by {E}dward {J}. {L}emmon and `\emph{Cogito Ergo Sum:} Inference or Performance?', by {J}aakko {H}intikka}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1969}, volume = {33}, number = {4}, pages = {615=615}, xref = {Review of: lemmon_ej:1962, hintikka_j:1962b}, topic = {performatives;Descartes;pragmatic-validity;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ cargile_j:2002a, author = {James Cargile}, title = {Logical Paradoxes}, booktitle = {A Companion to Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dale Jacquette}, pages = {103--114}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {paradoxes;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ cargile_j:2010a, author = {James Cargile}, title = {The Language of Thought Revisited}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2010}, volume = {70}, number = {2}, pages = {359--367}, xref = {Review of: fodor_ja:2008a}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;mental-representations;mental-language; language-of-thought;} } @incollection{ cariani_c:2021a, author = {Fabrizio Cariani}, title = {Deontic Logic and Natural Language}, booktitle = {Handbook of Deontic Logic and Normative Systems}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2021}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and John F. Horty and Xavier Parent and Ron van der Meyden and Leon van der Torre}, pages = {499--548 }, address = {London}, topic = {deontic-logic;nl-semantics;} } @phdthesis{ cariani_f:2009a, author = {Fabrizio Cariani}, title = {The Semantics of `ought' and the Unity of Modal Discourse}, school = {University of California at Berkeley}, year = {2009}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Berkeley, California}, topic = {modals;deontic-modals;'ought';deontic-logic;} } @article{ cariani_f:2013a, author = {Fabrizio Cariani}, title = {{`Ought'} and Resolution Semantics}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2013}, volume = {47}, number = {3}, pages = {534-558}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my14}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ cariani_f:2013b, author = {Fabrizio Cariani}, title = {Epistemic and Deontic `Should'}, journal = {Thought}, year = {2013}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {73--84}, topic = {'ought';deontic-modals;epistemic-modals;} } @article{ cariani_f:2014a, author = {Fabrizio Cariani}, title = {Attitudes, Deontics and Semantic Neutrality}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {2014}, volume = {95}, number = {4}, pages = {491--511}, abstract = {It has been recently suggested that a semantic theory for deontic modals should be neutral between a very large range of normative and evaluative theories. This article aims to clarify this talk of neutrality, in particular its scope and motivation. My thesis is that neutrality is best understood as an empirical thesis about a fragment of natural language that includes deontic modals -- not as a new, sui generis methodological constraint on natural language semantics.}, topic = {deontic-modals;metaethics;} } @article{ cariani_f:2016a, author = {Fabrizio Cariani}, title = {Consequence and Contrast in Deontic Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2016}, volume = {113}, number = {8}, pages = {396--416}, doi = {doi:10.5840/jphil2016113826}, abstract = {Contrastivists view ought-sentences as expressing comparisons among alternatives. Deontic actualists believe that the value of each alternative in such a comparison is determined by what would actually happen if that alternative were to be the case. One of the arguments that motivates actualism is a challenge to the principle of agglomeration over conjunction -- the principle according to which if you ought to run and you ought to jump, then you ought to run and jump. I argue that there is no way of developing the actualist insight into a logic that invalidates the agglomeration principle without also invalidating other desirable patterns of inference. After doing this, I extend the analysis to other contrastive views that challenge agglomeration in the way that the actualist does. This motivates skepticism about the actualist's way of challenging agglomeration.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap22}, topic = {actualism/possibilism;alternatives;deontic-logic;context;} } @incollection{ cariani_f:2016b, author = {Fabrizio Cariani}, title = {Deontic Modals and Probabilities: One Theory to Rule Them All?}, booktitle = {Deontic Modality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Nate Charlow and Matthew Chrisman}, pages = {11--46}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {'ought';modality;probability;deontic-modals;} } @article{ cariani_f-etal:2013a, author = {Fabrizio Cariani and Magdalena Kaufmann and Stefan Kaufmann}, title = {Deliberative Modality under Epistemic Uncertainty}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {36}, number = {3}, pages = {225--259}, abstract = {We discuss the semantic significance of a puzzle concerning 'ought' and conditionals recently discussed by Kolodny and MacFarlane. We argue that the puzzle is problematic for the standard Kratzer-style analysis of modality. In Kratzer's semantics, modals are evaluated relative to a pair of conversational backgrounds. We show that there is no sensible way of assigning values to these conversational backgrounds so as to derive all of the intuitions in Kolodny and MacFarlane's case. We show that the appropriate verdicts can be derived by extending Kratzer's framework to feature a third conversational background and claiming that the relevant reading of 'ought' is sensitive to this parameter.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16.}, topic = {'ought';miner-puzzle;deontic-modals;} } @book{ cariani_f-etal:2014a, editor = {Fabrizio Cariani and Davide Grossi and Joke Mehens and Xavier Parent}, title = {Deontic Logic and Normative Systems: 12th International Congress, {DEON} 2014}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2014}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-3-319-08614-9}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Sven Ove Hansson, "Deontic Diversity", pp. 5--18 2. Albert J.J. Anglberger and Huimin Dong and Olivier Roy, "Open Reading without Free Choice", pp. 19--32 3. Gunnar Bj\"ornsson and Robert Shanklin, "{`}Must', `Ought', and the Structure of Standards", pp. 33--48 4. Erica Calardo and Guido Governatori and Antonio Rotolo, "A Preference-Based Semantics for {CTD} Reasoning", pp. 49--64 5. Silvano Colombo Tosatto and Guido Governatori and Pierre Kelsen, "Detecting Deontic Conflicts in Dynamic Settings", pp. 65--80 6. Federico L.G. Faroldi, "Denial of Responsibility and Normative Negation", pp. 81--94 7. Melissa Fusco, "Factoring Disjunction out of Deontic Modal Puzzles", pp. 95--107 8. Dov Gabbay and Livia Robaldo and Xin Sun and Leendert van der Torre and Zoreh Baniasadi, "Toward a Linguistic Interpretation of the Deontic Paradoxes: {B}eth-{R}eichenbach Semantics Approach for a New Analysis of the Miners Scenario", pp. 108--123 9. Allesandra Marra, "For a Dynamic Semantics of Necessity Deontic Modals", pp. 124--138 10. Eugenio Orlandelli, "Proof Analysis in Deontic Logics", pp. 139--148 11. Xavier Parent and Leendert van der Torre, "{`}Sing and Dance!' Input-Output Logics without Weakening", pp. 149--156 12. Martin Rechenauer and Olivier Roy, "The Logical Structure of {S}canlon's Contractualism", pp. 166--176 13. R\'egos Riveret and Alexanxer Artikis and D\'idac Busquets and Jeremy Pitt, "Self-Governance by Transgfiguration: From Learning to Prescriptions", pp. 177--191 14. Catherine Saint Croix and Richmond H. Thomason, "Chisholm's Paradox and Conditional Oughts", pp. 192--207 15. Justin Snedegar, "Deontic Reasoning across Contexts", pp. 208--223 16. Christian Stra{\ss}er and Ofer Arieli, "Sequent-Based Argumentation for Normative Reasoning", pp. 224--240 17. Xin Sun and Leendert van der Torre, "Combining Consitutive and Regulative Norms in Input/Output Logic", pp. 241--257 18. Robert Trypuz and Piotr Kulicki, "A Deontic Logic of Actions and States", pp. 258--272 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ cariani_f-santorio_p:2018a, author = {Fabrizio Cariani and Paolo Santorio}, title = {Will Done Better: Selection Semantics, Future Credence, and Indeterminacy}, journal = {Mind}, year = {201}, volume = {127}, number = {505}, pages = {129--165}, abstract = {Statements about the future are central in everyday conversation and reasoning. How should we understand their meaning? The received view among philosophers treats will as a tense: in 'Cynthia will pass her exam', will shifts the reference time forward. Linguists, however, have produced substantial evidence for the view that will is a modal, on a par with must and would. The different accounts are designed to satisfy different theoretical constraints, apparently pulling in opposite directions. We show that these constraints are jointly satisfied by a novel modal account of will. On this account, will is a modal but doesn't work as a quantifier over worlds. Rather, the meaning of will involves a selection function similar to the one used by Stalnaker in his semantics for conditionals. The resulting theory yields a plausible semantics and logic for will and vindicates our intuitive views about the attitudes that rational agents should have towards future-directed contents. }, topic = {nl-tense;future-contingent-propositions;modals;} } @incollection{ carl_m:1998a, author = {Michael Carl}, title = {A Constructivist Approach to Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {247--256}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-translation;} } @incollection{ carl_m-schmidtwigger:1998a, author = {Michael Carl and Antje Schmidt-Wigger}, title = {Shallow Post Morphological Processing with {KURD}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Jill C. Burstein and Claudia Leacock}, pages = {257--265}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-morphology;} } @incollection{ carl_m-schmidtwiggerw:1998a, author = {Michael Carl and Antje Schmidt-Wigger}, title = {Shallow Post Morphological Processing with {KURD}}, booktitle = {New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {257--265}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-morphology;} } @book{ carl_m-way:2003a, editor = {Michael Carl and Andy Way}, title = {Recent Advances in Example-Based Machine Translation}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2003}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {1-4020-1400-7}, xref = {Review: daelemans:2004a.}, topic = {machine-translation;} } @book{ carl_w:1994a, author = {Wolfgang Carl}, title = {Frege's Theory of Sense and Reference: Its Origin and Scope}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {Frege;intensionality;} } @article{ carleton:1984a, author = {Lawrence R. Carleton}, title = {Programs, Language Understanding, and {S}earle}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1984}, volume = {59}, number = {2}, pages = {219--230}, topic = {philosophy-AI;foundations-of-cognition;} } @article{ carletta:1996a, author = {Jean Carletta}, title = {Assessing Agreement on Classification Tasks: The Kappa Statistic}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {249--255}, topic = {corpus-tagging;} } @article{ carletta-etal:1997a, author = {Jean Carletta and Amy Isard and Stephen Isard and Jacqueline C. Kowtko and Gwynewth Doherty-Sneddon and Anne H. Anderson}, title = {The Reliability of a Dialogue Structure Coding Scheme}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {13--31}, topic = {discourse-structure;corpus-tagging;corpus-linguistics; pragmatics;} } @incollection{ carletta-isard:1999a, author = {Jean Carletta and Amy Isard}, title = {The {MATE} Annotation Workbench: User Requirements}, booktitle = {Towards Standards and Tools for Discourse Tagging: Proceedings of the Workshop}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, editor = {Marilyn Walker}, pages = {11--17}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {discourse-tagging;computational-dialogue;} } @book{ carlson_e:1995a, author = {Erik Carlson}, title = {Consequentialism Reconsidered}, publisher = {Kluwer}, year = {1995}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {9789048145713, 9048145716}, abstract = {... strives to find a plausible formulation of the structural part of consequentialism. Key notions are analyzed, such as outcomes, alternatives and performability. Carlson argues that consequentialism should be understood as a maximizing rather than a satisficing theory, and as temporally neutral rather than future oriented.}, topic = {utilitarianism;alternatives-for-action;} } @article{ carlson_e:1998a, author = {Erik Carlson}, title = {Fischer on Backtracking and {N}ewcomb's Problem}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1998}, volume = {58}, number = {3}, pages = {229--231}, xref = {Commentary on: fischer_jm:1995a}, topic = {Newcomb-problem;} } @article{ carlson_e:1999a, author = {Erik Carlson}, title = {Consequentialism, Alternatives, and Actualism}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1999}, volume = {96}, number = {3}, pages = {253--268}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn10}, doi = {10.1023/A:1004239306956}, topic = {utilitarianism;consequentialism;obligation;alternatives-for-action;} } @article{ carlson_e:2002a, author = {Erik Carlson}, title = {Deliberation, Foreknowledge, and Morality as a Guide to Action}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2002}, volume = {57}, number = {1}, pages = {71--89}, abstract = {... I discuss whether moral ``actualism'' implies that morality cannot be action-guiding even for ideal agents. If actualism is true, an ideal agent will know about her own future actions. Since such foreknowledge is often thought to be incompatible with deliberation, and since action-guidance presupposes the possibility of deliberation, there is an apparent difficulty in combining actualism with the requirement of action-guidance. In opposition to an argument by Jan sterberg, I try to show that actualism and action-guidance are in fact compatible.}, topic = {self-knowledge;foreknowledge;practical-reasoning;ethics;} } @incollection{ carlson_e:2018a, author = {Erik Carlson}, title = {Value Theory (Axiology)}, booktitle = {Introduction to Formal Philosophy}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2018}, editor = {Sven Ove Hansson and Vincent F. Hendricks}, pages = {523--534}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {value-theory;qualitative-utility;} } @incollection{ carlson_g:2011a, author = {Gregory Carlson}, title = {Genericity}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {1153--1184}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;generics;} } @article{ carlson_gn:1977a, author = {Gregory N. Carlson}, title = {A Unified Analysis of the {E}nglish Bare Plural}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {413--456}, topic = {generics;i-level/s-level;} } @phdthesis{ carlson_gn:1977b, author = {Gregory N. Carlson}, title = {Reference to Kinds in {E}nglish}, school = {Linguistics Department, University of Massachusetts}, year = {1977}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, xref = {Book publication: carlson_gn:1980a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {generics;nl-semantics;} } @article{ carlson_gn:1979a, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {Generics and Atemporal {\em When}}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {49--98}, topic = {nl-semantics;generics;conditionals;} } @book{ carlson_gn:1980a, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {Reference to Kinds in {E}nglish}, publisher = {Garland Publishing Company}, year = {1980}, address = {New York}, xref = {Ph.{D}. thesis: carlson_gn:1977b.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {generics;nl-semantics;} } @article{ carlson_gn:1982a, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {Generic Terms and Generic Sentences}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {145--182}, topic = {generics;} } @article{ carlson_gn:1983a, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {Logical Form: Types of Evidence}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1983}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {295--317}, topic = {logical-form;foundations-of-semantics; linguistics-methodology;} } @article{ carlson_gn:1984a, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {On the Role of Thematic Roles in Linguistic Theory}, journal = {Linguistics}, year = {1984}, volume = {22}, pages = {259--279}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {thematic-roles;} } @article{ carlson_gn:1984b, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {Thematic Roles and Their Role in Semantic Interpretation}, journal = {Linguistics}, year = {1984}, volume = {22}, missinginfo = {number, pages, date? Cld be 85}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;thematic-roles;} } @article{ carlson_gn:1985a, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}emantics and Cognition}, by {R}ay {J}ackendoff}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {505--519}, xref = {Review of jackendoff_rs:1983a.}, topic = {cognitive-semantics;} } @article{ carlson_gn:1987a, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {Same and Different: Some Consequences for Syntax and Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1987}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {531--565}, topic = {events;nl-semantics;sameness/difference;} } @incollection{ carlson_gn:1988a, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {On the Semantic Composition of {E}nglish Generic Sentences}, booktitle = {Properties, Types and Meaning, Vol. 2}, year = {1988}, editor = {Gennaro Chierchia and Barbara Partee and Raymond Turner}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, pages = {167--193}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;generics;} } @article{ carlson_gn:1991a, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}eaning and Grammar: An Introduction to Semantics}, by {G}ennaro {C}hierchia and {S}ally {M}c{C}onnell-{G}inet}, journal = {Language}, year = {1991}, volume = {67}, number = {4}, pages = {805--813}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ carlson_gn:1991b, author = {Greg N. Carlson}, title = {Natural Kinds and Common Nouns}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {370--398}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-semantics;natural-kinds;common-nouns;} } @incollection{ carlson_gn:1995a, author = {Gregory N. Carlson}, title = {Truth Conditions of Generic Sentences: Two Contrasting Views}, booktitle = {The Generic Book}, publisher = {Chicago University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Gregory Carlson and Francis Jeffry Pelletier}, pages = {224--237}, address = {Chicago, IL}, topic = {generics;} } @incollection{ carlson_gn:1998a, author = {Gregory N. Carlson}, title = {Thematic Roles and the Individuation of Events}, booktitle = {Events and Grammar}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Susan D. Rothstein}, pages = {35--51}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {thematic-roles;events;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ carlson_gn:2005a, author = {Gregory N. Carlson}, title = {Reference}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {74--96}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reference;referring-expressions;} } @incollection{ carlson_gn:2008a, author = {Gregorn N. Carlson}, title = {Patterns in the Semantics of Generic Sentences}, booktitle = {Time and Modality}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2008}, editor = {Jacquelin Gu\`eron and Jacquelin Lecarme}, pages = {17--38}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {generics;} } @incollection{ carlson_gn:2012a, author = {Gregory N. Carlson}, title = {Habitual and Generic Aspect}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {804--851}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;} } @book{ carlson_gn-pelletier_fj:1995a, editor = {Gregory N. Carlson and Francis Jeffry Pelletier}, title = {The Generic Book}, publisher = {Chicago University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Chicago, Illinois}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Manfred Krifka, Francis Jeffrey Pelletier, Gregory Carlson, Alice ter Meulen, Gennaro Chierchia, and Godehard Link, "Genericity: an Introduction", pp. 1--124 2. Angelika Kratzer, "Stage-Level and Individual-Level Predicates", pp. 125--175 3. Gennaro Chierchia, "Individual-Level Predicates as Inherent Generics", pp. 176--223 4. Gregory Carlson, "Truth Conditions of Generic Sentences: Two Contrasting Views", pp. 224--237 5. Manfred Krifka, "Focus and the Interpretation of Generic Sentences", pp. 238--264 6. Mats Rooth, "Indefinites, Adverbs of Quantification, and Focus Semantics", pp. 265--299 7. Nucholas Asher and Michael Morreau, "What Some Generic Sentences Mean", pp. 300--338 8. Alice ter Meulen, "Semantic Constraints on Type-Shifting Anaphora", pp. 339--357 9. Godehard Link, "Generic Information and Dependent Generics", pp. 358--382 10. Karina Wilkinson, "The Semantics of the Common Noun `Kind'", pp. 383--397 11. Manfred Krifka, "Common Nouns: A Contrastive Analysis of English and Chinese", pp. 398--411 12. \"Osten Dahl, "The Marking of the Episodic/Generic Distinction in Tense-Aspect Systems", pp. 412--425 }, ISBN = {0-226-09291-7 (pbk)}, xref = {Review: vaneijck_j:1997a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {generics;} } @inproceedings{ carlson_gn-pelletier_fj:2000a, author = {Gregory N. Carlson and F. Jeffrey Pelletier}, title = {Average Noun Phrases}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {X}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2000}, editor = {Brendan Jackson and Tanya Matthews}, pages = {17--26}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;reference-gaps;} } @article{ carlson_gn-pelletier_fj:2002a, author = {Gregory N. Carlson and Francis Jeffrey Pelletier}, title = {The Average {A}merican has 2.3 Children}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2002}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {72--104}, abstract = {'Average'-NPs, such as the one in the title of this paper, have been claimed to be linguistically identical to any other definite NPs, but at the same time to be 'semantically inconsistent' with these other definite-NPs. To some this is an ironclad proof of the irrelevance of semantics to linguistics. We argue that both of the initial claims are wrong: 'average'-NPs, are not 'linguistically identical' to other definite-NPs, but instead show a number of interesting divergences, and we provide a plausible semantic account for them that is not 'semantically inconsistent' with the account afforded other definite NPs but in fact blends quite nicely with one standard account of the semantics for NPs. }, topic = {noun-phrases;foundations-of-semantics;} } @book{ carlson_gn-pelletier_fj:2005a, editor = {Greg N. Carlson and Francis Jeffry Pelletier}, title = {Reference and Quantification: The {P}artee Effect}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2005}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN-13 = {978-1575865041}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Sandro Zucchi, "The Present Mode" 2. Dorit Abusch, "Causatives and Mixed Aspectual Type" 3. Barbara Abbott, "Proper Names and Language" 4. Jeroen Groenendijk and Martin Stokhof, "Why Compositionality?" 5. Emmon Bach, "Is Word-Formation Compositional?" 6. Angelika Kratzer, "Indefinites and the Operators they Depend on" 7. Gennaro Chierchia, "Definites, Locality, and Intentional Identity" 8. Laurence R. Horn, "Airport '86 Revisited: Toward a Unified Indefinite Any", pp. 179--205 9. Arnim von Stechow and Thomas Ede Zimmerman, "A Problem for De Re Attitudes" 10. Hana Filip, "Measures and Indefinites" 11. Eva Haji\v{c}ov\'a and Petr Sgall, "The Position of Information Structure" 12. Mats Rooth, "Topic Accents on Quantifiers" } , topic = {nl-semantics;reference;nl-quantification;} } @article{ carlson_gn-spejewski:1997a, author = {Greg N. Carlson and Beverly Spejewski}, title = {Generic Passages}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1997}, volume = {5}, number = {2}, pages = {101--165}, topic = {generics;discourse;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ carlson_l:1981a, author = {Lauri Carlson}, title = {Aspect and Quantification}, booktitle = {Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Philip Tedeschi and Annie Zaenen}, pages = {31--64}, address = {New York}, topic = {tense-aspect;nl-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ carlson_l1:1994a, author = {Lauri Carlson}, title = {Plural Quantifiers and Informational Independence}, booktitle = {Intensional Logic: Theory and Applications}, publisher = {The Philosophical Society of Finland}, year = {1994}, editor = {Ilkka Niiniluoto and Esa Saarinen}, pages = {163--174}, address = {Helsinki}, topic = {plural;plural-quantification;} } @incollection{ carlson_l1-termeulen:1979a, author = {Lauri Carlson and Alice ter Meulen}, title = {Informational Independence in Intensional Context}, booktitle = {Essays in Honor of {J}aakko {H}intikka}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1979}, editor = {Esa Saarinen and Risto Hilpinen and Ilkka Niiniluoto and Merrill Province Hintikka}, pages = {61--72}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {branching-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ carlson_l2-etal:2004a, author = {Lynn Carlson and Daniel Marcu and Mary Ellen Okurowski}, title = {Building a Discourse-Tagged Corpus in the Framework of Rhetorical Structure Theory}, booktitle = {Current and New Directions in Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Jan van Kuppevelt and Ronnie W. Smith}, pages = {85--112}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {dialogue-corpora;rhetorical-structure-theory;} } @article{ carlson_tj:1999b, author = {Timothy J. Carlson}, title = {Ordinal Arithmetic and $\Sigma_1$ Elementarity}, journal = {Archive for Mathematical Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {38}, number = {7}, pages = {449--460}, topic = {ordinal-arithmetic;epistemic-arithmetic;} } @article{ carlson_tj:2000a, author = {Timothy J. Carlson}, title = {Knowledge, Machines, and the Consistency of Reinhardt's Strong Mechanistic Thesis}, journal = {Annals of Pure and Applied Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {105}, number = {1--3}, pages = {51--82}, abstract = {Reinhardt's strong mechanistic thesis, a formalization of `I know I am a Turing machine', is shown to be consistent with Epistemic Arithmetic.}, url = {http://www.math.osu.edu/~carlson.6/research/smt.pdf}, topic = {epistemic-arithmetic;Church's-thesis;mechanistic-thesis;} } @article{ carlsson-vandamme:1993a, author = {H. Carlsson and E. {van Damme}}, title = {Global Games and Equilibrium Selection}, journal = {Econometrica}, year = {1993}, volume = {61}, pages = {989--1018}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {game-theory;mutual-belief;Nash-equilibria;} } @article{ carlstrom_if:1975a, author = {Ian F. Carlstrom}, title = {Truth and Entailment for a Vague Quantifier}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1975}, volume = {30}, pages = {461--495}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ carlstrom_if:1990a, author = {Ian F. Carlstrom}, title = {A Truth-Functional Logic for Near-Universal Generalizations}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1990}, volume = {19}, number = {4}, pages = {379--405}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;exception-constructions;} } @article{ carlstrom_if-hill_cs:1978a, author = {Ian F. Carlstrom and Christopher S. Hill}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Logic of Conditionals}, by {E}rnest {A}dams}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1978}, volume = {45}, number = {1}, pages = {155--158}, xref = {Review of: adams_ew:1975a}, topic = {conditionals;probability-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ carmel_d-markovich_s:1996a, author = {David Carmel and Shaul Markovich}, title = {Learning Models of Intelligent Agents}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Eighth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, Vol. 2}, year = {1996}, editor = {William J. Clancey and Dan Weld}, pages = {62--67}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {machine-learning;finite-automata;} } @article{ carmel_d-markovich_s:1998a, author = {David Carmel and Shaul Markovich}, title = {Pruning Algorithms for Multi-Modal Adversary Search}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {99}, number = {2}, pages = {325--355}, topic = {search;} } @article{ carminati-etal:2002a, author = {Maria Nella Carminati and Lyn Frazier and Keith Rayner}, title = {Bound Variables and C-Command}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2002}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {1--34}, abstract = { It has long been assumed in linguistics that bound variable interpretations of pronouns are possible (only) when a quantified expression c-commands the pronoun. In two studies in which readers' eye movements were recorded, we examined the processing of pronouns bound by universal quantifiers. Experiment 1 compared examples where the quantifier c-commands the pronoun. ('Every British soldier thought he killed an enemy soldier') with examples where it doesn't ('Every British soldier aimed and then he killed an enemy soldier)'. Although there were no first pass differences, re-reading time showed that both quantifier examples took longer to read than nonquantified controls ('The old British soldier ...), but there was no special penalty in examples when the quantifier failed to c-command the pronoun. Experiment 2 investigated intersentential binding (telescoping): 'John Frederick/Each executive/Every executive went home. He broiled a steak. He ate dinner. Then he watched television.' Second pass and total reading times in the region containing the first pronoun were longer for quantified examples than name examples. But there was no indication that telescoping is tightly restricted, for example, to contexts with 'each' or to discourses describing stereotypical events composed of predictable subevents. The results suggest that bound variable interpretations are more generally and more readily available than is often assumed. They fit well with Bosch's (1983) attempt to limit pronoun occurrences to just two types: anaphoric referential pronouns and syntactic agreement pronouns. On this view, 'bound variable' interpretations without c-command are really anaphoric pronouns with inferred antecedents. This view is discussed along with the challenges it faces. }, topic = {syntactic-binding;anaphora;psycholinguistics;} } @incollection{ carmo-jones_aji:1977a, author = {Jos\'e Carmo and Andrew J.I. Jones}, title = {A New Approach to Contrary-to-Duty Obligations}, booktitle = {Defeasible Deontic Logic}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {Donald Nute}, pages = {317--344}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my11}, url = {http://dme.uma.pt/people/faculty/jose.carmo/publications.html}, topic = {deontic-logic;conditional-obligation;reparational-obligations;} } @article{ carmo-jones_aji:1996a, author = {Jos\'e Carmo and Andrew J.I. Jones}, title = {Deontic Database Constraints, Violation and Recovery}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1996}, volume = {57}, number = {1}, pages = {139--165}, topic = {deontic-logic;data-base-integrity;} } @article{ carmo_j-jones_aji:2022a, author = {Jos\'e Carmo and Andrew J.I. Jones}, title = {Carmo and {J}ones' Logic for Contrary-to-Duty Obligations Revised}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2022}, volume = {32}, number = {7}, pages = {1352--1364}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1093/logcom/exac026}, abstract = {We revise our logic for contrary-to-duty (CTD) conditionals, showing how to adjust our logical models in such a way as to avoid the counterintuitive results pointed out by Bj{\o}rn Kjos-Hanssen, but keep the main results that support our logical analysis of CTD scenarios.}, topic = {conditional-obligation;reparational-obligations;} } @book{ carnap_r:1928a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {{D}er {l}ogische {A}ufbau {d}er {W}elt}, publisher = {Weltkreis-Verlag}, year = {1928}, address = {Berlin-Schlactensee}, topic = {phenomenalism;} } @book{ carnap_r:1934a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Logische {S}yntax der {S}prache {S}chriften zur wissenschaftlichen {W}eltauffassung}, publisher = {Verlag von Julius Springer}, year = {1934}, address = {Vienna}, xref = {Revised English Translation: carnap_r:1937b.}, topic = {logical-syntax;} } @article{ carnap_r:1937a1, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Testability and Meaning}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1936--1937}, volume = {3 and 4}, pages = {419--471 and 1--40}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Republication: carnap_r:1937a1}, topic = {dispositions;} } @book{ carnap_r:1937a2, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Testability and Meaning}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Whitlock's, Inc.}, year = {1954}, address = {New Haven}, note = {Reprinted from \emph{Philosophy of Science}, vol. 3, with corrigenda and additional bibliography}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {dispositions;} } @book{ carnap_r:1937b, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {The Logical Syntax of Language}, publisher = {Kegan Paul Trench, Trubner {\&} Co}, year = {1937}, note = {Translated by Amethe Smeaton, Countess von Zeppelin}, address = {London}, xref = {Revision and translation of: carnap_r:1934a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {logical-syntax;} } @book{ carnap_r:1942a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Introduction to Semantics}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1942}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: church_a:1943}, xref = {Republication in: carnap_r:1961a}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;logic-classic;} } @book{ carnap_r:1942b, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Formalization of Logic}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1942}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication in: carnap_r:1961a}, xref = {Review: hempel_cg:1943a}, topic = {logic-classic;} } @article{ carnap_r:1945a1, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {The Two Concepts of Probability: The Problem of Probability}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1945}, volume = {5}, number = {4}, pages = {513--542}, xref = {Republication: carnap:1949a2}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @incollection{ carnap_r:1945a2, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {The Two Concepts of Probability}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {330--348}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: carnap:1945a1}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @article{ carnap_r:1946a, author = {Rudolph Carnap}, title = {Modalities and Quantification}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1946}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {33--64}, contentnote = {Stipulates equivalence of [](x)A and (x)[]A.}, topic = {modal-logic;quantifying-in-modality;} } @article{ carnap_r:1947a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {The Semiotic of {C}harles {M}orris: A Review of \emph{{S}igns, Language and Behavior, by {C}harles {M}orris}}, journal = {The Kenyon Review}, year = {1947}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {303--311}, xref = {Review of:L morris_cw:1946a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;foundations-of-semantics;semiotics;} } @incollection{ carnap_r:1949a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Truth and Confirmation}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {119--127}, address = {New York}, note = {Translated by Herbert Feigl and adapted from previous works}, topic = {foundations-of-induction;confirmation-theory;inductive-logic;} } @book{ carnap_r:1950a1, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Logical Foundations of Probability}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1950}, address = {Chicago}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @book{ carnap_r:1950a2, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Logical Foundations of Probability}, edition = {2}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1982}, address = {Chicago}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @article{ carnap_r:1950b1, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Empiricism, Semantics, and Ontology}, journal = {Revue Internationale de Philosophie}, year = {1950}, volume = {4}, pages = {20--40}, rtnote = {Rtrnote: Reading notes on file. Rnotes files "Carnap"}, topic = {logical-positivism;philosophical-ontology; foundations-of-semantics;metaphilosophy;} } @incollection{ carnap_r:1950b2, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Empiricism, Semantics, and Ontology}, booktitle = {Semantics and the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Illinois Press}, year = {1952}, editor = {Leonard Linsky}, pages = {208--228}, address = {Urbana, Illinois}, xref = {Republication of: carnap_r:1950b1}, topic = {logical-positivism;philosophical-ontology; foundations-of-semantics;metaphilosophy;} } @article{ carnap_r:1952a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Meaning Postulates}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1952}, volume = {3}, pages = {38--43}, missinginfo = {number}, note = {Reprinted in \cite{carnap_r:1956a}}, topic = {meaning-postulates;} } @incollection{ carnap_r:1954a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {On Belief Sentences: Reply to {A}lonzo {C}hurch.}, booktitle = {Philosophy and Analysis: A Collection of Articles Published in \emph{Analysis between 1933--1940 and 1947--1953}}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell}, year = {1954}, editor = {Margaret Macdonald}, pages = {125--128}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to church_a:1950a1}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;propositions;belief;} } @incollection{ carnap_r:1954b3, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Empiricism, Semantics, and Ontology}, booktitle = {Contemporary Philosophy: A Book of Readings}, publisher = {Henry Holt}, year = {1954}, editor = {James L. Jarrett and Sterling M. McMurrin}, pages = {337--390}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: carnap_r:1950b1}, topic = {logical-positivism;philosophical-ontology; foundations-of-semantics;metaphilosophy;} } @incollection{ carnap_r:1954b4, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Empiricism, Semantics, and Ontology}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mathematics: Selected Readings}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1964}, address = {New York}, editor = {Paul Benacerraf and Hilary Putnam}, pages = {233--248}, xref = {Republication of: carnap_r:1950b1}, topic = {logical-positivism;philosophical-ontology; foundations-of-semantics;metaphilosophy;} } @article{ carnap_r:1955a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Meaning and Synonymy in Natural Languages}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1955}, volume = {7}, pages = {33--47}, number = {3}, note = {Reprinted in \cite{carnap_r:1956a}, pp.~233--247.}, xref = {Commentary, response: chisholm_rm:1955a, carnap_r:1955b}, topic = {intentionality;synonymy;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ carnap_r:1955b, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {On Some Concepts of Pragmatics}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1955}, volume = {6}, number = {6}, pages = {85--91}, topic = {intentionality;synonymy;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ carnap_r:1956a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Meaning and Necessity}, publisher = {Chicago University Press}, year = {1956}, address = {Chicago}, edition = {2}, note = {(First edition published in 1947.)}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file for some pp.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, xref = {Review: bernays_p:1950a}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @book{ carnap_r:1961a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Introduction to Semantics and Formalization of Logic}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1961}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {Two books repubished in one volume.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;logic-classic;} } @incollection{ carnap_r:1962a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {The Aim of Inductive Logic}, booktitle = {Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science: Proceedings of the 1960 International Congress}, publisher = {Stanford University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Patrick Suppes and and Alfred Tarski}, pages = {303--318}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {foundations-of-induction;confirmation-theory;inductive-logic;} } @incollection{ carnap_r:1963a, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {My Philosophical Development}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {R}udolph {C}arnap}, publisher = {Open Court Publishing Company}, year = {1963}, editor = {Paul A. Schilpp}, pages = {3--84}, address = {LaSalle, Illinois}, topic = {Carnap;logical-empiricism;} } @incollection{ carnap_r:1963b, author = {Rudolf Carnap}, title = {Language, Modal Logic, and Semantics}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {R}udolph {C}arnap}, publisher = {Open Court Publishing Company}, year = {1963}, editor = {Paul A. Schilpp}, pages = {889--943}, address = {LaSalle, Ilinois}, contentnote = {Summary position statement and replies to Feys, Myhill, Davidson, etc.}, topic = {carnap;intensional-logic;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ carnap_r:1963c, author = {Rudolph Carnap}, title = {Replies and Systematic Expositions}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {R}udolph {C}arnap}, publisher = {Open Court}, year = {1963}, pages = {859--1013}, editor = {Paul A. Schilpp}, address = {LaSalle, Illinois}, contentnote = {PP. 868--873 deal with ontology.}, topic = {Carnap;analytic-philosophy;} } @techreport{ carnap_r-barhillel_y:1952a, author = {Rudolf Carnap and Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, title = {An Outline of a Theory of Information}, institution = {Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Reseaarch Laboratory of Electronics}, number = {247}, year = {1952}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {semantic-information;} } @book{ carnap_r-jeffrey_rc:1971a, editor = {Rudolf Carnap and Richard C. Jeffrey}, title = {Studies in Inductive Logic and Probability}, publisher = {University of California Press}, year = {1971}, address = {Berkeley, California}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library QA273.4 .C28}, topic = {induction;confirmation-theory;} } @article{ carney_j-fitch_gw:1979a, author = {James Carney and G.W. Fitch}, title = {Can {R}ussell Avoid {F}rege's Sense?}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1979}, volume = {88}, number = {351}, pages = {384--393}, topic = {Russell;intensionality;} } @article{ carney_jd:1980a, author = {James D. Carney}, title = {The Hesperus and {P}hosphorus Puzzle}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1980}, volume = {89}, number = {356}, pages = {577--581}, topic = {referential-opacity;proper-names;} } @article{ carnielli-etal:2022a, author = {Walter Carnielli and Marcelo E. Coniglio and David Fuenmayor}, title = {Logics of Formal Inconsistency Enriched with Replacement: An Algebraic and Modal Account}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {807--822}, topic = {relevance-logic;inconsistency;} } @book{ carnielli_wa-etal:2002a, editor = {Walter A. Carnielli and Marcelo E. Coniglio and Italia M. Loffredo D'Ottaviano}, title = {Paraconsistency: The Logical Way to the Inconsistent}, publisher = {Marcel Dekker}, year = {2002}, address = {New York}, xref = {Review: mcguiness_cn:2003a.}, topic = {paraconsistency;} } @article{ carnielli_wa-etal:2014a, author = {Walter A. Carnielli and Marcelo E. Coniglio and Rodrigo Podiacki and Tarc\'isio Rodrigues}, title = {On the Way to a Wider Model Theory: Completeness Theorems for First-Order Logics of Formal Inconsistency}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {548--578}, topic = {model-theory;completeness-theorems;paraconsistency;} } @book{ carnielli_wa-pizzi_c:2008a, author = {Walter Carnielli and Claudio Pizzi}, title = {Modalities and Multimodalities}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2008}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = { 1. "Modal logic and standard logic", Pp. 1-24 2. "The syntax of normal modal systems", Pp. 25-48 3. "The semantics of normal modal systems", Pp. 49-86 4. Completeness and canonicity", Pp. 87-116 5. Incompleteness and finite models", Pp. 117-140 6. Temporal logics", Pp. 141-181 7. Epistemic logic: knowledge and belief", Pp. 183-204 8. Multimodal logics", Pp. 205-239 9. Towards quantified modal logic", Pp. 241-272 }, topic = {modal-logic;} } @incollection{ carol:1996a, author = {Stuart K. Carol}, title = {The Human, the Computer, the Task, and Their Interaction---Analytic Models and Use-Centered Design}, booktitle = {Mind Matters: A Tribute to {A}llen {N}ewell}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.}, year = {1996}, editor = {David M. Steier and Tom M. Mitchell}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, pages = {259--312}, topic = {HCI;} } @incollection{ caroll-briscoe:1996a, author = {John Carroll and Ted Briscoe}, title = {Apportioning Development Effort in a Probabilistic {LR} Parsing System through Evaluation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Eric Brill and Kenneth Church}, pages = {92--100}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, contentnote = {The algorithm described gets about 80% of sentences right in general text.}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;punctuation;clcourse;} } @incollection{ carpenter_b:1993a, author = {Bob Carpenter}, title = {Skeptical and Credulous Default Unification with Applications to Templates and Inheritance}, booktitle = {Inheritance, defaults, and the lexicon}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ted Briscoe and Valeria de Paiva and Ann Copestake}, pages = {13--37}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {default-unification;nm-ling;} } @unpublished{ carpenter_b:1993b, author = {Bob Carpenter}, title = {Two-Level Finite State Morpho-Phonology: A Rational Reconstruction of {KIMMO}}, year = {1993}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {finite-state-phonology;computational-morphology; computational-phonology;} } @book{ carpenter_b:1995a, author = {Bob Carpenter}, title = {Lectures on Type-Logical Semantics}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {type-theory;nl-semantics;} } @book{ carpenter_b:1998a, author = {Bob Carpenter}, title = {Type-Logical Semantics}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: pulman_sg:1999a, pentus:1999a.}, topic = {categorial-grammar;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ carpenter_b:2003a, author = {Bob Carpenter}, title = {Complexity}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {178--197}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-processing;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ carpenter_b-etal:1991a, author = {Bob Carpenter and Carl Pollard and Alex Franz}, title = {The Specification and Implementation of Constraint-Based Unification Grammars}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Parsing Technology}, year = {1991}, address = {Cancun}, missinginfo = {Much}, topic = {unification-grammars;} } @unpublished{ carpenter_b-pollard:1989a, author = {Bob Carpenter and Carl Pollard}, title = {Solving Feature Structure Constraints}, year = {1989}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {feature-structures;logic-programming;} } @incollection{ carpenter_b-thomason_rh:1990a, author = {Bob Carpenter and Richmond Thomason}, title = {Inheritance Theory and Path-Based Reasoning: an Introduction}, booktitle = {Knowledge Representation and Defeasible Reasoning}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1990}, editor = {Henry Kyburg and Ronald Loui and Greg N. Carlson}, pages = {309--343}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @inproceedings{ carpuat-wu_dk:2005a, author = {Marine Carpuat and Dekai Wu}, title = {Word Sense Disambiguation vs. Statistical Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {387--394}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1048}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;statistical-nlp;machine-translation;} } @article{ carr_c:2001a, author = {Catherine Carr}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he {MIT} Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences,} edited by {R}obert {A}. {W}ilson and {F}rank {C}. {K}eil}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {130}, number = {2}, pages = {183--184}, xref = {Review of: wilson_ra-keil:1999a.}, topic = {cognitive-science-general;cognitive-science-survey;} } @article{ carr_d:1979a, author = {David Carr}, title = {The Logic of Knowing How and Ability}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1979}, volume = {88}, number = {351}, pages = {394--409}, rtnote = {In RT collection. \my10}, topic = {knowing-how;ability;} } @book{ carr_d:1999a, author = {David Carr}, title = {The Paradox of Subjectivity: The Self in the Transcendental Tradition}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: blattner:2001a.}, topic = {idealism;Kant;Husserl;Heidegger;} } @inproceedings{ carr_j:2013a, author = {Jennifer Carr}, title = {Deontic Modals Without Decision Theory}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 17}, year = {2013}, editor = {Emmanuel Chemla and Vincent Homer and Gregoire Winterstein}, pages = {63--80}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/article/view/339}, abstract = {The classic account of modals faces counterexamples. It makes the wrong predictions for a wide range of cases involving information-sensitive deontic modals. Some conservative amendments to the classic account have been proposed in order to avoid these problems. These accounts also face counterexamples. I argue that these counterexamples are manifestations of a deeper problem for the classic account and its recent variants: they all inadvertently build controversial normative assumptions into the semantics of modals. These normative assumptions come in the form of decision rules: they tell us how to go from some objective body of values to a verdict about what subjectively we ought to do, given our limited information. The fact that these decision rules are unattractive explains why many of the resulting predictions are judged false. I propose a generalization of the classic account. The view I defend introduces an additional parameter that is sensitive to norms of rational action under uncertainty. Instead of building these norms into the semantics, we should let them be determined by context.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja20\carr.pdf}, topic = {deontic-modals;} } @article{ carr_j:2014a, author = {Jennifer Carr}, title = {The If P, Ought P Problem}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {2014}, volume = {95}, number = {4}, pages = {555--583}, abstract = {Kratzer semantics for modals and conditionals generates the prediction that sentences of the form if p, ought p are trivially true. As Frank and Zvolenszky show, for certain flavors of modality, like deontic modality, this prediction is false. I explain some conservative solutions to the problem, and then argue that they are inadequate to account for puzzle cases involving self-frustrating oughts. These cases illustrate a general problem: there are two forms of information-sensitivity in deontic modals. Even generalizations of Kratzer semantics that predict these two roles for information, e.g. Kolodny and MacFarlane, predict that they vary together. I propose a generalization of Kratzer semantics that allows the two roles for information to vary independently of each other.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja20}, topic = {conditional-obligation;'ought';deontic-modals;miner-puzzle;} } @article{ carr_j:2015a, author = {Jennifer R. Carr}, title = {Ecumenical Expressivism Ecumenicized}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2015}, volume = {75}, number = {3}, pages = {442--450}, xref = {Commentary on: ridge_m:2014a}, xref = {Reply: ridge_m:2015b}, DOI = {doi:10.1093/analys/anv026}, topic = {expressivism;} } @article{ carr_jr:2015b, author = {Jennifer R. Carr}, title = {Subjective Ought}, journal = {Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2015}, volume = {2}, doi= {10.3998/ergo.12405314.0002.027}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, abstract = {The subjective deontic 'ought' generates counterexamples to classical inference rules like modus ponens. It also conflicts with the orthodox view about modals and conditionals in natural language semantics. Most accounts of the subjective ought build substantive and unattractive normative assumptions into the semantics of the modal. I sketch a general semantic account, along with a metasemantic story about the context sensitivity of information-sensitive operators.}, topic = {ought;miner-puzzle;information-sensitivity;} } @incollection{ carr_p:2012a, author = {Philip Carr}, title = {Philosophy of Phonology}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Linguistics}, publisher = {North Holland}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruth Kempson and Tim Fernando and Nicholas Asher}, pages = {403--444}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;phonology;} } @inproceedings{ carral_d-etal:2018a, author = {David Carral and Irina Dragoste and Markus Kr\"otzsch}, title = {The Combined Approach to Query Answering in Horn-{ALCHOIQ}}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {339--348}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we extend the combined method to the more expressive DL Horn-ALCHOIQ\v{o}a language for which CQ answering is EXPTIME-complete\v{o}in order to develop an efficient and scalable CQ answering procedure which is worst-case optimal for Horn-ALCHOIQ and ELHO ontologies. We implement and study the feasibility of our algorithm, and compare its performance to the DL reasoner Konclude. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {kb-query-processing;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ carral_d-etal:2022a, author = {David Carral and Lucas Larroque and Marie-Laure Mugnier and Micha\"el Thomazo}, title = {Normalisations of Existential Rules: Not so Innocuous!}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {102--111}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Existential rules are an expressive knowledge representation language mainly developed to query data. In the literature, they are often supposed to be in some normal form that simplifies technical developments. ... an important question is whether the properties that ensure the decidability of reasoning are preserved as well. We provide a systematic study of the impact of these procedures on the different chase variants with respect to chase (non-)termination and FO-rewritability. ...}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {kb-query-processing;complexity-in-AI;existential-rules;} } @book{ carrara_m-etal:2016a, editor = {Massimiliano Carrara and Alexandra Arapinis and Frederique Moltman}, title = {Unity and Plurality: Logic, Philosophy, and Linguistics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-871632-7}, xref = {Review: lando_g:2018a}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Massimiliano Carrara and Friederike Moltmann, "Introduction" 2. Theodore Scaltsas, "Relations as Plural-Predications in Plato" 3. Oystein Linnebo, "How to Harness Basic Law V" 4. Alex Oliver and Timothy Smiley, "Singularist Predicative Analyses and Boolos's Second-Order Pluralism" 5. Peter Simons, "The Ontology and Logic of Higher-Order Multitudes" 6. Francesca Boccuni, Massimiliano Carrara, and Enrico Martino, "The Logicality of Second-Order Logic: An Analysis in Terms of Plural Arbitrary Reference and Acts of Choice" 7. Friederike Moltmann, "Plural Reference and Reference to a Plurality: Linguistic Facts and Semantic Analyses" 8. Byeong-uk Yi, "Quantifiers, Determiners, and Plural Constructions" 9. Thomas J. McKay, "Mass and Plural" 10. Paolo Acquaviva, "Linguistic Plurality and the Conceptualization of Part Structure" 11. Alexandra Arapinis, "Partial Involvement: Groups and their Structure" }, abstract = {Plural reference, the view that definite plurals such as 'the students' refer to several entities at once (the individual students), is an approach favoured by logicians and philosophers, who take sentences with plurals ('the students gathered') not to be committed to entities beyond individuals, entities such as classes, sums, or sets. By contrast, linguistic semantics has been dominated by a singularist approach to plurals, taking the semantic value of a definite plural such as 'the students' to be a mereological sum or set. Moreover, semantics has been dominated by a particular ontological view of plurality, that of extensional mereology. This volume aims to build a bridge between the two traditions and to show the fruitfulness of nonstandard mereological approaches. A team of leading experts investigates new perspectives that arise from plural logic and non-standard mereology and explore novel applications to natural language phenomena. }, topic = {plural;plural-logics;pluralities;mereology;} } @article{ carrara_m-martino_e:2011a, author = {Massimiliano Carrara and Enrico Martino}, title = {On the Infinite in Mereology with Plural Quantification}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {54--62}, topic = {mereology;plural-quantification;foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ carrara_m-martino_e:2016a, author = {Massimiliano Carrara and Enrico Martino}, title = {The Mereological Foundation of Megethology}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2016}, volume = {45}, number = {2}, pages = {227--235}, topic = {mereology;foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ carrara_m-sacchi:2007a, author = {Massimiliano Carrara and Elisabetta Sacchi}, title = {Cardinality and Identity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {36}, number = {5}, pages = {539--556}, topic = {identity;} } @incollection{ carrascal-korta_k:2000a, author = {Bego\~na Carrascal and Kepa Korta}, title = {Towards a Logic of Communicative Intention}, booktitle = {Three Papers on Logic (Communication, Natural Language Connectives, Many-Valued Modalities)}, publisher = {Institute for Logic, Cognition, Language, and Information, University of the Basque Country}, year = {2000}, editor = {Xabier Arrozola and Bego\~na Carrascal and Kepa Korta and Isabel G\'omez Txurruka}, pages = {11--16}, address = {Donostia}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under "Arrozola"}, topic = {intention;communicative-intentions;} } @article{ carrasco-forcada:2002a, author = {Rafael C. Carrasco and Mikel L. Forcada}, title = {Incremental Construction and Maintenance of Minimal Finite-State Automata}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2002}, volume = {28}, number = {2}, pages = {207--216}, xref = {Comments: }, topic = {finite-state-automata;finite-state-nlp;} } @incollection{ carrier-randall_j:1993a, author = {Jill Carrier and Janet Randall}, title = {Lexical Mapping}, booktitle = {Knowledge and Language: Volume {II}, Lexical and Conceptual Structure}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {Eric Reuland and Werner Abraham}, pages = {119--142}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {cognitive-semantics;argument-structure;lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ carrol_j:2003a, author = {John Carrol}, title = {Parsing}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {233--248}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-processing;parsing;} } @book{ carroll_jb:1964a, author = {John B. Carroll}, title = {Language and Thought}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1964}, address = {New York}, topic = {psycholinguistics;} } @book{ carroll_jm:1987a, editor = {John M. Carroll}, title = {Interfacing Thought: Cognitive Aspects of Human-Computer Interaction}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262031256}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA76.9.I58 I591 1987.}, topic = {HCI;} } @book{ carroll_jm:1991a, editor = {John M. Carroll}, title = {Designing Interaction: Psychology at the Human-Computer Interface}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521400562}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 D481 1991}, topic = {HCI;} } @article{ carroll_jm:2001a, author = {John M. Carroll}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}obustness in Language and Speech Technology}, edited by {J}ean-{C}laude {J}unqua and {G}ertjan van {N}oord}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2001}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {596--597}, topic = {nlp-technology;} } @incollection{ carroll_jm:2003a, author = {John M. Carroll}, title = {Parsing}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {233--248}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-processing;parsing-algorithms;} } @book{ carroll_jm-tanenhaus_mk:1975a, author = {John M. Carroll and M.K. Tanenhaus}, title = {Functional Clauses are the Primary Units of Sentence Segmentation}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {psycholinguistics;parsing-psychology;} } @article{ carroll_jw:1991a, author = {John W. Carroll}, title = {Property-Level Causation?}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1991}, volume = {63}, number = {3}, pages = {245--270}, doi = {10.1007/BF00354193}, topic = {causality;generics;} } @book{ carroll_jw:1994a, author = {John W. Carroll}, title = {Laws of Nature}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review; tooley_m:1997a.}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ carroll_jw:2001a, author = {John W. Carroll}, title = {Review of \emph{{Dispositions},} by {S}tephen {M}umford}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {1}, pages = {82--84}, xref = {Review of mumford_s:1998a.}, topic = {dispositions;} } @book{ carroll_jw:2004a, editor = {John W. Carroll}, title = {Readings on Laws of Nature}, publisher = {University of Pittsburgh Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Pittsburgh}, xref = {Review: bostock_d:2008a}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;causality;natural-laws;} } @article{ carroll_l:1895a, author = {Lewis Carroll}, title = {What the Tortoise Said to {A}chilles}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1895}, volume = {4}, number = {14}, pages = {278--280}, note = {Author's real name: Charles L. Dodgson}, topic = {Achilles-and-the-tortoise;} } @book{ carruthers_p:1996a, author = {Peter Carruthers}, title = {Language Thought and Consciousness: An Essay in Philosophical Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review of jarrett:1998a.}, topic = {language-of-thought;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ carruthers_p:2003a, author = {Peter Carruthers}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}ind and Mechanism}, by {D}rew {M}c{D}ermott}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {151}, number = {1--2}, pages = {237--240}, xref = {Review of mcdermott_d:2001a.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;mind-body-problem;consciousness;} } @book{ carruthers_p:2005a, author = {Peter Carruthers}, title = {Consciousness: Essays from a Higher-Order Perspective}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19927-736-2}, xref = {Review: bremer:2008a}, topic = {consciousness;mental-language;language-of-thought; animal-cognition;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ carruthers_p:2006a, author = {Peter Carruthers}, title = {The Architecture of the Mind: Massive Modularity and the Flexibility of Thought}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-19-920707-7}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {mental-modularity;animal-cognition;philosophy-of-psychology; creativity;practical-reasoning;} } @book{ carruthers_p:2008a, author = {Peter Carruthers}, title = {The Architecture of the Mind}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-920708-9}, xref = {Review: chandra_p:2008a.}, topic = {modularity;foundations-of-psychology;} } @incollection{ carruthers_p:2009a, author = {Peter Carruthers}, title = {Invertebrate Concepts Confront the Generality Constraint (and Win)}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of Animal Minds}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert K. Lurz}, pages = {89--107}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {animal-cognition;concepts;} } @incollection{ carruthers_p:2012a, author = {Peter Carruthers}, title = {Language in Cognition}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Eric Margolis and Richard Samuels and Stephen P. Stich}, pages = {382--401}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;language-of-thought;} } @book{ carruthers_p:2015a, author = {Peter Carruthers}, title = {The Centered Mind: What the Science of Working Memory Shows Us about the Nature of Human Thought}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {976-0-19-873882-4}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;propositional-attitudes;working-memory;} } @article{ carruthers_p:2018a, author = {Peter Carruthers}, title = {The Problem of Animal Consciousness}, journal = {Proceedings and Addresses of the {A}merican {P}hilosophical {A}ssociation}, year = {2018}, volume = {92}, number = {November}, pages = {179--205}, topic = {animal-cognition;consciousness;} } @book{ carruthers_p-botherill:1999a, author = {Peter Carruthers and George Botherill}, title = {The Philosophy of Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052155915-4 (Pbk)}, topic = {philosophy-of-psychology;cogsci-intro; foundations-of-cogsci;} } @book{ carstairsmccarthy:1999a, author = {Andrew Carstairs-McCarthy}, title = {The Origins of Complex Language. An Inquiry into the Evolutionary Beginnings of Sentences, Syllables, and Truth}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: hinzen_w:2003a}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 116 .C37 1999.}, topic = {language-origins;} } @article{ carston_r:1987a, author = {Robyn Carston}, title = {Being Explicit}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1987}, volume = {10}, pages = {713--714}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {implicature;} } @incollection{ carston_r:1988a1, author = {Robyn Carston}, title = {Implicature, Explicature, and Truth-Theoretic Semantics}, booktitle = {Mental Representations: The Interface Between Language and Reality}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Ruth Kempson}, pages = {155--181}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, xref = {Republication: carston_r:1988a2}, topic = {nl-semantics;implicature;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ carston_r:1988a2, author = {Robyn Carston}, title = {Implicature, Explicature, and Truth-Theoretic Semantics}, booktitle = {Pragmatics: A Reader}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Steven Davis}, pages = {33--51}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: carston_r:1988a1}, topic = {implicature;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ carston_r:1998b, author = {Robyn Carston}, title = {Informativeness, Relevance, and Scalar Implicature}, booktitle = {Relevance Theory: Applications and Implications}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Co.}, year = {1998}, editor = {Robyn Carston and Seiji Uchida}, pages = {179--236}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Carston"}, topic = {relevance-theory;scalar-implicature;implicature;} } @book{ carston_r:2002a, author = {Robyn Carston}, title = {Thoughts and Utterances: The Pragmatics of Explicit Communication}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ carston_r:2005a, author = {Robyn Carston}, title = {Relevance Theory and the Saying/Implicating Distinction}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {633--656}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {relevance-theory;implicature;} } @article{ carston_r:2012a, author = {Robyn Carston}, title = {Word Meaning and Concept Expressed}, journal = {The Linguistic Review}, year = {2012}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {607--623}, abstract = {The concept expressed by the use of a word in a context often diverges from its lexically encoded context-independent meaning: it may be more specific or more general (or a combination of both) than the lexical meaning. Grasping the intended concept involves a pragmatic process of relevance-driven adjustment or modulation of the lexical meaning in interaction with the rest of the utterance and with contextual information. ... The widespread assumption that lexical meaning is conceptual, hence directly expressible, is challenged and a case made for the merits of an account of word type meaning in non-conceptual terms.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe18}, topic = {semantic-underspecification;context;concepts;} } @incollection{ carston_r-powell_r:2006a, author = {Robyn Carston and George Powell}, title = {Relevance Theory---New Directions and Developments}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {341--360}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {relevance-theory;} } @book{ carston_r-uchida:1997a, editor = {Robyn Carston and Seiji Uchida}, title = {Relevance Theory: Applications and Implications}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Co.}, year = {1997}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {UMich Grad P 99.4 .R44 R451 1997}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Deirdre Wilson and Dan Sperber, "Pragmatics and Time" 2. Keiko Tanaka, "The {J}apanese Adverbial {\it yahiri} or {\it yappari}" 3. Reiko Itani, A Relevance-Based Analysis of Hearsay Particles: With Special Reference to {J}apanese Sentence-Final Particle {\it ne}" 4. Kunihiko Imai, "Intonation and Relevance" 5. Nam Sun Song, "Metaphor and Metonymy" 6. Akiko Yoshimura, "Procedural Semantics and Metalinguistic Negation" 7. Tomoko Matsui, "Assessing a Scenario-Based Account of Bridging Reference Assignment" 8. Seiji Uchida, "Text and Relevance" 9. Robyn Carston, "Informativeness, Relevance, and Scalar Implicature" 10. Ken-Ichi Seto, "On Non-Echoic Irony" 11. Hideki Hamamoto, "Irony from a Cognitive Perspective" 12. Masa-Aki Yamanashi, "Some Issues in the Treatment of Irony and Other Topics" 13. Dan Sperber and Deirdre Wilson, "Irony and Relevance: A Reply to {S}an, }, topic = {relevance-theory;pragmatics;} } @article{ carston_tl:1992a, author = {Thomas L. Carston}, title = {Gibbard's Conceptual Scheme for Moral Philosophy}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, volume = {52}, number = {4}, pages = {953--956}, year = {1992}, xref = {Commentary on: gibbard_af:1990a}, topic = {expressivism;} } @book{ carswell-rommetveit:1971a, editor = {E.A. Carswell Ragnar Rommetveit}, title = {Social Contexts of Messages}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1971}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {LANGLEY P106 .S58; SLIS P106 .S58}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {psycholinguistics;pragmatics;} } @article{ carter_dm:1990a, author = {David M. Carter}, title = {Control Issues in Anaphor Resolution}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1990}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {435--454}, abstract = {Much research in computational linguistics has concentrated on treating the individual phenomena of natural language rather than on how these treatments can be made to work together. This paper discusses four respects in which processes embodying individual treatments must be made to co-operate with one another if anaphoric expressions are to be interpreted correctly. }, topic = {anaphora-resolution;} } @article{ carter_i:2005a, author = {Ian Carter}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Quality of Freedom}, by {M}atthew {H}. {K}ramer}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2005}, volume = {114}, number = {4}, pages = {551--553}, xref = {Review of: kramer_mh:2003a}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @book{ carter_j-dechaine:1989a, editor = {J. Carter and R.-M. Dechaine}, title = {{NELS 19}: Proceedings of the Nineteenth Conference of the {N}orth {E}ast {L}inguistic {S}ociety}, publisher = {GLSA Publications}, year = {1989}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, note = {URL FOR GLSA Publications: http://www.umass.edu/linguist/glsa-pubs.html.}, topic = {linguistics-proceedings;nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @book{ carter_j-etal:1990a, editor = {J. Carter and R.-M. Dechaine and B. Philip and T. Sherer}, title = {{NELS 20}: Proceedings of the Twentieth Conference of the {N}orth {E}ast {L}inguistic {S}ociety}, publisher = {GLSA Publications}, year = {1990}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, note = {URL FOR GLSA Publications: http://www.umass.edu/linguist/glsa-pubs.html.}, topic = {linguistics-proceedings;nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @article{ carter_ja-pritchard_d:2015a, author = {J. Adam Carter and Duncan Pritchard}, title = {Knowledge-How and Epistemic Luck}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2015}, volume = {49}, number = {3}, pages = {440--453}, topic = {knowing-how;} } @book{ carter_m:2007a, author = {Matt Carter}, title = {Minds and Computers: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Edinburgh}, ISBN = {978 0 7486 2099 9 (paperback)}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Winter, 2014.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @article{ carter_s:2021a, author = {Sam Carter}, title = {The Dynamics of Loose Talk}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2022}, volume = {55}, number = {1}, pages = {171--198}, topic = {metaphor;exaggeration;pragmatics;} } @article{ carter_s:2021b, author = {Sam Carter}, title = {A Suppositional Theory of Conditionals}, journal = {Mind}, year = {2021}, volume = {130}, number = {520}, pages = {1059---1086}, abstract = {Suppositional theories of conditionals take apparent similarities between supposition and conditionals as a starting point, appealing to features of the former to provide an account of the latter. This paper develops a novel form of suppositional theory, one which characterizes the relationship at the level of semantics rather than at the level of speech acts. In the course of doing so, it considers a range of novel data which shed additional light on how conditionals and supposition interact.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja22}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ carter_s:2022a, author = {Sam Carter}, title = {Force and Choice}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {4}, pages = {873--910}, abstract = {Some utterances of imperative clauses have directive force -- they impose obligations. Others have permissive force -- they extend permissions. The dominant view is that this difference in force is not accompanied by a difference in semantic content. Drawing on data involving free choice items in imperatives, I argue that the dominant view is incorrect.}, topic = {imperatives;permission;} } @article{ cartwright_hm:1970a, author = {Helen Morris Cartwright}, title = {Quantities}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1970}, volume = {79}, number = {1}, pages = {25--42}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Misc 3"}, topic = {mass-term-semantics;measures;} } @article{ cartwright_hm:1975b, author = {Helen Morris Cartwright}, title = {Truth and Mass Terms}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1975}, volume = {9}, pages = {179--198}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nl-semantics;mass-term-semantics;} } @article{ cartwright_hm:1975c, author = {Helen Morris Cartwright}, title = {Amounts and Measures of Amount}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1975}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {143--164}, topic = {mass-term-semantics;measures;} } @article{ cartwright_hm:1975d, author = {Helen Morris Cartwright}, title = {Some Remarks about Mass Nouns and Plurality}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1975}, volume = {31}, pages = {395--410}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nl-semantics;mass-term-semantics;plural;pluralities;} } @article{ cartwright_hm:1975e, author = {Helen Morris Cartwright}, title = {Heraclitus and the Bath Water}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1975}, volume = {74}, number = {4}, pages = {466--485}, topic = {mass-terms;identity;} } @article{ cartwright_hm:1984a, author = {Helen Morris Cartwright}, title = {Parts and Partitives: Notes on What Things Are Made of}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1984}, volume = {58}, number = {2}, pages = {251--277}, topic = {mass-term-semantics;} } @article{ cartwright_n:1979a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Causal Laws and Effective Strategies}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1979}, volume = {13}, pages = {419--437}, topic = {causality;probability;} } @article{ cartwright_n:1980a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Do the Laws of Physics State the Facts?}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1980}, volume = {61}, number = {1--2}, pages = {75--84}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;natural-laws;} } @article{ cartwright_n:1980b, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {The Truth Doesn't Explain Much}, journal = {American Philosophical Querterly}, year = {1980}, volume = {17}, number = {2}, pages = {159--163}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, abstract = {... most of the high-level claims in science are ceteris paribus generalizations, which are false unless certain precise conditions obtain. Given the explanatory force of ceteris paribus generalizations but the paucity of true laws, the covering law model of explanation must be false. There is, it is argued, a tradeoff between truth and explanatory power.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;natural-laws;explanation;} } @book{ cartwright_n:1986a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {How the Laws of Physics Lie}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1986}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary: elgin_m-sober_e:2002a1}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;natural-laws;} } @incollection{ cartwright_n:1986b, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Fitting Facts to Equations}, booktitle = {Philosophical Grounds of Rationality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Richard E. Grandy and Richard Warner}, pages = {441--453}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-of-physics;} } @book{ cartwright_n:1994a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Nature's Capacities and Their Measurement}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780198235071}, abstract = {Cartwright argues that capacities are essential in our scientific world, and, contrary to empiricist orthodoxy, that they can meet sufficiently strict demands for testability. Econometrics is one discipline where probabilities are used to measure causal capacities, and the technology of modern physics provides several examples of testing capacities (such as lasers). Cartwright concludes by applying the lessons of the book about capacities and probabilities to the explanation of the role of causality in quantum mechanics.}, topic = {capacities;philosophy-of-science;causality;foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @incollection{ cartwright_n:1995a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Causal Structures in Econometrics}, booktitle = {On the Reliability of Economic Models}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Daniel Little}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {causality;philosophy-of-economics;} } @article{ cartwright_n:1995b, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Probabilities and Experiments}, journal = {Journal of Econometrics}, year = {1995}, volume = {67}, pages = {47--59}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {probabilities;philosophy-of-economics;} } @book{ cartwright_n:1999a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {The Dappled World: A Study in the Boundaries of Science}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Reviews: winsberg-etal:2000a,giere:2000a,teller:2002a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Philsci Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;natural-laws;theory-reduction;} } @article{ cartwright_n:2002a1, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {In Favor of Laws that Are Not Ceteris Paribus After All}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2002}, volume = {57}, number = {3}, pages = {425--439}, xref = {Republication: cartwright_n:2002a2}, xref = {Commentary: elgin_m-sober_e:2002a1}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my18}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;} } @incollection{ cartwright_n:2002a2, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {In Favor of Laws that are Not \emph{Ceteris Paribus} After All}, booktitle = {Ceteris Paribus Laws}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {John Earman and Clark Glymour and Sandra Mitchell}, pages = {149--163}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Republication of: cartwright_n:2002a1}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;} } @article{ cartwright_n:2002a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {In Favor of Laws that Are Not \emph{Ceteris Paribus} After All}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2002}, volume = {57}, number = {3}, pages = {425--439}, abstract = {Opponents of ceteris paribus laws are apt to complain that the laws are vague and untestable. Indeed, claims to this effect are made by Earman, Roberts and Smith in this volume. I argue that these kinds of claims rely on too narrow a view about what kinds of concepts we can and do regularly use in successful sciences and on too optimistic a view about the extent of application of even our most successful non-ceteris paribus laws. ...}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;natural-laws;} } @article{ cartwright_n:2004a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Two Theorems on Invariance and Causality}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2004}, volume = {71}, number = {1}, pages = {203--224}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ cartwright_n:2004b, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Causation: One Word, Many Things}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2004}, volume = {71}, number = {5}, pages = {805--819}, note = {Philosophy of Science: Proceedings of the 2002 Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part 2: Symposia Papers. Edited by Sandra D. Mitchell.}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ cartwright_n:2006a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Where is the Theory in Our `Theories' of Causality?}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2006}, volume = {103}, number = {2}, pages = {55--66}, topic = {causality;} } @book{ cartwright_n:2007a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Hunting Causes and Using Them: Approaches in Philosophy and Economics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780521860819}, xref = {Commentary: longworth_f:2010a, weber_e:2010a}, xref = {Summary: cartwright_n:2010a}, abstract = {... argues that causation is not one thing, as commonly assumed, but many. ... In this collection of new and previously published essays, Nancy Cartwright provides a critical survey of philosophical and economic literature on causality, with a special focus on the currently fashionable Bayes-nets and invariance methods -- and it exposes a huge gap in that literature. Almost every account treats either exclusively how to hunt causes or how to use them. But where is the bridge between? ...}, topic = {causality;explanation;philosophy-of-economics;} } @article{ cartwright_n:2010a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Hunting Causes and Using Them: Approaches in Philosophy and Economics}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2010}, volume = {70}, number = {2}, pages = {307--310}, xref = {Summary of: cartwright_n:2007a}, topic = {causality;philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ cartwright_n:2010b, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Comments on Longworth and Weber}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2010}, volume = {70}, number = {2}, pages = {325--330}, xref = {Reply to: weber_e:2010a, longworth_f:2010a}, topic = {causality;philosophy-of-science;} } @incollection{ cartwright_n:2011a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Predicting `It Will Work for Us': (Way) Beyond Statistics}, booktitle = {Causality in the Sciences}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Phyllis McKay Illari and Federica Russo and Jon Williamson}, pages = {750--767}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {Despite widespread recognition of the problem of external validity, it is all too easy to suppose that [statistical] conclusions ... provide strong evidence for [policy decisions]. second sort. This chapter argues that this is not the case. ... Usually the only reliable way to use an 'it works somewhere' result as evidence for 'It will work for us' is whar ... the chapter calls a 'capacity' claim. This however [is weak] ... for two reasons. (1) It takes a great deal of theory, observation and experiment, far beyond the statistical study itself, to establish a tendency/capacity claim; (2) Reliable prediction requires in addition a great deal of local knowledge supplied by neither the statistical study nor the capacity claim.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de21}, topic = {causality;causal-modeling;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ cartwright_n:2018a, author = {Nancy Cartwright}, title = {Big Systems Versus Stocky Tangles: It Can Matter to the Details}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2018}, volume = {83}, number = {1}, pages = {3--19}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, abstract = {... This paper explores a deep difference in philosophical approaches -- Spohn's elegant proofs versus the stocky, tangled arguments I advocate -- and illustrates how these play out in far more detailed disputes about the nature of causality and causal inference.}, topic = {causality;philosophy-of-science;philosophical-methodology;} } @article{ cartwright_r1:1954a, author = {Richard Cartwright}, title = {Ontology and the Theory of Meaning}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1954}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {316--325}, contentnote = {Argues that Quine's theory of ontological commitment fails to meet standards of clarity.}, xref = {Review: anderson_ar:1957a}, xref = {Discussion: robbins_b:1958a}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;ontological-commitment;} } @article{ cartwright_r1:1956a, author = {Richard Cartwright}, title = {Comments on {D}r. {H}ochberg's Paper}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1956}, volume = {23}, number = {3}, pages = {260--265}, topic = {ontological-commitment;} } @article{ cartwright_r1:1956b, author = {Richard Cartwright}, title = {Substitutivity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1956}, volume = {63}, number = {21}, pages = {684--685}, topic = {referential-opacity;} } @article{ cartwright_r1:1961a1, author = {Richard Cartwright}, title = {Negative Existentials}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1961}, volume = {57}, number = {20/21}, pages = {629--639}, xref = {Republication: cartwright_r:1961a2}, topic = {(non)existence;} } @incollection{ cartwright_r1:1961a2, author = {Richard Cartwright}, title = {Negative Existentials}, booktitle = {Philosophy and Ordinary Language}, publisher = {University of Illinois Press}, year = {1963}, editor = {Charles E. Caton}, pages = {55--66}, address = {Urbana, Illinois}, xref = {Republication of: cartwright_r:1961a1.}, topic = {(non)existence;} } @incollection{ cartwright_r1:1962a, author = {Richard Cartwright}, title = {Propositions}, booktitle = {Analytical Philosophy, First Series}, publisher = {Barnes and Noble}, year = {1962}, editor = {Ronald J. Butler}, pages = {81--103}, address = {New York}, xref = {Review: anderson_ar:1964c}, topic = {propositions;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ cartwright_r1:1979a, author = {Richard Cartwright}, title = {Indiscernability Principles}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {V}: Studies in Metaphysics}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {293--306}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {identity;modality;} } @incollection{ cartwright_r1:1987a, author = {Richard Cartwright}, title = {On the Origins of {Russell's} Theory of Descriptions}, booktitle = {Philosophical Essays}, editor = {Richard Cartwright}, pages = {95--133}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {Russell;definite-descriptions;} } @incollection{ cartwright_r2:1991a, author = {Robert Cartwright}, title = {Lambda: The Ultimate Combinator}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Mathematical Theory of Computation}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Vladimir Lifschitz}, pages = {27--46}, address = {San Diego}, topic = {combinatory-logic;theory-of-programming-languages;} } @book{ carus:2008a, author = {Andre W. Carus}, title = {Carnap and Twentieth Century Thought}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {978-0-521-86227}, topic = {Carnap;} } @incollection{ caruthers:2012a, author = {Janice Caruthers}, title = {Discourse and Text}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {306--334}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;discourse;point-of-view;} } @inproceedings{ carver-etal:1988a, author = {Norman F. Carver and Victor R. Lesser and Daniel L. McCue}, title = {Focusing in Plan Recognition}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, pages = {42--48}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, missinginfo = {publisher, editor.}, rtnote = {Query: Was this 1988?}, topic = {focus;plan-recognition;pragmatics;} } @article{ casacuberta-vidal_e:2004a, author = {Francesco Casacuberta and Enrique Vidal}, title = {Machine Translation with Inferred Stochastic Finite-State Transducers}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {2}, pages = {205--225}, topic = {statistical-nlp;machine-translation;finite-state-nlp;} } @article{ casadio:2007a, author = {Claudia Casadio}, title = {Applying Pregroups to {I}talian Statements and Questions}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {87}, number = {2--3}, pages = {253--268}, topic = {pregroups;interrogatives;Italian-language;} } @article{ casadio-lambek:2002a, author = {Claudio Casadio and Joachim Lambek}, title = {A Tale of Four Grammars}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2002}, volume = {71}, number = {3}, pages = {315--329}, topic = {Lambek-calculus;categorial-grammars;} } @incollection{ casali-etal:2006a, author = {Ana Casali and Llu\'is Godo and Carles Sierra}, title = {A Logical Framework to Represent and Reason about Graded Preferences and Intentions}, booktitle = {Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference (KR2008)}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {27--37}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {In intentional agents, actions are derived from the mental attitudes and their relationships. In particular, preferences (positive desires) and restrictions (negative desires) are important proactive attitudes which guide agents to intentions and eventually to actions. In this paper, we present a general logical framework to represent and reasoning about gradual notions of desires and intentions, including sound and complete axiomatizations. Some extensions are proposed corresponding to certain additional constraints that the agent can set about the kind of preferences she is dealing with. We also show that the framework is expressive enough to describe how desires, together with other information, can lead agents to intentions. }, topic = {preferences;reasoning-about-preferences;BDI-agents; practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @incollection{ casali-etal:2008a, author = {Ana Casali and Llu\'is Godo and Carles Sierra}, title = {A Logical Framework to Represent and Reason about Graded Preferences and Intentions}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {27--37}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;reasoning-about-intentions;} } @article{ casali-etal:2011a, author = {Ana Casali and Llu\'is Godo and Carles Sierra}, title = {A Graded {BDI} Agent Model to Represent and Reason about Preferences}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {7--8}, pages = {1468--1478}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;BDI-architectures;} } @article{ casaneve_gw:1979a, author = {Gerald W. Casaneve}, title = {Taking Metaphor Seriously: The Implications of the Cognitive Significance of Metaphor for Theories of Language}, journal = {Southern Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {19--25}, contentnote = {Contains a survey of work on metaphor.}, topic = {metaphor;} } @article{ casanovas:2007a, author = {Enrique Casanovas}, title = {Logical Operations and Invariance}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {36}, number = {1}, pages = {33--60}, topic = {logical-constants;} } @article{ casati_r-torrengo_g:2011a, author = {Roberto Casati and Giuliano Torrengo}, title = {The Not So Incredible Shrinking Future}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {2}, pages = {240--244}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;} } @book{ casati_r-varzi_ac:1996a, author = {Roberto Casati and Achille C. Varzi}, title = {Holes and Other Superficialities}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262032112}, rtnote = {Graduate Library Call No: BD 399 .C371 1994}, xref = {Review: lewis_dk-lewis_s:1998a.}, topic = {spatial-representation;philosophical-ontology;mereology;} } @incollection{ casati_r-varzi_ac:1997a, author = {Roberto Casati and Achille C. Varzi}, title = {Spatial Entities}, booktitle = {Spatial and Temporal Reasoning}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {Oliviero Stock}, pages = {73--96}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. FIle Drawers, "Cassati".}, topic = {spatial-representation;computational-ontology; mereology;} } @book{ casati_r-varzi_ac:1999a, author = {Roberto Casati and Achille C. Varzi}, title = {Parts and Places: The Structures of Spatial Representation}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {026203266X (alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD 621 .C351 1999}, xref = {Reviews: aiello_m:2000a, mason_f:2001a.}, topic = {spatial-representation;philosophical-ontology;mereology;} } @incollection{ casati_r-varzi_ac:2006a, author = {Roberto Casati and Achille Varzi}, title = {Events}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {Stanford University}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2006/entries/events/}, year = {Summer 2006}, topic = {events;metaphysics;} } @incollection{ casini-straccia:2022a, author = {Giovanni Casini and Umberto Straccia}, title = {A General Framework for Modelling Conditional Reasoning---Preliminary Report}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {112--121}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We introduce and investigate here a formalisation for conditionals that allows the definition of a broad class of reasoning systems. This framework covers the most popular kinds of conditional reasoning in logic-based KR: the semantics we propose is appropriate for a structural analysis of those conditionals that do not satisfy closure properties associated to classical logics.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc22}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;paraconsistency;} } @inproceedings{ casini_g-etal:2018a, author = {Giovanni Casini and Eduardo Ferm\'e and Thomas Meyer and Ivan Varzinczak}, title = {A Semantic Perspective on Belief Change in a Preferential Non-Monotonic Framework}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {220--229}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Belief change and non-monotonic reasoning are usually viewed as two sides of the same coin, with results showing that one can formally be defined in terms of the other. In this paper we investigate the integration of the two formalisms by studying belief change for a (preferential) non-monotonic framework. We show that the standard AGM approach to belief change can be transferred to a preferential non-monotonic framework in the sense that change operations can be defined on conditional knowledge bases. ...}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no22}, topic = {belief-revision;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ casini_g-etal:2020a, author = {Giovanni Casini and Thomas Meyer and Ivan Varzinczak}, title = {Rational Defeasible Belief Change}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {213--222}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we consider the classical AGM belief change operators, contraction and revision, applied to a defeasible setting in the style of Kraus, Lehmann, and Magidor. The investigation leads us to the consideration of the problem of iterated change, generalising the classical work of Darwiche and Pearl. ... }, topic = {belief-revision;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ casini_g-meyer_t:2016a, author = {Giovanni Casini and Thomas Meyer}, title = {Using Defeasible Information to Obtain Coherence}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {537--540}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We consider the problem of obtaining coherence in a propositional knowledge base using techniques from Belief Change. ... In the propositional case we consider here, this translates to a propositional formula being satisfiable. We show how the introduction of defeasible information using contraction operators can be an effective means for obtaining coherence.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {coherence;belief-revision;} } @book{ cass-shell:1976a, author = {David Cass and Karl Shell}, title = {The {H}amiltonian Approach To Dynamic Economics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {012163650X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, HB135 .H351.}, topic = {mathematical-economics;} } @incollection{ cassam_q:2010a, author = {Quassim Cassam}, title = {Judging, Believing and Thinking}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2010}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {80--95}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;judging;belief;} } @book{ cassam_q:2015a, author = {Quassim Cassam}, title = {Self-Knowledge for Humans}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {9780199657575}, abstract = {... Rationalism says that what my beliefs and other attitudes are can be determined by reflecting on what they ought rationally to be. ... This book defends a form of inferentialism about self-knowledge. Inferences from behavioural and psychological evidence are a basic source of self-knowledge for humans, including substantial self-knowledge and knowledge of our own beliefs, desires, and other attitudes. On this account, the supposed asymmetry between knowledge of oneself and knowledge of others is a difference in the kinds of evidence available in the two cases. ...}, xref = {Review: coliva_a:2016a}, topic = {self-knowledge;limited-rationality;} } @inproceedings{ cassell_j:1994a, author = {Justine Cassell and Catherine Pelachaud and Norm Badler and Mark Steedman and Brett Achorn and Tripp Becket and Brett Douville, Scott Prevost and Matthew Stone}, title = {Animated Conversation: Rule-Based Generation of Facial Expression, Gesture and Spoken Intonation for Multiple Conversational Agents}, booktitle = {SIGGRAPH 1994}, year = {1994}, pages = {413--420}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, topic = {facial-expression;gesture;} } @article{ cassell_j:2000a, author = {Justine Cassell}, title = {Embodied Conversational Interface Agents}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, year = {2000}, volume = {43}, number = {4}, pages = {70--78}, topic = {embodiment;discourse;} } @incollection{ cassell_j:2000b, author = {Justine Cassell}, title = {Nudge Nudge Wink Wink: Elements of Face-to-Face Conversation for Embodied Conversational Agents}, booktitle = {Embodied Conversational Agents}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2000}, editor = {Justine Cassell and Joseph Sullivan and Scott Prevost and Elizabeth F. Churchill}, pages = {1--27}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {embodied-nlp;} } @article{ cassell_j-bickmore_t:2002a, author = {Justine Cassell and Tim Bickmore}, title = {Negotiated Collusion: Modeling Social Language and Its Relationship Effects in Intelligent Agents}, journal = {User Modeling and Adaptive Interfaces}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {1--44}, topic = {discourse;social-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ cassell_j-etal:1994a, author= {Justine Cassell and Catherine Pelachaud and Norm Badler and Mark Steedman and Brett Achorn and Tripp Becket and Brett Douville and Scott Prevost and Matthew Stone}, title = {Animated Conversation: Rule-based generation of facial expression, gesture and spoken intonation for multiple conversational agents}, booktitle = {SIGGRAPH}, year = {1994}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Cassell"}, topic = {animation;gestures;intonation;pragmatics;} } @techreport{ cassell_j-etal:1994b, author = {Justine Cassell and Matthew Stone and Brett Douville and Scott Prevost and Brett Achorn and Matthew Stone}, title = {Modeling the Interaction between Speech and Gesture}, institution = {Department of Computer \&\ Information Science, University of Pennsylvania}, number = {MS-CIS-94-23}, year = {1994}, address = {Philadelphia}, url = {https://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.com/&httpsredir=1&article=1341&context=cis_reports}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {gestures;speech-generation;} } @inproceedings{ cassell_j-etal:1999a, author = {Justine Cassell and Timothy W. Bickmore and L. Campbell and K. Chang and H. Vilhj\'almsson and H. Yan}, title = {Requirements for an Architecture for Embodied Conversational Characters}, booktitle = {Proceedings of Computer Animation and Simulation '99}, year = {1999}, editor = {Nadia Magnenat-Thalmann and Daniel Thalmann}, pages = {109--120}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {computational-dialogue;embodied-nlp;} } @book{ cassell_j-etal:2000a, editor = {Justine Cassell and Joseph Sullivan and Scott Prevost and Elizabeth F. Churchill}, title = {Embodied Conversational Agents}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780262032780}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Justine Cassell, "Nudge Nudge Wink Wink: Elements of Face-to-Face Conversation for Embodied Conversational Agents", pp. 1--27 2. Justine Cassell and Tim Bickmore and Lee Campbell and Hannes Vilhj\'almsson and Hao Yah, "Human Conversation as a System Framework: Designing Embodied Conversational Agents", pp. 29--63 3. Elizabeth F. Churchill and Linda Cook and Peter Hodgson and Scott Prevost and Joseph W. Sullivan, "{`}May I Help You?': Designing Embodied Conversational Agent Allies", pp. 64--94 4. Jeff Rickel and W. Lewis Johnson, "Task-Oriented Collaboration with Embodied Agents in Virtual Worlds", pp. 95--122 5. James C. Lester and Stuart G. Towns and Charles B. Callaway and Jennifer L. Voerman, and Patrick J. FitzGerald, "Deictic and Emotive Communication in Animated Pedagogical Agents", pp. 123--154 6. Isabella Poggi and Catherine Pelachaud, "Performative Facial Expressions in Animated Faces", pp. 155--188 7. Gene Ball and Jack Breese, "Emotion and Personality in a Conversational Agent", pp. 189--402 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. CS Shelves.}, topic = {embodied-nlp;embodiment;discourse;} } @incollection{ cassell_j-etal:2000b, author = {Justine Cassell and Tim Bickmore and Lee Campbell and Hannes Vilhj\'almsson and Hao Yah}, title = {Human Conversation as a System Framework: Designing Embodied Conversational Agents}, booktitle = {Embodied Conversational Agents}, publisher = {MIT Press}, editor = {Justine Cassell and Joseph Sullivan and Scott Prevost and Elizabeth F. Churchill}, pages = {29--63}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, year = {2000}, topic = {embodied-nlp;cognitive-architectures;} } @inproceedings{ cassell_j-etal:2000c, author = {Justine Cassell and Matthew Stone and Hao Yan}, title = {Coordination and Context-Dependence in the Generation of Embodied Conversation}, booktitle = {INLG--2000 Proceedings of the First International Conference on Natural Language Generation}, year = {2000}, editor = {Michael Elhadad}, pages = {171--178}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.3115/1118253.1118277}, abstract = {We describe the generation of communicative actions in an implemented embodied conversational agent. Our agent plans each utterance so that multiple communicative goals may be realized opportunistically by a composite action including not only speech but also coverbal gesture that fits the context and the ongoing speech in ways representative of natural human conversation. We accomplish this by reasoning from a grammar which describes gesture declaratively in terms of its discourse function, semantics and synchrony with speech.}, topic = {nl-generation;discourse-planning;gestures;embodied-nlp;} } @inproceedings{ cassell_j-stone_m:1999a, author = {Justine Cassell and Matthew Stone}, title = {Living Hand to Mouth: Psychological Theories about Speech and Gesture in Interactive Dialogue Systems}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Psychological Models of Communication in Collaborative Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Susan E. Brennan and Alain Giboin and David R. Traum}, pages = {34--42}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {discourse;multimodal-communication;gestures;} } @article{ cassimatis:2006a, author = {Nicholas L. Cassimatis}, title = {A Cognitive Substrate for Achieving Human-Level Intelligence}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2006}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {45--55}, topic = {large-kr-systems;cognitive-architectures;} } @article{ cassimatis-etal:2006a, author = {Nicholas Cassimatis and Erik T. Mueller and Patrick Henry Winston}, title = {Achieving Human-Level Intelligence through Integrated Systems and Research: Introduction to this Special Issue}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2006}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {12--14}, topic = {AI-editorial;cognitive-science;large-kr-systems;} } @book{ cassirer:1953a, author = {Ernst Cassirer}, title = {Language and Myth}, publisher = {Dover Publications}, year = {1953}, address = {New York}, note = {Translated by Susanne K. Langer}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-religion;anthropological-linguistics;} } @book{ cassirer:1955a, author = {Ernst Cassirer}, title = {The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, year = {1955}, volume = {1--3}, address = {New Haven}, note = {(These works were first published (in German) in 1923--29.)}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Continental Phil Lang"}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ casson:1988a, author = {Lionel Casson}, title = {How and Why Punctuation Ever Came to be Invented}, journal = {Smithsonian}, year = {1988}, volume = {1988}, number = {7}, pages = {216}, topic = {punctuation;} } @incollection{ castagneto-ferrari_g:2003a, author = {Marina Castagneto and Giacomo Ferrari}, title = {Influence of Regional Features on Map Task Dialogues}, booktitle = {Diabruck 2003: Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Universit\"at des Saarlandes}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ivana Kruijff-Korbayov\'a and Claudia Kosny}, pages = {21--26}, address = {Saarbr\"ucken}, topic = {discourse;dialectology;dialogue-corpora;} } @article{ castagnoli_l:2018a, author = {Luca Castagnoli}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Possibility of Inquiry}, by {G}ail {F}ine}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2018}, volume = {127}, number = {2}, pages = {225--228}, xref = {Review of: fine_g:2014a}, topic = {ancient-philosophy;knowledge;skepticism;} } @incollection{ castaing:1991a, author = {Jacqueline Castaing}, title = {A New Formalisation of Subsumption in Frame-Based Representation Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {78--87}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;proof-theory;inheritance-theory;frames;kr-course;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1958a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {Imperatives and Deontic Logic}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1958}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {42--48}, url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/3326749}, xref = {Review: bennett:1959a}, topic = {imperative-logic;imperatives;deontic-logic;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1959a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {The New Logic of Obligation}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1959}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {17--23}, xref = {Review: lemmon_ej:1960a}, xref = {Criticism of: rescher_n:1962a}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1960a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {Imperative Reasonings}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1960}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {21--49}, topic = {imperative-logic;imperatives;deontic-logic;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1960b, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {Obligation and Modal Logic}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1960}, volume = {3}, pages = {40--48}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1960c, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {{`}Ought' and Assumption in Moral Philosophy}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1960}, volume = {57}, number = {25}, pages = {791--603}, xref = {Review: bennett_j:1970a}, topic = {`ought';imperatives;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1960d, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {Outline of a Theory on the General Logical Structure of the Language of Action}, journal = {Theorie}, year = {1960}, volume = {26}, number = {3}, pages = {151--183}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1964a, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {Review of `{K}nowledge and Belief', by {J}akko {H}intikka}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1964}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {132--134}, xref = {Review of: hintikka_j:1962a.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;belief;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1964b, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {A Note on Deontic Logic (A Rejoinder)}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1966}, volume = {73}, number = {9}, pages = {231--234}, xref = {Reply to: sidorsky:1965a}, topic = {deontic-logic;action;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1964c, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~neda}, title = {Correction to the Logic of Obligation (A Reply)}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1964}, volume = {15}, number = {1--2}, pages = {25--28}, xref = {Correction to: castaneda_hn:1959a}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1965b, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {The Logic of Change, Action, and Norms}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1965}, volume = {62}, number = {13}, pages = {333--344}, xref = {Critical study of: vonwright_gh:1963a.}, xref = {Commentary: sidorsky:1965a.}, topic = {deontic-logic;action;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1966a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {\,`He': A Study in Self-Consciousness}, journal = {Ratio}, volume = {8}, year = {1966}, pages = {187--203}, topic = {indexicals;knowing-who;} } @book{ castaneda_hn:1967a, editor = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {Intentionality, Minds, and Perception; Discussions on Contemporary Philosophy, A Symposium}, publisher = {Wayne State University Press}, year = {1967}, address = {Detroit}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library B 20 .W36 1962}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;epistemology;analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1967b, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {Ethics and Logic: {S}tevensonianism Revisited}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, volume = {64}, year = {1967}, topic = {ethics;emotivism;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1967c, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {Indicators and Quasi-Indicators}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, year = {1969}, pages = {85--100}, topic = {indexicals;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1967d, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {Acts, the Logic of Obligation, and Deontic Calculi}, journal = {Cr\'itica: Revista Hispanoamericana de Filosof\'ia}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {77--99}, year = {1967}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1968a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {A Problem for Utilitarianism}, journal = {Analysis}, volume = {28}, year = {1968}, pages = {141--142}, contentnote = {Argues that utilitarianism conflicts with OA&OB-->OA, because then both A and B must be best among the alternatives, and so better than each other.}, topic = {utilitarianism;deontic-logic;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1968b, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {On the Logic of Attributions of Self-Knowledge to Others}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1968}, volume = {65}, number = {15}, pages = {439--456}, topic = {self-locating-constructions;self-knowledge;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1969a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {Ought, Value, and Utilitarianism}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, year = {1969}, pages = {257--275}, topic = {utilitarianism;`ought';} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1970a1, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {On the Semantics of the Ought-to-Do}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1970}, volume = {21}, number = {3--4}, pages = {449--468}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my10}, doi = {10.1007/BF00484811}, url = {http://www.springerlink.com/content/gm61280m436t12m6/}, xref = {Republication: castaneda_hn:1970a2}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ castaneda_hn:1970a2, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {On the Semantics of the Ought-to-Do}, booktitle = {Semantics of Natural Language}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1972}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {675--694}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Republication of: castaneda_hn:1970a1}, topic = {deontic-logic;`ought';} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1970a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {On Knowing (or Believing) that One Knows (or Believes)}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1970}, volume = {21}, pages = {187--203}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {indexicals;knowing-who;} } @incollection{ castaneda_hn:1970b, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {The Twofold Structure and the Unity of Practical Thinking}, booktitle = {The Nature of Human Action}, publisher = {Scott, Foresman and Company}, year = {1970}, editor = {Myles Brand}, pages = {105--130}, address = {Glenview, California}, topic = {deontic-logic;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1971a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {There Are Command Sh-Inferences}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1971}, volume = {32}, number = {1}, pages = {13--19}, topic = {imperative-logic;imperatives;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1973a, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {\emph{Ought} and \emph{Better}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1973}, volume = {34}, number = {2}, pages = {50--55}, contentnote = {The topic is how to define `better' in terms of `ought'}, topic = {`ought';} } @book{ castaneda_hn:1975a, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {Thinking and Doing: The Philosophical Foundations of Institutions}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {9027706107}, rtnote = {UMich GRADUATE LIBRARY, BF455 .C37 1982.}, topic = {deontic-logic;intention;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @book{ castaneda_hn:1975b, editor = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {Action, Knowledge, and Reality: Critical Studies in Honor of {W}ilfrid {S}ellars}, publisher = {Bobbs-Merrill}, year = {1975}, address = {Indianapolis}, ISBN = {0672612135}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B945.S494 A19.}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1977a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~{n}eda}, title = {Ought, Time, and Deontic Paradoxes}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, volume = {74}, year = {1977}, pages = {775--791}, topic = {deontic-logic;temporal-logic;`ought';} } @incollection{ castaneda_hn:1978a, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {On the Philosophical Foundations of the Theory of Communication}, booktitle = {Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {125--146}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {nl-semantics;referential-opacity;intensionality;} } @incollection{ castaneda_hn:1978b, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {The Causal and Epistemic Roles of Proper Names in Our Thinking of Particulars}, booktitle = {Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {151--158}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {reference;proper-names;metaphysics;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1980a, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {The Theory of Questions, Epistemic Powers, and the Indexical Theory of Knowledge}, journal = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {193--238}, topic = {interrogatives;knowledge;contextualism;} } @incollection{ castaneda_hn:1981a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~neda}, title = {The Paradoxes of Deontic Logic: The Simplest Solution to All of Them in One Fell Swoop}, booktitle = {New Studies in Deontic Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1981}, editor = {Risto Hilpinen}, pages = {37--85}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {deontic-logic;prima-facie-obligation;Ross'-paradox;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1981b, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {The Semantical Profile of Indexical (Experimential) Reference}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1981}, volume = {49}, number = {2}, pages = {275--316}, topic = {reference;indexicals;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ castaneda_hn:1984a, author = {{Hector-Neri} Casta\~neda}, title = {Causes, Causality, and Energy}, booktitle = {Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. Uehling, Jr. and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {17--27}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ castaneda_hn:1989a, author = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda}, title = {Paradoxes of Moral Reparation: Deontic Foci Versus Circumstances}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1989}, volume = {57}, number = {1}, pages = {1--21}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my11}, topic = {deontic-logic;reparational-obligations;} } @book{ castaneda_hn-nakhnikian_g:1963a, editor = {Hector-Neri Casta\~neda and George Nakhnikian}, title = {Morality and the Language of Conduct}, publisher = {Wayne State University Press}, year = {1963}, address = {Detroit}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BJ 21 .C35}, topic = {ethics;analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ castel:2002a, author = {Felipe Castel}, title = {Viewpoint: Ontological Computing}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, year = {2002}, volume = {45}, number = {2}, pages = {29--30}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {computational-ontology;human-computer-interaction;} } @article{ castelfranchi_c:1999a, author = {Cristiano Castelfranchi}, title = {Prescribed Mental Attitudes in Goal-Adoption and Norm-Adoption}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence and Law}, year = {1999}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {37--50}, abstract = {The general aim of this work is to show the importance of the adressee's mind as planned by the author of a speech act or of a norm; in particular, how important are the expected motivations for goal adoption. ...}, topic = {speech-acts;user-modeling-in-generation;} } @article{ castelfrianchi:1998a, author = {Cristiano Castelfrianchi}, title = {Modeling Social Action for {AI} Agents}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {103}, number = {1--2}, pages = {157--182}, topic = {cooperation;distributed-systems;artificial-societies;} } @inproceedings{ castelfrianchi-falcone:1998a, author = {Cristiano Castelfrianchi and R. Falcone}, title = {Principles of Trust for {MAS}: Cognitive Anatomy, Social Importance, and Quantification}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Multi-Agent Systems ({ICMAS}'98)}, year = {1998}, editor = {Y. Demazeau}, pages = {72--79}, publisher = {IEEE}, address = {Los Alamitos, CA}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, E's 1st name}, topic = {cooperation;distributed-systems;artificial-societies;} } @article{ castell_p-batens_d:1994a, author = {Paul Castell and Diderik Batens}, title = {The Two Envelope Paradox: The Infinite Case}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1994}, volume = {54}, number = {1}, pages = {46--49}, topic = {two-envelope-paradox;} } @incollection{ castellano_g-etal:2015a, author = {Ginevra Castellano and Hatice Gunes and Christopher Peters and Bj\"orn Schuller}, title = {Multimodal Affect Recognition for Naturalistic Human-Computer and Human-Robot Interactions}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {246--259}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {emotion;emotion-recognition;} } @article{ castellini-etal:2003a, author = {Claudio Castellini and Enrico Giunchiglia and Armando Tacchella}, title = {{SAT}-Based Planning in Complex Domains: Concurrency Constraints and Nondeterminism}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {147}, number = {1--2}, pages = {85--117}, topic = {planning-algorithms;sat-based-planning; reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ castilho_m-etal:1999a, author = {Marcus A. Castilho and Olivier Gasquet and Andreas Herzig}, title = {Formalizing Action and Change in Modal Logic {I}: The Frame Problem}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {1999}, volume = {9}, number = {5}, pages = {701--735}, url = {citeseer.ist.psu.edu/castilho99formalizing.html}, topic = {frame-problem;action;formalisms;modal-logic;causality;} } @article{ castillo_e-etal:1997a, author = {Enrique Castillo and Cristina Solares and Patricia G\'omez}, title = {Tail Uncertainty Analysis in Complex Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {96}, number = {2}, pages = {395--419}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The paper presents an efficient computational method for estimating the tails of a target variable Z which is related to other set of bounded variables $\stackrel{\ESM{\longrightarrow}}{X}=(X1,...,Xn)$ by an increasing (decreasing) relation $Z=h(X1,...,Xn)$. To this aim, variables $Xi, i=1,...,n$ are sequentially simulated in such a manner that $Z=h(x1,...,xi-1,Xi,...,Xn)$ is guaranteed to be in the tail of $Z$. The method is shown to be very useful to perform an uncertainty analysis of Bayesian networks, when very large confidence intervals for the marginal/conditional probabilities are required, as in reliability or risk analysis. The method is shown to behave best when all scores coincide and is illustrated with several examples, including two examples of application to real cases. A comparison with the fast probability integration method, the best known method to date for solving this problem, shows that it gives better approximations.}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;uncertainty-analysis;} } @article{ caston_v:1998a, author = {Victor Caston}, title = {Epiphenomenalisms, Ancient and Modern}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1998}, volume = {106}, number = {3}, pages = {309--363}, topic = {epiphenomenalism;} } @article{ caston_v:1998b, author = {Victor Caston}, title = {Aristotle and the Problem of Intentionality}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1998}, volume = {58}, number = {3}, pages = {249--297}, topic = {Atistotle;intentionality;} } @incollection{ caston_v:1999a, author = {Victor Caston}, title = {Something and Nothing: the Stoics On Concepts and Universals}, booktitle = {Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, Volume {XVII}}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {David Sedley}, pages = {145--213}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de11\caston2.pdf}, topic = {Stoic-philosophy;metaaphysics;} } @article{ caston_v:2017a, author = {Victor Caston}, title = {Review of \emph{{F}orm without Matter: {E}mpedocles and {A}ristotle on Color Perception}, by {M}ark {E}li {K}alderon}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2017}, volume = {126}, number = {3}, pages = {385--389}, xref = {Review of: kalderon_me:2015a}, topic = {ancient-philosophy;philosophy-of-perception;} } @inproceedings{ castro_c:1998a, author = {Carlos Castro}, title = {{COLLETTE}, Prototyping {CSP} Problem Solvers Using a Rule-Based Language}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation: Proceedings of {AISC'98}}, year = {1998}, editor = {Jacques Calmet and Jan Plaza}, pages = {107--119}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;} } @unpublished{ castro_pf-kulicki_p:2011a, author = {Pablo F. Castro and Piotr Kulicki}, title = {Deontic Logics based on Boolean Algebra}, year = {2011}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {Forthcoming in Segerberg Volume}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no11}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ castro_pf-kulicki_p:2014a, author = {Pablo F. Castro and Piotr Kulicki}, title = {Deontic Logics Based on Boolean Algebra}, booktitle = {{K}rister {S}egerberg on Logic of Actions}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2014}, editor = {Robert Trypuz}, pages = {85--117}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {deontic-logic;algebraic-logic;boolean-algebras;} } @inproceedings{ castroviejo_e-mayol_l:2021a, author = {Elena Castroviejo and Laia Mayol}, title = {Why Premise Questions?}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 25}, year = {2021}, editor = {Patrick Grosz and Luisa Marti and Hazel Pearson and Yasutada Sudo and Sarah Zobel}, pages = {205--222}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/issue/view/29}, abstract = {This paper is concerned with the interpretation of conditional questions introduced by the wh-word why (why-conditional questions, WCQs for short). In particular, we observe that WCQs -- unlike the other conditional questions -- cannot be uttered out of the blue and hence have a hypothetical reading; ... This makes WCQs necessarily premise conditionals in the sense of Iatridou (1991); Haegeman (2003). Along with Goebel (2017), we assume that premisehood is a specific use of a regular indicative conditional sentence. We explain the premise interpretation of conditionals as a combination of their thematic nature and the discourse constraints derived from the fact that p has its own discourse history. ...}, topic = {why-questions;conditionals;premise-conditionals;} } @book{ catford:1965a, author = {John C. Catford}, title = {A Linguistic Theory of Translation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1965}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {translation;} } @article{ catford:1969a, author = {John Catford}, title = {Learning a Language in the Field: Problems of Linguistic Relativity}, journal = {Modern Language Journal}, year = {1969}, volume = {53}, number = {5}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {linguistic-relativity;field-linguistics;} } @article{ cath:2009a, author = {Yuri Cath}, title = {The Ability Hypothesis and the New Knowledge-How}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2009}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {137--156}, topic = {knowing-how;consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @unpublished{ catizone-etal:2002a, author = {Roberta Catizone and Andrea Setzer and Yorick Wilks}, title = {State of the Art in Dialogue Management}, year = {2002}, url ={www.hcrc.ed.ac.uk/comic/documents/deliverables/D5-1Final.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Edinburgh.}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @book{ caton_ce:1963a, editor = {Charles E. Caton}, title = {Philosophy and Ordinary Language}, publisher = {University of Illinois Press}, year = {1963}, address = {Urbana, Illinois}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @incollection{ caton_ce:1969a, author = {Charles E. Caton}, title = {Epistemic Qualifiers and {E}nglish Grammar}, booktitle = {Studies in Philosophical Linguistics}, publisher = {Great Expectations}, year = {1969}, editor = {William Todd}, pages = {14--54}, address = {Evanston, Illinois}, topic = {parentheticals;} } @incollection{ caton_ce:1971a, author = {Charles E. Caton}, title = {Overview}, booktitle = {Semantics: An Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1971}, editor = {Danny D. Steinberg and Leon A. Jacobovits}, pages = {3--13}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ caton_ce:1978a, author = {Charles E. Caton}, title = {Review of \emph{Linguistic Behaviour}, by {J}onathan {B}ennett}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1978}, volume = {87}, number = {3}, pages = {466--472}, xref = {Review of: bennett_j:1976a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;semantics;speaker-meaning;Grice; convention;} } @incollection{ caton_ce:1981a, author = {Charles E. Caton}, title = {Stalnaker on Pragmatic Presupposition}, booktitle = {Radical Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Peter Cole}, pages = {83--100}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "C Caton"}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @article{ catta_d:2019a, author = {David Catta}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}roof-Theoretic Semantics}, by {N}issim {F}rancez}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages = {360--362}, xref = {Review of: francez_n:2015a}, topic = {proof-theoretic-semantics;} } @book{ cattell:1969a, author = {N. Ray Cattell}, title = {The New {E}nglish Grammar: A Descriptive Introduction}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1969}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {English-language;nl-syntax;} } @inproceedings{ catton:1998a, author = {Philip Catton}, title = {Problems with the Deductivist Image of Scientific Reasoning}, booktitle = {{PSA}98: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part 1: Contributed Papers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {452--473}, organization = {Philosophy of Science Association}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, address = {Chicago, Illinois}, topic = {scientific-reasoning;} } @incollection{ caudal:2012a, author = {Patrick Caudal}, title = {Pragmatics}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {269--305}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;pragmatics;semantics-pragmatics;implicature;} } @inproceedings{ cauli_c-etal:2021a, author = {Claudia Cauli and Magdalena Ortiz and Nir Piterman}, title = {Closed- and Open-world Reasoning in {DL}-Lite for Cloud Infrastructure Security}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {174--183}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {Infrastructure in the cloud is deployed through configuration files, which specify the resources to be created, their settings, and their connectivity. We aim to model infrastructure before deployment and reason about it so that potential vulnerabilities can be discovered and security best practices enforced. Description logics are a good match for such modeling efforts and allow for a succinct and natural description of cloud infrastructure. ...}, topic = {DL-Lite;internet-security;} } @book{ cauman:1998a, author = {Leigh S. Cauman}, title = {First-Order Logic}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-intro;} } @book{ cauman-etal:1983a, editor = {Leigh S. Cauman, Isaac Levi, Charles Parsons and Robert Schwartz}, title = {How Many Questions? Essays in Honor of {S}idney {M}orgenbesser}, publisher = {Hackett}, year = {1983}, address = {Indianapolis}, topic = {philosophy-general;} } @article{ causey:1971a, author = {Robert L. Causey}, title = {Review of `Basic Measurement Theory', by {Patrick Suppes and Joseph L. Zinnes}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1971}, volume = {36}, number = {2}, pages = {311--323}, xref = {Review of: suppes_p-zinnes:1963a.}, topic = {measurement-theory;} } @techreport{ causey:1990a, author = {Robert L. Causey}, title = {{EVID}: A System for Interactive Defeasible Reasoning}, institution = {Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, The University of Texas at Austin}, number = {A190--119}, year = {1990}, address = {Austin, Texas}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, abstract = {I describe a system for interactive, automated defeasible reasoning. An application program using this system can infer a conclusion defeasibly from a conjunction of supporting facts together with an appropriate general rule. ... The system has been implemented in Prolog, and includes an extensive logical interface that permits the user to interact with and override an application program's defeasible conclusions, subject to certain constraints on the user's consistency. Applications to decision support systems are described.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;applied-nonmonotonic-reasoning;AI-implementations;} } @article{ causey:1991a, author = {Robert L. Causey}, title = {The Epistemic Basis of Defeasible Reasoning}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1991}, volume = {1}, number = {4}, pages = {437--458}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;logic-programming;} } @article{ causey:1994a, author = {Robert L. Causey}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}hilosophy and Computer Science}, by {J}ames {H}. {F}etzer and \emph{{F}oundations of Cognitive Science: The Essential Readings}, edited by {J}ay {H}. {G}arfield}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {345--352}, xref = {Review of: fetzer_jh:1991a, garfield:1990a.}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @article{ causey:1997a, author = {Robert L. Causey}, title = {Review of \emph{Consciousness Reconsidered}, by {O}wen {F}lanagan, {J}r.}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {147--152}, xref = {Review of: flanagan_o:1992a.}, topic = {consciousness;} } @incollection{ cavazza:2004a, author = {Marc Cavazza}, title = {An Empirical Study of Speech Recognition Errors in Human Computer Dialogue}, booktitle = {Current and New Directions in Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Jan van Kuppevelt and Ronnie W. Smith}, pages = {113--132}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {speech-recognition;computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ cavazza-zweigenbaum:1995a, author = {Marc Cavazza and Pierre Zweigenbaum}, title = {Lexical Semantics: Dictionary or Encyclopedia?}, booktitle = {Computational Lexical Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Patrick Saint-Dizier and Evelyne Viegas}, pages = {336--347}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-kr;computational-lexical-semantics;} } @article{ cave:1983a, author = {J. Cave}, title = {Learning to Agree}, journal = {Economics Letters}, year = {1983}, volume = {12}, pages = {147--152}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {agreeing-to-disagree;mutual-belief;mutual-agreement;} } @article{ cavedon:1998a, author = {Lawrence Cavedon}, title = {Default Reasoning as Situated Monotonic Inference}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {509--531}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;situation-theory;} } @book{ cavedon-etal:2000a, editor = {Lawrence Cavedon and Patrick Blackburn and Nick Braisby and Atushi Shimojina}, title = {Logic, Language, and Computation, Volume 3}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2000}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-57586-268-9}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Janet Aisbett and Greg Carlson, "Epistemic Utility in Commonsense Reasoning", pp. 1--21 2. Maria Aloni, "Conceptual Covers in Dynamic Semantics", pp. 23--45 3. Carlos Areces and Ver\'onica Becher and Sebastian Ferro, "Characterization Results for d-{H}orn Formulas", pp. 49--66 4. Cristian S. Calude, "A Glimpse into Algorithmic Information Theory", pp. 67--83 5. Robin Cooper, "Information States, Attitudes, and Dependent Record Types", pp. 85--127 6. Paul Dekker, "The Semantics of Dynamic Conjunction", pp. 107--127 7. Peter G\"ardenfors, "Concept Combination: A Geometrical Model", pp. 129--146 8. Jelle Gerbrandy, "Identity in Epistemic Semantics", pp. 147--159 9. Yasuhiro Katagiri, "An Implicit Argument Analysis of {J}apanese Zeros", pp. 161--178 10. Yookyung Kim, "A Situation Semantic Account of Topic vs. Nominative Marking", pp. 179--199 11. Hisashi Komatsu, "Belief and the Epistemic Channel", pp. 201--216 12. Gregory R. Mulhauser, "Functions, Representations, and Zombies", pp. 217--240 13. Satoshi Tojo, "Aspect Analysis in Arrow Logic", pp. 241--264 14. Michael van Lambalgen, "Logical Constructions Suggested by Vision", pp. 265--293 15. Kees Vermeulen, "Information in Discourse: A Game for Many Agents", pp. 295--318 16. Cees Witteveen and Wiebe van der Hoek, "How to Recover from (Non)Monotonic Inconsistencies", pp. 319--340}, topic = {situation-semantics;nonmonotonic-logic;dynamic-logic;} } @article{ cavell:1958a1, author = {Stanley Cavell}, title = {Must We Mean What We Say?}, journal = {Inquiry}, year = {1958}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {172-212}, xref = {Republication: cavell:1958a2}, topic = {ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @incollection{ cavell:1958a2, author = {Stanley Cavell}, title = {Must We Mean What We Say?}, booktitle = {Ordinary Language}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1964}, editor = {Vere C. Chappell}, pages = {75--112}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, xref = {Republication of: cavell:1958a1}, topic = {ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @article{ cavell:1958a, author = {Stanley Cavell}, title = {Must We Mean What We Say?}, journal = {Inquiry}, year = {1958}, volume = {1}, pages = {152--212}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {speaker-meaning;JL-Austin;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ cavell:1969a, author = {Stanley Cavell}, title = {Austin at Criticism}, booktitle = {Symposium on J.L. Austin}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1969}, editor = {Kuang T. Fann}, pages = {59--75}, address = {London}, topic = {JL-Austin;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @book{ cavell:1979a, author = {Stanley Cavell}, title = {The Claim of Reason}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1979}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-502571-7}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Contemporary Philosophy shelves.}, topic = {skepticism;epistemology;} } @book{ cavinesse-boyle_f:1990a, editor = {B.F. Cavinesse and F. Boyle}, title = {Future Directions for Research in Symbolic Computation}, publisher = {Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics}, year = {1990}, address = {Philadelphia}, topic = {symbolic-computation;computer-assisted-science;} } @incollection{ cawsey_a:1990a, author = {Alison Cawsey}, title = {Generating Explanatory Discourse}, booktitle = {Current Research in Natural Language Generation}, year = {1990}, editor = {Robert Dale and Chris Mellish and Michael Zock}, publisher = {Academic Press}, address = {London}, pages = {75--101}, topic = {explanation;discourse;discourse-planning;nl-generation; pragmatics;} } @book{ cawsey_a:1992a, author = {Alison Cawsey}, title = {Explanation and Interaction: The Computer Generation of Explanatory Dialogues}, publisher = {MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, year = {1992}, ISBN = {0262032023}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 C381 1992.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Shelves.}, topic = {explanation;discourse;discourse-planning;nl-generation; pragmatics;computational-dialogue;} } @article{ cawsey_a:1993a, author = {Alison Cawsey}, title = {Planning Interactive Explanations}, journal = {International Journal of Man-Machine Studies}, year = {1993}, volume = {38}, number = {2}, topic = {explanation;discourse;discourse-planning;nl-generation; pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ cayrol:1995a, author = {Claudette Cayrol}, title = {On the Relation Between Argumentation and Non-Monotonic Coherence-Based Entailment}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {1443--1448}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;belief-revision;argument-systems;} } @article{ cayrol-etal:2001a, author = {Michel Cayrol and Pierre R\'egnier and Vincent Vidal}, title = {Least Commitment in Graphplan}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {130}, number = {1}, pages = {85--118}, topic = {planning-algorithms;graph-based-reasoning;} } @incollection{ cayrol-etal:2008a, author = {Claudette Cayrol and Florence Dupin de Saint-Cyr and Marie-Christine Lagasquie-Schiex}, title = {Revision of an Argumentation System}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {124--134}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {In this paper, we address the problem of revising a Dung-style abstract argumentation system, when we add a new argument which interacts with one previous argument. We study the impact of such an addition on the outcome of the argumentation system, more particularly on the set of its extensions. Different kinds of revision are defined according to the change induced on the number or on the contents of the extensions. Two particular revisions are studied, for which we propose characterization theorems. }, topic = {abstract-argumentation;generic-revision;} } @inproceedings{ centineo:1995a, author = {Giulia Centineo}, title = {The Distribution of {\em si} in {I}talian Transitive/Inchoative Pairs}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {V}}, year = {1995}, editor = {Mandy Simons and Teresa Galloway}, pages = {54--71}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-semantics;argument-structure;Italian-language; reflexive-constructions;inchoatives;} } @article{ centrone:2014a, author = {Stefana Centrone}, title = {Review of \emph{{N}ormenlogik: {G}rundlagen-{S}ysteme-{A}nwendungen}, by {E}dgar {M}orscher}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {97--98}, xref = {Review of: morscher:2012a}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ cenzer-remmel:2006a, author = {Douglas Cenzer and Jeffrey B. Remmel}, title = {Complexity, Decidability, and Completeness}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2006}, volume = {71}, number = {2}, pages = {399--424}, topic = {complexity-theory;completeness-theorems;algorithmic-complexity;} } @article{ cepollaro_b-thommen_t:2019a, author = {Bianca Cepollaro and Tristan Thommen}, title = {What's Wrong with Truth-Conditional Accounts of Slurs}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {42}, number = {4}, pages = {333--347}, topic = {slurs;} } @article{ ceragioli_l:2022a, author = {Leonardo Ceragioli}, title = {Single-Assumption Systems in Proof-Theoretic Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {5}, pages = {1019--1054}, abstract = {... this paper ... [defends] the diverging opinion that proof-theoretic semantics should always endorse a single-assumption and single-conclusion framework. ... The main argument in this direction is based on the circular dependences of meaning between multiple assumptions and conjunctions, and between multiple conclusions and disjunctions. }, topic = {proof-theoretic-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ cerami_m-etal:2010a, author = {Marco Cerami and Francesc Esteva and Felix Bou}, title = {Decidability of a Description Logic over Infinite-Valued Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {203--213}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {This paper proves that validity and satisfiability of assertions in the Fuzzy Description Logic based on infinite-valued Product Logic with universal and existential quantifiers... is decidable when we only consider quasi-witnessed interpretations. ...}, topic = {description-logics;fuzzy-logic;} } @incollection{ cercone_n-etal:1992a, author = {Nick Cercone and Randy Goebel and John de Haan and Stephanie Schaeffer}, title = {The {ECO} Family}, booktitle = {Semantic Networks in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Pergamon Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Fritz Lehmann}, pages = {95--131}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {ECO is another way of translating logic into graph-based notation, with extensions to handle features of NL not commonly dealt with in FOL. Quantifiers, descriptions, time, adverbs, intensional constructions. The description of the associated reasoning procedures is pretty vague. Apparently there is a general theorem prover and there are various specialized reasoners. Len Schubert seems to have played a role in it early on; it looks as if he has dropped out. }, topic = {kr;semantic-networks;kr-course;} } @book{ cercone_n-mccalla_g:1987a, editor = {Nick Cercone and Gordon McCalla}, title = {The Knowledge Frontier}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1987}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {Was intended as a review of field of KR. Rather uneven. Contains an intro by McCalla and Cercone. Chapters by Woods, Webber "Logic and NL", Zadeh, W.Marek, E.Elcock, J.Doyle, L.Schubert, S.Shapiro, Poole, McDermott.}, topic = {kr;kr-course;} } @article{ cerf:1966a1, author = {Walter Cerf}, title = {Critical Notice of {\it How to Do Things With Words}}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1975}, volume = {66}, pages = {262--285}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Reprinted in fann:1969a; see cerf:1966a2}, topic = {JL-Austin;speech-acts;pragmatics;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @incollection{ cerf:1966a2, author = {Walter Cerf}, title = {Critical Review of \emph{{H}ow to Do Things With Words}, by {J}ohn {L}. {A}ustin}, booktitle = {Symposium on J.L. Austin}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1969}, editor = {Kuang T. Fann}, pages = {351--379}, address = {London}, xref = {Reprinted; see cerf:1966a1}, topic = {JL-Austin;speech-acts;pragmatics;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @article{ cerkaz:2002a, author = {Paul S. Cerkaz}, title = {{TALPS}: The {T-AVB} Automated Load-Planning System}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2002}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {77--87}, topic = {planning-applications;autonomous-agents;} } @book{ cerri-etal:2002a, editor = {Stefano A. Cerri and Guy Gouard{\`e}res and F{\'a}bio Paragua\c{c}u}, title = {Intelligent Tutoring Systems, 6th International Conference, ITS 2002}, publisher = {Springer}, address = {Berlin}, series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science}, volume = {2363}, year = {2002}, ISBN = {3-540-43750-9}, topic = {intelligent-tutoring;} } @inproceedings{ cerutti_f-etal:2014a, author = {Federico Cerutti and Massimiliano Giacomin and Mauro Vallati and Marina Zanella}, title = {An {SCC} Recursive Meta-Algorithm for Computing Preferred Labellings in Abstract Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {42--51}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {This paper presents a meta-algorithm for the computation of preferred labellings, based on the general recursive schema for argumentation semantics called SCC-Recursiveness. The idea is to recursively decompose a framework so as to compute semantics labellings on restricted sub-frameworks, in order to reduce the computational effort. The meta-algorithm can be instantiated with a specific "base algorithm", applied to the base case of the recursion, which can be obtained by generalizing existing algorithms in order to compute labellings in restricted sub-frameworks. We devise for this purpose a generalization of a {SAT}-based algorithm, and provide an empirical investigation to show the significant improvement of performances obtained by exploiting the {SCC}-recursive schema. }, topic = {kr;abstract-argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ cerutti_f-etal:2016a, author = {Federico Cerutti and Mauro Vallati and Massimiliano Giacomin}, title = {{jArgSemSAT}: An Efficient Off-the-Shelf Solver for Abstract Argumentation Frameworks}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {541--544}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we describe jArgSemSAT, a Java re-implementation of ArgSemSAT. We show that jArgSemSAT can be easily integrated in existing argumentation systems (1) as an off-the-shelf, standalone, library; (2) as a Tweety compatible library; and (3) as a fast and robust web service freely available on the Web. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {artumentation-theory;model-checking;AI-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ cerutti_f-thimm_m:2018a, author = {Federico Cerutti and Matthias Thimm}, title = {A General Approach to Reasoning with Probabilities---Extended Abstract}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {629--630}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We propose a general scheme for adding probabilistic reasoningcapabilities to any knowledge representation formalism. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {reasoning-about-probabilities;} } @incollection{ cervesato-etal:1998a, author = {Iliano Cervesato and Massimo Franceschet and Angelo Montanari}, title = {The Complexity of Model Checking in Modal Event Calculi with Quantifiers}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {368--379}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;complexity-in-AI;event-calculus;kr-course;} } @incollection{ cervesato_i-etal:2000a, author = {Iliano Cervesato and Massimo Franceschet and Angelo Montanari}, title = {A Hierarchy of Modal Event Calculi: Expressiveness and Complexity}, booktitle = {Advances in Temporal Logic}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2000}, editor = {Howard Barringer and Michael Fisher and Dov M. Gabbay and Graham Gough}, pages = {1--20}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {We consider a hierarchy of modal event calculi to represent and reason about partially ordered events. These calculi are based on the model of time and change of Kowalski and Sergot's Event Calculus (EC)... The formalisms we analyze extend EC with operators from modal logic. We analyze and compare the expressive power and the complexity of the proposed calculi, focusing on intermediate systems between MEC and GMEC. ...}, topic = {event-calculus;modal-logic;complexity-theory;} } @article{ ceslinski:2007a, author = {Cezary Ce\'sli\'nski}, title = {Deflationism, Conservatism, and Maximality}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {36}, number = {6}, pages = {695--705}, abstract = {We discuss two desirable properties of deflationary truth theories: conservativeness and maximality. Joining them together, we obtain a notion of a maximal conservative truth theory - a theory which is conservative over its base, but can't be enlarged any further without losing its conservative character. There are indeed such theories; we show however that none of them is axiomatizable, and moreover, that there will be in fact continuum many theories of this sort. It turns out in effect that the deflationist still needs some additional principles, which would permit him to construct his preferred theory of truth}, topic = {deflationary-analyses;truth;} } @incollection{ cettolo-etal:1998a, author = {Mauro Cettolo and Roberto Gretter and Renato de Mori}, title = {Knowledge Integration}, booktitle = {Spoken Dialogues with Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Renato de Mori}, pages = {231--256}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {I.e., integrating speech with lexical models.}, topic = {speech-recognition;acoustic-modeling;} } @incollection{ cettolo-etal:1998b, author = {Mauro Cettolo and Roberto Gretter and Renato de Mori}, title = {Search and Generation of Word Hypotheses}, booktitle = {Spoken Dialogues with Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Renato de Mori}, pages = {257--309}, address = {New York}, topic = {speech-recognition;word-hypotheses;} } @inproceedings{ ceylan_ii-etal:2016a, author = {Ismail Ilkan Ceylan and Adnan Darwiche and Guy Van den Broeck}, title = {Open-World Probabilistic Databases}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {339--348}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we revisit the semantics underlying [probabilistic knowledge bases]. In particular, the closed-world assumption of probabilistic databases, that facts not in the database have probability zero, clearly conflicts with their everyday use. To address this discrepancy, we propose an open-world probabilistic database semantics, which relaxes the probabilities of open facts to intervals. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {probabilistic-knowledge-bases;} } @inproceedings{ ceylan_ii-etal:2020a, author = {\.Ismail \.Ilkan Ceylan and Thomas Lukasiewicz and Enrico Malizia and Cristian Molinaro and Andrius Vaicenavi\v{c}ius}, title = {Explanations for Negative Query Answers under Existential Rules}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {223--232}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {we ... [consider the problem of] explaining why a query is not entailed under existential rules, i.e., explaining negative query answers. We consider various problems related to explaining non-entailments from the abduction literature, and also introduce new problems. For all considered problems, we give a detailed complexity analysis for a wide range of existential rule languages and complexity measures.}, topic = {kb-query-processing;existential-rules;} } @article{ chabert-jaulin:2009a, author = {Gilles Chabert and Luc Jaulin}, title = {Contractor Programming}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {11}, pages = {1079--1100}, topic = {constraint-programming;} } @book{ chafe_w:1970a, author = {Wallace Chafe}, title = {Meaning and the Structure of Language}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1970}, address = {Chicago}, xref = {Review: langacker_rw:1972a}, topic = {nl-semantics;structural-linguistics;} } @incollection{ chafe_w:1976a, author = {Wallace Chafe}, title = {Givenness, Contrastiveness, Definiteness, Subjects, Topics, and Points of View}, booktitle = {Subject and Topic}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {C.N. Li}, pages = {25--55}, address = {New York}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Chafe"}, topic = {s-topic;d-topic;pragmatics;} } @article{ chafe_w:1988a, author = {Wallace Chafe}, title = {Punctuation and the Prosody of Written Language}, journal = {Written Communication}, volume = {5}, number = {4}, pages = {395--426}, year = {1988}, topic = {punctuation;} } @book{ chagrov-zakharyaschev_m:1996a, author = {Akexander Chagrov and Michael Zakharyaschev}, title = {Modal Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Logic Shelves.}, ISBN = {0-19-853779-4}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @book{ chagrov-zakharyaschev_m:1997a, author = {Alexander Chagrov and Michael Zakharyaschev}, title = {Modal Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, xref = {Reviews: goranko_v:1999a, venema_y:2000a.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic shelves.}, ISBN = {0 19 853779 4}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ chagrova:1991a, author = {Lilia A. Chagrova}, title = {An Undecidable Problem in Correspondence Theory}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1991}, volume = {56}, number = {4}, pages = {1261--1272}, contentnote = {Shows that the set of formulas of intuitionistic logic whose validity conditions are first-order definable is reducable to an undecidable problem involving "Minsky Machines".}, topic = {modal-logic;(un)decidability;} } @incollection{ chagrova:1998a, author = {Lilia A. Chagrova}, title = {On the Degree of Neighborhood Incompleteness of Normal Modal Logics}, booktitle = {Advances in Modal Logic, Volume 1}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1998}, editor = {Marcus Kracht and Maarten de Rijke and Heinrich Wansing}, pages = {63--72}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @incollection{ chai_jy-bierman:1997a, author = {Joyce Yue Chai and Alan W. Bierman}, title = {The Use of Lexical Semantics in Information Extraction}, booktitle = {Automatic Information Extraction and Building of Lexical Semantic Resources for {NLP} Applications}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Piek Vossen and Geert Adriaens and Nicoletta Calzolari and Antonio Sanfilippo and Yorick Wilks}, pages = {61--70}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {lexical-semantics;information-retrieval;} } @article{ chai_jy-etal:2002a, author = {Joyce Yue Chai and Veronika Horvath and Nicolas Nicolov and Margo Stys and Nanda Kambhatla and Wlodek Zadrozny and Orem Melville}, title = {Natural Language Assistant: A Dialog System for Online Product Recommendation}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2002}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {63--75}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @article{ chai_jy-etal:2016a, author = {Joyce Y. Chai and Rui Fang and Changsong Liu and Lanbo She}, title = {Collaborative Language Grounding Toward Situated Human-Robot Dialogue}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2016}, volume = {37}, number = {4}, pages = {32--45}, topic = {coord-in-conversation;turn-taking;HCI;} } @book{ chai_l:1998a, author = {Leon Chai}, title = {Jonathan {E}dwards and the Limits of Enlightenment Philosophy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Jonathan_Edwards;} } @incollection{ chaisson_ej:2012a, author = {Eric J. Chaisson}, title = {A Singular Universe of Many Singularities: Cultural Evolution in a Cosmic Context}, booktitle = {Singularity Hypotheses: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2012}, editor = {Amnon H. Eden and James H. Moor and Johnny H. S{\o}raker and Eric Steinhart}, pages = {413--440}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {technological-singularity;} } @book{ chaitin_gj:1987a, author = {Gregory J. Chaitin}, title = {Algorithmic Information Theory}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, year = {1987}, ISBN = {0521343062}, rtnote = {UMich MEDIA UNION LIBRARY, QA267 .C481 1987.}, topic = {algorithmic-complexity;} } @incollection{ chaitin_gj:1988a, author = {Gregory J. Chaitin}, title = {An Algebraic Equation for the Halting Probability}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {279--283}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-of-computation;theory-of-computation;} } @article{ chaitin_gj:1995a, author = {Gregory J. Chaitin}, title = {The {B}erry Paradox}, journal = {Complexity}, year = {1995}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {26--30}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {proof-complexity;complexity-theory;(in)completeness;} } @book{ chaitin_gj:1998a, author = {Gregory J. Chaitin}, title = {The Limits of Mathematics: A Course on Information Theory and the Limits of Reasoning}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {981308359X}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library: QA 76.9 .M35 C481 1998}, xref = {Review: djukic:2001a.}, topic = {algorithmic-information-theory;algorithmic-complexity;} } @book{ chaitin_gj:1999a, author = {Gregory J. Chaitin}, title = {The Unknowable}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {9814021725 (hardcover)}, rtnote = {UMich SCIENCE, QA 276 .C4371 1999.}, topic = {complexity-theory;goedels-first-theorem;} } @book{ chaitin_gj:2001a, author = {Gregory J. Chaitin}, title = {Exploring Randomness}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {1852334177 (acid-free paper)}, rtnote = {UMich SCIENCE, QA 267 .C4851 2001.}, topic = {complexity-theory;randomness;} } @inproceedings{ chajewska-etal:1988a, author = {Urszula Chajewska and Daphne Koller and Ronald Parr}, title = {Making Rational Decisions Using Adaptive Utility Elicitation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventeenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, editor = {Henry A. Kautz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {363--369}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, topic = {decision-theoretic-planning;preference-elicitation;} } @inproceedings{ chajewska-etal:1998a, author = {Urszula Chajewska and L. Getoor and J. Norman and Y. Shahar}, title = {Utility Elicitation as a Classification Problem}, booktitle = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence. Proceedings of the Fourteenth Conference (1998)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, year = {1998}, pages = {79--88}, topic = {preference-elicitation;} } @inproceedings{ chajewska-koller_d:2000a, author = {Urszula Chajewska and Daphne Koller}, title = {Utilities as Random Variables: Density Estimation and Structure Discovery}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixteenth Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence (UAI-2000)}, year = {2000}, editor = {Craig Boutilier}, pages = {63--71}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {foundations-of-utility;} } @article{ chakrabarti:1994a, author = {P.P. Chakrabarti}, title = {Algorithms for Searching Explicit {AND/OR} Graphs and Their Applications to Problem Reduction Search}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {65}, number = {2}, pages = {329--345}, topic = {search;and/or-graphs;} } @article{ chakrabarti-etal:1986a, author = {P.P. Chakrabarti and S. Ghose and S.C. DeSarkar}, title = {Heuristic Search through Islands}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1986}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {339--347}, topic = {search;} } @article{ chakrabarti-etal:1987a, author = {P.P. Chakrabarti and S. Ghose and S.C. DeSarkar}, title = {Admissibility of {AO}* when Heuristics Overestimate}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {97--113}, topic = {AI-algorithms-analysis;} } @article{ chakrabarti-etal:1989a, author = {P.P. Chakrabarti and S. Ghose and A. Acharya and S.C. de Sarkar}, title = {Heuristic Search in Restricted Memory}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {197--221}, topic = {search;heuristics;} } @incollection{ chalasani-etal:1991a, author = {Prasad Chalasani and Oren Etzioni and John Mount}, title = {Integrating Efficient Model-Learning and Problem-Solving Algorithms in Permutation Environments}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {89--98}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {machine-learning;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ chalmers_c:1994a, author = {Chris Chalmers}, title = {Analysing and Generating {E}nglish Compound Structures for Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Workshop on Compound Nouns: Multilingual Aspects of Nominal Composition}, year = {1994}, editor = {Dominique Bouillon and Pierre Bouillon}, pages = {125--134}, organization = {ISSCO}, publisher = {ISSCO}, address = {Geneva}, topic = {compound-nominals;} } @article{ chalmers_d:2011a, author = {David Chalmers}, title = {A Computational Foundation for the Study of Cognition}, journal = {Journal of Cognitive Science}, year = {2011}, volume = {12}, number = {4}, pages = {323--357}, topic = {philosophy-of-cognition;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @book{ chalmers_d-etal:2009a, editor = {David Chalmers and David Manley and Ryan Wasserman}, title = {Metametaphysics: New Essays on the Foundations of Ontology}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199546008}, contentsmote = { 1. David Manley, "Introduction: A Guided Tour of Metametaphysics" 2. Karen Bennett, "Composition, Colocation, and Metaontology" 3. David Chalmers, "Ontological Anti-Realism" 4. Matti Eklund, "Carnap and Ontological Pluralism" 5. Kit Fine, "The Question of Ontology" 6. Bob Hale and Crispin Wright, "The Metaontology of Abstraction" 7. John Hawthorne, "Superficialism in Ontology" 8. Eli Hirsch, "Ontology and Alternative Languages" 9. Thomas Hofweber, "Ambitious, Yet Modest, Metaphysics" 10. Kris McDaniel, "Ways of Being" 11. Huw Price, "Metaphysics after Carnap: The Ghost Who Walks?" 12. Jonathan Schaffer, "On What Grounds What" 13. Theodore Sider, "Ontological Realism" 14. Scott Soames, "Ontology, Analyticity, and Meaning: The Quine-Carnap Dispute" 15. Amie L. Thomasson, "Answerable and Unanswerable Questions" 16. Peter van Inwagen, "Being, Existence, and Ontological Commitment" 17. Stephen Yablo, "Must Existence-Questions Have Answers?"}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ chalmers_dj:1994a, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {On Implementing a Computation}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {391--402}, abstract = {To clarify the notion of computation and its role in cognitive science, we need an account of implementation, the nexus between abstract computations and physical systems. I provide such an account, based on the idea that a physical system implements a computation if the causal structure of the system mirrors the formal structure of the computation. $\ldots$ }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr13\chalmer2.pdf}, topic = {physical-realizations-of-computation;} } @article{ chalmers_dj:1995a, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {Minds, Machines, and Mathematics: A Review of \emph{Shadows of the Mind}, by {R}oger {P}enrose}, journal = {Psyche}, year = {1995}, volume = {2}, url = {http://psyche.cs.monash.edu.au}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, xref = {Review of: penrose_r:1994a}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;goedels-first-theorem; foundations-of-computation;goedels-second-theorem;} } @book{ chalmers_dj:1996a, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {The Conscious Mind: In Search of a Fundamental Theory}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0195105532}, xref = {Review: dietrich_e:1998a}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD 418.3 .C431 1996.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;} } @article{ chalmers_dj:1996b, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {Does a Rock Implement Every Finite-State Automaton?}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1986}, volume = {108}, number = {3}, pages = {309--333}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr13\chalmer1.pdf}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;} } @article{ chalmers_dj:1997a, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {Moving Forward on the Problem of Consciousness}, journal = {Journal of Consciousness Studies}, year = {1997}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {3--46}, topic = {consciousness;} } @incollection{ chalmers_dj:2002a, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {On Sense and Intention}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 16: Language and Mind, 2002}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {135--182}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {intensionality;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ chalmers_dj:2003a, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {The Nature of Narrow Content}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {46--61}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {broad/narrow-content;} } @incollection{ chalmers_dj:2006a, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {Two-Dimensional Semantics}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {574--606}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap18}, topic = {two-dimensional-semantics;} } @book{ chalmers_dj:2010a, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {The Character of Consciousness}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2010}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: speaks_j:2012a}, xref = {Summary: chalmers_dj:2013a}, xref = {Commentary: hellie_b:2013a, &peacocke_c:2013a, siegel_s:2013a}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ chalmers_dj:2011a, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {Verbal Disputes}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2011}, volume = {120}, number = {4}, pages = {515--566}, topic = {verbal-disputes;} } @article{ chalmers_dj:2011b, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {Propositions and Attitude Ascriptions: A {F}regean Account}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2011}, volume = {44}, number = {4}, pages = {595--639}, topic = {two-dimensional-semantics;propositions; propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ chalmers_dj:2011c, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {Actuality and Knowability}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {3}, pages = {411--419}, abstract = {It is widely believed that for all p ..., it is knowable a priori that (p iff actually p) . It is even more widely believed that for all such p, it is knowable that (p iff actually p). There is a simple argument against these claims from four antecedently plausible premisses.}, topic = {actuality;knowability;} } @article{ chalmers_dj:2013a, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {Summary of The Character of Consciousness}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2013}, volume = {73}, number = {2}, pages = {303--304}, xref = {Summary of: chalmers_dj:2010a}, xref = {Commentary: hellie_b:2013a, peacocke_c:2013a, siegel_s:2013a}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ chalmers_dj:2013b, author = {David J. Chalmers}, title = {The Contents of Consciousness: Reply to {H}ellie, {P}eacocke and {S}iegel}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2013}, volume = {73}, number = {2}, pages = {345--368}, xref = {Commentary: hellie_b:2013a, peacocke_c:2013a, siegel_s:2013a}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ chalmers_dj-jackson_fc:2001a, author = {David J. Chalmers and Frank Jackson}, title = {Conceptual Analysis and Reductive Explanation}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2000}, volume = {110}, number = {3}, pages = {315--360}, topic = {reduction;a-priori;metaphysics;} } @article{ chalmers_dj-rabern_b:2014a, author = {David J. Chalmers and Brian Rabern}, title = {Two-Dimensional Semantics and the Nesting Problem}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2014}, volume = {74}, number = {2}, pages = {210--224}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1093/analys/anu032}, abstract = {Graeme {F}orbes (2011) raises some problems for two-dimensional semantic theories. The problems concern nested environments: linguistic environments where sentences are nested under both modal and epistemic operators. Closely related problems involving nested environments have been raised by Scott Soames (2005) and Josh Dever (2007). We show that the two-dimensional semantics for attitude ascriptions developed in {C}halmers (2011a) has no trouble accommodating certain forms of the nesting problem that involve factive verbs such as "know" or "establish". A certain form of the nesting problem involving apriority and necessity operators does raise an interesting puzzle, but we show how a generalized version of the nesting problem arises independently of two-dimensional semantics -- it arises, in fact, for anyone who accepts the contingent a priori. We, then, provide a two-dimensional treatment of the apriority operator that fits the two-dimensional treatment of attitude verbs and apply it to the generalized nesting problem. We conclude that two-dimensionalism is not seriously threatened by cases involving the nesting of epistemic and modal operators.}, topic = {contingent-a-priori;two-dimensional-semantics;epistemic-attitudes;} } @inproceedings{ chalupsky:2000a, author = {Hans Chalupsky}, title = {Onto{M}orph: A Translation System for Symbolic Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {471--482}, abstract = {... OntoMorph provides a powerful rule language to represent complex syntactic transformations, and it is fully integrated with the PowerLoom KR system to allow transformations based on any mixture of syntactic and semantic criteria. We describe OntoMorph's successful application as an input translator for a critiquing system and as the core of a translation service for agent communication. We further motivate how OntoMorph can be used to support knowledge base merging tasks. }, topic = {knowledge-integration;} } @article{ chalupsky-etal:2002a, author = {Hans Chalupsky and Yolinda Gil and Craig A. Knoblock and Kristina Lerman and Jean Oh and David V. Pynadath and Milind Tambe}, title = {Electronic Elves: Agent Technology for Supporting Human Organizations}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2002}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {11--24}, topic = {CSCW;autonomous-agents;} } @incollection{ champagne-etal:1999a, author = {Maud Champagne and Jacques Virbel and Jean-Luc Nespoulous}, title = {The Differential (?) Processing of Literal and Non-Literal Speech Acts: A Psycholinguistic Approach}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {451--454}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;speech-acts;psycholinguistics;} } @phdthesis{ champollion_l:2010a, author = {Lucas Champollion}, title = {Parts of a Whole: Distributivity As A Bridge Between Aspect And Measurement}, school = {University of Pennsylvania}, year = {2010}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Philadelphia}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, url = {https://repository.upenn.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2117&context=edissertations}, topic = {mereology;tense-aspect;measures;nl-semantics;algebraic-semantics; mass-term-semantics;} } @article{ champollion_l:2011a, author = {Lucas Champollion}, title = {Lexicalized Non-Local {MCTAG} with Dominance Links is {NP}-Complete}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2011}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {343--359}, doi = {http: //doi.org/10.1007/s10849-011-9133-1 }, topic = {TAG-grammar;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ champollion_l:2015a, author = {Lucas Champollion}, title = {The Interaction of Compositional Semantics and Event Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2015}, volume = {38}, number = {1}, pages = {31--66}, abstract = {Davidsonian event semantics is often taken to form an unhappy marriage with compositional semantics. For example, it has been claimed to be problematic for semantic accounts of quantification (Beaver and Condoravdi, in: Aloni et al. (eds.) Proceedings of the 16th Amsterdam Colloquium, 2007), for classical accounts of negation (Krifka, in: Bartsch et al. (eds.) Semantics and contextual expression, 1989), and for intersective accounts of verbal coordination (Lasersohn, in Plurality, conjunction and events, 1995). This paper shows that none of this is the case, once we abandon the idea that the event variable is bound at sentence level, and assume instead that verbs denote existential quantifiers over events. $\ldots$}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16}, topic = {compositionality;events;Davidson-semantics;} } @book{ champollion_l:2017a, author = {Lucas Champollion}, title = {Parts of a Whole: Distributivity As A Bridge Between Aspect And Measurement}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780198755128}, abstract = {This book uses mathematical models of language to explain why there are certain gaps in language: things that we might expect to be able to say but can't. For instance, why can we say I ran for five minutes but not *I ran all the way to the store for five minutes? Why is five pounds of books acceptable, but *five pounds of book not acceptable? What prevents us from saying *sixty degrees of water to express the temperature of the water in a swimming pool when sixty inches of water can express its depth? And why can we not say *all the ants in my kitchen are numerous? The constraints on these constructions involve concepts that are generally studied separately: aspect, plural and mass reference, measurement, and distributivity. In this book, Lucas Champollion provides a unified perspective on these domains, connects them formally within the framework of algebraic semantics and mereology, and uses this connection to transfer insights across unrelated bodies of literature and formulate a single constraint that explains each of the judgments above. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Portions in \de18.}, topic = {mereology;tense-aspect;measures;nl-semantics;algebraic-semantics; mass-term-semantics;} } @incollection{ champollion_l:2020a, author = {Lucas Champollion}, title = {Distributivity, Collectivity and Cumulativity}, booktitle = {The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Semantics}, publisher = {Wiley Online Library}, year = {2020}, editor = {Daniel Gutzmann and Lisa Matthewson and C\'ecile Meier and Hotze Rullmann and Thomas Ede Zimmerman}, address = {New York}, url = {http://ling.auf.net/lingbuzz/002133}, abstract = {... Topics include: an operational definition of distributivity; the difference between lexical and phrasal distributivity; atomic vs nonatomic distributivity; collectivity and thematic entailments; two classes of collective predicates (exemplified by be numerous vs gather); how to distinguish between cumulative and collective readings; interactions of distributivity and collectivity ...}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;} } @incollection{ champollion_l-krifka_m:2016a, author = {Lucas Champollion and Manfred Krifka}, title = {Mereology}, booktitle = {Cambridge Handbook of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Maria Aloni and Paul Dekker}, pages = {369--388}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-semantics;mass-term-semantics;mereology;} } @inproceedings{ chan_h-darwiche:2002a, author = {Hai Chan and Adnan Darwiche}, title = {A Distance Measure for Bounding Probabilistic Belief Change}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {539--545}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {probability-kinematics;} } @incollection{ chan_h-darwiche:2003a, author = {Hei Chan and Adnan Darwiche}, title = {Revisiting the Problem of Belief Revision with Uncertain Evidence}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Logical Formalization of Commonsense Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John McCarthy and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {57--63}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {belief-revision;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ chan_tyt:2002a, author = {Tony Y.T. Chan}, title = {Unifying Metric Approach to the Triple Parity}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {141}, number = {1--2}, pages = {123--135}, topic = {connectionist-models;machine-learning;} } @article{ chandler_h:1967a, author = {Hugh Chandler}, title = {Excluded Middle}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1967}, volume = {64}, number = {24}, pages = {807--814}, topic = {truth-value-gaps;negation;vagueness;} } @inproceedings{ chandler_j-booth_r:2020a, author = {Jake Chandler and Richard Booth}, title = {Revision by Conditionals: From Hook to Arrow}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {233--242}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... Here we turn to an important but comparatively neglected issue: How to model agents capable of acquiring information regarding which rules of inference ('Ramsey Test conditionals') they ought to use in reasoning about these facts. ... We introduce a 'plug and play' method for uniquely extending any iterated belief revision operator to the conditional case. ... It is shown to satisfy a number of new constraints that are of independent interest.}, topic = {belief-revision;conditionals;} } @article{ chandler_j-booth_r:2023a, author = {Jake Chandler and Richard Booth}, title = {Elementary Belief Revision Operators}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2023}, volume = {52}, number = {1}, pages = {267--311}, abstract = {... In this paper, we show that [what is so distinctive about natural, restrained and lexicographic methods of iterated belief revision[ is satisfaction of an additional principle of "Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives" ...}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ chandler_m:1988a, author = {Marthe Chandler}, title = {Models of Voting Behavior in Survey Research}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1988}, volume = {76}, number = {1}, pages = {25--48}, topic = {voting-behavior;philosophy-of-social-science;} } @article{ chandra_p:2006a, author = {Pritha Chandra}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}anguage in Mind: Advances in the Study of Language and Thought}, edited by {D}edre {G}entner and {S}usan {G}oldin-{M}eadow}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2006}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {225--230}, xref = {Review of: gentner_d-goldinmeadow:2004a.}, topic = {foundations-of-psycholinguistics;} } @article{ chandra_p:2008a, author = {Pritha Chandra}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Architecture of the Mind}, by {P}eter {C}arruthers}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {133--139}, xref = {Review of: carruthers:2008a.}, topic = {modularity;foundations-of-psychology;} } @incollection{ chandrasekaran-etal:1995a, author = {B. Chandrasekaran and Janice Glasgow and N. Hari Narayanan}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Diagrammatic Reasoning}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Janice Glasgow and N. Hari Narayanan and B. Chandrasekaran}, pages = {xv--xxvii}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {diagrams;reasoning-with-diagrams; cognitive-psychology;visual-reasoning;} } @book{ chandy-misra:1988a, author = {K. Chandy and J. Misra}, title = {Parallel Program Design: A Foundation}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley}, year = {1988}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {distributed-systems;} } @book{ chang_bc-butchart:2012a, editor = {Briankle C. Chang and Garnet C. Butchart}, title = {Philosophy of Communication}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-51697-6}, oontentnote = {This is a retrospective collection.}, topic = {philosophy-of-languate;} } @incollection{ chang_cc:1963a, author = {Chen-Chung Chang}, title = {Logics with Positive and Negative Truth-Values}, booktitle = {Proceedings of a Colloquium on Modal and Many-Valued Logics}, publisher = {Societas Philosophica Fennica}, year = {1963}, editor = {Georg Henrik {Von Wright} and Oiva T. Ketonen and Jaako Hintikka}, pages = {19--40}, address = {Helsinki}, topic = {multivalued-logic;} } @article{ chang_cc:1964a, author = {Chen-Chung Chang}, title = {Some New Results in Definability}, journal = {Bulletin of the {A}merican Mathematical Society}, year = {1964}, volume = {70}, pages = {808--813}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {Beth's-theorem;} } @book{ chang_cc-keisler_hj:2012a, author = {C.C. Chang and H. Jerome Keisler}, edition = {3}, title = {Model Theory}, publisher = {Dover Publications}, year = {2012}, address = {Mineola, New York}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-486-48821-9}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Logic Shelves.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Chang & Keisler}, topic = {model-theory;} } @article{ chang_cl:1970a, author = {C.L. Chang}, title = {Renamable Paramodulation for Automatic Theorem Proving with Equality}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1970}, volume = {1}, number = {3--4}, pages = {247--256}, topic = {theorem-proving;} } @article{ chang_cl-slagle:1970a, author = {C.L. Chang and J.R. Slagle}, title = {An Admissible and Optimal Algorithm for Searching {AND/OR} graphs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1970}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {117--128}, topic = {search;graph-based-reasoning;} } @article{ chang_cl-slagle:1979a1, author = {C.L. Chang and James R. Slagle}, title = {Using Rewriting Rules for Connection Graphs to Prove Theorems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1979}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {159--178}, xref = {Republication: chang-slagle:1979a2.}, topic = {theorem-proving;graph-based-reasoning;} } @incollection{ chang_cl-slagle:1979a2, author = {C.L. Chang and James R. Slagle}, title = {Using Rewriting Rules for Connection Graphs to Prove Theorems}, booktitle = {Readings in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1981}, editor = {Bonnie Webber and Nils J. Nilsson}, pages = {109--118}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: chang-slagle:1979a1.}, topic = {theorem-proving;graph-based-reasoning;} } @article{ chang_fr:1980a, author = {Frederick R. Chang}, title = {Active Memory Processes in Visual Sentence Comprehension: Clause Effects and Pronominal Reference}, journal = {Memory and Cognition}, year = {1980}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {58--64}, topic = {memory;nl-comprehension-psychology;} } @article{ chang_h:2018a, author = {Hasok Chang}, title = {Review of \emph{The Philosophy of {H}ilary {P}utnam}, edited by {R}andall {E}. {A}uxier and {D}ouglas {R}. {A}nderson and {L}ewis {E}dwin {H}ahn}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2018}, volume = {127}, number = {2}, pages = {240--246}, xref = {Review of: auxier_rf-etal:2015a}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @incollection{ chang_js-etal:1995a, author = {Jing-Shin Chang et al.}, title = {Automatic Construction of a {C}hinese Electronic Dictionary}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Very Large Corpora}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1995}, editor = {David Yarowsky and Kenneth W. Church}, pages = {107--120}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-lexicography;Chinese-language;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ chang_js1-chen_mh:1997a, author = {Jason S. Chang and Mathis H. Chen}, title = {An Alignment Method for Noisy Parallel Corpora Based on Image Processing Techniques}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {297--304}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {text-alignment;} } @inproceedings{ chang_js2-etal:1995a, author = {Jing-Shin Chang et al.}, title = {Automatic Construction of a {C}hinese Electronic Dictionary}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Very Large Corpora}, year = {1995}, editor = {David Yarovsky and Kenneth Church}, pages = {107--120}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Other aus.}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;machine-learning;dictionary-construction; machine-readable-dictionaries;} } @article{ chang_kc-etal:1996a, author = {Kuo-Chin Chang and Tzung-Pei Hong and Shian-Shyong Tseng}, title = {Machine Learning by Imitating Human Learning}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {203--228}, topic = {machine-learning;learning;} } @unpublished{ chang_o:2002a, author = {Otfried Chang}, title = {The Hyperlatex Markup Language}, year = {2002}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Utrecht University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Manuals.}, topic = {TeX/LaTeX-manual;} } @book{ chang_r:1997a, editor = {Ruth Chang}, title = {Incommensurability, Incomparability, and Practical Reason}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0674447557}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Ruth Chang, "Introduction", pp. 1--14 2. James Griffin, "Incommensurability: What's the Problem?", pp. 15--51 3. David Wiggins, "Incommensurability: Four Proposals", pp.52--66 4. John Broome, "Is Incommensurability Vagueness?", pp. 67--89 5. Elizabeth Anderson, "Practical Reason and Incommensurable Goods", pp. 90--109 6. Joseph Raz, "Incommensurability and Agency", pp. 110--128 7. Donald Regan, "Value, Comparability, and Choice", pp. 129--150 8. Elijah Millgram, "Incommensurability and Practical Reasoning", pp. 151--169 9. Charles Taylor, "Leading a life", pp. 170--183 10. Steven Lukes, "Comparing the Incomparable: Trade-Offs and Sacrifices", pp. 184--195 11. Michael Stocker, "Abstract and Concrete Value: Plurality, Conflict, and Maximization", pp.196--214 12. John Finnis, "Commensuration and Public Reason", pp. 215--233 13. Cass R. Sunnstein, "Incommensurability and Kinds of Valuation: Some Applications in Law", pp. 234--254 }, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD 236 .I531 1997.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Winter 2013}, topic = {incommensurability-of-preference;practical-reasoning;pr-course; foundations-of-utility;} } @incollection{ chang_r:1997b, author = {Ruth Chang}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Incommensurability, Incomparability, and Practical Reason}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Ruth Chang}, pages = {1--14}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {incommensurability-of-preference;preference;} } @incollection{ chang_r:2004a, author = {Ruth Chang}, title = {Putting Together Morality and Well-Being}, booktitle = {Practical Conflicts: New Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Peter Baumann and Monika Betzler}, pages = {159--171}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {ethics;eudaimonia;} } @incollection{ chang_r:2012a, author = {Ruth Chang}, title = {Are Hard Choices Cases of Incomparibility?}, booktitle = {Action Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {106--126}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {incommensurability-in-ethics;} } @article{ chang_r:2017a, author = {Ruth Chang}, title = {Hard Choices}, journal = {Journal of the American Philosophical Association}, year = {2017}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {1--21}, abstract = {What makes a choice hard? I discuss and criticize three common answers and then make a proposal of my own. Paradigmatic hard choices are not hard because of our ignorance, the incommensurability of values, or the incomparability of the alternatives. They are hard because the alternatives are on a par; they are comparable, but one is not better than the other, and yet nor are they equally good. So understood, hard choices open up a new way of thinking about what it is to be a rational agent.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap18}, topic = {incommensurability-in-ethics;decision-making;} } @article{ chang_yh:2007a, author = {Yu-Han Chang}, title = {No Regrets about No-Regret}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {7}, pages = {434--439}, topic = {multiagent-learning;game-theory;} } @article{ changizi_ma-etal:2006a, author = {Mark A. Changizi and Qiong Zhang and Hao Ye and Shinsuke Shimojo}, title = {The Structures of Letters and Symbols throughout Human History Are Selected to Match Those Found in Objects in Natural Scenes}, journal = {The American Naturalist}, year = {2006}, volume = {167}, number = {5}, doi = {10.1086/502806}, url = {http://www.changizi.com/junction.pdf}, topic = {writing-systems;} } @incollection{ chant_sr:2017a, author = {Sara Rachel Chant}, title = {Collective Action and Agency}, booktitle = {The Routledge Handbook of Collective Intentionality}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2017}, editor = {Marija Jankovic and Kirk Ludwig}, pages = {13--24}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc19\chant.pdf}, topic = {group-action;group-attitudes;} } @incollection{ chao_yr:1962a, author = {Yuen Ren Chao}, title = {Models in Linguistics and Models in General}, booktitle = {Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science: Proceedings of the 1960 International Congress}, publisher = {Stanford University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Ernest Nagel and Patrick Suppes and Alfred Tarski}, pages = {558--566}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ chapman_d:1985a, author = {David Chapman}, title = {Planning for Conjunctive Goals}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {32}, number = {3}, pages = {333--377}, topic = {planning;} } @book{ chapman_s:2000a, author = {Siobhan Chapman}, title = {Philosophy for Linguists}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2000}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {041520659-6 (paperback)}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-and-linguistics;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ chapman_s:2005a, author = {Siobhan Chapman}, title = {Paul {G}rice, Philosopher and Linguist}, publisher = {Palgrave, Macmillan}, year = {2005}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {1-4039-0297-6}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves. 2x move 1 to office}, topic = {Grice;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ chapman_s:2010a, author = {Siobhan Chapman}, title = {{P}aul {G}rice and the Philosophy of Ordinary Language;}, booktitle = {Meaning and Analysis: New Essays on {G}rice}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2010}, editor = {Klaus Petrus}, pages = {31--46}, address = {New York}, topic = {Grice;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ chapman_t:1972a, author = {Tobias Chapman}, title = {On a New Escape from Logical Determinism}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1972}, volume = {81}, number = {324}, pages = {597--599}, xref = {Criticism of: cahn_sm:1967a.}, xref = {Reply: cahn_sm:1974a.}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;} } @book{ chapman_t:1982a, author = {T. Chapman}, title = {Time: A Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1982}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {90-277-1465-7}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;(in)determinism;causality;temporal-logic;} } @book{ chappell:1964a, editor = {Vere C. Chappell}, title = {Ordinary Language}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1964}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Vere C. Chappell, "Introduction", pp. 1--4 2. Norman Malcom, "Moore and Ordinary Language", pp. 5--23 3. Gilbert Ryle, "Ordinary Language", pp. 24--40 4. John L. Austin, "A Plea for Excuses", pp. 41--63 5. Benson Mates, "On the Verification of Statements about Ordinary Language", pp. 64--74 6. Stanley Cavell, "Must We Mean What We Say?", pp. 75--112 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @incollection{ chappell:1964b, author = {Vere C. Chappell}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Ordinary Language}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1964}, editor = {Vere C. Chappell}, pages = {1--4}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @article{ chapuis:1996a, author = {Andr\'e Chapuis}, title = {Alternative Revision Theories of Truth}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {25}, number = {4}, pages = {399--423}, topic = {truth;} } @book{ chapuis-gupta_a1:2000a, editor = {Andr\'e Chapuis and Anil Gupta}, title = {Circularity, Definition, and Truth}, publisher = {Indian Council of Philosophical Research}, year = {2000}, address = {New Delhi}, xref = {Review: glanzberg_m:2002a}, topic = {definitions;truth;semantic-paradoxes;} } @inproceedings{ charalambidis_a-etal:2021a, author = {Angelos Charalambidis and George Papadimitriou and Panos Rondogiannis and Antonis Troumpoukis}, title = {A Many-Valued Logic for Lexicographic Preference Representation}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {646--650}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We introduce lexicographic logic, an extension of propositional logic that can represent a variety of preferences, most notably lexicographic ones. The proposed logic supports a simple new connective whose semantics can be defined in terms of finite lists of truth values. We demonstrate that, despite the well-known theoretical limitations that pose barriers to the quantitative representation of lexicographic preferences, there exists a subset of the rational numbers over which the proposed new connective can be naturally defined. ...}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;multivalued-logic;} } @inproceedings{ charalambidis_a-rondogiannis_p:2014a, author = {Angelos Charalambidis and Panos Rondogiannis}, title = {Constructive Negation in Extensional Higher-Order Logic Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {12--21}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Extensional higher-order logic programming has been recently proposed as an interesting extension of classical logic programming. An important characteristic of the new paradigm is that it preserves all the well-known properties of traditional logic programming. In this paper we enhance extensional higher-order logic programming with constructive negation. We argue that the main ideas underlying constructive negation are quite close to the existing proof procedure for extensional higher-order logic programming and for this reason the two notions amalgamate quite conveniently. We demonstrate the soundness of the resulting proof procedure and describe an actual implementation of a language that embodies the above ideas. In this way we obtain the first (to our knowledge) higher-order logic programming language supporting constructive negation and offering a new style of programming that genuinely extends that of traditional logic programming. }, topic = {kr;higher-order-logic-programming;constructive-falsity;} } @article{ charland:2001a, author = {Louis C. Charland}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}trong Feelings: Emotion, Addiction, and Human Behavior}, by {J}on {E}lster}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {1}, pages = {108--110}, xref = {Review of elster:1999b.}, topic = {emotion;addiction;} } @book{ charles_d:1984a, author = {David Charles}, title = {Aristotle's Philosophy of Action}, publisher = {Duckworth}, year = {1984}, address = {London}, rtnote = {HILLMAN B491.A27 C43 1984b}, ISBN = {0801417082}, topic = {Aristotle;philosophy-of-action;} } @book{ charles_d:2002a, author = {David Charles}, title = {Aristotle on Meaning and Essence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: butler_t:2002a}, topic = {Aristotle;metaphysics;} } @unpublished{ charles_d:2017a, author = {David Charles}, title = {Taste: with some Remarks on Smell and Touch}, year = {2017}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Yale University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap17}, topic = {Aristotle;philosophy-of-sensation;} } @unpublished{ charlow_n:2008a, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Imperative Statics and Dynamics}, year = {2009}, note = {University of Michigan}, url = {http://www-personal.umich.edu/~ncharlo/work/imperative_statics_and_dynamics.pdf}, topic = {imperative-logic;imperatives;}, } @unpublished{ charlow_n:2009a1, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Restricting and Embedding Imperatives}, note = {University of Michigan}, xref = {Publication: charlow_n:2009a1.}, topic = {imperatives;} } @incollection{ charlow_n:2009a2, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Restricting and Embedding Imperatives}, booktitle = {Logic, Language, and Meaning: Selected Papers from the 17th {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2010}, editor = {Maria Aloni and Harald Bastiaanse and Tikitu de Jager and Katrin Schulz}, pages = {223--233}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Publication of: charlow_n:2009a1}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr19\charlow1.pdf}, topic = {imperatives;} } @unpublished{ charlow_n:2009b, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Directives}, year = {2009}, note = {Ms., University of Michigan}, url = {http://www-personal.umich.edu/~ncharlo/work/prospectus.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr19\Charlow2.pdf}, topic = {imperative-logic;imperatives;} } @unpublished{ charlow_n:2010a, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Meaning for Expressivists}, year = {2010}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Michigan}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn11\charlow2.pdf}, url = {http://www.natecharlow.com/work/meaning_for_expressivists.pdf}, abstract = {n this essay, I defend and develop Expressivism as a serious, empirically plausible theory of the meaning of normative language. I do not, however, defend any extant form of Expressivism. Rather, I identify, and ultimately reject, a latent presupposition ("Meaning Reductionism") about the relationship between a theory of meaning and a semantic theory -- one routinely made by both Expressivists and their critics (in particular, advocates of Frege-Geach trouble for Expressivism). According to Meaning Reductionism, if things of kind K are fundamental in a theory of meaning for a language, we must explain any fact about the meaning of expressions of that language by appeal to properties of K's. I show how Meaning Reductionism leads to unpalatable consequences when applied to theorizing about the meaning and semantics of imperative clauses. Namely, it seems to generate specious Frege-Geach trouble for non-propositional treatments of imperative clauses. So I suggest replacing it with a new view of the meaning/semantics interface -- one on which theorizing about meaning is theoretically prior to semantic theorizing, but which allows semantic explanations a kind of theoretically autonomous status. I use this new orientation to develop a non-propositional account of imperatives which avoids Frege-Geach trouble, but which is recognizably Expressivist in motivation and substance. I show how this sort of account can serve as a blueprint for an account of normative language. Finally, I argue that, while this account is importantly different from extant Expressivist treatments, it is, nevertheless, a clear-cut form of Expressivism}, topic = {expressivism;Frege-Geach-problem;} } @unpublished{ charlow_n:2010b, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {The Varieties of Expressivism}, year = {2010}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Michigan}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "CHarlow"}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess}, topic = {expressivism;} } @unpublished{ charlow_n:2011a1, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {What We Know and What to Do}, year = {2011}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, forthcoming in Synth\'se}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn11\wwkwtd_e.pdf}, xref = {Publication: charlow_n:2011a2}, topic = {normativity;deontic-modals;deontic-logic;conditionals; miner-puzzle;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ charlow_n:2011a2, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {What We Know and What to Do}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2013}, volume = {190}, number = {12}, pages = {2291--2323}, xref = {Publication of: charlow_n:2011a1}, abstract = {This paper discusses an important puzzle about the semantics of indicative conditionals and deontic necessity modals (should, ought, etc.): the Miner Puzzle ... Rejecting modus ponens for the indicative conditional, as others have proposed, seems to solve a version of the puzzle, but is actually orthogonal to the puzzle itself. In fact, I prove that the puzzle arises for a variety of sophisticated analyses of the truth-conditions of indicative conditionals. A comprehensive solution requires rethinking the relationship between relevant information (what we know) and practical rankings of possibilities and actions (what to do). ... an off-the-shelf semantics for weak deontic necessity modals, due to von Fintel and Iatridou, which distinguishes basic and higher-order ordering sources, and interprets weak deontic necessity modals relative to both, is well-suited to this task. ... formal semantic analysis of natural language modals expressing normative concepts demands that close attention [should] be paid to the nature of the underlying normative phenomena.}, topic = {normativity;deontic-modals;deontic-logic;conditionals; miner-puzzle;practical-reasoning;} } @phdthesis{ charlow_n:2011b, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Practical Language: Its Meaning and Use}, school = {University of Michigan}, year = {2011}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl11\chardiss.pdf}, topic = {deontic-logic;expressivism;imperatives;} } @unpublished{ charlow_n:2011c, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Meaning as Force: the Case for Imperatives}, year = {2011}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Michigan}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl11\charlow1.pdf}, topic = {deontic-logic;expressivism;imperatives;} } @article{ charlow_n:2013a, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {What We Know and What to Do}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2013}, volume = {190}, number = {12}, pages = {2291--2293}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn11\wwkwtd_e.pdf}, topic = {deontic-logic;conditional-obligation;miner-puzzle;} } @article{ charlow_n:2013b, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Presupposition and the A Priori}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2013}, volume = {165}, number = {2}, pages = {509--526}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc13\charlow2.pdf}, topic = {a-priori;} } @article{ charlow_n:2013c, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Conditional Preferences and Practical Conditionals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {36}, number = {6}, pages = {463--511}, abstract = {I argue that taking the Practical Conditionals Thesis (PCT) seriously demands a new understanding of the semantics of such conditionals. Practical Conditionals Thesis: A practical conditional [if A][ought(B)] expresses B's conditional preferability given A. Paul Weirich has argued that the conditional utility of a state of affairs B on A is to be identified as the degree to which it is desired under indicative supposition that A. Similarly, exploiting the PCT, I will argue that the proper analysis of indicative practical (as well as imperative) conditionals is in terms of what is planned, desired, or preferred, given suppositional changes to an agent's information. $\ldots$}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16.}, topic = {preference;conditionals;imperatives;} } @article{ charlow_n:2013e, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Conditional Preferences and Practical Conditionals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, volume = {36}, number = {6}, pages = {463--511}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc13\charlow5.pdf}, abstract = {I argue that taking the Practical Conditionals Thesis (PCT) seriously demands a new understanding of the semantics of such conditionals. Practical Conditionals Thesis: A practical conditional [if A][ought(B)] expresses B's conditional preferability given A}, year = {2013}, topic = {conditonal-obligation;conditionals;deontic-logic;} } @article{ charlow_n:2014a, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Review of \emph{{W}hen Truth Gives Out}, by {M}ark {R}ichard}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2014}, volume = {123}, number = {1}, pages = {367--371}, xref = {Review of: richard_m:2008a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;emotivism;predicates-of-taste;} } @article{ charlow_n:2014b, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {The Problem with the {F}rege-{G}each Problem}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2014}, volume ={167}, issue = {3}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc13\charlow4.pdf. }, topic = {Frege-Geach-problem;expressivism;} } @article{ charlow_n:2014c, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Logic and Semantics for Imperatives}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {4}, pages = {617--664}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc13\charlow3.pdf}, topic = {imperative-logic;imperatives;deontic-logic;expressivism;} } @article{ charlow_n:2014d, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {The Meaning of Imperatives}, journal = {Philosophy Compass}, year = {2014}, volume = {9}, number = {8}, pages = {540--555}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc13\charlow2.pdf}, topic = {imperative-logic;imperatives;deontic-logic;expressivism;} } @article{ charlow_n:2015a, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Prospects for an Expressivist Theory of Meaning}, journal = {Philosopher's Imprint}, year = {2015}, volume = {15}, number = {23}, pages = {1--43}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se15}, topic = {expressivism;dynamic-semantics;} } @article{ charlow_n:2016a, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Triviality Results for Restrictor Conditionals}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2016}, volume = {50}, number = {3}, pages = {533--564}, topic = {conditionals;CCP;} } @incollection{ charlow_n:2016b, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Decision Theory: Yes! Truth Conditions: No!}, booktitle = {Deontic Modality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Nate Charlow and Matthew Chrisman}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no16}, pages = {47--81}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {`ought';deontic-logic;metaethics;modality;decision-theory;deontic-modals;} } @incollection{ charlow_n:2018a, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Clause-Type, Force, and Normative Judgment in the Semantics of Imperatives}, booktitle = {New Work on Speech Acts}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Daniel Fogal and Daniel W. Harris and Matt Moss}, pages = {67--98}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de19}, abstract = {I argue that imperatives express contents that are both cognitively and semantically related to, but nevertheless distinct from, modal propositions. Imperatives, on this analysis, semantically encode features of planning that are modally specified. Uttering an imperative amounts to tokening this feature in discourse, and thereby proffering it for adoption by the audience.}, topic = {imperatives;} } @article{ charlow_n:2018b, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Decision-Theoretic Relativity in Deontic Modality}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2018}, volume = {41}, number = {3}, pages = {251--287}, abstract = {This paper explores the idea that a semantics for 'ought' should be neutral between different ways of deciding what an agent ought to do in a situation (e.g. different decision theories). While the idea is, I argue, well-motivated, taking it seriously leads to surprising, even paradoxical, problems for theorizing about the meaning of 'ought'. This paper describes and defends one strategy -- a form of Expressivism for the modal 'ought' -- for navigating these problems.}, topic = {'ought';decision-theory;} } @article{ charlow_n:2023a, author = {Nate Charlow}, title = {Modus Ponens and the Logic of Decision}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2023}, volume = {52}, number = {3}, pages = {859--888}, abstract = {This article presents and discusses a prima facie counterexample to modus ponens. To appropriately theorize the case, I argue for conceptualizing the notions of logical consequence and logical commitment in "normative" terms, so that logical commitment does not attach to the premises of a spurious dominance argument -- and, more generally, does not attach to unreasonable decision states ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se23}, topic = {conditionals;preferences;} } @book{ charlow_n-chrisman_m:2016a, editor = {Nate Charlow and Matthew Chrisman}, title = {Deontic Modality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780198717928}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Nate Charlow and Matthew Chrisman, "Introduction", pp. 1--10 1. Fabrizio Cariani, "Deontic Modals and Probabilities: One Theory to Rule Them All?", pp. 11--46 2. Nate Charlow, "Decision Theory: Yes! Truth Conditions: No!", pp. 47--81 3. Daniel Lassiter, "Linguistic and Philosophical Considerations on {B}ayesian Semantics", pp. 82--116 4. Aaron Bronfman and J. L. Dowell, "Contextualism about Deontic Conditionals", pp. 117--142 5. Ralph Wedgwood, "Objective and Subjective 'Ought'", pp. 143--168 6. Stephen Finlay, "Ought Out of Order", pp. 169--199 7. Jessica Rett, "On a Shared Property of Deontic and Epistemic Modals", pp. 200--229 8. Seth Yalcin, "Modalities of Normality", pp. 230--255 9. Paul Portner and Aynat Rubinstein, "Extreme and Non-Extreme Deontic Modals", pp. 256--282 10. Benj Hellie, "Rationalization and the Ross Paradox", pp. 283--323 11. Malte Willer, "Dynamic Foundations for Deontic Logic", pp. 324--354 12. William Starr, "Dynamic Expressivism about Deontic Modality", pp. 355--394 13. Matthew Chrisman, "Metanormative Theory and the Meaning of Deontic Modals", pp. 395--430 }, topic = {deontic-logic;deontic-modals;} } @incollection{ charlow_n-chrisman_m:2016b, author = {Nate Charlow and Matthew Chrisman}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Deontic Modality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Nate Charlow and Matthew Chrisman}, pages = {1--10}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {'ought';modality;deontic-modals;} } @inproceedings{ charlow_s:2008a, author = {Simon Charlow}, title = {Free and Bound Pro-Verbs: A Unified Treatment of Anaphora}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XVIII}}, year = {2008}, editor = {Tova Friedman and Satoshi Ito}, publisher = {CLC Publications}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {anaphora;} } @article{ charlow_s:2020a, author = {Simon Charlow}, title = {The Scope of Alternatives: Indefiniteness and Islands}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2020}, volume = {43}, number = {4}, pages = {427--472}, abstract = {I argue that alternative-denoting expressions interact with their semantic context by taking scope. With an empirical focus on indefinites in English, I show how this approach improves on standard alternative-semantic architectures that use point-wise composition to subvert islands, as well as on in situ approaches to indefinites more generally. ... }, topic = {indefineness;alternatives;} } @article{ charnavel_i:2019a, author = {Isabelle Charnavel}, title = {Supersloppy Readings: Indexicals as Bound Descriptions}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2019}, volume = {36}, number = {3}, pages = {453--530}, abstract = {This article explores understudied dependent readings in (English) ellipsis and focus constructions and their theoretical consequences. The main focus is on ``supersloppy'' readings of person indexicals in VP-ellipsis, in which you can be bound by "I" and vice versa. The empirical properties of these cases, tested in a large-scale systematically controlled questionnaire, show that I and you can be construed as e-type pronouns dependent on each other. This challenges the Kaplanian fixity theory of indexicals in a new way: not only can first- and second-person pronouns be bound, they can also contribute descriptive meanings that affect the interpretation of (elided) sentences. Readings similar to supersloppy readings furthermore extend to time and location indexicals, demonstratives and proper names, which indicates the linguistic relevance of other relations between indexicals and between non-indexicals. All these types of dependent readings shed new light on the theories of indexicals, demonstratives and proper names as well as e-type pronouns.}, topic = {ellipsis;anaphora;indexicals;demonstratives;} } @article{ charnavel_i:2023a, author = {Isabelle Charnavel}, title = {Moving to the Rhythm of Spring: A Case Study of the Rhythmic Structure of Dance}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {4}, pages = {799--838}, abstract = {[I] investigate the principles governing the perception of rhythmic structure in dance and music ... I conclude that dance and music perception largely share the same abstract system, and the differences in the properties of their structure derives from the different (visual vs. auditory) modalities in which they are perceived ... The general goal of the article is to shed further light on the organizational principles of mental representations by comparing several cognitive systems in order to distinguish between general cognitive properties and modality-specific or domain-specific properties. }, topic = {semantics-of-music;semantics-of-dance;} } @article{ charniak_e:1978a, author = {Eugene Charniak}, title = {On the Use of Framed Knowledge in Language Comprehension}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1978}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {225--265}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Notions like ``frames'', ``scripts'' etc. are now being used in programs to uderstand connected discourse. We will describe a program in this vein which understands simple stories about painting. (Jack was painting a chair. He dipped a brush into some paint. Q: Why?) In particular, problems of matching, read time inference, and undoing false conclusions will be stressed. The program makes heavy use of real world knowledge, and there is an extensive discussion of various issues in knowledge representation and how they affect frame representations: modularity, the need for problem solving, wordly vs control knowledge, and cleanliness. The paper concludes with an extensive discussion of the program's shortcomings. }, topic = {frames;nl-processing;} } @article{ charniak_e:1981a, author = {Eugene Charniak}, title = {A Common Representation for Problem-Solving and Language-Comprehension Information}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, volume = {16}, number = {3}, pages = {225--255}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Many in Artificial Intelligence have noted the common concerns of problem-solving and language-comprehension research. Both must represent large bodies of real world knowledge, and both must use such knowledge to infer new facts from old. Despite this the two subdisciplines have, with minor exceptions, kept arm's length. So, for example, many in language comprehension have adopted some form of `frame' representation, while problem-solving people have tended to use predicate calculus. In this paper I will first show that this is not merely idiosyncratic behavior, but rather stems from the different issues stressed by the two areas, problem solvers being primarily concerned with deep inferences in narrow domains, while language comprehenders being more concerned with shallow inference in broader areas. I will then suggest a compromise position which will use both frames and predicate calculus, and then show how this representation has features desired by both camps.}, topic = {kr;frames;natural-language-undersrtanding;problem-solving;} } @article{ charniak_e:1983a, author = {Eugene Charniak}, title = {Passing Markers: A Theory of Contextual Influence in Language Comprehension}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1983}, volume = {7}, pages = {171--190}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {context;nl-comprehension-psychology;} } @inproceedings{ charniak_e:1986b1, author = {Eugene Charniak}, title = {Jack and {J}anet in Search of a Theory of Knowledge}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1973}, editor = {Max B. Clowes}, pages = {337--343}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, xref = {Republished in grosz_bj-etal:1986a; see charniak_e:1986b2.}, topic = {nl-understanding;} } @incollection{ charniak_e:1986b2, author = {Eugene Charniak}, title = {Jack and {J}anet in Search of a Theory of Knowledge}, booktitle = {Readings in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1986}, editor = {Barbara G. Grosz and Karen Sparck Jones and Bonnie L. Webber}, pages = {331--338}, address = {Los Altos, California}, missinginfo = {Original publication: charniak_e:1986b1.}, topic = {nl-understanding;} } @article{ charniak_e:1987a, author = {Eugene Charniak}, title = {Logic and Explanation}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {3}, issue = {3}, pages = {172--174}, xref = {kr;foundations-of-kr;logic-in-AI;} } @article{ charniak_e:1988a, author = {Eugene Charniak}, title = {Motivation Analysis, Abductive Unification, and Nonmonotonic Equality}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {275--295}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Motivation analysis in story comprehension requires matching an action mentioned in the story against actions which might be predicted by possible explanatory motivations. This requires matching constants from the story against Skolem functions in the possible motivations (assuming a normal first-order representation of stories, plans, etc.). We will show that extending unification to allow for unifying two things if they are nonmonotonically equal does exactly what is needed in such cases. We also show that such a procedure allows for a clean method of noun-phrase reference determination. The work described here has all been implemented. }, topic = {abduction;story-understanding;reasoning-about-attitudes; nl-interpretation;} } @book{ charniak_e:1993a, author = {Eugene Charniak}, title = {Statistical Language Learning}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {corpus-statistics;nl-processing; statistical-nlp;} } @article{ charniak_e:1998a, author = {Eugene Charniak}, title = {Statistical Techniques for Natural Language Parsing}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1998}, volume = {18}, number = {4}, pages = {33--43}, topic = {corpus-statistics;nl-processing; statistical-nlp;} } @book{ charniak_e-etal:1980a, author = {Eugene Charniak and Christopher K. Riesbeck and Drew McDermott}, title = {Artificial Intelligence Programming}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1980}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0898590043}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, Q336 .C481.}, xref = {Review: london:1980a.}, topic = {AI-programming;AI-intro;AI-text;} } @inproceedings{ charniak_e-etal:1986a, author = {Eugene Charniak}, title = {A Neat Theory of Marker Passing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1986}, editor = {Tom Kehler and Stan Rosenschein}, pages = {584--588}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {parallel-processing;marker-passing;} } @book{ charniak_e-etal:1987a, author = {Eugene Charniak and Christopher K. Riesbeck and Drew V. McDermott}, title = {Artificial Intelligence Programming}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1987}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0898596092}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library Call No: Q336 .C481 1987}, topic = {AI-programming;AI-intro;AI-text;} } @article{ charniak_e-etal:1996a, author = {Eugene Charniak and Gelnn Carroll and John Adcock and Anthony Cassandra and Yoshihiko Gotoh and Jeremy Katz and Michael Litman and John McCann}, title = {Taggers for Parsers}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {85}, number = {1--2}, pages = {45--57}, topic = {part-of-speech-tagging;probabilistic-parsers;nl-processing;} } @inproceedings{ charniak_e-goldman_rp:1988a, author = {Eugene Charniak and Robert P. Goldman}, title = {A Logic for Semantic Interpretation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1988}, pages = {87--94}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, missinginfo = {editor}, topic = {computational-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ charniak_e-goldman_rp:1989a, author = {Eugene Charniak and Robert P. Goldman}, title = {A Semantics for Probabilistic Quantifier-Free First-Order Languages, with Particular Application to Story Understanding}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, pages = {1074--1079}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {computational-semantics;nl-interpretation;} } @article{ charniak_e-goldman_rp:1993a, author = {Eugene Charniak and Robert P. Goldman}, title = {A {B}ayesian Model of Plan Recognition}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {64}, number = {1}, pages = {53--79}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We argue that the problem of plan recognition, inferring an agent's plan from observations, is largely a problem of inference under conditions of uncertainty. We present an approach to the plan recognition problem that is based on Bayesian probability theory. In attempting to solve a plan recognition problem we first retrieve candidate explanations. These explanations (sometimes only the most promising ones) are assembled into a plan recognition Bayesian network, which is a representation of a probability distribution over the set of possible explanations. We perform Bayesian updating to choose the most likely interpretation for the set of observed actions. This approach has been implemented in the Wimp3 system for natural language story understanding. }, topic = {plan-recognition;nl-understanding;Bayesian-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ charniak_e-johnson_m:2005a, author = {Eugene Charniak and Mark Johnson}, title = {Coarse-to-Fine N-Best Parsing and MaxEnt Discriminative Reranking}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {173--180}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1022}, topic = {syntactic-disambiguation;maximum-entropy;} } @book{ charniak_e-mcdermott_d:1985a, author = {Eugene Charniak and Drew McDermott}, title = {Introduction to Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley Publishing Co.}, year = {1985}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0201119455}, rtnote = {Media Union Library Call No: Q335 .C4831 1985 Graduate Library Call No: Q335 .C4831 1985}, xref = {Review: furbach:2003a.}, topic = {AI-intro;AI-text;} } @inproceedings{ charniak_e-shimony:1990a, author = {Eugene Charniak and Solomon E. Shimony}, title = {Probabilistic Semantics for Cost Based Abduction}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, editor = {Thomas G. Dietterich and William Swartout}, pages = {106--111}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja14.}, topic = {abduction;} } @article{ charniak_e-shimony:1994a, author = {Eugene Charniak and Solomon Eyal Shimony}, title = {Cost-Based Abduction and {MAP} Explanation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {66}, number = {2}, pages = {345--374}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Cost-based abduction attempts to find the best explanation for a set of facts by finding a minimal cost proof for the facts. The costs are computed by summing the costs of the assumptions necessary for the proof plus the cost of the rules. We examine existing methods for constructing explanations (proofs), as a minimization problem on a DAG (directed acyclic graph). We then define a probabilistic semantics for the costs, and prove the equivalence of the cost minimization problem to the Bayesian network MAP (maximum a posteriori probability) solution of the system. A simple best-first algorithm for finding least-cost proofs is presented, and possible improvements are suggested. The semantics of cost-based abduction for complete models are then generalized to handle negation. This, in turn, allows us to apply the best-first search algorithm as a novel way of computing MAP assignments to belief networks that can enumerate assignments in order of decreasing probability. An important point is that improvement results for the best-first search algorithm carry over to the computation of MAPs. }, topic = {abduction;search;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @book{ charniak_e-wilks_y:1976a, editor = {Eugene Charniak and Yorick A. Wilks}, title = {Computational Semantics: an Introduction to Artificial Intelligence and Natural Language Comprehension}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1976}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {0444111107}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library Call No: P325 .C561}, topic = {nlp-survey;computational-semantics;} } @book{ charolles-etal:1986a, editor = {Michel Charolles and J\'anos A. Pet\"ofi and Emel S\"ozer}, title = {Research in Text Connexity and Text Coherence: A Survey}, publisher = {H. Buske}, year = {1986}, address = {Hamburg}, ISBN = {3871188115}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, 805 P185 v.53 pt.1.}, topic = {text-grammar;coherence;} } @inproceedings{ charrier_t-etal:2016a, author = {Tristan Charrier and Andreas Herzig and Emiliano Lorini and Faustine Maffre and Fran\c{c}ois Schwarzentruber}, title = {Building Epistemic Logic from Observations and Public Announcements}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {268--277}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We study an epistemic logic where knowledge is built from what the agents observe (including higher-order visibility) and what the agents learn from public announcements. This fixes two main drawbacks of previous observability-based approaches where who sees what is common knowledge and where the epistemic operators distribute over disjunction. The latter forbids the modeling of most of the classical epistemic problems, starting with the muddy children puzzle. We integrate a dynamic dimension where both facts of the world and the agents' observability can be modified by assignment programs. We establish that the model checking problem is PSPACE-complete. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {epistemic-logic;announcements;} } @article{ charwat_g-etal:2015a, author = {G\"unther Charwat and Wolfgang Dvorak and Sarah A. Gaggl and Johannes P. Wallner and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Methods for Solving Reasoning Problems in Abstract Argumentation: A Survey}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2015}, volume = {220}, pages = {28--63}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr22}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;AI-algorithms;} } @article{ chase_h-freitag_j:2019a, author = {Hunter Chase and James Freitag}, title = {Model Theory and Machine Learning}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages = {319--332}, topic = {learning-theory;model-theory;} } @incollection{ chastain:1975a, author = {Charles Chastain}, title = {Reference and Context}, booktitle = {Language, Mind, and Knowledge. {M}innesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 7}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Keith Gunderson}, pages = {194--269}, address = {Minneapolis, Minnesota}, topic = {reference;indexicals;context;} } @incollection{ chatalic:1994a, author = {Philippe Chatalic}, title = {Viewing Hypothesis Theories as Constrained Graded Theories}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Craig Mac{N}ish and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and David Pearce}, pages = {261--278}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {modal-logic;qualitative-probability;} } @incollection{ chateauneuf-etal:1991a, author = {A. Chateauneuf and R. Kast and A. Lapied}, title = {Uncertainty of the Valuation of Risky Assets}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {130--134}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;market-modeling;} } @incollection{ chater_n-christiansen_mh:2008a, author = {Nick Chater and Morten H. Christiansen}, title = {Computational Models of Psycholinguistics}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Computational Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ron Sun}, pages = {477--504}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;psycholinguistics;} } @incollection{ chater_n-etal:2011a, author = {Nick Chater and Mike Oaksford and Ulrike Hahn and Evan Heit}, title = {Inductive Logic and Empirical Psychology}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 10: Inductive Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2011}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Stephan Hartman and John Woods}, pages = {553--624}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;psychology;} } @article{ chater_n-pickering_mj:1997a, author = {Nick Chater and Martin J. Pickering}, title = {Two Projects for Understanding the Mind: A Response to {M}orris and {R}ichardson}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {553--569}, xref = {Response to: morris_wm-richardson_rc:1995a.}, topic = {foundations-of-cognitive-psychology;folk-psychology;} } @book{ chatzidakis-etal:2006a, editor = {Zo\'e Chatzidakis and Peter Koepke and Wolfram Pohlers}, title = {Logic Colloquium '02}, publisher = {Association for Symbolic Logic}, address = {Poughkeepsie}, year = {2006}, ISBN = {9781568813011}, topic = {logic-misc;} } @article{ chatzikyriakidis-luo_zl:2014a, author = {Stergios Chatzikyriakidis and Zhaolui Luo}, title = {Natural Language Inference in Coq}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2014}, volume = {23}, number = {4}, pages = {441--480}, topic = {nl-inference;} } @article{ chatzikyriakridis_s-luo_zh:2017a, author = {Stergios Chatzikyriakridis and Zhaohui Luo}, title = {Adjectival and Adverbial Modification: The View from Modern Type Theories}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2017}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {45--88}, topic = {nl-semantics;adjectives;adverbs;type-theory;many-sorted-logic;} } @incollection{ chaudhri-etal:1992a, author = {Vinay K. Chaudhri and Vassos Hadzilacos and John Mylopoulos}, title = {Concurrency Control for Knowledge Bases}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {762--773}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;concurrency-control;knowledge-base-integrity;} } @article{ chaudhri-etal:2013a, author = {Vinay K. Chaudhri and H. Chad Lane and Dave Gunning and Jeremy Roschelle}, title = {Intelligent Learning Technologies: Applications of Artificial Intelligence to Contemporary and Emerging Educational Challenges}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2013}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {10--12}, topic = {intelligent-tutoring;} } @article{ chaudhri-etal:2013b, author = {Vinay K. Chaudhri and Britte Cheng and Adam Overtholtzer and Jeremy Roschelle and Aaron Spaulding and Peter Clark and Mark Greaves and Dave Gunning}, title = {Inquire Biology: A Textbook that Answers Questions}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2013}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {55--72}, topic = {intelligent-tutoring;} } @article{ chaudhri-etal:2013c, author = {Vinay K. Chaudhri and H. Chad Lane and Dave Gunning and Jeremy Roschelle}, title = {Intelligent Learning Technologies Part 2: Applications of Artificial Intelligence to Contemporary and Emerging Educational Challenges}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2013}, volume = {34}, number = {4}, pages = {10--12}, topic = {intelligent-tutoring;AI-in-education;} } @inproceedings{ chaudhri_v-son_tc:2012a, author = {Vinay K. Chaudhri and Tran Cao Son}, title = {Specifying and Reasoning with Underspecified Knowledge Bases Using Answer Set Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {424--434}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... In this paper, we formalize an underspecified knowledge base using answer set programming, and give a set of rules called UMAP that support inheritance reasoning in such a knowledge base. }, topic = {underspecification;answer-sets;} } @inproceedings{ chaudri-mylopoulos:1995a, author = {Vinay K. Chaudri and John Mylopoulos}, title = {Efficient Algorithms and Performance Results for Multi-User Knowledge Bases}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {759--766}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {Alg for kb implementation, access. Read for KR?}, topic = {kr;large-kr-systems;kr-course;} } @article{ chaves:2008a, author = {Rui P. Chaves}, title = {Linearization-Based Word Ellipsis}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {31}, number = {3}, pages = {261--307}, topic = {ellipsis;HPSG;} } @inproceedings{ chavez-cooper_gf:1990a, author = {R. Martin Chavez and Gregory F. Cooper}, title = {An Empirical Evaluation of a Randomized Algorithm for Probabilistic Inference}, booktitle = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence 5}, year = {1990}, pages = {60--70}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers B.V.}, address = {North Holland}, editor = {M. Henrion and R.D. Shachter and L.N. Kanal and J.F. Lemmer}, topic = {probabilistic-reasoning;empirical-methods-in-AI;} } @article{ chavira-darwiche:2008a, author = {Mark Chavira and Adnan Darwiche}, title = {On Probabilistic Inference by Weighted Model Counting}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {6--7}, pages = {772--799}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @techreport{ cheeseman:1983a, author = {Peter Cheeseman}, title = {A Representation of Time for Planning}, institution = {SRI Artificial Intelligence Center}, number = {278}, year = {1983}, topic = {planning;temporal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ cheeseman:1985a, author = {Peter Cheeseman}, title = {In Defense of Probability}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, editor = {Arivind Joshi}, pages = {1002--1009}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, rtnote = {Check spelling A's name.}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;Bayesian-networks; reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ cheeseman:1988a, author = {Peter Cheeseman}, title = {An Inquiry Into Computer Understanding}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {58--66}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {number, Check Spelling A Name}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;Bayesian-networks; reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @phdthesis{ cheikes:1994a, author= {Brant A. Cheikes}, title= {Planning Responses from High-Level Goals: Adopting the Respondent's Perspective in Cooperative Response Generation}, school= {University of Pennsylvania}, address= {Philadelphia}, year= {1991}, topic = {nl-generation;cooperation;} } @book{ chein_m-mugnier:2009a, author = {Michel Chein and Marie-Laure Mugnier}, title = {Graph-Based Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2009}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {9781848002852 (print)}, xref = {Review: rothberghofer:2009a}, topic = {kr-text;conceptual-graphs;} } @inproceedings{ chelba:1997a, author = {Ciprian Chelba}, title = {A Structured Language Model}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {498--503}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {statistical-nlp;} } @inproceedings{ chelba-acero:2005a, author = {Ciprian Chelba and Alex Acero}, title = {Position Specific Posterior Lattices for Indexing Speech}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {443--450}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1055}, topic = {speech-recognition;} } @inproceedings{ chelba-jelinek_f:1998a, author = {Ciprian Chelba and Frederick Jelinek}, title = {Exploiting Syntactic Structure for Language Modeling}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {225--231}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {statistical-nlp;word-sequence-probabilities;} } @article{ chella-etal:1997a, author = {Antonio Chella and Marcello Frixione and Salvatore Gaglio}, title = {A Cognitive Architecture for Artificial Vision}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {89}, number = {1--2}, pages = {73--111}, topic = {cognitive-robotics;computer-vision;cognitive-architectures; vision;} } @article{ chella-etal:2000a, author = {Antonio Chella and Marcello Frixione and Salvatore Gaglio}, title = {Understanding Dynamic Scenes}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {123}, number = {1--2}, pages = {89--132}, topic = {computer-vision;process-recognition;} } @article{ chella-etal:2000b, author = {Antonio Chella and Marcello Frixione and Salvatore Gaglio}, title = {A Cognitive Architecture for Robot Self-Consciousness}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence in Medicine}, year = {2000}, volume = {44}, number = {1}, pages = {147--154}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se12\chella.pdf}, topic = {cognitive-architectures;consciousness;} } @incollection{ chella_a-etal:2005a, author = {Antonio Chella and Marcello Frixione and Salvatore Gaglio}, title = {Planning by Imagination in {C}icerobot, A Robot for Museum Tours}, booktitle = {{AISB}'05: Social Intelligence and Interaction in Animals, Robots and Agents: Proceedings of the Symposium on Next Generation Approaches to Machine Consciousness Imagination, Development, Intersubjectivity and Embodiment}, publisher = {The Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and the Simulation of Behaviour}, year = {2005}, editor = {Ron Chrisley and Rob Clowes and Steve Torrance}, pages = {40--49}, address = {Bath, England}, abstract = {authors developed a cognitive architecture for robot vision and action. One of the main characteristics of the architecture is the principled integration of perception and of symbolic knowledge by means of the introduction of an intermediate representation based on conceptual spaces. ..., planning is performed by taking advantage from the representations in conceptual space.}, topic = {machine-consciousness;planning;imagination;perception;cognitive-architectures;} } @article{ chellas_b:1980a, author = {Brian Chellas}, title = {Another Proof for the Decidability of Four Modal Logics}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {251--264}, topic = {modal-logic;decidability;} } @book{ chellas_bf:1969a, author = {Brian Chellas}, title = {The Logical Form of Imperatives}, publisher = {Perry Lane Press}, year = {1969}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {modal-logic;deontic-logic;imperatives;imperative-logic;} } @article{ chellas_bf:1971a, author = {Brian Chellas}, title = {Imperatives}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1971}, volume = {37}, number = {2}, pages = {114--129}, topic = {conditionals;deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ chellas_bf:1974a, author = {Brian Chellas}, title = {Conditional Obligation}, booktitle = {Logical Theory and Semantic Analysis}, editor = {S{\o}ren Stenlund}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1974}, pages = {23--33}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Chellas"}, topic = {deontic-logic;conditional-obligation;} } @article{ chellas_bf:1975a, author = {Brian Chellas}, title = {Basic Conditional Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1975}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {133--154}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn20}, topic = {conditionals;} } @unpublished{ chellas_bf:1978a, author = {Brian F. Chellas}, title = {Another Proof of the Decidability of Four Modal Logics}, year = {1978}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Calgary}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files}, topic = {modal-logic;decidability;} } @incollection{ chellas_bf:1979a, author = {Brian F. Chellas}, title = {Modalities in Normal Systems Containing the {S5} Axiom}, booktitle = {Intention and Intentionality: Essays in Honour of {G.E.M}. {A}nscombe}, publisher = {Harvester Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Cora Diamond and Jenny Teichman}, pages = {261--265}, address = {Brighton}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @book{ chellas_bf:1980a, author = {Brian F. Chellas}, title = {Modal Logic: An Introduction}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1980}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic shelves.}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ chellas_bf:1980b, author = {Brian F. Chellas}, title = {Another Proof for the Decidability of Four Modal Logics}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, pages = {251--264}, topic = {modal-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ chellas_bf:1983a, author = {Brian F. Chellas}, title = {$KG^{k,l,m,n}$ and the {EMFP}}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1983}, volume = {26}, number = {103--104}, pages = {255--262}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ chellas_bf:1992a, author = {Brian Chellas}, title = {Time and Modality in the Logic of Agency}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1992}, volume = {51}, pages = {485--517}, topic = {action;} } @article{ chellas_bf:1995a, author = {Brian Chellas}, title = {On Bringing It about}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {24}, number = {6}, pages = {563--571}, topic = {agency;} } @article{ chellas_bf-mckinney_a:1975a, author = {Brian F. Chellas and Audrey McKinney}, title = {The Completeness of Monotonic Modal Logics}, journal = {Mathematical Logic Quarterly}, year = {1975}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {379--383}, abstract = {The purpose of this paper is to point out an error in Krister Segerberg's proof of the completeness of the modal logic R, and to provide a correct proof.}, topic = {modal-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ chellas_bf-segerberg_k:1994a, author = {Brian F. Chellas and Krister Segerberg}, title = {Modal Logics with the {M}ac{I}ntosh Rule}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1994}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {67--86}, contentnote = {The MacIntosh rule is <>A --> []A/ []A --> <>A.}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ chemero_a:2003a, author = {Anthony Chemero}, title = {Information for Perception and Information Processing}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2003}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {577--588}, abstract = {I [compare] information as understood by Gibsonian, ecological psychologists with information as understood in Barwise and Perry's situation semantics. }, topic = {information;situation-theory;} } @book{ chemero_a:2009a, author = {Anthony Chemero}, title = {Radical Embodied cognitive Science}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-01322-2}, xref = {Review: cole_dc:2010a.}, topic = {representation;foundations-of-cogsci;embodiment;} } @article{ chemero_a-silberstein_m:2008a, author = {Anthony Chemero and Michael Silberstein}, title = {After the Philosophy of Mind: Replacing Scholasticism with Science}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2008}, volume = {75}, number = {1}, pages = {1--27}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @article{ cheml_e-egre_p:2019a, author = {Emmanuel Chemla and Paul \'Egr\'e}, title = {Suszko's Problem: Mixed Consequence and Compositionality}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {12}, number = {4}, pages = {736--767}, topic = {logical-consequence;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ chemla_e:2011a, author = {Emmanuel Chemla}, title = {Expressible Semantics for Counterfactuals}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {63--80}, abstract = {Lewis (1981) showed the equivalence between two dominant semantic frameworks for counterfactuals: ordering semantics, which relies on orders between possible worlds, and premise semantics, which relies on sets of propositions (so-called ordering sources). I define a natural, restricted version of premise semantics, expressible premise semantics, which is based on ordering sources containing only expressible propositions. First, I extend Lewis (1981) equivalence result to expressible premise semantics and some corresponding expressible version of ordering semantics. Second, I show that expressible semantics are strictly less powerful than their non-expressible counterparts, even when attention is restricted to the truth values of expressible counterfactuals. Assuming that the expressibility constraint is natural for premise semantics, this result breaks the equivalence between ordering semantics and (expressible) premise semantics. Finally, I show that these results cast doubt on various desirable conjectures, and in particular on a particular defense of the so-called limit assumption.}, topic = {conditionals;limit-condition;David-Lewis;} } @article{ chemla_e-etal:2011a, author = {Emmanuel Chemla and Vincent Homer and Daniel Rothschild}, title = {Modularity and Intuitions in Formal Semantics: The Case of Polarity Items}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2011}, volume = {34}, number = {6}, pages = {537--570}, abstract = {Linguists often sharply distinguish the different modules that support linguistics competence, e.g., syntax, semantics, pragmatics. However, recent work has identified phenomena in syntax (polarity sensitivity) and pragmatics (implicatures), which seem to rely on semantic properties (monotonicity). We propose to investigate these phenomena and their connections as a window into the modularity of our linguistic knowledge. We conducted a series of experiments to gather the relevant syntactic, semantic and pragmatic judgments within a single paradigm. The comparison between these quantitative data leads us to four main results. (i) Our results support a departure from one element of the classical Gricean approach, thus helping to clarify and settle an empirical debate. $\ldots$}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16.}, topic = {cognitive-modularity;implicature;pragmatic-processing;} } @book{ chemla_e-etal:2013a, editor = {Emmanuel Chemla and Vincent Homer and Grégoire Winterstein}, title = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 17}, year = {2013}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/issue/view/10}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @article{ chen_ck:2008a, author = {Cheryl K. Chen}, title = {On Having a Point of View: Belief, Action, and EgoCentric States}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {105}, number = {5}, pages = {240--258}, topic = {belief;indexicals;} } @article{ chen_h:2006a, author = {Hubie Chen}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}rinciples of Constraint Programming}, by {K}rzysztof {A}pt}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2006}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {128--131}, xref = {Review of: apt_kr:2003a.}, topic = {constraint-programming;} } @inproceedings{ chen_hh:1998a, author = {Hsin-Hsi Chen and Sheng-Jie Huang and Yung-Wei Ding and Shih-Chung Tsai}, title = {Proper Name Translation in Cross-Language Information Retrieval}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {232--236}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {proper-names;machine-translation;} } @inproceedings{ chen_hh-lee_ys:1995a, author = {Hsin-Hsi Chen and Yue-Shi Lee}, title = {Development of a Partially Bracketed Corpus with Part-Of-Speech Information Only}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Very Large Corpora}, year = {1995}, editor = {David Yarovsky and Kenneth Church}, pages = {162--172}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;corpus-statistics;text-chunking; part-of-speech-tagging;machine-learning;corpus-tagging;} } @article{ chen_j-pan_tq:2019a, author = {Jia Chen and Tianqun Pan}, title = {Logics for Moderate Belief-Disagreement between Agents}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2019}, volume = {107}, number = {3}, pages = {559--589}, topic = {epistemic-logic;multiagent-epistemic-logic;} } @article{ chen_jh-chang_js:1998a, author = {Jen Hen Chen and Jason S. Chang}, title = {Topical Clustering of {MRD} Senses Based on Information Retrieval Techniques}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {24}, number = {1}, pages = {61--95}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;computational-lexicography;} } @inproceedings{ chen_jn-chang_js:1998a, author = {Jen-Nan Chen and Jason S. Chang}, title = {A Concept-based Adaptive Approach to Word Sense Disambiguation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {237--243}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;} } @inproceedings{ chen_jy-etal:2018a, author = {Jiaoyan Chen and Freddy L\'ecu\'e and Jeff Z. Pan and Ian Horrocks and Huajun Chen}, title = {Knowledge-Based Transfer Learning Explanation}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {349--358}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we propose an ontology-based approach for human-centric explanation of transfer learning. Three kinds of knowledge-based explanatory evidence, with different granularities, including general factors, particular narrators and core contexts are first proposed and then inferred with both local ontologies and external knowledge bases. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {dexcription-logics;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ chen_jy-etal:2020a, author = {Jiaoyan Chen and Freddy L\'ecu\'e and Yuxia Geng and Jeff Z. Pan and Huajun Chen}, title = {Ontology-Guided Semantic Composition for Zero-shot Learning}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {850--854}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {Zero-shot learning (ZSL) is a popular research problem that aims at predicting for those classes that have never appeared in the training stage by utilizing the inter-class relationship with some side information. In this study, we propose to model the compositional and expressive semantics of class labels by an OWL (Web Ontology Language) ontology, and further develop a new ZSL framework with ontology embedding. The effectiveness has been verified by some primary experiments on animal image classification and visual question answering.}, topic = {computational-ontology;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ chen_kj-etal:1998a, author = {Keh-Jiann Chen and Wen Tsuei and Lee-Feng Chien}, title = {{PAT}-Trees with the Deletion Function as the Learning Device for Linguistic Patterns}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {244--250}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {machine-language-learning;PAT-trees;} } @article{ chen_l:2020a, author = {Lu Chen}, title = {Infinitesimal Gunk}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {5}, pages = {981--1004}, abstract = {In this paper, I advance an original view of the structure of space called Infinitesimal Gunk. This view says that every region of space can be further divided and some regions have infinitesimal size, where infinitesimals are understood in the framework of Robinson's (1966) nonstandard analysis. This view, I argue, provides a novel reply to the inconsistency arguments proposed by Arntzenius (2008) and Russell (2008), which have troubled a more familiar gunky approach. Moreover, it has important advantages over the alternative views these authors suggested. Unlike Arntzenius's proposal, it does not introduce regions with no interior. It also has a much richer measure theory than Russell's proposal and does not retreat to mere finite additivity. }, topic = {space-time;mereology;nonstandard-analysis;} } @article{ chen_l:2022a, author = {Lu Chen}, title = {Smooth Infinitesimals in the Metaphysical Foundation of Spacetime Theories}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {4}, pages = {857--877}, abstract = {I propose a theory of space with infinitesimal regions called smooth infinitesimal geometry (SIG) based on certain algebraic objects (i.e., rings), which regiments a mode of reasoning heuristically used by geometricists and physicists (e.g., circle is composed of infinitely many straight lines). ...}, topic = {formalizations-of-space;infinitesimals;} } @incollection{ chen_l1-tokuda_n:2003a, author = {Lang Chen and Naoyuki Tokuda}, title = {A New Buggy Rule and Template-Template Based Tutorial Dialogue System}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Natural Language Generation in Spoken and Written Dialogue}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Reva Freedman and Charles Callaway}, pages = {12--14}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {nl-generation;computational-dialogue;intelligent-tutoring;} } @article{ chen_la-tokuda_n:2003a, author = {Liang Chen and Naoyuki Tokuda}, title = {Robustness of Regional Matching Scheme over Global Matching Scheme}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {144}, number = {2}, pages = {213--232}, topic = {voting-procedures;} } @inproceedings{ chen_sf-goodman_j1:1996a, author = {Stanley F. Chen and Joshua Goodman}, title = {An Empirical Study of Smoothing Techniques for Language Modeling}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {310--318}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {corpus-statistics;smoothing;} } @techreport{ chen_sf-goodman_j1:1998a, author = {Stanley F. Chen and Joshua Goodman}, title = {An Empirical Study of Smoothing Techniques for Language Modeling}, institution = {Center for Research in Computing Technology, Harvard University}, number = {TR-10-98}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {corpus-statistics;frequency-estimation;smoothing;} } @book{ chen_ss1:1990a, editor = {Su-Shing Chen}, title = {Advances in Spatial Reasoning, Volume 1}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Co.}, year = {1990}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0893915726}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library Call No: Q 335 .A391 1990}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;} } @book{ chen_ss1:1990b, editor = {Su-Shing Chen}, title = {Advances in Spatial Reasoning, Volume 2}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Co.}, year = {1990}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0893915734}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library Call No: Q 335 .A391 1990}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;} } @article{ chen_ss2-etal:1990a, author = {Susan S. Chen and James M. Keller and Richard M. Crownover}, title = {Shape from Fractal Geometry}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {43}, number = {2}, pages = {199--218}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A novel method for the recovery of a planar surface orientation from its image using fractal measures is presented. A fractal-related feature, the average Holder constant, is defined in the two-dimensional topological space. It is proven that the average Holder constant is scale-sensitive and the distance ratio from any two points on the fractal surface to the viewer can be calculated from their average Holder constants. By incorporating the distance ratio into the surface-vanishing line formula in the geometric model, a method for inferring planar surface shape is derived. The novelty of this method is that the fractal-related feature is used as a direct input in the shape recovery process. Experimental results showing the validity of applying this method to artificially rotated textured images and images of naturally textured surfaces are presented. }, topic = {fractals;texture;distance-metrics;} } @incollection{ chen_sy-husband_em:2020a, author = {Sherry Yong Chen and E. Matthew Husband}, title = {Event (De)composition}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Experimental Semantics and Pragmatics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2020}, editor = {Chris Cummins and Katsos Napoleon}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {experimental-semantics;event-structure;} } @article{ chen_t-etal:2012a, author = {Tao Chen and Nevin L. Zhang and Tengfei Liu and Kin Man Poon and Yi Wang}, title = {Model-Based Multidimensional Clustering of Categorical Data}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {176}, pages = {2246--2269}, topic = {cluster-analysis;} } @article{ chen_w-warren_ds:1993a, author = {W. Chen and D.S. Warren}, title = {A Goal-Oriented Approach to Computing the Well-Founded Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Logic Programming}, year = {1993}, volume = {17}, pages = {279--300}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @article{ chen_xj-degiacomo_g:1999a, author = {Xiao Jun Chen and Giuseppe De Degiacomo}, title = {Reasoning about Nondeterministic and Concurrent Actions: A Process Algebra Approach}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {107}, number = {1}, pages = {63--98}, topic = {concurrency;concurrent-actions;process-algebras;} } @incollection{ chen_xp-etal:2008a, author = {Xiaoping Chen and Jianmin Ji and Fangzhen Lin}, title = {Computing Loops with at Most One External Support Rule}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {401--410}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {If a loop has no external support rules, then its loop formula is equivalent to a set of unit clauses; and if it has exactly one external support rule, then its loop formula is equivalent to a set of binary clauses. In this paper, we consider how to compute these loops and their loop formulas in a normal logic program, and use them to derive consequences of a logic program. We show that an iterative procedure based on unit propagation, the program completion and the loop formulas of loops with no external support rules can compute the same consequences as the "Expand" operator in smodels, which is known to compute the well-founded model when the given normal logic program has no constraints. We also show that using the loop formulas of loops with at most one external support rule, the same procedure can compute more consequences, and these extra consequences can help ASP solvers such as cmodels to find answer sets of certain logic programs. }, topic = {logic-programming;} } @incollection{ chen_y1-etal:2006a, author = {Yan Chen and Fangzhen Lin and Yisong Wang and Mingyi Zhang}, title = {First-Order Loop Formulas for Normal Logic Programs}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {298--307}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @article{ chen_y2-etal:2011a, author = {Yin Chen and Fangzhen Lin and Yan Zhang and Yi Zhou}, title = {Loop-Separable Programs and Their First-Order Definability}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {3--4}, pages = {890--913}, topic = {answer-sets;} } @article{ chen_yl-pennock_dm:2010a, author = {Yileng Chen and David M. Pennock}, title = {Designing Markets for Prediction}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2010}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {42--52}, topic = {algorithmic-game-theory;} } @article{ chen_yx-etal:2009a, author = {Yixin Chen and Ruoyun Huang and Zhao Xing and Weixiong Zhang}, title = {Long-distance mutual exclusion for planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {2}, pages = {365--391}, topic = {planning-algorithms;constraint-propagation;model-checking;} } @article{ cheng_cy-resnik_m:1965a, author = {Chung-Ying Cheng and Michael Resnik}, title = {Ontic Commitment and the Empty Universe}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1965}, volume = {62}, number = {14}, pages = {359--363}, topic = {(non)existence;empty-domain;} } @article{ cheng_cy-resnik_md:1965a, author = {Chen-Ying Cheng and Michael D. Resnik}, title = {Ontic Commitment and the Empty Universe}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1965}, volume = {62}, number = {14}, pages = {359--364}, topic = {ontological-commitment;(non)existence;} } @article{ cheng_j-etal:2002a, author = {Jie Cheng and Russell Greiner and Jonathan Kelly and David Bell and Weiru Liu}, title = {Learning {B}ayesian Networks from Data: An Information-Theory Based Approach}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {137}, number = {1--2}, pages = {43--90}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;machine-learning;} } @article{ cheng_ls-huang_ct:1996a, author = {Lisa L.-S. Cheng and C.-T James Huang}, title = {Two Types of Donkey Sentences}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1996}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {121--163}, topic = {anaphora;donkey-anaphora;} } @article{ cheng_pw-novick_lr:1991a, author = {Patricia W. Cheng and Laura R. Novick}, title = {Causes Versus Enabling Conditions}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {1991}, volume = {40}, number = {1--2}, pages = {83--120}, abstract = {People distinguish between a cause (e.g., a malfunctioning component in an airplane causing it to crash) and a condition (e.g., gravity) $\ldots$ One approach explains the distinction in terms of an inferential rule based on the normality of the potential causal factors. Another approach explains the distinction in terms of the conversational principle of being informative to the inquirer given assumptions about his or her state of knowledge. The present paper evaluates variants of these two approaches, and presents our probabilistic contrast model, which takes a third approach. This approach explains the distinction between causes and enabling conditions by the covariation between potential causes and the effect in question over a focal set -- a set of events implied by the context. Covariation is defined probabilistically, with necessity and sufficiency as extreme cases of the components defining contrasts. We report two experiments resting our model against variants of the normality and conversational views.}, topic = {causality;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ cheng_y:2020a, author = {Yong Cheng}, title = {Finding the Limit of Incompleteness {I}}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {26}, number = {3--4}, pages = {268--286}, contentnote = {Considers the question of whether there is a weakest theory sustaining G1-incomplenetess.}, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;} } @article{ cheng_y:2021a, author = {Yong Cheng}, title = {Current Research on G\"odel's Incompleteness Theorems}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {113--167}, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;goedels-secoond-theorem;} } @article{ cherian-troxell:1996a, author = {Sunil Cherian and Wade O. Troxell}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}omputers, Minds, and Robots}, by {W}illiam {S}. {R}obinson}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {497--412}, xref = {robinson_wr:1992a.}, topic = {Turing-test;intelligence;philosophy-of-AI;} } @article{ cherian-troxell:1997a, author = {Sunil Cherian and Wade O. Troxell}, title = {Review of \emph{David McFarland and Thomas B\"osser, Intelligent Behavior in Animals and Robots}, by {D}avid {M}c{F}arland and {T}homas {B}\"osser}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {452--456}, xref = {Review of: mcfarland_d-bosser:1993a.}, topic = {animal-cognition;machine-intelligence;philosophy-AI;embodiment;} } @book{ cherniak:1986a, author = {Christopher Cherniak}, title = {Minimal Rationality}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1986}, address = {Cambridge}, xref = {Review: spector_l-hendler_j:1987a.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {limited-rationality;pr-course;} } @article{ cherniavsky:1972a, author = {A.L. Cherniavsky}, title = {A Program for Timetable Compilation by a Look-Ahead Method}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1972}, volume = {3}, number = {1--3}, pages = {61--76}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The problem of timetable compilation for a single-track railway is a job-shop scheduling problem but with differences that handicap the generation of feasible solutions. The paper states the problem and describes the algorithm and the experimental results. The idea of the algorithm is that a feasible solution is obtained by successice resolving of ``conflicts'' between trains, this process being interpreted as the generation of some tree T. The way to resolve a conflict is selected by a look-ahead method which enables us to obtain good enough solutions by using a very rough estimate function. One specific feature of the algorithm is that the look-ahead tree T' is not a subtree of T; the other is the culs-de-sac on trees T and T'. When it reaches a cul-de-sac, the algorithm augments the tree with additional nodes. }, topic = {scheduling;AI-algorithms;experimental-AI;} } @article{ cherniss:1951a, author = {Harold Cherniss}, title = {The Characteristics and Effects of Presocratic Philosophy}, journal = {Journal of the History of Ideas}, year = {1951}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {319--345}, topic = {ancient-philosophy;presocratic-philosophy;} } @article{ chernoff_f:1980a, author = {Fred Chernoff}, title = {Goldman on Epistemic Conjunction}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1980}, volume = {40}, number = {1}, pages = {45--47}, topic = {epistemic-logic;lottery-paradox;} } @article{ chernova-etal:2011a, author = {Sonia Chernova and Nick DePalma and Cynthia Breazeal}, title = {Crowdsourcing Real World Human-Robot Dialog and Teamwork through Online Multiplayer Games}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2011}, volume = {32}, number = {4}, pages = {100--111}, topic = {computational-dialogue;computer-games;} } @article{ cherry_c1:1974a, author = {Christopher Cherry}, title = {The Limits of Defeasibility}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1974}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {101--107}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;legal-reasoning;} } @book{ cherry_c2:1957a, author = {Colin Cherry}, title = {On Human Communication}, publisher = {John Wiley \&\ Sons}, year = {1957}, address = {New York}, topic = {linguistics-general;} } @article{ chesnevar_c-etal:2006a, author = {Carlos Ches\~nevar and Jared McGinnis and Sanjay Modgil and Ivad Rahwan and Chris Reed and Guillerno Simari and Matthew South and Gerard Vreeswijk and Steven Willmott}, title = {Towards an Argument Interchange Format}, journal = {Knowledge Engineering Review}, year = {2006}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {293--316}, abstract = {In this paper, we describe a draft specification for an argument interchange format (AIF) intended for representation and exchange of data between various argumentation tools and agent-based applications.}, topic = {argument-modeling;} } @article{ chester:1976a, author = {David Chester}, title = {The Translation of Formal Proofs into {E}nglish}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1976}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {261--278}, topic = {proofs-as-discourse;} } @incollection{ chetcutisperandio-lagrue:2008a, author = {Nathalie Chetcuti-Sperandio and Sylvain Lagrue}, title = {How to Choose Weightings to Avoid Collisions in a Restricted Penalty Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {340--347}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {$\ldots$ one of the main and less studied flaws of Penalty Logic is the influence of the choice of weights on inference: the same pieces of information can provide extremely different results just by changing some weights. This paper concentrates on weightings and on the problem of collisions between interpretations which yield weak conclusions. It focuses more particularly on a family of weightings, the sigma-weightings. We show that some of these weightings avoid collisions but that in the meanwhile they disable the mechanism of compensation (and so the interest) of Penalty Logic. $\ldots$ }, topic = {penalty-logic;inconsistency-management;} } @incollection{ chevaleyre-etal:2006a, author = {Yann Chevaleyre and Ulle Endriss and J\'er\^ome Lang}, title = {Expressive Power of Weighted Propositional Formulas for Cardinal Preference Modeling}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {145--152}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {preferences;qualitative-utility;} } @article{ chevaleyre-etal:2008a, author = {Yann Chevaleyre and Ulle Endriss and Jer\^ome Lang and Nicolas Maudet}, title = {Preference Handling in Combinatorial Domains: From {AI} to Social Choice}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2008}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {37--46}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;social-choice-theory; multiattribute-utility;qualitative-utility;} } @inproceedings{ chevalier-martinex:2001a, author = {Aline Chevalier and Laure Martinex}, title = {The Role of Context in the Acquisition and in the Organization of Knowledge: Studies from Adults and from Children}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {425--428}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;cognitive-psychology;} } @inproceedings{ chi_eh-etal:2001a, author = {Ed H. Chi and Peter Pirolli and Kim Chen and James Pitkow}, title = {Using Information Scent to Model User Information Needs and Actions on the Web}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {ACM} {CHI} 2001 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems}, year = {2001}, pages = {490--497}, organization = {ACM}, publisher = {ACM Press}, topic = {user-modeling;information-retrieval;} } @techreport{ chi_mth:1983a, author = {Micheline T.H. Chi}, title = {A Learning Framework for Development}, institution = {Learning Research and Development Center}, number = {1983/18}, year = {1983}, address = {University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {developmental-psychology;expertise;} } @article{ chi_mth-etal:1981a, author = {Micheline T.H. Chi and Paul J. Feltovich and Robert Glaser}, title = {Categorization and Representation of Physics Problems by Experts and Novices}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1981}, volume = {5}, pages = {121--152}, missinginfo = {number}, URL = {http://cognitrn.psych.indiana.edu/rgoldsto/cogsci/Chi.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;psychology-of-learning;physics-learning;} } @techreport{ chi_mth-etal:1983a, author = {Micheline T.H. Chi and Robert Glaser and Ernest Rees}, title = {Expertise in Problem Solving}, institution = {Learning Research and Development Center}, number = {1981/3}, year = {1981}, address = {University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {expertise;} } @incollection{ chi_mth-ohlsson:2005a, author = {Michelene T. H. Chi and Stellan Ohlsson}, title = {Complex Declarative Learning}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Keith J. Holyoak and Robert G. Morrison}, pages = {371--399}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;learning;} } @article{ chi_zy:1999a, author = {Zhiyi Chi}, title = {Statistical Properties of Probabilistic Context-Free Grammars}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {131--160}, topic = {probabilistic-grammars;} } @article{ chi_zy-geman:1998a, author = {Zhiyi Chi and Stuart Geman}, title = {Estimation of Probabilistic Context-Free Grammars}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {299--305}, topic = {probabilistic-parsers;} } @inproceedings{ chiang_d:2005a, author = {David Chiang}, title = {A Hierarchical Phrase-Based Model for Statistical Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {263--270}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1033}, topic = {machine-translation;statistical-nlp;} } @incollection{ chiarcos-stede:2004a, author = {Christian Chiarcos and Manfred Stede}, title = {Salience-Driven Text Planning}, booktitle = {Natural Language Generation: Third International Conference, INLG 2004}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2004}, editor = {Anja Belz and Roger Evans and Paul Piwek}, pages = {21--30}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {document-planning;nl-generation;} } @inproceedings{ chiatti_a-etal:2020a, author = {Agnese Chiatti and Enrico Motta and Enrico Daga}, title = {Towards a Framework for Visual Intelligence in Service Robotics: Epistemic Requirements and Gap Analysis}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {905--916}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... In this paper, we analyze the epistemic requirements for Visual Intelligence, both in a top-down fashion, using existing frameworks for human-like Visual Intelligence in the literature, and from the bottom up, based on the errors emerging from object recognition trials in a real-world robotic scenario. Finally, we use these requirements to evaluate current Knowledge Bases for Service Robotics and to identify gaps in the support they provide for Visual Intelligence. These gaps provide the basis of a research agenda for developing more effective knowledge representations for Visual Intelligence.}, topic = {cognitive-robotics;visual-intelligence;} } @article{ chichilinsky:1982a, author = {Graciela Chichilinsky}, title = {Social Aggregation Rules and Continuity}, journal = {Quarterly Journal of Economics}, year = {1982}, volume = {96}, pages = {337--352}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {welfare-economics;social-choice-theory;} } @incollection{ chichilinsky:1983a, author = {Graciela Chichilinsky}, title = {Social Choice Theory and Game Theory: Recent Results with a Topological Approach}, booktitle = {Social Choice and Welfare}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1983}, editor = {Prasanta K. Pattanaik and Maurice Salles}, pages = {79--102}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {social-choice-theory;game-theory;} } @article{ chichilnisky-heal_j:1983a, author = {Graciela Chichilnisky and G. Heal}, title = {Necessary and Sufficient Conditions for a Resolution of the Social Choice Paradox}, journal = {Journal of Economic Theory}, year = {1983}, volume = {31}, pages = {68--87}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {social-choice-theory;Arrow's-theorem;} } @article{ chickering-meek:2006a, author = {David Maxwell Chickering and Christopher Meek}, title = {On the Incompatibility of Faithfulness and Monotone {DAG} Faithfulness}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {8--9}, pages = {653--666}, xref = {Pretty much demolishes the result in cheng_j-etal:2002a.}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;machine-learning;} } @article{ chien_a:2008a, author = {Arnold Chien}, title = {Scalar Implicature and Contrastive Explanation}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2008}, volume = {161}, number = {1}, pages = {47--66}, contentnote = {Abstract: I argue for a subsumption of any version of Grice's first quantity maxim posited to underlie scalar implicature, by developing the idea of implicature recovery as a kind of explanatory inference, as e.g. in science. I take the applicable model to be contrastive explanation, while following van Fraassens analysis of explanation as an answer to a why-question. A scalar implicature is embedded in such an answer, one that meets two probabilistic constraints: the probability of the answer, and favoring. I argue that besides having application at large, outside of linguistic interpretation, these constraints largely account not only for implicatures based on strength order, logical and otherwise, but also for unordered cases. I thus suggest that Grice's maxim and its descendants are expressions of general explanatory constraints, as they happen to be manifested in this particular explanatory task. I conclude by briefly discussing how I accordingly view Grice's system outside of scalar implicature. }, topic = {implicature;explanation;} } @article{ chien_aj:1996a, author = {Arnold J. Chien}, title = {Why the Mind May Not Be Modular}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {1--32}, topic = {cognitive-modularity;} } @incollection{ chien_m-etal:1998a, author = {Michel Chien and Marie-Laure Mugnier and Genevi\`eve Simonet}, title = {Nested Graphs: A Graph-Based Knowledge Representation Model with {FOL} Semantics}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {524--534}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;conceptual-graphs;graph-based-reasoning;kr-course;} } @article{ chien_s-etal:1999a, author = {S. Chien and G. Rabideau and J. Willis and T. Mann}, title = {Automating Planning and Scheduling of Shuttle Payload Operations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {114}, number = {1--2}, pages = {239--255}, topic = {planning;scheduling;} } @article{ chierchia_g:1982a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Nominalization and {M}ontague Grammar: A Semantics Without Types for Natural Languages}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1982}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {303--354}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nominalization;nl-semantic-types;} } @incollection{ chierchia_g:1985a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {The Variability of Impersonal Subjects}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {107--143}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;impersonal-subjects;nl-quantifiers; Italian-language;} } @article{ chierchia_g:1985b, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Formal Semantics and the Grammar of Prediction}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1985}, volume = {16}, number = {3}, pages = {417--443}, topic = {nl-semantics;predication;properties;} } @incollection{ chierchia_g:1988a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Properties, Types and Meaning, Vol. 2}, year = {1988}, editor = {Gennaro Chierchia and Barbara Partee and Raymond Turner}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, pages = {1--20}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;intensionality;thematic-roles;} } @incollection{ chierchia_g:1988b, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Structured Meanings, Thematic Roles and Control}, booktitle = {Properties, Types and Meaning, Vol. 2}, year = {1988}, editor = {Gennaro Chierchia and Barbara Partee and Raymond Turner}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, pages = {131--166}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {hyperintensionality;thematic-roles;} } @incollection{ chierchia_g:1989a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Anaphora and Attitudes De Se}, booktitle = {Semantics and Contextual Expression}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1989}, editor = {Renate Bartsch and Johan van Benthem and Peter van Emde Boas}, pages = {1--31}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {indexicals;self-locating-constructions;propositional-attirudes;} } @techreport{ chierchia_g:1990a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Anaphora and Dynamic Logic}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP--90--07}, year = {1990}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {anaphora;donkey-anaphora;dynamic-logic;dynamic-semantics;} } @techreport{ chierchia_g:1990b, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {The Variability of Impersonal Subjects}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP--90--06}, year = {1990}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Relation of adverbs of quantification to impersonal subjects.}, topic = {adverbs;impersonal-subjects;} } @article{ chierchia_g:1992a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Questions with Quantifiers}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1992--1993}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {181--234}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;nl-semantics;interrogatives;} } @article{ chierchia_g:1992b, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Anaphora and Dynamic Binding}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {111--183}, year = {1992}, topic = {anaphora;donkey-anaphora;dynamic-logic;dynamic-semantics;} } @article{ chierchia_g:1994a, author = {Gennarro Chierhia}, title = {Intensionality and Context Change}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1994}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {141--168}, topic = {hyperintensionality;dynamic-logic;} } @book{ chierchia_g:1995a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Dynamics of Meaning: Anaphora, Presupposition, and the Theory of Grammar}, publisher = {Chicago University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Chicago}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored Shelves.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Chierchia"}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;nl-semantics;donkey-anaphora;presupposition; anaphora;pragmatics;context;} } @incollection{ chierchia_g:1995b, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Individual-Level Predicates as Inherent Generics}, booktitle = {The Generic Book}, publisher = {Chicago University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Gregory Carlson and Francis Jeffry Pelletier}, pages = {176--223}, address = {Chicago, IL}, topic = {generics;i-level/s-level;} } @inproceedings{ chierchia_g:1997a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Partitives, Reference to Kinds and Semantic Variation}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1997}, editor = {Aaron Lawson}, pages = {73--98}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;partitive-constructions;Italian-language;} } @article{ chierchia_g:1998a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Reference to Kinds across Languages}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1998}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {339--405}, topic = {universal-grammar;semantics-of-common-nouns;} } @incollection{ chierchia_g:1998b, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Plurality of Mass Nouns and the Notion of `Semantic Parameter'}, booktitle = {Events and Grammar}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Susan D. Rothstein}, pages = {53--103}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {mass-term-semantics;events;} } @incollection{ chierchia_g:2004a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Scalar Implicatures, Polarity Phenomena and the Syntax/Pragmatics Interface}, booktitle = {Structures and Beyond: The Cartography of Syntactic Structures}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Adriana Belletti}, pages = {39--103}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {polarity-sensitivity;scalar-implicature;} } @article{ chierchia_g:2006a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Broaden Your Views: Implicatures of Domain Widening and the 'Logicality' of Language}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {2006}, volume = {37}, number = {4}, pages = {535--590}, doi = {}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja16}, abstract = {... presents a unified theory of polarity-sensitive items (PSIs) based on the notion of domain widening. ...}, topic = {polarity;domain-dynamics;implicature;} } @book{ chierchia_g:2013a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Logic in Grammar: Polarity, Free Choice, and Intervention}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2013}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199697977}, rtnote = {Chapter 1, "The Spontaneous Logicality of Language", is in RT Collection, \au13.}, topic = {scalar-implicature;polarity;free-choice-'any/or';presupposition; foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ chierchia_g:2013b, author = {Gennaro Chierchia}, title = {Free Choice Nominals and Free Choice Disjunction: the Identity Thesis}, booktitle = {Alternatives in Semantics}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amanira F\v{a}l\v{a}u\c{s}}, pages = {50--87}, address = {New York}, topic = {free-choice-'any/or';} } @book{ chierchia_g-etal:1988a, editor = {Gennaro Chierchia and Barbara Partee and Raymond Turner}, title = {Properties, Types and Meaning, Vols. 1 and 2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1988}, volume = {38 and 39}, series = {Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {This reference for both volumes.}, topic = {nl-semantics;polymorphism;nl-semantic-types;} } @book{ chierchia_g-etal:1988b, editor = {Gennaro Chierchia and Barbara Partee and Raymond Turner}, title = {Properties, Types and Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1988}, volume = {38}, series = {Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {This reference for volume 1. TC: Aczel, Algebraic Semantics. Thomason, Ramified. Turner, Two Issues in the Foundations. Asher and Kamp, Self-Reference. Bealer, Type-Free Intensionality. van Benthem, Semantic Type-Change }, topic = {nl-semantics;polymorphism;nl-semantic-types;} } @book{ chierchia_g-etal:1988c, editor = {Gennaro Chierchia and Barbara Partee and Raymond Turner}, title = {Properties, Types and Meaning, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1988}, volume = {39}, series = {Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {This reference for volume 2. TC: Groenendijk and Stokhof, Shifting Rules and the Semantics of Interrogatives. Dowty, On the Semantic Content of the Notion of `Thematic Role'. Chierchia, Structured Meanings, Thematic Roles and Control Carlson, On the Semantic Composition of English Generic Sentences. Schubert and Pelletier, Generically Speaking, or Using Discourse Representation Theory to Interpret Generics. Zeevat, Realism and Definiteness }, topic = {nl-semantics;polymorphism;nl-semantic-types;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ chierchia_g-etal:2008a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia and Danny Fox and Benjamin Spector}, title = {The Grammatical View of Scalar Implicatures and the Semantics Pragmatics Interface}, booktitle = {Handbook of Semantics}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2008}, editor = {Paul Portner and Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger}, missinginfo = {pages}, address = {Berlin}, urk = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/WMzY2ZmY/CFS_EmbeddedSIs.pdf}, topic = {scalar-implicature;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ chierchia_g-etal:2013a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia and Danny Fox and Benjamin Spector}, title = {The Grammatical View of Scalar Implicatures and the Relationshop between Semantics and Pragmatics}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 3}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {2297--2331}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {scalar-implicature;semantics-pragmatics;} } @book{ chierchia_g-mcconnellginet_s:1987a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia and Sally McConnell-Ginet}, title = {Meaning and Linguistic Structure}, publisher = {1987 Linguistic Institute}, year = {1987}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @book{ chierchia_g-mcconnellginet_s:1992a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia and Sally McConnell-Ginet}, title = {Meaning and Grammar: An Introduction to Semantics}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: perrault_cr::1993a, carlson:1991a.}, xref = {2nd edition: chierchia_g-mcconnellginet_s:2000a.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves. 2 copies}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File some chapters. Rnotes drawers, "Chiercha-McCG"}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @book{ chierchia_g-mcconnellginet_s:2000a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia and Sally McConnell-Ginet}, title = {Meaning and Grammar: An Introduction to Semantics}, edition = {2}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {1st edition: chierchia_g-mcconnellginet_s:1992a.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File some chapters. Rnotes drawers, "Chiercha-McCG"}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @article{ chierchia_g-turner_r:1988a, author = {Gennaro Chierchia and Raymond Turner}, title = {Semantics and Property Theory}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1988}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {261--302}, topic = {nl-semantics;property-theory;} } @article{ chihara_c:1968a, author = {Charles Chihara}, title = {Our Ontological Commitment to Universals}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1968}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {25--46}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;ontological-commitment;} } @article{ chihara_c:1975a, author = {Charles Chihara}, title = {Davidson's Extensional Theory of Meaning}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1975}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {1--15}, topic = {Davidson-semantics;} } @article{ chihara_c:1976a, author = {Charles Chihara}, title = {Truth, Meaning, and Paradox}, journal = {N\^ous}, year = {1976}, volume = {10}, number = {3}, pages = {305--312}, topic = {Davidson-semantics;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ chihara_cs:1963a, author = {Charles S. Chihara}, title = {Mathematical Discovery and Concept Formation}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1963}, volume = {72}, number = {1}, pages = {17--34}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;scientific-discovery;} } @article{ chihara_cs:1975a, author = {Charles S. Chihara}, title = {Davodson's Extensional Theory of Meaning}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1975}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {1--15}, topic = {Davidson-semantics;} } @article{ chihara_cs:1979a, author = {Charles S. Chihara}, title = {The Semantic Paradoxes: A Diagnostic Investigation}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1979}, volume = {88}, number = {4}, pages = {590--618}, xref = {Follow-up: chihara:1984a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ chihara_cs:1984a, author = {Charles S. Chihara}, title = {Priest, the Liar, and {G}\"odel}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1984}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {117--124}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;paraconsistency;goedels-first-theorem;} } @article{ chihara_cs:1984b, author = {Charles S. Chihara}, title = {A Simple Type Theory without Platonic Domains}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1984}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {249--283}, topic = {higher-order-logic;logic-and-ontology;philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ chihara_cs:1984c, author = {Charles S. Chihara}, title = {The Semantic Paradoxes: Some Second Thoughts}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1984}, volume = {45}, pages = {223--229}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Follow-up to: chihara:1979a.}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @incollection{ chihara_cs:1994a, author = {Charles S. Chihara}, title = {The {H}owson-{U}rbach Proofs of {B}ayesian Principles}, booktitle = {Probability and Conditionals: Belief Revision and Rational Decision}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1994}, pages = {161--178}, editor = {Ellery Eells and Brian Skyrms}, address = {Cambridge, England}, missinginfo = {Check topic.}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @book{ chihara_cs:1998a, author = {Charles S. Chihara}, title = {The Worlds of Possibility: Modal Realism and the Semantics of Modal Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library BC 199 .M6 C481 1998.}, xref = {Review: nolan_d:2004a.}, topic = {foundations-of-modal-logic;metaphysics;possible-worlds;} } @article{ chihara_cs-fodor_ja:1965a, author = {Charles Chihara and Jerry A. Fodor}, title = {Operationalism and Ordinary Language}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1965}, volume = {2}, number = {4}, pages = {281--295}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;Wittgenstein;} } @book{ child_w:1994a, author = {William Child}, title = {Causality, Interpretation, and the Mind}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198239785}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD 418.3 .C4551 1994.}, topic = {causality;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ child_w:2001a, author = {William Child}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}rticulating Reasons: An Introduction to Inferentialism}, by {R}obert {B}random}, journal = {Mind}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {439}, pages = {721--725}, xref = {Review of: brandom_rb:2000a}, topic = {inferentialism;} } @article{ childers-majer:2012a, author = {Timothy Childers and Ondrej Majer}, title = {Interpreting Probability}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, note = {Introduction to a special issue on interpreting probability.}, pages = {141--144}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @incollection{ chin_dn:1989a, author = {David N. Chin}, title = {{KNOME}: Modeling What the User Knows in {UC}}, booktitle = {User Models in Dialog Systems}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1989}, editor = {Alfred Kobsa and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {74--107}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {KNOME is a Unix consultant system.}, topic = {user-modeling;intelligent-tutoring;agent-stereotypes;} } @incollection{ chintanathina_s-etal:2007a, author = {Sandeep Chintanathina and Michael Gelfond and Richard Watson}, title = {Defeasible Laws, Parallel Actions, and Reasoning about Resources}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2007 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Logical Formalization of Commonsense Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2007}, editor = {Eyal Amir andVladimir Lifschitz and Rob Miller}, pages = {35--40}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {planning-formalisms;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ chipman_l:1971a, author = {Lauchan Chipman}, title = {Material and Illative Implication}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1971}, volume = {80}, number = {318}, pages = {179--193}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ chipman_l:1977a, author = {Lauchlan Chipman}, title = {Psychological Verbs as Relative Predicates}, journal = {International Logic Review}, year = {1977}, volume = {8}, pages = {205--216}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @book{ chipman_sef:2016a, editor = {Susan E.F. Chipman}, title = {The {O}xford Handbook of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Susan Chipman, "An Introduction to Cognitive Science", pp. 1--13 2. Dario D. Salucci, "ACT-R and Beyond", pp. 15--26 3. David E. Kieras, "A Summary of the EPIC Cognitive Architecture", pp. 27--48 4. Sashank Varma, "The CAPS Family of Cognitive Architectures", pp. 49--68 5. Stephen J. Flusberg and James L. McClelland, "Connectionism and the Emergence of Mind", pp. 69--90 6. Randall C. O'Reilly and Thomas E Hazy and Seth A. Herd, "The Leabra Cognitive Architecture: How to Play 20 Principles with Nature and Win!", pp. 91--116 7. Ron Sun, "The CLARION Cognitive Architecture: Toward a Cognitive Theory of the Mind", pp. 117--134 8. Bradley C. Love, "Concepts, Meaning and Conceptual Relationships", pp. 137--150 9. Hedderik van Rijn and Niels A. Taagen, "An Integrative Account of Psychological Time", pp. 151--168 10. Allison S. Liu and Christian D. Schunn, "The Central Questions of Spatial Cognition", pp. 169--190 11. Clayton Lewis, "Causal Relations: Kant, Unity, and Diversity", pp. 191--210 12. Matthew M. Walsh and Marsha C. Lewis, "The Cognitive Science Approach to Learning and Memory", pp. 211--230 13. Stephen K. Reed, "Problem Solving", pp. 231--248 14. Cleotilde Gonzalez, "Decision-Making, A Cognitive Science Perspective", pp. 249--264 15. Marcel Adam Just and Augusto Buchweitz, "What Brain Imaging Reveals about the Nature of Multitasking", pp. 265--280 16. Vyvian Evans, "Cognitive Linguistics", pp. 283--300 17. Christiane Fellbaum, "WordNet: An Electronic Lexical Resource", pp. 301--314 18. Martha Palmer and Claire Bonial and Hena D. Hwang, "VerbNet: Capturing {E}nglish Verb Behavior, Meanngm and Usage,", pp. 315--336 19. Sergei Nirenberg and Marjorie J. McShane, "Natural Language Processing", pp. 337--355 } , topic = {cogsci-general;} } @incollection{ chipman_sef:2016b, author = {Susan E.F. Chipman}, title = {An Introduction to Cognitive Science}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Susan E.F. Chipman}, pages = {1--13 }, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se19\chipman.pdf}, topic = {cogsci-general;} } @article{ chirimuuta:2014a, author = {Mazvita Chirimuuta}, title = {Psychophysical Methods and the Evasion of Introspection}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2014}, volume = {81}, number = {5}, pages = {914--926}, topic = {philosophy-of-psychology;} } @book{ chirsman:2015a, author = {Matthew Chirsman}, title = {The Meaning of `Ought': Beyond Descriptivism and Expressivism in Metaethics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199363001}, xref = {Review: dunaway_b:2017a}, abstract = {The word 'ought' is one of the core normative terms, but it is also a modal word. ... Chrisman develops a careful account of the semantics of 'ought' as a modal operator, and uses this to motivate a novel inferentialist account of why ought-sentences have the meaning that they have. This is a metanormative account that agrees with traditional descriptivist theories in metaethics that specifying the truth-conditions of normative sentences is a central part of the explanation of their meaning. But Chrisman argues that this leaves important metasemantic questions about what it is in virtue of which ought-sentences have the meanings that they have unanswered. His appeal to inferentialism aims to provide a viable anti-descriptivist but also anti-expressivist answer to these questions.}, topic = {'ought';deontic-modals;inferentialism;} } @article{ chisholm:1967a, author = {Brian Skyrms}, title = {The Explication of `X Knows that p{'}}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1967}, volume = {64}, number = {12}, pages = {373--379}, topic = {knowledge;belief;philosophical-analysis;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1946a1, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {The Contrary-to-Fact-Conditional}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1946}, volume = {55}, pages = {289--307}, number = {220}, xref = {Review: mckinsey_jcc:1947a.}, xref = {Republication: chisholm_rm:1946a2}, xref = {Commentary: will_fl:1947a}, topic = {conditionals;dispositionals;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1946a2, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {The Contrary-to-Fact-Conditional}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {481--497}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication with amendations of: chisholm_rm:1946a1}, topic = {conditionals;dispositionals;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1949a3, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {The Contrary-to-Fact Conditional}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {482--497}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: chisholm_rm:1946a1}, topic = {conditionals;dispositionals;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1950a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Review of `Hypotheticals', by {D}avid {P}ears}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1950}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {215--216}, xref = {Review of: pears_df:1977a.}, contentnote = {Chisholm seems to think Pears' paper is weak on content. He says Pears claims that counterfactuals entail falsity of their antecedents, points out that this has strange consequences.}, topic = {conditionals;subjunctive-mood;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1951a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Review of ``\,`Non-Accidental' and Counterfactual Sentences'', by {E}lizabeth {L}ane {B}eardsley}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1951}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, pages = {63--64}, xref = {Review of: beardsley:1949a.}, topic = {conditionals;(non)accidental-generalizations;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1952a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Intentionality and the Theory of Signs}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1952}, volume = {3}, number = {4}, pages = {56--63}, xref = {Review: baylis_ca:1962a}, topic = {Brentano;intentionality;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1952b, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Comments on the `Proposal Theory' of Philosophy}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1952}, volume = {49}, number = {9}, pages = {301--306}, xref = {Commentary on: ambrose:1952a}, topic = {philosophy-and-language;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1954a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {On the Uses of Intentional Words}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1954}, volume = {51}, number = {15}, pages = {436--441}, xref = {Review: baylis_ca:1962c}, xref = {Reply to: nochlin:1953}, topic = {intensionality;mind-body-problem;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1955a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Law Statements and Counterfactual Inference}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1955}, volume = {15}, number = {5}, pages = {97--105}, contentnote = {Law statements support counterfactuals. Can you account for the difference between law stmts and non law stmts without using using counterfactuals?}, xref = {Review: baylis_ca:1956a.}, topic = {causality;natural-laws;conditionals;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1955b, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {A Note on {C}arnap's Meaning Analysis}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1955}, volume = {6}, number = {6}, pages = {87--89}, xref = {Commentary on: carnap_r:1955a}, xref = {Reply: carnap_r:1955a}, conbtentnote = {Criticizes carnap_r:1955a}, topic = {Carnap;intensionality;synonymy;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1956a1, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Sentences about Believing}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1956}, volume = {56}, pages = {125--148}, xref = {Republication: chisholm_rm:1956a2}, topic = {Brentano;belief;intentionality;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1956a2, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Sentences about Believing}, booktitle = {Minnesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 2}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1958}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Michael Scriven and Gorver Maxwell}, pages = {510--219}, address = {Minneapolis}, xref = {Republication of: chisholm_rm:1956a1}, topic = {Brentano;belief;intentionality;} } @book{ chisholm_rm:1957a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Perceiving: A Philosophical Study}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1957}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {perception;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1961a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {What Is It to Act upon a Proposition?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1961}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {1--6}, contentnote = {Chisholm thinks you can act on false propositions; acting on a proposition is acting as if the proposition were true. The point seems to be that one acts on contingencies. This paper raises a genuine issue, without clarifying it much.}, xref = {Commentary: george_ra:1963a}, topic = {motivation;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1963a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Contrary-to-Duty Imperatives and Deontic Logic}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1963}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {33--36}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja12}, xref = {Commentary: fisher_m2:1964a}, topic = {deontic-logic;reparational-obligations;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1963b, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Supererogation and Offence: A Conceptual Scheme for Ethics}, journal = {Ratio}, volume = {5}, year = {1963}, pages = {1--14}, topic = {ethics;supererogation;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1963c, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {The Logic of Knowing}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1963}, volume = {60}, number = {25}, pages = {773--795}, xref = {Review of: hintikka_j:1962a}, topic = {epistemic-logic;belief;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1964a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {The Ethics of Requirement}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, volume = {1}, year = {1964}, pages = {147--153}, contentnote = {Takes "p requires q" as a primitive. This is really an essay on prima facie obligation with some remarks on defeasibility and on problems and puzzles relating to deontic logic.} , topic = {ethics;deontic-logic;obligation;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1964b1, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {{J}.{L}. {A}ustin's Philosophical Papers}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1964}, volume = {75}, pages = {1--26}, xref = {Reprinted in fann:1969a; see chisholm_rm:1964a2}, topic = {JL-Austin;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1964b2, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Austin's Philosophical Papers}, booktitle = {Symposium on J.L. Austin}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1969}, editor = {Kuang T. Fann}, pages = {101--126}, address = {London}, xref = {Reprinted; see chisholm_rm:1964a1}, topic = {JL-Austin;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1964c, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Believing and Intentionality: A Reply to Mr.~Luce and Mr.~Sleigh}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1964}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {266--269}, topic = {belief;intentionality;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1965a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Leibniz' Law in Belief-Contexts}, booktitle = {Contributions to Logic and Methodology in Honor of {J}.{M}. {B}ochenski}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1965}, editor = {Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka}, pages = {243--250}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {referential-opacity;} } @book{ chisholm_rm:1966a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Theory of Knowledge}, edition = {1}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1966}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {epistemology;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1966b, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Comments on von {W}right's `{T}he Logic of Action'}, booktitle = {The Logic of Decision and Action}, publisher = {University of Pittsburgh Press}, year = {1967}, editor = {Nicholas Rescher}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania}, pages = {137--139}, xref = {Comments on: vonwright_gh:1966a}, topic = {action;temporal-logic;action-formalisms;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1967b, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {He Could Have Done Otherwise}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1967}, volume = {64}, pages = {409--417}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {JL-Austin;conditionals;ability;counterfactual-past;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1969a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Some Puzzles about Agency}, booktitle = {The Logical Way of Doing Things}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, year = {1969}, editor = {Karel Lambert}, pages = {199--217}, address = {New Haven, Connecticut}, topic = {determinism;ability;agency;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1970a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {The Structure of Intention}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1970}, volume = {67}, number = {1970}, pages = {633--647}, topic = {intention;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1970b, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Events and Propositions}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1970}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {15--24}, topic = {events;propositions;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1974a1, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Practical Reason and the Logic of Requirement}, booktitle = {Practical Reason}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, year = {1974}, editor = {Stefan K\"orner}, pages = {1--16}, address = {New Haven}, xref = {Republication: chisholm_rm:1974a2}, topic = {deontic-logic;obligation;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1974a2, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Practical Reason and the Logic of Requirement}, booktitle = {Practical Reasoning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Joseph Raz}, pages = {118--127}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: chisholm_rm:1974a1}, topic = {deontic-logic;obligation;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @book{ chisholm_rm:1977a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Theory of Knowledge, Second Edition}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1977}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {epistemology;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1979a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {On the Logic of Purpose}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {V}: Studies in Metaphysics}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {223--237}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {intention;} } @incollection{ chisholm_rm:1979b, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {Identity through Possible Worlds}, booktitle = {The Possible and the Actual: Readings in the Metaphysics of Modality}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Michael J. Loux}, pages = {89--87}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {metaphysics;essentialism;modality; philosophy-of-possible-worlds;} } @article{ chisholm_rm:1980a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm}, title = {The Logic of Believing}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1980}, volume = {61}, number = {1--2}, pages = {31--49}, topic = {belief;self-locating-constructions;} } @article{ chisholm_rm-keim:1972a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm and Robert G. Keim}, title = {A System of Epistemic Logic}, journal = {Ratio}, year = {1972}, volume = {14}, number = {2}, pages = {99--115}, topic = {epistemic-logic;preferences;} } @article{ chisholm_rm-taylor_r:1960a, author = {Roderick M. Chisholm and Richard Taylor}, title = {Making Things to Have Happened}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1960}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, pages = {73--78}, xref = {Commentary: dray_wh:1960a}, topic = {temporal-direction;causality;} } @article{ chittaro-ranon:2004a, author = {Luca Chittaro and Roberto Ranon}, title = {Hierarchical Model-Based Diagnosis Based on Structural Realization}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {155}, number = {1--2}, pages = {147--182}, topic = {model-based-reasoning;diagnosis;abstraction;} } @article{ choi_kmf-etal:2000a, author = {Kenneth M. F. Choi and Jimmy H. M. Lee and Peter J. Stuckey}, title = {A Lagrangian Reconstruction of {GENET}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {123}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--39}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;search;} } @incollection{ choi_s:2006a, author = {Soona Choi}, title = {Acquisition of Modality}, booktitle = {The Expression of Modality}, publisher = {Mouton-de Gruyter}, year = {2006}, editor = {William Frawley}, pages = {141--172}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-modality;developmental-psycholoogy;L1-acquisition;} } @article{ choi_sh:2002a, author = {Sungho Choi}, title = {Causation and Gerrymandered World Lines: A Critique of {S}almon}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2002}, volume = {69}, number = {1}, pages = {105--117}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ choi_sh:2008a, author = {Sungho Choi}, title = {Dispositional Properties and Counterfactual Conditionals}, journal = {Mind}, year = {2008}, volume = {117}, number = {468}, pages = {795--841}, topic = {dispositions;conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ choi_sk-etal:1998a, author = {Sung-Kwon Choi and Han-Min Jung and Chul-Min Sim and Taewan Kim and Dong-In Park and Jun-Sik Park and Key-Sun Choi}, title = {Hybrid Approaches to Improvement of Translation Quality in Web-based {E}nglish-{K}orean Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {251--255}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {machine-translation;} } @article{ choi_ss-etal:2008a, author = {Sung-Soon Choi and Kyomin Jung and Jeong Han Kim}, title = {Phase Transition in a Random {NK} Landscape Model}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {2--3}, pages = {179--203}, topic = {computational-phase-transitions;} } @article{ choi_ss-kim_jh:2010a, author = {Sung-Soon Choi and Jeong Han Kim}, title = {Optimal Query Complexity Bounds for Finding Graphs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {9--10}, pages = {551--569}, topic = {reasoning-about-graphs;} } @incollection{ cholewinski-etal:1996a, author = {Pawe{\l} Cholewi\'nski and Victor W. Marek and Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski}, title = {Default Reasoning System {DeReS}}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {518--528}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-reasoning;default-logic;theorem-proving; kr-course;} } @article{ cholewinski-etal:1999a, author = {Pawe{\l} Cholewi\'nski and Artur Mikitiuk and Wictor Marek and Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski}, title = {Computing with Default Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {112}, pages = {105--146}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-reasoning;default-logic;theorem-proving; kr-course;nonmonotonic-reasoning-algorithms;} } @incollection{ chollet-etal:1997a, author = {Gerard Chollet and Jean-Luc Cochard and Andrei Constantinescu and Cedric Jaroulet and Philippe Langlais}, title = {Swiss {F}rench {P}oly{P}hone and {P}oly{V}ar: Telephone Speech Databases to Model Inter- and Intra-Speaker Variability}, booktitle = {Linguistic Databases}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1997}, editor = {John Nerbonne}, pages = {117--135}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;speech-recognition;} } @incollection{ cholvy:1998a, author = {Laurence Cholvy}, title = {Reasoning about Merged Information}, booktitle = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems, Volume 3: Belief Change}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, pages = {233--263}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {paraconsistency;knowledge-integration;} } @incollection{ cholvy-cuppens:1999a, author = {Laurence Cholvy and Fr\'ed\'eric Cuppens}, title = {Reasoning about Norms Provided by Conflicting Regulations}, booktitle = {Norms, Logics and Information Systems. New Studies in Deontic Logic and Computer Science}, publisher = {IOS Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul McNamara and Henry Prakken}, pages = {247--264}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {deontic-logic;rules-and-regulations;} } @incollection{ chomicki_j-etal:2000a, author = {Jan Chomicki and Jorge Lobo and Shamim A. Naqvi}, title = {A Logic Programming Approach to Conflict Resolution in Policy Management}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {121--132}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {In this paper we use a declarative policy description language PDL, in which policies are formulated as sets of ECA rules. The main contribution of the paper is a framework for detecting action conflicts and finding resolutions to these conflicts. Conflicts are captured as violations of action constraints. The semantics of rules, and conflict detection and resolution are defined axiomatically using logic programs. Given a policy and a set of action constraints the framework defines a monitor that filters the output of the policy to satisfy the constraints. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {conflict-resolution;conflict;plan-monitoring;logic-programming;} } @article{ chomsky_n:1955a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Logical Syntax and Semantics: Their Linguistic Relevance}, journal = {Language}, year = {1955}, volume = {31}, number = {1}, pages = {36--45}, xref = {Commentary on: barhillel_y:1954a}, topic = {carnap;natural-language/formal-language; foundations-of-linguistics;logic-and-linguistics;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1957a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Syntactic Structures}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1957}, address = {The Hague}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-syntax;} } @article{ chomsky_n:1957b, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Review of `{O}ntology and the Choice of Languages', by {L}ouis O. {K}atsoff}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1957}, volume = {22}, number = {4}, pages = {394--395}, xref = {Review of: katsoff_lo:1953a}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;logic-of-existencd;} } @article{ chomsky_n:1958a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {On Certain Formal Properties of Grammars}, journal = {Information and Control}, year = {1958}, volume = {2}, issue = {2}, pages = {137--167}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Chomsky2.pdf}, topic = {formal-language-theory;} } @article{ chomsky_n:1958b, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {A Review of {B}.{F}. {S}kinner's \emph{{V}erbal Behavior}}, journal = {Language}, year = {1958}, volume = {35}, number = {1}, pages = {26--58}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \rt\courses\phil196\2012\ctools\resource\chomsky.pdf}, rtnote = {Rtrnote: Reading notes on file. Rnotes, "Chomsky".}, xref = {Review of: skinner_bf:1957a}, xref = {Commentary: maccorquodale:1970a}, topic = {foundations-of-linguistics;foundations-of-cogsci;behaviorism;} } @article{ chomsky_n:1961a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Some Methodological Remarks on Generative Grammar}, journal = {Word}, year = {1961}, volume = {17}, number = {2}, pages = {219--239}, topic = {transformational-grammar;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1962a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Explanatory Models in Linguistics}, booktitle = {Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science: Proceedings of the 1960 International Congress}, publisher = {Stanford University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Ernest Nagel and Patrick Suppes and Alfred Tarski}, pages = {538--550}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {foundations-of-linguistics;transformational-grammar; phonology;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1962b, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Current Issues in Linguistic Theory}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1962}, address = {The Hague}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1963a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Degrees of Grammmaticalness}, booktitle = {The Structure of Language: Readings in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1964}, editor = {J.A. Fodor and Jerrold J. Katz}, pages = {384--389}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {foundations-of-syntax;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1965a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Aspects of the Theory of Syntax}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1965}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-syntax;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1966a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Cartesian Linguistics}, publisher = {Harper and Row}, year = {1966}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {foundations-of-linguistics;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1968a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Language and Mind}, publisher = {Harcourt, Brace and World}, year = {1968}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;foundations-of-syntax;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1969a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Quine's Empirical Assumptions}, booktitle = {Words and Objections: Essays on the Work of {W.V.O.} {Q}uine}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1969}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Jaakko Hintikka}, pages = {53--68}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Chomsky"}, topic = {indeterminacy-of-translation;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1970a1, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Remarks on Nominalization}, booktitle = {Readings in Transformational Grammar}, publisher = {Ginn and Co.}, year = {1970}, editor = {R. Jacobs and P. Rosenbaum}, pages = {184--221}, address = {Boston}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, xref = {Republication: chomsky_n:1970a2.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;nominalization;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1970a2, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Remarks on Nominalization}, booktitle = {The Logic of Grammar}, publisher = {Dickenson Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {262--289}, address = {Encino, California}, xref = {Original Publication: chomsky_n:1970a1.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;nominalization;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1971a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Deep Structure, Surface Structure, and Semantic Interpretation}, booktitle = {Semantics: An Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1971}, editor = {Danny D. Steinberg and Leon A. Jacobovits}, pages = {183--216}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1972a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Some Empirical Issues in the Theory of Transformational Grammar}, booktitle = {Goals of Linguistic Theory}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall, Inc.}, year = {1972}, editor = {Stanley Peters}, pages = {63--127}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {transformational-grammar;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1973a1, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Conditions on Transformations}, booktitle = {A {F}estschrift for {M}orris {H}alle}, publisher = {Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc.}, year = {1973}, editor = {Stephen R. Anderson and Paul Kiparsky}, pages = {232--286}, address = {New York}, topic = {nl-syntax;extended-std-theory;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1973a2, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Conditions on Transformations}, booktitle = {Essays on Form and Interpretation}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1977}, editor = {Noam Chomsky}, pages = {78--160}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Republication of: chomsky_n:1973a1.}, topic = {nl-syntax;extended-std-theory;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1975a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Knowledge of Language}, booktitle = {Language, Mind, and Knowledge. {M}innesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 7}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Keith Gunderson}, pages = {299--320}, address = {Minneapolis, Minnesota}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Chapter 2: \se18}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Chomsky"}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ chomsky_n:1975b1, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Questions of Form and Interpretation}, journal = {Linguistic Analysis}, year = {1975}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {75--109}, xref = {Republication: chomsky_n:1975b2.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1975b2, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Questions of Form and Interpretation}, booktitle = {Essays on Form and Interpretation}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1977}, editor = {Noam Chomsky}, pages = {25--59}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Republication of: chomsky_n:1975b1.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1975c, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Reflections on Language}, publisher = {Pantheon Books}, year = {1975}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1975d, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {The Logical Structure of Linguistic Theory}, publisher = {Plenum Press}, year = {1975}, address = {New York}, note = {Written and privately distributed, 1955.}, topic = {nl-syntax;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1976a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Problems and Mysteries in the Study of Human Language}, booktitle = {Language in Focus}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Asa Kasher}, pages = {281--357}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ chomsky_n:1976b1, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Conditions on Rules of Grammar}, journal = {Linguistic Analysis}, year = {1976}, volume = {2}, number = {4}, missinginfo = {pages}, xref = {Republication: chomsky_n:1976b2.}, topic = {nl-syntax;extended-std-theory;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1976b2, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Conditions on Rules of Grammar}, booktitle = {Essays on Form and Interpretation}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1977}, editor = {Noam Chomsky}, pages = {163--210}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Republication of: chomsky_n:1976b1.}, topic = {nl-syntax;extended-std-theory;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1977a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Essays on Form and Interpretation}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1977}, address = {Amsterdam}, contentnote = {TC: 1. "Introduction", pp. 1--21 2. "Questions of Form and Interpretation", pp. 25--59 3. "On the Nature of Language", pp. 63--77 4. "Conditions on Transformations", pp. 78--160 5. "Conditions on Rules of Grammar", pp. 163--210 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-semantics;extended-std-theory;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:1977b, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Essays on Form and Interpretation}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1977}, editor = {Noam Chomsky}, pages = {1--21}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {nl-syntax;extended-std-theory;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1979a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Language and Responsibility}, publisher = {Pantheon Books}, year = {1979}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1980a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Rules and Representations}, publisher = {Columbia University Press}, year = {1980}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, ISBN = {0-231-04826-2}, xref = {Critical discusion: sober_e:1980a}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-language;philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1981a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Lectures on Government and Binding}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1981}, address = {Foris Publications}, xref = {3rd edition, chomsky_n:1984a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-syntax;GB-syntax;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1982a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Some Concepts and Consequences of the Theory of Government and Binding}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1982}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {government-binding-theory;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1984a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, edition = {3}, title = {Lectures on Government and Binding}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1981}, address = {Foris Publications}, xref = {1st edition, chomsky_n:1981a.}, topic = {nl-syntax;GB-syntax;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1986a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Barriers}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1986}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-syntax;GB-syntax;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1986b, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Knowledge of Language: Its Nature, Origin, and Use}, publisher = {Praeger}, year = {1986}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0030055539 (hardcover), 0030055520 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate P106 .C5181 1986}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1987a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Language and Problems of Knowledge}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {foundations-of-language;foundations-of-cogsci; philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @article{ chomsky_n:1992a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Explaining Language Use}, journal = {Philosophical Topics}, year = {1992}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {205--231}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;pragmatics;} } @book{ chomsky_n:1995a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {The Minimalist Program}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-semantics;minimalist-syntax;} } @article{ chomsky_n:1995b, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Language and Nature}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1995}, volume = {104}, number = {413}, pages = {1--61}, contentnote = {A critique of naturalist theories.}, topic = {linguistic-naturalism;philosophy-of-language; philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @book{ chomsky_n:2000a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {New Horizons in the Study of Language and Mind}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: harman_gh:2000a.}, ISBN = {0-521-65822-5}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;philosophy-of-mind; philosophy-of-language;internalism/externalism;} } @article{ chomsky_n:2007a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}ind as Machine: A History of Cognitive Science}, by {M}argaret {B}oden}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {18}, pages = {1094--1103}, xref = {Review of: boden_ma:2006a}, topic = {cognitive-science;} } @article{ chomsky_n:2009a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {The Mysteries of Nature: How Deeply Hidden?}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2009}, volume = {106}, number = {4}, pages = {167--200}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;mind-body-problem;} } @incollection{ chomsky_n:2009b, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {Turing on the {`}Imitation Game{'}}, booktitle = {Parsing the {T}uring Test: Philosophical and Methodological Issues in the Quest for the Thinking Computer}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert Epstein and Gary Roberts and Grace Beber}, pages = {103--106}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se12\chomsky.pdf}, topic = {Turing;Turing-test;Descartes;} } @article{ chomsky_n:2013a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {What is Language?}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {110}, number = {12}, pages = {645--662}, topic = {foundations-of-linguistics;} } @article{ chomsky_n:2013b, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {What Can We Understand?}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {110}, number = {12}, pages = {663--684}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ chomsky_n:2013c, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {What is the Common Good?}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {110}, number = {12}, pages = {685--700}, topic = {political-philosophy;} } @book{ chomsky_n:2016a, author = {Noam Chomsky}, title = {What Kind of Creatures Are We?}, publisher = {Columbia University Press}, year = {2016}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {9780231540926}, xref = {Review: burge_t:2017a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;philosophy-of-science;} } @book{ chomsky_n-halle:1968a, author = {Noam Chomsky and Morris Halle}, title = {The Sound Pattern of {E}nglish}, publisher = {Harper and Row}, year = {1968}, address = {New York}, topic = {phonology;} } @article{ chomsky_n-miller_ga:1958a, author = {Noam Chomsky and George A. Miller}, title = {Finite State Languages}, journal = {Information and Control}, year = {1958}, volume = {1}, pages = {91--112}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Chomsky1.pdf}, topic = {formal-language-theory;} } @article{ chong_ct-yu_l:2015a, author = {C.T. Chong and Liang Yu}, title = {Randomness in a Higher-Order Setting}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {80}, number = {4}, pages = {1131--1148}, topic = {randomness;} } @book{ chopra_a-etal:2018a, editor = {Amit Chopra and Leon van der Torre and Harko Verhagen and Serena Villata}, title = {Handbook of Normative Multiagent Systems}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2018}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\chopra.pdf}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Harko Verhagen and Martin Neumann and Munindar P. Singh, "Normative Multi-Agent Systems: Foundations and History", pp. 3--27 2. Natasha Alechina and Mehdi Dastani and Brian Logan, "Norm Specification and Verification in Multi-Agent Systems", pp. 29-55 3. Viviane T. Silva and Wamberto W. Vasconcelos and Jessica S. Santos and Jean O. Zahn and Mairon Belchior, "Modeling Normative Conflicts in Multi-Agent Systems", pp. 57--71 4. Christopher K. Frantz and Gabriella Pigozzi, "Modeling Norm Dynamics in Multi-Agent Systems", pp. 73-141 5. Nicoletta Fornara and Tina Balke-Visser, "Modeling Organizations and Institutions in MAS", pp. 143--169 6. Rob Christiaanse, "Modeling Norms Embedded in Society: Ethics and Sensitive Design", pp. 171--205 7. Matteo Baldoni and Cristina Baroglio and Amit K. Chopra and Akin G\"unay, "Interaction Protocols", pp. 209--224 8. Matteo Baldoni and Cristina Baroglio and Olivier Boissier and Jomi F. Hubner and Roberto Micalizio, "Norm-Aware and Norm-Oriented Programming", pp. 247--301 9. Gabriella Pigozzi and Leendert van der Torre, "Multi-Agent Deontic Logic and its Challenges from a Normative Systems Perspective", pp. 247--301 10. Xavier Parent and Leendert van der Torre, "Detachment in Normative Systems: Examples, Inference Patterns, Properties", pp. 303--342 11. Celia da Costa Pereira and Beishui Liao and Alessandra Malerba and Antonino Rotolo and Andrea G. B. Tettamanzi and Leendert van der Torre and Serena Villata, "Handling Norms in Multi-Agent Systems by Means of Formal Argumentation", pp.343--370 12. Emiliano Lorini, "Logics for Games, Emotions and Institutions", pp. 371--407 }, topic = {multiagent-systems;deontic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ chopra_a-singh_mp:2004a, author = {Amit Chopra and Munindar P. Singh}, title = {Nonmonotonic Commitment Machines}, booktitle = {{ACL} 2003: Advances in Agent Communication}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2004}, editor = {Frank Dignum}, pages = {183--200}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {... We propose a commitment-based formalism called Nonmonotonic Commitment Machines (NCMs) for representing multiagent interaction protocols. In this approach, we give semantics to states and actions in a protocol in terms of commitments. Protocols represented as NCMs afford the agent flexibility in interactions with other agents. In particular, situations in protocols when nonmonotonic reasoning is required can be efficiently represented in NCMs.}, topic = {agent-communication;applied-nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ chopra_s-etal:2003a, author = {Samir Chopra and Aditya Ghose and Thomas Meyer}, title = {Non-Prioritized Ranked Belief Change}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2003}, volume = {32}, number = {3}, pages = {417--443}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ chopra_s-etal:2004a, author = {Samir Chopra and Eric Pacuit and Rohit Parikh}, title = {Knowledge-Theoretic Properties of Strategic Voting}, booktitle = {Proceedings of Logics in Artificial Intelligence: 9th {E}uropean Conference (JELIA)}, year = {2004}, editor = {J\'ose Alferes and Jo\~ao Leite}, pages = {18--30}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {\ldots\ We present some properties of strategic voting and then examine -- via a bimodal logic utilizing epistemic and strategizing modalities -- the knowledge-theoretic properties of voting situations and note that unless the voter knows that it should vote strategically, and how, i.e., knows what the other voters' preferences are and which alternate preference P' it should use, the voter will not strategize. Our results suggest that opinion polls in election situations effectively serve as the first n-1 stages in an n stage election.}, topic = {strategic-voting;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ chopra_s-etal:2008a, author = {Samir Chopra and Aditya Ghose and Thomas Meyer and Ka-Shu Wong}, title = {Iterated Belief Change and the Recovery Axiom}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {37}, number = {5}, pages = {501--520}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ chopra_s-martin_e2:2002a, author = {Samir Chopra and Eric Martin}, title = {Generalized Logical Consequence: Making Room for Induction in the Logic of Science}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {31}, number = {3}, pages = {245--280}, topic = {logical-consequence;} } @article{ chotnowsk:1951a, author = {Mieczyslaw Chotnowsk}, title = {Review of `{E}mpiricism, Semantics, and Ontology', by {Rudolph {C}arnap}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1951}, volume = {16}, number = {4}, pages = {292--298}, xref = {Review of: carnap_r:1950b.}, topic = {logical-positivism;philosophical-ontology; foundations-of-semantics;metaphilosophy;} } @incollection{ chou_tsc-winslett:1991a, author = {Timothy S-C Chou and Marriane Winslett}, title = {Immortal: A Model-Based Belief Revision System}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {99--110}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;model-based-reasoning;belief-revision;kr-course;} } @article{ choueiry-etal:2005a, author = {Berthe Y. Choueiry and Yumi Iwasaki and Sheila A. McIlraith}, title = {Towards a Practical Theory of Reformulation for Reasoning about Physical Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {162}, number = {1--2}, pages = {145--204}, topic = {problem-reformulation;reasoning-about-physical-systems; approximation;} } @incollection{ chouraqui:1984a, author = {Eugene Chouraqui}, title = {Computational Models of Reasoning}, booktitle = {The Mind and the Machine: Philosophical Aspects of Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood, Ltd.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Steve B. Torrance}, pages = {145--155}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {AI-general;problem-solving;} } @article{ chovil:1991a, author = {Nicole Chovil}, title = {Discourse-Oriented Facial Displays in Conversation}, journal = {Research on Language and Social Interaction}, volume = {25}, pages = {163--194}, year = {1991}, topic = {gestures;discourse;pragmatics;facial-expression;} } @article{ chovil:1991b, author = {Nicole Chovil}, title = {Social Determinants of Facial Displays}, journal = {Journal of Nonverbal Behavior}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {141--154}, year = {1991}, topic = {gestures;discourse;facial-expression;} } @article{ chovil-fridlund:1991a, author = {Nicole Chovil and Alan J. Fridlund}, title = {Why Emotionality Cannot Equal Sociality: Reply to {Buck}}, journal = {Journal of Nonverbal Behavior}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {163--167}, year = {1991}, xref = {Reply to buck_r:1991a.}, topic = {gestures;discourse;} } @article{ chow_tws-li_jy:1997a, author = {Tommy W.S. Chow and Jin-Yan Li}, title = {Higher-Order {P}etri Net Models Based on Artificial Neural Networks}, Journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {92}, number = {1--2}, pages = {289--300}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In this paper, the properties of higher-order neural networks are exploited in a new class of Petri nets, called higher-order Petri nets (HOPN). Using the similarities between neural networks and Petri nets this paper demonstrates how the McCullock-Pitts models and the higher-order neural networks can be represented by Petri nets. A 5-tuple HOPN is defined, a theorem on the relationship between the potential firability of the goal transition and the T-invariant (HOPN) is proved and discussed. The proposed HOPN can be applied to the polynomial clause subset of first-order predicate logic. A five-clause polynomial logic program example is also included to illustrate the theoretical results.}, topic = {connectionist-models;Petri-nets;} } @article{ chrisley:1994a, author = {Ronald L. Chrisley}, title = {Why Everything Doesn't Realize Every Computation}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {403--420}, abstract = {$\ldots$ Putnam has argued that every ordinary open physical system realizes every abstract finite automaton, $\ldots$ Putnam's argument is scrutinized, and found inadequate because, among other things, it employs a notion of causation that is too weak. }, topic = {physical-realizations-of-computation;philosophy-of-computation;} } @incollection{ chrisley:1995a, author = {Ronald L. Chrisley}, title = {Taking Embodiment Seriously: Nonconceptual Content and Robotics}, booktitle = {Android Epistemology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Kenneth M. Ford and Clark Glymour and Patrick J. Hayes}, pages = {141--166}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {philosophy-AI;embodiment;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ chrisley:2000a, author = {Ron Chrisley}, title = {Philosophical Foundations of Artificial Consciousness}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence in Medicine}, year = {2000}, volume = {44}, number = {1}, pages = {119--137}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se12\chrisley.pdf}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;} } @article{ chrisley:2003a, author = {Ron Chrisley}, title = {Embodied Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {149}, number = {1}, pages = {131--150}, topic = {embodiment;foundations-of-cognition;} } @incollection{ chrisley_r:2005a, author = {Ron Chrisley}, title = {Next Generation Approaches to Machine Consciousness}, booktitle = {{AISB}'05: Social Intelligence and Interaction in Animals, Robots and Agents: Proceedings of the Symposium on Next Generation Approaches to Machine Consciousness Imagination, Development, Intersubjectivity and Embodiment}, publisher = {The Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and the Simulation of Behaviour}, year = {2005}, editor = {Ron Chrisley and Rob Clowes and Steve Torrance}, pages = {1--11}, address = {Bath, England}, abstract = {... Synthesizing results from embodied AI, phenomenology and hermeneutics in Philosophy, Neuroscience and enactive Psychology (among others), new paradigms for research into natural consciousness that transcend the limited behavioural/cognitive or neural/functional oppositions are being proposed and tested, with encouraging results. This paper gives an overview of some work that attempts to entwine these two strands to see how they might be of mutual benefit to each other.}, topic = {machine-consciousness;emotional-intelligence;} } @book{ chrisley_r-etal:2005a, editor = {Ron Chrisley and Rob Clowes and Steve Torrance}, title = {{AISB}'05: Social Intelligence and Interaction in Animals, Robots and Agents: Proceedings of the Symposium on Next Generation Approaches to Machine Consciousness Imagination, Development, Intersubjectivity and Embodiment}, publisher = {The Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and the Simulation of Behaviour}, year = {2005}, address = {Bath, England}, url = {https://aisb.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/7_MachConsc_Final.pdf}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Ron Chrisley, Rob Clowes and Steve Torrance, "Next Generation Approaches to Machine Consciousness", pp. 1--11 2. Susan Stuart, "The Binding Problem: Induction, Integration and Imagination", pp. 12--18 3. Pentti O. A. Haikonen, "You Only Live Twice: Imagination in Conscious Machines", pp. 19--25 4. Murray Shanahan, "Consciousness, Emotion, and Imagination: A Brain-Inspired Architecture for Cognitive Robotics", pp. 26--35 5. Takashi Ikegami, "Chaotic Itinerancy, Active Perception and Mental Imagery", pp. 36--39 6. Antonio Chella and Marcello Frixione and Salvatore Gaglio, "Planning by Imagination in {C}icerobot, A Robot for Museum Tours", pp. 40--49 7. Jon Stening and Henrik Jacobsson and Tom Ziemke, "Imagination and Abstraction of Sensorimotor Flow: Towards a Robot Model", pp. 50--58 8. Steve Torrance, "Thin Phenomenality and Machine Consciousness", pp. 59--66 9. Tatsuya Nomura and Koichi Takaishi and Tatsunori Hashido, "Considerations of Machine Consciousness in the Context of Mental Therapy from Psychological and Sociological Perspectives", pp. 67--74 10. David J Calverley, "Toward A Method for Determining the Legal Status of a Conscious Machine", pp. 75--84 11. David Gamez, "An Ordinal Probability Scale for Synthetic Phenomenology", pp. 85--94 12. Tibor Bosse and Catholijn M. Jonker and Jan Treur, "Simulation and Representation of Body, Emotion and Core Consciousness", pp. 95--103 13. Hiroyuki Iizuka and Takashi Ikegami, "Emergence of Body Image and the Dichotomy of Sensory and Motor Activity", pp. 104--109 14. Igor Aleksander and Mercedes Lahnstein and Rabinder Lee, "Will and Emotions: A Machine Model that Shuns Illusions", pp. 110--116 } , topic = {machine-consciousness;emotional-intelligence;} } @article{ chrisman_m:2008a, author = {Matthew Chrisman}, title = {Ought to Believe}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {105}, number = {7}, pages = {346--370}, topic = {belief;obligation;} } @article{ chrisman_m:2012a, author = {Matthew Chrisman}, title = {{`}Ought' and Control}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2012}, volume = {90}, number = {3}, pages = {433--451}, abstract = {... I ... motivate some more general reflections on how the standard treatment of `ought' by theoretical semanticists might be refined in the light of the distinction important to ethical theory between agential and non-agential ought-statements, but also on how ethical theory might benefit from more careful study of the dominant treatment of modals as operators in theoretical semantics.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20\Chrisman2.pdf}, topic = {`ought';agency;} } @incollection{ chrisman_m:2012b, author = {Matthew Chrisman}, title = {On the Meaning of `Ought{'}}, booktitle = {Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Volume 7}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Russ Shafer-Landau}, pages = {305--322}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20\Chrisman1.pdf}, topic = {`ought';nl-modality;} } @book{ chrisman_m:2015a, author = {Matthew Chrisman}, title = {The Meaning of `Ought{'}}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-936300-1}, abstract = {... In this book Matthew Chrisman develops a careful account of the semantics of 'ought' as a modal operator, and uses this to motivate a novel inferentialist account of why ought-sentences have the meaning that they have. This is a metanormative account that agrees with traditional descriptivist theories in metaethics that specifying the truth-conditions of normative sentences is a central part of the explanation of their meaning. But Chrisman argues that this leaves important metasemantic questions about what it is in virtue of which ought-sentences have the meanings that they have unanswered. His appeal to inferentialism aims to provide a viable anti-descriptivist but also anti-expressivist answer to these questions. }, topic = {'ought';inferentialism;} } @incollection{ chrisman_m:2016a, author = {Matthew Chrisman}, title = {Metanormative Theory and the Meaning of Deontic Modals}, booktitle = {Deontic Modality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Nate Charlow and Matthew Chrisman}, pages = {395--430}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {'ought';modality;deontic-modals;metaethics;} } @article{ chrisman_m:2018a, author = {Matthew Chrisman}, title = {Epistemic Normativity and Cognitive Agency}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {52}, number = {3}, pages = {508--529}, topic = {belief-maintenance;normativity;} } @inproceedings{ chrisman_m-simmons_r2:1991a, author= {Lonnie Chrisman and Reid G. Simmons}, title= {Sensible Planning: Focusing Perceptual Attention}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {Thomas Dean and Kathy McKeown}, pages = {756--761}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {planning;attention;} } @incollection{ christ:1997a, author = {Oliver Christ}, title = {Linking {W}ord{N}et to a Corpus Query System}, booktitle = {Linguistic Databases}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1997}, editor = {John Nerbonne}, pages = {189--202}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {wordnet;information-retrieval;} } @article{ christensen_d:1997a, author = {David Christensen}, title = {What is Relative Confirmation?}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1997}, volume = {31}, number = {3}, pages = {370--384}, topic = {confirmation-theory;} } @article{ christensen_d:1999a, Author = {David Christensen}, title = {Measuring Confirmation}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {96}, number = {9}, pages = {437--461}, topic = {confirmation-theory;} } @book{ christensen_d:2004a, author = {David Christensen}, title = {Putting Logic in Its Place}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: douven_i:2008a}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;rationality;belief;lottery-paradox; surprise-examination-paradox;paradox-of-the-preface;} } @article{ christensen_j-kallestrup_j:2012a, author = {Jonas Christensen and Jesper Kallestrup}, title = {Counterfactuals and Downward Causation: A Reply to {Z}hong}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {3}, pages = {513--517}, xref = {Commentary on: zhong_l:2012a}, topic = {reasons-for-action;} } @book{ christensen_ne:1965a, author = {Niels E. Christensen}, title = {On the Nature of Meanings: A Philosophical Analysis}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Munksgaard}, year = {1965}, address = {Copenhagen}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;} } @article{ christensen_ne:1967a, author = {Niels E. Christensen}, title = {The Alleged Distinction between Use and Mention}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1967}, volume = {76}, number = {3}, pages = {358--367}, topic = {use-mention;} } @article{ christensen_s:1996a, author = {David Christensen}, title = {Dutch-Book Arguments Depragmatized: Epistemic Consistency for Partial Believers}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1996}, volume = {93}, number = {9}, pages = {480--479}, topic = {probability-kinematics;foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @incollection{ christiaanse_r:2018a, author = {Rob Christiaanse}, title = {Modeling Norms Embedded in Society: Ethics and Sensitive Design}, booktitle = {Handbook of Normative Multiagent Systems}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2018}, editor = {Amit Chopra and Leon van der Torre and Harko Verhagen and Serena Villata}, pages = {171--205}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\chopra.pdf}, topic = {multiagent-systems;social-norms;} } @book{ christian_b:2012a, author = {Brian Christian}, title = {The Most Human Human: What Artificial Intelligence Teaches Us about Being Alive}, publisher = {Anchor Books}, year = {2012}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {978-0-307-47670-8}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI-Cogsci Shelves}, topic = {popular-AI;Turing-test;} } @incollection{ christiansen_h:1999a, author = {Henning Christiansen}, title = {Open Theories and Abduction for Context and Accommodation}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {455-462}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;accommodation;abduction;} } @incollection{ christiansen_h-dahl_v:2005a, author = {Henning Christiansen and Veronica Dahl}, title = {Meaning in Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {97--111}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;discourse-interpretation;constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ christoff_z-etal:2016a, author = {Zo\'e Christoff and Jens Ulrik Hansen and Carlo Proietti}, title = {Reflecting on Social Influence in Networks}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2016}, volume = {25}, number = {3--4}, pages = {299--333}, topic = {social-networks;} } @article{ christoff_z-etal:2022a, author = {Zo\'e Christoff and Norbert Gratzl and Olivier Roy}, title = {Priority Merge and Intersection Modalities}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {165--196}, topic = {epistemic-logic;group-attitudes;aggregation;} } @inproceedings{ chrpa_l:2021a, author = {Luk\'a\v{s} Chrpa and Martin Pil\'at and Jakub Med}, title = {On Eventual Applicability of Plans in Dynamic Environments with Cyclic Phenomena}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {184--193}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we address a class of problems where non-deterministic events represent " cyclic p If they interfere with the agent, they might be dangerous for it (e.g. ships cruising through the area of AUV operations). We present techniques that initially analyse the problem whether it falls within this class by considering the notion of event reversibility ...}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;plan-verification;} } @inproceedings{ chrpa_l-bartak_r:2016a, author = {Luk\'a\^s Chrpa and Roman Bart\'ak}, title = {Guiding Planning Engines by Transition-Based Domain Control Knowledge}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {545--548}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... In this paper, we introduce transition-based DCK, inspired by Finite State Automata, that is efficient as demonstrated empirically, planner-independent (can be encoded within planning problems) and easy to specify. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {planning-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ chrpa_l-etal:2021a, author = {Luk\'a\v{s} Chrpa and Wolfgang Faber and Michael Morak}, title = {Universal and Uniform Action Reversibility}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {651--655}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... In the usual settings, the problem of action reversibility is PSPACE-complete, that is, as hard as deciding plan existence. In this paper ... we study the relations between projection abstractions and the subclasses of the action reversibility problem and we show that universal uniform reversibility of a given action can be decided on projection consisting of only the variables present in the schema of the action in question.}, topic = {action-reversibility;} } @inproceedings{ chu_fc-halpern_jy:2003a, author = {Francis C. Chu and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Great Expectations. Part {I}: On the Customizability of Generalized Expected Utility}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, editor = {Georg Gottlob and Toby Walsh}, pages = {291--296}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {We propose a generalization of expected utility that we call generalized EU (GEU), where a decision maker's beliefs are represented by plausibility measures and the decision maker's tastes are represented by general (i.e., not necessarily real-valued) utility functions. We show that every agent, `rational' or not, can be modeled as a GEU maximizer. We then show that we can customize GEU by selectively imposing just the constraints we want.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn14\halpern1.}, topic = {expected-utility;foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @inproceedings{ chu_fc-halpern_jy:2003b, author = {Francis C. Chu and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Great Expectations. Part {II}: Generalized Expected Utility as a Universal Decision Rule}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, editor = {Georg Gottlob and Toby Walsh}, pages = {297--302}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {Many different rules for decision making have been introduced in the literature. We show that a notion of generalized expected utility proposed in [Chu and Halpern 2003] is a universal decision rule, in the sense that it can represent essentially all other decision rules. This approach gives us a general technique for designing new decision rules as well as providing a framework for comparing decision rules to each other. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn14\halpern2.}, topic = {expected-utility;foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @article{ chu_fc-halpern_jy:2004a, author = {Francis C. Chu and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Great Expectations. Part {II}: Generalized Expected Utility as a Universal Decision Rule}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {159}, number = {1--2}, pages = {207--229}, topic = {foundations-of-utility;} } @article{ chu_g-stuckey:2012a, author = {Geoffrey Chu and Peter J. Stuckey}, title = {A Complete Solution to the Maximum Density Still Life Problem}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {184--185}, pages = {1--16}, topic = {search;heuristics;} } @incollection{ chu_s:2002a, author = {Sharon Chu}, title = {The Prosodic Transcription of a Corpus of {H}ong {K}ong {E}nglish---Collection Criteria, Transcription System, and Preliminary Findings}, booktitle = {Third {SIGdial} Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue: Proceedings of the Workshop}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2002}, editor = {Kristina Jokinen and Susan McRoy}, pages = {11--14}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;Chinese-language;prosody;} } @article{ chuard-southwood:2009a, author = {Philippe Chuard and Nicholas Southwood}, title = {Epistemic Norms without Voluntary Control}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2009}, volume = {43}, number = {4}, pages = {599--632}, topic = {epistemic-norms;} } @inproceedings{ chucarroll-brown_mk:1997a, author = {Jennifer Chu-Carroll and Michael K. Brown}, title = {Initiative in Collaborative Dialogue Interactions}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {262--270}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {collaboration;discourse-initiative;discourse;} } @article{ chucarroll-carberry_s:1974a, author = {Jennifer Chu-Carroll and Sandra Carberry}, title = {Collaborative Response Generation in Planning Dialogues}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1995}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {355--400}, topic = {nl-generation;collaboration;computational-dialogue;} } @inproceedings{ chucarroll-carberry_s:1994a, author = {Jennifer Chu-Carroll and Sandra Carberry}, title = {A Plan-Based Model for Response Generation in Collaborative Task-Oriented Dialogues}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, editor = {Barbara Hayes-Roth and Richard Korf}, pages = {799--805}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {discourse;plan-recognition;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ chucarroll-carberry_s:1995a, author = {Jennifer Chu-Carroll and Sandra Carberry}, title = {Response Generation in Collaborative Negotiation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Third Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1995}, editor = {Hans Uszkoreit}, pages = {136--143}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {discourse;plan-recognition;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ chucarroll-carpenter_b:1998a, author = {Jennifer Chu-Carroll and Bob Carpenter}, title = {Dialogue Management in Vector-Based Call Routing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {256--262}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {spoken-dialogue-systems;call-routing;} } @article{ chucarroll-carpenter_b:1999a, author = {Jennifer Chu-Carroll and Bob Carpenter}, title = {Vector-Based Natural Language Call Routing}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages = {361--388}, topic = {speech-recognition;} } @article{ chun_ahw:2011a, author = {Andy Hon Wai Chun}, title = {Optimizing Limousine Service with AI}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2011}, volume = {32}, number = {2}, pages = {27--41}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;scheduling;} } @article{ chun_ahw-etal:2000a, author = {Andy Hon Wai Chun and Steve Ho Chuen Chang and Francis Ming Fai Tsang and Dennis Wai Ming Yeung}, title = {Stand-Allocation System ({\sc sas}): A Constraint-Based System Developed with Software Components}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {63--74}, topic = {planning;software-engineering;} } @incollection{ chung_s:1987a, author = {Sandra Chung}, title = {The Syntax of {C}hamorro Existential}, booktitle = {The Representation of (In)definites}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Eric Reuland and Alice {ter Meulen}}, pages = {191--225}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {(in)definiteness;Austronesian-language;existential-constructions;} } @article{ chung_s:2000a, author = {Sandra Chung}, title = {On Reference to Kinds in {I}ndonesian}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2000}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {157--171}, topic = {nominal-constructions;nl-semantics;Indonesian-language;} } @article{ chung_s-etal:1995a, author = {Sandra Chung and William A. Ladusaw and James McCloskey}, title = {Sluicing and Logical Form}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1995}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {239--282}, topic = {ellipsis;LF;} } @incollection{ chung_s-timberlake:1985a, author = {Sandra Chung and Alan Timberlake}, title = {Tense, Aspect, and Mood}, booktitle = {Language Typology and Syntactic Description: Grammatical Categories and the Lexicon, Volume {III}}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, editor = {Timothy Shopen}, chapter = {4}, pages = {202--258}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-tense;tense-aspect;nl-mood;} } @article{ church_a:1932a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of \emph{The Foundations of Mathematics and Other Logical Essays}}, journal = {The American Mathematical Monthly}, year = {1932}, volume = {39}, pages = {355--357}, xref = {Review of \cite{braithwaite_rb:1931a}.}, topic = {logic-classics;} } @article{ church_a:1936a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {A Note on the {E}ntscheidungsproblem}, journal = {1936}, year = {1936}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {40--41}, topic = {(un)decidability;} } @article{ church_a:1939a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Schr\"oder's Anticipation of the Simple Theory of Types}, journal = {The Journal of Unified Science}, year = {1939}, volume = {9}, pages = {149--152}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church 2"}, topic = {history-of-logic;Frege;type-theory;} } @article{ church_a:1939b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{A} Logistical Approach to the Ontological Problem', by {{W}illard {V}.{O}. {Q}uine}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1939}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {170}, xref = {Review of: quine_wvo:1939a.}, topic = {ontological-commitment;logic-of-existence;} } @article{ church_a:1940a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {A Formulation of the Simple Theory of Types}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1940}, volume = {5}, number = {2}, pages = {56--68}, topic = {higher-order-logic;} } @article{ church_a:1940b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `Thought and Its Objects', by {A}braham {I}. Meldin}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1940}, volume = {5}, number = {4}, pages = {162--163}, xref = {Review of: meldin_ai:19a.}, topic = {intensional-transitive-verbs;} } @book{ church_a:1941a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {The Calculi of Lambda Conversion}, publisher = {University of Princeton Press}, year = {1941}, note = {Annals of Mathematics Studies, Number 6}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, xref = {Review: frank_o:1944a}, topic = {untyped-lambda-calculus;logic-classics;} } @article{ church_a:1942a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{W}hitehead and the Rise of Modern Logic', by {W}illard {V}.{O}. {Q}uine}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1942}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {100--101}, xref = {Review of: quine_wvo:1941a.}, contentnote = {Contains useful remarks on Russell's theory of descriptions.}, topic = {Whitehead;Russell;history-of-logic;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ church_a:1943a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Carnap's Introduction to Semantics}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1943}, volume = {52}, number = {3}, pages = {298--304}, xref = {Review of: carnap_r:1942a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn16}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;logic-classic;} } @article{ church_a:1943b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{N}otes on Existence and Necessity', by {W}illard {V}.{O}. {Q}uine}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1943}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {45--47}, xref = {Review of: quine_wvo:1943a1.}, xref = {Postscript: church_a:1968b}, topic = {referential-opacity;quantifying-in-modality;} } @article{ church_a:1945a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `Logic Without Ontology', by {E}rnest {N}agel}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1945}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {16--18}, xref = {Review of: nagel_e:1944a1}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;logical-empiricism;convention;} } @article{ church_a:1946a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{T}he {L}iar', by {A}lexander {K}oyr\'e}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1946}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {131}, xref = {Review of: koyre:1946a}, xref = {Commentary on: koyre:1946a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ church_a:1946b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} Note on the `Paradox of Analysis{'}}, by {M}orton {W}hite and \emph{{A}nanysis and Identity: A Rejoinder}, by {M}orton {W}hite and \emph{{H}ow Can Analysis Be Informative?}, by {M}ax {B}lack}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1946}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {149--151}, xref = {Review of: white_mg:1945a, black_m:1946a, black_m:1945a, white_mg:1945a}, topic = {philosophical-analysis;paradox-of-analysis;} } @article{ church_a:1948a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{D}esignation and Truth', by {P}eter {T}. {G}each}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1948}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {151--152}, xref = {Review of: geach_pt:1948a.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ church_a:1948b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{O}n Sense and Reference', by {G}otlob {F}rege, translated by {M}ax {B}lack}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {19}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {152--153}, xref = {Review of: frege_g:1892a2.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;intensionality;philosophy-classics;} } @article{ church_a:1950a1, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {On {C}arnap's Analysis of Statements of Assertion and Belief}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1950}, volume = {10}, number = {5}, pages = {97--99}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Offprint in file drawers.}, xref = {Republication: church_a:1950a2.}, xref = {Commentary: cohen_lj-lloyd_ac:19a, george_fh:1971a}, xref = {Reply: carnap_r:1954a}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;propositions;belief;} } @incollection{ church_a:1950a2, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {On {C}arnap's Analysis of Statements of Assertion and Belief}, booktitle = {The Logic of Grammar}, publisher = {Dickenson Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {129--142}, address = {Encino, California}, xref = {Original Publication: church_a:1950a1.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Church"}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;propositions;} } @article{ church_a:1950a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{T}he Problem of the Motning Star and the Evening Star', by {{F}rederic {B}. {F}itch}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1950}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {63}, xref = {Review of: fitch_fb:1949a.}, topic = {referential-opacity;proper-names;} } @article{ church_a:1950b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{R}ussell's Theory of Descriptions', by {A}lonzo {C}hurch}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1950}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {217}, xref = {Review of: geach_pt:1950b.}, topic = {Russell;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ church_a:1950c, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{A}cquaintance and Description Again', by {{W}ilfrid {S}ellars}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1950}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {22}, xref = {Review of: sellars_wp:1949a.}, topic = {definite-descriptions;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ church_a:1951a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {The Need for Abstract Entities in Semantic Analysis}, journal = {Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences}, year = {1951}, volume = {80}, number = {1}, pages = {100--112}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, xref = {Review: barhillel_y:1952c}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;propositional-attitudes; foundations-of-semantics;intensionality;philosophical-ontology; intensional-transitive-verbs;} } @incollection{ church_a:1951b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {A Formulation of the Logic of Sense and Denotation}, booktitle = {Structure, Method, and Meaning: Essays in Honor of {H}enry M. {S}cheffer}, publisher = {Liberal Arts Press}, year = {1951}, editor = {Paul Henle and Horace M. Kallen and Susanne K. Langer}, address = {New York}, pages = {3--24}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church 2"}, topic = {Frege;intensional-logic;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1951c, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {The Weak Theory of Implication}, year = {1951}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Princeton University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church 2"}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ church_a:1953a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Non-Normal Truth-Tables for the Propositional Calculus}, journal = {Boletin de la Sociedad Mathematica {M}exicana}, year = {1953}, volume = {10}, number = {1,2}, pages = {41--52}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "A Church"}, topic = {finite-matrix;} } @article{ church_a:1954a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Intensional Isomormphism and Identity of Belief}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1954}, volume = {5}, number = {5}, pages = {65--73}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church 2"}, xref = {JSL Review: XX294}, topic = {belief;hyperintensionality;propositional-attitudes;} } @book{ church_a:1956a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Introduction to Mathematical Logic, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {1959}, address = {Princeton}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {logic-general;} } @incollection{ church_a:1956b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Propositions and Sentences}, booktitle = {The Problem of Universals: A Symposium}, publisher = {Notre Dame University Press}, year = {1956}, editor = {Innocentius M. Bochenski}, pages = {3--11}, address = {Notre Dame, Indiana}, xref = {Review: hempel_cg:1957a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church 2"}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Church"}, topic = {propositions;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ church_a:1957a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}ntroduction to Logic}, by {P}atrick {S}uppes}, journal = {Science}, year = {1957}, volume = {126}, number = {3285}, pages = {1250--1251}, month = {December}, xref = {Review of suppes_p:1957a.}, topic = {logic-intro;} } @article{ church_a:1958a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Symposium: Ontological Commitment}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1958}, volume = {40}, number = {23}, pages = {1008--1014}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church 2"}, xref = {Review: stegmuller_w:1959a}, topic = {ontological-commitment;} } @article{ church_a:1958b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Logic and Analysis}, journal = {Atti del {XII} Congresso Internazionale di Filosofia, Venezia, 12-18 September, 1958}, year = {1958}, volume = {4}, pages = {78--81}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church 2"}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B20 .I6 1958}, topic = {intensionality;} } @inproceedings{ church_a:1962a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Logic, Arithmetic and Automata}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians}, year = {1962}, pages = {23--35}, missinginfo = {editor, publisher, address}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church 2"}, topic = {history-of-computer-science;automata-theory;recursion-theory;} } @incollection{ church_a:1962b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Mathematics and Logic}, booktitle = {Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science: Proceedings of the 1960 International Congress}, publisher = {Stanford University Press}, year = {1962}, editor = {Ernest Nagel and Patrick Suppes and Alfred Tarski}, pages = {181--186}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {foundations-of-mathematics;logicism;} } @article{ church_a:1963a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{T}he Logic of Existence', by {H}enry {S}. {L}eonard}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1963}, volume = {28}, number = {3}, pages = {259--261}, xref = {Review of: leonard_hs:1956a.}, topic = {logic-misc;} } @article{ church_a:1966a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `{E}xistential Import Revisited', by {K}arel {L}ambert}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1966}, volume = {30}, number = {1}, pages = {103--104}, xref = {Review of: lambert_k:1963c.}, topic = {logic-of-existence;} } @incollection{ church_a:1968a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Paul {J}. {C}ohen and the Continuum Problem}, booktitle = {Proceedings of International Congress of Mathematicians}, year = {1968}, editor = {I.G. Petrovsky}, publisher = {International Mathematical Union}, address = {Berlin}, pages = {15--20}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Church".}, topic = {continuum-hypothesis;set-theory;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1968b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Postscript 1968}, year = {1968}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Princeton University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Church holographs"}, xref = {Postscript to church_a:1943b.}, topic = {referential-opacity;quantifying-in-modality;} } @article{ church_a:1969a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Review of `Signification and Significance: A Study of the Relations of Signs and Values', by {C}harles {W}. {M}orris}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1969}, volume = {33}, number = {2}, pages = {316--317}, xref = {Review of: morris_cw:1964a}, topic = {nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics; philosophy-of-language;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1971a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {The Formal Theory of Meaning}, year = {1971}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Princeton University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ church_a:1973a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Outline of a Revised Formulation of the Logic of Sense and Denotation (Part {I})}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1973}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {24--33}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Church Holographs".}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au11\church1.pdf}, topic = {logic-of-sense-and-denotation;Frege;} } @article{ church_a:1974a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Outline of a Revised Formulation of the Logic of Sense and Denotation (Part {II})}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1974}, volume = {8}, pages = {135--156}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au11\church2.pdf}, topic = {logic-of-sense-and-denotation;Frege;} } @article{ church_a:1974b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Russellian Simple Type Theory}, journal = {Proceedings of the American Philosophical Association}, year = {1974}, volume = {47}, pages = {21--33}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {number}, note = {Presidential address delivered at the Forty-eighth Annual Meeting of the Pacific Division of the American Philosophical Association}, rtnote = {Rtrnote: Reading notes on file. Rnotes files "Church"}, topic = {Russell;higher-order-logic;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1975a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Alternative Treatment of Reflexivization}, year = {1975}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, UCLA.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church"}, rtnote = {Authorship uncertain. This may have been written by Michael Bennett. In any case, it shows that Church was familiar with PTQ.}, topic = {reflexive-constructions;Montague-grammar;} } @article{ church_a:1976a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Comparison of {R}ussell's Resolution of the Semantical Antinomies with that of {T}arski}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1976}, volume = {41}, pages = {747--760}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {Russell;Tarski;ramified-type-theory;semantic-paradoxes;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1980a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {The Principle of Individuation for Propositions in the Logic of Principia Mathematica}, year = {1980}, note = {Abstract of a Lecture Given at the University of Wisconsin, May 2, 1980}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church Holographs"}, topic = {ramified-type-theory;propositions;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1980b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {A Preliminary Report on {C}arnap Prize Essay No. 7: `Two Puzzles Concerning Tense and Aspect in {E}nglish{'}}, year = {1980}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, UCLA}, rtnote = {In RHT collection, "Church Holographs"}, rtnote = {From Michael Bennett collection. This would have been confidential at one time. It is of interest because it shows Church's thoughts about formalizing natural language.}, xref = {Report on: bennett_mr:1973a.}, topic = {tense-aspect;nl-semantics;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1981a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Axioms for Functional Calculi of Higher Order}, year = {1981}, note = {Unpublished Manuscript, University of California at Los Angeles}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Church Holographs"; (But this is actually a typescript).}, missinginfo = {Date is a wild guess.}, topic = {higher-order-logic;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1981b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Outline of a Revised Version of the Logic of Sense and Denotation}, year = {1981}, note = {Unpublished Manuscript, University of California at Los Angeles}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Date is a wild guess.}, topic = {Frege;logic-of-sense-and-denotation;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1981c, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Russellian Simple Type Theory}, year = {1981}, note = {Unpublished Manuscript, University of California at Los Angeles}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Church Holographs"}, missinginfo = {Date is a wild guess.}, topic = {higher-order-logic;Russell;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1981d, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {A Revised Version of the Logic of Sense and Denotation. Alternative (1).}, year = {1981}, note = {Unpublished Manuscript, University of California at Los Angeles}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Date is a wild guess.}, topic = {Frege;logic-of-sense-and-denotation;} } @unpublished{ church_a:1984a1, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Intensionality and the Paradox of the Name Relation}, year = {1970}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, UCLA.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church 2"}, rtnote = {This is a good historical reference on the evening-star morning-star paradox.}, rtnote = {This is a holograph, in Church's copperplate.}, xref = {Publication: church_a:1984a2}, topic = {Frege;Russell;proper-names;intensionalty;reference;} } @incollection{ church_a:1984a2, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Intensionality and the Paradox of the Name Relation}, booktitle = {Themes from {K}aplan}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1989}, editor = {Joseph Almog and John Perry and Howard Wettstein}, pages = {151--165}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {This is a good historical reference on the evening-star morning-star paradox.}, topic = {Frege;Russell;proper-names;intensionalty;reference;} } @article{ church_a:1984b, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {Russell's Theory of Identity of Propositions}, year = {1984}, journal = {Philosophia Naturalis}, volume = {21}, pages = {513--522}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Church Holographs"}, rtnote = {This is a holograph, in Church's copperplate.}, topic = {Russell;propositions;} } @article{ church_a:1993a, author = {Alonzo Church}, title = {A Revised Formulation of the Logic of Sense and Denotation. {A}lternative (1)}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1993}, volume = {27}, pages = {141--157}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au11\church_a.pdf}, xref = {Review: wells_r:1952a}, topic = {Frege;intensional-logic;logic-of-sense-and-denotation;} } @article{ church_k:2011a, author = {Kenneth Church}, title = {A Pendulum Swung Too Far}, journal = {Linguistic Issues in Language Technology}, year = {2011}, volume = {6}, number = {5}, abstract = {Today's students might be faced with a very different set of challenges from those of the 1990s in the not-too-distant future. What should they do when most of the low hanging fruit has been pretty much picked over? In the particular case of Machine Translation, the revival of statistical approaches (e.g., Brown et al. (1993)) started out with finite-state methods for pragmatic reasons, but gradually over time, researchers have become more and more receptive to the use of syntax to capture long-distance dependences, especially when there isn't very much parallel corpora, and for language pairs with very different word orders (e.g., translating between a subject-verb-object (SVO) language like English and a verb final language like Japanese). Going forward, we should expect Machine Translation research to make more and more use of richer and richer linguistic representations. So too, there will soon be a day when stress will become important for speech recognition. Since it isn't possible for textbooks in computational linguistics to cover all of these topics, we should work with colleagues in other departments to make sure that students receive an education that is broad enough to prepare them for all possible futures, or at least all probable futures.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja18}, topic = {AI-editorial;theoretical-vs-computational-linguistics;} } @incollection{ church_k-gale_w:1995a, author = {Kenneth Church and William Gale}, title = {Inverse Document Frequency (IDF): A Measure of Deviations from {P}oisson}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Very Large Corpora}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1995}, editor = {David Yarowsky and Kenneth W. Church}, pages = {121--130}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {statistical-nlp;word-frequencies;} } @techreport{ church_kw:1980a, author = {Kenneth W. Church}, title = {Memory Limitations in Natural Language Processing}, institution = {Laboratiry for Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology}, number = {MIT/LCS/TR-245}, year = {1980}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;} } @book{ church_kw:1983a, author = {Kenneth W. Church}, title = {Phrase-Structure Parsing: A Method for Taking Advantage of Allophonic Constraints}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1983}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana 46405}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;} } @incollection{ church_kw-etal:1981a, author = {Kenneth W. Church and William Gale and Patrick Hanks and Donald Hindle}, title = {Parsing, Word Association, and Typical Predicate-Argument Relations}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Parsing Technology}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1981}, editor = {Masaru Tomita}, pages = {103--112}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;} } @article{ church_kw-gale_wa:1991a, author = {Kenneth W. Church and William Gale}, title = {A Comparison of the Enhanced {G}ood-{T}uring and Deleted Estimation Methods for Estimating Probabilities of {E}nglish Bigrams}, journal = {Computer Speech and Language}, year = {1991}, volume = {5}, pages = {19--54}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {statistical-nlp;frequency-estimation;} } @inproceedings{ church_kw-gale_wa:1995a, author = {Kenneth W. Church and William A. Gale}, title = {Inverse Document Frequency (IDF): A Measure of Deviations from {P}oisson}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Very Large Corpora}, year = {1995}, editor = {David Yarovsky and Kenneth Church}, pages = {121--130}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;corpus-statistics;} } @incollection{ churcher-etal:1997a, author = {Gavin E. Churcher and Eric S. Atwell and Clive Souter}, title = {A Generic Template to Evaluate Integrated Components in Spoken Dialogue Systems}, booktitle = {Interactive Spoken Dialog Systems: Bridging Speech and {NLP} Together in Real Applications}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Julia Hirschberg and Candace Kamm and Marilyn Walker}, pages = {9--16}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;nlp-evaluation;} } @incollection{ churchill_ef-etal:2000a, author = {Elizabeth F. Churchill and Linda Cook and Peter Hodgson and Scott Prevost and Joseph W. Sullivan}, title = {{`}May I Help You?': Designing Embodied Conversational Agent Allies}, booktitle = {Embodied Conversational Agents}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2000}, editor = {Justine Cassell and Joseph Sullivan and Scott Prevost and Elizabeth F. Churchill}, pages = {64--94}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {embodied-nlp;} } @book{ churchland_cs-sejnowski_tj:1992a, author = {Patricia S. Churchland and Terrence J. Sejnowski}, title = {The Computational Brain}, publisher = {Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge}, ISBN = {0262031884}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Qp 356 .C481 1992.}, xref = {Reviews: reeke:1996a, leibovic:1997a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci shelves.}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;connectionism;} } @incollection{ churchland_pm:1989a, author = {Paul M. Churchland}, title = {Folk Psychology and the Explanation of Human Behavior}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 3: Philosophy of Mind and Action Theory}, publisher = {Ridgeview Publishing Company}, year = {1989}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {225--241}, address = {Atasacadero, California}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {folk-psychology;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ churchland_pm:1995a, author = {Paul M. Churchland}, title = {Machine Stereopsis: A Feedforward Network for Fast Stereo Vision with Movable Fusion Plane}, booktitle = {Android Epistemology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Kenneth M. Ford and Clark Glymour and Patrick J. Hayes}, pages = {279--306}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {stereoscopic-vision;connectionist-models;} } @incollection{ churchland_pm:1996a, author = {Paul M. Churchland}, title = {Learning and Conceptual Change: The View from the Neurons}, booktitle = {Connectionism, Concepts, and Folk Psychology: The Legacy of {A}lan {T}uring: Volume {II}}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter J.R. Millican and Andy Clark}, pages = {7--43}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {connectionism;} } @article{ churchland_pm:2005a, author = {Paul M. Churchland}, title = {Functionalism at Forty: A Critical Perspective}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2005}, volume = {102}, number = {1}, pages = {33--50}, topic = {functionalism;} } @incollection{ churchland_pm:2009a, author = {Paul M. Churchland}, title = {On the Nature of Intelligence}, booktitle = {Parsing the {T}uring Test: Philosophical and Methodological Issues in the Quest for the Thinking Computer}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert Epstein and Gary Roberts and Grace Beber}, pages = {107--117}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de12}, topic = {Turing-test;Church's-thesis;machine-intelligence;philosophy-AI;} } @book{ chwistek_l:1925a, author = {Leon Chwistek}, title = {The Theory of Constructive Types (Proinciples of Logic and Mathenmatics)}, publisher = {University Press}, year = {1925}, address = {Krakow}, topic = {type-theory;constructivism;ramified-type-theory;} } @article{ chwistek_l:1932a, author = {Leon Chwistek}, title = {Die nominalistische {G}rundlegung der {M}athematik}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {1932}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {367--388}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja22}, topic = {ramified-type-theory;constructivism;} } @incollection{ chytil-karlgren:1988a, author = {Michal P. Chytil and Hans Karlgren}, title = {Categorial Grammars and List Automata for Strata of Non-{CF}-Languages}, booktitle = {Categorial Grammar}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {1988}, editor = {Wojciech Buszkowski and Witold Marcisziewski and Johan van Benthem}, pages = {85--112}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {categorial-grammar;automata-theory;} } @inproceedings{ ciabattoni_a-rusnok_p:2010a, author = {Agata Ciabattoni and Pavel Rusnok}, title = {On the Classical Content of Monadic {G} with Involutive Negation and its Application to a Fuzzy Medical Expert System}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {373--381}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {The satisfiability problem for monadic infinite-valued Godel logic is known to be undecidable. We identify a fragment of this logic extended with strong negation whose satisfiability is not only decidable but it is decidable within classical logic. We use this fragment to formalize the rules of CADIAG-2, a well performing fuzzy expert system assisting in the differential diagnosis in internal medicine. A (classical) satisfiability check of the resulting formulas allowed the detection of some errors in the rules of the system}, topic = {modal-logic;decidability;} } @article{ ciampaglia_gl-etal:2018a, author = {Giovanni Luca Ciampaglia and Alexis Mantzarlis and Gregory Maus Filippo Menzer}, title = {Research Challenges of Digital Misinformation: Toward a Trustworthy Web}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2018}, volume = {39}, number = {1}, pages = {65--74}, topic = {web-misinformation;} } @article{ ciancarini-favini:2010a, author = {Paolo Ciancarini and Gian Piero Favini}, title = {Monte {C}arlo Tree Search in {K}riegspiel}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {11}, pages = {670--684}, topic = {game-playing;search;} } @article{ ciardelli_f-roelofsen_f:2017a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli and Floris Roelofsen}, title = {Hurford's Constraint, the Semantics of Disjunction, and the Nature of Alternatives}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {20}, volume = {2017}, number = {1}, pages = {199--222}, abstract = {This paper contributes to ... (1), work on so-called Hurford disjunctions, i.e., disjunctions where one disjunct entails another, and (2), work in alternative and inquisitive semantics where disjunction has been argued to generate multiple propositional alternatives. We point out that Hurford effects are found not only in disjunctive statements, but also in disjunctive questions. We show that inquisitive semantics facilitates a unified explanation of Hurford phenomena in statements and questions. We also argue that Hurford effects provide an empirical handle on the subtle differences between inquisitive semantics and alternative semantics, providing insight into the notion of alternatives and the notion of meaning adopted in these two frameworks.}, topic = {alternatives;disjunction;interrogatives;inquisitive-semantics;} } @article{ ciardelli_i:2020a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli}, title = {Indicative Conditionals and Graded Information}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {3}, pages = {509--549}, abstract = {I propose an account of indicative conditionals that combines features of minimal change semantics and information semantics. ... I argue that this account does better than its predecessors with respect to a set of desiderata concerning inferences with conditionals. In particular, it captures three important facts: (i) that a conditional is logically independent from its antecedent; (ii) that a sequence of antecedents behaves like a single conjunctive antecedent (the import-export equivalence); and (iii) that conditionals restrict the quantification domain of epistemic modals. ... }, topic = {indicative-conditionals;} } @article{ ciardelli_i:2022a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli}, title = {The Restrictor View, without Covert Modals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {2}, pages = {293--320}, abstract = {... In this paper I provide a theory of conditionals on which if-clauses are uniformly interpreted as restrictors, but no covert modals are postulated. Epistemic if-clauses, like those in bare conditionals, restrict an information state parameter which is used to interpret an expressive layer of the language. I show that this theory yields an attractive account of bare and overtly modalized conditionals and solves various empirical problems for the standard view, while dispensing with its less plausible assumption.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl22}, topic = {conditionals;relativized-modalities;} } @inproceedings{ ciardelli_i-etal:2009a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli and Jeroen Groenendijk and Floris Roelofsen}, title = {Attention! 'Might' in Inquisitive Semantics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 19th Semantics and Linguistic Theory Conference: {SALT 19}}, year = {2009}, editor = {Ed Cormany and Satoshi Ito and David Lutz}, pages = {91--108}, publisher = {Linguistic Society of America}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {This paper points out that the notion of meaning propounded by inquisitive semantics is not only suited to capture both informative and inquisitive content, but also a sentence's potential to draw attention to certain possibilities. This gives rise to a novel analysis of 'might'.}, topic = {inquisitive-semantics;epistemic-modals;alternatives;attention;} } @article{ ciardelli_i-etal:2013a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli and Jeroem Groenendijk and Floris Roelofsen}, title = {Inquisitive Semantics: a New Notion of Meaning}, journal = {Language and Linguistics Compass}, year = {2013}, volume = {7}, number = {9}, pages = {459--476}, topic = {inquisitive-semantics;} } @article{ ciardelli_i-etal:2017a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli and Floris Roelofsen and Nadine Theiler}, title = {Composing Alternatives}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2017}, volume = {40}, number = {1}, pages = {1--36}, abstract = {... this approach [sentences take sets of propositions as values] also faces a number of problems. We focus here on two of these, in our view the most fundamental ones. The first has to do with how meanings are composed, i.e., with the type-theoretic operations of function application and abstraction; the second has to do with how meanings are compared, i.e., the notion of entailment. Our aim is to reconcile what we take to be the essence of Hamblin's proposal with the more orthodox type-theoretic framework rooted in the work of Montague in such a way that both the explanatory utility of the former and the solid formal foundations of the latter are preserved. ...}, topic = {inquisitive-semantics;compositionality;interrogatives;} } @article{ ciardelli_i-etal:2018a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli and Linmin Zhang and Lucas Champollion}, title = {Two Switches in the Theory of Counterfactuals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2018}, volume = {41}, number = {6}, pages = {577--621}, abstract = {Based on a crowdsourced truth value judgment experiment, we provide empirical evidence challenging two classical views in semantics, and we develop a novel account of counterfactuals that combines ideas from inquisitive semantics and causal reasoning. First, we show that two truth-conditionally equivalent clauses can make different semantic contributions when embedded in a counterfactual antecedent. Assuming compositionality, this means that the meaning of these clauses is not fully determined by their truth conditions. This finding has a clear explanation in inquisitive semantics: truth-conditionally equivalent clauses may be associated with different propositional alternatives, each of which counts as a separate counterfactual assumption. Second, we show that our results contradict the common idea that the interpretation of a counterfactual involves minimizing change with respect to the actual state of affairs. We propose to replace the idea of minimal change by a distinction between foreground and background for a given counterfactual assumption: the background is held fixed in the counterfactual situation, while the foreground can be varied without any minimality constraint.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ ciardelli_i-liu_xh:2020a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli and Xinghan Liu}, title = {Intuitionistic Conditional Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {4}, pages = {807--832}, abstract = {Building on recent work by Yale Weiss, we study conditional logics in the intuitionistic setting. We consider a number of semantic conditions which give rise, among others, to intuitionistic counterparts of Lewis's logic VC and Stalnaker's C2. We show how to obtain a sound and complete axiomatization of each logic arising from a combination of these conditions. On the way, we remark how, in the intuitionistic setting, certain classically equivalent principles of conditional logic come apart, and how certain logical connections between different principles no longer hold. }, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;conditionals;} } @article{ ciardelli_i-otto_m:2021a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli and Martin Otto}, title = {Inquisitive Bisimulation}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {86}, number = {1}, pages = {77--109}, topic = {inquisitive-modal-logic;model-theory;} } @article{ ciardelli_i-roelofsen_f:2011a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli and Floris Roelofsen}, title = {Inquisitive Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {40}, number = {1}, pages = {55--94}, topic = {inquisitive-semantics;intuitionistic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ ciardelli_i-roelofsen_f:2015a, author = {Ivano Ciardelli and Floris Roelofsen}, title = {Alternatives in {M}ontague {G}rammar}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 19}, year = {2015}, editor = {Eva Csipak and Hedde Zeijlstra}, publisher = {Georg-{A}ugust-{U}niversit\"at {G}\"ottingen}, address = {G\"ottingen}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TVlN2I2Z/sub19proc.pdf}, pages = {161--178}, topic = {alternatives;nl-semantics;Montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ cicekli-korkmaz:1998a, author = {Ilyas Cicekli and Turgay Korkmaz}, title = {Generation of Simple {T}urkish Sentences with Systemic-Functional Grammar}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {165--173}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-generation;systemic-grammar;Turkish-language;} } @article{ cichowsz:1995a, author = {Pawel Cicocz}, title = {Truncating Temporal Differences: On the Efficient Implementation of TD($\lambda$) for Reinforcement Learning}, journal = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research}, year = {1995}, volume = {2}, pages = {287--318}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @article{ cieslinski:2003a, author = {Cesary Cie\'sli\'nski}, title = {L\"ob's Theorem in a Set-Theoretical Setting}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2003}, volume = {75}, number = {3}, pages = {319--328}, topic = {provability-logic;} } @article{ cieslinski:2010a, author = {Cezary Cie\'sli\'nski}, title = {Deflationary Truth and Pathologies}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {39}, number = {3}, pages = {325--337}, topic = {formalizations-of-arithmetic;} } @inproceedings{ cima_g-etal:2020a, author = {Gianluca Cima and Maurizio Lenzerini and Antonella Poggi}, title = {Non-Monotonic Ontology-based Abstractions of Data Services}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {243--252}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {In Ontology-Based Data Access (OBDA), a domain ontology is linked to the data sources of an organization in order to query, integrate and manage data ... Current works on this subject are based on expressing abstractions in terms of unions of conjunctive queries (UCQs) over the ontology. In this paper we advocate the use of a non-monotonic language for this task. }, topic = {computational-ontology;information-management;nommonotonic-reasoning;} } @techreport{ cimati-serafini_l:1993a1, author = {Alessandro Cimatti and Luciano Serafini}, title = {Multiagent Reasoning with Belief Contexts: The Approach and a Case Study}, institution = {Istituto per la Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica}, number = {9312--01}, year = {1993}, address = {Trento}, xref = {Conference Publication: cimati-serafini_l:1993a2.}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;epistemic-logic;context;} } @techreport{ cimatti-etal:1997a, author = {Alessandro Cimatti and Enrico Giunchiglia and Fausto Giunchiglia and Paolo Traverso}, title = {Planning via Model Checking: A Decision Procedure for {AR}}, institution = {Istituto per la Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica}, number = {9705--02}, year = {1997}, address = {Trento}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {planning-formalisms;model-checking;} } @article{ cimatti-etal:2003a, author = {Alessandro Cimatti and A. Pistore and M, Rovero and Paolo Traverso}, title = {Weak, Strong, and Strong Cyclic Planning via Symbolic Model Checking}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {147}, number = {1--2}, pages = {35--84}, topic = {planning-algorithms;model-checking; reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ cimatti-etal:2004a, author = {Alessandro Cimatti and M. Roveri and P.G. Bertoli}, title = {Conformant Planning via Symbolic Model Checking and Heuristic Search}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {159}, number = {1--2}, pages = {127--206}, topic = {planning;reasoning-about-uncertainty;model-checking;} } @incollection{ cimatti-etal:2008a, author = {Alessandro Cimatti and Marco Pistore and Paolo Traverso}, title = {Automated Planning}, booktitle = {Handbook of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2008}, editor = {Frank van Harmelen and Vladimir Lifschitz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {841--867}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {planning-algorithms;} } @incollection{ cimatti-serafini_l:1993a2, author = {Alessandro Cimatti and Luciano Serafini}, title = {Multiagent Reasoning with Belief Contexts: The Approach and a Case Study}, booktitle = {Intelligent Agents: Proceedings of the 1994 Workshop on Agent Theories, Architectures, and Languages (ATAL--94)}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1995}, editor = {Michael J. Wooldrige and Nicholas R. Jennings}, pages = {71--85}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Technical Report: cimati-serafini_l:1993a1.}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;epistemic-logic;context;} } @techreport{ cimatti-serafini_l:1994a1, author = {Alessandro Cimatti and Luciano Serafini}, title = {Multiagent Reasoning with Belief Contexts {II}: Elaboration Tolerance}, institution = {Istituto per la Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica}, number = {9412--09}, year = {1994}, address = {Trento}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Conference Publication: cimati-serafini_l:1994a2.}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;epistemic-logic;context;} } @inproceedings{ cimatti-serafini_l:1994a2, author = {Alessandro Cimatti and Luciano Serafini}, title = {Multi-Agent Reasoning with Belief Contexts {II}: Elaboration Tolerance}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First International Conference on Multi-Agent Systems ({ICMAS}-95)}, pages = {57--64}, note = {Also IRST-Technical Report 9412-09, IRST, Trento, Italy. {\em Commonsense-96}, Third Symposium on Logical Formalizations of Commonsense Reasoning, Stanford University, 1996}, year = {1996}, xref = {Technical Report: cimati-serafini_l:1994a1.}, topic = {context;epistemic-logic;context;} } @incollection{ cimatti-serafini_l:2000a, author = {Alessandro Cimatti and Luciano Serafini}, title = {A Context-Based Mechanization of Multi-Agent Reasoning}, booktitle = {Formal Aspects of Context}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Pierre Bonzon and Marcos Cavalcanti and Rolf Nossum}, pages = {65--83}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {context;contextual-reasoning;mutual-belief;multimodal-logic;} } @article{ cimpian_a-etal:2010a, author = {Andrei Cimpian and Amanda C. Brandone and Susan A. Gelman}, title = {Generic Statements Require Little Evidence for Acceptance but Have Powerful Implications}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {2010}, volume = {34}, number = {8}, pages = {1452--1482}, abstract = {... In this paper, we hypothesized that there is a paradoxical asymmetry at the core of generic meaning, such that these sentences have extremely strong implications but require little evidence to be judged true. Four experiments confirmed the hypothesized asymmetry: Participants interpreted novel generics such as "Lorches have purple feathers" as referring to nearly all lorches, but they judged the same novel generics to be true given a wide range of prevalence levels (e.g., even when only 10% or 30% of lorches had purple feathers). A second hypothesis, also confirmed by the results, was that novel generic sentences about dangerous or distinctive properties would be more acceptable than generic sentences that were similar but did not have these connotations. In addition to clarifying important aspects of generics' meaning, these findings are applicable to a range of real-world processes such as stereotyping and political discourse.}, topic = {generics;psycholinguistics;} } @book{ cintula_p-etal:2011a, editor = {Petr Cintula and Christian G. Fermuller and Luis Godo and Petr Hajek}, title = {Understanding Vagueness: Logical, Philosophical, and Linguistic Perspectives}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2011}, address = {London}, ISBN = {9781848900370}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ cintula_p-etal:2013a, author = {Petr Cintula and Rostislav Hor\v{c}\'ik and Carles Noguera}, title = {Nonassociative Substructural Logics and Their Semilinear Extensions}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {394--423}, topic = {substructural-logics;algebraic-semantics;} } @article{ cintula_p-etal:2019a, author = {Petr Cintula and Jos\'e Gil-F\'erez and Tommaso Moraschini and Francesco Paoli}, title = {An Abstract Approach to Consequence Relations}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {331--371}, abstract = {We generalise the Blok-J\"onsson account of structural consequence relations, later developed by Galatos, Tsinakis and other authors, in such a way as to naturally accommodate multiset consequence. ... }, topic = {abstract-logical-consequence-relation;algebraic-logic;} } @article{ cintula_p-noguera:2015a, author = {Petr Cintula and Carles Noguera}, title = {A {H}enkin-Style Proof of Completeness for First-Order Algebraizable Logics}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {80}, number = {1}, pages = {341--358}, topic = {completeness-theorems;algebraic-logic;} } @phdthesis{ cioch:1985a, author = {Frank Anthony Cioch}, title = {Software Understandability: An Empirical Study (Comprehension, Requirements, Specifications, Expertise, Methodology)}, school = {Computer Science, University of Michigan}, year = {1985}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, contentnote = {Summary: The dramatic advances in computer hardware technology have been accompanied by intensified demands for understandable software. The understandability issue appears at every stage in the software life-cycle. Requirements specifications must be understandable to both user and designer. Numerous design techniques and programming language constructs have evolved in response to the understandability requirement. Maintenance programmers often must understand software planned, designed, coded, and used by Note: others. Software must be easy to learn and easy to use; thus, understanding is a central theme. Although evaluation of the many software and notational tools and techniques is of central concern, understanding has proved difficult to measure. Many different types of definitions have been employed in efforts to measure it. It is necessarily a multi-faceted construct requiring multiple measures to encompass its complexity. The conceptualization and measurement of understanding are central to this dissertation. Cognitive theory provided a basis for the development of the measures while dimensional analysis was used to empirically validate the structure of the construct. An empirical investigation of the nature of understanding in the context of the human/computer interface was performed. Programmer and nonprogrammer understanding of requirements specifications written in structured English and Structured Analysis was studied experimentally. The results showed that understanding is, in fact, multidimensional. Further, specification language and programming expertise differed in their effects on understanding. In the case of low-level details of system operation, programming expertise had a significant effect using either specification language. For the more conceptual requirements of task-environment understanding, the advantage of programming expertise was evident only in the case of structured English. Programmers who read Structured Analysis were able to perform no better than nonprogrammers. In addition, the results for the subjective dimensions of understanding were not entirely parallel and provided a broader perspective on the effects of programming expertise and specification language on understanding.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: DISS 19602}, topic = {software-engineering;} } @inproceedings{ ciocoiu-nau:2000a, author = {Mihai Ciocoiu and Dana S. Nau}, title = {Ontology-Based Semantics}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {539--546}, abstract = {We consider the problem of providing semantics for declarative languages, in a way that would be useful for enabling automated knowledge exchange. ... We introduce Ontology-Based Semantics with this purpose in mind. We show how ontologies can be used to make implicit assumptions explicit, and how they areintegratedinoursemanticsinorderto restrict the set of models a set of sentences has. ... }, topic = {computational-ontology;knowledge-integration;} } @incollection{ ciorba:1996a, author = {Viorica Ciorba}, title = {A Query Answering Algorithm for {L}ukaszewicz' General Open Default Theory}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence: European Workshop, {Jelia}'96, Ivora, Portugal, September 30 - October 3, 1996.}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Ewa Orlowska}, pages = {208--223}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {default-logic;default-reasoning;nonmonotonic-reasoning-algorithms;} } @article{ cipria-roberts_c1:2000a, author = {Alicia Cipria and Craige Roberts}, title = {Spanish \emph{Imperfecto} and \emph{Pr\'eterito}: Truth Conditions and {A}ktionsart Effects in a Situation Semantics}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2000}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {297--347}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers. Under "Craige Roberts". And \my23}, topic = {Spanish-language;situation-semantics;Aktionsarten; tense-aspect;} } @book{ cirslinski_c:2017a, author = {Cezary Cir\'sli\'nski}, title = {The Epistemic Lightness of Truth: Deflationism and its Logic}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9781108178600}, xref = {Review: ketland_j:2020a}, abstract = {This book analyses and defends the deflationist claim that there is nothing deep about our notion of truth. According to this view, truth is a 'light' and innocent concept, devoid of any essence which could be revealed by scientific inquiry. Cezary Cieskinski considers this claim in light of recent formal results on axiomatic truth theories, which are crucial for understanding and evaluating the philosophical thesis of the innocence of truth. Providing an up-to-date discussion and original perspectives on this central and controversial issue, his book will be important for those with a background in logic who are interested in formal truth theories and in current philosophical debates about the deflationary conception of truth. }, topic = {truth;deflationary-analyses;axiomatic-truth;} } @inproceedings{ ciskowski:2001a, author = {Piotr Ciskowski}, title = {{VC}-Dimension of a Context-Dependent Perceptron}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {429--432}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;connetionist-models;} } @inproceedings{ cisowski:2003a, author = {Piort Cisowski}, title = {Contextual Modeling Using Context-Dependent Feedforward Neural Nets}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {435--442}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;connectionist-models;} } @article{ ciuni-zanardo:2011a, author = {Roberto Ciuni and ALberto Zanardo}, title = {Completeness of a Branching-Time Logic with Possible Choices}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2011}, volume = {96}, number = {3}, pages = {393--420}, topic = {branching-time;completeness-theorems;} } @inproceedings{ civili_c-libkin_l:2018a, author = {Cristina Civili and Leonid Libkin}, title = {Approximating Certainty in Querying Data and Metadata}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {582--591}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Metadata, such as mappings or constraints, is used in a variety of scenarios to facilitate query answering; these include data integration and exchange, consistent query answering, and ontology-based data access. ... we propose to approximate such query answering by reducing it to another scenario where multiple databases need to be taken into account, namely incomplete information in databases. For them, well-behaved approximation schemes exist for much larger classes of queries. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {query-answering;metadata;} } @article{ clancey:1983a, author = {William J. Clancey}, title = {The Epistemology of a Rule-Based Expert System: a Framework for Explanation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {215--251}, xref = {Commentary: clancey:1993b.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Misc 3"}, topic = {kr;explanation;kr-course;} } @article{ clancey:1985a, author = {William J. Clancey}, title = {Heuristic Classification}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {285--350}, xref = {Commentary: clancey:1993a.}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A broad range of well-structured problems -- embracing forms of diagnosis, catalog selection, and skeletal planning -- are solved in `expert systems' by the methods of heuristic classification. These programs have a characteristic inference structure that systematically relates data to a pre-enumerated set of solutions by abstraction, heuristic association, and refinement. In contrast with previous descriptions of classification reasoning, particularly in psychology, this analysis emphasizes the role of a heuristic in routine problem solving as a non-hierarchical, direct association between concepts. In contrast with other descriptions of expert systems, this analysis specifies the knowledge needed to solve a problem, independent of its representation in a particular computer language. The heuristic classification problem-solving model provides a useful framework for characterizing kinds of problems, for designing representation tools, and for understanding non-classification (constructive) problem-solving methods.}, topic = {kr;foundations-of-knowledge-engineering;problem-solving; expert-systems;kr-course;heuristics;} } @article{ clancey:1985b, author = {William J. Clancey}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}onceptual Structures: Information Processing in Mind and Machine}, by {J}ohn {F}. {S}owa}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {27}, number = {1}, pages = {113--124}, topic = {kr;cognitive-semantics;visual-reasoning;} } @article{ clancey:1992a, author = {William J. Clancey}, title = {Model Construction Operators}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {53}, number = {2--3}, pages = {1--115}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Expert systems can be viewed as programs that construct a model of somesystem in the world so that it can be assembled, repaired, controlled, etc.In contrast with most conventional computer programs, these models representprocesses and structures by relational networks. Control knowledge forconstructing such a model can be described as operators that construct agraph linking processes and structures causally, temporally, spatially, bysubtype, etc. From this perspective, we find that the terminology ofblackboard expert systems is not specific to a particular set of programs, but is rather a valuable perspective for understanding what every expert system is doing.This paper reviews different ways of describing expert system reasoning,emphasizing the use of simple logic, set, and graph notations for makingdimensional analyses of modeling languages and inference methods. The practical question is, how can we systematically develop knowledge acquisition tools that capture general knowledge about types of domains and modeling methods? Examples of modeling operators from ABEL, CADUCEUS,NEOMYCIN, HASP, and ACCORD demonstrate how diverse expert system approachescan be explained and integrated by the model construction perspective. Reworked examples from TEIRESIAS, XPLAIN, and KNACK illustrate how to writemetarules without using domain-specific terms, thus making explicit theirmodel construction nature. Generalizing from these observations, we combinethe system-model and operator viewpoints to describe the representation ofprocesses in AI programs in terms of three nested levels of domain,inference, and communication modeling. This synthesis reveals how the use ofrelational networks in computer programs has evolved from programmerdescriptions of computational processes (such as flowcharts and dataflowdiagrams) to network representations that are constructed and manipulated by the programs themselves. }, topic = {expert-systems;domain-modeling;knowledge-acquisition;} } @article{ clancey:1993a, author = {William J. Clancey}, title = {Notes on `Heuristic Classification'}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {191--196}, xref = {Commentary on clancey:1985a.}, topic = {kr;foundations-of-knowledge-engineering;expert-systems; kr-course;} } @article{ clancey:1993b, author = {William J. Clancey}, title = {Notes on `Epistemology of a Rule-Based System'}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {197--204}, xref = {Commentary on: clancey:1983a.}, topic = {kr;explanation;kr-course;} } @article{ clancey-soloway:1990a, author = {William J. Clancey and Elliot Soloway}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Learning Environments: Preface}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {42}, number = {1}, pages = {1--6}, topic = {intelligent-tutoring;} } @article{ clancy:1972a, author = {Patricia Clancy}, title = {Analysis of a Conversation}, journal = {Anthropological Linguistics}, year = {1972}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {78--86}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {conversation-analysis;discourse;pragmatics;} } @article{ clapin:1991a, author = {Hugh Clapin}, title = {Connectionism Isn't Magic}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1991}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {167--184}, abstract = {Ramsey, Stich and Garon's recent paper `Connectionism, Eliminativism, and the Future of Folk Psychology' claims a certain style of connectionism to be the final nail in the coffin of folk psychology. I argue that their paper fails to show this, }, topic = {connectionism;folk-psychology;} } @article{ clapp_l:1995a, author = {Lenny Clapp}, title = {How to Be Direct and Innocent: A Criticism of {C}rimmins and {P}erry's Theory of Attitude Ascriptions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1995}, volume = {18}, number = {5}, pages = {529--565}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;philosophy-of-language;} } @unpublished{ clapp_l:2000a, author = {Lenny Clapp}, title = {Beyond Sense and Reference: An Alternative Response to the Problem of Opacity}, year = {2000}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Illinois Wesleyan University}, topic = {intensionality;compositionality;propositional-attitudes; philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ clapp_l:2001a, author = {Lenny Clapp}, title = {Disjuctive Properties, Multiple Realizations}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2000}, volume = {98}, number = {3}, pages = {111--136}, topic = {mind-body-problem;disjunctive-properties;} } @article{ clapp_l:2002a, author = {Lenny Clapp}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}cientific Essentialism}, by {B}rian {E}llis}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2000}, volume = {111}, number = {4}, pages = {589--594}, xref = {Review of: ellis_b:2001a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;dispositionals;events;causality; essentialism;} } @article{ clapp_l:2002b, author = {Lenny Clapp}, title = {Davidson's Program And Interpreted Logical Forms}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages = {261--297}, topic = {Davidson-semantics;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ clapp_l:2009a, author = {Lenny Clapp}, title = {In Defense of Context Shifting Arguments}, booktitle = {Compositionality, Context and Semantic Values}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert J. Stainton and Christopher Viger}, pages = {79--103}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Commentary on: cappelen_h-lepore_e:2003a}, topic = {nl-semantics;context-sensitivity;indexicals;} } @incollection{ clapp_l:2010a, author = {Lenny Clapp}, title = {Unarticulated Tension}, booktitle = {Context-Dependence, Perspective and Relativity}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fran\c{c}ois R\'ecanati and Isidora Stojanovic and Neftali Villanueva}, pages = {19--50}, abstract = {The idea of unarticulated constituents is used in several different ways in the philosophy of mind and the philosophy of language. My purpose here is to clarify these uses and thereby illustrate that there is considerable tension between them. ... I will explore the consequences of these conclusions for semantic relativism, a position that bears at least very strong resemblance toward the views advanced in (Perry 1986).}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn17}, topic = {context;contextualism;unarticulated-constituents;} } @article{ clapp_l:2021a, author = {Lenny Clapp}, title = {Negative Existentials as Corrections: A Partial Solution to the Problem of Negative Existentials in Segmented Discourse Representation Theory}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2021}, volume = {44}, number = {6}, pages = {1281--1315}, abstract = {I [analyze] paradigmatic uses of negative existentials as corrections of previous assertions that are judged to suffer from referential presupposition failure. I present the explanation within the framework of a simple version of segmented discourse representation theory.}, topic = {(non)existence;discourse-representation-theory;} } @incollection{ clapp_l-etal:2019a, author = {Leonard Clapp and Marga Reimer and Anne Spire}, title = {Negative Existentials}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Reference}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Jeannette Gundel and Barbara Abbott}, pages = {203--235}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reference;(non)existence;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ clark_a:2006a, author = {Austen Clark}, title = {Painfulness Is Not a Quale}, booktitle = {Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Muryat Aydede}, pages = {177--197}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @book{ clark_a:2015a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Surfing Uncertainty}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {... explores ... prediction machines -- devices that have evolved to anticipate the incoming streams of sensory stimulation before they arrive. These predictions then initiate actions that structure our worlds and alter the very things we need to engage and predict. Clark takes us on a journey in discovering the circular causal flows and the self-structuring of the environment that define "the predictive brain." ...}, ISBN = {9780190217013}, topic = {predictive-causal-models;cogntive-neuroscience;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ clark_a:2019a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Consciousness as Generative Entanglement}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {116}, number = {12}, pages = {645--662}, contentnote = {Exploits predictive processing models to propose an account of qualia.}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;predictive-causal-models;} } @incollection{ clark_a-lappin_s:2012a, author = {Alexander Clark and Shalom Lappin}, title = {Computational Learning Theory and Language Acquisition}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Linguistics}, publisher = {North Holland}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruth Kempson and Tim Fernando and Nicholas Asher}, pages = {445--476}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {learnability;L1-acquisition;} } @book{ clark_a1:1989a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Microcognition: Philosophy, Cognitive Science, and Parallel Distributed Processing}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-53095-3}, xref = {Reviews: losonsky:1994a, higginbotham_j:1994d.}, topic = {cognitive-science;connectionism;} } @book{ clark_a1:1993a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Associative Engines: Connectionism, Concepts, and Representational Change}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-03210-4}, xref = {Review: aizawa_k:1995a.}, topic = {connectionism;concepts;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ clark_a1:1993b, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Superpositional Connectionism: A Reply to {M}arinov}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {271--281}, xref = {Reply to: marinov:1993a}, topic = {sub-symbolic-representations;} } @article{ clark_a1:1994a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Representational Trajectories in Connectionist Learning}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {317--332}, abstract = {The paper considers the problems involved in getting neural networks to learn about highly structured task domains. }, topic = {connectionism;concept-learning;} } @incollection{ clark_a1:1996a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Connectionism, Concepts, and Folk Psychology: The Legacy of {A}lan {T}uring: Volume {II}}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter J.R. Millican and Andy Clark}, pages = {1--6}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;foundations-of-cogsci; connectionism;} } @article{ clark_a1:1998a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Time and Mind}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1998}, volume = {95}, number = {7}, pages = {354--376}, xref = {A reply to vangelder_t:1995a.}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;} } @article{ clark_a1:1998b, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Twisted Tales: Causal Complexity and Cognitive Scientific Explanation}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {79--99}, topic = {causality;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @book{ clark_a1:2001a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Mindware: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-513857-0.}, xref = {Review: brogaard:2002a}, topic = {philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @book{ clark_a1:2003a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Natural-Born Cyborgs: Minds, Technologies, and the Future of Human Intelligence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-51751-7}, xref = {Review: broderick:2007}, topic = {social-impact-of-computation;brain-computer-interfaces; AI-editorial;} } @book{ clark_a1:2008a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Supersizing the Mind: Embodiment, Action, and Cognitive Extension}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: rupert:2012a, cole_dc:2008a.}, ISBN = {978-0-19-533321-3}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;embodiment;} } @book{ clark_a1:2015a, author = {Andy Clark}, title = {Surfing Uncertainty: Prediction, Action, and the Embodied Mind}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780190217013}, abstract = {[Our minds are] devices that have evolved to anticipate the incoming streams of sensory stimulation before they arrive. These predictions then initiate actions that structure our worlds and alter the very things we need to engage and predict.}, topic = {online-causal-prediction;cognitive-psychology;philosophical-psychology;} } @book{ clark_a1-etal:1996a, editor = {Andy Clark and Jes\'us Ezquerro and Jes\'us M. Larrazabal}, title = {Philosophy and Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1996}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {cognitive-science-general;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribio:1986a, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribio}, title = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, {V}olume 1}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1986}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {Media Union Library Q335 .U531}, topic = {uncertainty-in-AI;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribio:1988a, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribio}, title = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, {V}olume 2}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1988}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {Media Union Library Q335 .U531}, topic = {uncertainty-in-AI;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribio:1989a, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribio}, title = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, {V}olume 3}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1989}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {Media Union Library Q335 .U531}, topic = {uncertainty-in-AI;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribio:1990a, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribio}, title = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, {V}olume 4}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1990}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {Media Union Library Q335 .U531}, topic = {uncertainty-in-AI;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribio:1990b, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribio}, title = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, {V}olume 5}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1990}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {Media Union Library Q335 .U531}, topic = {uncertainty-in-AI;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribio:1991a, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribio}, title = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, {V}olume 6}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1991}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {Media Union Library Q335 .U531}, topic = {uncertainty-in-AI;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribio:1998d, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribio}, title = {Machine Intelligence: Perspectives on the Computational Model}, Publisher = {Garland Publishing}, year = {1998}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0815327684}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, Q 335 .M1731 1998.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. A.M. Turing, "Computing Machinery and Intelligence" 2. John Haugeland, "Semantic Engines: An Introduction to Mind Design" 3. John R. Searle, "Mind, brains, and programs" 4. Stevan Harnad, "Symbol Grounding Problem" 5. Paul M. Churchland and Patricia Smith Churchland, "Could a Machine Think?" 6. David J. Chalmers, "On Implementing a Computation" 7. Allen Newell, "You Can't Play 20 Questions with Nature and Win: Projective Comments on the Papers of this Symposium" 8. David Marr, "Artificial Intelligence: A Personal View" 9. George N. Reeke, Jr. and Gerald M. Edelman, "Real Brains and Artificial Intelligence" 10. Hubert L. Dreyfus and Stuart E. Dreyfus, "Making a Mind Versus Modeling the Brain: Artificial Intelligence Back at a Branchpoint" 11. David Israel and John Perry, "What Is Information?" 12. David Kirsh, "When is Information Explicitly Represented?" 13. Fred I. Dretske, "Machines and the mental", pp. 14. Daniel C. Dennett. "Ways of Establishing Harmony" }, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribo:1998a, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribo}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science: Machine Intelligence}, publisher = {Garland Publishing}, year = {1998}, volume = {1}, address = {Levittown, Pennsylvania}, ISBN = {0815327684}, topic = {cognitive-science-survey;philosophy-AI;AI-survey;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribo:1998b, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribo}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science: Cognitive Architectures in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Garland Publishing}, year = {1998}, volume = {2}, address = {Levittown, Pennsylvania}, topic = {cognitive-science-survey;cognitive-architectures;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribo:1998c, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribo}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science: Consciousness and Emotion in Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Garland Publishing}, year = {1998}, volume = {3}, address = {Levittown, Pennsylvania}, topic = {cognitive-science-survey;consciousness;emotion;} } @book{ clark_a1-toribo:1998d, editor = {Andy Clark and Josefa Toribo}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science: Language and Meaning in Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Garland Publishing}, year = {1998}, volume = {4}, address = {Levittown, Pennsylvania}, topic = {cognitive-science-survey;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ clark_a2:2000a, author = {Alexander Clark}, title = {Inducing Syntactic Categories by Context Distribution Clustering}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {91--94}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;syntactic-categories;grammar-learning;} } @book{ clark_a3:1993a, author = {Austen Clark}, title = {Sensory Qualities}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198240015}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library BD 214 .C531 1993}, topic = {philosophy-of-perception;} } @incollection{ clark_a3:2008a, author = {Austen Clark}, title = {Phenomenal Properties: Some Models from Psychology and Philosophy}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {406--425}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {qualia;} } @article{ clark_b:1993a, author = {Billy Clark}, title = {Relevance and `Pseudo-Imperatives'}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1993}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, pages = {79--121}, topic = {indirect-speech-acts;pseudo-imperatives;} } @incollection{ clark_e:2005a, author = {Eve V. Clark}, title = {Pragmatics and Language Acquisition}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {562--577}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {pragmatics;L1-acquisition;} } @incollection{ clark_ec:2002a, author = {Eve V. Clark}, title = {Making Use of Pragmatic Inferences in the Acquisition of Meaning}, booktitle = {The Construction of Meaning}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2002}, editor = {David Beaver and Luis de Casillas Mart\'inez and Brady Z. Clark and Stefan Kaufmann}, pages = {45--58}, address = {Stanford University}, topic = {pragmatics;L1-acquisition;developmental-psychology;} } @incollection{ clark_hh:1975a, author = {Herbert H. Clark}, title = {Bridging}, booktitle = {Theoretical Issues in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Roger C. Schank and Bonnie Nash-Webber}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {definite-descriptions;discourse;discourse-structure; nm-ling;pragmatics;bridging-anaphora;} } @book{ clark_hh:1976a, author = {Herbert H. Clark}, title = {Semantics and Comprehension}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, address = {Berlin}, year = {1976}, ISBN = {9789027933843}, topic = {psycholinguistics;semantic-processing;} } @article{ clark_hh:1979a, author = {Herbert H. Clark}, title = {Responding to Indirect Speech Acts}, journal = {Cognitive Psychology}, year = {1979}, volume = {11}, pages = {430--477}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {indirect-speech-acts;pragmatics;psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh:1983a, author = {Herbert H. Clark}, title = {Making Sense of Nonce Sense}, booktitle = {The Process of Language Understanding}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1983}, editor = {G.B. Flores d'Arcais and R.J. Jarvella}, pages = {297--331}, address = {London}, xref = {Republished in clark_hh:1992a.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {nonce-sense;pragmatics;psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ clark_hh:1987a, author = {Herbert H. Clark}, title = {Relevant to What?}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1987}, volume = {10}, pages = {714--715}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {implicature;relevance;psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh:1991b, author = {Herbert H. CLark}, title = {Words, the World, and Their Possibilities}, booktitle = {The Perception of Structure}, publisher = {American Psychological Association}, year = {1991}, editor = {Gregory R. Lockhead and James R. Pomerantz}, address = {Washington, {DC}}, xref = {Republished in clark_hh:1992a.}, topic = {lexical-semantics;context;} } @book{ clark_hh:1992a, author = {Herbert Clark}, title = {Arenas of Language Use}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Chicago}, contentnote = {TC: 1. "Definite Reference and Mutual Knowledge" 2. "Context for Comprehension" 3. "Common Ground and the Understanding of Demonstrative Reference" 4. "Referring as a Collaborative Process" 5. "Contributing to Discourse" 6. "Understanding by Addressees and Overhearers" 7. "Hearers and Speech Acts" 8. "Dealing with Overhearers" 9. "Concealing One's Meaning from Overhearers" 10. "Making Sense of Nonce Sense" 11. "Understanding Old Words with New Meanings" 12. "Words, the World, and Their Possibilities" }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {mutual-belief;coord-in-conversation;discourse; pragmatics;psychology-of-discourse;} } @book{ clark_hh:1996a, author = {Herbert H. Clark}, title = {Using Language}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Introduction 1. Language Use 2. Joint Activities 3. Joint Actions 4. Common Ground 5. Meaning and Understanding 6. Signaling 7. Joint Projects 8. Grounding 9. Utterances 10. Joint Commitment 11. Conversation 12. Layering 13. Conclusion }, topic = {pragmatics;psychology-of-discourse;} } @inproceedings{ clark_hh:1999a, author = {Herbert H. Clark}, title = {How Do Real People Communicate with Virtual Partners?}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Psychological Models of Communication in Collaborative Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Susan E. Brennan and Alain Giboin and David R. Traum}, pages = {43--47}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {discourse;HCI;psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh:2005a, author = {Herbert H. Clark}, title = {Pragmatics of Language Performance}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {365--382}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr16}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Rnotes files. "Clark, HH"}, topic = {conversational-record;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ clark_hh-brennan_se:1991a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Susan E. Brennan}, title = {Grounding in Communication}, booktitle = {Perspectives on Socially Shared Cognition}, publisher = {American Psychological Association}, year = {1991}, editor = {Lauren B. Resnick and John M. Levine and Stephanie D. Teasley}, pages = {127--149}, address = {Washington, D.C.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap16}, topic = {social-psychology;shared-cognition;psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh-carlson_tb:1982a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Thomas B. Carlson}, title = {Speech Acts and Hearer's Beliefs}, booktitle = {Mutual Knowledge}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1982}, pages = {1--36}, address = {London}, xref = {Revised version in clark:1992a.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {discourse;mutual-belief;pragmatics;psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ clark_hh-carlson_tb:1982b, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Thomas B. Carlson}, title = {Hearers and Speech Acts}, journal = {Language}, year = {1982}, volume = {58}, number = {2}, pages = {332--373}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Republished in clark_hh:1992a.}, topic = {speech-acts;discourse;participant-roles;psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh-carlson_tb:1982c, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Thomas B. Carlson}, title = {Critics' Beliefs about Hearer's Beliefs: A Rejoinder to {J}ohnson-{L}aird, {S}perber and {W}ilks}, booktitle = {Mutual Knowledge}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1982}, pages = {52--59}, address = {London}, topic = {discourse;mutual-belief;pragmatics;psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh-carlson_tb:1992a, author = {Herbert Clark and Thomas B. Carlson}, title = {Context for Comprehension}, booktitle = {Attention and Performance {IX}}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1982}, pages = {313--330}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, xref = {Republished in clark:1992a.}, topic = {discourse;context;pragmatics;psychology-of-discourse;} } @book{ clark_hh-clark_e:1977a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Eve Clark}, title = {Psychology and Language, an Introduction to Psycholinguistics}, publisher = {Harcourt Brace Jovanovich}, year = {1977}, address = {New York}, xref = {Review: dahl_o-linell_p:1980a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {psycholinguistics;} } @article{ clark_hh-etal:1983a, author = {Herbert H. CLark and R. Schreuder and S. Buttrick}, title = {Common Ground and the Understanding of Demonstrative Utterance}, journal = {Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior}, year = {1983}, volume = {22}, pages = {245--258}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, xref = {Republished in clark_hh:1992a.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {reference;discourse;mutual-belief;pragmatics; deixis;demonstratives;conversational-record;psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ clark_hh-gerrig:1983a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and R.J. Gerrig}, title = {Understanding Old Words with New Meanings}, journal = {Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior}, year = {1983}, volume = {22}, pages = {591--608}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {nonce-sense;semantic-change;psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ clark_hh-gerrig:1984a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and R.J. Gerrig}, title = {On the Pretense of Irony}, journal = {Journal of Experimental Psychology: General}, year = {1984}, volume = {113}, number = {1}, pages = {121--126}, topic = {irony;cognitive-psychology;psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ clark_hh-gerrig:1990a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Richard J. Gerrig}, title = {Quotations as Demonstrations}, journal = {Language}, year = {1990}, volume = {66}, number = {4}, pages = {764--805}, xref = {Criticism: johnson_m3-lepore_e:2011a}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh-haviland_se:1974a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Susan E. Haviland}, title = {Psychological Processes as Linguistic Explanation}, booktitle = {Explaining Linguistic Phenomena}, publisher = {Hemisphere Publishing Corp.}, year = {1974}, editor = {David Cohen}, pages = {91--124}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;linguistics-methodology; explanation;given-new;} } @incollection{ clark_hh-haviland_se:1974b, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Susan E. Haviland}, title = {Comprehension and the Given-New Contract}, booktitle = {Discourse Production and Comprehension}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1974}, editor = {R. Freedle}, pages = {1--40}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {given-new;discourse;pragmatics;psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ clark_hh-lucy:1975a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Peter Lucy}, title = {Understanding What is Meant From What is Said: A Study in Conversationally Conveyed Requests}, journal = {Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior}, year = {1975}, volume = {14}, pages = {56--72}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {speech-acts;speaker-meaning;pragmatics;psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh-marshall:1981a2, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Catherine R. Marshall}, title = {Definite Reference and Mutual Knowledge}, booktitle = {Arenas of Language Use}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Chicago}, editor = {Herbert H. Clark}, pages = {9--59}, topic = {reference;discourse;mutual-belief;pragmatics; psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh-marshall_ca:1978a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Catherine R. Marshall}, title = {Reference Diaries}, booktitle = {Theoretical Issues in Natural Language Processing, Volume 2}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1978}, editor = {David L. Waltz}, pages = {57--63}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, topic = {reference;discourse;mutual-belief;pragmatics; psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh-marshall_cb:1981a1, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Catherine R. Marshall}, title = {Definite Reference and Mutual Knowledge}, booktitle = {Elements of Discourse Understanding}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Bonnie Webber and Ivan Sag}, pages = {10--63}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Revised version in clark:1992a.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, rtnote = {Copy In RHT collection. \no20}, topic = {reference;discourse;mutual-belief;pragmatics; psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ clark_hh-schaefer_ef:1987a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Edward F. Schaefer}, title = {Concealing One's Meaning from Overhearers}, journal = {Journal of Memory and Language}, year = {1987}, volume = {26}, pages = {209--225}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Republished in clark_hh:1992a.}, topic = {discourse;collaboration;pragmatics;participant-roles; psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ clark_hh-schaefer_ef:1989a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Edward F. Schaefer}, title = {Contributing to Discourse}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1989}, volume = {13}, pages = {259--294}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Republished in clark_hh:1992a.}, topic = {discourse;collaboration;pragmatics;psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_hh-schaefer_ef:1996a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Edward F. Schaefer}, title = {Dealing with Overhearers}, booktitle = {Using Language}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Herbert H. Clark}, pages = {248--274}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {discourse;conversational-record;} } @article{ clark_hh-schaefer_eh:1987a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Edward F. Schaefer}, title = {Collaborating on Contributions to Conversations}, journal = {Language and Cognitive Processes}, year = {1987}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {19--41}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap16}, topic = {discourse;common-ground;} } @article{ clark_hh-schober:1989a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Michael Schober}, title = {Understanding by Addressees and Overhearers}, journal = {Cognitive Psychology}, year = {1989}, volume = {21}, pages = {211--232}, number = {2}, xref = {Republished in clark_hh:1992a.}, topic = {discourse;collaboration;pragmatics;participant-roles; psychology-of-discourse;} } @article{ clark_hh-wilkesgibbs:1986a, author = {Herbert H. Clark and Deanna Wilkes-Gibbs}, title = {Referring as a Collaborative Process}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {1986}, volume = {22}, pages = {1--39}, number = {1}, topic = {reference;collaboration;discourse;pragmatics; psychology-of-discourse;} } @incollection{ clark_kl:1978a1, author = {Keith L. Clark}, title = {Negation as Failure}, booktitle = {Logic and Data Bases}, publisher = {Plenum Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {H. Gallaire and Jack Minker}, pages = {293--322}, address = {New York}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, xref = {Republication: clark_kl:1978a1.}, topic = {logic-programming;negation-as-failure;} } @incollection{ clark_kl:1978a2, author = {Keith L. Clark}, title = {Negation as Failure}, booktitle = {Readings in Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1987}, editor = {Matthew L. Ginsberg}, pages = {311--325}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Original publication: clark_kl:1978a2.}, topic = {logic-programming;negation-as-failure;} } @book{ clark_kl-tarnlund:1982a, editor = {Keith L. Clark and Sten-{\AA}ke T{\aa}rnlund}, title = {Logic Programming}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1982}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0121755207}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA76.6 .L5871 1982.}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @article{ clark_m:1999a, author = {Michael Clark}, title = {Recalcitrant Variants of the Liar Paradox}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1999}, volume = {59}, number = {2}, pages = {117--126}, xref = {Commentary: weir_a:2000a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ clark_m1:1980a, author = {Michael Clark}, title = {The Equivalence of Tautological and `Strict' Entailment Proof of an Amended Conjecture of {L}ewy's}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {9--15}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ clark_mj:1963a, author = {Michael J. Clark}, title = {Knowledge and Grounds: A Comment on {M}r. {G}ettier's Paper}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1963}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {46--48}, xref = {Comment on: gettier:1963a}, topic = {knowledge;belief;analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ clark_mj:1965a, author = {Michael J. Clark}, title = {Intentional objects}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1965}, volume = {25}, number = {Supp-l}, pages = {123--128}, topic = {intentionality;} } @article{ clark_mj:1971a, author = {Michael J. Clark}, title = {Ifs and Hooks}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1971}, volume = {32}, number = {2}, pages = {33--39}, contentnote = {Argues against e.g. Strawson in favor of material account.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ clark_mj:1974a, author = {Michael J. Clark}, title = {Ifs and Hooks: A Rejoinder}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1974}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {77--83}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ clark_mj:1975a, author = {Michael J. Clark}, title = {Utterer's Meaning and Implications about Belief}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1975}, volume = {35}, number = {3}, pages = {105--108}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ clark_mj:1976a, author = {Michael J. Clark}, title = {If Conditionals Were Not Contraposable}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1976}, volume = {36}, number = {2}, pages = {112}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ clark_mj:1987a, author = {Michael J. Clark}, title = {The Truth about Heaps}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1987}, volume = {47}, number = {4}, pages = {177--179}, topic = {sorites-paradox;} } @article{ clark_mj:1989a, author = {Michael J. Clark}, title = {A Paradox of Conditional Probability}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1989}, volume = {49}, number = {1}, pages = {16--21}, topic = {probability;belief;} } @book{ clark_mj:2002a, author = {Michael J. Clark}, title = {Paradoxes from {A} to {Z}}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2002}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0 415 22809 3}, topic = {paradoxes;} } @article{ clark_mj-liggins_d:2012a, author = {Michael J. Clark and David Liggins}, title = {Recent Work on Grounding}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {4}, pages = {812--823}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de16}, topic = {truthmaking;metaphysics;} } @inproceedings{ clark_p-etal:2000a, author = {Peter Clark and John A. Thompson and Bruce W. Porter}, title = {Knowledge Patterns}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {591--600}, topic = {knowledge-acquisition;knowledge-engineering; macro-formalization;} } @article{ clark_r:1976a, author = {Romane Clark}, title = {Old Foundations for a Logic of Perception}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1976}, volume = {33}, number = {2--4}, pages = {75--99}, topic = {logic-of-perception;} } @article{ clark_r1:1953a, author = {Romane Clark}, title = {Review of `{M}r. {P}ap on `Logic, Existence, and Definite Descriptions'', by {{D}onald {K}alish}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1953}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {206}, xref = {Review of: pap_a:1953a, kalish:1955a.}, topic = {empty-domain;} } @article{ clark_r1:1965a, author = {Romane Clark}, title = {On What is Naturally Necessary}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1965}, volume = {62}, number = {21}, pages = {613--625}, xref = {Commentary: buck_rc:1965a, achinstein_p:1965a.}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;natural-laws;causality; nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ clark_r1:1970a, author = {Romane Clark}, title = {Concerning the Logic of Predicate Modifiers}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1970}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {311--335}, topic = {adverbs;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ clark_r1:1973a, author = {Romane Clark}, title = {Prima Facie Generalizations}, booktitle = {Conceptual Change}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1973}, editor = {Glenn Pearce and Patrick Maynard}, pages = {42--54}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "R. Clark"}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;generics;} } @article{ clark_r1:1976a, author = {Romane Clark}, title = {Old Foundations for a Logic of Perception}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1990}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {75--99}, topic = {logic-of-perception;} } @article{ clark_r1:1982a, author = {Romane Clark}, title = {When Is a Fallacy Valid? Reflections on Backward Reasoning}, journal = {Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {1--13}, topic = {abduction;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ clark_r1:1982b, author = {Romane Clark}, title = {Not Every Act of Thought Has a Matching Proposition}, journal = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {5}, pages = {509--524}, xref = {Commentary: heidelberger_h:1980a}, topic = {propositions;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ clark_r1:1986a, author = {Romane Clark}, title = {Predication and Paronymous Modifiers}, journal = {Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1986}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {376--392}, topic = {nl-semantics;adverbs;} } @incollection{ clark_r2:1992a, author = {Ron Clark}, title = {Reflection and Truth}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fourth Conference ({TARK} 1992)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Yoram Moses}, pages = {73--84}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {epistemic-logic;semantic-reflection;} } @incollection{ clark_r3:2011a, author = {Robin Clark}, title = {On the Learnability of Quantifiers}, booktitle = {Handbook of Logic and Language}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {2011}, editor = {Johan {van Benthem} and Alice {ter Meulen}}, pages = {911--923}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;complexity-theory;} } @book{ clark_r3:2012a, author = {Robin Clark}, title = {Meaningful Games: Exploring language with Game Theory}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0262016179}, topic = {game-theory;nl-semantics;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ clark_r3-kurtonina:1999a, author = {Robin Clark and Natasha Kurtonina}, title = {Consequences from {Q}uine}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {91--95}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {combinatory-logic;switch-reference;} } @article{ clark_r3-parikh_p:2007a, author = {Robin Clark and Prashant Parikh}, title = {Game theory and Discourse Anaphora}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2007}, volume = {16}, number = {3}, pages = {265--282}, topic = {game-theory;anaphora;discourse;} } @article{ clarke_b:1981a, author = {Bowman L. Clarke}, title = {A Calculus of Individuals Based on `Connection{'} }, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {204--218}, topic = {mereology;spatial-reasoning;} } @article{ clarke_b:1985a, author = {Bowman L. Clarke}, title = {Individuals and Points}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1985}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {61--75}, topic = {mereology;spatial-reasoning;} } @book{ clarke_dd:1983a, author = {David D. Clarke}, title = {Language and Action: A Structural Model of Behaviour}, publisher = {Pergamon Press}, year = {1983}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {HILLMAN P95.45 .C58}, topic = {discourse-analysis;} } @article{ clarke_ds:1977a, author = {D.S. Clarke, Jr.}, title = {The Role of Practical Inferences in Deliberation}, journal = {The Southern Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {15--25}, topic = {practical-reasoning;} } @book{ clarke_ds:1985a, author = {David S. {Clarke, Jr.}}, title = {Practical Inferences}, publisher = {Routledge \& Kegan Paul}, year = {1996}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0710204159}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library BC199.I47 C581 1985}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ clarke_e:2013a, author = {Ellen Clarke}, title = {The Multiple Realizability of Biological Individuals}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {110}, number = {8}, pages = {413--435}, topic = {philosophy-of-biology;functionalism;} } @article{ clarke_em-etal:1986a, author = {Edmund M. Clarke and E.A. Emerson and A.P. Sistla}, title = {Automatic Verification of Finite-State Concurrent Systems Using Temporal Logic Specifications}, journal = {{ACM} Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems}, year = {1986}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {244--263}, topic = {temporal-logic;program-verification;} } @book{ clarke_em-etal:1999a, author = {Edmund M. Clarke and Orna Grumberg and Doron A. Peled}, title = {Model Checking}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262032708}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS General shelves.}, topic = {model-checking;program-verification;} } @book{ clarke_m2:2004a, author = {Murray Clarke}, title = {Reconstructing Reason and Representation}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-03322-4}, topic = {modularity;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ clarke_n-wilson_n:1991a, author = {Mike Clarke and Nic Wilson}, title = {Efficient Algorithms for Belief Functions Based on the Relationship Between Belief and Probability}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {48--52}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {probabilistic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ clarke_r1:2000a, author = {Randolph Clarke}, title = {Modest Libertarianism}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 14: Action and Freedom}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {21--45}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @incollection{ clarke_r1:2005a, author = {Randolph Clarke}, title = {Incompatibilist (Nondeterministic) Theories of Free Will}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {Stanford University}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2005/entries/incompatibilism-theories/}, year = {2005}, quarter = {Fall 2005}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {freedom;volition;(in)determinism;(in)compatibilism;} } @article{ clarke_r1:2010a, author = {Randolph Clarke}, title = {Intentional Omissions}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2010}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {158--177}, topic = {intention;omissions;} } @incollection{ clarke_r1:2012a, author = {Randolph Clarke}, title = {What is an Omission?}, booktitle = {Action Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {127--143}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;refraining;} } @article{ clarke_r1:2019a, author = {Randolph Clarke}, title = {Free Will, Agent Causation, `Disappearing Agents{'}}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2019}, volume = {53}, number = {1}, pages = {76--96}, topic = {reasons-for-action;causality;} } @incollection{ clarke_r2:2011a, author = {Roger Clarke}, title = {Asimov's Laws of Robotics: Implications for Information Technology}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {254--284}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @article{ clarkedoane:2013a, author = {Justin Clarke-Doane}, title = {What is Absolute Undecidability?}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2013}, volume = {47}, number = {3}, pages = {467--481}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ clarkedunne_j:2019a, author = {Justin Clarke-Dunne}, title = {Modal Objectivity}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2019}, volume = {53}, number = {2}, pages = {266--295}, topic = {philosophy-of-possible-worlds;metaphysics;} } @inproceedings{ classen_j:2018a, author = {Jens Cla{\ss}en}, title = {Symbolic Verification of Golog Programs with First-Order BDDs}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {524--529}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... So far work on the verification of Golog has been mostly of theoretical nature. Here we report on our efforts on implementing a verification algorithm for Golog based on fixpoint computations, a graph representation of program executions, and a symbolic representation of the state space. ... We evaluate the approach by experimental analysis.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {GoLog;program-verication;} } @inproceedings{ classen_j-delgrande_j:2020a, author = {Jens Cla{\ss}en and James Delgrande}, title = {Dyadic Obligations over Complex Actions as Deontic Constraints in the Situation Calculus}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {253--263}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... In this paper, we integrate these two areas by incorporating deontic notions into Situation Calculus theories. We do this by considering deontic assertions as constraints, expressed as a set of conditionals, which apply to complex actions expressed as GOLOG programs. These constraints induce a ranking of "ideality" over possible future situations. This ranking in turn is used to guide an agent in its planning deliberation, towards a course of action that adheres best to the deontic constraints. We present a formalization that includes a wide class of (dyadic) deontic assertions, lets us distinguish prima facie from all-things-considered obligations, and particularly addresses contrary-to-duty scenarios. ...}, topic = {conditional-obligation;situation-calculus;reasoning-about-obligation;} } @inproceedings{ classen_j-delgrande_jp:2021a, author = {Jens Cla{\ss}en and James P. Delgrande}, title = {An Account of Intensional and Extensional Actions, and its Application to Belief, Nondeterministic Actions and Fallible Sensors}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {194--204}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... We present a general, qualitative approach to reasoning about action and change in [a highly uncertain] setting. ... we consider actions to have an intensional aspect, under the control of and determined by the agent, and an extensional aspect, not directly accessible to the agent and controlled by "nature". This leads to two distinct but related related notions of belief, an extensional "bird's eye" view which models an agent's beliefs wrt actually-executed actions, and an intensional view representing beliefs from the agent's point of view. We argue that the approach is significantly more general and comprehensive than previous accounts, and leads to a unified view of failed actions and nondeterminism with respect to physical and sensing actions.}, topic = {planning;situation-calculus;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @incollection{ classen_j-delgrande_jp:2022a, author = {Jens Cla{\ss}en and James P. Delgrande}, title = {Projection of Belief in the Presence of Nondeterministic Actions and Fallible Sensing}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {400--404}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In a recent paper, we presented a Situation Calculus-based framework for modelling an agent that has incomplete or inaccurate knowledge about its environments, whose actions are non-deterministic, and whose sensor might give incorrect results. Generalizing earlier proposals, the presented approach represented the agent's epistemic state by a set of situations ranked by their respective plausibility, which would then be updated by modifying the plausibility ranks accordingly. In this short paper, we extend our earlier work by considering the problem of projection in this framework, i.e. the question whether a certain (epistemic) formula will hold after a given sequence of actions. ...}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {situation-calculus;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @incollection{ classen_j-lakemeyer_g:2006a, author = {Jens Cla{\ss}en and Gerhard Lakemeyer}, title = {Foundations for Knowledge-Based Programs Using ${\cal ES}$}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {318--328}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {GoLog;knowledge-based-programming;} } @incollection{ classen_j-lakemeyer_g:2008a, author = {Jens Classen and Gerhard Lakemeyer}, title = {A Logic for Non-Terminating {G}olog Programs}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {589--599}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {Typical Golog programs for robot control are non-terminating. Analyzing such programs so far requires meta-theoretic arguments involving complex fix-point constructions. In this paper we propose a logic based on the situation calculus variant ES, which includes elements from branching time, dynamic and process logics and where the meaning of programs is modelled as possibly infinite sequences of actions. We show how properties of non-terminating programs can be formulated in the logic and, for a subset of it, how existing ideas from symbolic model checking in temporal logic can be applied to automatically verify program properties. }, topic = {Golog;} } @incollection{ classen_w:1992a, author = {Wim Classen}, title = {Generating Referring Expressions in a Multimodal Environment}, booktitle = {Aspects of Automated Natural Language Generation: 6th International Workshop on Natural Language Generation, {T}rento, {I}taly, April 5--7, 1992}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, editor = {Robert Dale and Eduard Hovy and Dietmar R\"ossner and Oliviero Stock}, pages = {227--262}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-generation;referring-expressions;multimedia-generation;} } @article{ clausing:2002a, author = {Thorsten Clausing}, title = {A Syntactic Framework with Probabilistic Beliefs and Conditionals for the Analysis of Strategic Form Games}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2002}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {335--348}, topic = {game-theory;conditionals;epistemic-logic;probability-semantics;} } @book{ clavel:2000a, author = {Manuel Clavel}, title = {Reflection in Rewriting Logic: Metalogical Foundations and Metaprogramming Applications}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2000}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1575862379}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76 .S4251 1997.}, topic = {metaprogramming;} } @article{ claybrook:1976a, author = {Billy G. Claybrook}, title = {A New Approach to the Symbolic Factorization of Multivariate Polynomials}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1976}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {203--241}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A heuristic factorization scheme that uses learning and other heuristic programming techniques to improve the efficiency of determining the symbolic factorization of multivariate polynomials with integer coefficients and an arbitrary number of variables and terms is described. The learning program, POLYFACT, in which the factorization scheme is implemented is also described. POLYFACT uses learning through the dynamic construction and manipulation of first-order predicate calculus heuristics to reduce the amount of searching for the irreducible factors of a polynomial. Tables containing the results of factoring randomly generated multivariate polynomials are presented: (1) to demonstrate that learning does improve considerably the efficiency of factoring polynomials and (2) to show that POLYFACT does learn from previous experience. The factorization times of polynomials factored by both the scheme implemented in POLYFACT and Wang's implementation of Berlekamp's algorithm are given. The two algorithms are compared, and two situations where POLYFACT's algorithm can be used to improve the efficiency of Wang's algorithm are discussed. }, topic = {machine-learning;search;algebraic-computation;} } @article{ clearwater-hogg_t:1996a, author = {Scott H. Clearwater and Tad Hogg}, title = {Problem Structure Heuristics and Scaling Behavior for Generic Algorithms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {81}, number = {1--2}, pages = {327--347}, topic = {search;experiments-on-theorem-proving-algs; computational-phase-transitions;} } @book{ cleave:1991a, author = {John P. Cleave}, title = {A Study of Logics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @article{ cleave_jp:1974a, author = {John P. Cleave}, title = {The Notion of Logical Consequence in the Logic of Inexact Predicates}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"yr mathematische Logik und {G}rundlagen der {M}athematik}, year = {1974}, volume = {20}, number = {19--22}, pages = {307--324}, topic = {multivalued-logic;vagueness;} } @article{ cleland_ce:1991a, author = {Carol Cleland}, title = {On the Individuation of Events}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1991}, volume = {86}, number = {2}, pages = {229--254}, topic = {events;individuation;event-individuation;} } @article{ cleland_ce:1993a, author = {Carol E. Cleland}, title = {Is the {C}hurch-{T}uring Thesis True?}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {283--312}, abstract = {The Church-Turing thesis makes a bold claim about the theoretical limits to computation. $\ldots$ In this paper I identify three domains of application which have been claimed for the thesis: (1) the number theoretic functions; (2) all functions; (3) mental and/or physical phenomena. $\ldots$ I argue that mundane procedures can be said to be effective in the same sense in which Turing machine procedures can be said to be effective. I also argue that mundane procedures differ from Turing machine procedures in a fundamental way $\ldots$ }, xref = {Commentary: horsten_l-roelants:1995a.}, topic = {Church's-thesis;foundations-of-computation; physical-realizations-of-computation;} } @article{ cleland_ce:1995a, author = {Carole E. Cleland}, title = {Effective Procedures and Computable Functions}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1995}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {9--23}, xref = {Response to: horsten_l-roelants:1995a.}, topic = {Church's-thesis;foundations-of-computation; physical-realizations-of-computation;} } @article{ cleland_ce:2001a, author = {Carol E. Cleland}, title = {Recipes, Algorithms, and Programs}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {219--237}, abstract = {In the technical literature of computer science, the concept of an effective procedure is closely associated with the notion of an instruction that precisely specifies an action. $\ldots$ despite the pivotal role played by the notion of a precisely specified instruction in classifying procedures as effective and ineffective, little attention has been paid to the manner in which instructions "precisely specify" the actions they prescribe. It is the purpose of this paper to remedy this defect. The results are startling. The reputed exemplary precision of Turing machine instructions turns out to be a myth. Indeed, the most precise specifications of action are provided not by the procedures of theoretical computer science and mathematics (algorithms) but rather by the nontechnical procedures of everyday life. $\ldots$ }, topic = {foundations-of-computation;} } @article{ cleland_ce:2002a, author = {Carol E. Cleland}, title = {On Effective Procedures}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {159--179}, abstract = {Since the mid-twentieth century, the concept of the Turing machine has dominated thought about effective procedures. This paper presents an alternative to Turing's analysis; it unifies, refines, and extends my earlier work on this topic. I show that Turing machines cannot live up to their billing as paragons of effective procedure; at best, they may be said to provide us with mere procedure schemas. $\ldots$ }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl12.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Rnotes files.}, topic = {effectivity;foundations-of-computation;} } @article{ cleland_ce:2002b, author = {Carol E. Cleland}, title = {Methodological and Epistemic Differences between Historical Science and Experimental Science}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2002}, volume = {69}, number = {3}, pages = {474--496}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;philosophy-of-history;} } @book{ clemen:1995a, author = {Robert T. Clemen}, title = {Making Hard Decisions: An Introduction to Decision Analysis}, publisher = {Duxbury Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Pacific Grove, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Eco}, topic = {decision-theoretic-reasoning;} } @article{ clemenson_d:2001a, author = {David Clemenson}, title = {A Paradox of Actuality}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2001}, volume = {61}, number = {2}, pages = {139--141}, topic = {possibility;conceivability;} } @article{ clementini-etal:1997a, author = {Eliseo Clementini and Paolino Di Felice and Daniel Hern\'andez}, title = {Qualitative Representation of Positional Information}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {95}, number = {2}, pages = {317--356}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;spatial-reasoning;spatial-representation;} } @article{ clementini_e-difelice_p:1997a, author = {Eliseo Clementini and Paolino Di Felice}, title = {A Global Framework for Qualitative Shape Description}, journal = {Geoinformatica}, year = {1997}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {11--27}, abstract = {The framework that we propose is structured in three dimensions (topological, projective, and metric properties of shape) that are shown to be necessary. Major emphasis is given to metric properties (elongation and symmetry) which have not received much attention till now.}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;spatial-cognition;spatial-representation;} } @article{ clerbout:2014a, author = {Nicolas Clerbout}, title = {First-Order Dialogical Games and Tableaux}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {4}, pages = {785--801}, topic = {dialogical-semantics;} } @article{ clerbout-etal:2011a, author = {Nicolas Clerbout and Marie-H\'el\`en Gorisse and Shahid Rahman}, title = {Context-Sensitivity in {J}ain Philosophy: A Dialogical Study of {S}iddharsigani's \emph{{C}ommentary on the Handbook of Logic}}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {40}, number = {5}, pages = {663--662}, topic = {Indian-logic;perspective-sensitive-reasoning;} } @incollection{ cleve:2002a, author = {James van Cleve}, title = {Time, Idealism, and the Identity of Indiscernables}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 16: Language and Mind, 2002}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {379--393}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {metaphysics;philosophy-of-time;} } @book{ cleveland:1997a, author = {Timothy Cleveland}, title = {Trying without Willing: An Essay in the Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Ashgate Publishing}, year = {1997}, address = {Aldershot}, xref = {Review: roth:2000a.}, topic = {volition;action;} } @book{ clifford_je:1975a, author = {John E Clifford}, title = {Tense and Tense Logic}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1975}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @book{ clifton_c-etal:1994a, editor = {Charles {Clifton, Jr.} and Lyn Frazier and Keith Rayner}, title = {Perspectives on Sentence Processing}, publisher = {Erlbaum}, year = {1994}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, topic = {psycholinguistics;} } @article{ climenhaga_n:2017a, author = {Nevin Climenhaga}, title = {How Explanation Guides Confirmation}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2017}, volume = {84}, number = {2}, pages = {359--368}, topic = {explanation;confirmation-theory;} } @article{ climer-zhang_wx:2006a, author = {Sharlee Climer and Weixiong Zhang}, title = {Cut-and-Solve: An Iterative Search Strategy for Combinatorial Optimization Problems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {8--9}, pages = {714--738}, topic = {search;AI-algorithms;anytime-algorithms;} } @article{ clocksin:2003a, author = {William F. Clocksin}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and the Future}, journal = {Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical, and Engineering Sciences}, year = {2003}, volume = {361}, pages = {1721--1748}, topic = {AI-editorial;} } @book{ clocksin-mellish:1987a, author = {William F. Clocksin and Christopher S. Mellish}, title = {Programming in Prolog}, edition = {3}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1987}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {Prolog;} } @book{ clocksin-mellish:1994a, author = {William F. Clocksin and Christopher S. Mellish}, title = {Programming in Prolog}, edition = {4}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {Prolog;} } @inproceedings{ cloos_c:2005a, author = {Christopher Cloos}, title = {The Utilibot Project: An Autonomous Mobile Robot Based on Utilitarianism}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Machine Ethics}, year = {2005}, editor = {G. Michael Anderson and Susan Leigh Anderson and Chris Arme}, pages = {38--45}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {As autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) begin living in the home, performing service tasks and assisting with daily activities, their actions will have profound ethical implications. Consequently, AMRs need to be outfitted with the ability to act morally with regard to human life and safety. Yet, in the area of robotics where morality is a relevant field of endeavor (i.e. human-robot interaction) the sub-discipline of morality does not exist. In response, the Utilibot project seeks to provide a point of initiation for the implementation of ethics in an AMR. The Utilibot is a decision-theoretic AMR guided by the utilitarian notion of the maximization of human well-being. The core ethical decision-making capacity of the Utilibot consists of two dynamic Bayesian networks that model human and environmental health, a dynamic decision network that accounts for decisions and utilities, and a Markov decision process (MDP) that decomposes the planning problem to solve for the optimal course of action to maximize human safety and well-being. }, topic = {computational-ethics;robotics;} } @article{ clowes_mb:1970a, author = {M.B. Clowes}, title = {On Seeing Things}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1970}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {79--116}, topic = {computer-vision;} } @incollection{ coady_d:2004a, author = {David Coady}, title = {Preempting Preemption}, booktitle = {Causation and Counterfactuals}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {John Collins and Ned Hall and Laurie A. Paul}, pages = {325--341}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {causality;conditionals;} } @book{ coakley_m:2017a, author = {Matthew Coakley}, title = {Motivation Ethics}, publisher = {Bloomsbury}, year = {2017}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {9781350004597}, abstract = {... we might morally evaluate ... what people do ... Or we might evaluate agents ... we could evaluate institutions ... . this book [asks] ... of the theories that evaluate one object, are they compatible with an acceptable account of the evaluation of the other objects? ... for instance, if a moral theory tells us which actions are right and wrong, can it then be compatible with a theory of what it is to be a morally good or bad or heroic or depraved agent (or deny the need for this)? ... the book sets out how this is very difficult for some of our most prominent theories, why this is so, and why a theory based on motivations might be the right answer.}, topic = {metaethics;} } @book{ coates_j:1983a, author = {Jennifer Coates}, title = {The Semantics of the Modal Auxiliaries}, publisher = {Croom Helm}, year = {1983}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, ISBN = {9781138989986}, abstract = {... an investigation into the meanings of the modal auxiliaries in modern British English. ... a large-scale corpus-based project, looking at modal auxiliaries in both written and spoken language, and taking into account stylistic variation. ... Semantic analysis conventionally consists in distinguishing one meaning from another, in recognising discrete categories, but the acknowledgement of indeterminacy explicitly denies the existence of such discrete categories. This book examines in detail this problem and its relationship to a study of modals.}, topic = {modal-auziliaries;English-language;corpus-linguistics;lexical-semantcs;} } @article{ coates_j:1990a, author = {Jennifer Coates}, title = {Modal Meaning: The Semantic-Pragmatic Interface}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1990}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {53--63}, topic = {epistemic-modals;deontic-modals;} } @article{ coberos-etal:2012a, author = {Pablo Coberos and Paul \'Egr\'e and David Ripley and Robert van Rooij}, title = {Tolerant, Classical, Strict}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {347--385}, xref = {Commentary: alxatib-etal:2013a}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ cobreros_p:2008a, author = {Pablo Cobreros}, title = {Supervaluationism and Logical Consequence: A Third Way}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2008}, volume = {90}, number = {3}, pages = {291--319}, topic = {vagueness;supervaluations;logical-consequence;} } @article{ cobreros_p-etal:2015a, author = {Pablo Cobreros and Paul Egr\'e and Dave Ripley and Robert van Rooij}, title = {Pragmatic Interpretations of Vague Expressions: Strongest Meaning and Nonmonotonic Consequence}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {4}, pages = {375--393}, topic = {vagueness;partial-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ cobreros_p-etal:2020a, author = {Pablo Cobreros and Paul Egr\'e and David Ripley and Robert van Rooij}, title = {Inferences and Metainferences in {ST}}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {6}, pages = {1057--1077}, abstract = {In a recent paper, Barrio, Tajer and Rosenblatt establish a correspondence between metainferences holding in the strict-tolerant logic of transparent truth ST+ and inferences holding in the logic of paradox LP+. They argue that LP+ is ST+'s external logic and they question whether ST+'s solution to the semantic paradoxes is fundamentally different from LP+'s. Here we establish that by parity of reasoning, ST+ can be related to LP+'s dual logic K3+. We clarify the distinction between internal and external logic and argue that while ST+'s nonclassicality can be granted, its self-dual character does not tie it to LP+ more closely than to K3+.}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;truth;} } @article{ cobreros_p-etal:2022a, author = {Pablo Cobreros and Elio La Rosa and Luca Tranchini}, title = {Higher-level Inferences in the Strong-{K}leene Setting: A Proof-theoretic Approach}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {6}, pages = {1417--1452}, abstract = {... we propose a sequent calculus capturing a hierarchy of notions of satisfaction based on the Strong Kleene matrices introduced by Barrio et al. 2020 ... }, topic = {metainference;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ cocchiarella_n:1966a, author = {Nino Cocchiarella}, title = {A Logic of Actual and Possible Objects}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1966}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {688--689}, topic = {logic-of-existence;logic-and-ontology;} } @article{ cocchiarella_n:1968a, author = {Nino Cocchiarella}, title = {Some Remarks on Second-Order Logic with Existence Attributes}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1968}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {165--175}, topic = {logic-of-existence;logic-and-ontology;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ cocchiarella_n:1969a, author = {Nino Cocchiarella}, title = {A Second-Order Logic of Existence}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1969}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {57--69}, topic = {logic-of-existence;logic-and-ontology;higher-order-logic;} } @phdthesis{ cocchiarella_nb:1966a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Tense Logic: A Study of Temporal Reference}, school = {UCLA}, year = {1966}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1969a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {A Completeness Theorem in Second-Order Modal Logic}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1969}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {81--103}, topic = {modal-logic;higher-order-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1971a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {A New Formulation of Predicative Second Order Logic}, journal = {Logique et Analyse, Nouvelle S\'erie}, year = {1971}, volume = {17}, number = {65--66}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {(im)predicativity;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1975a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {On the Primary and Secondary Semantics for Logical Necessity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1975}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {13--27}, topic = {modal-logic;analyticity;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1977a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Sortals, Natural Kinds and Re-Identification}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1977}, volume = {20}, number = {80}, pages = {439--474}, topic = {individuation;natural-kinds;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1981a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}ragmatics, Truth, and Language}, by {R}ichard {M}. {M}artin}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1981}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {453--466}, xref = {Review of martin_rm1:1979a.}, topic = {nominalism;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ cocchiarella_nb:1981b, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Richard {M}ontague and the Logical Analysis of Language}, booktitle = {In Contemporary Philosophy: A New Survey, Volume 2}, publisher = {Martinus Nijhoff}, year = {1981}, editor = {Guttorm Fl{\o}istad}, pages = {113--155}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {Montague;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1982a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Meinong Reconstructed {\it Versus} Early {R}ussell Reconstructed}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {183--214}, note = {Review of \cite{parsons_t2:1980a}.}, topic = {Russell;Meinong;(non)existence;} } @unpublished{ cocchiarella_nb:1984a1, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Frege, {R}ussell and Logicism: A Logical Reconstruction}, year = {1984}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Indiana University.}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, xref = {Publication: cocchiarella_nb:1984a2}, topic = {Frege;Russell;logicism;} } @incollection{ cocchiarella_nb:1984a2, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Frege, {R}ussell, and Logicism: A Logical Reconstruction}, booktitle = {Frege Synthesized}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1986}, editor = {Leila Haaparanta and Jaakko Hintikka}, pages = {197--252}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {Frege;Russell;logicism;} } @incollection{ cocchiarella_nb:1984b, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Philosophical Perspectives on Quantification in Tense and Modal Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {II}: Extensions of Classical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther}, pages = {309--353}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;first-order-modal-logic; first-order-temporal-logic;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1985a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Frege's Double Correlation Thesis and {Q}uine's Set Theories {NF} and {ML}}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1985}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {1--39}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1986a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Conceptualism, Ramified Logic, and Nominalized Predicates}, journal = {Topoi}, year = {1986}, volume = {5}, pages = {75--87}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap21}, topic = {predication;ramified-type-theory;nominalization;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1988a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Predication Versus Membership in the Distinction between Logic as Language and Logic as Calculus}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1988}, volume = {77}, number = {1}, pages = {37--72}, topic = {predication;foundations-of-logic;} } @book{ cocchiarella_nb:1990a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Logical Investigations of Predication Theory and the Problem of Universals}, publisher = {Humanities Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey}, xref = {Review: williamson_t:1990c.}, topic = {metaphysics;philosophical-realism;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1991a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Review of \emph{Descriptions}, by {S}tephen {N}eale}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1991}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {347--350}, xref = {Review of: neale_s:1990a.}, topic = {Russell;philosophy-of-language;reference;definite-descriptions; context;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:1995a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Knowledge Representation in Conceptual Realism}, journal = {International Journal of Human-Computer Studies}, year = {1995}, volume = {43}, number = {5--6}, pages = {697--721}, abstract = {...In what follows I will give a brief outline of some of the categorial structures of conceptual realism as a formal ontology. It is this system that I propose we adopt as the basis of a categorial framework for knowledge representation.}, topic = {kr;philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:2002a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {On the Logic of Classes as Many}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2002}, volume = {70}, number = {2}, pages = {303--338}, topic = {pluralities;Russell;} } @incollection{ cocchiarella_nb:2002b, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Philosophical Perspectives on Quantification in Tense and Modal Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {VII}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {235--276}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;first-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:2005a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Denoting Concepts, Reference, and the Logic of Names, Classes as Many, Groups, and Plurals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2005}, volume = {28}, number = {2}, pages = {135--179}, topic = {Russell;names;reference;plural;} } @article{ cocchiarella_nb:2015a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {Two Views of the Logic of Plurals and a Reduction of One to the Other}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2015}, volume = {103}, number = {1}, pages = {757--780}, topic = {pluralities;} } @incollection{ cocchiarella_nb:forthcominga, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella}, title = {On Predication, A Conceptualist View}, booktitle = {Topics in Predication Theory. Volume 2: Philosophy of Language and Logic}, publisher = {Peter Lang}, year = {Forthcoming}, editor = {Piotr Stalmaszczyk}, missinginfo = {pages}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe16}, topic = {predication;} } @book{ cocchiarella_nb-freund_ma:2008a, author = {Nino B. Cocchiarella and Max A. Freund}, title = {Modal Logic: An Introduction to Its Syntax and Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2008}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-536657-0}, xref = {Review: wansing_h:2010b}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ coccoa_l-babic_j:2021a, author = {Lorenzo Coccoa and Joshua Babic}, title = {A System of Axioms for {M}inkowski Spacetime}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {1}, pages = {149--185}, abstract = {The choice of primitives is in the spirit of Tarski (1959): a predicate of betwenness and a four place predicate to compare the square of the relativistic intervals. Minkowski spacetime is described as a four dimensional 'vector space' that can be decomposed everywhere into a spacelike hyperplane -- which obeys the Euclidean axioms in Tarski and Givant (The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic, 5(2), 175--214 1999) -- and an orthogonal timelike line. ... We conclude with a Representation Theorem relating models M of our system M1 that satisfy second order continuity to the mathematical structure []R4,ab[], called 'Minkowski spacetime' in physics textbooks. }, topic = {space-time;} } @article{ coddington:2005a, author = {Alexandra M. Coddington}, title = {Motivations for MADbot: a Motivated and Goal Directed Robot}, journal = {Proceedings of the 25th Workshop of the UK Planning and Scheduling Special Interest Group (PlanSIG 2006)}, year = {2006}, pages = {39--46}, issn = {1368-5708}, url = {http://www.cs.nott.ac.uk/~rxq/PlanSIG/program.htm}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe13\codding2.pdf}, topic = {motives;goal-formation;agent-architectures;} } @inproceedings{ coddington:2007a, author = {Alexandra M. Coddington}, title = {Integrating Motivations with Planning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 6th International Joint Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems}, series = {AAMAS '07}, year = {2007}, isbn = {978-81-904262-7-5}, location = {Honolulu, Hawaii}, pages = {850--852}, articleno = {127}, numpages = {3}, url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/1329125.1329281}, doi = {10.1145/1329125.1329281}, publisher = {ACM}, address = {New York, NY, USA}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr13\codding3.pdf}, topic = {motives;goal-formation;agent-architectures;planning;} } @inproceedings{ coddington:2007b, author = {Alexandra Coddington}, title = {Motivations as a Meta-Level Component for Constraining Goal Generation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First International Workshop on Metareasoning in Agent-Based Systems}, year = {2007}, editor = {Anita Raja and Michael T. Cox}, pages = {16--30}, note = {http://coitweb.uncc.edu/~anraja/AAMAS07/MRABS.htm}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my14}, topic = {goal-formation;} } @inproceedings{ coddington-etal:2005a, author = {Alex M. Coddington and M. Fox and J. Gough and D. Long and I. Serina}, title = {{MAD}bot: A Motivated and Goal Directed Robot}, booktitle = {The {T}wentieth {N}ational {C}onference on {A}rtificial {I}ntelligence and the {S}eventeenth {I}nnovative {A}pplications of {A}rtificial {I}ntelligence {C}onference}, year = {2005}, editor = {Manuela M. Veloso and S. Kambhampati}, pages = {1680--1681}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn14\coddington1.pdf}, topic = {agent-architectures;motives;goal-formation;} } @article{ coddington-luck_m:2004a, author = {Alexandra M. Coddington and Michael Luck}, title = {A Motivation-Based Planning and Execution Framework}, journal = {International Journal on Artificial Intelligence Tools}, year = {2004}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {5--25}, month = {March}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn14\coddington2.pdf}, topic = {goal-formation;} } @unpublished{ code_a:1972a, author = {Alan Code}, title = {Contingent Identity in {A}ristotle's {\em Metaphysics}}, year = {1972}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Date is a wild guess.}, topic = {identity;individuation;Aristotle;metapysics;} } @unpublished{ code_a:1972b, author = {Alan Code}, title = {On the Application of {T}homason's Tense Logic to {\em {D}e {I}nterpretatione} 9}, year = {1972}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Date is a wild guess.}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;Aristotle;branching-time;} } @unpublished{ code_a:1975a, author = {Alan Code}, title = {The Persistence of {A}ristotlian Matter}, year = {1975}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection, "A Code" Apparently never published.}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, topic = {identity;individuation;Aristotle;metapysics;} } @unpublished{ code_a:1976a1, author = {Alan Code}, title = {Aristotle's Response to {Q}uine's Objections to Modal Logic}, year = {1977}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Journal Publication: code_a:1976a2.}, topic = {Aristotle;quantifying-in-modality;} } @article{ code_a:1976a2, author = {Alan Code}, title = {Aristotle's Response to {Q}uine's Objections to Modal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1976}, volume = {5}, number = {2}, pages = {159--186}, xref = {Publication of: code_a:1976a1.}, topic = {Aristotle;quantifying-in-modality;} } @unpublished{ code_a:1977a, author = {Alan Code}, title = {Aristotle on Future Contingencies and Truth-Value Gaps}, year = {1977}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Summer collection under FC Project.}, topic = {Aristotle;future-contingent-propositions;} } @unpublished{ code_a:1980a, author = {Alan Code}, title = {Aristotle on the Sameness of Each Thing with Its Essence}, year = {1980}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {Aristotle;metaphysics;} } @incollection{ code_a:1985a, author = {Alan Code}, title = {On the Origin of some Aristotelian Theses about Predication}, booktitle = {How Things Are: Studies in Predication and the History of Philosophy and Science}, publisher = {D. Reidel}, year = {1985}, editor = {James Bogan and James E. Mcguire}, pages = {101--131}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {Aristotle;metaphysics;predication;} } @incollection{ code_a:1986a, author = {Alan Code}, title = {Aristotle: Essence and Accident}, booktitle = {Philosophical Grounds of Rationality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Richard E. Grandy and Richard Warner}, pages = {410--439}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Aristotle;essentialism;} } @article{ code_a:1995a, author = {Alan D. Code}, title = {Potentiality in {A}ristotle's Science and Metaphysics}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1995}, volume = {76}, number = {3--4}, pages = {405--418}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja14}, contenttnote = {This is mostly about mixtures.}, topic = {potentiality;Aristotle;metaphysics;} } @article{ coeckelbergh_m:2009a, author = {Mark Coeckelbergh}, title = {Virtual Moral Agency, Virtual Moral Responsibility: On the Moral Significance of the Appearance, Perception, and Performance of Artificial Agents}, journal = {AI and Society}, year = {2009}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {181--189}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @article{ coenen_j:1993a, author = {Jos Coenen}, title = {Top-Down Development of Layered Fault-Tolerant Systems and Its Problems---A Deontic Perspective}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {9}, number = {1--2}, pages = {133--150}, topic = {deontic-logic;software-engineering;program-specification;} } @unpublished{ coetzee:2003a, author = {Andreas Coetzee}, title = {A Rank-Ordering Model of {EVAL}}, year = {2003}, note = {Unpublished dissertation chapter.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {optimality-theory;grammar-formalisms;} } @book{ coffa:1991a, author = {J. Alberto Coffa}, title = {The Semantic Tradition from {K}ant to {C}arnap: to the {V}ienna Station}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: ryckman:1993a.}, rtnote = {UMich: TANNER B840 .C58 1991}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;logical-positivism; history-of-semantics;} } @book{ coffa_ja:1991a, author = {J. Alberto Coffa}, title = {The Semantic Tradition From {K}ant to {C}arnap: To the {V}ienna Station}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9781139172240}, abstract = {Alberto Coffa traces the roots of logical positivism in a semantic tradition that arose in opposition to Kant's theory that a priori knowledge is based on pure intuition and the constitutive powers of the mind. In Part II, Coffa chronicles the development of this tradition by members and associates of the Vienna Circle. Much of Coffa's analysis draws on the unpublished notes and correspondence of many philosophers. The book, however, is not merely a history of the semantic tradition from Kant 'to the Vienna Station'. ... Coffa also critically reassesses the role of semantic notions in understanding the ground of a priori knowledge and its relation to empirical knowledge and questions the turn the tradition has taken since Vienna.}, xref = {Reply: goldfarb_w:1997a}, topic = {Carnap;history-of-semantics;} } @book{ coffey-atkinson_p:1998a, author = {Amanda Coffey and Paul Atkinson}, title = {Making Sense of Qualitative Data}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1996}, address = {Thousand Oaks, California}, topic = {qualitative-methods;} } @incollection{ coffman:2013a, author = {E.J. Coffman}, title = {Can Virtue Epistemology Capitalize on {JTB}'s Appeal?}, booktitle = {Epistemic Agency}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2013}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Baron Reed}, pages = {199--222}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;} } @article{ cogan_r:1996a, author = {Ross Cogan}, title = {Opting out: {B}ennett on Classifying Conditionals.}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1996}, volume = {56}, number = {3}, pages = {142--145}, xref = {Commentary on: bennett_j:1995a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ cogburn-megil:2010a, author = {Jon Cogburn and Jason Megil}, title = {Are Turing Machines Platonists? Inferentialism and the Computational Theory of Mind}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {423--439}, abstract = {We first discuss Michael Dummett's philosophy of mathematics and Robert Brandom's philosophy of language to demonstrate that inferentialism entails the falsity of Church's Thesis and, as a consequence, the Computational Theory of Mind. This amounts to an entirely novel critique of mechanism in the philosophy of mind, one we show to have tremendous advantages over the traditional Lucas-Penrose argument. }, topic = {foundations-of-computation;} } @article{ cogburn-silcox:2005a, author = {Jon Cogburn and Mark Silcox}, title = {Computing Machinery and Emergence: The Aesthetics and Metaphysics of Video Games}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2005}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {73--89}, abstract = {We build on some of Daniel Dennett's ideas about predictive indispensability to characterize properties of video games discernable by people as computationally emergent if, and only if: (1) they can be instantiated by a computing machine, and (2) there is no algorithm for detecting instantiations of them. We then use this conception of emergence to provide support to the aesthetic ideas of Stanley Fish and to illuminate some aspects of the Chomskyan program in cognitive science. }, topic = {emergence;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ coghill_rc:2006a, author = {Robert C. Coghill}, title = {Pain: Making the Private Experience Public}, booktitle = {Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Muryat Aydede}, pages = {299-314 }, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-cogsci;subjectivity;} } @phdthesis{ cohan:2000a, author = {Jocelyn Cohan}, title = {The Realization and Function of Focus in Spoken {E}nglish}, school = {The University of Texas at Austin}, year = {2000}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Austin}, topic = {sentence-focus;} } @inproceedings{ cohan:2001a, author = {Jocelyn Cohan}, title = {Consider the Alternatives: Focus in Contrast and Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {102--115}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;sentence-focus;alternatives;} } @phdthesis{ cohen:1971a, author = {David Cohen}, title = {On the Linguistic Representation of Presuppositions}, school = {Linguistics Department, University of Texas as Aystin}, year = {1971}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Austin, Texas}, topic = {presupposition;} } @phdthesis{ cohen_a:1996a, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {Think Generic! The Meaning and Use of Generic Sentences}, school = {Department of Philosophy, Carnegie Mellon University}, year = {1996}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {generics;} } @article{ cohen_a:1999a, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {Generics, Frequency Adverbs, and Probability}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {221--253}, topic = {generics;nl-semantics;probability;} } @article{ cohen_a:1999b, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {How Are Alternatives Computed?}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1999}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, pages = {43--65}, abstract = {It is widely assumed that focusing a phrase indicates that alternatives to the phrase are considered. The question is, how are alternatives to a given phrase determined? There are a number of proposed answers to this question (Rooth 1985, 1992; von Stechow 1989; Jacobs 1983, among others). These accounts, however, typically deal only with logically simple phrases; when more complex phrases are considered, they turn out to be inadequate. Current theories fail to provide a principled relation between the alternatives induced by a complex phrase and those induced by its component parts; moreover, they predict incorrect truth conditions in some cases. The heart of the problem with these accounts lies in the assumption that the same combinatory rules used in determining the meanings of expressions also apply in determining the alternatives induced by them. Instead, I argue that alternatives are induced by presupposition, and that focus induces alternatives only to the extent that it gives rise to presuppositions. The problem of determining the alternatives is thereby reduced to the problem of determining presupposition in context: the rules for computing alternatives are the same rules that govern the derivation of presupposition. These rules are different from the combinatory rules used to compute the ordinary meaning and thus avoid the problems which plague previous approaches. }, topic = {alternatives;presupposition;discourse;} } @article{ cohen_a:2000a, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {The King of France Is, in Fact, Bald}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2000}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {255--290}, topic = {definite-descriptions;conditionals;} } @article{ cohen_a:2001a, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {Relative Bindings of `Many', `Often', and Generics}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {41--67}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;nl-quantifiers;} } @article{ cohen_a:2004a, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {Existential Generics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {137--168}, topic = {generics;nl-semantics;} } @article{ cohen_a:2008a, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {Indiscriminability as Indiscernability by Default}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2008}, volume = {90}, number = {3}, pages = {369--383}, topic = {vagueness;nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic;rough-sets; sameness/difference;identity;} } @incollection{ cohen_a:2012a, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {No Quantification without Reinterpretation}, booktitle = {Genericity}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Alda Mari and Claire Beyssade and Fabio Del Prete}, pages = {334--351}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {generics;nl-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ cohen_a:2016a, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {Genericity}, booktitle = {Cambridge Handbook of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Maria Aloni and Paul Dekker}, pages = {285--310}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-semantics;generics;} } @article{ cohen_a-erteschikshir:2002a, author = {Ariel Cohen and Nomi Erteschik-Shir}, title = {Topic, Focus, and the Interpretation of Bare Plurals}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {125--165}, topic = {plural;nl-semantics;sentence-focus;generics;} } @article{ cohen_a-etal:2008a, author = {Ariel Cohen and Michael Kaminski and Johann A. Makowsky}, title = {Notions of Sameness by Default and Their Application to Anaphora, Vagueness, and Uncertain Reasoning}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2008}, volume = {17}, number = {3}, pages = {285--306}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic;sameness/difference;identity;} } @article{ cohen_a-krifka_m:2014a, author = {Ariel Cohen and Manfred Krifka}, title = {Superlative Quantifiers and Meta-Speech Acts}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2014}, volume = {37}, number = {1}, pages = {41--90}, abstract = {Recent research has shown that the superlative quantifiers at least and at most do not have the same type of truth conditions as the comparative quantifiers 'more than' (Geurts and Nouwen 2007) and 'fewer than'. We propose that superlative quantifiers are interpreted at the level of speech acts. We relate them to denegations of speech acts, as in I don't promise to come, which we analyze as excluding the speech act of a promise to come. Calling such conversational acts that affect future permissible speech acts "meta-speech acts," we introduce the meta-speech act of a GRANT of a proposition as a denial to assert the negation of that proposition. Superlative quantifiers are analyzed as quantifiers over GRANTS. $\ldots$}, topic = {comparative-constructions;superlativee-constructions;speech-acts;} } @article{ cohen_b:1977a, author = {Brian L. Cohen}, title = {The Mechanical Discovery of Certain Problem Symmetries}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1977}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {119--131}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper presents several methods for analysing finite state problems to discover certain types of symmetry. The methods are based on techniques used in Sequential Machine Theory, especially the use of partitions that have the Substitution Property. Amarel's investigations of a type of time-reverse symmetry have also been extended to a wider class of problems. All the symmetries discussed enable substantial savings in search effort to be obtained by effectively reducing the size of the search space.}, topic = {search;symmetry;} } @article{ cohen_bl:1977b, author = {Brian L. Cohen}, title = {A Powerful and Efficient Structural Pattern Recognition System}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1977}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {223--255}, topic = {pattern-matching;} } @article{ cohen_c:2001a, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {On the Generic Use of Indefinite Singulars}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {183--209}, abstract = {The distribution of indefinite singular generics is much more restricted than that of bare plural generics. The former, unlike the latter, seem to require that the property predicated of their subject be, in some sense, definitional. Moreover, the two constructions exhibit different scopal behaviour, and differ in their felicity in conjunctions, questions, and expressions describing the speaker's confidence. I propose that the reason is that the two expressions, in fact, have rather different meanings. Carlson (1995) makes a distinction between inductivist and rules-and-regulations regulations theories of generics. Instead, I draw a distinction between inductivist and rules-and-regulations readings of generics. On one reading, a generic expresses the way things are, and its logical form involves quantification; on the other reading, a generic refers to some rule or regulation (often a definition), and states that it is in effect. While bare plurals are ambiguous between the two readings, indefinite singulars can only refer to a rule or a regulation. This difference between the two constructions follows from the fact that bare plurals, but not (nonspecific) indefinite singulars, are acceptable topics. The topic of bare plural generics, then, is the bare plural itself. It is mapped onto the restrictor of the generic quantifier, hence an inductivist reading is available. In contrast, this option is not open to indefinite singular generics. Thus, an inductivist reading is ruled out, and the only possible topic is a rule or regulation. The various differences between the two types of generic are then shown to follow. }, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;} } @article{ cohen_c:2005a, author = {Ariel Cohen}, title = {More Than Bare Existence: An Implicature of Existential Bare Plurals}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2005}, volume = {22}, number = {4}, pages = {389--400}, abstract = {Existential bare plurals (e.g. dogs) have the same semantics as explicit existentials (e.g. a dog or some dogs) but different pragmatics. In addition to entailing the existence of a set of individuals, existential bare plurals implicate that this set is suitable for some purpose. The suitability implicature is a form of what has been variously called informativeness-based or R-based implicature. Condoravdi (1992, 1994) and others have claimed that bare plurals have a third reading (in addition to the generic and the existential), sometimes called quasi-universal. However, the suitability implicature is sufficient to account for the quasi-universal interpretation, without the need to stipulate a distinct reading of bare plurals. }, topic = {plural;implicature;} } @phdthesis{ cohen_d:1971a, author = {David Cohen}, title = {On the Linguistic Representation of Presuppositions}, school = {University of Texas at Austin}, year = {1971}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Austin, Texas}, topic = {presupposition;nl-semantics;} } @book{ cohen_d:1974a, editor = {David Cohen}, title = {Explaining Linguistic Phenomena}, publisher = {Hemisphere Publishing Corp.}, year = {1974}, address = {Washington, DC}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Gerald A. Sanders, "Introduction: Issues of Explanation in Linguistics", pp. 1--41 2. Fred I. Dretske, "Explanation in Linguistics", pp. 21--41 3. Larry Hutchinson, "Grammar as Theory", pp. 43--73 4. Harry A. Whitaker, "Is the Grammar in the Brain?", pp. 75--89 5. Herbert H. Clark and Susan E. Haviland, "Psychological Processes as Linguistic Explanation", pp. 91--124 6. Ray C. Dougherty, "What Explanation Is and Isn't", pp. 125--151 7. Emmon Bach, "Explanatory Adequacy", pp. 153--171 8. Thomas G. Bever, "The Ascent of the Specious, or, There's a Lot We Don't Know about Mirrors", pp. 173--200 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;linguistics-methodology;} } @book{ cohen_d-worth:1977a, editor = {David Cohen and Jessica Worth}, title = {Testing Linguistic Hypotheses}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1977}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Jon D. Ringen, "Linguistic Facts: A Study of the Empirical Scientific Status of Transformational Generative Grammars" 2. Victoria A. Fromkin, "When Does a Test Count as a Hypothesis, or, What Counts as Evidence?" 3. Donald J. Foss and David Fay, "Linguistic Theory and Performance Models" 4. Stephen P. Stich, "Competence and Indeterminacy" 5. D. Terence Langendoen, "Acceptable Conclusions from Unacceptable Ambiguity" 6. Arnold Zwicky, "Settling on an Underlying Form: The {E}nglish Inflectional Endings" 7. Paul Kiparsky, "What Are Phonological Theories about?" 8. Jessica R. Wirth, "Logical Considerations in the Testing of Linguistic Hypotheses" }, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @article{ cohen_da-etal:2006a, author = {David A. Cohen and Martin C. Cooper and Peter G. Jeavons and Andrei A. Krokhin}, title = {The Complexity of Soft Constraint Satisfaction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {11}, pages = {983--1016}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ cohen_dh:1991a, author = {Daniel H. Cohen}, title = {Conditionals, Quantification, and Strong Mathematical Induction}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1991}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {315--326}, topic = {relevance-logic;mathematical-induction;} } @article{ cohen_e:1994a, author = {Edward Cohen}, title = {Computational Theory for Interpreting Handwritten Text in Constrained Domains}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {1--31}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper describes a computational theory for automatic interpretation of off-line handwritten text that is constrained in content and structure. Interpreting text is regarded as converting the textual content into a predefined symbolic representation. Content constraints are lexicons associated with syntactic categories, and known relationships (e.g., semantics, world knowledge) between phrases in different syntactic categories. Structural constraints describe the text's two-dimensional phrase layout (e.g., the phrase's position in a text line). Writing style is assumed to be unconstrained (i.e., what is normally encountered in practice). Handwritten interpretation problems in this class include determining delivery point codes from addresses, amounts from bank checks, and drug and dosage from drug prescriptions. In this paper, a computational theory, including algorithm and implementation examples, describes the problem class and a solution.}, topic = {computational-reading;} } @book{ cohen_j1-stewart_i:1994a, author = {Jack Cohen and Ian Stewart}, title = {The Collapse of Chaos: Discovering Simplicity in a Complex World}, publisher = {Viking}, year = {1994}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0670849839}, rtnote = {UMich Science, Q 175 .C613 1994.}, topic = {chaos-theory;} } @incollection{ cohen_j2:2010a, author = {Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Perception and Computation}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2010}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {96--124}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;perception;perspective-sensitive-reasoning;} } @article{ cohen_j2:2013a, author = {Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Indexicality and the Puzzle of the Answering Machine}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2013}, volume = {110}, number = {1}, pages = {5--32}, topic = {indexicals;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1950a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Mr. {S}trawson's Analysis of Truth}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1950}, volume = {10}, number = {6}, pages = {136--140}, xref = {Commentary on: strawson_pf:1950b1}, xref = {Review: beth:1951a}, topic = {truth;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1951a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Tense Usage and Propositions}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1951}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {80--87}, contentnote = {This is a good reference for a disucssion of problems having to do with tensed proppsitions from the standpoint of analytic philosophy.}, topic = {nl-tense;`now';} } @article{ cohen_lj:1955a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Can There Be Artificial Minds?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1955}, volume = {16}, pages = {36--41}, number = {2}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. M&M files. Also \ja13}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. M&M files.}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;philosophy-of-mind;machine-intelligence;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1957a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Can the Logic of Indirect Discourse Be Formalized?}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1957}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {225--232}, topic = {propositions;semantic-hierarchies;intensional-paradoxes;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1961a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Why Do {C}retans Have to Say So Much?}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1961}, volume = {12}, number = {5}, pages = {72--78}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my11}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @book{ cohen_lj:1962a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {The Diversity of Meaning}, publisher = {Methuen}, edition = {1}, year = {1962}, address = {London}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library B 840 .C68}, xref = {Review: katz_jj:1964a.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1962b, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Geach on Referring Expressions}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1962}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {6--8}, xref = {Commentary: geach_pt:1962c}, xref = {Discussion of: geach_pt:1962b}, topic = {referring-expressions;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1962c, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Geach on Referring Expressions: A Rejoinder}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1962}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {10--12}, xref = {Reply to: geach_pt:1962b}, topic = {referring-expressions;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1964a1, author = {{L. Jonathan} Cohen}, title = {Do Illocutionary Forces Exist?}, journal = {Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1964}, volume = {14}, number = {55}, pages = {118--137}, xref = {Reprinted in fann:1969a; see cohen_lj:1964a2}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Commentary: frye:1973a}, topic = {JL-Austin;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ cohen_lj:1964a2, author = {{L. Jonathan} Cohen}, title = {Do Illocutionary Forces Exist?}, booktitle = {Symposium on J.L. Austin}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1969}, editor = {Kuang T. Fann}, pages = {420--444}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Fild drawers, "LJ Cohen"}, topic = {JL-Austin;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @book{ cohen_lj:1966a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {The Diversity of Meaning}, publisher = {Methuen}, edition = {2}, year = {1966}, address = {London}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ cohen_lj:1971a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Some Remarks on {G}rice's Views about the Logical Particles of Natural Language}, booktitle = {Pragmatics of Natural Language}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1971}, editor = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, pages = {50--68}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;pragmatics;Grice;} } @incollection{ cohen_lj:1972a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Some Remarks on {G}rice's Views about the Logical Particles of Natural Language}, booktitle = {Pragmatics of Natural Languages}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1972}, editor = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, pages = {50--68}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {logical-connectives;Grice;logic-and-language;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1974a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Roger {G}allie and Substitutional Quantification}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1974}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {69--73}, xref = {Commentary on: gallie_rd:1974a}, topic = {Prior;substitutional-quantification;} } @incollection{ cohen_lj:1976a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {How Empirical is Contemporary Logical Empiricism?}, booktitle = {Language in Focus}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Asa Kasher}, pages = {359--376}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {logical-empiricism;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1977a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Can the Converesationalist Hypothesis Be Defended?}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1977}, volume = {71}, number = {2}, pages = {81--90}, topic = {logical-connectives;Grice;} } @incollection{ cohen_lj:1979a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {The Semantics of Metaphor}, booktitle = {Metaphor and Thought}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Andrew Ortony}, pages = {64--77}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {metaphor;pragmatics;} } @unpublished{ cohen_lj:1980a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Some Paradoxes about Ambiguity in Truth-Theoretical Semantics}, year = {1980}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, }, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, topic = {ambiguity;nl-semantics;} } @book{ cohen_lj:1982a, editor = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science {VI}: Proceedings of the Sixth International Congress of Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science, {H}annover, 1979}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Co.}, year = {1982}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {0444854231 (Elsevier North-Holland)}, rtnote = {UMich GRADUATE LIBRARY, QA 9 .A1 I571 1979.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1985a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {A Problem about Ambiguity in Truth-Theoretical Semantics}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1985}, volume = {45}, number = {3}, pages = {129--134}, topic = {Davidson-semantics;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1989a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Belief and Acceptance}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1989}, volume = {98}, number = {391}, pages = {367--389}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no21}, topic = {belief;} } @book{ cohen_lj:1992a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {An Essay on Belief and Acceptance}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978019823604}, abstract = {n this incisive new book one of Britain's most eminent philosophers explores the often-overlooked tension between voluntariness and involuntariness in human cognition. ... }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves}, topic = {belief;volition;} } @incollection{ cohen_lj:1996a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Does Belief Exist?}, booktitle = {Connectionism, Concepts, and Folk Psychology: The Legacy of {A}lan {T}uring: Volume {II}}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter J.R. Millican and Andy Clark}, pages = {265--276}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary on: stich_sp:1983a.}, topic = {belief;folk-psychology;} } @article{ cohen_lj:1999a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen}, title = {Holism: Some Reasons for Buyer's Remorse}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1999}, volume = {59}, number = {2}, pages = {63--71}, xref = {Commentary on: heal_j1994a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;semantic-holism;foundations-of-semantics;} } @book{ cohen_lj-hesse_mn:1980a, editor = {L. Jonathan Cohen and Mary Hesse}, title = {Applications Of Inductive Logic: Proceedings Of a Conference at the Queen's College, Oxford, 21--24 August 1978}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1980}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {019824584X}, rtnote = {Umich Graduate Library, BC91 .A661.}, topic = {inductive-logic;} } @article{ cohen_lj-lloyd_ac:1955a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen and Antony C. Lloyd}, title = {Assertion-Statements}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1955}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {66--70}, xref = {Commentary on: church_a:1950a1}, contentnote = {Seeks to generalize Church's criticism of Carnap's analysis of statements of assertion and belief.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;propositions;} } @incollection{ cohen_lj-margalit:1972a, author = {L. Jonathan Cohen and Avishai Margalit}, title = {The Role of Inductive Reasoning in the Interpretation of Metaphor}, booktitle = {Semantics of Natural Language}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1972}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {722--740}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {metaphor;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ cohen_m:1975a, author = {Michael Cohen}, title = {Dummett on Assertion}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1975}, volume = {36}, number = {1}, pages = {1--5}, topic = {assertion;} } @article{ cohen_m:2021a, author = {Michael Cohen}, title = {Opaque Updates}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {3}, pages = {447--470}, abstract = {... The paper highlights the connection between opaque updates and the dynamic-epistemic principles Perfect-Recall and No-Miracles. I argue that opaque updates are central to contemporary discussions in epistemology, in particular to externalist theories of knowledge and to the related problem of epistemic bootstrapping, or easy knowledge. ... }, topic = {belief-updates;referential-opacity;intensionality;} } @article{ cohen_m-etal:2016a, author = {Michael Cohen and Daniel Dennett and Nancy Kanwisher}, title = {What is the Bandwidth of Perceptual Experience?}, journal = {Trends in Cognitive Sciences 20 (5):}, year = {2016}, volume = {20}, number = {5}, pages = {324--335}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2016.03.006}, abstract = {... the amount of visual information observers can perceive and remember at any given moment is limited. How can our subjective impressions be reconciled with these objective observations? Here, we answer this question by arguing that, although we see more than the handful of objects, claimed by prominent models of visual attention and working memory, we still see far less than we think we do. Taken together, we argue that these considerations resolve the apparent conflict between our subjective impressions and empirical data on visual capacity, while also illuminating the nature of the representations underlying perceptual experience.}, topic = {psychology-of-perception;} } @inproceedings{ cohen_m1-dam:2007a, author = {Mika Cohen and Mads Dam}, title = {A Complete Axiomatisation of Knowledge and Cryptography}, booktitle = {Logic in Computer Science 2007}, year = {2007}, editor = {Luke Ong}, pages = {77--87}, organization = {IEEE Computer Society}, publisher = {IEEE Computer Society}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;epistemic-logic;cryptography;} } @article{ cohen_ma-dennett_dc:2011a, author = {Michael A. Cohen and Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Consciousness Cannot Be Separated from Function}, journal = {Trends in Cognitive Sciences}, year = {2011}, volume = {15}, number = {8}, pages = {358--364}, rtnote = {Reading Notes on File. "Dennett"}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Dennett"}, topic = {consciosness;philosophy-of-mind;functionalism;} } @article{ cohen_ma-etal:2010a, author = {Mark A. Cohen and Frank E. Ritter and Steven R Haynes}, title = {Applying Software Engineering to Agent Development}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2010}, volume = {31}, number = {2}, pages = {25--44}, topic = {software-engineering;agent-architectures;} } @article{ cohen_md-etal:1972a, author = {M.D. Cohen and J.G. March and J.P. Olsen}, title = {A Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice}, journal = {Administrative Science Quarterly}, year = {1972}, volume = {17}, pages = {1--25}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {decision-making;management-science;} } @article{ cohen_ms:1981a, author = {Marvin S. Cohen}, title = {Can Human Irrationality Be Experimentally Demonstrated?}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1981}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {317--371}, abstract = {The object of this paper is to show why recent research in the psychology of deductive and probabilistic reasoning does not have `bleak implications for human rationality,' as has sometimes been supposed. The presence of fallacies in reasoning is evaluated by referring to normative criteria $\ldots$ Since a theory of competence has to predict the very same intuitions, it must ascribe rationality to ordinary people $\ldots$ }, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {rationality;cognitive-psychology;} } @incollection{ cohen_nh-etal:2005a, author = {Norman H. Cohen and Paul Castro and Archan Misra}, title = {Descriptive Naming of Context Data Providers}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {112--125}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;} } @article{ cohen_pr1:1984a, author = {Philip R. Cohen}, title = {The Pragmatics of Referring and the Modality of Communication}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1984}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {97--125}, topic = {discourse-planning;referring-expressions;plan-recognition; pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ cohen_pr1-etal:1981a, author = {Philip R. Cohen and C. Raymond Perrault and James F. Allen}, title = {Beyond Question Answering}, booktitle = {Strategies for Natural Language Processing}, editor = {Wendy Lehnert and M. Ringle}, pages = {245--274}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1981}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, topic = {pragmatics;nl-interpretation;} } @book{ cohen_pr1-etal:1990a, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Jerry Morgan and Martha Pollack}, title = {Intentions in Communication}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1990}, xref = {Review: oberlander:1993a.}, topic = {pragmatics;nl-understanding;} } @article{ cohen_pr1-levesque_h:1991a, author = {Philip R. Cohen and Hector Levesque}, title = {Teamwork}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1991}, volume = {25}, number = {4}, pages = {487--512}, topic = {group-planning;} } @inproceedings{ cohen_pr1-levesque_hj:1980a, author = {Philip R. Cohen and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Speech Acts and the Recognition of Shared Plans}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1980 Meeting of the Canadian Society for Computational Studies of Intelligence}, year = {1980}, pages = {263--271}, organization = {Canadian Society for Computational Studies of Intelligence}, missinginfo = {editor, publisher}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "PR Cohen"}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;plan-recognition;} } @inproceedings{ cohen_pr1-levesque_hj:1985a, author = {Philip R. Cohen and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Speech Acts and Rationality}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-Third Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1985}, editor = {William Mann}, pages = {49--59}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Morristown, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ cohen_pr1-levesque_hj:1986a1, author = {Philip R. Cohen and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Persistence, Intention, and Commitment}, booktitle = {Reasoning about Actions and Plans}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1986}, editor = {Michael P. Georgeff and Amy Lansky}, pages = {297--340}, address = {Los Altos, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Cohen1.pdf}, xref = {Republished. See cohen_p-levesque_hj:1986a2.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. Research Notes. "Cohen-Levesque"}, topic = {intention;practical-reasoning;pr-course;foundations-of-planning; commitment;} } @incollection{ cohen_pr1-levesque_hj:1986a2, author = {Philip R. Cohen and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Persistence, Intention, and Commitment}, booktitle = {Intentions in Communication}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1990}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Jerry Morgan and Martha Pollack}, pages = {33--69}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Previously published in cohen-levesque_hj:1986a1.}, topic = {intention;practical-reasoning;pr-course;foundations-of-planning; commitment;} } @article{ cohen_pr1-levesque_hj:1990a, author = {Philip R. Cohen and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Intention Is Choice With Commitment}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {42}, number = {3}, pages = {213--261}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, \fe13}, xref = {Commentary: singh_mp:1992a}, topic = {intention;practical-reasoning;pr-course;foundations-of-planning; commitment;} } @incollection{ cohen_pr1-levesque_hj:1990b, author = {Philip R. Cohen and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Rational Interaction as the Basis for Communication}, booktitle = {Intentions in Communication}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1990}, editor = {Philip Cohen and Jerry Morgan and Martha Pollack}, pages = {221--255}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {discourse;foundations-of-pragmatics;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @article{ cohen_pr1-perrault_cr:1979a1, author = {Philip R. Cohen and C. Raymond Perrault}, title = {Elements of a Plan-Based Theory of Speech Acts}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1979}, volume = {3}, pages = {177--212}, xref = {Reprinted in webber_bl-nilsson_nj:1981a, grosz_bj-etal:1986a}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {speech-acts;planning;discourse;speech-acts; pragmatics;} } @incollection{ cohen_pr1-perrault_cr:1979a2, author = {Philip Cohen and C. Raymond Perrault}, title = {Elements of a Plan-Based Theory of Speech Acts}, booktitle = {Readings in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1981}, editor = {Bonnie Webber and Nils J. Nilsson}, pages = {478--495}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: cohen_pr1-perrault_cr:1979a1.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {speech-acts;planning;discourse;speech-acts; pragmatics;} } @book{ cohen_pr2:1995a, author = {Paul R. Cohen}, title = {Empirical Methods for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Reviews: kibler:1999a, gent-walsh_t:1999a.}, topic = {experimental-AI;} } @article{ cohen_pr2:2005a, author = {Paul R. Cohen}, title = {If Not {T}uring's Test, Then What?}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2005}, volume = {26}, number = {4}, pages = {61--67}, contentnote = {One interesting feature of this piece: reflections on what makes a challenge problem good.}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;AI-editorial;Turing-test;} } @article{ cohen_pr2:2016a, author = {Paul R. Cohen}, title = {Harold {C}ohen and {AARON}}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2016}, volume = {37}, number = {4}, pages = {63--66}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe17}, topic = {computer-art;creativity;} } @inproceedings{ cohen_pr2-etal:2002a, author = {Paul R. Cohen and Tim Oates and Carole R. Beal and Niall Adams}, title = {Contentful Mental States for Robot Baby}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {126--131}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {automated-language-acquisition;} } @article{ cohen_r1:1987a, author = {Robin Cohen}, title = {Analyzing the Structure of Argumentative Discourse}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1987}, volume = {13}, number = {1--2}, pages = {11--24}, topic = {argumentation;discourse-structure;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ cohen_r1-jones_m:1989a, author = {Robin Cohen and Marlene Jones}, title = {Incorporating User Models into Expert Systems for Educational Diagnosis}, booktitle = {User Models in Dialog Systems}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1989}, editor = {Alfred Kobsa and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {313--333}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {user-modeling;intelligent-tutoting;} } @incollection{ cohen_r2-etal:1979a, author = {Rudolf Cohen and Stephanie Kelter and Gerhild Woll}, title = {Conceptual Impairment in Aphasia}, booktitle = {Semantics from Different Points of View}, year = {1979}, editor = {Rainer B\"auerle and Urs Egli and Arnim {von Stechow}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, pages = {353--363}, topic = {aphasia;} } @article{ cohen_rc:1966a, author = {Robert C. Cohen}, title = {Animadversions on {P}lantinga's {K}ant}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1966}, volume = {63}, number = {19}, pages = {546--548}, topic = {ontological-argument;} } @article{ cohen_s:1964a, author = {Stewart Cohen}, title = {Knowledge and Context}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1986}, volume = {83}, number = {10}, pages = {574--583}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;knowledge;context;skepticism;} } @article{ cohen_s:1986a, author = {Stewart Cohen}, title = {On Knowledge and Context}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1986}, volume = {83}, number = {10}, pages = {574--583}, topic = {knowledge;propositional-attitudes;context;} } @article{ cohen_s:1987a, author = {Stewart Cohen}, title = {Knowledge, Context, and Social Standards}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1990}, volume = {73}, number = {1}, pages = {3--26}, topic = {knowledge;context;} } @incollection{ cohen_s:2000a, author = {Stewart Cohen}, title = {Contextualism and Skepticism}, booktitle = {Skepticism}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {94--107}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary: klein_pd:2000a, hawthorne_j2:2000a,prades_jl:2000a}, topic = {skepticism;contextualism;epistemology;} } @incollection{ cohen_s:2000b, author = {Stewart Cohen}, title = {Replies}, booktitle = {Skepticism}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {132--139}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: klein_pd:2000a, hawthorne_j2:2000a,prades_jl:2000a}, topic = {skepticism;contextualism;epistemology;} } @incollection{ cohen_s:2004a, author = {Stewart Cohen}, title = {Knowledge, Assertion, and Practical Reasoning}, booktitle = {Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {482--491}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary on: hawthorne_j2:2004a}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;factivity;context;epistemic-modals;} } @incollection{ cohen_s:2005b, author = {Stewart Cohen}, title = {Is Knowledge Contextual? Contextualism Defended}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {69--74}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary on: conee_e:2005a}, topic = {knowledge;context;} } @incollection{ cohen_s:2005c, author = {Stewart Cohen}, title = {Is Knowledge Contextual? Contextualism Defended Some More}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {79--83}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: conee_e:2005b}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;} } @article{ cohen_sm:2002a, author = {S. Marc Cohen}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}ubstantial Knowledge: {A}ristotle's Metaphysics}, by {C}.{D}.{C}. {R}eeve}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2002}, volume = {111}, number = {3}, pages = {452--456}, xref = {Review of: reeve:2000a}, topic = {Aristotle;metaphysics;} } @incollection{ cohen_sm:2014a, author = {S. Marc Cohen}, title = {Aristotle's Metaphysics}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url= {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2014/entries/aristotle-metaphysics/}, year = {2014}, topic = {Aristotle;metaphysics;}, } @article{ cohen_t:1973a, author = {Ted Cohen}, title = {Illocutions and Perlocutions}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1973}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {492--503}, topic = {speech-acts;illocutionary-force;} } @article{ cohen_ww:1994a, author = {William W. Cohen}, title = {Grammatically Biased Learning: Learning Logic Programs Using an Explicit Antecedent Description Language}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {68}, number = {2}, pages = {303--366}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Every concept learning system produces hypotheses that are written in some sort of constrained language called the concept description language, and for most learning systems, the concept description language is fixed. This paper describes a learning system that makes a large part of the concept description language an explicit input, and discusses some of the possible applications of providing this additional input. In particular, we discuss a technique for learning a logic program such that the antecedent of each clause in the program can be generated by a special antecedent description language; it is shown that this technique can be used to make use of many different types of background knowledge, including constraints on how predicates can be used, programming cliches, overgeneral theories, incomplete theories, and theories syntactically close to the target theory. The approach thus unifies many of the problems previously studied in the field of knowledge-based learning.}, topic = {concept-learning;Horn-clause-abduction;} } @article{ cohen_ww:1995a, author = {William W. Cohen}, title = {Pac-Learning Non-Recursive {P}rolog Clauses}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {79}, number = {1}, pages = {1--38}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Recently there has been an increasing amount of research on learning concepts expressed in subsets of Prolog; the term inductive logic programming (ILP) has been used to describe this growing body of research. This paper seeks to expand the theoretical foundations of ILP by investigating the pac-learnability of logic programs. We focus on programs consisting of a single function-free non-recursive clause, and focus on generalizations of a language known to be pac-learnable: namely, the language of determinate function-free clauses of constant depth. We demonstrate that a number of syntactic generalizations of this language are hard to learn, but that the language can be generalized to clauses of constant locality while still allowing pac-learnability. More specifically, we first show that determinate clauses of log depth are not pac-learnable, regardless of the language used to represent hypotheses. We then investigate the effect of allowing indeterminacy in a clause, and show that clauses with k indeterminate variables are as hard to learn as DNF. We next show that a more restricted language of clauses with bounded indeterminacy is learnable using k-CNF to represent hypotheses, and that restricting the ``locality'' of a clause to a constant allows pac-learnability even if an arbitrary amount of indeterminacy is allowed. This last result is also shown to be a strict generalization of the previous result for determinate function-free clauses of constant depth. Finally, we present some extensions of these results to logic programs with multiple clauses.}, topic = {concept-learning;Horn-clause-abduction;PAC-learning;} } @article{ cohen_ww:2000a, author = {William W. Cohen}, title = {{WHIRL}: A Word-Based Information Representation Language}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {118}, number = {1--2}, pages = {163--196}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We describe WHIRL, an ``information representation language'' that synergistically combines properties of logic-based and text-based representation systems. WHIRL is a subset of Datalog that has been extended by introducing an atomic type for textual entities, an atomic operation for computing textual similarity, and a ``soft'' semantics; that is, inferences in WHIRL are associated with numeric scores, and presented to the user in decreasing order by score. This paper briefly describes WHIRL, and then surveys a number of applications. We show that WHIRL strictly generalizes both ranked retrieval of documents, and logical deduction; that nontrivial queries about large databases can be answered efficiently; that WHIRL can be used to accurately integrate data from heterogeneous information sources, such as those found on the Web; that WHIRL can be used effectively for inductive classification of text; and finally, that WHIRL can be used to semi-automatically generate extraction programs for structured documents.}, topic = {kr;information-retrieval;information-integration;} } @inproceedings{ cohen_ww-etal:1992a, author = {William W. Cohen and Alex Borgida and Haym Hirsh}, title = {Computing Least Common Subsumers in Description Logics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Paul S. Rosenbloom and Peter Szolovits}, pages = {754--761}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {kr;classifier-algorithms;description-logics;kr-course;} } @incollection{ cohen_ww-hirsh_h:1994a, author = {William W. Cohen and Haym Hirsh}, title = {Learning the Classical Description Logic: Theoretical and Experimental Results}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {121--133}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;description-logics;machine-learning;kr-course;} } @article{ cohen_y-timmerman_t:2016a, author = {Yishai Cohen and Travis Timmerman}, title = {Actualism Has Control Issues}, journal = {Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy}, year = {2016}, volume = {10}, number = {3}, pages = {1--19}, doi = {doi:10.26556/jesp.v10i3.104}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my22\Cohen1.pdf}, topic = {actualism/possibilism;ability;alternatives-for-action;self-prediction;} } @incollection{ cohen_y-timmerman_t:2020a, author = {Yishai Cohen and Travis Timmerman}, title = {Actualism, Possibilism, and the Nature of Consequentialism}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Consequentialism}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2020}, editor = {Douglas W. Portmore}, pages = {139--161}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {The actualism/possibilism debate in ethics is about whether counterfactuals of freedom concerning what an agent would freely do if she were in certain circumstances even partly determine that agent's obligations. This debate arose from an argument against the coherence of utilitarianism in the deontic logic literature. In this chapter, we first trace the historical origins of this debate and then examine actualism, possibilism, and securitism through the lens of consequentialism. After examining their respective benefits and drawbacks, we argue that, contrary to what has been assumed, actualism and securitism both succumb to the so-called nonratifiability problem. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my22\cohen2.pdf}, topic = {utilitarianism;actualism/possibilism;} } @article{ cohn_ag:1987a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn}, title = {A More Expressive Form of Many Sorted Logic}, journal = {Journal of Automated Reasoning}, year = {1987}, volume = {3}, pages = {113--200}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {many-sorted-logic;} } @incollection{ cohn_ag:1989a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn}, title = {On the Appearance of Sortal Literals: A Non Substitutional Framework for Hybrid Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {55--66}, address = {San Mateo, California}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {kr;theorem-proving;hybrid-kr-architectures;sort-hierarchies; kr-course;} } @incollection{ cohn_ag:1992a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn}, title = {Completing Sort Hierarchies}, booktitle = {Semantic Networks in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Pergamon Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Fritz Lehmann}, pages = {477--491}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {theorem-proving;taxonomic-reasoning;kr;semantic-networks; kr-course;} } @incollection{ cohn_ag:1996a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn}, title = {Calculi for Qualitative Spatial Reasoning}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Mathematical Computation}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jacques Calmet and J. Campbell and J. Pfalzgraf}, pages = {124--143}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;} } @incollection{ cohn_ag:1997a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn}, title = {Qualitative Spatial Representation and Reasoning Techniques}, booktitle = {{KI}-97, Advances in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1997}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and Christopher Habel and Bernhard Nebel}, pages = {1--30}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;} } @incollection{ cohn_ag-etal:1997a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn and Brandon Bennett and John Gooday and Nicholas M. Gotts}, title = {Representing and Reasoning with Qualitative Spatial Relations}, booktitle = {Spatial and Temporal Reasoning}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {Oliviero Stock}, pages = {97--134}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files drawers, "AG Cohn". Bib is in "bibs".}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;spatial-representation; qualitative-reasoning;} } @book{ cohn_ag-etal:1998a, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, title = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, address = {San Francisco}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe de Giacomo and Maurizio Lenzarini and Daniele Nardi and Ricardo Rosati, "Description Logic Framework for Knowledge Integration", pp. 2--13 2. Hector J. Levesque, "A Completeness Result for Reasoning with Incomplete First-Order Knowledge Bases", pp. 14--23 3. Mary-Anne Williams and Grigoris Antoniou, "A Strategy for Revising Default Theory Extensions", pp. 24--33 4. Lars Karlsson, "Anything Can Happen; on Narratives and Hypothetical Reasoning", pp. 36--47 5. John McCarthy and Tom Costello, "Combining Narratives", pp. 48--59 6. Michael Thielscher, "How (Not) to Minimize Events", pp. 60--71 7. Stefan Brass and J\"urgen Dix and Ilkka Niemel\"a and Teodor C. Przmusinski, "A Comparison of the Static and the Disjunctive Well-Founded Semantics and its Implementation", pp. 74--85 8. Gerhard Brewka and Thomas Eiter, "Preferred Answer Sets for Extended Logic Programs", pp. 86--97 9. Jos\'e J\'ulio Aleferes and J.A. Leite and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Halina Przymusinska and Teodor C. Przymucinski, "Dynamic Logic Programming", pp. 98--109 10. Volker Haarslev and Carsten Lutz and Ralf M\"oller, "Foundations of Spatiotemporal Reasoning with Description Logics", pp. 112--123 11. Philippe Balbiani and Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Condotta and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro, "A Model for Reasoning about Bidimensional Temporal Relations", pp. 124--130 12. Philippe Muller, "A Qualitative Theory of Motion Based on Spatio-Temporal Primitives", pp. 131--141 13. Paolo Liberatore, "On the Compatibility of Diagnosis, Planning, Reasoning about Actions, Belief Revision, etc.", pp. 144--155 14. Adnan Darwiche, "Compiling Devices: A Structure-Based Approach", pp. 156--166 15. Sheila A. McIlraith, "Explanatory Diagnosis: Conjecturing Actions to Explain Observations", pp. 167--177 16. Peter A. Flach, "Comparing Consequence Relations", pp. 180--189 17. Emil Weydert, "System {JZ}: How to Build a Canonical Ranking Model of a Default Knowledge Base", pp. 190--201 18. Eyal Amir, "Pointwise Circumscription Revisited", pp. 202--210 19. Norman McCain and Hudson Turner, "Satisfiability Planning with Causal Theories", pp. 212--223 20. Fangzhen Lin, "On Measuring Plan Quality (A Preliminary Report)", pp. 224--232 21. Brandon Bennett, "Modal Semantics for Knowledge Bases Dealing with Vague Concepts", pp. 234--244 22. Inderjeet Mani, "A Theory of Granularity and its Application to the Problem of Polysemy and Underspecification of Meaning", pp. 245--255 23. Patrick Doherty and Witold {\L}ukasziewicz and Ewa Madali\'nska-Bugaj, "The {PMA} and Relativizing Change for Action Update", pp. 258--269 24. Tom Costello and Anna Patterson, "Quantifiers and Operations on Modalities and Contexts", pp. 270--281 25. Fausto Giunchiglia and Chiara Ghidini, "Local Models Semantics, or Contextual Reasoning $=$ Locality$\,+\,$Compatibility", pp. 282--289 26. Javier A. Pinto, "Concurrent Actions and Interacting Effects", pp. 292--303 27. Erik Sandewall, "Logic Based Modelling of Goal-Directed Behavior", pp. 304--315 28. Gerhard Lakemeyer and Hector J. Levesque, "${\cal AOL}$ A Logic of Acting, Sensing, Knowing, and Only Knowing", pp. 316--327 29. Jochen Renz, "A Canonical Model of the Region Connection Calculus", pp. 330--341 30. Christoph Dornheim, "Undecidability of Plane Polynomial Mereotopology", pp. 342--353 31. J\'er\^ome Lang and Pierre Marquis, "Complexity Results for Independence and Definability in Propositional Logic", pp. 356--367 32. Iliano Cervesato and Massimo Franceschet and Angelo Montanari, "The Complexity of Model Checking in Modal Event Calculi with Quantifiers", pp. 368--379 33. Thomas Lukasiewicz, "Probabilistic Deduction with Conditional Constraints over Basic Events", pp. 380--391 34. Katsumi Inoue and Chiaki Sakama, "Specifying Transactions for Extended Abduction", pp. 394--405 35. Thomas Eiter and Nicola Leone and Cristinel Mateis and Gerald Pfeifer and Francesco Scarcello, "The {KR} System {\tt dlv}: Progress Report, Comparisons and Benchmarks", pp. 406--417 36. Francesco Buccafurri and Nicola Leone and Pasquale Rullo, "Disjunctive Ordered Logic: Semantics and Expressiveness", pp. 416--429 37. Fahiem Bacchus and Ron Petrick, "Modeling an Agent's Incomplete Knowledge during Planning and Execution", pp. 432--443 38. Nicola Muscettola and Paul Morris and Ioannis Tsamardinos, "Reformulating Temporal Plans for Efficient Reasoning", pp. 444--452 39. Giuseppe De Giacomo and Raymond Reiter and Mikhail Soutchanski, "Execution Monitoring of High-Level Robot Plans", pp. 453--464 40. Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and J. Lang and Henri Prade and Philippe Smets and A. Saffiotti, "A General Approach for Inconsistency Handling and Merging Information in Prioritized Knowledge Bases", pp. 466--477 41. Jaap Kamps, "Formal Theory Building Using Automated Reasoning Tools", pp. 478--487 42. S\'ebastian Konieczny and Ram\'on Pino-P\'erez, "On the Logic of Merging", pp. 488--498 43. Ralf K\"usters, "Characterizing the Semantics of Terminological Cycles in ${\cal ALN}$ Using Finite Automata", pp. 499--510 44. Frank Wolter and Michael Zakharyaschev, "Satisfiability Problem in Description Logics with Modal Operators", pp. 512--523 45. Michel Chien and Marie-Laure Mugnier and Genevi\`eve Simonet, "Nested Graphs: A Graph-Based Knowledge Representation Model with {FOL} Semantics", pp. 524--534 46. Vladimir Lifschitz, "Situation Calculus and Causal Logic", pp. 536--546 47. Raymond Reiter, "Sequential, Temporal {GOLOG}", pp. 547--556 48. Graham White and John Bell and Wilfrid Hodges, "Building Models of Prediction Theories", pp. 557--568 49. Manfred Jaeger, "Reasoning about Infinite Random Structures with Relational {B}ayesian Networks", pp. 570--581 50. Va Ha and Peter Haddawy, "Geometric Foundations for Interval-Based Probabilities", pp. 582--593 51. Didier Dubois and Llu\'is Godo and Henri Prade and Adriana Zapico, "Making Decision in a Qualitative Setting: from Decision under Uncertainty to Case-Based Decision", pp. 594--605 52. M. Baioletti and S. Marcugini and A. Milani, "Encoding Planning Constraints into Partial Order Planning Domains", pp. 608--616 53. Jussi Rintanen, "A Planning Algorithm not Based on Directional Search", pp. 617--624 54. Enrico Giunchiglia and Fausto Giunchiglia and Roberto Sebastiani and Armando Tacchella, "More Evaluation of Decision Procedures for Modal Logics", pp. 626--635 55. Ian R. Horrocks, "Using an Expressive Description Logic: {FaCT} or Fiction?", p. 636--645 56. Katherine Morik, "How to Tailor Representations to Different Requirements (Abstract)", p. 650 57. Hector J. Levesque, "What Robots Can Do (Abstract)", p. 651 58. Maurizio Lenzerini, "Description Logics and Their Applications (Abstract)", p. 652 }, topic = {kr;} } @book{ cohn_ag-etal:2000a, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, title = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, address = {San Francisco}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Frank Wolter and Michael Zakharyaschev, "Spatio-temporal representation and reasoning based on RCC-8", pp. 3--14 2. Matteo Cristani and Anthony G. Cohn and Brandon Bennett, "Spatial Locations via Morpho-Mereology", pp. 15--25 3. Antony Galton, "Continuous Motion in Discrete Space", pp. 26--37 4. John G. Stell, "The Representation of Discrete Multi-resolution Spatial Knowledge", pp. 38--49 5. Yannis Dimopoulos and Bernhard Nebel and Francesca Toni, "Finding Admissible and Preferred Arguments Can be Very Hard", pp. 53--61 6. Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz, "Complexity Results for Default Reasoning from Conditional Knowledge Bases", pp. 62--73 7. Marc Denecker and V. Wiktor Marek and Miroslaw Truszczynski, "Uniform Semantic Treatment of Default and Autoepistemic Logic", pp. 74--84 8. Vladimir Lifschitz, "Missionaries and Cannibals in the Causal Calculator", pp. 85--96 9. Raymond Reiter, "Narratives as Programs", pp. 99--108 10. Michael Thielscher, "Representing the Knowledge of a Robot", pp. 109--120 11. Jan Chomicki and Jorge Lobo and Shamim A. Naqvi, "A Logic Programming Approach to Conflict Resolution in Policy Management", pp. 121--132 12. S\'ebastien Konieczny, "On the Difference between Merging Knowledge Bases and Combining Them", pp. 135--144 13. Paolo Liberatore and Marco Schaerf, "BReLS: A System for the Integration of Knowledge Bases", pp. 145--152 14. Pedrito Maynard-Reid {II} and Daniel J. Lehmann, "Representing and Aggregating Conflicting Beliefs", pp. 153--164 15. Fangzhen Lin, "On Strongest Necessary and Weakest Sufficient Conditions", pp. 167--175 16. Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Moshe Y. Vardi, "Containment of Conjunctive Regular Path Queries with Inverse", pp. 176--185 17. Fabio Massacci, "Reduction Rules and Universal Variables for First Order Tableaux and {DPLL}", pp. 186--197 18. Andrei Voronkov, "Deciding {K} using Inverse-{K}", pp. 198--209 19. Yousri El Fattah and Mark A. Peot, "A Compositional Structured Query Approach to Automated Inference", pp. 213--224 20. Philipp M. Yelland, "An Alternative Combination of Bayesian Networks and Description Logics", pp. 225--234 21. Nahla Ben Amor and Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and Hector Geffner and Henri Prade, "Independence in qualitative uncertainty frameworks", pp. 235--246 22. Isabelle Bloch, "Spatial Representation of Spatial Relationship Knowledge", pp. 247--258 23. Franz Baader and Ralf K\"usters, "Matching Concept Descriptions with Existential Restrictions", pp. 261--272 24. Volker Haarslev and Ralf M\"uller, "Expressive ABox Reasoning with Number Restrictions, Role Hierarchies, and Transitively Closed Roles", pp. 273--284 25. Ian Horrocks and Stephan Tobies, "Reasoning with Axioms: Theory and Practice", pp. 285--296 26. Franz Baader and Ralf K\"usters and Ralf Molitor, "Rewriting Concepts Using Terminologies", pp. 297--308 27. Chitta Baral and Sheila A. McIlraith and Tran Cao Son, "Formulating Diagnostic Problem Solving Using an Action Language with Narratives and Sensing", pp. 311--322 28. Alan Verberne and Frank van Harmelen and Annette ten Teije, "Anytime Diagnostic Reasoning using Approximate Boolean Constraint Propagation", pp. 323--332 29. Gianfranco Lamperti and Marina Zanella, "Generation of Diagnostic Knowledge by Discrete-Event Model Compilation", pp. 333--344 30. Renata Wassermann, "An Algorithm for Belief Revision", pp. 345--352 31. Haythem O. Ismail and Stuart C. Shapiro, "Two Problems with Reasoning and Acting in Time", pp. 355--365 32. Edjard Mota, "Cyclical and Granular Time Theories as Subsets of the Herbrand Universe", pp. 366--377 33. Philippe Balbiani and Aomar Osmani, "A Model for Reasoning about Topologic Relations between cyclic intervals", pp. 378--385 34. Eyal Amir and Sheila A. McIlraith, "Partition-Based Logical Reasoning", pp. 389--400 35. Philippe Besnard and Torsten Schaub, "Significant Inferences: Preliminary Report", pp. 401--410 36. Tomi Janhunen and Ilkka Niemel\"a and Patrik Simons and Jia-Huai You, "Unfolding Partiality and Disjunctions in Stable Model Semantics", pp. 411--422 37. Chad M. Cumby and Dan Roth, "Relational Representations that Facilitate Learning", pp. 425--434 38. Alessandro Biso and Francesca Rossi and Alessandro Sperduti, "Experimental Results on Learning Soft Constraints", pp. 435--444 39. H\'el\'ene Fargier and J\'er\v{o}me Lang and Pierre Marquis, "Propositional Logic and One-Stage Decision Making", pp. 445--456 40. Celine Lafage and J\'er\v{o}me Lang, "Logical Representation of Preferences for Group Decision Making", pp. 457--468 41. Hans Chalupsky, "OntoMorph: A Translation System for Symbolic Knowledge", pp. 471--482 42. Deborah L. McGuinness and Richard E. Fikes and James Rice and Steve Wilder, "An Environment for Merging and Testing Large Ontologies", pp. 483--493 43. Nestor Rychtyckyj and Robert G. Reynolds, "Long-Term Maintanability of Deployed Knowledge Representation Systems", pp. 494--504 44. Eric W\"urbel and Robert Jeansoulin and Odile Papini, "Revision: an application in the framework of GIS", pp. 505--515 45. John McCarthy, "Approximate Objects and Approximate Theories", pp. 519--526 46. Steven Shapiro and Maurice Pagnucco and Yves Lesp\'erance and Hector J. Levesque, "Iterated Belief Change in the Situation Calculus", pp. 527--538 47. Mihai Ciocoiu and Dana S. Nau, "Ontology-Based Semantics", pp. 539--546 48. Angelo Montanari and Alberto Policriti and Matteo Slanina, "Supporting Automated Deduction in first-order modal logics", pp. 547--556 49. Thierry Vidal, "Controllability Characterization and Checking in Contingent Temporal Constraint Networks", pp. 559--570 50. Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Condotta, "The Augmented Interval and Rectangle Networks", pp. 571--579 51. Robert A. Morris and Paul H. Morris, "On the Complexity of Reasoning about Repeating Events", pp. 580--588 52. Peter Clark and John A. Thompson and Bruce W. Porter, "Knowledge Patterns", pp. 591--600 53. Stefan Schulz and Udo Hahn, "Knowledge Engineering by Large-Scale Knowledge Reuse---Experience from the Medical Domain", pp. 601--610 54. Hasan M. Jamil, "A Logic Based Language for Parametric Inheritance", pp. 611--622 55. J\'er\v{o}me Lang and Pierre Marquis, "In Search of the Right Extension", pp. 625--636 56. Ram\'on Pino P\'erez and Carlos Uzc\'ategui, "Ordering Explanations and the Structural Rules for Abduction", pp. 637--646 57. Zhaohui Zhu and Ben Li and Shifu Chen and Wujia Zhu, "Valuation-Ranked Preferential Model", pp. 647--653 58. Enrico Giunchiglia, "Planning as Satisfiability with Expressive Action Languages: Concurrency, Constraints and Nondeterminism", pp. 657--666 59. Mario Mart\'in and Hector Geffner, "Learning Generalized Policies in Planning Using Concept Languages", pp. 667--677 60. Luca Iocchi and Daniele Nardi and Riccardo Rosati, "Planning with Sensing, Concurrency, and Exogenous Events: Logical Framework and Implementation", pp. 678--689 61. Matthew L. Ginsberg and Andrew J. Parkes, "Satisfiability Algorithms and Finite Quantification", pp. 690--701 62. Richmond H. Thomason, "Desires and Defaults: A Framework for Planning with Inferred Goals", pp. 702--713 63. Adam Pease and Vinay K. Chaudhri and Fritz Lehmann and Adam Farquhar, "Practical Knowledge Representation and the {DARPA} High Performance Knowledge Bases Project", pp. 717--724 64. Leora Morgenstern and Richmond H. Thomason, "Teaching Knowledge Representation: Challenges and Proposals", pp. 725--733 }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {kr;} } @inproceedings{ cohn_ag-etal:2012a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn and Jochen Renz and Muralikrishna Sridhar}, title = {Thinking Inside the Box: A Comprehensive Spatial Representation for Video Analysis}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {588--592}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We present a uniform and comprehensive spatial representation of moving objects that includes all the above spatial/temporal aspects, analyse different properties of this representation and demonstrate that it is suitable for video analysis.}, topic = {spatial-representation;} } @incollection{ cohn_ag-gotts:1996a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn and Nicholas Mark Gotts}, title = {Representing Spatial Vagueness: A Mereological Approach}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {230--241}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;spatial-reasoning;mereology;vagueness;kr-course;} } @article{ cohn_ag-hazarika:2001a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn and Shayamanta M. Hazarika}, title = {Qualitative Spatial Representation and Reasoning: An Overview}, journal = {Fundamenta Informaticae}, year = {2001}, volume = {46}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--29}, topic = {spatial-representation;spatial-reasoning;} } @incollection{ cohn_ag-renz:2008a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn and Jochen Renz}, title = {Spatial Reasoning}, booktitle = {Handbook of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2008}, editor = {Frank van Harmelen and Vladimir Lifschitz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {551--596}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {spatial-logic;spatial-reasoning;} } @article{ cohn_ag-varzi_ac:2003a, author = {Anthony G. Cohn and Achille C. Varzi}, title = {Mereotopological Connection}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2003}, volume = {32}, number = {4}, pages = {357--390}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;} } @article{ cohn_d:1966a, author = {D. Cohn}, title = {Narrated Monologue}, journal = {Comparative Literature}, year = {1966}, volume = {2}, pages = {97--112}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, rtnote = {Cited by Fillmore. Use for Is it about deixis?}, topic = {discourse;deixis;pragmatics;} } @article{ cohn_d-etal:1994a, author = {David Cohn and Les Atlas and Richard Ladner}, title = {Improving Generalization with Active Learning}, journal = {Machine learning}, year = {1994}, volume = {18}, number = {2}, pages = {201--221}, abstract = {We describe a formalism for active concept learning called selective sampling and show how it may be approximately implemented by a neural network. In selective sampling, a learner receives distribution information from the environment and queries an oracle on parts of the domain it considers 'useful.' We test our implementation, called anSG-network, on three domains and observe significant improvement in generalization.}, topic = {concept-learning;} } @incollection{ cohn_jf-delatorre_f:2015a, author = {Jeffrey F. Cohn and Fernando De la Torre}, title = {Automated Face Analysis for Affective Computing}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {131--150}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {emotional-computing;facial-expression;facial-recognition;} } @incollection{ cohn_n-paczynski_m:2019a, author = {Neil Cohn and Martin Paczynski}, title = {The Neurophysiology of Event Processing in Language and Visual Events}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Event Structure}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Robert Truswell}, pages = {644--708}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {events;eventualities;Aktionsarten;} } @book{ cohn_pm:1965a, author = {Paul M. Cohn}, title = {Universal Algebra}, publisher = {Harper \&\ Row.}, year = {1965}, address = {New York}, topic = {universal-algebra;} } @inproceedings{ cohn_t-etal:2005a, author = {Trevor Cohn and Andrew Smith and Miles Osborne}, title = {Scaling Conditional Random Fields Using Error-Correcting Codes}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {10--17}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1002}, topic = {machine-learning;named-entity-tagging;part-of-speech-tagging;} } @article{ cohon:2000a, author = {Rachel Cohon}, title = {The Roots of Reasons}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2000}, volume = {109}, number = {1}, pages = {63--85}, topic = {reasons-for-action;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @incollection{ cohon:2010a, author = {Rachel Cohon}, title = {Hume's Moral Philosophy}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2010/entries/hume-moral/}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, year = {2010}, topic = {Hume;ethics;} } @book{ coiffet:1983a, author = {Philippe Coiffet}, title = {Robot Technology, Volume 1: Modelling and Control}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1983}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0137820941 (v. 1)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, TJ211 .C673.}, xref = {Review: rock:1987a.}, topic = {robotics;} } @book{ coiffet:1983b, author = {Philippe Coiffet}, title = {Robot Technology, Volume 2: Interaction with the Environment}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1983}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library TJ211 .C673}, xref = {Review: rock:1987a.}, topic = {robotics;} } @book{ coiffet-chirouze:1983a, author = {Philippe Coiffet and Michel Chirouze}, title = {An Introduction to Robot Technology}, publisher = {McGraw-Hill}, year = {1983}, address = {New York}, miscnote = {Translated by Meg Tombs.}, ISBN = {0070106894}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, TJ211 .C61311 1983.}, topic = {robotics;} } @techreport{ colban:1988a, author = {Erik A. Colban}, title = {Simplified Unification Based Grammar Formalisms}, institution = {Department of Mathematics, University of Oslo}, number = {{COSMOS}-Report No.~05}, year = {1988}, address = {P.O. Box 1053, Blindern, 0316 Oslo 3, Norway}, topic = {unification-of-FSs;grammar-formalisms;} } @techreport{ colban:1990a, author = {Erik A. Colban}, title = {Unification Algorithms}, institution = {Department of Mathematics, University of Oslo}, number = {{COSMOS}-Report No.~16}, year = {1990}, address = {P.O. Box 1053, Blindern, 0316 Oslo 3, Norway}, topic = {unification-of-FSs;} } @techreport{ colban:1991a, author = {Erik A. Colban}, title = {Generalized Quantifiers in Sequent Calculus}, institution = {Department of Mathematics, University of Oslo}, number = {{COSMOS} Report No. 18}, year = {1991}, address = {P.O. Box 1053, Blindern, 0316 Oslo 3, Norway}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;} } @article{ colburn:1991a, author = {Timothy R. Colburn}, title = {Program Verification, Defeasible Reasoning, and Two Views of Computer Science}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1991}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {97--116}, abstract = {In this paper I attempt to cast the current program verification debate within a more general perspective on the methodologies and goals of computer science. $\ldots$ }, topic = {program-verification;philosophy-of-computer-science;} } @article{ colburn:1991b, author = {Timothy R. Colburn}, title = {Defeasible Reasoning and Logic Programming}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1991}, volume = {1}, number = {4}, pages = {417--436}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;logic-programming;} } @article{ colburn:1995a, author = {Timothy R. Colburn}, title = {Heuristics, Justification, and Defeasible Reasoning}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1995}, volume = {5}, number = {4}, pages = {467--487}, topic = {heuristics;philosophy-AI;} } @article{ colburn:1996a, author = {Timothy R. Colburn}, title = {Review of \emph{{AI}: The Tumultuous History of the Search for Artificial Intelligence}, by {D}aniel {C}revier}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {109--112}, xref = {Review of: crevier:1993a.}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @article{ colburn:1998a, author = {Timothy R. Colburn}, title = {Information Modeling Aspects of Software Development}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {375--393}, abstract = {An examination of the evolution of programming languages and development of general programming paradigms, including object-oriented design and implementation, suggests that while data modeling will necessarily continue to be a programmer's concern, more and more of the programming process itself is coming to be characterized by information modeling activities. }, topic = {software-engineering;} } @book{ colburn:2000a, author = {Timothy R. Colburn}, title = {Philosophy and Computer Science}, publisher = {M.E. Sharpe}, year = {2000}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {1-56324-991-X}, xref = {Review: indurkhya:2002a.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;philosophy-and-computer-science; philosophy-of-computer-science;} } @article{ colburn-shute:2007a, author = {Timothy Colburn and Gary Shute}, title = {Abstraction in Computer Science}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2007}, volume = {17}, number = {3}, pages = {169--184}, abstract = {$\ldots$ Mathematics, being primarily concerned with developing inference structures, has information neglect as its abstraction objective. Computer science, being primarily concerned with developing interaction patterns, has information hiding as its abstraction objective. $\ldots$ }, topic = {philosophy-of-computer-science;abstraction;} } @article{ colburn-shute:2011a, author = {Timothy Colburn and Gary Shute}, title = {Decoupling as a Fundamental Value of Computer Science}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {241--259}, abstract = {Computer science is an engineering science whose objective is to determine how to best control interactions among computational objects. We argue that it is a fundamental computer science value to design computational objects so that the dependencies required by their interactions do not result in couplings, since coupling inhibits change. The nature of knowledge in any science is revealed by how concepts in that science change through paradigm shifts, so we analyze classic paradigm shifts in both natural and computer science in terms of decoupling. We show that decoupling pervades computer science both at its core and in the wider context of computing at large, and lies at the very heart of computer science's value system. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn12\colburn.pdf.}, topic = {philosophy-of-computer-science;philosophy-of-software-engineering;} } @article{ colby_km:1981a, author = {Kenneth Mark Colby}, title = {Modeling a Paranoid Mind}, journal = {The Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1981}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {515--560}, topic = {Turing-test;nl-generation;} } @article{ colby_km-etal:1970a, author = {Kenneth Mark Colby and Sylvia Weber and Franklin Dennis Hilf}, title = {Artificial Paranoia}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1970}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {1--25}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A case of artificial paranoia has been synthesized in the form of a computer simulation model. The model and its embodied theory are briefly described. Several excerpts from interviews with the model are presented to illustrate its paranoid input-output behavior. Evaluation of the success of the simulation will depend upon indistinguishability tests. }, topic = {simulation-of-human-like-behavior;} } @article{ colby_km-etal:1972a, author = {Kenneth Mark Colby and Franklin Dennis Hilf and Sylvia Weber and Helena C. Kraemer}, title = {Turing-Like Indistinguishability Tests for the Validation of a Computer Simulation of Paranoid Processes}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1972}, volume = {3}, number = {1--3}, pages = {199--221}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A computer simulation of paranoid processes in the form of a dialogue algorithm was subjected to a validation study using indistinguishability tests. Judges rated degrees of paranoia present in initial psychiatric interviews of both paranoid patients and of versions of the paranoid model. Judges also attempted to distinguish teletyped interviews with real patients from interviews with the simulation model. The statistical results indicate a satisfactory degree of resemblance between the two groups of interviews. It is concluded that the model provides a successful simulation of naturally occurring paranoid processes as measured by these tests. }, topic = {Turing-test;simulation-of-human-like-behavior;} } @article{ cole_d:2002a, author = {David Cole}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}oncepts: Where Cognitive Science Went Wrong}, by {J}erry {F}odor}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {443--448}, xref = {Review of: fodor_ja:1998a.}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;concepts;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ cole_dc:1994a, author = {David C. Cole}, title = {Thought and Qualia}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {283--302}, abstract = {I present a theory of the nature and basis of the conscious experience characteristic of occurent propositional attitudes: thinking this or that. As a preliminary I offer an extended criticism of Paul Schweizer's treatment of such consciousness as unexplained secondary qualities of neural events. I also attempt to rebut arguments against the possibility of functionalist accounts of conscious experience and qualia. }, xref = {Commentary: schweizer_p:1996a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;qualia;} } @incollection{ cole_dc:2004a, author = {David C. Cole}, title = {The {C}hinese Room Argument}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {Stanford University}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2004/entries/chinese-room/}, year = {Fall 2004}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophy-ai;philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;} } @article{ cole_dc:2008a, author = {David C. Cole}, title = {Review of \emph{Supersizing the Mind}, by {A}ndy {C}lark}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {145--147}, xref = {Review of: clark_a1:2008a.}, topic = {embedded-cognition;} } @article{ cole_dc:2009a, author = {David C. Cole}, title = {Review of \emph{{LOT}2: The Language of Thought Revisited}, by {J}erry {A}. {F}odor}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2009}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {439--443}, xref = {Review of: fodor_ja:2008a}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;mental-representations;mental-language; language-of-thought;} } @article{ cole_dc:2010a, author = {David C. Cole}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}adical Embodied Cognitive Science}, by {A}nthony {C}hemero}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {475--479}, xref = {Review of: chemero:2009a.}, topic = {representation;foundations-of-cogsci;embodiment;} } @article{ cole_dc:2011a, author = {David C. Cole}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}onsciousness Revisited: Materialism without Phenomenal Concepts}, by {M}ichael {T}ye}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {103--106}, xref = {Review of: tye_m:2009a.}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ cole_dc:2012a, author = {David C. Cole}, title = {Review of \emph{The Extended Mind}, edited by Richard Menary}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2012}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {47--51}, xref = {Review of: menary:2010a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;embedded-cognition;} } @article{ cole_dj:1993a, author = {David J. Cole}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}rtificial Experts: Social Knowledge and Intelligent Machines}, by {H}arry {M}. {C}ollins}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {343--345}, xref = {Review of: collins_hm:1990a}, topic = {philosophy-AI;machine-intelligence;} } @article{ cole_dj:1996a, author = {David J. Cole}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}olism: A Shopper's Guide}, by {J}erry {F}odor and {E}rnest {L}epore}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {256--261}, xref = {Review of: fodor_ja-lepore_e:1992a.}, topic = {holism;philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ cole_m:1991a, author = {Michael Cole}, title = {Conclusion}, booktitle = {Perspectives on Socially Shared Cognition}, publisher = {American Psychological Association}, year = {1991}, editor = {Lauren B. Resnick and John M. Levine and Stephanie D. Teasley}, pages = {398--417}, address = {Washington, D.C.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {social-psychology;group-attitudes;} } @article{ cole_p:1974a, author = {Peter Cole}, title = {Indefiniteness and Anaphoricity}, journal = {Language}, year = {1974}, volume = {50}, number = {4}, pages = {696--735}, topic = {indefiniteness;anaphora;}, } @incollection{ cole_p:1974b, author = {Peter Cole}, title = {Conversational Implicature and Syntactic Rules}, booktitle = {Towards Tomorrow's Linguistics}, publisher = {Georgetown University Press}, year = {1974}, editor = {R.W. Shuy and {C.-J.} Bailey}, address = {Washington, DC}, pages = {104--119}, rtnote = {In RHT collection}, topic = {implicature;} } @incollection{ cole_p:1975a, author = {Peter Cole}, title = {The Synchronic and Diachronic Status of Conversational Implicature}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics 3: Speech Acts}, year = {1975}, editor = {Peter Cole and Jerry Morgan}, pages = {257--288}, publisher = {Academic Press}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {implicature;} } @incollection{ cole_p:1975b, author = {Peter Cole}, title = {On the Origins of Referential Opacity}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics 9: Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Peter Cole}, pages = {1--22}, address = {New York}, topic = {referential-opacity;} } @book{ cole_p:1978a, editor = {Peter Cole}, title = {Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1978}, address = {New York}, topic = {pragmatics;} } @book{ cole_p:1978b, editor = {Peter Cole}, title = {Syntax and Semantics 9: Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1978}, address = {New York}, topic = {pragmatics;} } @book{ cole_p:1981a, editor = {Peter Cole}, title = {Radical Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Jay D. Atlas and Stephen C. Levinson, "It-Clefts, Informativeness and Logical Form: Radical Pragmatics (Revised Standard Version)", pp. 1--61 2. Emmon Bach, "On Time, Tense, and Aspect: An Essay In English Metaphysics", pp. 63--81 3. Charles E. Caton, "Stalnaker on Pragmatic Presupposition", pp. 83--100 4. Alice Davison, "Syntactic and Semantic Indeterminacy Resolved: A Mostly Pragmatic Analysis of the {H}indi Conjunctive Participle", pp. 101--128 5. Keith Donnellan, "Intuitions and Presuppositions", pp. 129--142 6. Charles J. Fillmore, "Pragmatics and the Description of Discourse", pp. 143--166 7. Georgia M. Green and Jerry L. Morgan, "Pragmatics, Grammar, and Discourse", pp. 167--182 8. Grice, H.P. "Presupposition and Conversational Implicature", pp. 183--198 9. Geoffrey Nunberg, "Validating Pragmatic Explanations", pp. 199--222 10. Ellen F. Prince, "Towards a Taxonomy of Given-New Information", pp. 223--256 11. Jerrold L. Sadock, "Almost", pp. 257-272 12. Ivan A. Sag, "Formal Semantics and Extralinguistic Context", pp. 273--294 13. Dan Sperber and Deirdre Wilson, "Irony and the Use-Mention Distinction", pp. 295--318 }, ISBN = {0121796604}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P99.4.P72 R31}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {pragmatics;} } @article{ cole_p:1985a, author = {Peter Cole}, title = {Quantifier Scope and the {ECP}}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {283--289}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;} } @book{ cole_p-morgan_jl:1975a, editor = {Peter Cole and Jerry Morgan}, title = {Syntax and Semantics 3: Speech Acts}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1975}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {Hillman P291 S8 1971 v.3}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @article{ coleman_j-local:1991a, author = {John Coleman and John Local}, title = {The `No Crossing Constraint' in Autosegmental Phonology}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1991}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {295--338}, topic = {autosegmental-phonology;} } @book{ coleman_jl:2002a, author = {Jules L. Coleman}, title = {Risks and Wrongs}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2002}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN-13 = {9780199253616}, abstract = {This book is concerned with the conflict between the goals of justice and economic efficiency in the allocation of risk, especially risk pertaining to safety. ... The first part of the book rejects traditional rational choice liberalism in favor of the view that the market operates as a rational way of fostering stable relationships and institutions within communities of individuals with broadly divergent conceptions of the good. ...}, topic = {conflict;market-economics;} } @book{ coleman_js-etal:1960a, author = {James S. Coleman and Ernest W. Adams and Herbert Solomon}, title = {Mathematical Thinking in the Measurement of Behavior}, publisher = {The Free Press}, year = {1960}, address = {Glencoe, Illinois}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Three Parts: Coleman: The Mathematical Theory of Small Groups Adams: A Survey of Bernoullian Utility Theory Solomon: A Survey of Mathematical Models in Factor Analysis }, topic = {math-in-behavioral-science;utility-theory;} } @inproceedings{ coleman_l:1972a, author = {Linda Coleman}, title = {Why the Only Interesting Syntactic Dialects Are the Uninteresting Ones}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society}, year = {1972}, pages = {78--98}, publisher = {Chicago Linguistics Society}, editor = {Claudia W. Corum and Thomas C. Smith-Stark and Ann Weiser}, address = {Chicago University, Chicago, Illinois}, topic = {linguistic-variation;nl-syntax;} } @article{ coles-etal:2009a, author = {Andrew Coles and Maria Fox and Keith Halsey and Derek Long and Amanda Smith}, title = {Managing Concurrency in Temporal Planning Using Planner-Scheduler Interaction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {1}, pages = {1--44}, topic = {planning;scheduling;} } @incollection{ coletti-etal:1991a, author = {G. Coletti and A. Gilio and R. Scozzafava}, title = {Assessment of Qualitative Judgements for Conditional Events in Expert Systems}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {135--140}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ coliva_a:2003a, author = {Annalisa Coliva}, title = {The First Person: Error through Misidentification, the Split between Speaker's and Semantic Reference, and the Real Guarantee}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {100}, number = {8}, pages = {416--431}, topic = {first-person;} } @book{ coliva_a:2012a, editor = {Annalisa Coliva}, title = {Mind, Meaning, and Knowledge: Themes from the Philosophy of {C}rispin {W}right}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199278053}, xref = {Review: jackson_fc:2014b}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Paul A. Boghossian, "Blind rule-following" 2. Christopher Peacocke, "Understanding and rule-following" 3. Paul Horwich, "Regularities, rules, meanings, truth conditions, and epistemic norms" 4. Akeel Bilgrami, "Why meaning intentions are degenerate" 5. Barry C. Smith, "The publicity of meaning and the interiority of mind" 6. Dorit Bar-On, "Expression, truth, and reality: some variations on themes from Wright" 7. Simon Blackburn, "Some remarks about minimalism" 8. Stewart Shapiro, "Objectivity, explanation, and cognitive shortfall" 9.Carol Rovane, "How to formulate relativism" 10. Jim Pryor, "When warrant transmits" 11.Jos\'e L. Zalabardo, "Wright on Moore" 12.Annalisa Coliva, "Moore's Proof, liberals, and conservatives---is there a ({W}ittgensteinian) third way?" 13. Michael Williams, " Wright against the sceptics" 14. Crispin Wright, "Replies" }, topic = {rule-following;philosophy-of-language;self-knowledge;} } @article{ coliva_a:2015a, author = {Annalisa Coliva}, title = {How to Commit Moore's Paradox}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2015}, volume = {112}, number = {4}, pages = {169--192}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ coliva_a:2016a, author = {Annalisa Coliva}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}elf-Knowledge for Humans}, by {Q}uassim {C}assam}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2016}, volume = {76}, number = {2}, pages = {246--252}, DOI = {doi:10.1093/analys/anv078}, xref = {Review of: cassam_q:2015a}, topic = {self-knowledge;limited-rationality;} } @inproceedings{ collier:1998a, author = {Nigel Collier and Hideki Hirakawa and Akira Kumano}, title = {Machine Translation vs. Dictionary Term Translation---A Comparison for {E}nglish-{J}apanese News Article Alignment}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {263--267}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {text-alignment;} } @inproceedings{ collier-etal:1998a, author = {Nigel Collier and Kenji Ono and Hideki Hirakawa}, title = {An Experiment in Hybrid Dictionary and Statistical Sentence Alignment}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {268--274}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {text-alignment;} } @book{ collins_a1-etal:1995a, editor = {Alan F. Collins and Susan E. Gathercole and Martin A. Conway and Peter E. Morris}, title = {Theories of Memory}, Publisher = {Laurence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1995}, address = {Nahwah, New Jersey}, topic = {memory-models;} } @incollection{ collins_a2:1984a, author = {Arthur Collins}, title = {Action, Causality and Teleological Explanation}, booktitle = {Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. Uehling, Jr. and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {345--369}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {action;causality;teleology;explanation;} } @article{ collins_am-loftus:1975a, author = {Allan M. Collins and Elizabeth F. Loftus}, title = {A Spreading-Activation Theory of Semantic Processing}, journal = {Psychological Review}, year = {1975}, volume = {82}, pages = {407--428}, topic = {nl-comprehension-psychology;semantic-comprehension;} } @article{ collins_am-quillian:1969a, author = {Allan M. Collins and M. Ross Quillian}, title = {Retrieval Time from Semantic Memory}, journal = {Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior}, year = {1969}, volume = {8}, pages = {240--247}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;memory;} } @book{ collins_c:1997a, author = {Chris Collins}, title = {Local Economy}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {syntactic-minimalism;nl-syntax;} } @incollection{ collins_c:2002a, author = {Chris Collins}, title = {Eliminating Labels}, booktitle = {Derivation and Explanation in the Minimalist Program}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishing}, year = {2002}, editor = {Samuel David Epstein and T. Daniel Seeley}, pages = {42--64}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {minimalist-syntax;X-bar-theory;} } @article{ collins_c:2020a, author = {Chris Collins}, title = {Outer Negation of Universal Quantifier Phrases}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2020}, volume = {43}, number = {3}, pages = {233--246}, abstract = {This paper discusses two ways of negating DP quantifier phrases. In one way, NEG modifies the quantifier D directly with the structure [[NEG D] NP] (inner negation). In the other way, NEG modifies the whole DP with the structure [NEG DP] (outer negation). I give evidence based on negative polarity items that negated universal quantifier phrases like "not every student" involve outer negation. ...}, topic = {negation;nl-quantifiers;} } @book{ collins_c-postal_pm:2012a, author = {Chris Collins and Paul M. Postal}, title = {Imposters: A Study of Pronominal Agreement}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN-13 = {9780262016889}, abstract = {... sometimes third person nonpronominal determiner phrases (DPs) are used to refer to the speaker - for example, this reporter, yours truly ... This book refers to these DPs as imposters because their third person exterior hides a first or second person core. It studies the interactions of imposters with a range of grammatical phenomena The fundamental proposal of the book is that a pronoun agrees with what the book calls a source, where its antecedent constitutes only one type of source. ...}, topic = {personal-pronouns;} } @inproceedings{ collins_g-etal:1989a, author = {Gregg Collins and Lawrence Birnbaum and Bruce Krulwich}, title = {An Adaptive Model of Decision-Making in Planning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, pages = {511--516}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, missinginfo = {Check A's 1st name}, topic = {planning;} } @book{ collins_hm:1990a, author = {Harry M. Collins}, title = {Artificial Experts: Social Knowledge and Intelligent Machines}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, isbn = {0-262-03168-X}, topic = {philosophy-AI;machine-intelligence;} } @article{ collins_hm:1996a, author = {H.M. Collins}, title = {Embedded or Embodied? A Review of {\it What Computers Still Can't Do}, by {H}ubert {L}. {D}reyfus}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {80}, number = {1}, pages = {99--117}, xref = {Review of dreyfus_hl:1992a.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @phdthesis{ collins_j:1991a, author = {John Collins}, title = {Belief Revision}, school = {Princeton University}, year = {1991}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Philosophy Department, Princeton University}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ collins_j:1995a, author = {John Collins}, title = {Desire-as-Belief Implies Opinionation or Indifference}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1995}, volume = {55}, number = {1}, pages = {2--5}, abstract = {... It is worth asking whether [belief and desire] are necessarily distinct, or whether it might be possible to construe desire as belief of a certain sort -- belief, say, about what would be good. ...}, topic = {belief;desire;} } @article{ collins_j:2000a, author = {John Collins}, title = {Preemptive Prevention}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2000}, volume = {97}, number = {4}, pages = {223--234}, topic = {causality;prevention;} } @incollection{ collins_j:2004a, author = {John Collins}, title = {Preemptive Prevention}, booktitle = {Causation and Counterfactuals}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {John Collins and Ned Hall and Laurie A. Paul}, pages = {102--118}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {causality;conditionals;} } @article{ collins_j:2005a, author = {John Collins}, title = {On the Input Problem for Massive Modularity}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2005}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {1--22}, abstract = {Jerry Fodor argues that the massive modularity thesis is $\ldots$ incoherent, self-defeating. The thesis suffers from what Fodor dubs the `input problem': the function of a given module (proprietarily understood) in a wholly modular system presupposes non-modular processes. It will be argued that massive modularity suffers from no such a priori problem. $\ldots$ }, topic = {cognitive-modularity;foundations-of-cognition;} } @article{ collins_j:2007a, author = {John Collins}, title = {Syntax, More or Less}, journal = {Mind}, year = {2007}, volume = {116}, number = {464}, pages = {805--850}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe18}, abstract = {Much of the best contemporary work in the philosophy of language and content makes appeal to the theories developed in generative syntax. In particular, there is a presumption that -- at some level and in some way -- the structures provided by syntactic theory mesh with or support our conception of content/linguistic meaning as grounded in our first-person understanding of our communicative speech acts. This paper will suggest that there is no such tight fit. ...}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;syntax-semantics-interface;} } @article{ collins_j:2008a, author = {John Collins}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}nsensitive Semantics: A Defense of Semantic Minimalism and Speech Act Pluralism}, by {H}erman {C}appelen and {E}rnest {L}epore}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2008}, volume = {117}, number = {1}, pages = {126--130}, xref = {Review of: cappelen_h-lepore_e:2005a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;foundations-of-semantics;context;} } @incollection{ collins_j:2013a, author = {John Collins}, title = {The Syntax of Personal Taste}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 27: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2013}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {51--103}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {predicates-of-taste;experiencing-verbs;thematic-roles;} } @incollection{ collins_j:2017a, author = {John Collins}, title = {On the Linguistic Status of Context Sensitivity}, booktitle = {A Companion to the Philosophy of Language, Second Edition}, publisher = {John Wiley \&\ Sons}, volume = {1}, year = {2017}, editor = {Bob Hale and Crispin Wright and Alexander Miller}, pages = {151--173}, address = {New York}, abstract = {This chapter provides some tentative conclusions about the likely linguistic status of context-sensitive semantic properties. It argues that pragmatism is fully aligned with a standard approach to syntax, and should be the default view of the notion of a linguistic 'context', viz., context is not a well-behaved linguistic notion. But rather a potentially open-ended way of marking the role extra-linguistic factors can play in fixing what is said on an occasion of the use of a linguistic type. Context sensitivity is not restricted to the construal of overt linguistic material. It also appears that the construal of tokens of many constructions depends upon contextual factors that are not explicitly encoded in linguistic material; that is, if pronouns are explicit variables, then there appear to be implicit or covert variables as well. Truth-value of a sentence in context is assigned relative to the value a coordinate of the index takes under the scope of the operator. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc18}, topic = {context;context-sensitivity;contextualism;} } @book{ collins_j-etal:2004a, editor = {John Collins and Ned Hall and Laurie A. Paul}, title = {Causation and Counterfactuals}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, contentnote = {TC: 1. John Collins, Ned Hall, and L.A. Paul, "Causation and Counterfactuals: History, Problems and Prospects", pp. 1--58 2. Jonathan Schaffer, "Trumping Preemption", pp. 59--74 3. David Lewis, "Causation as Influence", pp. 75--101 4. John Collins, "Preemptive Prevention", pp. 102--118 5. Stephen Yablo, "Advertisement for a Sketch of an Outline of a Prototheory of Causation", pp. 119--138 6. Peter Menzies, "Difference-Making in Context", pp. 139--180 7. Ned Hall, "Causation and the Price of Transitivity", pp. 181--204 8. L.A. Paul, "Aspect Causation", pp. 205--204 9. Ned Hall, "Two Concepts of Causation", pp. 225--276 10. David Lewis, "Void and Object", pp. 277--290 11. Helen Beebee, "Causing and Nothingness", pp. 291--308 12. D.H. Mellor, "For Facts as Causes and Effects", pp. 309--324 13. David Coady, "Preempting Preemption", pp. 325--341 14. Cei Maslin, "Causes Contrasts and the Nontransitivity of Causation", pp. 341--358 15. Igal Kvart, "Causation: Probabilistic and Counterfactual Analyses", pp. 359--386 16. Murali Ramachandran, "A Counterfactual Analysis of Indeterministic Causation", pp. 387--402 17. Christopher Hitchcock, "Do all and Only Causes Raise the Probabilities of Effects?", pp. 403--417 18. Tim Maudlin, "Causation, Counterfactuals, and the Third Factor", pp. 418--444 19. D.M. Armstrong, "Going through the Open Door Again: Counterfactual versus Singularist", pp. 445--457 }, ISBN-10 = {0-262-53256-5}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-262-53256-3}, topic = {conditionals;causality;} } @incollection{ collins_j-etal:2004b, author = {John Collins and Ned Hall and Laurie A. Paul}, title = {Counterfactuals and Causation: History, Problems, and Prospects}, booktitle = {Causation and Counterfactuals}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {John Collins and Ned Hall and Laurie A. Paul}, pages = {1--57}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no21}, topic = {causality;conditionals;} } @article{ collins_j-etal:2010a, author = {John Collins and Wolfgang Ketter and Norman Sadeh}, title = {Pushing the Limits of Rational Agents: The Trading Agent Competition for Supply Chain Management}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2010}, volume = {31}, number = {2}, pages = {63--80}, topic = {computational-bargaining;} } @inproceedings{ collins_jw-forbus_kd:1987a1, author = {John W. Collins and Kenneth D. Forbus}, title = {Reasoning about Fluids via Molecular Collections}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, editor = {Kenneth D. Forbus and Howard Shrobe}, pages = {590--595}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, xref = {Republication: collins_jw-forbus_kd:1987a2.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;} } @incollection{ collins_jw-forbus_kd:1987a2, author = {John W. Collins and Kenneth D. Forbus}, title = {Reasoning about Fluids via Molecular Collections}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {503--507}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: collins_jw-forbus_kd:1987a1}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ collins_m:1996a, author = {Michael John Collins}, title = {A New Statistical Parser Based on Bigram Lexical Dependencies}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {184--191}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;statistical-nlp;} } @inproceedings{ collins_m:1997a, author = {Michael Collins}, title = {Three Generative, Lexicalized Models for Statistical Parsing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {16--23}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;statistical-nlp;} } @article{ collins_m:1999a, author = {Michael Collins}, title = {Review of \emph{{B}eyond Grammar: An Experience-Based Theory of Language}, by {R}ens {B}od}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages = {440--444}, xref = {Review of bod:1998a.}, topic = {statistical-parsing;TAG-grammar;nlp-algorithms;} } @article{ collins_m:2003a, author = {Michael Collins}, title = {Head-Driven Statistical Techniques for Natural-Language Parsing}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2003}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {589--654}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;statistical-parsing;} } @inproceedings{ collins_m-brooks_j:1995a, author = {Michael Collins and James Brooks}, title = {Prepositional Attachment through a Backed-off Model}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Very Large Corpora}, year = {1995}, editor = {David Yarovsky and Kenneth Church}, pages = {27--38}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;ambiguity-resolution;corpus-statistics; machine-learning;prepositional-attachment;} } @inproceedings{ collins_m-etal:2005a, author = {Michael Collins and Brian Roark and Murat Saraclar}, title = {Discriminative Syntactic Language Modeling for Speech Recognition}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {507--514}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1063}, topic = {acoustic-modeling;speech-recognition;} } @inproceedings{ collins_m-etal:2005b, author = {Michael Collins and Philipp Koehn and Ivona Kucerova}, title = {Clause Restructuring for Statistical Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {531--540}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1066}, topic = {statistical-nlp;machine-translation;} } @inproceedings{ collins_m-singer_y:1999a, author = {Michael Collins and Yoram Singer}, title = {Unsupervised Models for Named Entity Classification}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint {SIGDAT} Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing and Very Large Corpora}, year = {1999}, editor = {Pascale Fung and Joe Zhou}, pages = {189--196}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, NJ}, topic = {named-entity-tagging;machine-learning;} } @book{ collins_nl-michie_d:1967a, editor = {N.L. Collins and Donald Michie}, title = {Machine intelligence {I}}, publisher = {Oliver \&\ Boyd}, year = {1967}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {AI-general;} } @book{ colodny:1965a, editor = {Robert G. Colodny}, title = {Beyond the Edge of Certainty: Essays in Contemporary Science and Philosophy}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall, Inc.}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, year = {1965}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;} } @book{ colodny:1966a, editor = {Robert Colodny}, title = {Mind and Cosmos: Essays in Contemporary Science and Philosophy}, publisher = {University of Pittsburgh Press}, year = {1966}, address = {Pittsburgh}, topic = {analytic-philosophy-collection;philosophy-of-science;} } @book{ colodny:1972a, editor = {Robert G. Colodny}, title = {Paradigms and Paradoxes: The Philosophical Challenge of The Quantum Domain}, publisher = {University of Pittsburgh Press}, year = {1972}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {UMich Science: QC 174.1 .C72}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;philosophy-of-physics; foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @article{ colomb:1999a, author = {Robert M. Colomb}, title = {Representation of Propositional Expert Systems as Partial Functions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {109}, number = {1--2}, topic = {expert-systems;decision-trees;}, pages = {187--209}, } @article{ colombetti:1993a, author = {Marco Colombetti}, title = {Formal Semantics for Mutual Belief}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {62}, number = {2}, pages = {341--353}, topic = {mutual-belief;} } @inproceedings{ colombetti_m:2000a, author = {Marco Colombett}, title = {A Commitment-Based Approach to Agent Speech Acts and Conversations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Autonomous Agents, Workshop on Agent Languages and Conversation Policies}, year = {2000}, editor = {Mark Greaves and Frank Dignum and Jeffrey Bradshaw and Brahim Chaib-Draa}, pages = {21--29}, publisher = {ACM Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {... presents the main elements of Albatross, an agent communication language whose definition is currently under development. The semantics of Albatross, based on the social notion of commitment, allows one to define speech act types in a neat and concise way.}, topic = {agent-communication;speech-acts;} } @article{ colombo:2010a, author = {Matteo Colombo}, title = {How `Authentic Intentionality' can be Enabled: a Neurocomputational Hypothesis}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {183--202}, abstract = {According to John Haugeland, the capacity for `authentic intentionality' depends on a commitment to constitutive standards of objectivity. One of the consequences of Haugeland's view is that a neurocomputational explanation cannot be adequate to understand `authentic intentionality'. This paper gives grounds to resist such a consequence. }, topic = {intentionality;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ colomina_jj:2014a, author = {Juan J. Colomina}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}ussell's Logical Atomism}, by {D}avid {B}ostock}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2014}, volume = {102}, number = {3}, pages = {655--662}, xref = {Review of: }, topic = {Russell;history-of-analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ colomina_jj:2019a, author = {Juan J. Colomina}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Rule-Following Paradox and Its Implications for Metaphysics}, by {J}ody {A}zzouni}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2019}, volume = {107}, number = {2}, pages = {445--450}, xref = {Review of: azzouni_j:2017a}, topic = {rule-following;} } @article{ colomina_jj:2020a, author = {Juan J. Colomina}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Rule-Following Paradox and Its Implications for Metaphysics}, by {J}ody {A}zzouni}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2020}, volume = {108}, number = {2}, pages = {445--450}, xref = {Review of: azzouni_j:2017a}, topic = {rule-following;private-language;} } @article{ colson-grigoroff:2001a, author = {Lo\"ic Colson and Serge Grigoroff}, title = {Syntactical Truth Predicates for Second-Order Arithmetic}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {66}, number = {1}, pages = {225--256}, topic = {second-order-arithmetic;truth-definitions;} } @article{ colston:1997a, author = {H.L. Colston}, title = {\,`I've Never Seen Anything Like It': Overstatement, Understatement, and Irony}, journal = {Metaphor and Symbol}, year = {1997}, volume = {12}, pages = {43--58}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {irony;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ colston:1998a, author = {H.L. Colston}, title = {You'll Never Believe This: Irony and Hyperbole in Expressing Surprise}, journal = {Journal of Psycholinguistic Research}, year = {1998}, volume = {27}, pages = {499--513}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {irony;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ colterjohn_j-macintosh_d:1987a, author = {Julia Colterjohn and Duncan MacIntosh}, title = {Gerald {V}ision and Indexicals}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1987}, volume = {47}, number = {1}, pages = {58--60}, xref = {Commentary on: vision_g:1985a}, topic = {indexicals;two-dimensional-semantics;} } @article{ colton-etal:2009a, author = {Simon Colton and Ramon L\'opez de M\'antaras Badia and Oliverio Stock}, title = {Computational Creativity: Coming of Age}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2009}, volume = {30}, number = {3}, pages = {11--22}, topic = {AI-editorial;computational-creativity;} } @book{ colyan:2012a, author = {Mark Colyan}, title = {An Introduction to the Philosophy of Mathematics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ colyvan_m:2001a, author = {Mark Colyvan}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} Subject With No Object: Strategies for Nominalistic Interpretation of Mathematics}, by {J}ohn {B}urgess and {G}ideon {R}osen}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {67}, number = {1}, pages = {146--150}, xref = {Review of burgess_jp-rosen_g:1997a.}, topic = {nominalism;nominalistic-semantics;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ colyvan_m:2004a, author = {Mark Colyvan}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Search for Certainty: A Philosophical Account of Foundations of Mathematics}, by {M}arcus {G}iaquinto}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {214--216}, xref = {Review of: giaquinto:2002a.}, topic = {foundations-of-mathematics;foundations-of-set-theory;} } @article{ colyvan_m:2008a, author = {Mark Colyvan}, title = {Relative Expectation Theory}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {105}, number = {1}, pages = {37--44}, topic = {foundations-of-decision-theory;} } @article{ coman_a-aha_dw:2018a, author = {Alexandra Coman and David W. Aha}, title = {{AI} Rebel Agents}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2018}, volume = {39}, number = {3}, pages = {16--26}, topic = {robot-disobedience;social-intelligence;AI-editorial;} } @incollection{ comesana_j:2005a, author = {Juan Comesa\~na}, title = {There Is no Immediate Justification}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {pp. 222--235}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;reasons-for-knoeledge;justification;} } @incollection{ comesana_j:2005b, author = {Juan Comesa\~na}, title = {Is There Immediate Justification/ Reply to {P}ryor}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {239--243}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: pryor_j:2005b}, topic = {knowledge;reasons-for-knoeledge;justification;} } @incollection{ comini-etal:1994a, author = {Marco Comini and Giorgio Levi and Giuliana Vitiello}, title = {Abstract Debugging of Logic Program}, booktitle = {Logic Programming Synthesis and Transformation, Meta-Programming in Logic: Fourth International Workshops, {LOBSTR}'94 and {META}'94, Pisa, Italy}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Laurent Fribourg and Franco Turini}, pages = {440--450}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {metaprogramming;logic-programming;} } @incollection{ comorovski:1985a, author = {Ileana Comorovski}, title = {On Quantifier Strength and Partitive Noun Phrases}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {145--177}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;(in)definiteness; existential-constructions;partitive-constructions;} } @book{ comorovski:1996a, author = {Ileana Comorovski}, title = {Interrogative Phrases and the Syntax-Semantics Interface}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1996}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0792338049}, topic = {interrogatives;} } @incollection{ comorovski:2008a, author = {Ileana Comorovski}, title = {Intensional Subjects and Indirect Contextual Anchoring}, booktitle = {Time and Modality}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2008}, editor = {Jacquelin Gu\`eron and Jacquelin Lecarme}, pages = {39--57}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-semantics;intensionality;context;} } @incollection{ compiani:1996a, author = {Mario Compiani}, title = {Remarks on the Paradigms of Connectionism}, booktitle = {Connectionism, Concepts, and Folk Psychology: The Legacy of {A}lan {T}uring: Volume {II}}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter J.R. Millican and Andy Clark}, pages = {45--66}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {connectionism;} } @incollection{ comrie:1976a, author = {Bernard Comrie}, title = {The Syntax of Causative Constructions: Cross-Linguistic Similarities and Divergences}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics Vol. 6: The Grammar of Causative Constructions}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Mayayoshi Shibatani}, pages = {261--312}, address = {New York}, topic = {nl-causatives;universal-grammar;} } @incollection{ comrie:1981a, author = {Bernard Comrie}, title = {Aspect and Voice}, booktitle = {Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Philip Tedeschi and Annie Zaenen}, pages = {65--78}, address = {New York}, topic = {tense-aspect;} } @unpublished{ comrie:1983a, author = {Bernard Comrie}, title = {Conditionals: A Typology}, year = {1983}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Southern California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {conditonals;linguistic-typology;} } @book{ comrie:1985a, author = {Bernard Comrie}, title = {Aspect: An Introduction to the Study of Verbal Aspect and Related Problems}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-tense;universal-grammar;} } @incollection{ comrie:1985b, author = {Bernard Comrie}, title = {Causative Verb Formation and Other Verb-Deriving Morphology}, booktitle = {Language Typology and Syntactic Description, Volume {III}: Grammatical Categories and the Lexicon}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, editor = {Timothy Shopen}, pages = {309--348}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-causatives;} } @incollection{ comrie:1986a, author = {Bernard Comrie}, title = {Conditionals: A Typology}, booktitle = {On Conditionals}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Elizabeth Traugott and Alice {ter Meulen} and Judy Reilly}, pages = {77--101}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. FIle Drawers, "Comrie"}, topic = {conditionals;typology;} } @book{ comrie_b-polinsky_m:1993a, editor = {Bernard Comrie and Maria Polinsky}, title = {Causatives and Transitivity}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {1993}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {nl-causatives;} } @book{ conant:1981a, editor = {Roger Conant}, title = {Mechanisms Of Intelligence: {A}shby'S Writings On Cybernetics}, publisher = {Intersystems Publications}, year = {1981}, address = {Seaside, California}, topic = {AI-classics;} } @article{ conati-kardan:2013a, author = {Cristina Conati and Samad Kardan}, title = {Student Modeling: Supporting Personalized Instruction, from Problem Solving to Exploratory Open Ended Activities}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2013}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {13--26}, topic = {intelligent-tutoring;user-modeling;} } @inproceedings{ condon-etal:1997a, author = {Sherri L. Condon and Claude G. Cech and William R. Edwards}, title = {DIscourse Routines in Decision-Making Interactions}, booktitle = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Communicative Action in Humans and Machines}, year = {1997}, pages = {20--27}, organization = {{AAAI}}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, editor = {David R. Traum}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {speech-acts;corpus-statistics;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ condoravdi_c:2002a, author = {Cleo Condoravdi}, title = {Temporal Interpretation of Modals}, booktitle = {The Construction of Meaning}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2002}, editor = {David I. Beaver and Luis D. Casillas Mart\'inez and Brady Z. Clark and Stefan Kaufmann}, pages = {59--88}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {modals;nl-tense;} } @unpublished{ condoravdi_c:2009a, author = {Cleo Condoravdi}, title = {Measurement and Intensionality in the Semantics of the Progressive}, year = {2009}, note = {Handout, 5th workshop in discourse structure in honor of Carlota S. Smith, UT Austin.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja20}, topic = {progressive-aspect;conditionals;tense-aspect;} } @unpublished{ condoravdi_c:2011a, author = {Cleo Condoravdi}, title = {Linking Semantics for Modification}, year = {2011}, note = {Unpublished slides, Xerox PARC and Stanford University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe22\Condoravdi1.pdf}, topic = {linking-semantics;event-semantics;} } @incollection{ condoravdi_c:2021a, author = {Cleo Condoravdi}, title = {Counterfactuals to the Rescue}, booktitle = {Conditionals, Probability, and Paradox: Themes from the Philosophy of {D}orothy {E}dgington}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2021}, editor = {Lee Walters and John Hawthorne}, pages = {76--99}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {conditionals;probability;} } @inproceedings{ condoravdi_c-etal:2003a, author = {Cleo Condoravdi and Richard Crouch and Valeria de Paiva and Reinhard Stolle and Daniel G. Bobrow}, title = {Entailment, Intensionality and Text Understanding}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {HLT-NAACL} 2003 Workshop on Text Meaning}, year = {2003}, editor = {Sergei Nirenburg}, pages = {38--45}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {text-understanding;} } @article{ condoravdi_c-kaufmann_s:2005a, author = {Cleo Condoravdi and Stefan Kaufmann}, title = {Modality and Temporality}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2005}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {119--128}, abstract = {The present collection addresses a number of issues in the semantic interpretation of modal and temporal expressions. Despite the variety the papers exhibit both in the selection of topics and the choice of formal frameworks, they are interconnected through several overarching themes that are at the centre of much ongoing research. The purpose of this brief introduction is to put the papers into context and draw the reader's attention to some of these connections. The topics we will discuss in the remainder are: counterfactuals, causality, partiality, compositionality of conditionals, and context dependence. }, topic = {nl-tense;modals;modality;} } @incollection{ condoravdi_c-lauer_s:2014a, author = {Cleo Condoravdi and Sven Lauer}, title = {Imperatives: Meaning and Illocutionary Force}, booktitle = {Empirical Issues in Syntax and Semantics}, publisher = {Colloque de Syntaxe et S\'emantique \'a {P}aris}, year = {2014}, address = {Paris}, editor = {Christopher Pi\~n\'on}, pages = {37--58}, topic = {imperatives;speech-acts;} } @article{ condoravdi_c-lauer_s:2016a, author = {Cleo Condoravdi: and Sven Lauer}, title = {Anankastic Conditionals are Just Conditionals}, journal = {Semantics and Pragmatics}, year = {2016}, volume = {9}, url = {https://semprag.org/index.php/sp/article/view/sp.9.8}, topic = {anankastic-conditionals;} } @incollection{ condorovdi_c:2002a, author = {Cleo Condorovdi}, title = {Temporal Interpretation of Modals}, booktitle = {The Construction of Meaning}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2002}, editor = {David Beaver and Luis de Casillas Mart\'inez and Brady Z. Clark and Stefan Kaufmann}, pages = {59--88}, address = {Stanford University}, abstract = {This paper provides a uniform analysis of the temporal interpretation of epistemic and metaphysical modals referring to the present, the past, or the future. It argues for a decompositional analysis of modals referring to the past, attributes the ambiguity of such modals to scopal ambiguity, and claims that a generalization relating the temporal reference of modals with the kind of modality they express is a consequence of the structure of possibilities and a felicity condition governing the association of modals with a modal base. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja20\condoravdi2}, topic = {epistemic-modals;nl-tense;modals;} } @inproceedings{ condotta:2000a, author = {Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Condotta}, title = {The Augmented Interval and and Rectangle Networks}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {571--579}, abstract = {We augment Allen's Interval Algebra networks and Rectangle Algebra networks by quantitative constraints represented by ST Ps. With the help of polynomial algorithms based on the traditional and weak path-consistency methods, we prove the tractability of the consistency problem of preconvex augmented interval networks and strongly-preconvex augmented rectangle networks. }, topic = {temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ condotta-ligozat:2004a, author = {Jean Fran\c{c}ois Condotta and G\'erard Ligozat}, title = {Axiomatizing the Cyclic Interval Calculus}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {95--104}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ condotta_jf-etal:2016a, author = {Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Condotta and Issam Nouaouri and Michael Sioutis}, title = {A {SAT} Approach for Maximizing Satisfiability in Qualitative Spatial and Temporal Constraint Networks}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {432--442}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {...To efficiently solve the MAX-QCN problem, we introduce and study two families of encodings of the partial maximum satisfiability problem (PMAX-SAT). ...}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {model-checking;spatial-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ condotta_jf-etal:2016b, author = {Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Condotta and Badran Raddaoui and Yakoub Salhi}, title = {Quantifying Conflicts for Spatial and Temporal Information}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {443--452}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {This paper tackles the problem of evaluating the degree of inconsistency in spatial and temporal qualitative reasoning. ... we provide two inconsistency measures that can be useful in various AI applications. The first one is based on the number of constraints that we need to relax to get a consistent qualitative constraint network. The second inconsistency measure is based on variable restrictions to restore consistency. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {reasoning-about-consistency;spatial-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ condotta_jf-lecoutre_c:2010a, author = {Jean-Franois Condotta and Christophe Lecoutre}, title = {A Class of {df}-Consistencies for Qualitative Constraint Networks}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {319--328}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In this paper, we introduce a new class of local consistencies, called °f-consistencies, for qualitative constraint networks. ... We study the connections existing between some properties of mappings f and the relative inference strength of °f-consistencies. }, topic = {qualitative-constraint-networks;consistency-checking;} } @article{ conee_e:1983a, author = {Earl Conee}, title = {Review of \emph{{U}tilitarianism and Co-operation}, by {D}onald {R}egan}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, volume = {80}, year = {1983}, pages = {415--424}, xref = {Review of: regan:1980a.}, topic = {utilitarianism;} } @incollection{ conee_e:2005a, author = {Earl Conee}, title = {Is Knowledge Contextual? Contextualism Contested}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {60--68}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;context;} } @incollection{ conee_e:2005b, author = {Earl Conee}, title = {Is Knowledge Contextual? Contextualism Contested Some More}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {75--78}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: cohen_s:2005b}, topic = {knowledge;context;} } @incollection{ conee_e:2007a, author = {Earl Conee}, title = {Disjunctivism and Anti-Skepticism}, booktitle = {The Metaphysics of Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2007}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {16--37}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {perception;illusions;skepticism;} } @article{ coniglio_me-etal:2021a, author = {Marcelo E. Coniglio and G.T. Gomez-Pereira and Mart\'in Figallo}, title = {Some Model-Theoretic Results on the 3-Valued Paraconsistent First-Order Logic {QCIORE}}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {187--224}, topic = {paraconsistency;model-theoryt;} } @inproceedings{ conitzer-sandholm:2002a, author = {Vincent Conitzer and Tuomas Sandholm}, title = {Vote Elicitation: Complexity and Strategy-Proofness}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {392--397}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {voting-procedures;complexity-in-AI;strategic-voting;} } @article{ conitzer-sandholm:2006a, author = {Vincent Conitzer and Tuomas W. Sandholm}, title = {Complexity of Constructing Solutions in the Core Based on Synergies among Coalitions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {6--7}, pages = {607--619}, topic = {coalition-formation;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ conitzer-sandholm:2011a, author = {Vincent Conitzer and Tuomas Sandholm}, title = {Expressive Markets for Donating to Charities}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {7--8}, pages = {1251--1271}, topic = {computational-bargaining;} } @article{ conitzer-yokoo_m:2010a, author = {Vincent Conitzer and Makuto Yokoo}, title = {Using Mechanism Design to Prevent False-Name Manipulation}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2010}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {65--77}, topic = {algorithmic-game-theory;computational-bargaining;} } @inproceedings{ conitzer_v-xia_lr:2012a, author = {Vincent Conitzer and Lirong Xia}, title = {Paradoxes of Multiple Elections: An Approximation Approach}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {179--187}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we investigate how well the winner under the sequential voting process approximates the winners under some common voting rules that admit natural scoring functions that can serve as a basis for approximation results. ... We show some generalized paradoxes of multiple elections: Sequential voting does not approximate many common voting rules well even when the preferences are O-legal or separable. ... Our results thus draw a border for conditions under which sequential voting rules, which have extremely low computational and communicational cost, are good approximations of some common voting rules w.r.t. their corresponding scoring functions.}, topic = {voting-procedures;} } @article{ conklin_hc:1955a, author = {Harold C. Conklin}, title = {Hanun\'oo Color Categories}, journal = {Southwestern Journal of Anthropology}, year = {1955}, volume = {11}, pages = {339--344}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {linguistic-relativity;color-terms;} } @article{ conlisk:1996a, author = {John Conlisk}, title = {Why Bounded Rationality}, journal = {Journal of Economic Literature}, year = {1996}, volume = {34}, number = {2}, pages = {669--700}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my13}, topic = {bounded-rationality;} } @incollection{ conlon-etal:1994a, author = {Sumali Pin-Ngern Conlon and Joanne Dardaine and Agnes D'Souza and Martha Evens and Sherwood Haynes and Jong-Sun Kim and Robert Strutz}, title = {The {IIT} Lexical Database: Dream and Reality}, booktitle = {Current Issues in Computational Linguistics: Essays in Honour of {D}on {W}alker}, publisher = {Giardini Editori e Stampatori and Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {Antonio Zampolli and Nicoletta Calzolari and Martha Palmer}, pages = {201--225}, address = {Pisa and Dordrecht}, topic = {computational-lexicography;} } @article{ connell-brady_m:1987a, author = {Jonathan H. Connell and Michael Brady}, title = {Generating and Generalizing Models of Visual Objects}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {31}, number = {2}, pages = {159--183}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We report on initial experiments with an implemented learning system whose inputs are images of two-dimensional shapes. The system first builds semantic network descriptions of shapes based on Brady's ``smoothed local symmetry'' representation. It learns shape models from them using a substantially modified version of Winston's ANALOGY program. A generalization of Gray coding enables the representation to be extended and also allows a single operation, called ``ablation'', to achieve the effects of many standard induction heuristics. The program can learn disjunctions, and can learn concepts using only positive examples. We discuss learnability and the pervasive importance of representational hierarchies.}, topic = {machine-learning;shape-recognition;} } @inproceedings{ connolly_jh:2001a, author = {John H. Connolly}, title = {Context in the Study of Human Languages and Computer Programming Languages: A Comparison}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {116--128}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;programming-languages;} } @book{ connolly_jh-pemberton:1996a, editor = {John H. Connolly and Lyn Pemberton}, title = {Linguistic Concepts and Methods in {CSCW}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, address = {Berlin}, contentsnote = {TC: 1. John Connolly and Lyn Pemberton, "Introduction" 2. Christine Cheepen and James Monaghan, "Linguistics and Task Analysis in CSCW" 3. Katherine Morton, "Spoken Language and Speech Synthesis in CSWCW" 4. Stephanie A. Robertson, "The Contribution of Genre to CSCW" 5. Alison Newlands, Anne Anderson and Jim Mullin, "Dialogue Structure and Cooperative Task Performance in two CSCW Environments" 6. Anthony Clarke, John Connolly, Steven Garner and Hilary Palmen, "A Language of Cooperation?" 7. John Connolly, "Some Grammatical Characteristics of Cooperative Spoken Dialog in a CSCW Context" 8. Pat Healey and Carl Vogel, A Semantic Framework for CSCW 9. Julian Newman, "Semiotics, Information and Cooperation" 10. Duska Rosenberg, "Socioinguistic Inquiriy + Situation Theory = Contribution to CSCW??" 11. Lyn Pemberton, "Telltales and Overhearers: Participant Roles in Electronic Mail Communication" 12. John Levine and Chris Mellish, "CORECT: Using Natural Language Generation as an Integral Part of a CSCW Tool for Collaborative Requirements Capture" 13. Christophe Godereaux, Korinna Diebel, Pierre-Oivier El Guedji, Frederic Revolta and Pierre Nugues, "An Interactive Spoken Dialogue Interface to Virtual Worlds" 14. Jeremy Fox, "Computer Mediated Communication in Foreign Language Learning" 15. Larry Selinker, "Understanding the `Good and Bad Language Learner': CSCW as a Necessary Tool" }, ISBN = {3-540-19984-5}, xref = {Review: honeycutt:1998a}, topic = {CSCW;nl-processing;} } @article{ connolly_jm:1990a, author = {John M. Connolly}, title = {Whither Action Theory: Artificial Intelligence or {A}ristotle?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Research}, year = {1990--91}, volume = {16}, pages = {85--106}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11}, rtnote = {The main issue is reasons/causes. This is a criticism of brand_m:1984a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @article{ connolly_t:1999a, author = {Terry Connolly}, title = {Action as a Fast and Frugal Heuristic}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1999}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {479--496}, abstract = {Fast and frugal heuristics research has shown that, in some environments, modest thought can lead to excellent action. In this paper we extend this work to situations in which action is taken after little or no thought. We show that these `highly active' or `decision cycles' processes can lead to excellent results at the cost of almost no thought. }, topic = {heuristics;limited-rationality;unplanned-actions;pr-course;} } @incollection{ conrad:1988a, author = {Michael Conrad}, title = {The Price of Programmability}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {285--307}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-of-computationcomplexity-theory;complexity; theory-of-computation;} } @incollection{ conrad_sj:2011a, author = {Sarah-Jane Conrad}, title = {Disquotational Indirect Reports in Focus}, booktitle = {Understanding Quotation}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Elke Brendel and J\"org Meibauer and Markus Steinbach}, pages = {59--84}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @book{ conradie-goranko_v:2015a, author = {Willem Conradie and Valentin Goranko}, title = {Logic and Discrete Mathematics}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {2015}, address = {New York}, ISBN-17 = {978-1-118-75127-5}, xref = {Review: brauner_t:2018a}, topic = {discrete-mathematics;logic-intro;} } @article{ consentino_d:1980a, author = {David A. Consentino}, title = {Self-Deception without Paradox}, journal = {Philosophy Research Archives}, year = {1980}, volume = {6}, number = {1388}, pages = {443--465}, topic = {self-deception;} } @article{ console_l-etal:2002a, author = {Luca Console and Claudia Picardi and Marina Ribaudo}, title = {Process Algebras for Systems Diagnosis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {142}, number = {1}, pages = {19--51}, topic = {diagnosis;model-based-reasoning;process-algebras;} } @inproceedings{ console_m-etal:2016a, author = {Marco Console and Paolo Guagliardo and Leonid Libkin}, title = {Approximations and Refinements of Certain Answers via Many-Valued Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {349--358}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... Our goal is to provide a general many-valued framework for correctly approximating certain answers. We do so by defining the semantics of many-valued answers and queries ... We show that no evaluation procedure based on Boolean logic delivers correctness guarantees. Finally, we study the relative power of evaluation procedures based on the informativeness of the answers they produce. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;query-answering;multivalued-logic;} } @inproceedings{ console_m-etal:2018a, author = {Marco Console and Paolo Guagliardo and Leonid Libkin}, title = {Propositional and Predicate Logics of Incomplete Information}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {592--601}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {This design by a committee from several decades ago [using Kleene 3-valued logic] is now part of the standard adopted by vendors of database management systems. But is it really the right way to handle incompleteness in propositional and predicate logics? Our goal is to answer this question. Using an epistemic approach, we first characterize possible levels of partial knowledge about propositions, which leads to six truth values. We impose rationality conditions on the semantics of the connectives of the propositional logic, and prove that Kleene's logic is the maximal sublogic to which the standard optimization rules apply, thereby justifying this design choice. For extensions to predicate logic, however, we show that the additional truth values are not necessary: ... [We] conclude that the many-valued extension for handling incompleteness does not add any expressiveness to it.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {multivalued-logic;query-languages;epistemic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ console_m-etal:2020a, author = {Marco Console and Matthias Hofer and Leonid Libkin}, title = {Reasoning about Measures of Unmeasurable Sets}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {264--273}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we follow a recently proposed approach of taking intersection of a set with balls of increasing radius, and defining the measure by means of the asymptotic behavior of the proportion of such balls taken by the set. We show that this approach works for every set definable in first-order logic with the usual arithmetic over the reals (addition, multiplication, exponentiation, etc.), and every uniform measure over the space, of which the usual Lebesgue measure ...d) is an example. In fact we establish a correspondence between the good asymptotic behavior and the finiteness of the VC dimension of definable families of sets. ... we give two algorithms for estimating our measure of unbounded unmeasurable sets, with deterministic and probabilistic guarantees, the latter being more efficient. ...}, topic = {reasoning-about-probability;} } @incollection{ constable:1998a, author = {R.L. Constable}, title = {Types in Logic, Mathematics, and Programming}, booktitle = {Handbook of Proof Theory}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Samuel R. Buss}, pages = {683--786}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Review: arai_t:1998k.}, topic = {proof-theory;type-theory;} } @article{ constant_n:2012a, author = {Noah Constant}, title = {English Rise-Fall-Rise: A Study in the Semantics and Pragmatics of Intonation}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2012}, volume = {35}, number = {5}, pages = {407--442}, abstract = {This paper provides a semantic analysis of English rise-fall-rise (RFR) intonation as a focus quantifier over assertable alternative propositions. I locate RFR meaning in the conventional implicature dimension, and propose that its effect is calculated late within a dynamic model. With a minimum of machinery, this account captures disambiguation and scalar effects, as well as interactions with other focus operators like 'only' and clefts. $\ldots$}, topic = {intonation;Elglish-language;} } @book{ conte-etal:1977a, editor = {Amedeo G. Conte and Risto Hilpinen and Georg Henrik von Wright}, title = {Deontische {L}ogik und {S}emantik}, publisher = {Athenaion}, year = {1977}, address = {Wiesbaden}, ISBN = {3799706453}, rtnote = {UMich GRADUATE LIBRARY, BC 145 .D42.}, topic = {deontic-logic;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ conte_r-etal:1999a, author = {Rosaria Conte and Rino Falcone and Giovanni Sartor}, title = {Introduction: Agents and Norms: How to Fill the Gap?}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence and Law}, year = {1999}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {1--15}, abstract = {We believe that an approach to norms and agency capable of meeting the requirements of the emerging field of autonomous agents requires integrating the results obtained in the legal and in the multi-agents domains. In this introduction, we will summarize the different approaches to norms adopted in the two domains (1) formulate some open questions and argue that their solution requires a synthesis of those approaches (3) present the papers included in this volume as attempts to answer some of these open questions.}, topic = {social-institutions;multiagent-systems;} } @article{ contessa_g:2013a, author = {Gabriele Contessa}, title = {Does Your Metaphysics Need Structure?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2013}, volume = {73}, number = {4}, pages = {715--721}, xref = {Commentary on: sider_t:2011a}, topic = {metaphysics;} } @unpublished{ contreras:1980a, author = {Heles Contreras}, title = {On the Explanatory Adequacy of {M}ontague Grammar}, year = {1980}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Linguistics Department, University of Washington.}, topic = {Montague-grammar;foundations-of-semantics;} } @unpublished{ contreras:1980b, author = {Heles Contreras}, title = {Discontinuous Constituents in {S}panish}, year = {1980}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Linguistics Department, University of Washington.}, topic = {discontinuous-constituents;} } @article{ conway_jh-etal:2020a, author = {J.H. Conway and M.S. Patterson and U.S.S.R. Moscow}, title = {A Headache-Causing Problem}, journal = {The American Mathematical Monthly}, year = {2020}, volume = {127}, number = {4}, pages = {291--296}, rtnote = {Author's name id not a joke.}, topic = {Conway-paradox;} } @book{ conway_mb:1997a, editor = {Martin A. Conway}, title = {Cognitive Models of Memory}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-53148-8 (pbk)}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;memory;memory-models;} } @article{ cook_g:1990a, author = {Guy Cook}, title = {Transcribing Infinity. Problems of Context Representation}, journal = {Journal of Pragmatics}, year = {1990}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {1--24}, topic = {context;} } @incollection{ cook_j-gallagher_jp:1994a, author = {J. Cook and John P. Gallagher}, title = {A Transformation System for Definite Programs Based on Termination Analysis}, booktitle = {Logic Programming Synthesis and Transformation, Meta-Programming in Logic: Fourth International Workshops, {LOBSTR}'94 and {META}'94, Pisa, Italy}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Laurent Fribourg and Franco Turini}, pages = {51--68}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @article{ cook_je:1978a, author = {John W. Cook}, title = {Whorf's Linguistic Relativism, Part {II}}, journal = {Philosophical Investigations}, year = {1978}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {1--37}, topic = {linguistic-relativity;} } @article{ cook_jw:1965a, author = {John W. Cook}, title = {Wittgenstein on Privacy}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1965}, volume = {74}, number = {3}, pages = {281--314}, topic = {Wittgenstein;philosophy-of-language;private-language;} } @article{ cook_jw:1978a, author = {John W. Cook}, title = {Whorf's Linguistic Relativism}, journal = {Philosophical Investigations}, year = {1978}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {1--30}, topic = {linguistic-relativity;} } @book{ cook_m2:1994a, author = {Maeve Cook}, title = {Language and Reason: A Study of {H}abermas's Pragmatics}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-53145-3}, topic = {continental-philosophy;pragmatics;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ cook_m3:1986a, author = {Monte Cook}, title = {Indeterminacy of Identity}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1986}, volume = {46}, number = {4}, pages = {179--186}, xref = {Commentary on: evans_g:1978a1}, topic = {vagueness;identity;} } @article{ cook_rt:2004a, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {Patterns of Paradox}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {69}, number = {3}, pages = {767--774}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ cook_rt:2005a, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {What's Wrong with Tonk?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {34}, number = {2}, pages = {217--226}, topic = {natural-deduction;logical-connectives;} } @book{ cook_rt:2009a, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {A Dictionary of Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Edinburgh}, ISBN = {978-0-7486-2559-8}, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @article{ cook_rt:2009b, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}elf-Reference}, edited by {T}homas {B}olander, {V}incent {F}. {H}endricks, and {S}tig {A}ndur {P}edersen}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2009}, volume = {91}, number = {2}, pages = {139--144}, xref = {Review of: bolander-etal:2006a}, topic = {self-reference;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ cook_rt:2009c, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {Curry, {Y}ablo and Duality}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2009}, volume = {69}, number = {4}, pages = {612--620}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;Yablo-paradox;Curry-Paradox;} } @incollection{ cook_rt:2011a, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {Vagueness and Meaning}, booktitle = {Vagueness: A Guide}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2011}, editor = {Giuseppina Ronzitti}, pages = {83--104}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16}, topic = {vagueness;nl-semantics;} } @article{ cook_rt:2012a, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {Review of \emph{{F}oundational Theories of Classical and Constructive Mathematics}, by {{G}iovanni {S}ommaruga}}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {128--131}, xref = {Review of: sommaruga:2011a}, topic = {foundations-of-mathematics;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ cook_rt:2012b, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {The {T}-Schema is not a Logical Truth}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {2}, pages = {231--239}, topic = {convention-T;analyticity;necessary-truth;} } @book{ cook_rt:2014a, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {The {Y}ablo Paradox: An Essay on Circularity}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199669608}, xref = {Review: ripley_d:2015a}, topic = {Yablo-paradox;circularity;} } @article{ cook_rt:2019a, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {Revising Benardete's Zeno}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {1}, pages = {37--56}, topic = {truth-definitions;} } @article{ cook_rt:2022a, author = {Roy T. Cook}, title = {MTV Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {6}, pages = {1477--1519}, abstract = {This essay introduces a novel framework to studying many-valued logics -- the movable truth value (or MTV) approach. After setting up the framework, we will show that a vast number of many-valued logics, and in particular many-valued logics that have previously been given very different kinds of semantics, including C, K3, LP, ST, TS, RMfde, and FDE, can all be unified within the MTV-logic approach. ...}, topic = {multivalued-logic;} } @article{ cook_rt-ebert_pa:2016a, author = {Roy T. Cook and Philip A. Ebert}, title = {Frege's Recipe}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2016}, volume = {113}, number = {10}, pages = {309--345}, topic = {Frege;} } @article{ cook_rt-kim_nj:2015a, author = {Roy T. Cook and Namjoong Kim}, title = {The Paradox of Adverbs}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2015}, volume = {75}, number = {4}, pages = {559--561}, DOI = {doi:10.1093/analys/anv052}, topic = {adverbs;} } @inproceedings{ cook_sa:1971a, author = {Stephen A. Cook}, title = {The Complexity of Theorem Proving Procedures}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third {ACM} Symposium on Theory of Computing}, year = {1971}, pages = {151--158}, topic = {complexity-theory;} } @article{ cook_sa:1978a, author = {Stephen A. Cook}, title = {Soundness and Completeness of an Axiom System for Program Verification}, journal = {{SIAM} Journal on Computing}, year = {1978}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {70--90}, topic = {program-verification;semantics-of-programming-languages;} } @article{ cook_sa:1983a, author = {Stepnen A. Cook}, title = {An Overview of Computational Complexity}, journal = {Communications of the Association for Computing Machinery}, year = {1983}, volume = {26}, pages = {401--408}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {complexity-theory;} } @unpublished{ cook_sa:2000a, author = {Stepnen A. Cook}, title = {The {P} Versus {NP} Problem}, year = {2000}, note = {Computer Science Department, University of Toronto. https://www.claymath.org/sites/default/files/pvsnp.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. \fe19}, topic = {complexity-theory;P=NP-problem;} } @book{ cook_vj:1988a, author = {Vivian J. Cook}, title = {Chomsky's Universal Grammar: An Introduction}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1988}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. . LLP authored shelves}, topic = {nl-syntax;GB-syntax;} } @book{ cooke_m:1994a, author = {Maeve Cooke}, title = {Language and Reason}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {Habermas;continental-philosophy;pragmatics;} } @article{ cooke_rm:1983a, author = {Roger M. Cooke}, title = {A Result in {R}enyi's Conditional Probability Theory with Application to Subjective Probability}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1983}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {19--32}, topic = {probability;probability-kinematics;} } @article{ cooke_rm:1986a, author = {Roger M. Cooke}, title = {Conceptual Fallacies in Subjective Probability}, journal = {Topoi}, year = {1986}, volume = {5}, pages = {69--74}, missinginfo = {number}, abstract = {Subjective probability considered as a logic of partial belief succumbs to three fundamental fallacies. These concern the representation of preference via expectation, the measurability of partial belief, and the normalization of belief.}, rtnote = {The paper develops several puzzles arising from the idea that probability is a sort of belief. But it is inconclusive about their significance.}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;belief;} } @book{ cooke_rm:1991a, author = {Roger M. Cooke}, title = {Experts in Uncertainty}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;statistical-inference;} } @article{ coolen:2006a, author = {F.P.A. Coolen}, title = {On Nonparametric Predictive Inference and Objective {B}ayesianism}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2006}, volume = {15}, number = {1--2}, pages = {21--47}, topic = {statistical-inference;interval-based-probabilities;} } @article{ cooley:1957a, author = {John C. Cooley}, title = {Review of \emph{{F}act, Fiction and Forecast}, by {N}elson {G}oodman}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1957}, volume = {54}, missinginfo = {number}, pages = {293--311}, xref = {Review of: goodman_n:1955a.}, topic = {conditionals;induction;(un)natural-predicates;} } @book{ cooper_a:1995a, author = {Alan Cooper}, title = {About Face: The Essentials of User Interface Design}, publisher = {IDG Books Worldwide}, year = {1995}, address = {Foster City, California}, ISBN = {1568843224 (pbk)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .U83 C65 1995.}, topic = {HCI;} } @article{ cooper_de:1972a, author = {Devid E. Cooper}, title = {Definitions and `Clusters{'}}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1972}, volume = {81}, number = {324}, pages = {495--503}, topic = {definitions;} } @book{ cooper_de:1973a, author = {David E. Cooper}, title = {Philosophy and the Nature of Language}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1973}, series = {Longman Linguistic Library}, address = {London}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Introduction 2. Meaning 3. Meaning in Philosophy 4. Language and culture 5. Grammar and mind 6. Truth, the a priori and synonymity 7. Speech acts }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, xref = {Review: vendler:1975a}, topic = {philosopy-of-language;philosophy-and-linguistics;} } @book{ cooper_de:1974a, author = {David E. Cooper}, title = {Presuppositions and Non-Truth Condtional Semantics}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1974}, address = {The hague}, topic = {presupposition;} } @book{ cooper_de:1975a, author = {David E. Cooper}, title = {Knowledge of Language}, publisher = {Prism Press}, year = {1975}, address = {London}, ISBN = {978-0904727012}, contentnote = {Presents an empiricist account of language acquisition}, topic = {philoosphy-of-linguistics;} } @incollection{ cooper_de:1978a, author = {David E. Cooper}, title = {The Deletion Argument}, booktitle = {Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {189--194}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;linguistics-methodology;} } @incollection{ cooper_de:1993a, author = {David E. Cooper}, title = {Truth and Metaphor}, booktitle = {Knowledge and Language: Volume {III}, Metaphor and Knowledge}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {F.R. Ankersmit and J.J.A. Mooij}, pages = {37--47}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {metaphor;pragmatics;} } @article{ cooper_ds:1977a, author = {David E. Cooper}, title = {Lewis on Our Knowledge of Conventions}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1977}, volume = {86}, number = {342}, pages = {256--261}, topic = {convention;mutual-belief;} } @article{ cooper_gf:1990a, author = {Gregory F. Cooper}, title = {The Computational Complexity of Probabilistic Inference using Bayesian Belief Networks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {42}, number = {3}, pages = {393--405}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;Bayesian-networks;} } @inproceedings{ cooper_gf:1992a, author = {Gregory F. Cooper}, title = {A {B}ayesian Method for Learning Belief Networks that Contain Hidden Variables}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Workshop on Knowledge Discovery in Databases}, year = {1992}, pages = {112--124}, missinginfo = {Editor, Organization, Address}, topic = {machine-learning;Bayesian-networks;} } @article{ cooper_gf-herskovits:1992a, author = {Gregory F. Cooper and E.H. Herskovits}, title = {A {B}ayesian Method for the Induction of Probabilistic Networks from Data}, journal = {Machine Learning}, year = {1992}, volume = {9}, pages = {309--347}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ cooper_m-etal:2020a, author = {Martin Cooper and Andreas Herzig and Fr\'ed\'eric Maris and Elise Perrotin and Julien Vianey}, title = {Lightweight Parallel Multi-Agent Epistemic Planning}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {274--283}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We study a simple version of multi-agent epistemic planning where the number of parallel steps has to be minimized. We prove that this extension of classical planning is in PSPACE. }, topic = {epistemic-planning;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ cooper_mc:1989a, author = {Martin C. Cooper}, title = {An Optimal K-Consistency Algorithm}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {41}, number = {1}, pages = {89--95}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper generalizes the arc-consistency algorithm of Mohr and Henderson [4] and the path-consistency algorithm of Han and Lee [2] to a k-consistency algorithm (arc-consistency and path-consistency being 2-consistency and 3-consistency, respectively). The algorithm is a development of Freuder's synthesis algorithm [1]. It simultaneously establishes i-consistency for each 1 <= i <= k. It has worst-case time and space complexity which is optimal when k is a constant and almost optimal for all other values of k. In the case that all order-i constraints exist for all 1 <= i <= n, this algorithm is a solution to the consistent labeling problem with almost optimal worst-case time and space complexity. }, topic = {arc-(in)consistency;AI-algorithms;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ cooper_mc:1997a, author = {Martin C. Cooper}, title = {Fundamental Properties of Neighbourhood Substitution in Constraint Satisfaction Problems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {90}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--24}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In combinatorial problems it is often worthwhile simplifying the problem, using operations such as consistency, before embarking on an exhaustive search for solutions. Neighbourhood substitution is such a simplification operation. Whenever a value x for a variable is such that it can be replaced in all constraints by another value y, then x is eliminated. This paper shows that neighbourhood substitutions are important whether the aim is to find one or all solutions. It is proved that the result of a convergent sequence of neighbourhood substitutions is invariant modulo isomorphism. An efficient algorithm is given to find such a sequence. It is also shown that to combine consistency (of any order) and neighbourhood substitution, we only need to establish consistency once.}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;AI-algorithms-analysis;} } @article{ cooper_mc:1999a, author = {Martin C. Cooper}, title = {Linear-Time Algorithms for Testing the Realisability of Line Drawings of Curved Objects}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {108}, number = {1--2}, pages = {31--68}, topic = {line-drawings;spatial-reasoning;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ cooper_mc:2000a, author = {Martin C. Cooper}, title = {Linear Constraints for the Interpretation of Line Drawings of Curved Objects}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {119}, number = {1--2}, pages = {235--258}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Drawings of curved objects often contain many linear features: straight lines, colinear or coplanar points, parallel lines and vanishing points. These linear features give rise to linear constraints on the 3D position of scene points. The resulting problem can be solved by standard linear programming techniques. An important characteristic of this approach is that instead of making a strong assumption, such as all surfaces are planar, only a very weak assumption, which disallows coincidences and highly improbable objects, needs to be made to be able to deduce planarity. The linear constraints, combined with junction-labelling constraints, are a powerful means of discriminating between possible and impossible line drawings. They provide an important tool for the machine reconstruction of a 3D scene from a human-entered line drawing. }, topic = {visual-reasoning;line-drawings;} } @article{ cooper_mc:2004a, author = {Martin C. Cooper}, title = {Cyclic Inconsistency: A Local Reduction Operation for Binary Valued Constraints}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {155}, number = {1--2}, pages = {69--92}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;arc-(in)consistency;} } @article{ cooper_mc:2005a, author = {Martin C. Cooper}, title = {A Mathematical Model of Historical Semantics and the Grouping of Word Meanings into Concepts}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2005}, volume = {31}, number = {2}, pages = {227--248}, topic = {semantic-change;lexical-disambiguation;statistical-modeling;} } @article{ cooper_mc-etal:1994a, author = {Martin C. Cooper and David A. Cohen and Peter G. Jeavons}, title = {Characterising Tractable Constraints}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {65}, number = {2}, pages = {347--361}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We present algorithms for finding out optimal cost solutions of an explicit AND/OR graph. We show that these new algorithms can work on AND/OR graphs containing cycles. Finally, we show how these algorithms can be incorporated in implicit graph search schemes like AO* so that they work for transformation rules which lead to graphs with cycles.}, topic = {and/or-graphs;optimality;search;} } @article{ cooper_mc-etal:2010a, author = {Martin C. Cooper and S. de Givry and M. Sanchez and T. Schiex and M. Zytnicki and T. Werner}, title = {Soft Arc Consistency Revisited}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {7--8}, pages = {449--478}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;arc-(in)consistency;} } @article{ cooper_mc-etal:2010b, author = {Martin C. Cooper and Peter G. Jeavons and Andr\'as Z. Salamon}, title = {Generalizing Constraint Satisfaction on Trees: Hybrid Tractability and Variable Elimination}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {9--10}, pages = {570--584}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ cooper_mc-schiex:2004a, author = {Martin C. Cooper and Thomas Schiex}, title = {Arc Consistency for Soft Constraints}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {154}, number = {1--2}, pages = {199--237}, topic = {arc-(in)consistency;} } @article{ cooper_mc-zivny:2011a, author = {Martin C. Cooper and Stanislav \v{Z}ivn\'y}, title = {Hybrid Tractability of Valued Constraint Problems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {9--10}, pages = {1555--1569}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;constraint-optimization;} } @article{ cooper_n:1966a, author = {Neil Cooper}, title = {Ontological Commitment}, journal = {The Monist}, year = {1966}, volume = {50}, number = {1}, pages = {125--129}, topic = {ontological-commitment;} } @article{ cooper_pr-swain_mj:1992a, author = {Paul R. Cooper and Michael J. Swain}, title = {Arc Consistency: Parallelism and Domain Dependence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {58}, number = {1--3}, pages = {207--235}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper discusses how better arc consistency algorithms for constraint satisfaction can be developed by exploiting parallelism and domain-specific problem characteristics. A massively parallel algorithm for arc consistency is given, expressed as a digital circuit. For a constraint satisfaction problem with n variables and a labels, this algorithm has a worst-case time complexity of O(na), significantly better than that of the optimal uniprocessor algorithm. An algorithm of intermediate parallelism suitable for implementation on a SIMD machine is also given. Analyses and implementation experiments are shown for both algorithms. A method for exploiting characteristics of a problem domain to achieve arc consistency algorithms with better time and space complexity is also discussed. A general technique for expressing domain knowledge and using it to develop optimized arc consistency algorithms is described. The domain-specific optimizations can be applied analogously to any of the arc consistency algorithms along the sequential/parallel spectrum.}, topic = {arc-(in)consistency;constraint-satisfaction; parallel-processing;} } @incollection{ cooper_r:2012a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Type Theory and Semantics in Flux}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Linguistics}, publisher = {North Holland}, year = {2012}, editor = {Ruth Kempson and Tim Fernando and Nicholas Asher}, pages = {271--324}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;nl-semantic-types;} } @incollection{ cooper_r-ranta_a:2008a, author = {Robin Cooper and Aarne Ranta}, title = {Natural Language as Collections of Resources}, booktitle = {Language in Flux: Dialogue Coordination, Language Variation, Change and Evolution}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2008}, editor = {Robin Cooper and Ruth Kempson}, pages = {109--120}, address = {London}, abstract = {We ... propose a view on which natural languages are rather to be regarded as collections of resources, a toolbox which can be used for constructing languages in the formal sense. This view arose from work on the Grammatical Framework, an implemented system for the construction of small application grammars based on general resources for natural languages ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe22\Cooper2.pdf}, topic = {foundations-of-linguistics;natural-language/formal-language;} } @phdthesis{ cooper_r1:1975a, author = {Robin H. Cooper}, title = {Montague's Semantic Theory and Transformational Grammar}, school = {Linguistics Department,University of Massachusetts}, year = {1975}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {Montague-grammar;transformational-grammar;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1:1976a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Lexical and Nonlexical Causatives in {B}antu}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics Vol. 6: The Grammar of Causative Constructions}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Mayayoshi Shibatani}, pages = {313--324}, address = {New York}, topic = {nl-causatives;Bantu-languages;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1:1978a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {{M}ontague's Theory of Translation and Transformational Syntax}, booktitle = {Meaning and Translation: Philosophical and Logical Approaches}, publisher = {New York University Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Franz Guenthner and Monica Guenthner-Reutter}, pages = {307--325}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {Discusses how to do Montague interpretation off of deep structure in standard theory.}, topic = {syntax-semantics-interface;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1:1978b, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Variable Binding and Relative Clauses}, booktitle = {Formal Semantics and Pragmatics for Natural Languages}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1978}, editor = {Franz Guenthner and S.J. Schmidt}, pages = {131--170}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;relative-clauses;} } @unpublished{ cooper_r1:1978c, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {A Fragment of {E}nglish with Questions and Relative Clauses}, year = {1978}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Universibty of Wisconsin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "R Cooper"}, topic = {Montague-grammar;relative-clauses;interrogatives;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1:1979a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Bach's Passive, Polysynthetic Languages, Temporal Adverbs, and Free Deletions}, booktitle = {Paper Presented to {E}mmon {B}ach by His Students}, publisher = {Graduate Linguistic Student Association, University of Massachusetts}, year = {1979}, editor = {Elisabet Engdahl and Mark Stein}, pages = {64--75}, address = {Amherst}, topic = {Montague-Grammar;passive;adverbs;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1:1979b, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {The Interpretation of Pronouns}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Frank Heny and Helmut S. Schnelle}, pages = {61--27}, address = {New York}, topic = {Montague-grammar;anaphora;nl-quantifiers;relative-clauses;} } @book{ cooper_r1:1983a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Quantification and Syntactic Theory}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1983}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, xref = {Review: termeulen:1986d}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifier-scope;syntax-semantics-interface; Montague-grammar;presupposition;pragmatics;} } @techreport{ cooper_r1:1985a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Aspectual Classes in Situation Semantics}, institution = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, number = {CSLI-84-14C}, year = {1985}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {Aktionsarten;situation-semantics;} } @article{ cooper_r1:1986a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Tense and Discourse Location in Situation Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1986}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {17--36}, topic = {nl-tense;situation-semantics;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1:1987a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Preliminaries to the Treatment of Generalized Quantifiers in Situation Semantics}, booktitle = {Generalized Quantifiers}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1987}, editor = {Peter G\"{a}rdenfors}, pages = {73--91}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;situation-semantics;} } @article{ cooper_r1:1987b, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Meaning Representation in {M}ontague {G}rammar and Situation Semantics}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {35--44}, topic = {nl-semantics;Montague-grammar;situation-semantics;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1:1988a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Facts in Situation Theory: Representation, Psychology, or reality?}, booktitle = {Mental Representations: The Interface Between Language and Reality}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Ruth Kempson}, pages = {49--61}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {situation-semantics;cognitive-semantics;facts;} } @unpublished{ cooper_r1:1993a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Towards a General Semantic Framework}, year = {1993}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Centre for Cognitive Science, University of Edinburgh.}, topic = {nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1:1996a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {The Role of Situations in Generalized Quantifiers}, booktitle = {The Handbook of Contemporary Semantic Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, editor = {Shalom Lappin}, pages = {65--86}, topic = {nl-semantics;situation-semantics; generalized-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1:2000a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Information States, Attitudes, and Dependent Record Types}, booktitle = {Logic, Language, and Computation, Volume 3}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2000}, editor = {Lawrence Cavedon and Patrick Blackburn and Nick Braisby and Atushi Shimojina}, pages = {85--127}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {type-theory;conversational-record;information-state;} } @article{ cooper_r1:2003a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Afterward}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2003}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, note = {Comments on a special issue on discourse and information structure}, pages = {369--373}, topic = {information-structure;} } @article{ cooper_r1:2006a, author = {Robin Cooper}, title = {Records and Record Types in Semantic Theory}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2006}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {99--112}, abstract = {This paper explores possibilities for formulating linguistic semantics in terms of records and record types of the kind used in recent developments of Martin-L\"of type theory. We will suggest that this gives us tools to develop a single theory which includes aspects of Montague semantics, Discourse Representation Theory, situation semantics and Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar. We will also argue that formulating these theories in terms of record types may provide us not only with a unified approach but also with certain improvements over the individual theories.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe22\Cooper1.pdf}, topic = {type-theory;nl-semantic-types;foundations-of-semantics;} } @book{ cooper_r1-etal:1990a, editor = {Robin Cooper and Kuniaki Mukai and John Perry}, title = {Situation Theory and its Applications}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, year = {1990}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {0937073555 (v. 1)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BC 5 .S571 1990.}, topic = {situation-theory;situation-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ cooper_r1-etal:2000a, author = {Robin Cooper and Elisabet Engdahl and Staffan Larsson and Stina Ericsson}, title = {Accommodating Questions and the Nature of {QUD}}, booktitle = {G\"otalog2000, Proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, year = {2000}, editor = {Massimo Poesio and David Traum}, pages = {57--62}, publisher = {Department of Linguistics, G\"oteborg University}, address = {G\"oteborg}, topic = {computational-dialogue;question-under-discussion;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1-etal:2003a, author = {Robin Cooper and Stina Ericsson and Staffan Larsson and Ian Lewin}, title = {An Information State Update Approach to Collaborative Negotiation}, booktitle = {"Perspectives on Dialogue in the New Millenium"}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {2003}, editor = {Peter K\"uhnlein and Hannes Rieser and Henk Zeevat}, pages = {271--286}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {computational-dialogue;information-state;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1-ginzburg_j:2002a, author = {Robin Cooper and Jonathan Ginzburg}, title = {Using Dependent Record Types in Clarification Ellipsis}, booktitle = {{EDILOG} 2002: Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Centre, University of Edinburgh}, year = {2002}, editor = {Johan Bos and Mary Ellen Foster and Colin Mathesin}, pages = {45--52}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {ellipsis;clarification-dialogues;HPSG;type-theory;} } @article{ cooper_r1-ginzburg_j:2014a, author = {Jonathan Ginzberg and Robin Cooper}, title = {Quotation via Dialogical Interaction}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2014}, volume = {23}, number = {3}, pages = {287-311}, topic = {dialogue-logic;direct-discourse;} } @book{ cooper_r1-kempson_r:2008a, editor = {Robin Cooper and Ruth Kempson}, title = {Language in Flux: Dialogue Coordination, Language Variation, Change and Evolution}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2008}, address = {London}, ISBN-13 = {978-1904987963}, topic = {nl-semantics;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1-larsson_s:1998a, author = {Robin Cooper and Staffan Larsson}, title = {Dialogue Moves and Information States}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third International Workshop on Computational Semantics (IWCS-3)}, year = {1998}, editor = {Harry C. Bunt and E.C.G. Thijsse}, pages = {398--400}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, note = {Full Paper available at http://www.fb10.uni-bremen.de/anglistik/ling/ss07/discourse-materials/CooperLarsson98.pdf }, topic = {computational-dialogue;information-state;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1-larsson_s:2003a, author = {Robin Cooper and Staffan Larsson}, title = {Accommodation and Reaccommodation in Dialogue}, booktitle = {Presuppositions and Discourse}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2003}, editor = {Rainer B\"auerle and Uwe Reyle and Thomas Ede Zimmerman}, address = {Amsterdam}, pages = {101--123}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Cooper1.pdf}, topic = {computational-dialogue;accommodation;} } @incollection{ cooper_r1-parsons_t2:1976a, author = {Robin Cooper and Terence Parsons}, title = {Montague Grammar, Generative Semantics and Interpretive Semantics}, booktitle = {Montague Grammar}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Barbara H. Partee}, pages = {311--362}, address = {New York}, topic = {Montague-grammar;generative-semantics;nl-semantics;} } @article{ cooper_r2-etal:1996a, author = {R. Cooper and J. Fox and J. Farrington and T. Shallice}, title = {A Systematic Methodology for Cognitive Modeling}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {85}, number = {1--2}, pages = {3--44}, topic = {cognitive-architectures;cognitive-modeling;SOAR;} } @article{ cooper_r2-franks:1993a, author = {Richard Cooper and Bradley Franks}, title = {Interruptibility as a Constraint on Hybrid Systems}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {73--96}, topic = {connectionism;cognitive-architectures;} } @book{ cooper_r3:1998a, author = {Russell Cooper}, title = {Coordination Games}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-57896-5}, topic = {game-theory;cooperation;} } @article{ cooper_sb:2001a, author = {S. Barry Cooper}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}heories of Computability}, by {N}icholas {P}ippinger}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {67}, number = {1}, pages = {140--141}, xref = {Review of pippinger:1997a.}, topic = {computability;} } @book{ cooper_sb-etal:2008a, editor = {S. Barry Cooper and Benedict L\"owe and Andrea Sorbi}, title = {New Computational Paradigms: Changing Conceptions of What is Computable}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2008}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-0-387-68546-5}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Andrew Hodges, "Alan Turing, Logical and Physical", pp. 3--16 2. Serikzhan Badaev, Sergey Goncharov, "Computability and Numberings", pp. 19--34 3. Johan van Benthem, "Computation as Conversation", pp. 35--58 4. Yuri Matiyasevich, "Computation Paradigms in Light of {H}ilbert's Tenth Problem", pp. 59--86 5. Yiannis N. Moschovakis and Vasilis Paschalis, "Elementary Algorithms and Their Implementations", pp. 87--118 6. Dag Normann, "Applications of the {K}leene-{K}reisel Density Theorem to Theoretical Computer Science", pp. 119--138 7. Wilfried Sieg, "Church Without Dogma: Axioms for Computability", pp. 139--152 8. Viggo Stoltenberg-Hansen and John V. Tucker, "Computability on Topological Spaces via Domain Representations", pp. 153--194 9. Ji\v{r}\'i Wiedermann, Dana Pardubsk\'a, "On the Power of Broadcasting in Mobile Computing", pp. 195--210 10. Samuel R. Buss, "The Computational Power of Bounded Arithmetic from the Predicative Viewpoint", pp. 213--222 11. Ulrich Kohlenbach, "Effective Uniform Bounds from Proofs in Abstract Functional Analysis", pp. 223--258 12. Elvira Mayordomo, "Effective Fractal Dimension in Algorithmic Information Theory", pp. 259--286 13. Michael Rathjen, "Metamathematical Properties of Intuitionistic Set Theories with Choice Principles", pp. 287--312 14. Helmut Schwichtenberg, "New Developments in Proofs and Computations", pp. 313--340 15. Gheorghe P\v{a}un, "From Cells to (Silicon) Computers, and Back", pp. 343--372 16. Grzegorz Rozenberg, "Computer Science, Informatics, and Natural Computing---Personal Reflections", pp. 373--382 17. Olivier Bournez, Manuel L. Campagnolo, "A Survey on Continuous Time Computations", pp. 383--424 18. Vasco Brattka and Peter Hertling and Klaus Weihrauch, "A Tutorial on Computable Analysis", pp. 425--492 19. Abbas Edalat, "A Continuous Derivative for Real-Valued Functions", pp. 493--520 20. Joel David Hamkins and Russell Miller and Daniel Seabold and Steve Warner, "Infinite Time Computable Model Theory", pp. 521--558 }, topic = {theory-of-computation;computability;foundations-of-computation;} } @book{ cooper_sb-hodges_a:2016a, editor = {S. Barry Cooper and Andrew Hodges}, title = {The Once and Future {T}uring: Computing the World}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN-13 = {978-1107010833}, ISBN-10 = {1107010837}, xref = {Review: urquhart:2016a}, topic = {Turing;computability;} } @book{ cooper_sb-vanleeuwen_j:2013a, editor = {S. Barry Cooper and Jan van Leeuwen}, title = {Alan {T}uring: His Work and Impact}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2013}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {978-0-12-389680-7}, topic = {Turing;} } @article{ cooper_se:1972a, author = {David E. Cooper}, title = {Searle on Intentions and Reference}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1972}, volume = {32}, number = {5}, pages = {159--163}, topic = {intention;reference;} } @book{ cooper_we-pacciacooper_j:1980a, author = {William E. Cooper and Jeanne Paccia-Cooper}, title = {Syntax and Speech}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1980}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780674283947}, topic = {nl-syntax;psycholinguistics;} } @article{ cooper_ws:1968a, author = {William S. Cooper}, title = {The Propositional Logic of Propositional Discourse}, journal = {Inquiry}, year = {1968}, volume = {11}, number = {1--4}, pages = {295--320}, abstract = {A nonclassical system of propositional logic is presented, whose conditional connective has logical properties approximating those of 'if-then'. This proposed system reduces, in a sense, to the classical logic. Moreover, because it is equivalent to a certain nonstandard three-valued logic, its decision procedure is almost as efficient as that of the classical logic.}, xref = {Criticism: Cresswell 1969}, topic = {conditionals;multivalued-logic;} } @book{ cooper_ws:1979a, author = {William S. Cooper}, title = {Foundations of Logico-Linguistics}, publisher = {Reidel}, year = {1978}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {foundations-of-logic;automata-theory;} } @book{ cope_d:1991a, author = {David Cope}, title = {Computers and Musical Style}, publisher = {A-R Editions}, year = {1991}, address = {Madison, Wisconsin}, ISBN = {0895792567 (hardcover)}, rtnote = {UMich MUSIC, MT 723 .C681 1991.}, xref = {Review: berger_j:1996a.}, topic = {AI-and-music;} } @book{ cope_d:2005a, author = {David Cope}, title = {{CMMC}: Computer Models of Musical Creativity}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-03338-0}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, xref = {Review: dannenberg:2006a.}, topic = {AI-and-music;} } @article{ copeland_bj:1979a, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {On When a Semantics is Not a Semantics: Some Reasons for Disliking the {R}outley-{M}eyer Semantics for Relevance Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1979}, volume = {8}, number = {4}, pages = {399--413}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @book{ copeland_bj:1993a, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Artificial Intelligence: A Philosophical Introduction}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {Info Sci Q335 C53 1993.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Winter, 2014.}, topic = {AI-intro;AI-text;philosophy-AI;} } @article{ copeland_bj:1994a, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {On Vague Objects, Fuzzy Logic, and Fractal Boundaries}, journal = {Southern Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume}, year = {1994}, volume = {33}, pages = {83--96}, topic = {vagueness;identity;fuzzy-logic;} } @book{ copeland_bj:1996a, editor = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Logic and Reality: Essays on the Legacy of {A}rthur {P}rior}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. B. Jack Copeland, "Arthur {P}rior's Life and Legacy", pp. 1--40 2. Peter Grifton, "Introduction" (To two essays by {A}rhur {P}rior on Temporal Realism), pp. 43--44 3. Arthur N. Prior, "A Statement of Temporal Realism", pp. 45--46 4. Arthur N. Prior, "Some Free Thinking about Time", pp. 47--51 5. B. Jack Copeland, "Tree Formulations of Tense Logic", pp. 53--67 6. Dov Gabbay and Ian Hodkinson, "Temporal Logic in the Context of Databases", pp. 69--87 7. Rita Rodriguez and FrankAnger, "Prior's Temporal Legacy in Computer Science", pp. 89--109 8. Richard Sylvan, "Other Withered Stumps of Time", pp. 111--130 9. Carew Meredith and Arthur N. Prior, "Interpretations of Different Modal Logics in the `Property Calculus{'}", pp. 133--168 10. Johan van Benthem, "Modal Logic as a Theory of Information", pp. 135--168 11. Kit Fine and Gerhard Schurz, "Transfer Theorems for Multimodal Logics", pp. 169--213 12. Lloyd Humberstone, "Homophony, Validity, Modality", pp. 215--236 13. Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}, "Agents in Branching Time", pp. 239--271 14. Graham Oddie, "The Consequences of Action", pp. 273--299 15. Krister Segerberg, "To Do and Not to Do", pp. 301--313 16. Robert Bull, "Logics Without Contraction {I}", pp. 317--336 17. Martin Bunder, "Logics Without Contraction {II}", pp. 337--349 18. Neil Tennant, "Delicate Proof Theory", pp. 351--385 19. Rom Harr\'e, "There is No Time Like the Present", pp. 389--391 20. Karel Lambert, "Russellian Names: Notes on a Theory of {A}rthur {P}rior", pp. 411--417 21. Peter Loptson, "Prior, Plantinga, Haecceiity, and the Possible", pp. 419--435 22. Mark Richard, "Propositional Quantification", pp. 437--459 23. Roger Teichman, "Statements of Property-Identity and Event-Identity", pp. 461--476 24. Graham Priest, "Some Priorities of {B}erkeley", pp. 479--487 25. Michael Resnik, "Ought There to be One Logic?", pp. 489--517 26. Peter {\O}hrstrom and Olav Flo, "Bibliography of {P}rior's Philosophical Writings", pp. 519--532 }, xref = {Review: menzel:2000a.}, topic = {philosophical-logic;temporal-logic;modal-logic;Prior;} } @incollection{ copeland_bj:1996b, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Arthur {P}rior's Life and Legacy}, booktitle = {Logic and Reality: Essays on the Legacy of {A}rthur {P}rior}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jack Copeland}, pages = {1--40}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Prior;} } @incollection{ copeland_bj:1996c, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Tree Formulations of Tense Logic}, booktitle = {Logic and Reality: Essays on the Legacy of {A}rthur {P}rior}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jack Copeland}, pages = {53--67}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {temporal-logic;proof-theory;} } @article{ copeland_bj:1996d, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {What is Computation?}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1996}, volume = {108}, number = {3}, pages = {335--359}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr13\copeland.pdf}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;} } @article{ copeland_bj:1997a, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {The Broad Conception of Computation}, journal = {The {A}merican Behavioral Scientist}, year = {1997}, volume = {40}, number = {6}, pages = {690--716}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl13}, topic = {Turing;Church's-thesis;} } @article{ copeland_bj:1997b, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Vague Identity and Fuzzy Logic}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {94}, number = {10}, pages = {514--534}, topic = {vagueness;identity;fuzzy-logic;} } @article{ copeland_bj:1998a, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Turing's {O}-Machines, {S}earle, {P}enrose and the Brain}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1998}, volume = {58}, number = {2}, pages = {128--138}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no16}, xref = {Commentary on: johnsonlaird_pn:1989b, penrose_r:1989a}, topic = {consciousness;Turing;Turing-machines;} } @article{ copeland_bj:2000a, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Nature Versus Wide Mechanism: Including a Re-Examination of {T}uring's Views on the Mind-Machine Issue}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2000}, volume = {97}, number = {1}, pages = {5--32}, topic = {mind-body-problem;philosophy-of-computation;Turing;} } @article{ copeland_bj:2000b, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {The {T}uring Test}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, pages = {519--539}, topic = {Turing-test;} } @article{ copeland_bj:2002a, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {The Genesis of Possible Worlds Semantics}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {31}, number = {2}, pages = {99--137}, topic = {possible-worlds-semantics;history-of-logic;} } @article{ copeland_bj:2002b, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Accelerating {T}uring Machines}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {281--300}, abstract = {$\ldots$ Are accelerating Turing machines, then, logically impossible devices? I argue that they are not. There are implications concerning the nature of effective procedures and the theoretical limits of computability. $\ldots$ }, topic = {hypercomputation;} } @article{ copeland_bj:2002c, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Hypercomputation}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {4}, pages = {461--502}, abstract = {A survey of the field of hypercomputation, including discussion of a variety of objections. }, topic = {hypercomputation;} } @incollection{ copeland_bj:2002d, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {The {C}hinese Room from a Logical Point of View}, booktitle = {Views into the {C}hinese Room: New Essays on {S}earle and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {John Preston and Mark Bishop}, pages = {109--122}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-AI;} } @book{ copeland_bj:2004a, editor = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {The Essential {T}uring}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-825-080-0 (pbk)}, xref = {Reviews: obdrzalek:2005a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Logic Shelves, under "T".}, topic = {Turing;Turing-test;history-of-logic;} } @incollection{ copeland_bj:2004b, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Computation}, booktitle = {Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Computing and Information}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Luciano Floridi}, pages = {3--17}, address = {Osford}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;} } @incollection{ copeland_bj:2006a, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Colossus and the Rise of the Modern Computer}, booktitle = {Colossus: {T}he Secrets of {B}letchley {P}arks Codebreaking Computers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {B. Jack Copeland et al.}, pages = {101--115}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Turing;history-of-computer-science;} } @incollection{ copeland_bj:2008a, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {The {C}hurch-{T}uring Thesis}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url= {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2008/entries/church-turing/}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, year = {2008}, topic = {Church's-thesis;foundations-of-computation;} } @incollection{ copeland_bj:2015a, author = {B. Jack Copeland}, title = {Turing versus G\"odel on Computability and the Mind}, booktitle = {Computability: {T}uring, {C}hurch, and Beyond}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {B. Jack Copeland and Carl J. Posy and Oron Shagrir}, pages = {6--33}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Logic Shelves.}, topic = {computability;history-of-logic;foundations-of-cognition;} } @book{ copeland_bj-etal:2006a, author = {B. Jack Copeland et al.}, title = {Colossus: {T}he Secrets of {B}letchley {P}arks Codebreaking Computers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-19-284055-4}, ISBN-10 = {0-19-284055-X}, topic = {Turing;history-of-computer-science;} } @book{ copeland_bj-etal:2015a, editor = {B. Jack Copeland and Carl J. Posy and Oron Shagrir}, title = {Computability: {T}uring, {C}hurch, and Beyond}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-52748-4}, contentnote = {TC: 1. B. Jack Copeland and Carl J. Posy and Oron Shagrir, "Introduction: The 1930s Revolution", pp. vii--x 2. B. Jack Copeland, "Turing versus G\"odel on Computability and the Mind", pp. 6--33 3. Martin Davis, "Computability and Arithmetic", pp. 35--53 4. Solomon Feferman, "About and around Computing over the Reals", pp. 55--76 5. Saul A. Kripke, "The Church-Turing `Thesis' as a Special Corollary of G\"odel's Completeness Theorem", pp. 57--104 6. Carl J. Posy, "Computability and Constructibility", pp. 105--139 7. Hilary Putnam, "After G\"odel", pp. 141--152 8. Stewart Shapiro, "The Open Texture of Computability", pp. 153--181 9. Wilfried Sieg, "Goedel's Philosophical Challenge (to {T}uring)", pp. 183--202 10. Robert Irving Soare, "Interactive Computing and Relativized Computability", pp. 203--260 11. Scott Aronson, "Why Philosophers Should Care about Computational Complexity", pp. 261--327 12. Dorit Aharonov and Umesh V. Vazirani, "Is Quantum Mechanics Falsifiable? A Computational Perspective on the Foundations of Quantum Mechanics", pp. 329--349 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Logic shelves.}, topic = {computability;philosophy-of-computation;} } @incollection{ copeland_bj-etal:2015b, author = {B. Jack Copeland and Carl J. Posy and Oron Shagrir}, title = {Introduction: The 1930s Revolution}, booktitle = {Computability: {T}uring, {C}hurch, and Beyond}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {B. Jack Copeland and Carl J. Posy and Oron Shagrir}, pages = {vii--x}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {computability;history-of-logic;} } @article{ copeland_bj-proudfoot_d:2000a, author = {B. Jack Copeland and Diane Proudfoot}, title = {What {T}uring Did after He Invented the Universal {T}uring Machine}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {491--509}, topic = {Turing;history-of-computer-science;history-of-AI;} } @incollection{ copeland_bj-proudfoot_d:2009a, author = {B. Jack Copeland and Diane Proudfoot}, title = {Turing's Test: A Philosophical and Historical Guide}, booktitle = {Parsing the {T}uring Test: Philosophical and Methodological Issues in the Quest for the Thinking Computer}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert Epstein and Gary Roberts and Grace Beber}, pages = {119--138}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de12}, topic = {Turing;Turing-test;machine-intelligence;} } @incollection{ copeland_bj-proudfoot_d:2012a, author = {B. Jack Copeland and Diane Proudfoot}, title = {Artificial Intelligence}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Eric Margolis and Richard Samuels and Stephen P. Stich}, pages = {147--182}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;AI-general;} } @article{ copeland_bj-shagrir_o:2007a, author = {B. Jack Copeland and Oron Shagrir}, title = {Physical Computation: How General are {G}andy's Principles for Mechanisms?}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2007}, volume = {17}, number = {3}, pages = {217--231}, abstract = {What are the limits of physical computation? In his "Church's Thesis and Principles for Mechanisms", Turing's student Robin Gandy proved that any machine satisfying four idealised physical principles is equivalent to some Turing machine. Gandy'ss four principles in effect define a class of computing machines (`Gandy machines'). Our question is: What is the relationship of this class to the class of all (ideal) physical computing machines? Gandy himself suggests that the relationship is identity. We do not share this view. We will point to interesting examples of (ideal) physical machines that fall outside the class of Gandy machines and compute functions that are not Turing-machine computable. }, topic = {foundations-of-computation;philosophy-of-computing;} } @article{ copeland_bj-shagrir_o:2011a, author = {B. Jack Copeland and Oron Shagrir}, title = {Do Accelerating {T}uring Machines Compute the Uncomputable}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {221--239}, abstract = {Accelerating Turing machines have attracted much attention in the last decade or so. They have been described as `the work-horse of hypercomputation' (Potgieter and Rosinger 2010: 853). But do they really compute beyond the `Turing limit' e.g., compute the halting function? We argue that the answer depends on what you mean by an accelerating Turing machine, on what you mean by computation, and even on what you mean by a Turing machine. We show first that in the current literature the term `accelerating Turing machine' is used to refer to two very different species of accelerating machine, which we call end-stage-in and end-stage-out machines, respectively. We argue that end-stage-in accelerating machines are not Turing machines at all. We then present two differing conceptions of computation, the internal and the external, and introduce the notion of an epistemic embedding of a computation. We argue that no accelerating Turing machine computes the halting function in the internal sense. Finally, we distinguish between two very different conceptions of the Turing machine, the purist conception and the realist conception; and we argue that Turing himself was no subscriber to the purist conception. We conclude that under the realist conception, but not under the purist conception, an accelerating Turing machine is able to compute the halting function in the external sense. We adopt a relatively informal approach throughout, since we take the key issues to be philosophical rather than mathematical. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my12.}, topic = {accelerating-Turing-machines;Turing-machines; paradoxes-of-physical-infinity;} } @unpublished{ copestake:1990a, author = {Ann Copestake}, title = {An Approach to Building the Hierarchical Element of a Lexical Knowledge Base from a Machine Readable Dictionary}, year = {1990}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {computational-lexicography;machine-readable-dictionaries;} } @incollection{ copestake:1993a, author = {Ann Copestake}, title = {Defaults in Lexical Representation}, booktitle = {Inheritance, Defaults, and the Lexicon}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ted Briscoe and Valeria de Paiva and Ann Copestake}, pages = {223--245}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {inheritance;computational-lexicography;} } @incollection{ copestake:1995a, author = {Ann Copestake}, title = {The Representation of Group Denoting Nouns in a Lexical Knowledge Base}, booktitle = {Computational Lexical Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Patrick Saint-Dizier and Evelyne Viegas}, pages = {207--231}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-kr;computational-lexical-semantics;plural;} } @book{ copestake:2002a, author = {Ann Copestake}, title = {Implementing Typed Feature Structure Grammars}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2002}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-57586-261-1}, xref = {Review: penn_g:2003a}, topic = {typed-feature-structures;grammar-formalisms;} } @article{ copestake-briscoe:1995a1, author = {Ann Copestake and Ted Briscoe}, title = {Semi-Productive Polysemy and Sense Extension}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1995}, volume = {12}, pages = {15--17}, missinginfo = {number}, abstract = {In this paper we discuss various aspects of systematic or conventional polysemy and their formal treatment within an implemented constraint-based approach to linguistic representation. We distinguish between two classes of systematic polysemy: constructional polysemy, where a single sense assigned to a lexical entry is contextually specialized, and sense extension, which predictably relates two or more senses. Formally the first case is treated as instantiation of an underspecified lexical entry and the second by use of lexical rules. The problems of distinguishing between these two classes are discussed in detail. We illustrate how lexical rules can be used both to relate fully conventionalized senses and also applied productively to recognize novel usages and how this process can be controlled to account for semi-productivity by utilizing probabilities. }, topic = {polysemy;} } @incollection{ copestake-briscoe:1995a2, author = {Ann Copestake and Ted Briscoe}, title = {Semi-Productive Polysemy and Sense Extension}, booktitle = {Lexical Semantics: The Problem of Polysemy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {James Pustejovsky and Branamir Boguraev}, pages = {15--67}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {polysemy;} } @inproceedings{ copestake-lascarides_a:1997a, author = {Ann Copestake and Alex Lascarides}, title = {Integrating Symbolic and Statistical Representations: The Lexicon Pragmatics Interface}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, pages = {136--143}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {lexical-semantics;compound-nouns;lexical-disambiguation; pragmatics;corpus-statistics;discourse-representation-theory;} } @book{ copi_im:1971a, author = {Irving M. Copi}, title = {The Theory of Logical Types}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1971}, address = {London}, rtnote = {Umich Tanner BC199 .T9 C78}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic shelves.}, topic = {foundations-of-logic;semantic-paradoxes;Russell-paradox; type-theory;ramified-type-theory;} } @incollection{ copi_im:1976a, author = {Irving M. Copi}, title = {A Problem in {P}lato's Laws}, booktitle = {Language in Focus}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Asa Kasher}, pages = {627--639}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {Plato;philosophy-of-law;} } @inproceedings{ copley_b:2001a, author = {Bridget Copley}, title = {Be Going to as a Case of High Aspect}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2001}, editor = {Rachel Hastings and Brendan Jackson and Zsofia Zvolenszky}, pages = {95--113}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;} } @inproceedings{ copley_b:2004a, author = {Bridgit Copley}, title = {Aspect, Scope, and Future Conditionals}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 8}, editor = {C\'ecile Meier and Matthias Weisgerber}, year = {2004}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TBhOWVjN/}, pages = {67--81}, abstract = {This paper argues that though will and be going to both involve a future modal, their meanings differ aspectually. Be going to includes a progressive-like aspectual operator that takes scope over the future modal. Will, on the other hand, is ambiguous between a reading that is the future modal alone, and a reading that has a generic-like aspectual operator over the modal. The evidence for these logical forms consists primarily of modal effects caused by aspectual operation on the temporal argument of the future modal's accessibility relation.}, topic = {nl-tense;nl-modality;conditionals;} } @unpublished{ copley_b:2006a, author = {Bridget Copley}, title = {What Should `Should' Mean}, year = {2006}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, CNRS/Universit Paris}, url = {http://copley.free.fr/copley.should.pdf}, abstract = {One analysis of non-deontic should treats it as having less-than-universal quantification over the epistemically accessible worlds -- the worlds that, for all the speaker knows, could be the actual world. This analysis is based on the intuition that should assertions are weaker than are assertions of epistemic must sentences. Problems with the traditional analysis, however, indicate that there must be a different reason why these should sentences express weaker propositions. This paper argues that non-deontic should can involve either epistemic or metaphysical modality; both are weaker than epistemic must because should does not trigger a presupposition that things work out normally, while must does. An initially problematic attempt to extend this analysis to deontic should prompts a revision to Kratzer's theory of modals, in which the division of labor between the modal base and the ordering source is rethought.}, url = {http://copley.free.fr/copley.should.pdf}, topic = {`ought';deontic-modals;modals;nl-modality;} } @article{ copley_b:2008a, author = {Bridget Copley}, title = {The Plan's the Thing: Deconstructing Futurate Meanings}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {2008}, volume = {39}, number = {2}, pages = {261--274}, topic = {nl-tense;ability;} } @incollection{ copley_b:2008b, author = {Bridget Copley}, title = {Temporal Orientation in Conditionals (Or, How {I} Learned to Stop Worrying and Love {UFO}s)}, booktitle = {Time and Modality}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2008}, editor = {Jacquelin Gu\`eron and Jacquelin Lecarme}, pages = {59--77}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {conditionals;nl-tense;} } @incollection{ copley_b:2009a, author = {Bridget Copley}, title = {Temporal Orientation in Conditionals}, booktitle = {Time and Modality}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Jacquelin Gu\'eron and Jacquelin Lecarme}, pages = {59--77}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my10}, topic = {nl-tense;conditionals;} } @incollection{ copley_b:2019a, author = {Bridget Copley}, title = {Force Dynamics}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Event Structure}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Robert Truswell}, pages = {137--170}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {nl-causatives;eventualities;nl-metaphysucs;} } @incollection{ copley_b-harley_h:2014a, author = {Bridget Copley and Heidi Harley}, title = {Eliminating Causative Entailments with the Force-Dynamic Framework: The Case of the {T}ohono {O}'odham Frustrative \Emph{cem}}, booktitle = {Causation in Grammatical Structures}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Bridget Copley and Fabienne Martin}, pages = {120--149}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantics;causality;agency;nl-causality;nl-causatives;event-structure; Tohono-Oodham;} } @article{ copley_b-harley_h:2015a, author = {Bridget Copley and Heidi Harley}, title = {A force-Theoretic Framework for Event Structure}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2015}, volume = {38}, number = {2}, pages = {103--158}, abstract = {We propose an account of dynamic predicates which draws on the notion of force, eliminating reference to events in the linguistic semantics. We treat dynamic predicates as predicates of forces, represented as functions from an initial situation to a final situation that occurs ceteris paribus, that is, if nothing external intervenes. The possibility that opposing forces might intervene to prevent the transition to a given final situation leads us to a novel analysis of non-culminating accomplishment predicates in a variety of languages, including the English progressive. We then apply the force-theoretic framework to the composition of basic Vendlerian eventuality types within a lexical-decomposition syntax. $\ldots$}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16}, topic = {event-structure;} } @book{ copley_b-martin_f:2014a, editor = {Bridget Copley and Fabienne Martin}, title = {Causation in Grammatical Structures}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199672080}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Bridget Copley and Fabienne Martin, "Introduction", pp. 1--8 2. Bridget Copley and Phillip Wolff, "Theories of Causation Can and Should Inform Linguistic Theory", pp. 11--57 3. Richmond H. Thomason, "Formal Semantics for Causal Constructions", pp. 58--75 4. Max Kistler, "Two types of Causal Statements", pp. 76--99 5. Phillip Wolff, "Causal Pluralism and Force Dynamics", pp. 100--119 6. Bridget Copley and Heidi Harley, "Eliminating Causative Entailments with the Force-Dynamic Framework: The Case of the {T}ohono {O}'odham Frustrative \emph{cem}", pp. 120--151 7. Tatjana Ili\v{c}, "Modality and Causation: Two Sides of the Same Coin", pp. 152--175 8. Paul Egre, "Intentional Action and the Semantics of Gradable Expressions (on the Knobe Effect)", pp. 176--205 9. Fabienne Martin and Florian Schafer, "Causation at the Syntax-Semantics Interface", pp. 209--244 10. Gillian Ramchand, "Causal Chains and Instrumental Case in {H}indi/{U}rdu", pp. 245--278 11. Sergei Tatevosov and Ekaterina Lyutikova, "Causativization and Event Structure", pp. 279--327 12. Nigel Duffield, "Inadvertent Cause and the Unergative-Unaccusative Split in {V}ietnamese and {E}nglish", pp. 328--350 13. Raffaella Folli, "Causatives and Inchoatives in the Lexicon and the Syntax: Evidence from {I}talian", pp. 351--371 14. Anja Latrouite, "Event-Structural Prominence and Forces in Verb Meaning Shift", pp. 372--394 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no13}, topic = {causality;nl-causality;nl-causatives;agency;} } @incollection{ copley_b-martin_f:2014b, author = {Bridget Copley and Fabienne Martin}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Causation in Grammatical Structures}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Bridget Copley and Fabienne Martin}, pages = {1--8}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantics;causality;agency;nl-causality;nl-causatives;event-structure;} } @incollection{ copley_b-wolff_p2:2014a, author = {Bridget Copley and Phillip Wolff}, title = {Theories of Causation Can and Should Inform Linguistic Theory}, booktitle = {Causation in Grammatical Structures}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Bridget Copley and Fabienne Martin}, pages = {11--57}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantics;causality;agency;nl-causality;nl-causatives;event-structure;} } @article{ copp_d:1997a, author = {David Copp}, title = {Defending the Principle of Alternate Possibilities: Blameworthiness and Moral Responsibility}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1997}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {441--456}, contentnote = {Evidently Frankfurt argued in frankfurt_hg:1969a, giving examples, that you can be responsible even if you could not have done otherwise. The purpose of this paper is to refute this interpretation of the examples.}, topic = {freedom;blameworthiness;} } @article{ copp_d:2001a, title = {Realist-Expressivism: A Neglected Option for Moral Realism}, author = {David Copp}, journal = {Social Philosophy and Policy}, pages = {1--43}, volume = {18}, year = {2001}, topic = {expressivism;} } @incollection{ copp_d:2008a, author = {David Copp}, title = {Darwinian Skepticism about Moral Realism}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {186--206}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {moral-realism;} } @article{ copp_d:2008b, author = {David Copp}, title = {'Ought' Implies 'Can' and the Derivation of the Principle of Alternate Possibilities}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2008}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {67--75}, contentnote = {Argues that Frankfurt's principle of alternate possibilities can be defived from 'Ought --> Can'.}, topic = {alternatives-for-action;ability;obligation;} } @article{ coppock_e:2018a, author = {Elizabeth Coppock}, title = {Outlook-Based Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2018}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {125--164}, abstract = {This paper presents and advocates an approach to the semantics of opinion statements, including matters of personal taste and moral claims. In this framework, 'outlook-based semantics', the circumstances of evaluation are not composed of a possible world and a judge (as in 'world-judge relativism'); rather, outlooks replace possible worlds in the role of circumstance of evaluation. Outlooks are refinements of worlds that settle not only matters of fact but also matters of opinion. ... because the proposed circumstances of evaluation (outlooks) are entirely analogous to possible worlds, the framework is easy to use and extend.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {predicates-of-taste;possible-worlds-semantics;} } @incollection{ coppock_e-beaver_di:2013a, author = {Elizabeth Coppock and David I. Beaver}, title = {\emph{Mere}-eology}, booktitle = {Alternatives in Semantics}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amanira F\v{a}l\v{a}u\c{s}}, pages = {150--173 }, address = {New York}, topic = {alternatives;'only';} } @article{ coppock_e-beaver_di:2015a, author = {Elizabeth Coppock and David I. Beaver}, title = {Definiteness and Determinacy}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2015}, volume = {38}, number = {5}, pages = {377--435}, abstract = {This paper distinguishes between definiteness and determinacy. Definiteness is seen as a morphological category which, in English, marks a (weak) uniqueness presupposition, while determinacy consists in denoting an individual. Definite descriptions are argued to be fundamentally predicative, presupposing uniqueness but not existence, and to acquire existential import through general type-shifting operations that apply not only to definites, but also indefinites and possessives. Through these shifts, argumental definite descriptions may become either determinate (and thus denote an individual) or indeterminate (functioning as an existential quantifier). $\ldots$}, topic = {definiteness;definite-descriptions;} } @incollection{ coquand:2011a, author = {Thierry Coquand}, title = {Type Theory}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, howpublished = {\url{http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2010/entries/type-theory/}}, year = {2010}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Summer 2011 files.}, edition = {Spring 2010}, } @article{ coradeschi-etal:2000a, author = {Silvia Coradeschi and Lars Karlsson and Peter Stone and Tucker Balch and Gerhard Kraetzschmar and Minoru Asada}, title = {Overview of {R}obo{C}up-99}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {21}, number = {3}, pages = {11--18}, topic = {robotics;RoboCup;} } @article{ corander-marttinen:2006a, author = {Jukea Corander and Pekka Marttinen}, title = {Bayesian Model Learning Based on Predictive Entropy}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2006}, volume = {15}, number = {1--2}, pages = {5--20}, topic = {statistical-inference;statistical-modeling; statistical-model-learning;} } @article{ corazza:2002a, author = {Eros Corazza}, title = {Description-Names}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {313--325}, topic = {reference;proper-names;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ corazza:2004a, author = {Eros Corazza}, title = {Essential Indexicals and Quasi-Indicators}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2004}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {341--374}, abstract = {In this paper I shall focus on Castaneda's notion of quasi-indicators and I shall defend the following theses: (1) Essential indexicals ('I', 'here', and 'now' are intrinsically perspectival mechanisms of reference and, as such, they are not reducible to any other mechanism of reference. (2) Quasi-indicators (e.g. expressions like 'she' (herself) exist in natural language and cannot be explained away as merely reflexive pronouns. (3) Quasi-indicators are the only mechanism that allows the attribution of an indexical reference. As such they must appear in oratio obliqua constructions. (4) When linked to a quantified expression, quasi-indicators, like anaphors, inherit their reference from the antecedent to which they are linked (and thus coindexed with). When linked to a referring NP, quasi-indicators work like (quasi-indexical) bound variables. (5) Quasi-indicators must be understood along the lines of logophoric pronouns (from 'logos' meaning discourse and 'phoros' meaning bearing or transporting). As such, they are best explained using such notions as perspective and point of view. }, topic = {indexicals;} } @incollection{ corazza-demori:1998a, author = {Anna Corazza and Renato de Mori}, title = {On the Use of Formal Grammars}, booktitle = {Spoken Dialogues with Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Renato de Mori}, pages = {523--561}, address = {New York}, topic = {grammar-formalisms;spoken-dialogue-systems;} } @book{ corbett_d:2003a, author = {D. Corbett}, title = {Reasoning and Unification over Conceptual Graphs}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2003}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-306-4787-5}, xref = {Review: gennari:2005a}, topic = {conceptual-graphs;unification;} } @incollection{ corbi_je:2000a, author = {Josep E. Corbi}, title = {The Principle of Inferential Justification, Scepticism, and Causal Beliefs}, booktitle = {Skepticism}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {377--385 }, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary on: hookway_c:2000a}, topic = {skepticism;epistemology;justification;} } @incollection{ corblin_f:2003a, author = {Francis Corblin}, title = {Presuppositions of Commitment Stores}, booktitle = {Diabruck 2003: Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Universit\"at des Saarlandes}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ivana Kruijff-Korbayov\'a and Claudia Kosny}, pages = {27--34}, address = {Saarbr\"ucken}, topic = {discourse;pragmatics;presupposition;} } @incollection{ corblin_f:2012a, author = {Francis Corblin}, title = {The Roots of Genericity: Indefinite Singulars vs. Definite Plurals}, booktitle = {Genericity}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Alda Mari and Claire Beyssade and Fabio Del Prete}, pages = {352--371 }, address = {Oxford}, topic = {generics;plural;} } @article{ corcoran:1972a, author = {John Corcoran}, title = {Review of \emph{{N}oam Chomsky}, by {J}ohn {L}yons}, journal = {Word}, year = {1972}, volume = {28}, pages = {335--338}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {Chomsky;} } @incollection{ corcoran:1972b, author = {John Corcoran}, title = {Harris on the Structures of Language}, booktitle = {Transformationelle Analyse}, publisher = {Athen\"aum Verlag}, year = {1972}, editor = {Pl\"otz}, pages = {275--292}, address = {Frankfurt}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;} } @incollection{ corcoran:1972c, author = {John Corcoran}, title = {Harris on the Structures of Language}, booktitle = {Transformationelle Analyse}, publisher = {Athen\"aum Verlag}, year = {1972}, editor = {Pl\"otz}, pages = {275--292}, address = {Frankfurt}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;} } @article{ corcoran:1972d, author = {John Corcoran}, title = {Completeness of an Ancient Logic}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1972}, volume = {37}, number = {4}, pages = {696--705}, topic = {Aristotle;syllogistic;} } @article{ corcoran:1972e, author = {John Corcoran}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}ilbert}, by {C}onstance {R}eid}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1972}, volume = {39}, number = {1}, pages = {106--108}, xref = {Review of: reid_c:1970a}, topic = {history-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ corcoran:1973a, author = {John Corcoran}, title = {Gaps between Logical Theory and Mathematical Practice}, booktitle = {The Methodological Unity of Science}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1973}, editor = {Mario Bunge}, pages = {23--50}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ corcoran:2008a, author = {John Corcoran}, title = {Review of \emph{From {P}eirce to {S}kolem: A Neglected Chapter in the History of Logic}, by {G}eraldine {B}rady}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {541--544}, xref = {Review of: brady_g:2000a.}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @article{ corcoran-etal:1974a, author = {John Corcoran and William Frank and Michael Maloney}, title = {String Theory}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1974}, volume = {39}, number = {4}, pages = {625--637}, topic = {formal-language-theory;} } @article{ cordes_m:2021a, author = {Moritz Cordes}, title = {Calculizing Classical Inferential Erotetic Logic}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {1066--1087}, abstract = {This paper contributes to the calculization of evocation and erotetic implication as defined by Inferential Erotetic Logic (IEL). ... these definitions should be seen as desiderata that may or may not play the role of a point of orientation when setting up 'rules of asking.'}, topic = {interrogative-logic;} } @incollection{ cordesch_r:2008a, author = {Roberto Cordesch}, title = {Steps Toward the Synthetic Method: Symbolic Information Processing and Self-Organizing Systems in Early Artificial Intelligence Modeling}, booktitle = {The Mechanical Mind in History}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Phil Husbands and Owen Holland and Michael Wheeler}, pages = {219--258}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @book{ cordeschi:2002a, author = {Roberto Cordeschi}, title = {The Discovery of the Artificial: Behaviour, Mind and Machines Before and Beyond Cybernetics}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {1-4020-0606-3}, xref = {Review: begeer:2005a.}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @incollection{ cordeschi:2006a, author = {Robert Cordeschi}, title = {Searching in a Maze, in Search of Knowledge: Issues in Early Artificial Intelligence}, booktitle = {Reasoning, Action, and Interaction in {AI} Theories and Systems}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2006}, editor = {Oliviero Stock and Marco Schaerf}, pages = {1--24}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {history-of-AI;knowledge-representation;} } @incollection{ cordier:1992a, author = {M.O. Cordier}, title = {A Temporal Revision Model for Reasoning about World Change}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {732--739}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;reasoning-about-change;} } @article{ cordonfranco_a-etal:2017a, author = {Andr\'es Cordon-Franco and David Fern\'andez-Duque and Joost J. Joosten and Francisco F\'elix Lara-Mart\'in}, title = {Predicativity through Transfinite Reflection}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {82}, number = {3}, pages = {787--808}, contentnote = {Reflection is PROV(A) --> A. This can be used to generate natural fragments of arithmetic.}, topic = {reflection-principles;provability-logic;} } @inproceedings{ core:1996a, author = {Mark Core}, title = {Using Parsed Corpora for Structural Disambiguation in the {TRAINS} Domain}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {345--350}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;disambiguation;nl-interpretation;} } @inproceedings{ core-allen_jf:1997a, author = {Mark G. Core and James F. Allen}, title = {Coding Dialogues with the {DAMSL} Annotation Scheme}, booktitle = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Communicative Action in Humans and Machines}, year = {1997}, pages = {28--35}, organization = {{AAAI}}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, editor = {David R. Traum}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {speech-acts;corpus-linguistics;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ core-schubert:1999a, author = {Mark G. Core and Lenhart K. Schubert}, title = {A Model of Speech Repairs and Other Disruptions}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Psychological Models of Communication in Collaborative Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Susan E. Brennan and Alain Giboin and David R. Traum}, pages = {48--53}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {discourse;speech-repairs;hesitation-noises; discourse-interruptions;} } @inproceedings{ corea_c-etal:2021a, author = {Carl Corea and Matthias Thimm and Patrick Delfmann}, title = {Measuring Inconsistency over Sequences of Business Rule Cases}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {656--660}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We investigate inconsistency and culpability measures for multisets of business rule bases. ...}, topic = {reasoning-about-inconsistency;} } @book{ corfield:2003a, author = {David Corfield}, title = {Towards a Philosophy of Real Mathematics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: pincock_c:2005a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ corfield:2010a, author = {David Corfield}, title = {Varieties of Justification in Machine Learning}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {291--301}, abstract = {Forms of justification for inductive machine learning techniques are discussed and classified into four types. This is done with a view to introduce some of these techniques and their justificatory guarantees to the attention of philosophers, and to initiate a discussion as to whether they must be treated separately or rather can be viewed consistently from within a single framework.}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @book{ corfield-williamson_j:2001a, editor = {David Corfield and Jon Williamson}, title = {Foundations of {B}ayesianism}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2001}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Review: risse:2003a}, topic = {Bayesian-reasoning;Bayesian-statistics;foundations-of-statistics;} } @article{ cormack:1987a, author = {Annabel Cormack}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}ental Spaces}, by {G}iles {F}auconnier}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1987}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {247--260}, xref = {Review of fauconnier_g:1985b.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ cormak:1984a, author = {Annabel Cormak}, title = {{VP} Anaphora: Variables and Scope}, booktitle = {Varieties of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1984}, editor = {Fred Landman and Frank Veltman}, pages = {81--102}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;verb-phrase-anaphora;} } @article{ cormak-kempson_rm:1981b, author = {Annabel Cormak and Ruth Kempson}, title = {On `Formal Games and Forms of Games{'} }, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1981}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {431--435}, xref = {Discussion of kempson_rm-cormak:1981a, tennant_n:1981a.}, topic = {ambiguity;nl-quantifier-scope;nl-quantifiers; semantic-underspecification;} } @book{ cormen-etal:2001a, author = {Thomas H. Cormen and Charles E. Leiserson and Ronald L. Rivest and Clifford Stein}, title = {Introduction to Algorithms, Second Edition}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-03293-7}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS General shelves.}, topic = {algorithms;} } @article{ cornish:1992a, author = {Francis Cornish}, title = {{\em So Be It:} The Discourse-Semantic of {\em So} and {\em It}}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1992}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {163--178}, topic = {nl-semantics;anaphora;} } @article{ cornman_j:1970a, author = {James Cornman}, title = {Categories, Grammar and Semantics}, journal = {Inquiry}, year = {1970}, volume = {13}, number = {1--4}, pages = {297--307}, topic = {nl-semantic-types;} } @article{ cornman_jw:1963a, author = {James W. Cornman}, title = {Language and Ontology}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1963}, volume = {41}, number = {3}, pages = {291--305}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @book{ cornman_jw:1966a, author = {James W. Cornman}, title = {Metaphysics, Reference, and Language}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, year = {1966}, address = {New Haven}, xref = {Review: rorty_r:1967a}, topic = {metaphysics;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ cornman_jw:1969a, author = {James W. Cornman}, title = {On the Relevance of Linguistic Reference to Ontology}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1969}, volume = {66}, number = {20}, pages = {700--712}, topic = {ontological-commitment;reference;} } @article{ cornman_jw:1970a, author = {James W. Cornman}, title = {Categories, Grammar, and Semantics}, journal = {Inquiry}, year = {1970}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {297--307}, topic = {category-mistakes;sortal-incorrectness;} } @book{ corradi:1995a, author = {Gemma Corradi}, title = {The Other Side of Language: A Philosophy of Listening}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1995}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0415026210}, rtnote = {UMich Shapiro Undergraduate B 105 .L77 C823 1990}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ correadasilva-etal:1991a, author = {Fl\'avio S. Corr\'ea da Silva and Dave Robertson and Paul Chung}, title = {Automated Reasoning about an Uncertain Domain}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {141--145}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;logic-programming;fuzzy-logic;} } @article{ correia_f:2000a, author = {Fabrice Correia}, title = {Propositional Logic of Essence}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {295--313}, topic = {modal-logic;reference;individuation;} } @article{ correia_f:2006a, author = {Fabrice Correia}, title = {Generic Essence, Objectual Essence, and Modularity}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2006}, volume = {40}, number = {4}, pages = {753--767}, topic = {essence;metaphysics;} } @article{ correia_f:2007a, author = {Fabrice Correia}, title = {Modality, Quantification, and Many {V}lach-Operators}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2007}, volume = {36}, number = {4}, pages = {473--488}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;first-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ correia_f:2014a, author = {Fabrice Correia}, title = {Logical Grounds}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {31--59}, topic = {truthmaking;truth-hierarchies;} } @article{ correia_f:2017a, author = {Fabrice Correia}, title = {An Impure Logic of Representational Grounding}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {5}, pages = {507--538}, topic = {truthmaking;metaphysics;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ correia_f:2017b, author = {Fabrice Correia}, title = {Erratum to: An Impure Logic of Representational Grounding}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {5}, pages = {538}, topic = {truthmaking;metaphysics;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ correia_f:2022a, author = {Fabrice Correia}, title = {A General Theory of Location Based on the Notion of Entire Location}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {3}, pages = {555--582}, abstract = {It would be a good thing to have at our disposal a general theory of location that is neutral with respect to ... (i) the view that some objects have more than one exact location, (ii) the view that some objects are located without having an exact location, and (iii) the view that some objects are "spanners" -- where a spanner is an object exactly located at a region that has proper parts but which has no proper part exactly located at a proper part of the region. ... The theory takes as its sole locational primitive the notion of being entirely located at.}, topic = {philosophy-of-space;} } @book{ correia_f-iacona_a:2013a, editor = {Fabrice Correia and Andrea Iacona}, title = {Around the Tree: Semantic and Metaphysical Issues Concerning Branching and the Open Future}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-94-007-5166-8}, topic = {branching-time;} } @article{ correros-etal:2012a, author = {Pablo Correros and Paul Egr\'e and David Ripley and Robert van Rooij}, title = {Tolerance and Mixed Consequence in the S'Valuationist Setting}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2012}, volume = {100}, number = {4}, pages = {855--877}, topic = {vagueness;supervaluations;} } @article{ corrigan_r:1986a, author = {Roberta Corrigan}, title = {The Internal Structure of {E}nglish Transitive Sentences}, journal = {Memory and Cognition}, year = {1986}, volume = {14}, number = {5}, pages = {420--421}, abstract = {... Results suggest that language and other types of cognitive tasks require the same basic processes and structures.}, topic = {psycholinguistics;nl-causatives;} } @book{ corriveau:1995a, author = {Jean-Pierre Corriveau}, title = {Time-Constrained Memory: A Reader-Based Approach to Text Comprehension}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1995}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, xref = {Review: graesser_ac:1996a.}, topic = {text-comprehension;memory;memory-models;language-and-cognition;} } @article{ corruble-ganascia:1997a, author = {Vincent Corruble and Jean-Gabriel Ganascia}, title = {Induction and the Discovery of the Causes of Scurvy: A Computational Reconsruction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {91}, number = {2}, pages = {205--223}, topic = {automated-scientific-discovery;induction;} } @article{ corsi_g:1988a, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {Quantified Modal Logic with Rigid Terms}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"ur mathematische.{L}ogik und {G}rundlgen der {M}athematik}, year = {1988}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {251--258}, topic = {first-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ corsi_g:1989a, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {A Logic Characterized by the Class of Linear {K}ripke Frames with Nested Domains}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1989}, volume = {48}, number = {1}, pages = {15--22}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ corsi_g:1989b, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {A Cut-Free Calculus for {D}ummett's {LC} Quantified}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"{u}r Mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik}, year = {1989}, volume = {35}, number = {4}, pages = {289--301}, topic = {proof-theory;modal-logic;first-order-modal-logic;} } @techreport{ corsi_g:1990a1, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {A Unifying Completeness Theorem in Quantified Modal Logic}, institution = {Institute for Logic, Language, and Computation, University of Amsterdam}, number = {PP--2001--22}, year = {2001}, address = {ILLC, University of Amsterdam, Plantage Muidergract 24, NL-1018 TV Amsterdam, Holland } , rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;modal-logic;completeness-theorems; first-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ corsi_g:1990a2, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {A Unified Completeness Theorem in Quantified Modal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {67}, number = {4}, pages = {1483--1510}, xref = {Journal publication of: corsi_g:1990a1.}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;modal-logic;completeness-theorems; first-order-modal-logic;} } @book{ corsi_g:1990b, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {Quantified Modal Logic, An Introduction}, publisher = {Istituto per la Documentazione Giuridica del Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche}, year = {1990}, address = {Firenze}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;modal-logic;} } @article{ corsi_g:1992a, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {Completeness Theorem for {D}ummett's {LC} Quantified and Some of its Extensions}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1992}, volume = {51}, number = {2}, pages = {317--335}, topic = {completeness-theorems;modal-logic;first-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ corsi_g:1993a, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {Quantified Modal Logics of Positive Rational Numbers and Some Related Systems}, journal = {Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1993}, volume = {34}, number = {2}, pages = {263--283}, topic = {first-order-modal-logic;} } @unpublished{ corsi_g:1996a, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {Counterpart Semantics: A Foundational Study on Quantified Modal Logics}, year = {1996}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Universit\'a di Firenze}, topic = {counterpart-theory;quantifying-in-modality;} } @article{ corsi_g:1999a, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {Bull's Theorem by the Method of Diagrams}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1999}, volume = {62}, pages = {163--176}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @techreport{ corsi_g:2002a, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {Counterpart Semantics: A Foundational Study on Quantified Modal Logics}, institution = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, number = {ILLC 2002 PP-2002-20}, year = {2002}, address = {Amtsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Corsi1.pdf}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;modal-logic;counterpart-theory; first-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ corsi_g:2013a, author = {Giovanna Corsi}, title = {Free Quantified Epistemic Logics}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2013}, volume = {101}, number = {6}, pages = {1159--1183}, topic = {epistemic-logic;free-logic;} } @article{ corsi_g-ghilardi_s:1989a, author = {Giovanna Corsi and Silvio Ghilardi}, title = {Directed Frames}, journal = {Archive for Mathematical Logic}, year = {1989}, volume = {29}, pages = {53--67}, abstract = {Predicate extensions of the intermediate logic of the weak excluded middle and of the modal logic S4.2 are introduced and investigated. In particular it is shown that some of them are characterized by subclasses of the class of directed frames with either constant or nested domains.}, topic = {first-order-modal-logic;} } @incollection{ corsi_g-ghilardi_s:1992a, author = {Giovanna Corsi and Silvio Ghilardi}, title = {Semantical Aspects of Quantified Modal Logic}, booktitle = {Knowledge, Belief, and Strategic Interaction}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Cristina Bicchieri and Maria Luisa {Dalla Chiara}}, pages = {167--195}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Corsi"}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;modal-logic;first-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ corsi_g-orlandelli_e:2013a, author = {Giovanna Corsi and Eugenio Orlandelli}, title = {Free Quantified Epistemic Logics}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2013}, volume = {101}, number = {6}, pages = {1159--1183}, topic = {epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ corstonoliver:1998a, author = {Simon H. Corston-Oliver}, title = {Identifying the Linguistic Correlates of Rhetorical Relations}, booktitle = {Discourse Relations and Discourse Markers: Proceedings of the Conference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Manfred Stede and Leo Wanner and Eduard Hovy}, pages = {8--14}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {discourse-cue-words;discourse-structure; empirical-methods-in-discourse;} } @incollection{ corstonoliver:2000a, author = {Simon Corston-Oliver}, title = {Using Decision Trees to Select the Grammatical Relation of a Noun Phrase}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First {SIGdial} Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Laila Dybkjaer and Koiti Hasida and David R. Traum}, pages = {66--73}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {grammatical-relations;statistical-nlp;} } @article{ corstonoliver:2000b, author = {Simon Corston-Oliver}, title = {Review of \emph{{N}atural Language Information Retrieval}, edited by {T}omek {S}trzalkowski}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, volume = {26}, number = {3}, pages = {460--462}, xref = {Review of: strzalkowski:1999a.}, topic = {nl-processing;information-retrieval;} } @incollection{ cortescalabuig-etal:2006a, author = {\'Alvaro Cort\'es-Calabuig and Marc Denecker and Ofer Arieli and Maurice Bruynooghe}, title = {Accuracy and Efficiency of Fixpoint Methods for Approximate Query Answering in Locally Complete Databases}, booktitle = {Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference (KR2008)}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {81--91}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {Standard databases convey Reiter's closed-world assumption that an atom not in the database is false. This assumption is relaxed in locally closed databases that are sound but only partially complete about their domain. One of the consequences of the weakening of the closed-world assumption is that query answering in locally closed databases is undecidable. In this paper, we develop efficient approximate methods for query answering, based on fixpoint computations, and investigate conditions that assure the optimality of these methods. Our approach of approximative reasoning may be incorporated in different contexts where incompleteness plays a major role and efficient reasoning is imperative. }, topic = {database-queries;} } @incollection{ cortescalabuig-etal:2008a, author = {\'Alvaro Cort\'es-Calabuig and Marc Denecker and Ofer Arieli and Maurice Bruynooghe}, title = {Accuracy and Efficiency of Fixpoint Methods for Approximate Query Answering in Locally Complete Databases}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {81--91}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {query-answering;} } @incollection{ coscoy:1997a, author = {Yann Coscoy}, title = {A Natural Language Explanation for Formal Proofs}, booktitle = {{LACL}'96: First International Conference on Logical Aspects of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1997}, editor = {Christian Retor/'e}, pages = {149--167}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-and-nl-processing;nl-generation-from-proofs;} } @inproceedings{ coseriu_e:1976a, author = {Eugene Coseriu}, title = {Logique du Langage et Logique de la Grammaire}, booktitle = {Mod\'eles Logiques et Niveaux d'Analyse Linguistique.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Jean David and Robert Martin}, pages = {15--38}, publisher = {Centre d'Analyse Syntaxiquew de l'Universit\'e de Metz }, address = {Metz}, topic = {logic-and-language;} } @article{ costa_mj1:1986a, author = {Michael J. Costa}, title = {Acting Intentionally and Minimal Abilities}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1986}, volume = {46}, number = {3}, pages = {144--147}, topic = {intention;ability;} } @inproceedings{ costantini-tocchio:2003a, author = {Stefania Costantini and Arianna Tocchio}, title = {Context-Based Commonsense Reasoning in the {DALI} Logic Programming Language}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {443--450}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;common-sense-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ costello:1995a, author = {Tom Costello}, title = {Relating Formalizations of Actions}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Extending Theories of Action: Formal Theories and Applications}, year = {1995}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. File drawers, "Costello"}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {action;planning-formalisms;foundations-of-planning;discrete-systems;} } @incollection{ costello:1996a, author = {Tom Costello}, title = {Modeling Belief Change Using Counterfactuals}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {432--443}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {belief-revision;conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ costello:1997a, author = {Tom Costello}, title = {Beyond Minimizing Change}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {448--452}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {frame-problem;action-formalisms;circumscription;} } @article{ costello:1998a, author = {Tom Costello}, title = {The Expressive Power of Circumsciption}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {104}, number = {1--2}, pages = {313--329}, topic = {circumscription;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ costello-mccarthy_j1:2006a, author = {Tom Costello and John McCarthy}, title = {Review of \emph{{E}xtending Mechanics to Minds: The Mechanical Foundations of Psychology and Economics}, by {J}on {D}oyle}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {18}, pages = {1237--1238}, xref = {Review of: doyle_j:2006a.}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;rational-mechanics;} } @incollection{ costello-patterson_a:1998a, author = {Tom Costello and Anna Patterson}, title = {Quantifiers and Operations on Modalities and Contexts}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {270--281}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;context;modal-logic;kr-course;logic-of-context;} } @incollection{ costemarquis_s-etal:2004a, author = {Sylvie Coste-Marquis and Jer\^ome Lang and Paolo Liberatore and Pierre Marquis}, title = {Expressive Power and Succinctness of Propositional Languages for Preference Representation}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {203--212}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preference-representation;} } @incollection{ costemarquis_s-etal:2006a, author = {Sylvie Coste-Marquis and Caroline Devred and Pierre Marquis}, title = {Constrained Argumentation Frameworks}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {112--122}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;argument-based-defeasible-reasoning;} } @incollection{ costemarquis_s-etal:2006b, author = {Sylvie Coste-Marquis and H\'elene Fargier and J\'er\^ome Lang and Daniel Le Berre and Pierre Marquis}, title = {Representing Policies for Quantified Boolean Formulas}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {286--296}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {model-checking;quantified-boolean-logic;} } @article{ costemarquis_s-etal:2007a, author = {Sylvie Coste-Marquis and Caroline Devred and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Marie-Christine Lagasquie-Schiex and Pierre Marquis}, title = {On the Merging of {D}ung's Argumentation Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {10--15}, pages = {730--753}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ costemarquis_s-etal:2012a, author = {Sylvie Coste-Marquis and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Pierre Marquis and Mohand Akli Ouali}, title = {Weighted Attacks in Argumentation Frameworks}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {593--597}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... The aim of this paper is to explore ways to take advantage of attacks weights within an argumentation process. Two different approaches are considered: The first one extends the proposal by (Dunne et al. 2011) and accounts for other aggregation functions than sum in the objective of relaxing attacks. The second one shows how weights can be exploited to strengthen the usual notion of defence, leading to new concepts of extensions.}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;prioritized-nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ costemarquis_s-etal:2014a, author = {Sylvie Coste-Marquis and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Jean-Guy Mailly and Pierre Marquis}, title = {On the Revision of Argumentation Systems: Minimal Change of Arguments Statuses}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {52--61}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In this paper, we investigate the revision of argumentation systems a la Dung. We focus on revision as minimal change of the arguments status. ... We show how AGM belief revision postulates can be translated to the case of argumentation systems. We provide a corresponding representation theorem in terms of minimal change of the arguments statuses. Several distance-based revision operators satisfying the postulates are also pointed out, along with some methods to build revised argumentation systems. We also discuss some computational aspects of those methods. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {kr;abstract-argumentation;belief-revision;} } @incollection{ costemarquis_s-marquis_p:2002a, author = {Sylvie Coste-Marquis and Pierre Marquis}, title = {Complexity Results for Paraconsistent Inference Relations}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {61--72}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;complexity-in-AI;paraconsistency;} } @incollection{ costemarquis_s-marquis_p:2005a, author = {Sylvie Coste-Marquis and Pierre Marquis}, title = {On the Complexity of Paraconsistent Inference Relations}, booktitle = {Inconsistency Tolerance}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Leopoldo Bertossi and Anthony Hunter and Torsten Schaub}, pages = {151--190}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {reasoning-under-inconsistency;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ cote_s:1997a, author = {Sharon Cote}, title = {Ranking Forward-Looking Centers}, booktitle = {Centering Theory in Discourse}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Marilyn A. Walker and Arivind K. Joshi and Ellen Prince}, pages = {55--69}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {anaphora-resolution;discourse;pragmatics;centering;} } @article{ cotnoir_aj-varzi_ac:2019a, author = {Aaron J. Cotnoir and Achille C. Varzi}, title = {Natural Axioms for Classical Mereology}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {201--208}, topic = {mereology;} } @article{ cotogno:2009a, author = {Paolo Cotogno}, title = {A Brief Critique of Pure Hypercomputation}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2009}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {391--405}, abstract = {$\ldots$ infinite-time oracles are not actually solving paradoxes, but simply assigning them conventional values. Special values for non-terminating processes are likewise irrelevant, since diagonalization can cover any amount of value assignments. This should not be construed as a restriction of computing power: Turing's uncomputability is not a `barrier' to be broken, but simply an effect of the expressive power of consistent programming systems. }, topic = {hypercomputation;} } @article{ cotrini-gurevich_y:2013a, author = {Carlos Cotrini and Yuri Gurevich}, title = {Transitive Primal Infon Logic}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {281--304}, topic = {infon-logic;} } @article{ cotrini-gurevich_y:2013b, author = {Carlos Cotrini and Yuri Gurevich}, title = {Transitive Primal Infon Logic---Erratum}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {366}, topic = {infon-logic;} } @book{ cotterill:1998a, author = {Rodney Cotterill}, title = {Enchanted Looms: Conscious Networks in Brains and Computers}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-62435-5}, xref = {Review: wilson_r2:2001a}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @book{ cottingham-etal:1984a, editor = {John Cottingham and Robert Stoothoff and Dugald Murdoch}, title = {The Philosophical Writings of {D}escartes}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {Descartes;history-of-philosophy;} } @incollection{ cottrell:1998a, author = {Gary W. Cottrell}, title = {A model of Lexical Access of Ambiguous Words}, booktitle = {Lexical Ambiguity Resolution: Perspectives from Psychology, Neuropsychology, and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufman}, year = {1988}, editor = {Steven L. Small and Gary W. Cottrell and Michael K. Tanenhaus}, pages = {179--194}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;} } @article{ couch:2009a, author = {Mark Couch}, title = {Functional Explanation in Context}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2009}, volume = {76}, number = {2}, pages = {253--269}, topic = {functionalism;} } @article{ coulter_j:1995a, author = {Jeff Coulter}, title = {The Informed Neuron: Issues in the Use of Information Theory in the Behavioral Sciences}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1995}, volume = {5}, number = {4}, pages = {583--596}, topic = {information;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ coulter_j-sharrock_w:2002a, author = {Jeff Coulter and Wes Sharrock}, title = {The Hinterland of the {C}hinese Room}, booktitle = {Views into the {C}hinese Room: New Essays on {S}earle and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {John Preston and Mark Bishop}, pages = {181--200}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-AI;} } @book{ coulthard_m:1977a, author = {Malcolm Coulthard}, title = {An Introduction to Discourse Analysis}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1977}, address = {London}, rtnote = {Hillman P302 C68 1985}, topic = {discourse-analysis;text-linguistics;discourse;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ coulthard_m:1994a, author = {Malcolm Coulthard}, title = {Analysing and Evaluating Written Text}, booktitle = {Advances in Written Text Analysis}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1994}, editor = {Malcolm Coulthard}, pages = {1--11}, address = {New York}, topic = {writing;} } @incollection{ coulthard_m-brazil:1979a, author = {Malcolm Coulthard and D. Brazil}, title = {Exchange Structure}, booktitle = {Studies in Discourse Analysis}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1981}, editor = {Malcolm Coulthard and Martin Montgomery}, pages = {82--106}, address = {London}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {discourse-analysis;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @book{ coulthard_m-montgomery_m:1981a, editor = {Malcolm Coulthard and Martin Montgomery}, title = {Studies in Discourse Analysis}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1981}, address = {London}, rtnote = {Hillman P302 .S78 1981}, topic = {pragmatics;text-linguistics;discourse-analysis;discourse;} } @article{ counihan:2008a, author = {Marian Counihan}, title = {`If $p$ then $q$' and All That: Logical Elements in Reasoning and Discourse}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2008}, volume = {17}, number = {4}, pages = {391--415}, topic = {psychology-of-reasoning;cognitive-science;quantifiers;} } @book{ couperkuhlen-selting:1996a, editor = {Elizabeth Couper-Kuhlen}, title = {Prosody in Conversation}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {intonation;prosody;discourse;pragmatics;} } @article{ coupley-fouquere:1997a, author = {Pascal Coupley and Christophe Fouquer\'e}, title = {Extending Conceptual Definitions with Default Knowledge}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {258--299}, topic = {extensions-of-kl1;nonmonotonic-reasoning;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @book{ courcelle_b-engelfriet_j:2011a, author = {Bruno Courcelle and Joost Engelfriet}, title = {Graph Structure and Monadic Second-Order Logic, a Language Theoretic Approach}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {978-0-521-89833-1}, topic = {graph-theory;subtheories-of-HOL;} } @incollection{ cousot:1990a, author = {P. Cousot}, title = {Methods and Logics for Proving Programs}, booktitle = {Handbook of Theoretical Computer Science, Vol. B: Algorithms and Complexity}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {1990}, editor = {Jan {van Leeuven}}, pages = {841--993}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {program-verification;} } @article{ coventry-etal:1994a, author = {Kenny R. Coventry and Richard Carmichael and Simon E. Garrod}, title = {Spatial Prepositions, Object-Specific Function, and Task Requirements}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1994}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {289--309}, topic = {nl-semantics;semantic-processing;spatial-language;} } @book{ cover-olearyhawthorne_j:1999a, author = {J.A. Cover and John O'Leary-Hawthorne}, title = {Substance and Individuation in {L}eibniz}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: nelson_a:2004a.}, topic = {Leibniz;substance;individuation;} } @incollection{ covington:1986a, author = {Michael A. Covington}, title = {Grammatical Theory in the Middle Ages}, booktitle = {Studies in the History of Western Linguistics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {F.R. Palmer}, pages = {23--42}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {history-of-linguistics;} } @techreport{ covington:1989a, author = {Michael A. Covington}, title = {An Extension of {P}rolog for Unification-Based Grammar}, institution = {Advanced Computational Research Center, University of Georgia}, number = {AI--1989--01}, year = {1988}, address = {Athens, Georgia}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {Prolog;unification-grammars;} } @book{ covington:1994a, author = {Michael A. Covington}, title = {Natural Language Processing for {P}rolog Programmers}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1994}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0-13-629213-5}, topic = {nlp-programming;nlp-intro;} } @inproceedings{ covington:1998a, author = {Michael A. Covington}, title = {Alignment of Multiple Languages for Historical Comparison}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {275--280}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {computational-historical-linguistics;} } @techreport{ covington-etal:1988a, author = {Michael A. Covington and Donald Nute and Nora Schmitz and David Goodman}, title = {From {E}nglish to {P}rolog via Discourse Representation Theory}, institution = {Advanced Computational Research Center, University of Georgia}, number = {01--0024}, year = {1988}, address = {Athens, Georgia}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {discourse-representation-theory;nl-interpretation;} } @incollection{ cowen:2004a, author = {Tyler Cowen}, title = {How do Economists Think about Rationality?}, booktitle = {Satisficing and Maximizing: Moral Theorists on Practical Reason}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Michael Byron}, pages = {213--236}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {satisficing;practical-reasoning;rationality;} } @book{ cowie_ap:1998a, editor = {A.P. Cowie}, title = {Phraseology: Theory, Analysis, and Applications}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198294255}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 326.5 .P45 P481 1998.}, topic = {collocations;corpus-linguistics;} } @article{ cowie_f:1997a, author = {Fiona Cowie}, title = {The Logical Problem of Language Acquisition}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1997}, volume = {111}, number = {1}, abstract = {Arguments from the 'Logical Problem of Language Acquisition' suggest that since linguistic experience provides few negative data that would falsify overgeneral grammatical hypotheses, innate knowledge of the principles of Universal Grammar must constrain learners' hypothesis formulation. Although this argument indicates a need for domain-specific constraints, it does not support their innateness. Learning from mostly positive data proceeds unproblematically in virtually all domains. Since not every domain can plausibly be accorded its own special faculty, the probative value of the argument in the linguistic case is dubious. In ignoring the holistic and probablistic nature of theory construction, the argument underestimates the extent to which positive data can supply negative evidence and hence overestimates the intractability of language learning in the absence of a dedicated faculty. While nativism about language remains compelling, the alleged 'Logical Problem' contributes nothing to its plausibility and the emphasis on the Problem in the recent acquisition literature has been a mistake.}, pages = {17---51}, topic = {L1-acquisition;} } @book{ cowie_f:1998a, author = {Fiona Cowie}, title = {What's Within? Nativism Reconsidered}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0195123840 (alk. paper)}, topic = {nativism;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ cowie_r:2015a, author = {Roddy Cowie}, title = {Ethical Issues in Affective Computing}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {334--348}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {emotional-computing;computers-and-ethics;} } @incollection{ cowles:1994a, author = {David Cowles}, title = {On {V}an {I}nwagen's Defense of Vague Identity}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 8: Logic and Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {137--158}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {vagueness;identity;} } @article{ cox_a:1978a, author = {Azizah Cox}, title = {Casta\~neda's Theory of Moralty}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1978}, volume = {35}, number = {4}, pages = {557--563}, topic = {deontic-logic;moral-conflict;} } @article{ cox_a:1978b, author = {Azizah Cox}, title = {Hintikka and the Interdefinability of Obligation and Forbiddance}, journal = {Southwestern Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1978}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {7--10}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ cox_ij-leonard_jj:1994a, author = {Ingemar J. Cox and John J. Leonard}, title = {Modeling a Dynamic Environment Using a {B}ayesian Multiple Hypothesis Approach}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {66}, number = {2}, pages = {311--344}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Dynamic world modeling requires the integration of multiple sensor observations obtained from multiple vehicle locations at different times. A crucial problem in this interpretation task is the presence of uncertainty in the origins of measurements (data association or correspondence uncertainty) as well as in the values of measurements (noise uncertainty). Almost all previous work in robotics has not distinguished between these two very different forms of uncertainty. In this paper we propose to model the uncertainty due to noise, e.g. the error in an object's position, by conventional covariance matrices. To represent the data association uncertainty, an hypothesis tree is constructed, the branches at any node representing different possible assignments of measurements to features. A rigorous Bayesian data association framework is then introduced that allows the probability of each hypothesis to be calculated. These probabilities can be used to guide an intelligent pruning strategy. The multiple hypothesis tree allows decisions concerning the assignment of measurements to be postponed. Instead, many different hypotheses are considered. Expected observations are predicted for each hypothesis and these are compared with actual measurements. Hypotheses that have their predictions supported by measurements increase in probability compared with hypotheses whose predictions are unsupported. By ``looking ahead'' two or three time steps and examining the probabilities at the leaves of the tree, very accurate assignment decisions can be made. For dynamic world modeling, the approach results in multiple world models at a given time step, each one representing a possible interpretation of all past and current measurements and each having an associated probability. In addition, each geometric feature has an associated covariance that models the uncertainty due to noise. This framework is independent of the sensing modality, being applicable to most temporal data association problems. It is therefore appropriate for the broad class of vision, acoustic and range sensors currently used on existing mobile robots. Preliminary results using ultrasonic range data demonstrate the feasibility of the approach. }, topic = {robotics;dynamic-systems;reasoning-about-noisy-sensors;} } @article{ cox_jwr:1963a, author = {J.W. Roxbee Cox}, title = {Can {I} Know Beforehand What {I} Am Going to Decide?}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1963}, volume = {72}, number = {1}, pages = {88--92}, xref = {Discussion of ginet_c:1962a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed with ginet_c:1962a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no21}, topic = {freedom;causality;introspection;intention;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ cox_jwr:1964a, author = {J. W. Roxbee Cox}, title = {Are There Non-Dispositional Properties?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1964}, volume = {24}, number = {5}, pages = {161--164}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/3327021}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ cox_mt:2005a, author = {Michael T. Cox}, title = {Metacognition in Computation: A Selected Research Review}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {169}, number = {2}, pages = {104--141}, topic = {metacognition;} } @article{ cox_mt:2007a, author = {Michael T. Cox}, title = {Perpetual Self-Aware Cognitive Agents}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2007}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {42--45}, topic = {metacognition;} } @article{ cox_mt-ram:1999a, author = {Michael T. Cox and Ashwin Ram}, title = {Introspective Multistrategy Learning: On the Construction of Learning Strategies}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {112}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--55}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A central problem in multistrategy learning systems is the selection and sequencing of machine learning algorithms for particular situations. This is typically done by the system designer who analyzes the learning task and implements the appropriate algorithm or sequence of algorithms for that task. We propose a solution to this problem which enables an AI system with a library of machine learning algorithms to select and sequence appropriate algorithms autonomously. Furthermore, instead of relying on the system designer or user to provide a learning goal or target concept to the learning system, our method enables the system to determine its learning goals based on analysis of its successes and failures at the performance task. The method involves three steps: Given a performance failure, the learner examines a trace of its reasoning prior to the failure to diagnose what went wrong (blame assignment); given the resultant explanation of the reasoning failure, the learner posts explicitly represented learning goals to change its background knowledge (deciding what to learn); and given a set of learning goals, the learner uses nonlinear planning techniques to assemble a sequence of machine learning algorithms, represented as planning operators, to achieve the learning goals (learning-strategy construction). In support of these operations, we define the types of reasoning failures, a taxonomy of failure causes, a second-order formalism to represent reasoning traces, a taxonomy of learning goals that specify desired change to the background knowledge of a system, and a declarative task-formalism representation of learning algorithms. We present the Meta-AQUA system, an implemented multistrategy learner that operates in the domain of story understanding. Extensive empirical evaluations of Meta-AQUA show that it performs significantly better in a deliberative, planful mode than in a reflexive mode in which learning goals are ablated and, furthermore, that the arbitrary ordering of learning algorithms can lead to worse performance than no learning at all. We conclude that explicit representation and sequencing of learning goals is necessary for avoiding negative interactions between learning algorithms that can lead to less effective learning. }, topic = {machine-learning;metareasoning;case-based-reasoning;} } @article{ cox_mt-zhang_c:2007a, author = {Michael T. Cox and Chen Zhang}, title = {Mixed-Initiative Goal Manipulation}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2007}, volume = {28}, number = {2}, pages = {62--73}, topic = {mixed-initiative-systems;collaboration;reasoning-about-goals; group-planning;} } @inproceedings{ cox_pt-pietrzykowski:1986a, author = {P. T. Cox and T. Pietrzykowski}, title = {Causes for Events: Their Computation and Applications}, booktitle = {Proceedings, Eighth International Conference on Automated Deduction (CADE-8)}, year = {1986}, editor = {Jorg Siekmann}, pages = {608--621}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, E's 1st name}, contentnote = {This is what Stickel calls "most specific abduction".}, topic = {causality;events;abduction;} } @inproceedings{ cox_pt-pietrzykowski:1987a, author = {P.T. Cox and T. Pietrzykowski}, title = {General Diagnosis for Abductive Inference}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1987 Symposium on Logic Programming}, year = {1987}, pages = {183--189}, contentnote = {This is what Stickel calls "most specific abduction".}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, organization, publisher}, topic = {theorem-proving;abduction;} } @book{ coyne:1988a, author = {Richard Coyne}, title = {Logic Models of Design}, publisher = {Pitman}, year = {1988}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0 273 08797 5}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union QA 76 .C85 1988}, topic = {logic-programming;planning;macro-formalization;logic-in-cs; CAD;spatial-arrangement-tasks;} } @article{ cozman:2000a, author = {Fabio G. Cozman}, title = {Credal Networks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {120}, number = {2}, pages = {199--233}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper presents a complete theory of credal networks, structures that associate convex sets of probability measures with directed acyclic graphs. Credal networks are graphical models for precise/imprecise beliefs. The main contribution of this work is a theory of credal networks that displays as much flexibility and representational power as the theory of standard Bayesian networks. Results in this paper show how to express judgements of irrelevance and independence, and how to compute inferences in credal networks. A credal network admits several extensions---several sets of probability measures comply with the constraints represented by a network. Two types of extensions are investigated. The properties of strong extensions are clarified through a new generalization of d-separation, and exact and approximate inference methods are described for strong extensions. Novel results are presented for natural extensions, and linear fractional programming methods are described for natural extensions. The paper also investigates credal networks that are defined globally through perturbations of a single network.}, topic = {graph-based-reasoning;credal-networks; reasoning-about-uncertainty;bayesian-networks;} } @article{ crabbe:2000a, author = {Marcel Crabb\'e}, title = {The Rise and Fall of Typed Sentences}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {65}, number = {4}, pages = {1858--1862}, contentnote = {This has to do with New Foundations.}, topic = {type-theory;set-theory;} } @article{ crabbe:2011a, author = {Marcel Crabb\'e}, title = {Reassurance for the Logic of Paradox}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {479--485}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;paraconsistency;} } @article{ craggs-wood_mm:2005a, author = {Edward Craggs and Mary McGee Wood}, title = {Evaluating Discourse and Dialogue Encoding Schemes}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2005}, volume = {31}, number = {3}, pages = {289--294}, topic = {discourse-tagging;intercoder-agreement;} } @incollection{ craig_e:2017a, author = {Edward Craig}, title = {Meaning and Privacy}, booktitle = {A Companion to the Philosophy of Language, Second Edition}, publisher = {John Wiley \&\ Sons}, volume = {1}, year = {2017}, editor = {Bob Hale and Crispin Wright and Alexander Miller}, pages = {250--271}, address = {New York}, abstract = {This chapter reviews epistemically private items (EPI). A highly influential tradition makes the meaning of a word depend on the nature of the 'idea' associated with it, whilst treating ideas as items before the consciousness of speakers and their hearers, hence as strong candidates for epistemic privacy. Michael Dummett has denied that EPI can play any role in the semantics of the public language. For this view he advances a group of three closely related arguments, which we may call respectively the arguments from Communicability, from Acquisition, and from Manifestation. The immediately obvious candidates for EPI-affected semantics are expressions which purport to describe sensations, and those standing for properties at least plausibly thought of as powers to produce sensations of certain kinds. Grasp of meaning, once any part is denied to EPI, must consist in the capacity for some kind of publicly accessible behavior. }, topic = {privileged-access;subjectivity;} } @book{ craig_rt-tracey_k:1983a, editor = {Robert T. Craig and Karen Tracey}, title = {Conversational Coherence: Form, Structure and Strategy}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1983}, address = {London}, topic = {discourse-coherence;discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ craig_rt-tracey_k:1983b, author = {Robert T. Craig and Karen Tracey}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Conversational Coherence: Form, Structure and Strategy}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1983}, editor = {Robert T. Craig and Karen Tracey}, address = {London}, missinginfo = {pages}, rtnote = {pages = {10--}}, topic = {discourse-coherence;discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @article{ craig_w:1957a, author = {William Craig}, title = {Three Uses of the {H}erbrand-{G}entzen Theorem on Relating Model Theory to Proof Theory}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1957}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {269--285}, topic = {proof-theory;model-theory;} } @article{ craig_wl:1998a, author = {William Lane Craig}, title = {McTaggart's Paradox and the Problem of Temporary Intrinsics}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1998}, volume = {58}, number = {2}, pages = {122--127}, xref = {Commentary: oaklander_n:1999a}, topic = {A-series-B-series;philosophy-of-time;} } @article{ craig_wl:1999a, author = {William Lane Craig}, title = {Oaklander on {M}c{T}aggart and Intrinsic Change}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1999}, volume = {59}, number = {4}, pages = {319--320}, xref = {Reply to: oaklander_ln:1999a}, topic = {A-series-B-series;philosophy-of-time;} } @incollection{ craig_wl:2003a, author = {William Lane Craig}, title = {In Defense of Presentism}, booktitle = {Time, Tense, and Reference}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Alexander Joki\'c and Quentin Smith}, pages = {391--408}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;metaphysics;} } @unpublished{ crain-fodor_jd:1980a, author = {Stephen Crain and Janet D. Fodor}, title = {How Can Grammers Help Parsers?}, year = {1980}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Connecticut}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Year is a wild guess.}, topic = {parsing-psychology;} } @article{ crain-pietroski_pm:2001a, author = {Stephen Crain and Paul Pietroski}, title = {Nature, Nurture, and Universal Grammar}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2001}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {139--186}, topic = {L1-acquisition;universal-grammar;} } @incollection{ crain-steedman_m:1985a, author = {Stephen Crain and Mark Steedman}, title = {On Not Being Led Up the Garden Path: The Use of Context by the Psychological Parser}, booktitle = {Natural Language Parsing: Psychological, Computational and Theoretical Perspectives}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, editor = {David Dowty and Lauri Karttunen and Arnold Zwicky}, address = {Cambridge, England}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {parsing-psychology;context;} } @book{ crain-thornton:1998a, author = {Stephen Crain and Rosalind Thornton}, title = {Investigations in Universal Grammar: A Guide to Experiments on the Acquisition of Syntax and Semantics}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: geurts_b:2000a}, topic = {L1-acquisition;semantics-acquisition;} } @incollection{ crain_s:2013a, author = {Stephen Crain}, title = {Meaning in First Language Acquisition}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 3}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {2724--2752}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;L1-acquisition;} } @incollection{ crampe-euzenat:1998a, author = {Isabelle Cramp\'e and J\'er\^ome Euzenat}, title = {Object Knowledge Base Revision}, booktitle = {{ECAI}98, Thirteenth European Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1998}, editor = {Henri Prade}, pages = {3--7}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {knowledge-base-revision;} } @article{ crane_t:1990a, author = {Tim Crane}, title = {An Alleged Analogy between Numbers and Propositions}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1990}, volume = {50}, number = {4}, pages = {224--230}, topic = {propositions;epistemology;} } @article{ crane_t:1991a, author = {Tim Crane}, title = {All the Difference in the World}, journal = {The Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1991}, volume = {41}, number = {1}, pages = {1--25}, xref = {Commentary on: putnam_h:1975a1, burge_t:1979b}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc16}, topic = {externalism;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ crane_t:1992a, editor = {Tim Crane}, title = {The Contents of Experience, Essays on Perception}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780511554582}, topic = {perception;epistemology;} } @book{ crane_t:1996a, editor = {Tim Crane}, title = {Dispositions: A Debate}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1996}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0415144329}, note = {A debate involving David M. Armstrong, C.B. Martin and U.T. Place.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BD 374 .A751 1996.}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ crane_t:1998a, author = {Tim Crane}, title = {Intentionality as the Mark of the Mental}, journal = {Royal Instutute of Philosophy Supplement}, year = {1998}, volume = {43}, pages = {229--251}, topic = {intentionality;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ crane_t:2000a, author = {Tim Crane}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Paradox of Self-Consciousness}, by {J}os\'e Luis Berm\'udez}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2000}, volume = {109}, number = {4}, pages = {624--627}, xref = {Review of bermudez_jl:1998a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ crane_t:2003a, author = {Tim Crane}, title = {The Mechanical Mind}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2003}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0-415-29030-9 (hardback), 0-415-29031-7 (paperback)}, xref = {Review: knowles_j:2005a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ crane_t:2009a, author = {Tim Crane}, title = {Intentionalism}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Ansgar Beckermann and Brian P. McLaughlin and Sven Walter}, pages = {474--493}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {intentionality;philosoophy-of-mind;} } @book{ crane_t:2015a, author = {Tim Crane}, title = {The Objects of Thought}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {976-0-19--87405-5 (pbk), 976-0-19--968274-4 (hcvr)}, abstract = {... argues that the representation of the non-existent is a pervasive feature of our thought about the world, and that we will not adequately understand thought's representational power ('intentionality') unless we have understood the representation of the non-existent.}, topic = {intentionality;(non)existence;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ craven-etal:2000a, author = {Mark Craven and Dan DiPasquo and Dayne Freitag and Andrew McCallum and Tom Mitchell and Kamal Nigan and S\'ean Slattery}, title = {Learning to Construct Knowledge Bases from the World Wide Web}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {118}, number = {1--2}, pages = {69--113}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The World Wide Web is a vast source of information accessible to computers, but understandable only to humans. The goal of the research described here is to automatically create a computer understandable knowledge base whose content mirrors that of the World Wide Web. Such a knowledge base would enable much more effective retrieval of Web information, and promote new uses of the Web to support knowledge-based inference and problem solving. Our approach is to develop a trainable information extraction system that takes two inputs. The first is an ontology that defines the classes (e.g., company, person, employee, product) and relations (e.g., employed_by, produced_by) of interest when creating the knowledge base. The second is a set of training data consisting of labeled regions of hypertext that represent instances of these classes and relations. Given these inputs, the system learns to extract information from other pages and hyperlinks on the Web. This article describes our general approach, several machine learning algorithms for this task, and promising initial results with a prototype system that has created a knowledge base describing university people, courses, and research projects.}, topic = {AI-and-the-internet;machine-learning; computational-ontology;intelligent-information-retrieval;} } @article{ craven-sergot_mj:2005a, author = {Robert Craven and Mark Sergot}, title = {Distant Causation in $C+$}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2005}, volume = {79}, number = {1}, pages = {73--96}, topic = {action-formalisms;causality;ramification-problem;} } @inproceedings{ craven_r-etal:2012a, author = {Robert Craven and Francesca Toni and Cristian Cadar and Adrian Hadad and Matthew Williams}, title = {Efficient Argumentation for Medical Decision-Making}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {598--602}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We describe the application of assumption-based argumentation (ABA) to a domain of medical knowledge derived from clinical trials of drugs for breast cancer. We adapt an algorithm for calculating the admissible semantics for ABA frameworks to take account of preferences and describe a prototype implementation which uses variant-based parallel computation to improve the efficiency of query answering. }, topic = {kb-query-processing;complexity-in-AI;assumption-based-argumentation;} } @book{ craver_ce-darden_l:2013a, author = {Carl E. Craver and Lindley Darden}, title = {In Search of Mechanisms}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {2013}, address = {Chicago}, xref = {Review: levy_a3:2015a}, ISBN = {9780226039824}, topic = {explanation;mechanisms;philosophy-of-science;} } @article{ craver_cf:2001a, author = {Carl F. Craver}, title = {Role Functions, Mechanisms, and Hierarchy}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2001}, volume = {68}, number = {1}, pages = {53--74}, abstract = {...Here I synthesize Cummins' account with recent work on mechanisms and causal/mechanical explanation. ...}, topic = {mechansims;phi;losophy-of-science;} } @book{ craver_cf:2007a, author = {Carl F. Craver}, title = {Explaining the Brain}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199299317}, abstract = {...Craver constructs and defends standards for evaluating neuroscientific explanations that are grounded in a systematic view of what neuroscientific explanations are: descriptions of multilevel mechanisms. ... draws on a wide range of examples in the history of neuroscience (e.g. Hodgkin and Huxleys model of the action potential and LTP as a putative explanation for different kinds of memory), as well as recent philosophical work on the nature of scientific explanation. ...}, topic = {explanation;philosophy-of-neuroscience;} } @book{ craver_cf-darden_l:2013a, author = {Carl F. Craver and Lindley Darden}, title = {In Search of Mechanisms: Discoveries across the Life Sciences}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {2013}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {9780226039794}, topic = {mechanisms;philosophy-of-biology;} } @article{ craver_cf-kaplan_dm:2018a, author = {Carl F. Craver and David M. Kaplan}, title = {Are More Details Better? On the Norms of Completeness for Mechanistic Explanations}, journal = {British Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year = {2018}, doi = {doi:10.1093/bjps/axy015}, volume = {71}, number = {1}, pages = {287--319}, abstract = {Completeness is an important but misunderstood norm of explanation. It has recently been argued that mechanistic accounts of scientific explanation are committed to the thesis that models are complete only if they describe everything about a mechanism and, as a corollary, that incomplete models are always improved by adding more details. If so, mechanistic accounts are at odds with the obvious and important role of abstraction in scientific modelling. We respond to this characterization of the mechanist's views about abstraction and articulate norms of completeness for mechanistic explanations that have no such unwanted implications.}, topic = {mechanisms;explanation;abstraction;} } @inproceedings{ cravo-etal:1999a, author = {Maria Cravo and Jo\~ao Cachopo and Ana Cachopo and Jo\~ao Martins}, title = {Permissive Belief Revision (Preliminary Report)}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Action and Change}, year = {1999}, editor = {Michael Thielscher}, pages = {17--24}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ craw-etal:2006a, author = {Susan Craw and Nirmalie Wiratunga and Ray C. Rowe}, title = {Learning Adaptation Knowledge to Improve Case-Based Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {16--17}, pages = {1175--1192}, topic = {case-based-reasoning;machine-learning;} } @phdthesis{ crawford_jm:1990a, author = {James M. Crawford}, title = {Access-Limited Logic---A Language for Knowledge Representation}, school = {Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at Austin}, year = {1990}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Austin, Texas}, note = {Also Technical Report {AI}90--141, Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {knowledge-representation;semantic-networks;} } @inproceedings{ crawford_jm:1990b, author = {James M. Crawford and Adam Farquhar and Benjamin Kuipers}, title = {{QPC}: a Compiler From Physical Models Into Qualitative Differential Equations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, pages = {365--372}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, missinginfo = {editor}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;} } @techreport{ crawford_jm:1990c, author = {James M. Crawford}, title = {Towards a Formalization of Access-Limited Logic}, institution = {Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, The University of Texas at Austin}, number = {A190--133}, year = {1990}, address = {Austin, Texas}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {knowledge-representation;semantic-networks;} } @article{ crawford_jm-anton:1996a, author = {James M. Crawford and L.D. Anton}, title = {Experimental Results on the Crossover Point in Random 3-{SAT}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {81}, number = {1--2}, pages = {31--57}, topic = {search;experiments-on-theorem-proving-algs; computational-phase-transitions;} } @inproceedings{ crawford_jm-auton:1993a, author = {James M. Crawford and L.D. Anton}, title = {Experimental Results on the Crossover Point in Satisfiability Problems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Richard E. Fikes and Wendy Lehnert}, pages = {21--27}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, contentnote = {Efficient implementation of np-complete algs.}, topic = {experiments-on-theorem-proving-algs;} } @incollection{ crawford_jm-etal:1996a, author = {James M. Crawford and Matthew L. Ginsberg and Eugene Luck and Amitabha Roy}, title = {Symmetry-Breaking Predicates for Search Problems}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {148--159}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;kr-course;complexity-in-AI;theorem-proving;planning;search;} } @inproceedings{ crawford_jm-etherington:1992a, author = {James M. Crawford and David W. Etherington}, title = {Formalizing Reasoning about Change: a Qualitative Reasoning Approach}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, editor = {Paul S. Rosenbloom and Peter Szolovits}, pages = {577--583}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;qualitative-reasoning;frame-problem;} } @inproceedings{ crawford_jm-etherington:1995a, author = {James M. Crawford and David W. Etherington}, title = {Observations on Observations in Action Theories}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Extending Theories of Action: Formal Theories and Applications}, year = {1995}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection.}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {action;planning-formalisms;foundations-of-planning;} } @incollection{ crawford_jm-kuipers_bj:1989a, author = {James M. Crawford and Benjamin Kuipers}, title = {Towards a Theory of Access-Limited Logic for Knowledge Representation}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {67--78}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {knowledge-representation;semantic-networks;} } @inproceedings{ crawford_jm-litman_dj:1996a, author = {James M. Crawford and Diane J. Litman}, title = {Path-Based Rules in Object-Oriented Programming}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Eighth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, Vol. 2}, year = {1996}, editor = {William J. Clancey and Dan Weld}, pages = {490--497}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {kr;krcourse;object-oriented-systems;expert-systems;} } @article{ crawford_ls-etal:2013a, author = {Lara S. Crawford and Minh Binh Do and Wheeler S. Ruml and Haitham Hindi and Craig Eldershaw and Rong Zhou and Lukas Kuhn and Markus P.J. Fromherz and David Biegelsen and Johan de Kleer and Daniel Larner}, title = {On-Line Reconfigurable Machines}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2013}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {73--88}, topic = {plan-maintenance;reconfigurable-manufacturing-systems;} } @article{ crawford_p:1966a, author = {Patricia Crawford}, title = {Existence, Predication, and {A}nselm}, journal = {The Monist}, year = {1966}, volume = {50}, number = {1}, pages = {109--124}, topic = {(non)existence;logic-of-existence;ontological-argument;} } @article{ crawford_s:2004a, author = {Sean Crawford}, title = {A Solution for {R}ussellians to a Puzzle about Belief}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {3}, pages = {223--229}, topic = {proper-names;propositions;} } @article{ crawford_s:2013a, author = {Sean Crawford}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Sources of Intentionality}, by {U}riah {K}riegel}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2013}, volume = {73}, number = {1}, pages = {190--193}, xref = {Review of: kriegel_u:2010b}, topic = {intentionality;} } @article{ creaney:1998a, author = {Norman Creaney}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}urface Structure and Interpretation}, by {M}ark {S}teedman}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {24}, number = {1}, pages = {177--179}, xref = {Review of steedman_m:1997a.}, topic = {nl-semantics;categorial-grammar;} } @inproceedings{ creary_lg:1979a, author = {Lewis G. Creary}, title = {Propositional Attitudes: {F}regean Representation and Simulative Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1979}, editor = {Bruce Buchanan}, pages = {176--181}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ creary_lg-hill_cs:1975a, author = {Lewis G. Creary and Christopher S. Hill}, title = {Review of \emph{Counterfactuals}, by {D}avid {K}. {L}ewis}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1975}, volume = {42}, number = {3}, pages = {341--344}, xref = {Review of: lewis_dk:1973a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @unpublished{ creary_lg-pollard:1985a, author = {Lewis G. Creary and Carl J. Pollard}, title = {A Computational Semantics for Natural Language}, year = {1985}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Hewlett-Packard Laboratories}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess. This is clearly a preprint but I do not have the reference.}, topic = {computational-semantics;HPSG;} } @article{ creath:1977a, author = {Richard Creath}, title = {The Root of the Problem}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {273--275}, xref = {Comment on root:1977a.}, topic = {synonymy;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ creel:2020a, author = {Kathleen A. Creel}, title = {Transparency in Complex Computational Systems}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2020}, volume = {87}, number = {4}, pages = {568--589}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;explainable-AI;} } @inproceedings{ creignou_n:2010a, author = {Nadia Creignou and Johannes Schmidt and Michael Thomas}, title = {Complexity of Propositional Abduction for Restricted Sets of Boolean Functions}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {8--16}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we focus on propositional abduction, where the knowledge base and the manifestation are represented by propositional formulae. The problem of deciding whether there exists an explanation has been shown to be $\Sigma$P2-complete in general. We consider variants obtained by restricting the allowed connectives in the formulae to certain sets of Boolean functions. We give a complete classification of the complexity for all considerable sets of Boolean functions. ...}, topic = {abduction;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ creignou_n-etal:2012a, author = {Nadia Creignou and Odile Papini and Reinhard Pichler and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Belief Revision within Fragments of Propositional Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {126--136}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we present a general approach to define new revision operators derived from known operators (as for instance, Satoh's and Dalal's revision operators), such that the result of the revision remains in the fragment under consideration. ...}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ cremers:1996a, author = {Anita Cremers}, title = {Review of \emph{{D}eixis in {N}arrative: {A} {C}ognitive {S}cience {P}erspective}, by {J}udith {F}. {D}uchan, {G}ail {A}. {B}ruder, and {L}ynne {E}. {H}ewitt}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {448--449}, topic = {deixis;psycholinguistics;pragmatics;} } @article{ cremers_a-etal:2022a, author = {Alexandre Cremers and Liz Coppock and Jakub Dotla\v{c}il and Floris Roelofsen}, title = {Ignorance Implicatures of Modified Numerals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {3}, pages = {683--740}, abstract = {Modified numerals, such as at least three and more than five, are known to sometimes give rise to ignorance inferences. However, there is disagreement in the literature regarding the nature of these inferences, their context dependence, and differences between at least and more than. We present a series of experiments which sheds new light on these issues.}, topic = {implicature;experimental-semantics;} } @incollection{ crespo_i-etal:2018a, author = {In\'es Crespo and Hadii Karawani and Frank Veltman}, title = {Expressing Expectations}, booktitle = {The Science of Meaning: Essays on the Metatheory of Natural Language Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Derek Ball and Brian Rabern}, pages = {253--275}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {In this paper we have to say something about ... Conditionals, ... Relative gradable adjectives, ... Generic sentences. ... What these topics have in common is that one cannot explain the mean- ing -- not even the logical properties -- of the expressions concerned without explaining how they affect people's expectations. This can best be done in a framework in which the meaning of a sentence is not equated with its truth conditions but with its (potential) impact on the intentional state of an addressee.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, topic = {affective-meaning;conditionals;adjectives;generics;nl-semantics;modals;} } @article{ crespo_i-veltman_f:2019a, author = {In\'es Crespo and Frank Veltman}, title = {Tasting and Testing}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {42}, number = {6}, pages = {617--653}, abstract = {Our main concern in this paper is the semantics of predicates of personal taste. However, in order to see these predicates in the right perspective, we had to broaden the scope to the wider class of relative gradable adjectives. We present an analysis of the meaning of these adjectives in the framework of update semantics. ... an important characteristic of relative gradable adjectives is the interplay between their evaluative features and people's expectations. The dynamic set-up also makes it possible (a) to model the interpretation of a relative gradable adjective without supposing that the context always supplies a 'cut-off' point determining its application, and (b) to deal in a pragmatic way with situations in which the Sorites paradox arises.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {predicates-of-taste;gradable-adjectives;dynamic-semantics;} } @book{ cresswell_m:1985a, author = {Max Cresswell}, title = {Adverbial Modification in Situation Semantics: Interval Semantics and its Rivals}, publisher = {D. Reidel}, year = {1985}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {978-94-009-5414-4}, topic = {nl-semantics;adverbs;situation-semantics;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1966a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Functions of Propositions}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1966}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {545--560}, topic = {propositional-quantifiers;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1967a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Propositional Identity}, journal = {Logique et Analyse, Nouvelle S\'erie}, year = {1967}, volume = {10}, number = {39--40}, pages = {283--292}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {propositions;higher-order-logic;modal-logic;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1968a, title = {The Representation of Intensional Logics}, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"ur Mathematische Logik und Grundlagen der Mathematik}, year = {1968}, volume = {14}, pages = {289--298}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1968b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Some Proofs of Relative Completeness in Modal Logic}, journal = {Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1968}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {62--65}, contentnote = {Proves completeness of S7, S8 relative to S3. Of S6 relative to S2. Of S2 relative to E2.}, topic = {modal-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1969a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {The Elimination of De Re Modalities}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1969}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {329--330}, contentnote = {Gives conditions under which formulas with free variables in scope of [] are eliminable.}, topic = {individual-attitudes;quantifying-in-modality;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1970a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Classical Intensional Logics}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1970}, volume = {36}, pages = {347--372}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1972a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Intensional Logics and Logical Truth}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1972}, volume = {1}, pages = {2--15}, topic = {modal-logics;intensional-logic;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1972b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Second-Order Intensional Logic}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"ur mathematische.{L}ogik und {G}rundlgen der {M}athematik}, year = {1972}, volume = {18}, pages = {297--320}, topic = {completeness-proofs;modal-logic;higher-order-logic;} } @book{ cresswell_mj:1973a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Logics and Languages}, publisher = {Methuen}, year = {1973}, address = {London}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Syn & Sem of Propositional Languages 2. Propositional Logics 3. The Metaphysics of Propositions 4. The Structure of Propositions 5. Pure Categorial Languages 6. Abstraction and \lambda-categorial languages 7. The Metaphysics of Categorial Languages 8. Pragmatics 9. Some Parts of Speech 10. More Parts of Speech 11. Context-Dependence in English 12. Words and Morphemes 13. Obtaining Natural Languages 14. Meaning and Use }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, xref = {Review: guenthner_f:1977a.}, topic = {nl-semantics;pragmatics;speech-acts;pragmatics; categorial-grammar;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1973b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Physical Theories and Possible Worlds}, journal = {Logique et Analyse, Nuuvelle S\'erie}, year = {1973}, volume = {16}, number = {63--64}, pages = {495--511}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophy-of-possible-worlds;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1973c, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}hilosophical Problems in Logic: Some Recent Developments}, edited by {K}arel {L}ambert}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1973}, volume = {85}, number = {1}, pages = {158--164}, xref = {Review of: lambert_k:1970a.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1974a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {A Semantics for a Logic of `Better'}, journal = {Logique et Analyse, Nouvelle S\'erie}, year = {1974}, volume = {17}, number = {65--66}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {deontic-logic;comparative-constructions;evaluative-terms;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1974b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Adverbs and Events}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1974}, volume = {28}, pages = {455--481}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {adverbs;events;event-semantics;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1975a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Hyperintensional Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1975}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {25--38}, topic = {hyperintensionality;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1975b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Semantic Deviance}, year = {1975}, journal = {Linguistische Berichte}, volume = {35}, pages = {1--9}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1976a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {The Semantics of Degree}, booktitle = {Montague Grammar}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Barbara H. Partee}, pages = {261--292}, address = {New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;Montague-grammar;comparative-constructions; adjectives;vagueness;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1976b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Review of \emph{Formal Philosophy: Selected Papers of {R}ichard {M}ontague}, edited by {R}ichmond {H}. {T}homason}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1976}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {193--207}, xref = {Review of: montague_r1:1974a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {nl-semantics;montague-grammar;} } @unpublished{ cresswell_mj:1977b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Relative Identity}, year = {1977}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Victoria University at Wellington.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Cresswell"}, topic = {identity;semantics-of-common-nouns;} } @book{ cresswell_mj:1977c, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Categorial Languages}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1977}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Cresswell"}, topic = {type-theory;categorial-grammar;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1978a, Author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Semantics and Logic}, journal = {Theoretical Linguistics}, year = {1978}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {19--30}, topic = {nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1978b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Propositions and Points of View}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1978}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {1--41}, topic = {indexicals;context;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1978c, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Semantic Competence}, booktitle = {Meaning and Translation: Philosophical and Logical Approaches}, publisher = {New York University Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Franz Guenthner and Monica Guenthner-Reutter}, pages = {9--27}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {Argues for truth-conditional approach to semantic competence.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1978d, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}resupposition and the Delimitation of Semantics}, by {R}uth {K}empson}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1978}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {437--446}, xref = {Review of kempson_rm:1975a.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1978e, author = {Max Cresswell}, title = {Adverbs of Space and Time}, booktitle = {Formal Semantics and Pragmatics for Natural Languages}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1978}, editor = {Franz Guenthner and S.J. Schmidt}, pages = {171--199}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {adverbs;temporal-adverbials;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1979a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Interval Semantics for Some Event Expressions}, booktitle = {Semantics from Different Points of View}, year = {1979}, editor = {Rainer B\"auerle and Urs Egli and Arnim {von Stechow}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, pages = {90--116}, topic = {temporal-logic;events;nl-semantics;nl-tense;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1979b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}emantics}, by {J}ohn {L}yons}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, xref = {Review of lyons_j1:1977a1, lyons_j1:1977a2.}, pages = {289--295}, topic = {semantics-survey;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1979c, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {The World Is Everything that Is the Case}, booktitle = {The Possible and the Actual: Readings in the Metaphysics of Modality}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Michael J. Loux}, pages = {129--145}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {metaphysics;essentialism;modality; philosophy-of-possible-worlds;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1979d, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Bradley's Theory of Judgement}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {575--594}, topic = {idealism;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1980a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Jackson on Perception}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1980}, volume = {66}, pages = {123--147}, topic = {epistemology;phenomenalism;logic-of-perception;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1980b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Quotational Theories of Propositional Attitudes}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {17--40}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1981b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Adverbs of Causation}, booktitle = {Words, Worlds, and Contexts: New Approaches to Word Semantics}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1981}, editor = {Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser}, pages = {21--37}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Cresswell"}, topic = {causality;nl-semantics;adverbs;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1982a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {The Autonomy of Semantics}, booktitle = {Processes, Beliefs, and Questions}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1982}, editor = {Stanley Peters and Esa Saarinen}, pages = {69--86}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @techreport{ cresswell_mj:1982b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {De Re Belief Generalized}, institution = {Universit\"at Konstanz}, year = {1982}, address = {Konstanz}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {See cresswell_mj-vonstechow:1982a.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;individual-attitudes;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1983a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {A Highly Impossible Scene: The Semantics of Visual Contradiction}, booktitle = {Meaning, Use, and Interpretation of Language}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1983}, editor = {Rainer B\"auerle and Christoph Schwarze and Arnim von Stechow}, pages = {62--78}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-of-perception;inconsistency;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1984a, author = {Max Cresswell}, title = {Comments on von {S}techow}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1984}, volume = {3}, number = {1--2}, pages = {79--81}, topic = {nl-semantics;comparative-constructions;} } @book{ cresswell_mj:1985a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Structured Meanings}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Compositional Semantics: An Arithmetical Analogy 2. De Re Attitudes 3. Structured Meanings 4. Structural Ambiguity 5. Attitudes De Expressione 6. What Meanings Are 7. Why Meanings Are Not Internal Representations 8. Possible Worlds 9. A System of Intensions 10. Structured Meanings Again 11. Iterated Attitudes 12. \lambda-Categorial Languages 13. Indirect Discourse I 14. Indirect Discourse II 15. Discourse De Se 16. Semantics in the Picture }, xref = {Review: gupta_a1-savion:1987a, anderson_ca:1991a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;propositional-attitudes; structured-propositions;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1985b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {The Decidable Modal Logics Are Not Recursively Enumerable}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1985}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {231--233}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1987a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Magari's Theorem Via the Recession Frame}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1987}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, pages = {13--15}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1988a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}nquiry}, by {R}obert {C}. {S}talnaker}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1988}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {515--519}, xref = {Review of stalnaker_rc:1984a.}, topic = {foundations-of-modality;propositional-attitudes;belief-revision; pragmatics;agent-attitudes;belief;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1988b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Categorial Languages}, booktitle = {Categorial Grammar}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {1988}, editor = {Wojciech Buszkowski and Witold Marcisziewski and Johan van Benthem}, pages = {113--126}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {categorial-grammar;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1990a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}nformal Lectures on Formal Semantics}, by {E}mmon {B}ach}, journal = {Language}, year = {19900}, volume = {66}, number = {2}, pages = {392--396}, xref = {Review of: bach_e:1989a}, topic = {nl-semantics;common-sense-knowledge; nl-metaphysics;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1991a, author = {M.J. Cresswell}, title = {Basic Concepts of Semantics}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {24--31}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-semantics;montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1991b, author = {M.J. Cresswell}, title = {Die Weltsituation}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {71--79}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {possible-worlds;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1991c, author = {M.J. Cresswell}, title = {Adverbial Modification in $\lambda$-Categorial Languages}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {748--757}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-semantics;adverbs;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:1991d, author = {M.J. Cresswell}, title = {Syntax and Semantics of Categorial Languages}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {148--155}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {categorial-grammar;} } @book{ cresswell_mj:1994a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Language in the World: A Philosophical Enquiry}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {Hillman P106 C698 1994}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP shelves.}, contentnote = {This is a defense of possible-worlds semantics. The core seems to be an argument that yes, the explication of semantic relations in a natural language involves causality, but that this causality is explicated in terms of pw's in a way that makes pw's a particularly natural tool for semantic theory.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1995a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Incompleteness and the {B}arcan Formula}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {24}, number = {4}, pages = {379--403}, topic = {modal-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @book{ cresswell_mj:1996a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Semantic Indexicality}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1996}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0792339142}, topic = {indexicals;nl-semantics;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:1999a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}andbook of Logic and Language}, by Johan {van Benthem} and {A}lice {ter Meulen}}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1999}, volume = {63}, number = {1}, pages = {435--438}, xref = {Review of vanbenthem_j-termeulen:1996a.}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:2000a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}dvances in Modal Logic}, by {M}arcus {K}racht and {M}aarten de {R}ijke and {H}einrich {W}ansing}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2000}, volume = {65}, number = {3}, pages = {440--442}, xref = {Review of kracht_m-etal:1998a.}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:2001a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Modal Logic}, booktitle = {The {B}lackwell Guide to Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2001}, editor = {Lou Goble}, pages = {136--158}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @incollection{ cresswell_mj:2001b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {How to Complete Some Modal Predicate Logics}, booktitle = {Advances in Modal Logic, Vol. 2}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2001}, editor = {Michael Zakharyaschev and Krister Segerberg and Maartin de Rijke and Heinrich Wansing}, pages = {173--196}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my13\cresswell.ps}, topic = {modal-logic;quantifying-in-modality;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:2002a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Why Propositions Have No Structure}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2002}, volume = {36}, number = {4}, pages = {643--662}, topic = {propositions;hyperintensionality;structured-propositions;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:2002b, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Static Semantics for Dynamic Discourse}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {25}, number = {5--6}, pages = {545--571}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:2004a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Adequacy Conditions for Counterpart Theory}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {82}, number = {1}, pages = {28--41}, topic = {counterpart-theory;individuation;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:2006a, author = {Maxwell J. Cresswell}, title = {From Modal Discourse to Possible Worlds}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2006}, volume = {82}, number = {1}, pages = {307--327}, topic = {possible-worlds-semantics;foundations-of-modal-logic; philosophy-of-possible-worlds;nl-modality;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:2007a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Arabic Numerals in Propositional Attitude Sentences}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2006}, volume = {66}, number = {1}, pages = {92--93}, xref = {The strange case of "LL does not know that vii is 7".}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:2010a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Temporal Reference in Linear Tense Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {39}, number = {2}, pages = {173--200}, topic = {first-order-temporal-logic;} } @article{ cresswell_mj:2013a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Predicate Metric Tense Logic for `Now' and `Then'}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {42}, number = {1}, pages = {1--24}, topic = {temporal-logic;} } @unpublished{ cresswell_mj:2015a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Semantics Before {M}ontague: The Case Of {A}.{N}. {P}rior}, year = {2015}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Auckland University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc15}, topic = {history-of-philosophy;nl-semantics;Prior;} } @book{ cresswell_mj-hughes_ge:1995a, author = {Max J. Cresswell and G.E. Hughes}, title = {A New Introduction to Modal Logic}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1995}, address = {London}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ cresswell_mj-vonstechow:1982a, author = {Maxwell J. Cresswell and Arnim {von Stechow}}, title = {{\em De Re} Belief Generalized}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1982}, volume = {5}, number = {4}, pages = {503--535}, xref = {See cresswell_mj:1982b.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;reference;} } @article{ cresswell_ms:1969a, author = {Max J. Cresswell}, title = {Cooper's Logic of Ordinary Discourse}, journal = {Inquiry}, year = {1969}, volume = {12}, number = {1--4}, pages = {447--448}, xref = {Criticism of: cooper_ws:1968a}, topic = {conditionals;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ cresto:2012a, author = {Eleonora Cresto}, title = {A Defense of Temperate Epistemic Transparency}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {41}, number = {6}, pages = {923--955}, topic = {epistemic-logic;} } @book{ creswell:1997a, author = {John W. Creswell}, title = {Qualitative Inquiry}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1997}, address = {Thousand Oaks, California}, topic = {qualitative-methods;} } @book{ crevier:1993a, author = {Daniel Crevier}, title = {{AI}: The Tumultuous History of the Search for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Basic Books}, year = {1993}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0465029973}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Q 335 .C661 1993, Graduate Library Q 335 .C661 1993, Media Union Library Q 335 .C661 1993.}, xref = {Review: colburn:1996a.}, topic = {history-of-AI;} } @article{ crevier:1996a, author = {Daniel Crevier}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}rtificial Minds}, by {S}tan {F}ranklin}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {261--266}, xref = {Review of: franklin_s:1995a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-computation;} } @book{ crick_f:1988a, author = {Francis Crick}, title = {What Mad Pursuit: A Personal View of Scientific Discovery}, publisher = {Basic Books}, year = {1988}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-465-09138-5}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. History of science shelves.}, topic = {molecular-biology;history-of-science;science-essay;} } @book{ crick_f:1994a, author = {Francis Crick}, title = {The Astonishing Hypothesis: The Scientific Search for the Soul}, publisher = {Charles Scribner's Sons}, year = {1994}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-684-19431-7}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves. m&mcourse;}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ crick_f-koch_c:1990a, author = {Francis Crick and Christof Koch}, title = {Towards a Neurobiological Theory of Consciousness}, journal = {Seminars in the Neurosciences}, year = {1990}, volume = {2}, pages = {263--275}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr18}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ crick_f-koch_c:1998a, author = {Francis Crick and Christof Koch}, title = {Consciousness and Neuroscience}, journal = {Cerebral Cortex}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {97--107}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ crick_f-koch_c:2003a, author = {Francis Crick and Christof Koch}, title = {A Framework for Consciousness}, journal = {Nature Neuroscience}, year = {2003}, volume = {6}, pages = {119--126}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @book{ crick_m:1976a, author = {Malcolm Crick}, title = {Explorations in Language and Meaning: Towards a Semantic Anthropology}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1976}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {anthropological-linguistics;} } @book{ crimmins_m:1992a, author = {Mark Crimmins}, title = {Talk about Beliefs}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: BD 215 .C8251 1992}, ISBN = {026203185X}, xref = {Review: boer_se:1994a.}, topic = {belief;} } @article{ crimmins_m:1992b, author = {Mark Crimmins}, title = {Context in the Attitudes}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1992}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {185--198}, topic = {context;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ crimmins_m:1995a, author = {Mark Crimmins}, title = {Contextuality, Reflexivity, Iteration, Logic}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 9: {AI}, Connectionism, and Philosophical Psychology}, publisher = {Ridgeview Publishing Company}, year = {1995}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {381--399}, address = {Atasacadero, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja15}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;context;} } @article{ crimmins_m:1998a, author = {Mark Crimmins}, title = {Hesperus and {P}hosphorus: Sense, Pretense, and Reference}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1998}, volume = {107}, number = {1}, pages = {1--47}, rtnote = {Manuscript in RHT collection. CLEAR THIS}, topic = {sense-reference;quantifying-in-modality;} } @unpublished{ crimmins_m:1999b, author = {Mark Crimmins}, title = {Philosophy of Language}, year = {1999}, note = {Posted at http://www-personal.umich.edu/{\user}markcrim/u107.html.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ crimmins_m-perry_j:1989a1, author = {Mark Crimmins and John Perry}, title = {The Prince and the Phone Booth: Reporting Puzzling Beliefs}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1989}, volume = {86}, pages = {685--711}, xref = {Republication: crimmins_m-perry_j:1989a2.}, topic = {reference;foundations-of-semantics;propositional-attitudes; belief;} } @incollection{ crimmins_m-perry_j:1989a2, author = {Mark Crimmins and John Perry}, title = {The Prince and the Phone Booth: Reporting Puzzling Beliefs}, booktitle = {Readings in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter Ludlow}, pages = {963--991}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of crimmins_m-perry_j:1989a1.}, topic = {reference;foundations-of-semantics;propositional-attitudes; belief;} } @techreport{ criscuolo-etal:1994a, author = {Giovanni Criscuolo and Fausto Giunchiglia and Luciano Serafini}, title = {A Foundation of Metalogical Reasoning}, institution = {Istituto per la Ricerca Scientifica e Technoligica (IRST)}, number = {Technical Report 9403-02}, year = {1994}, address = {Trento}, topic = {metareasoning;} } @incollection{ criscuolo_g-minicozzi_e:1999a, author = {Giovanni Criscuolo and Eliana Minicozzi}, title = {On Existence of Extensions for Default Theories}, booktitle = {Logical Foundations for Cognitive Agents: Contributions in Honor of {R}ay {R}eiter}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Hector J. Levesque and Fiora Pirri}, pages = {79--85}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {default-logic;} } @book{ crisp_od:2005a, author = {Oliver D. Crisp}, title = {Jonathan {E}dwards and the Metaphysics of Sin}, publisher = {Ashgate}, year = {2005}, address = {Brighton, Vermont}, ISBN = {0 7546 3896 0}, topic = {Jonathan-Edwards;} } @article{ crisp_tm:2005a, author = {Thomas M. Crisp}, title = {Hawthorne on Knowledge and Practical Reasoning}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2005}, volume = {65}, number = {2}, pages = {138--140}, xref = {Commentary on: hawthorne_j2:2004a}, topic = {epistemology;knowledge;} } @article{ crisp_tm-warfield_ta:2001a, author = {Thomas M. Crisp and Ted A. Warfield}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}ind in a Physical World}, by {J}aegwon {K}im}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2001}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {304--316}, xref = {Review of kim_jw:1998a.}, topic = {mind-body-problem;causality;} } @incollection{ cristani_m-etal:2000a, author = {Matteo Cristani and Anthony G. Cohn and Brandon Bennett}, title = {Spatial Locations via Morpho-Mereology}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {15--25}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {We present a calculus for representing and reasoning about the location of rigid objects which may move within some region (we will speak of mobile parts). The calculus has both a mereological primitive and a morphological one, hence the title of the paper. We present an axiomatisation for congruence, our chosen morphological primitive, define the notion of mobile part, describe a subset of morpho-mereological relations suitable for representing spatial locations, and analyze the computational complexity of this set. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;mereology;} } @inproceedings{ cristea-etal:1998a, author = {Dan Cristea and Nancy Ide and Laurent Romary}, title = {Veins Theory: A Model of Global Discourse Cohesion and Coherence}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {281--285}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {discourse-coherence;} } @incollection{ cristea-etal:1999a, author = {Dan Cristea and Daniel Marcu and Nancy Ide and Valentin Tablan}, title = {Discourse Structure and Co-Reference: An Empirical Study}, booktitle = {The Relation of Discourse/Dialogue Structure and Reference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, editor = {Dan Cristea and Nancy Ide and Daniel Marcu}, pages = {46--53}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {discourse-structure;anaphora-resolution;} } @book{ cristea-etal:1999b, editor = {Dan Cristea and Nancy Ide and Daniel Marcu}, title = {The Relation of Discourse/Dialogue Structure and Reference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Robert Kasper and Paul Davis and Craige Roberts, "An Integrated Approach to Reference and Presupposition Resolution", pp. 1--10 2. Tomoko Matsui, "Approaches to {J}apanese Zero Pronouns", pp. 11--20 3. Harksoo Kim and Jeong-Mi Cho and Jungyun Seo, "Anaphora Resolution Using an Extended Centering Algorithm in a Multi-Modal Dialogue System", pp. 21--28 4. Sandra Harabagiu and Stephen Maiorano, "Knowledge-Lean Coreference Resolution and Its Relation to Textual Cohesion and Coreference", pp. 29--38 5. Elena Not and Lucia M. Tovena and Massimo Zancanaro, "Positing and Resolving Bridging Anaphora in Deverbal {NP}s", pp. 39--45 6. Dan Cristea and Daniel Marcu and Nancy Ide and Valentin Tablan, "Discourse Structure and Co-Reference: An Empirical Study", pp. 46--53 7. Jonathan DeCristofaro and Michael Strube and Kathleen F. McCoy, "Building a Tool for Annotating Reference in Discourse", pp. 54--62 8. Kathleen F. McCoy and Michael Strube, "Generating Anaphoric Expressions: Pronoun or Definite Description?", pp. 63--71 9. Rodger Kibble, "Cb or Not {Cb}?: Centering Theory Applied to {NLG}", pp. 72--81 10. Peter C. Gordon and Randall Hendrick, "Comprehension of Coreferential Expressions", pp. 82--89 11. Helen Seville and Allan Ramsay, "Reference-Based Discourse Structure for Reference Resolution", pp. 90--99 12. Frank Schilder, "Reference Hashed", pp. 100--109 13. Livia Polanyi and Martin van den Berg, "Logical Structure and Discourse Anaphora Resolution", pp. 110--117 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, topic = {discourse-structure;anaphora;reference;} } @inproceedings{ cristea-webber_bl:1997a, author = {Dan Cristea and Bonnie Webber}, title = {Expectations in Incremental Discourse Parsing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {88--95}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {discourse-structure;} } @incollection{ cristiani:2002a, author = {Matteo Cristiani}, title = {Many-Sorted Preference Relations}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {265--276}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;complexity-in-AI;preferences;qualitative-utility; constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ cristiani-hirsch_r:2004a, author = {Matteo Cristiani and Robin Hirsch}, title = {The Complexity of Constraint Satisfaction Problems for Small Relation Algebras}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {156}, number = {2}, pages = {177--196}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;interval-algebras;constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ cristianini-schollkopf:2002a, author = {Nello Cristianini and Bernhard Sch\"ollkopf}, title = {Support Vector Machines and Kernel Methods: The New Generation of Learning Machines}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {23}, number = {3}, pages = {31--41}, topic = {kernal-methods;machine-learning;} } @article{ crittenden_c:1966a, author = {Charles Crittenden}, title = {Fictional Existence}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1966}, volume = {3}, number = {4}, pages = {317--321}, topic = {fictional-characters;} } @book{ crittenden_c:1991a, author = {Charles Crittenden}, title = {Unreality: The Metaphysics of Fictional Objects}, publisher = {Cornell University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, xref = {Review: taschek:1993a.}, topic = {fiction;logic-of-existence;} } @article{ crivelli-williamson_t:1998a, author = {Paoli Crivelli Timothy Williamson}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} New Introduction to Modal Logic}, by {M}ax {J}. {C}resswell and {G}.{E}. {H}ughes}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1998}, volume = {107}, number = {3}, pages = {471--471}, xref = {Review of: hughes_ge-cresswell_mj:1996a.}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ crnic_l:2021a, author = {Luka Crni\v{c}}, title = {Remarks on Two Approaches to {NPI} Licensing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 25}, year = {2021}, editor = {Patrick Grosz and Luisa Marti and Hazel Pearson and Yasutada Sudo and Sarah Zobel}, pages = {223--237}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/issue/view/29}, abstract = {In relation to the notion of informativity, two types of approaches to DPs headed by any (any-DPs) have been distinguished. At a frst approximation, one approach takes an any-DP to be accompanied by a requirement that a clause containing it be more informative than all its relevant alternatives (cf. Kadmon & Landman 1993), while the other approach requires a clause containing it to be more informative than all its relevant alternatives that are true (cf. Chierchia 2013). The goal of this paper is to compare these approaches with respect to their predictions about the distribution of plural any-DPs in modal environments.}, topic = {polarity;} } @incollection{ crocco-delcerro:1994a, author = {Gabriella Crocco and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro}, title = {Structure, Consequence Relation, and Logic}, booktitle = {What is a Logical System?}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Dov Gabbay}, pages = {239--259}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {proof-theory;logical-consequence;} } @book{ crocco-etal:1995a, editor = {Gabriella Crocco and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig}, title = {Conditionals: From Philosophy to Computer Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {TC: 1. G. Crocco and L Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig, "Introduction", pp. 1--12 2. S.O. Hansson, "The Emperor's New Clothes: Some Recurring Problems in the Formal Analysis of Conditionals", pp. 13--31 3. H. Katsuno and K. Satoh, "A Unified View of Consequence Relation, Belief Revision, and Conditional Logic", pp. 33--65 4. C.E. Alcourr\'on, "Defeasible Logics: Demarcation and Affinities", pp. 67--102 5. Nicholas Asher, "Commonsense Entailment: A Conditional Logic for Some Generics", pp. 103--145 6. S. Lindstr\"om and W. Rabinowicz, "The Ramsey Test Revisited", pp. 147--191 7. Horacio L. Arl\'o Costa, "Epistemic Logic, Snakes, and Stars", pp. 193--239 8. Krister Segerberg, "Conditional Action", pp. 341--265 9. Craig Boutilier and Mois\'es Goldszmidt, "On the Revision of Conditional Belief Sets", pp. 267--300 10. Didier Dubois and Henri Prade, "Conditional Objects, Possibility Theory and Default Rules", pp. 301--336 11. Dov M. Gabbay, "Conditional Implications and Non-Monotonic Consequence", pp. 337--359 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LL Collection Shelves.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @incollection{ crocco-etal:1995b, author = {Gabriella Crocco and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig}, title = {Introduction (to {\it Conditionals: From Philosophy to Computer Science}}, booktitle = {Conditionals: From Philosophy to Computer Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Gabriella Crocco and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig}, pages = {1--12}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ crocco-farinasdelcerro:1996a, author = {Gabriella Crocco and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro}, title = {Counterfactuals: Foundations for Nonmonotonic Inferences}, booktitle = {Logic, Action, and Information: Essays on Logic in Philosophy and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, editor = {Andr\'e Fuhrmann and Hans Rott}, pages = {173--207}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;proof-theory; substructural-logics;} } @incollection{ crocco-lamarre:1992a, author = {Gabriella Crocco and Philippe Lamarre}, title = {On the Connection between Non-Monotonic Inference Systems and Conditional Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {565--571}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-logic;conditionals;kr-course;} } @incollection{ crocker:2008a, author = {Lawrence Crocker}, title = {Ethics and the Law's Burdens of Proof}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {272--293}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {burden-of-proof;} } @book{ crocker-etal:2000a, editor = {Matthew W. Crocker and Martin Pickering and Charles {Clifton, Jr.}}, title = {Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-63121-1}, xref = {Review: weinberg_as:2000a.}, topic = {parsing-psychology;psycholinguistics;} } @book{ crockett:1994a, author = {Larry Crockett}, title = {Turing Test and the Frame Problem: {AI}'s Mistaken Understanding of Intelligence }, publisher = {Greenwood Publishing Group}, year = {1994}, address = {Westport, Connecticut}, ISBN = {0893919268 }, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @techreport{ croft_w:1984a, author = {William Croft}, title = {The Representation of Adverbs, Adjectives, and Events in Logical Form}, institution = {Artificial Intelligence Center, SRI International}, number = {344}, year = {1984}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {nl-semantics;events;event-semantics;adverbs;adjectives;} } @article{ croft_w:1991a, author = {William Croft}, title = {The Evolution of Negation}, journal = {Journal of Linguistics}, year = {19}, volume = {27}, pages = {1--27}, topic = {negation;historical-linguistics;} } @incollection{ croft_w:1993a, author = {William Croft}, title = {Case Marking and the Semantics of Mental Verbs}, booktitle = {Semantics and the Lexicon}, year = {1993}, editor = {James Pustejovsky}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, pages = {55--72}, topic = {lexical-semantics;thematic-roles;psych-verbs;} } @article{ croft_w:1993b, author = {William Croft}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}ommon Sense Reasoning}, by {E}rnest {D}avis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {61}, number = {1}, pages = {105--112}, xref = {Review of davis_e:1991a.}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;kr;kr-course;} } @book{ croft_wa:1991a, author = {William A. Croft}, title = {Syntactic Categories and Grammatical Relations: the Cognitive Organization of Information}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {0226120899, 0226120902}, topic = {grammatical-relations;} } @incollection{ croft_wa:2015a, author = {William A. Croft}, title = {Possible Verbs and the Structure of Events}, booktitle = {Meanings and Prototypes: Studies in Linguistic Categorization}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2015}, editor = {Savas L. Tsohatzidis}, pages = {48--73}, address = {London}, topic = {event-structure;} } @book{ croft_wb:2000a, editor = {W. Bruce Croft}, title = {Advances in Information Retrieval: Recent Research from the Center for Intelligent Information Retrieval}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-7923-7812-1}, xref = {Review: harabagiu:2001a.}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @book{ croft_wb-lafferty:2003a, editor = {W. Bruce Croft and John Lafferty}, title = {Language Modeling for Information Retrieval}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2003}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {1-4020-1216-0}, xref = {Review: thompson_p:2004a.}, topic = {n-gram-models;information-retrieval;} } @incollection{ croitoru-compatangelo:2006a, author = {Madalina Croitoru and Ernesto Compatangelo}, title = {A Tree Decomposition Algorithm for Conceptual Graph Projection}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {271--276}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;conceptual-graphs;} } @article{ cronus:1965a, author = {Diodorus Cronus}, title = {Time, Truth and Ability}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1965}, volume = {25}, number = {4}, pages = {137-141}, topic = {future-contingent-propositions;(in)determinism;} } @unpublished{ cross_cb:1984a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Explanation and Conditional Logic}, year = {1984}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {conditionals;explanation;} } @phdthesis{ cross_cb:1985a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Studies in the Semantics of Modality}, school = {Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh}, year = {1985}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {modal-logic;ability;causality;probability-semantics;} } @article{ cross_cb:1985b, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Jonathan {B}ennett on `Even If{'} }, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {353--357}, topic = {nl-semantics;`even';conditionals;} } @article{ cross_cb:1986a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {`{C}an' and the Logic of Ability}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1986}, volume = {50}, pages = {53--64}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {ability;} } @incollection{ cross_cb:1990a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Belief Revision, Nonmonotonic Reasoning, and the {R}amsey Test}, booktitle = {Knowledge Representation and Defeasible Reasoning}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1990}, editor = {Henry E. Kyburg and Ronald P. Loui and Greg N. Carlson}, pages = {223--244}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Cross"}, topic = {belief-revision;Ramsey-test;} } @unpublished{ cross_cb:1991a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Desire, Belief, and Satisfactory Situations}, year = {1991}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Georgia}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. FIle Drawers, "Cross"}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;desire;} } @article{ cross_cb:1993a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {From Worlds to Probabilities: A Probabilistic Semantics for Modal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1993}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {169--192}, topic = {modal-logic;probability-semantics;} } @article{ cross_cb:1997a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {The Modal Logic of Discrepancy}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1997}, volume = {26}, number = {2}, pages = {143--168}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @unpublished{ cross_cb:1999a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {The Paradox of the Knower without Epistemic Closure}, year = {1999}, month = {November}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Philosophy, University of Georgia.}, xref = {Publication: cross_cb:2001a.}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;} } @article{ cross_cb:2000a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {A Characterization of Imaging in Terms of {P}opper Functions}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2000}, volume = {67}, number = {2}, pages = {316--318}, topic = {primitive-conditional-probability;imaging; probability-kinematics;} } @article{ cross_cb:2001a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {The Paradox of the Knower without Epistemic Closure}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {438}, pages = {319--333}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;} } @article{ cross_cb:2001b, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {A Theorem Concerning Syntactical Treatments of Nonidealized Belief}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2001}, volume = {129}, number = {3}, pages = {335--341}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;} } @article{ cross_cb:2003a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Nonmonotonic Inconsistency}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {149}, number = {2}, pages = {161--178}, xref = {Correction: cross_cb:2004b.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;(in)consistency;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ cross_cb:2004a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {More on the Paradox of the Knower without Epistemic Closure?}, journal = {Mind}, year = {2004}, volume = {113}, number = {449}, pages = {109--114}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn14.}, xref = {Reply to: uzquiano_g:2004a.}, topic = {knower-paradox;syntactic-attitudes;} } @article{ cross_cb:2004b, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {A Correction to `Nonmonotonic Inconsistency{'}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {160}, number = {1--2}, pages = {191--192}, xref = {Correction to: cross_cb:2003a2.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;(in)consistency;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ cross_cb:2006a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Conditional Logic and the Significance of {T}ooley's Example}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2006}, volume = {66}, number = {4}, pages = {325--335}, xref = {Commentary on: tooley_m:2002a}, topic = {conditionals;causality;} } @article{ cross_cb:2007a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}onditionals in Context}, by {C}hristopher {G}auker}, journal = {Mind}, year = {2007}, volume = {116}, number = {464}, pages = {1119--1122}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se10}, doi = {10.1093/mind/fzm1119}, xref = {Review of: gauker_c:2005a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ cross_cb:2008a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Antecedent-Relative Comparative World Similarity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {37}, number = {2}, pages = {101--120}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ cross_cb:2009a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Causal Independence, the Identity of Indiscernables, and the Essentiality of Origins}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2009}, volume = {106}, number = {5}, pages = {277--291}, topic = {identity-of-indiscernables;causality;} } @article{ cross_cb:2011a, author = {Charles B. Cross}, title = {Comparative World Similarity and What Is Held Fixed in Counterfactuals}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {1}, pages = {91--96}, doi = {10.1093/analys/anq109}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn11}, topic = {conditionals;counterfactual-similarity;} } @inproceedings{ cross_cb-thomason_rh:1987a, author = {Charles B. Cross and Richmond H. Thomason}, title = {Update and Conditionals}, booktitle = {Methodologies for Intelligent Systems: Proceedings of the Sixth International Symposium}, year = {1987}, editor = {Zbigniew Ras and M. Zemankova}, publisher = {North-Holland}, pages = {392--399}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {belief-revision;conditionals;} } @incollection{ cross_cb-thomason_rh:1992a, author = {Charles B. Cross and Richmond H. Thomason}, title = {Conditionals and Knowledge-Base Update}, booktitle = {Belief Revision}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Peter G\"ardenfors}, pages = {246--275}, address = {Cambridge}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no20}, topic = {belief-revision;conditionals;} } @article{ cross_r:1959a, author = {Robert C. Cross}, title = {Category Differences}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1959}, volume = {59}, pages = {255--270}, topic = {category-mistakes;sortal-incorrectness;} } @book{ cross_r:1968a, author = {Rupert Cross}, title = {Precedent in {E}nglish Law}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, year = {1968}, topic = {legal-precedent;} } @article{ cross_rc:1959a, author = {R.C. Cross}, title = {Category Differences}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1959}, volume = {59}, pages = {255--270}, topic = {philosophical-categories;category-mistakes;} } @article{ cross_t:2005a, author = {Troy Cross}, title = {What is a Disposition?}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2005}, volume = {144}, pages = {321--341}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ cross_t:2012a, author = {Troy Cross}, title = {Recent Work on Dispositions}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {1}, pages = {115--124}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de16}, topic = {dispositions;} } @book{ crossley_jn:1974a, editor = {John N. Crossley}, title = {Algebra and Logic}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1974}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-3-540-37480-0}, contentnote = {TC: 1. John N. Crossley, "Reminiscences of Logicians", pp. 1--62 2. Max J. Cresswell, "Frames and Models in Modal Logic", pp. 63--86 3. Solomon Feferman, "A Language and Axioms for Explicit Mathematics", pp. 87--139 4. Robert Gilmer, "Dimension Theory of Commutative Polynomial Rings", pp. 140--154 5. Robert Gilmer, "Dimension Theory of Power Series Rings over a Commutative Ring", pp. 155--162 6. R.I. Goldblatt and S.K. Thomason, "Axiomatic Classes in Propositional Modal Logic", pp. 163--173 7. Peter Hilton, "Nilpotent Actions on Nilpotent Groups", pp. 174--196 8. R. McFadden, "Structure Theorems for Inverse Semigroups", pp. 197--208 9. G. Metakides and A. Nerod, "Recursion theory and algebra", pp. 209--219 10. A. Mostowski, "An Exposition of Forcing", pp. 220--282 11. A. Nerode, "Logic and Foundations", pp. 283--290 12. John Staples, "Church-Rosser Theorems for Replacement Systems", pp. 291--307 } , topic = {algebraic-logic;} } @incollection{ crossley_jn:2013a, author = {John N. Crossley}, title = {What Is Mathematical Logic? A Survey}, booktitle = {Logic at the Crossroads. Volume {I}: Proof, Computation, and Agency}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amitabha Gupta and Rohit Parikh and Johan van Benthem and Eric Pacuit}, pages = {3--17}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-general;} } @incollection{ crossley_jn:2013b, author = {John N. Crossley}, title = {What Is a Proof}, booktitle = {Logic at the Crossroads. Volume {I}: Proof, Computation, and Agency}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amitabha Gupta and Rohit Parikh and Johan van Benthem and Eric Pacuit}, pages = {35--52}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {mathematical-proof;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ crossley_jn:2013c, author = {John N. Crossley}, title = {What Is the Difference Between Proofs and Programs}, booktitle = {Logic at the Crossroads. Volume {I}: Proof, Computation, and Agency}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amitabha Gupta and Rohit Parikh and Johan van Benthem and Eric Pacuit}, pages = {81--97}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {mathematical-proof;} } @book{ crossley_jn-dummett_m:1965a, editor = {John N. Crossley and Michael A.E. Dummett}, title = {Formal Systems and Recursive Functions}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1965}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic shelves.}, topic = {modal-logic;mathematical-logic;} } @article{ crossley_jn-humberstone_l:1977a, author = {John N. Crossley and Lloyd Humberstone}, title = {The Logic of `Actually{'}}, journal = {Reports on Mathematical Logic}, year = {77}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {11--29}, topic = {actuality;} } @article{ crossman-goodeve:1983a, author = {E.R.F.W. Crossman and P.J. Goodeve}, title = {Feedback Control of Hand Movement and {F}itts' Law"}, journal = {Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology}, year = {1983}, volume = {35A}, pages = {251--278}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja13}, topic = {psychometrics;motor-skills;} } @inproceedings{ crouch_r:2005a, author = {Richard Crouch}, title = {Packed Rewriting for Mapping Semantics to {KR}}, booktitle = {IWCS-6: Proceedings Sixth International Workshop on Computational Semantics, Tilburg, The Netherlands}, year = {2005}, editor = {Harry Bunt and Jeroen Geertzen and Elias Thijsse}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, topic = {computational-semantics;} } @article{ crouch_rs-pulman_sg:1993a, author = {R.S. Crouch and S.G. Pulman}, title = {Time and Modality in a Natural Language Interface to a Planning System}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {63}, number = {1--2}, pages = {265--304}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper describes a natural language interface to nonlinear planning systems. We focus on the treatments of temporal and modal information in logical form (LF, a semantic representation for natural language interpretation), and in plan query language (PQL, a language designed for framing questions about and describing nonlinear plans). A number of differences between the two formalisms emerge, and we discuss ways in which they can be reconciled to provide an interface between LF and PQL.}, topic = {nl-tense;nl-interfaces;} } @incollection{ crow_bk:1983a, author = {Brian K. Crow}, title = {Topic Shifts in Couples' Conversation}, booktitle = {Conversational Coherence: Form, Structure and Strategy}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1983}, editor = {Robert T. Craig and Karen Tracey}, pages = {136--156}, address = {London}, topic = {d-topic;discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @book{ crowell:1964a, author = {Thomas Lee Crowell, Jr.}, title = {Index to Modern {E}nglish}, publisher = {MCGraw Hill}, year = {1964}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {English-language;nl-syntax;} } @article{ crowther_t:2019a, author = {Thomas Crowther}, title = {Verbs, Times and Objects}, journal = {International Journal of Philosophical Studies}, year = {2019}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {475--497}, abstract = {The aim of the paper is to demonstrate the fruitfulness of the influential verb typology developed by Zeno Vendler for recent debates in the philosophy of perception. ... In the visual perception of events and processes there seems to be a match between the temporal duration, order and location of the events and processes which are the objects of perception and the subject's perceiving them. But this matching is absent in cases of the perception of primary substances; objects which manifestly endure over time. ... The conclusion notes some consequences of the discussion for contemporary debates about the temporal characteristics of perception.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au19}, topic = {Aktionsarten;tense-aspect;} } @article{ crull_em:2013a, author = {Elise M. Crull}, title = {Philosophy of Physics}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2013}, volume = {73}, number = {4}, pages = {771--784}, contentnote = {Summary of recent work}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;} } @book{ crumley:1999a, author = {Jack S. {Crumley II}}, title = {An Introduction to Epistemology}, publisher = {Mayfield Publishing Co.}, year = {1999}, address = {Mountain View, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {epistemology;philosophy-intro;} } @article{ crupi_v:2015a, author = {Vincenzo Crupi}, title = {Inductive Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {6}, pages = {641--650}, topic = {inductive-logic;} } @article{ crupi_v-iacona_a:2022a, author = {Vincenzo Crupi and Andrea Iacona}, title = {On the Logical Form of Concessive Conditionals}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {3}, pages = {633--651}, abstract = {... One [idea] is that the logical form of a sentence as used in a given context is determined by the content expressed by the sentence in that context. The other is that a coherent distinction can be drawn between a reading of 'if' according to which a conditional is true when its consequent holds on the supposition that its antecedent holds, and a stronger reading according to which a conditional is true when its antecedent supports its consequent. ... the logical form of concessive conditionals can be elucidated by relying on this distinction.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl22}, topic = {concessive-conditionals;} } @book{ cruse_a:2000a, author = {Alan Cruse}, title = {Meaning in Language: An Introduction to Semantics and Pragmatics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {semantics;pragmatics;} } @book{ cruse_a:2004a, author = {Alan Cruse}, title = {Meaning in Language: An Introduction to Semantics and Pragmatics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-926306-X}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-pragmatics;linguistics-intro;} } @article{ cruse_da:1972a, author = {David A. Cruse}, title = {A note on {E}nglish Causatives}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1972}, volume = {3}, number = {4}, pages = {520--528}, contentnote = {Reasons for not deriving 'kill' from 'cause to die". Introduces notion of direct causality. Discusses a wide range of examples. } , rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja22}, topic = {nl-causatives;} } @book{ cruse_da:1986a, author = {David A. Cruse}, title = {Lexical Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1986}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ cruse_da:1995a, author = {David A. Cruse}, title = {Polysemy and Related Phenomena from a Cognitive Linguistic Viewpoint}, booktitle = {Computational Lexical Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Patrick Saint-Dizier and Evelyne Viegas}, pages = {33--49}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-kr;lexical-semantics;nl-polysemy;} } @book{ cruttenden:1986a, author = {Allen Cruttenden}, title = {Intonation}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, year = {1986}, topic = {intonation;prosody;} } @book{ crystal:1969a, author = {David Crystal}, title = {Prosodic Systems and Intonation in {E}nglish}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1969}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {prosody;intonation;} } @book{ crystal:1991a, author = {David Crystal}, title = {A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics}, edition = {3rd}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1991}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {linguistics-terminology;linguistics-general;} } @article{ csazar:1955a, author = {A. Cs\'asa\'r}, title = {Sur la Structure des Espaces de Probalilit\'e Conditionelle}, journal = {Acta Mathematicaa Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae}, year = {1955}, volume = {6}, pages = {337--361}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, rtnote = {See comments in spohn_w:1986a.}, topic = {primitive-conditional-probability;} } @article{ csikasznagy_a:2009a, author = {Attila Csik\'asz-Nagy}, title = {Computational Systems Biology of the Cell Cycle}, journal = {Briefings in Bioinformatics}, year = {2009}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {424--434}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe22}, abstract = {...Here we review past and present of computational modeling of cell-cycle regulation, and discuss possible future directions of the field.}, topic = {cellular-models;systems-biology;} } @inproceedings{ csinger-poole_dl:1993a, author = {Andrew Csinger and David L. Poole}, title = {Hypothetically Speaking: Default Reasoning and Discourse Processing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {1179--1183}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {nm-ling;default-reasoning;nonmonotonic-reasoning; discourse-structure;pragmatics;} } @book{ csipak_e-zeijlstra_h:2015a, editor = {Eva Csipak and Hedde Zeijlstra}, title = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 19}, year = {2015}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TVlN2I2Z/}, alturl = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TVlN2I2Z/}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @article{ cubitt_r-sugden_r:2003a, author = {Robin Cubitt and Robert Sugden}, title = {Common Knowledge, Salience and Convention: A Reconstruction of {D}avid {L}ewis' Game Theory}, journal = {Economics and Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {175--210}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr22}, abstract = {...We re-examine [Lewis'] theory by reconstructing key parts in a more formal way, extending it, and showing how it differs from more recent game theory. In contrast to current theories of common knowledge, Lewis' theory is based on an explicit analysis of the modes of reasoning that are accessible to rational individuals and so can be used to analyse the genesis of common knowledge. Lewis' analysis of convention emphasises the role of inductive reasoning and of salience in the maintenance of conventions over time.}, topic = {David-Lewis;mutual-belief;game-theory;convention;} } @incollection{ cucala_djt-etal:2022a, author = {David J. Tena Cucala and Bernardo Cuenca Grau and Boris Motik}, title = {Faithful Approaches to Rule Learning}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {484--493}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we study the formal properties of Neural-LP--a prominent rule learning approach. We show that the rules extracted from Neural-LP models can be both unsound and incomplete: on the same input dataset, the extracted rules can derive facts not predicted by the model, and the model can make predictions not derived by the extracted rules. We also propose a modification to the Neural-LP model that ensures that the extracted rules are always sound and complete. Finally, we show that, on several prominent benchmarks, the classification performance of our modified model is comparable to that of the standard Neural-LP model. Thus, faithful learning of rules is feasible from both a theoretical and practical point of view.}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {rule-learning;} } @inproceedings{ cucchiarelli-etal:1998a, author = {Alessandro Cucchiarelli and Danilo Luzi and Paola Velardi}, title = {Automatic Semantic Tagging of Unknown Proper Names}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {286--292}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {personal-name-recognition;} } @article{ cucchiarelli-velardi:2001a, author = {Alessandro Cucchiarelli and Paola Velardi}, title = {Unsupervised Named Entity Recognition Using Syntactic and Semantic Contextual Evidence}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2001}, volume = {27}, number = {1}, pages = {123--131}, topic = {personal-name-recognition;machine-learning;} } @article{ cudd:2003a, author = {Ann E. Cudd}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}ollective Rationality and Collective Reasoning}, by {C}hristopher {M}c{M}ahon}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2003}, volume = {112}, number = {1}, pages = {118--120}, xref = {Review of: mcmahon_c:2001a.}, topic = {group-reasoning;group-attitudes;} } @inproceedings{ cui_bq-etal:1999a, author = {Baoqui Cui and Terrance Swift and David S. Warren}, title = {A Case Study in Using Preference Logic Grammars for Knowledge Representation}, booktitle = {Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence 1730: Logic Programming and Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, year = {1999}, editor = {Michael Gelfond and Nicola Leone and Gerald Pfeifer}, pages = {206--220}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {model-preference;kr;} } @article{ cui_bq-swift_t:2002a, author = {Baoaiu Cui and Terrance Swift}, title = {Preference Logic Grammars: Fixed Point Semantics and Application to Data Standardization}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {138}, number = {1--2}, pages = {117--147}, topic = {logic-programming;model-preference;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ cui_z-etal:1992a, author = {Zhan Cui and Anthony G. Cohn and David A. Randell}, title = {Qualitative Simulation Based on a Logical Formulation of Space and Time}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, editor = {Paul S. Rosenbloom and Peter Szolovits}, pages = {679--684}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;} } @book{ culicover-etal:1977a, editor = {Peter W. Culicover and Thomas Wasow and Adrian Akmajian}, title = {Formal Syntax}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1977}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0121992403}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library P158 .M18 1976}, topic = {nl-syntax;} } @book{ culicover-rochemont:1981a, author = {Peter W. Culicover and Michael Rochemont}, title = {Stress and Focus in {E}nglish}, publisher = {School of Social Sciences, University of California}, year = {1981}, address = {Irvine, California}, ISBN = {0521364124}, topic = {stress;sentence-focus;English-language;} } @article{ culicover-rochemont:1983a, author = {Peter W. Culicover and Michael S. Rochemont}, title = {Stress and Focus in {E}nglish}, journal = {Language}, year = {1983}, volume = {59}, number = {1}, pages = {123--165}, topic = {sentence-focus;intonation;} } @article{ cullen:2009a, author = {Jamie Cullen}, title = {Imitation Versus Communication: Testing for Human-Like Intelligence}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2009}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {237--254}, abstract = {$\ldots$ I explore the notion of shifting the goal posts of the Turing Test, and related tests such as the Total Turing Test, away from the exact imitation of human capabilities, and towards communication with humans instead. While the continued philosophical relevance of such tests is open to debate, the outcome is a different class of tests which are, unlike the Turing Test, immune to failure by means of sub-cognitive questioning techniques. I suggest that attempting to instantiate such tests could potentially be more scientifically and pragmatically relevant to some Artificial Intelligence researchers, than instantiating a Turing Test, due to the focus on producing a variety of goal directed outcomes through communicative methods, as opposed to the Turing Test's emphasis on `fooling' an Examiner. }, topic = {Turing-test;} } @book{ cullicover:1976a, author = {Peter W. Cullicover}, title = {Syntax}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-12-199250-0}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;nl-syntax;} } @book{ cullicover:1981a, author = {Peter Cullicover}, title = {Negative Curiosities}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Cullicover" }, topic = {negation;} } @book{ cullicover:1997a, author = {Peter W. Cullicover}, title = {Principles and Parameters: An Introduction to Syntactic Theory}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-syntax;principles-and-parameters-syntax;} } @article{ cullicover-jackendoff_rs:1997a, author = {Peter W. Cullicover and Ray Jackendoff}, title = {Semantic Subordination Despite Syntactic Coordination}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1997}, volume = {28}, number = {2}, pages = {195--230}, contentnote = {Extended study of a purported mismatch between syntactic structure and semantic representation.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ cullingford_rc:1981a, author = {Richard Cullingford}, title = {{SAM}}, booktitle = {Inside Computer Understanding: Five Programs Plus Miniatures}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1981}, editor = {Roger C. Schank and Christopher K. Riesbeck}, pages = {75--119}, address = {London}, abstract = {SAM (Script Applier Mechanism) is a system of computer programs written to investigate how knowledge of context can be used to aid in understanding stories. The basic knowledge source SAM applies is the script. Using scripts of varying degrees of complexity, SAM can read (by the process of script application) not only simple stories, but also newspaper articles referring to domains as diverse as car accidents and state visits. Each of these types of texts involve certain invariant components, such as what can happen, the order in which things happen, and who is involved. This consistency of form and content enables the script-based model of reading to be used. }, topic = {nl-understanding;} } @article{ cullity:2009a, author = {Garrett Cullity}, title = {Review of \emph{{E}thics Done Right: Practical Reasoning as a Foundation for Moral Theory}, by {E}lijah {M}illgram}, journal = {Ethics}, year = {2009}, volume = {119}, number = {3}, pages = {581--589}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn12}, xref = {Review of: millgram:2005a.}, topic = {ethics;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @book{ cullity-gaut:1997a, editor = {Garrett Cullity and Berys Gaut}, title = {Ethics and Practical Reason}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198236468 (hardcover)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BJ 1031 .E831 1997.}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ cullity-holton:2002b, author = {Garrett Cullity and Richard Holton}, title = {Particularism and Moral Theory}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {2002}, volume = {76}, note = {Supplementary Series.}, pages = {169--209}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Legal Reasoning".}, topic = {particularism;} } @article{ culotta-etal:2006a, author = {Aron Culotta and Trausti Kristjansson and Andrew McCallum and Paul Viola}, title = {Collective Feedback and Persistent Learning for Information Extraction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {14--15}, pages = {1101--1122}, topic = {machine-learning;information-extraction;} } @article{ culy:1985a, author = {Christopher Culy}, title = {The Complexity of the Vocabulary of {B}ambara}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {345--351}, topic = {formal-language-theory;nl-syntax;Bambara-language;} } @article{ culy:1996a, author = {Christopher Culy}, title = {Formal Properties of Natural Language and Linguistic Theories}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1996}, volume = {19}, number = {6}, pages = {599--617}, topic = {formal-language-theory;foundations-of-syntax;} } @incollection{ cumby_cm-roth_d:2000a, author = {Chad M. Cumby and Dan Roth}, title = {Relational Representations that Facilitate Learning}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {425--434}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {... This work develops an expressive relational representation language that allows the use of propositional learning algorithms when learning relational denitions. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {structure-learning;} } @article{ cumming_s:2008a, author = {Samuel Cumming}, title = {Variabilism}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2008}, volume = {117}, number = {3}, pages = {525--554}, contentnote = {The claim is that proper names and pronouns should be treated similarly, as bindable variables.}, topic = {proper-names;anaphora;} } @unpublished{ cumming_s:2009a, author = {Sam Cumming}, title = {Discourse Content}, year = {2009}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, UCLA}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Cumming".}, url = {http://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0B1eFV9VUSHSnYTcyNTA5ZWQtMzkwZS00OTllLWJhODUtYTVjMjY1MDIxN2E3&hl=en}, topic = {anaphora;discourse-anaphora;hyperintensionality;} } @article{ cumming_s:2013a, author = {Sam Cumming}, title = {From Coordination to Content}, journal = {Philosopher's Imprint}, year = {2013}, volume = {13}, abstract = {Frege's picture of attitude states and attitude reports requires a notion of content that is shareable between agents, yet more fine-grained than reference. Kripke challenged this picture by giving a case on which the expressions that resist substitution in an attitude report share a candidate notion of fine-grained content. A consensus view developed which accepted Kripke's general moral and replaced the Fregean picture with an account of attitude reporting on which states are distinguished in conversation by their (private) representational properties.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ cumming_s:2013b, author = {Sam Cumming}, title = {Creatures of Darkness}, journal = {Analytic Philosophy}, year = {200}, volume = {54}, number = {4}, pages = {379--400}, abstract = {In this paper, I present and defend an explication of content in terms of the mathematical notion of information.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ cumming_s:2014a, author = {Sam Cumming}, title = {Discourse Content}, booktitle = {Metasemantics: New Essays on the Foundations of Meaning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Alexis Burgess and Brett Sherman}, pages = {214--230}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {discourse-referents;reference;nl-semantics;} } @article{ cummings_ml:2021a, author = {Mary L. Cummings}, title = {Rethinking the Maturity of Artificial Intelligence in Safety-Critical Settings}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2021}, volume = {42}, number = {1}, pages = {6--15}, topic = {AI-and-society;AI-safety;social-political-implications-of-AI;} } @article{ cummings_ml-stimpson_a:2019a, author = {Mary L. "Missy" Cummings and Alexander Stimpson}, title = {Identifying Critical Contextual Design Cues Through a Machine Learning Approach}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2019}, volume = {40}, number = {4}, pages = {28--39}, topic = {CAD;context;machine-learning;} } @article{ cummins_c-etal:2012a, author = {Chris Cummins and Uli Sauerland and Stephanie Solt}, title = {Granularity and scalar implicature in numerical expressions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2012}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {135--169}, abstract = {It has been generally assumed that certain categories of numerical expressions, such as 'more than n', 'at least n', and 'fewer than n', systematically fail to give rise to scalar implicatures in unembedded declarative contexts. Various proposals have been developed to explain this perceived absence. In this paper, we consider the relevance of scale granularity to scalar implicature, and make two novel predictions: first, that scalar implicatures are in fact available from these numerical expressions at the appropriate granularity level, and second, that these implicatures are attenuated if the numeral has been previously mentioned or is otherwise salient in the context. We present novel experimental data in support of both of these predictions, and discuss the implications of this for recent accounts of numerical quantifier usage.}, topic = {scalar-implicature;n;-quantifiers;} } @book{ cummins_c-napoleon_k:2020a, editor = {Chris Cummins and Katsos Napoleon}, title = {Oxford Handbook of Experimental Semantics and Pragmatics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2020}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-250955-1, 0-19-250954-3, 0-19-183405-X}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Chris Cummins and Napoleon Katsos, "Introduction" 2. Dimitrios Skordos and David Barner, "Language Comprehension, Inference, and Alternatives" 3. Judith Degen and Michael K. Tanenhaus, "Constraint-Based Pragmatic Processing" 4. Richard Breheny, "Scalar Implicatures" 5. Sherry Yong Chen and E. Matthew Husband, "Event (De)composition" 6. Florian Schwarz, "Presuppositions, Projection, and Accommodation" 7. Myrto Grigoroglou and Anna Papafragou, "Spatial Terms" 8. Heather Ferguson, "Counterfactuals" 9. Kristen Syrett, "Distributivity" 10. Dimitra Lazaridou-Chatzigoga, "Genericity" 11. Rick Nouwen, Stavroula Alexandropoulou, and Yaron Mcnabb, "Modified Numerals" 12. Ye Tian and Richard Breheny, "Negation" 13. Lyn Tieu and Jacopo Romoli, "Plurality" 14. Adrian Brasoveanu and Jakub Dotla\v{c}il, "Quantification" 15. Patricia J. Brooks and Olga Parshina, "Quantifier Spreading" 16. Stephanie Solt, "Adjective Meaning and Scales" 17. Nicola Spotorno and Ira Noveck, "Ironic Utterances" 18. Nausicaa Pouscoulous and Giulio Dulcinati, "Metaphor" 19. Petra B. Schumacher, "Metonymy" 20. Sam Alxatib and Uli Sauerland, "Vagueness" 21. Marie Juanchich, Miroslav Sirota, and Jean-François Bonnefon, "Verbal Uncertainty" 22. Hugh Rabagliati and Mahesh Srinivasan, "Word Senses" 23. Kristen Syrett, "Antecedent-Contained Deletion" 24. Edgar Onea, "Exhaustivity in It-Clefts" 25. Christina S. Kim, "Focus" 26. Ming Xiang, "Negative Polarity Items" 27. Hannah Rohde, "Pronouns" 28. Catherine Davies and Jennifer E. Arnold, "Reference and Informativeness" 29. Judith Tonhauser, "Prosody and Meaning" 30. Thomas Holtgraves, "Politeness" 31. Paula Rubio-Fernández, "Theory of Mind" 32. J.P. De Ruiter, "Turn-Taking" }, topic = {experimental-pragmatics;experimental-semantics;} } @incollection{ cummins_dd:2002a, author = {Denise Dellarosa Cummins}, title = {The Evolutionary Roots of Intelligence and Rationality}, booktitle = {Common Sense, Reasoning, and Rationality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Ren\'ee Elio}, pages = {132--147}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {This chapter argues that several important cognitive functions are shaped (through natural selection) by the exigencies of the social environment. These functions include (i) a biological predisposition to rapidly and effectively acquire implicit rules that specify what we are permitted, obligated, or forbidden to do within our social groups; and (ii) a domain-specific embedding function that enables us to effortlessly form hierarchically structured representations of what is socially crucial but essentially hidden from view, namely, the minds of others. The implication is that our capacity to form deeply embedded mental representations (and hence deeply embedded goal structures) emerged as an adaptation to the social environment. The pressure to compete and cooperate successfully with conspecifics constituted a crucible that necessitated and forged this crucial cognitive function. }, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;social-reasoning;} } @article{ cummins_r:1974a, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {Dispositions, States and Causes}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1974}, volume = {34}, number = {6}, pages = {194--204}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ cummins_r:1975a, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {Truth and Logical Form}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1975}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {29--44}, contentnote = {Criticizes Davidson's application of the learnability argument.}, topic = {logical-form;truth-definitions;Davidson-semantics;} } @article{ cummins_r:1977a, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {Programs in the Explanation of Behaviour}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1977}, volume = {44}, number = {2}, pages = {269--287}, abstract = {The purpose of this paper is to set forth a sense in which programs can and do explain behavior, and to distinguish from this a number of senses in which they do not. Once we are tolerably clear concerning the sort of explanatory strategy being employed, two rather interesting facts emerge; (1) though it is true that programs are "internally represented," this fact has no explanatory interest beyond the mere fact that the program is executed; (2) programs which are couched in information processing terms may have an explanatory interest for a given range of behavior which is independent of physiological explanations of the same range of behaviour.}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;philosophy-of-psychology;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @article{ cummins_r:1977b, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {Reply to {H}ugly and {S}ayward}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {353--354}, contentnote = {This is a reply to hugly_p-sayward_c:1977a.}, topic = {logical-form;truth-definitions;Davidson-semantics;} } @article{ cummins_r:1979a, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {Intention, Meaning, and Truth Conditions}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1979}, volume = {35}, number = {4}, pages = {345--360}, contentnote = {Commentary on Jonathan Bennett}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;convention;nl-semantics;metasemantics;} } @book{ cummins_r:1983a, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {The Nature of Psychological Explanation}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {HILLMAN BF38.5 .C85 1983}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. PhilSci Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-psychology;} } @book{ cummins_r:1989a, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {Meaning and Mental Representation}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262031396}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate B 105 .R4 C861 1988}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;representation;philosophy-of-language; foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ cummins_r:1991a, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {Form, Interpretation, and the Uniqueness of Content: Response to {M}orris}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1991}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {31--42}, abstract = {In response to Michael Morris, I attempt to refute the crucial second premise of the argument, which states that the formality condition cannot be satisfied `non-stipulatively' in computational systems. I defend the view of representation urged in Meaning and Mental Representation against the charge that it makes content stipulative and therefore irrelevant to the explanation of cognition. Some other reservations are expressed. }, xref = {Response to: morris_m:1991a}, topic = {mental-representations;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ cummins_r:1996a, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {Representations, Targets, and Attitudes}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {HILLMAN B105 R4C84 1996}, xref = {Review: egan:1998a.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;philosophy-of-mind; foundations-of-semantics;intentionality; foundations-of-cognition;} } @article{ cummins_r:1996b, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {Systematicity}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1996}, volume = {93}, number = {12}, missinginfo = {pages = 591--???}, topic = {philosophy-of-cogsci;C-systemacitity;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ cummins_r:1997a, author = {Robert Cummins}, title = {The Lot of the Causal Theory of Mental Content}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1997}, volume = {94}, number = {10}, pages = {535--542}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;propositional-attitudes; foundations-of-cognition;} } @book{ cummins_r-cummins_dd:1999a, editor = {Robert Cummins and Denise Dellarosa Cummins}, title = {Minds, Brains, Computers: The Foundations of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1999}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {1-55786-877-8 (pb)}, topic = {philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @article{ cummins_r-etal:2002a, author = {Robert Cummins and Alexa Lee and Martin Roth and David Byrd and Pierre Poirier}, title = {Review of \emph{{O}n Clear and Confused Ideas: An Essay about Substance Concepts}, by {R}uth {G}arrett {M}illikan}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {99}, number = {2}, pages = {102--108}, xref = {Review of: millikan_rg:2000a.}, topic = {metaphysics;individuation;substance;} } @article{ cummins_r-gottlieb_d:1972a, author = {Robert Cummins and Dale Gottlieb}, title = {On an Argument for Truth-Functionality}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1972}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {265--269}, topic = {truth-functionality;} } @article{ cummins_r-gottlieb_d:1976a, author = {Robert Cummins and Dale Gottlieb}, title = {Better Total Consequences: Utilitarianism and Extrinsic Value}, journal = {Metaphilosophy}, year = {1976}, volume = {7}, number = {3/4}, pages = {286--306}, topic = {utilitarianism;} } @book{ cummins_r-pollock_jl:1991a, editor = {Robert Cummins and John L. Pollock}, title = {Philosophy and {AI}: Essays at the Interface}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, contentnote = {Chapters: 1. Michael Bratman and David Israel and Martha Pollack, "Plans and Resource-Bounded Practical Reasoning", pp. 1--22 2. Robert Cummins, "Cross-Domain Inference and Problem Embedding", pp. 23--38 3. Jon Doyle, "The Foundations of Psychology: A Logico-Computational Inquiry into the Concept of Mind", pp. 39--77 4. Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin, Michael Miller, and Donald Perlis, "Memory, Reason, and Time: the Step-Logic Approach", pp 79--103 5. Glymour, Kelley and Spirtes, "Artificial Intelligence and Hard Problems: The Expected Complexity of Problem Solving", pp. 105--128 6. Henry Kyburg, "Normative and Descriptive Ideals", pp. 129--139 7. Ron Loui, "Ampliative Inference, Computation, and Dialectic", pp. 141--155 8. Judea Pearl, "Probabilistic Semantics for Nonmonotonic Reasoning", pp. 157--187 9. John L. Pollock, "OSCAR: A General Theory of Rationality", pp. 189--213 10. Stuart C. Shapiro and William J. Rapaport, "Models and Minds: Knowledge Representation for Natural-Language Competence", pp. 215--259 11. Yoav Shoham, "Implementing the Intensional Stance", pp. 261--277 12. Paul Thagard, "The Dinosaur Debate: Explanatory Coherence and the Problem of Competing Hypotheses", pp. 279--300 }, isbn = {0-262-03180-9}, xref = {Review: steinhart:1997a}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @article{ cummins_rc:1975a, author = {Robert C. Cummins}, title = {Functional Analysis}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1975}, volume = {72}, number = {20}, pages = {741--765}, topic = {functionalism;function;} } @incollection{ cunningham_h-etal:1998a, author = {Hamish Cunningham and Mark Stevenson and Yorick Wilks}, title = {Implementing a Sense Tagger in a General Architecture for Text Engineering}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {59--71}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {This describes uses of GATE, a general architecture for language engineering.}, topic = {corpus-tagging;lexical-disambiguation;} } @article{ cunningham_s1:1997a, author = {Suzanne Cunningham}, title = {Two Faces of Intentionality}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1997}, volume = {64}, number = {3}, pages = {445--460}, topic = {intentionality;} } @book{ cunningham_s1:2000a, author = {Suzanne Cunningham}, title = {What is a Mind?}, publisher = {Hackett Publishing Co.}, year = {2000}, address = {Indianapolis}, ISBN = {0-87220-518-5 (pbk), 0-87220-518-3 (hardcover)}, contentsnote = {TC: 1. What sort of thing is a mind? 2. What does it mean to be conscious? 3. Where do emotions fit? 4. Did the mind evolve? 5. What is a self? 6. Could a machine have a mind? 7. How do we link behavior to mental states? }, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate Library BD 418.3 .C791 2000.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-intro;} } @book{ cunningham_s2-hubbold:1992a, editor = {S. Cunningham and R.J. Hubbold}, title = {Interactive Learning Through Visualization: The Impact of Computer Graphics in Education}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540551050}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Andries van Dam, "Electronic Books and Interactive Illustrations: Transcript of a Talk" 2. Richard L. Phillips, "Opportunities for Multimedia in Education" 3. John Lansdown, "Mnemotechnics and the Challenge of Hypermedia" 4. Christoph Hornung, "Cooperative Learning Using Hypermedia" 5. G. Scott Owen, "Hyper{G}raph: A Hypermedia System for Computer Graphics Education" 6. Shogo Nishida, "Hyper-Simulator Based Learning Environment to Enhance Human Understanding" 7. Thomas G. West, "Visual Thinkers, Mental Models and Computer Visualization" 10. Judith R. Brown, "The Multi-Faceted Blackboard: Computer Graphics in Higher Education" 11. Charlie Gunn, "Remarks on Mathematical Courseware" 12. Kenneth O'Connell, "Visualization of Concepts in Physics" 13. Hermann Haertel, "Visual Ways of Knowing, Thinking, and Interacting" 14. Jonathan P. Taylor, "Prospero: A System for Representing the Lazy Evaluation of Functions" 15. Jacques Raymond, "Computer aSsisted Lecturing: One Implementation" 16. Joan Truckenbrod and Barbara Mones-Hattal, "Interactive Computer Graphics via Telecommunications" 17. Donna J. Cox, "Collaborative Computer Graphics Education" 18. Bernard Levrat, "Portability of Educational Materials Using Graphics" 19. Adele Newton, "Collaboration between Industry and Academia: Computer Graphics in Design Education" 20. Ahmad H. Nasri, "Computer Graphics in Computer Graphics Education" 21. Albert Paoluzzi, "Solid Modeling in Computer Graphics Education" }, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, LB 1028.75 .I571 1992.}, topic = {computer-graphics;computer-assisted-education;} } @book{ cuonzo:2014a, author = {Margaret Cuonzo}, title = {Paradox}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-52545-7}, topic = {paradoxes;} } @book{ cupillari:2001a, author = {Antonella Cupillari}, edition = {2}, title = {The Nuts and Bolts of Proofs}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {2001}, address = {San Diego}, topic = {mathematics-primer;how-to-prove-it;} } @article{ curley_em:1972a, author = {Edwin M, Curley}, title = {Lewis and Entailment}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1972}, volume = {23}, number = {3}, pages = {198--204}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ curran_a:1995a, author = {Angelica Curran}, title = {Utilitarianism and Future Mistakes: Another Look}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1995}, volume = {78}, number = {1}, pages = {71--85}, doi = {doi:10.1007/BF00989819}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn10}, topic = {deontic-logic;secondary-obligations;'ought';alternatives-for-action; actualism/possibilism;ability;predicted-behavior-and-obligation;} } @inproceedings{ curran_j:2005a, author = {James Curran}, title = {Supersense Tagging of Unknown Nouns Using Semantic Similarity}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {26--33}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1004}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;machine-learning;} } @article{ currie_g:1980a, author = {Gregory Currie}, title = {Frege on Thoughts}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1980}, volume = {89}, number = {354}, pages = {234--248}, topic = {Frege;sense-reference;} } @incollection{ currie_g:1995a, author = {Gregory Currie}, title = {Imagination and Simulation: Aesthetics Meets Cognitive Science}, booktitle = {Mental Simulation: Evaluations and Applications}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Martin Davies and Tony Stone}, pages = {151--169}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {folk-psychology;mental-simulation; psychology-of-pretense;} } @article{ currie_k-tate:1991a, author = {Ken Currie and Austin Tate}, title = {O-Plan: The Open Planning Architecture}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {52}, number = {1}, pages = {49--86}, topic = {planning;} } @article{ curry_hb:1933a, author = {Haskell B. Curry}, title = {Apparent Variables from the Standpoint of Combinatory Logic}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics}, year = {1933}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {381--404}, topic = {combinatory-logic;variable-binding;} } @book{ curry_hb:1950a, author = {Haskell Curry}, title = {A Theory of Formal Deducibility}, publisher = {Notre Dame University Press}, year = {1950}, address = {Notre Dame, Indiana}, xref = {JSL 16.1}, topic = {proof-theory;first-order-logic;} } @article{ curry_hb:1950b, author = {Haskell Curry}, title = {Language, Metalanguage, and Formal System}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1950}, volume = {59}, number = {3}, pages = {346--353}, xref = {XVIII 270}, topic = {semantic-metalanguages;logic-editorial;} } @article{ curry_hb:1958a, author = {Haskell Curry}, title = {On Definitions in Formal Systems}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1958}, volume = {1}, number = {3/4}, pages = {105--114}, topic = {definitions;} } @book{ curry_hb:1963a, author = {Haskell Curry}, title = {Foundations of Mathematical Logic}, publisher = {McGraw-Hill}, year = {1963}, address = {New York}, topic = {logic-classics;} } @incollection{ cushing_jt:2000a, author = {James T. Cushing}, title = {Bohmian Insights into Quantum Chaos}, booktitle = {{PSA}'1998: Proceedings of the 1998 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2000}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {S430--S445}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {quantum-chaos;} } @book{ cushing_s:1977a, author = {Stephen Cushing}, title = {The Formal Semantics of Quantification}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;fractional-quantifiers;quantifiers;} } @article{ cushing_s:1987a, author = {Steven Cushing}, title = {Some Quantifiers Require Two-Predicate Scopes}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {32}, number = {2}, pages = {259--267}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Predicate calculus has long served as the basis of mathematical logic and has more recently achieved widespread use in artificial intelligence. This system of logic expresses propositions in terms of quantifications, restricting itself to the universal and existential quantifiers ``all'' and ``some'', which appear to be adequate for formalizing mathematics. Systems that aspire to deal with natural language or everyday reasoning, however, must attempt to deal with the full range of quantifiers that occur in such language and reasoning, including, in particular, plurality quantifiers, such as ``most'', ``many'', and ``few''. The logic of such quantifiers forces an extension of the predicate-calculus framework to a system of representation that involves more than one predicate in each quantification. In this paper, we prove this result for the specific case of ``most''. Unlike some other arguments that attempt to establish the inadequacy of standard predicate calculus on the basis of intuitive plausibility judgements as to the likely character of human reasoning [11, 19], our result is a theorem of logic itself.}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ cussens-hunter_a:1991a, author = {James Cussens and Anthony Hunter}, title = {Using Defeasible Logic for a Window on a Probabilistic Database: Some Preliminary Notes}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {146--152}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;probabilities;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @incollection{ cussens-pulman_sg:2000a, author = {James Cussens and Stephen Pulman}, title = {Incorporating Linguistics Constraints into Inductive Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {184--193}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {grammar-learning;inductive-logic-programming;} } @incollection{ custer:1998a, author = {Bradley P. Custer}, title = {Position Paper on Appropriate Audio/Visual {T}uring Test}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {287--288}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {Turing-test;} } @inproceedings{ cutler:1974a, author = {Anne Cutler}, title = {On Saying What you Mean Without Meaning What You Say}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society}, year = {1974}, pages = {117--217}, editor = {M. LaGaly and R.A. Fox and A. Brock}, publisher = {Chicago Linguistics Society}, address = {Chicago University, Chicago, Illinois}, topic = {implicature;speaker-meaning;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ cutler:1977a, author = {Anne Cutler}, title = {The Context Dependence of `Intonational Meaning'}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society}, year = {1977}, editor = {W. Beach and S. Fox and S. Philosoph}, pages = {104--115}, publisher = {Chicago Linguistics Society}, address = {Chicago University, Chicago, Illinois}, missinginfo = {editor}, topic = {intonation;pragmatics;} } @article{ cutler:1987a, author = {Anne Cutler}, title = {The Task of the Speaker and the Task of the Hearer}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1987}, volume = {10}, pages = {715--716}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {conversation;implicature;} } @incollection{ cutter_b:2017a, author = {Brian Cutter}, title = {The Metaphysical Implications of the Moral Significance of Consciousness}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 31: Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2017}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {103--130}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {consciousness;ethics;} } @article{ cutter_b-tye_m:2011a1, author = {Brian Cutter and Michael Tye}, title = {Tracking Representationalism and the Painfulness of Pain}, journal = {Philosophical Issues}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {90--100}, xref = {Republication: cutter_b-tye_m:2011a2}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ cutter_b-tye_m:2011a2, author = {Brian Cutter and Michael Tye}, title = {Tracking Representationalism and the Painfulness of Pain}, booktitle = {The Epistemology of Perception}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2011}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Berit Brogard}, pages = {90--109}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: cutter_b-tye_m:2011a1}, topic = {epistemology;pain;} } @article{ cutting-bock:1997a, author = {J. Cooper Cutting and Kathryn Bock}, title = {That's the Way the Cookie Bounces: Syntactic and Semantic Components of Experimentally Elicited Idiom Blends}, journal = {Memory and Cognition}, year = {1997}, volume = {25}, pages = {57--71}, topic = {idioms;} } @article{ cvetkovic-pevac:1988a, author = {Drago\u{s} Cvetkovi\'{c} and Irena Pevac}, title = {Man-Machine Theorem Proving in Graph Theory}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {35}, number = {1}, pages = {1--23}, topic = {theorem-proving;computer-assisted-science;} } @book{ cyert-march:1963a, author = {Richard M. Cyert and J.G. March}, title = {A Behavioral Theory of the Firm}, publisher = {Prentice Hall}, year = {1963}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {management-science;} } @inproceedings{ cyras_k-etal:2016a, author = {Kristijonas Cyras and Ken Satoh and Francesca Toni}, title = {Abstract Argumentation for Case-Based Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {549--552}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We investigate case-based reasoning (CBR) problems where cases are represented by abstract factors and (positive or negative) outcomes, and an outcome for a new case, represented by abstract factors, needs to be established. To this end, we employ abstract argumentation (AA) and propose a novel methodology for CBR, called AA-CBR. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;case-based-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ cyras_k-oliveira_t:2018a, author = {Kristijonas Cyras and Tiago Oliveira}, title = {Argumentation for Reasoning with Conflicting Clinical Guidelines and Preferences}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {631--632}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We propose to use two structured argumentation formalisms, assumption-driven ABA+ and goal-driven ASPIC-G, to enable automated patient-centric medical reasoning with interacting clinical guideline recommendations, patient-specific conditions and preferences over recommendations and goals. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;medical-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ cyras_k-toni_f:2016a, author = {Kristijonas Cyras and Francesca Toni}, title = {{ABA}+: Assumption-Based Argumentation with Preferences}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {553--556}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We present a novel approach to account for preferences in a well known structured argumentation formalism, Assumption-Based Argumentation (ABA). The new formalism, called ABA+, incorporates object-level preferences (over assumptions) directly into the attack relation to reverse attacks. We give several basic desirable properties of ABA+.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;preferenes;} } @book{ czekakowski_j:2015a, author = {Janusz Czekakowski}, title = {Freedom and Enforcement in Action. Elements of Formal Action Theory}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2015}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-94-017-9854-9}, abstract = {The chapters here focus on specialized tasks in formal action theory, beginning with a thorough description and formalization of the language of action, and moving through material on the differing models of action theory to focus on probabilistic models, the relations of formal action theory to deontic logic, and its key applications in algorithmic and programming theory. ...}, topic = {deontic-logic;action-formalisms;} } @article{ czekakowski_j:2020a, author = {Janusz Czekakowski}, title = {Deontology of Compound Actions}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2020}, volume = {108}, number = {1}, pages = {5--48}, abstract = {This paper, being a companion to the book czekakowski_j:2015a elaborates the deontology of sequential and compound actions based on relational models and formal constructs borrowed from formal linguistics. ... The issue of permission and obligation of actions is presented in the form of a logical system. This system is semantically defined by providing its intended models in which the role of actions of various types (atomic, sequential and compound ones) is accentuated. Since the consequence relation is not finitary, other semantically defined variants of are defined. The focus is on the finitary system in which only finite compound actions are admissible. An adequate axiom system for it is defined. The strong completeness theorem is the central result. The role of the canonical model in the proof of the completeness theorem is emphasized.}, topic = {deontic-logic;action-formalisms;completeness-theorems;} } @incollection{ czelakowski:1996a, author = {Janusz Czelakowski}, title = {Elements of Formal Action Theory}, booktitle = {Logic, Action, and Information: Essays on Logic in Philosophy and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, editor = {Andr\'e Fuhrmann and Hans Rott}, pages = {3--62}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {This is a useful survey article on the philosophical side of action theory. The author is apparently unaware of the work in AI.}, topic = {action;action-formalisms;STIT;} } @article{ czermak:1974a, author = {J. Czermak}, title = {A Logical Calculus with Descriptions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1974}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {211--228}, topic = {definite-descriptions;} } @inproceedings{ dabrowski_kk-etal:2020a, author = {Konrad K. Dabrowski and Peter Jonsson and Sebastian Ordyniak and George Osipov}, title = {Fine-Grained Complexity of Temporal Problems}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {284--293}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... We present novel algorithms that exploit structural properties of the solution space [for simple temporal problem (STP)] and prove, assuming the Exponential-Time Hypothesis, that their worst-case time complexity is close to optimal. Among other things, we make progress towards resolving a long-open question concerning whether Allen's interval algebra can be solved in single-exponential time, by giving a 2^{O(nloglog(n))} algorithm for the special case of unit-length intervals.}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ dacey_r:1975a, author = {Raymond Dacey}, title = {The Role of Economic Theory in Supporting Counterfactual Arguments}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1975}, volume = {35}, number = {3}, pages = {402--410}, topic = {conditional-reasoning;economics;} } @article{ daciuk:2004a, author = {Jan Daciuk}, title = {Comments on `Incremental Construction and Maintenance of Minimal Finite-State Automata{'} by {R}afael {C}. {C}arrasco and {M}ikel {L}. {F}orcada}, Journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {2}, pages = {227--235}, xref = {Comments on: carrasco-forcada:2002a.}, topic = {finite-state-automata;finite-state-nlp;} } @incollection{ daciuk-etal:1998a, author = {Jan Daciuk and Bruce W. Watson and Richard E. Watson}, title = {Incremental Construction of Minimal Acyclic Finite State Automata and Transducers}, booktitle = {{FSMNLP'98}: International Workshop on Finite State Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Lauri Karttunen}, pages = {48--55}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-processing;finite-state-nlp;finite-state-automata; construction-of-FSA;} } @article{ daciuk-etal:2000a, author = {Jan Daciuk and Stoyan Mihov and Bruce W. Watson and Richard E. Watson}, title = {Incremental Construction of Minimal Acyclic Finite-State Automata}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {3--16}, topic = {finite-state-nlp;finite-state-automata;} } @article{ dacosta-bueno_o:1999a, author = {Newton C.A. da Costa and Ot\'avio Bueno}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}ussell et le Cercle des Paradoxes}, by {P}hilippe de {R}ouilhan}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {64}, number = {4}, pages = {1845--1847}, xref = {Review of: derouilhan:1996a}, topic = {Russell;paradoxes;} } @article{ dacosta-doria:1995a, author = {Newton C.A. da Costa and Francesco Doria}, title = {On {J}a\'skowski's Discussive Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1995}, volume = {54}, number = {1}, pages = {33--60}, topic = {paraconsistency;quantum-logic;} } @article{ dacosta-etal:1998a, author = {Newton C.A. da Costa and Ot\'avia Bueno and Steven French}, title = {The Logic of Pragmatic Truth}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {27}, number = {6}, pages = {603--621}, topic = {modal-logic;paraconsistency;} } @article{ dacosta-french_s:1991a, author = {Newton C.A. da Costa and Steven French}, title = {On {R}ussell's Principle of Induction}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1991}, volume = {86}, number = {2}, pages = {225--295}, topic = {Russell;induction;} } @incollection{ dacostapereira_c-etal:2018a, author = {Celia da Costa Pereira and Beishui Liao and Alessandra Malerba and Antonino Rotolo and Andrea G. B. Tettamanzi and Leendert van der Torre and Serena Villata}, title = {Handling Norms in Multi-Agent Systems by Means of Formal Argumentation}, booktitle = {Handbook of Normative Multiagent Systems}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2018}, editor = {Amit Chopra and Leon van der Torre and Harko Verhagen and Serena Villata}, pages = {343--370}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\chopra.pdf}, topic = {multiagent-systems;deontic-logic;argumentatiion-theory;} } @phdthesis{ daelemans:1987a, author = {Walter Daelemans.}, title = {Studies in Language Technology: An Object-Oriented Computer Model of Morphophonological Aspects of {D}utch}, school = {Katholieke Universiteit Leuven}, year = {1987}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Leuven}, topic = {Dutch-language;morphology;nm-ling;} } @inproceedings{ daelemans:1987b, author = {Walter Daelemans}, title = {A Tool for the Automatic Creation, Extension, and Updating of Lexical Knowledge Bases}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third Conference of the {E}uropean {C}hapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1987}, organization = {{A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, pages = {70--74}, missinginfo = {editor, address, publisher}, topic = {computational-lexicography;} } @incollection{ daelemans:1998a, author = {Walter Daelemans}, title = {Abstraction is Harmful in Language Learning (Abstract)}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {1}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-learning;nl-processing;abstraction;} } @article{ daelemans:2001a, author = {Walter Daelemans}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}earnability in Optimality Theory}, by {B}ruce {T}esar and {P}aul {S}molensky}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2001}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {316--317}, xref = {Review of: tesar-smolensky:2000a.}, topic = {grammar-learning;optimality-theory;} } @article{ daelemans:2004a, author = {Walter Daelemans}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}ecent Advances in Example-Based Machine Translation}, edited by {M}ichael {C}arl and {A}ndy {W}ay}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {4}, pages = {516--520}, xref = {Review of: carl-way:2003a.}, topic = {machine-translation;} } @article{ daelemans-etal:1992a, author = {Walter Daelemans and Koenraad De Smedt and Gerald Gazdar}, title = {Inheritance in Natural Language Processing}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1992}, volume = {18}, pages = {205--218}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {inheritance;nl-processing;} } @book{ daelemans-gazdar_g:1980a, editor = {Walter Daelemans and Gerald Gazdar}, title = {Inheritance and Natural Language Processing: Workshop Proceedings}, publisher = {Institute for Language Technology and AI, Tilburg University}, year = {1980}, address = {Tilburg}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, } @incollection{ dagan-etal:1997a, author = {Ido Dagan and Yale Kerov and Dan Roth}, title = {Mistake-Driven Learning in Text Categorization}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {55--63}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {empirical-methods-in-nlp;machine-learning; topic-extraction;} } @inproceedings{ dagan-etal:1997b, author = {Ido Dagan and Lillian Lee and Fernando Pereira}, title = {Similarity-Based Methods for Word Sense Disambiguation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {56--63}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;nl-processing;} } @article{ dagostino_f:1984a, author = {Fred D'Agostino}, title = {Chomsky on Creativity}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1984}, volume = {58}, number = {1}, pages = {63--117}, topic = {Chomsky;creativity;} } @incollection{ dagostino_g-hollenberg:1998a, author = {Giovanna D'Agostino and Marco Hollenberg}, title = {Uniform Interpolation, Automata and the Modal $\mu$-Calculus}, booktitle = {Advances in Modal Logic, Volume 1}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1998}, editor = {Marcus Kracht and Maarten de Rijke and Heinrich Wansing}, pages = {73--84}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ dagostino_m:1992a, author = {Marcello D'Agostino}, title = {Are Tableaux an Improvement on Truth-Tables? Cut-Free Proofs and Bivalence}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1992}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {235--252}, topic = {proof-theory;semantic-tableaux;cut-free-deduction;} } @article{ dagostino_m-etal:1997a, author = {Marcello D'Agostino and Dov. M. Gabbay and Alessandra Russo}, title = {Grafting Modalities onto Substructural Implication Systems}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1997}, volume = {59}, number = {1}, pages = {65--102}, topic = {modal-logic;substructural-logics;} } @book{ dagostino_m-etal:1999a, editor = {Marcello D'Agostino and Dov. M. Gabbay and Reiner H\"anle and Joachim Posegga}, title = {Handbook of Tableau Methods}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1999}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-7923-5627-6}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @inproceedings{ dague-etal:1987a1, author = {Philippe Dague and Olivier Raiman and Philippe Dev\'es}, title = {Troubleshooting: When Modeling Is the Trouble}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, editor = {Kenneth D. Forbus and Howard Shrobe}, pages = {600--605}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, xref = {Republication: dague-etal:1987a2.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning; order-of-magnitude-reasoning;} } @incollection{ dague-etal:1987a2, author = {Philippe Dague and Olivier Raiman and Philippe Dev\'es}, title = {Troubleshooting: When Modeling Is the Trouble}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {435--440}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: dague-etal:1987a1.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning; order-of-magnitude-reasoning;} } @article{ dagum-luby:1997a, author = {Paul Dagum and Michael Luby}, title = {An Optimal Approximation Algorithm for {B}ayesian Inference}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {93}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--27}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;probabilistic-reasoning;complexity-in-AI;} } @book{ dahl_n:1984a, author = {Norman O. Dahl}, title = {Practical Reason, {A}ristotle, and Weakness of Will}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;akrasia;Aristotle;} } @article{ dahl_n:1997a, author = {Norman O. Dahl}, title = {Two Kinds of Essence in {A}ristotle: A Pale Man is Not the Same as His Essence}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1997}, volume = {106}, number = {2}, pages = {233--265}, topic = {Aristotle;metaphysics;essence;} } @article{ dahl_no:1974a, author = {Norman O. Dahl}, title = {{`}Ought' Implies `Can' and Deontic Logic}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1974}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {485--511}, topic = {ability;deontic-logic;} } @techreport{ dahl_o:1972a, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {On Points of Reference}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of G\"oteborg}, number = {1}, year = {1972}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Logical Grammar Reports}, topic = {indexicality;context;} } @techreport{ dahl_o:1973a, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {Some Suggestions for a Logic of Aspects}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of G\"oteborg}, number = {3}, year = {1973}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Logical Grammar Reports}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. FIle Drawers, "Dahl"}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {tense-aspect;} } @techreport{ dahl_o:1973b, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {On the Semantics of Quantified Noun Phrases and Related Problems}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of G\"oteborg}, number = {5}, year = {1973}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Logical Grammar Reports}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;} } @techreport{ dahl_o:1974a, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {How to Open a Sentence: Abstraction in Natural Language}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of G\"oteborg}, number = {12}, year = {1974}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Logical Grammar Reports}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nl-semantics;anaphora;} } @techreport{ dahl_o:1974b, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {Operational Grammars}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of G\"oteborg}, number = {8}, year = {1974}, address = {G\"oteborg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Logical Grammar Reports}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {categorial-grammar;} } @incollection{ dahl_o:1975a, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {On Generics}, booktitle = {Formal Semantics of Natural Language}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Edward L. Keenan}, pages = {99--111}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {generics;} } @book{ dahl_o:1977a, editor = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {Logic, Pragmatics and Grammar}, publisher = {Department of Linguistics, University of Gothenberg}, year = {1977}, address = {G\"oteberg}, topic = {pragmatics;} } @article{ dahl_o:1979a, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {Typology of Sentence Negation}, journal = {Linguistics}, year = {19}, volume = {17}, number = {1--2}, pages = {79--106}, topic = {negation;linguistic-typology;} } @incollection{ dahl_o:1981a, author = {Osten Dahl}, title = {On the Definition of the Telic-Atelic (Bounded-Nonbounded) Distinction}, booktitle = {Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Philip Tedeschi and Annie Zaenen}, pages = {79--90}, address = {New York}, topic = {telicity;} } @book{ dahl_o:1985a, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {Tense and Aspect Systems}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1985}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {CS P281 .D27 1985}, topic = {nl-tense;tense-aspect;} } @incollection{ dahl_o:1987a, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {Contextualization and De-Contextualization}, booktitle = {Natural Language and Logic}, year = {1987}, editor = {Rudi Studer}, pages = {62--69}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "O Dahl"}, topic = {context;} } @article{ dahl_o:1988a, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {The Role of Deduction Rules in Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1988}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {1--18}, abstract = {The distinction between partial and total interpretations (models) is discussed and related to the distinction between proof-theoretical and model-theoretical treatments of logic. It is claimed that there is a parallel between the construction of a proof based on a set of premises and e.g. the production of a natural-language text which is based on information in some kind of data-base. The main part of the paper is devoted to a discussion of the relations between the deduction rules traditionally associated with the existential quantifier and notions pertaining to the theory of reference such as specificity and referentiality /attributivity. Two types of specificity are distinguished, which can be connected with Existential Elimination and Existential Introduction, respectively. A distinction is further made between trivial and non-trivial Existential Introduction, where only the latter kind involves erasure of coreference links. It is argued that an analogous treatment of the referential-attributive distinction is a way of making sense of Donnellan's suggestion that the latteT may depend on the description's role in an argument. Finally, the notions of 'external anchoring' and stability of individual concepts are related to the distinctions made earlier in the paper.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ dahl_o:1995a, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {The Marking of the Episodic/Generic Distinction in Tense-Aspect Systems}, booktitle = {The Generic Book}, publisher = {Chicago University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Gregory Carlson and Francis Jeffry Pelletier}, pages = {412--425}, address = {Chicago, IL}, topic = {generics;tense-aspect;} } @article{ dahl_o:1999a, author = {\"Osten Dahl}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}ndefinite Pronouns}, by {M}artin {H}aspelmath}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {22}, number = {6}, pages = {663--678}, xref = {Review of haspelmath:1997a.}, topic = {indefiniteness;pronouns;} } @article{ dahl_o-linell_p:1980a, author = {Osten Dahl and Per Linell}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}sychology and Language, an Introduction to Psycholinguistics}, by {H}erbert {H}. {C}Lark and {E}ve {V}. {C}lark}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {437--450}, xref = {Review of clark_hh-clark_e:1977a.}, topic = {psycholinguistics;} } @book{ dahl_oj-etal:1972a, author = {Ole-Johan Dahl and E.W. Dijkstra and Charles A.R. Hoare}, title = {Structured Programming}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1972}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0122005503}, rtnote = {Umich Media Union Library, QA76.6 .D14.}, topic = {structured-programming;} } @article{ dahl_v-etal:1993a, author = {Veronica Dahl and Fred Popovich and Michael Rochemont}, title = {A Principled Characterization of Dislocated Phrases: Capturing the Barriers with Static Discontinuity Grammars}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1993}, volume = {16}, number = {4}, pages = {331--352}, topic = {constituent-structure;grammar-formalisms;} } @book{ dahlbom:1993a, editor = {Bo Dahlbom}, title = {Dennett and His Critics}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-631-18549-6}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Bo Dahlbom, "Editor's Introduction", pp. 1--12 2. Dawkins, Richard, "Viruses of the Mind", pp. 13--27 3. P.S. Churchland and V.S. Ramachandran, "Fillin in: Why Dennett is Wrong", pp. 28--52 4. John Haugeland, "Pattern and Being", pp. 53--69 5. Jerry Fodor and Ernest Lepore, "Is Intentional Ascription Intrinsically Normative?" pp. 70--82 6. Colin McGinn, "Logic, Mind, and Mathematics", pp. 83--96 7. Ruth Garrett Millikan, "On Mentalese Orthography", 97--123 8. Kathleen Atkins, "What Is It Like to Be Boring and Myopic?" 9. Bo Dahlbom, "Mind is Artificial", pp. 161--183 10. Rorty, Richard, "Holism, Intrinsicality, and the Ambition of Transcendence", pp. 184--202. 11. Dennett, Daniel, "Back from the Drawing Board", pp. 203--235. }, xref = {Review: elton:1998a.}, topic = {Daniel-Dennett;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ dahlgren:1972a, author = {Kathy Dahlgren}, title = {Two Object Verbs in a {M}ontague Grammar}, booktitle = {Papers in {M}ontague Grammar}, publisher = {Linguistics Department, UCLA}, year = {1972}, editor = {Robert Rodman}, pages = {127--138}, address = {Los Angeles, California}, note = {ULCA Occasional Papers in Linguistics, No. 2}, topic = {Montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ dahlgren:1974a, author = {Kathy Dahlgren}, title = {The Pragmatics of Presupposition}, booktitle = {{UCLA} Occasional Papers in Linguistics, No. 5}, publisher = {UCLA Linguistics Department}, year = {1974}, editor = {George Bedell}, address = {Los Angeles}, topic = {presupposition;} } @book{ dahlgren:1988a, author = {Kathleen Dahlgren}, title = {Naive Semantics for Natural Language Understanding}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1988}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {Intro in RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-semantics;lexical-semantics;computational-ontology;} } @inproceedings{ dahlgren:1989a, author = {Kathleen Dahlgren}, title = {Coherence Relation Assignment}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society}, pages = {588--596}, year = {1989}, missinginfo = {Editor, organization}, topic = {discourse-structure;discourse-coherence;pragmatics;} } @article{ dahlgren:1995a, author = {Kathleen Dahlgren}, title = {A Linguistic Ontology}, journal = {International Journal on Human-Computer Studies}, year = {1995}, volume = {43}, number = {5--6}, pages = {809--818}, topic = {computational-semantics;computational-ontology;} } @incollection{ dahlgren:1998a, author = {Kathleen Dahlgren}, title = {Lexical Marking and the Recovery of Discourse Structure}, booktitle = {Discourse Relations and Discourse Markers: Proceedings of the Conference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Manfred Stede and Leo Wanner and Eduard Hovy}, pages = {65--71}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {discourse-cue-words;discourse-structure;} } @article{ dahlgren-etal:1989a, author = {Kathleen Dahlgren and Joyce McDowell and Edward P. {Stabler, Jr.}}, title = {Knowledge Representation for Commonsense Reasoning with Text}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1989}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {nl-understanding;kr;common-sense-knowledge;} } @incollection{ dahlhaus-malowsky:1988a, author = {Elias Dahlhaus and Johann A. Malowsky}, title = {Gandy's Principles for Mechanism as a Model of Parallel Computation}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {309--314}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {parallel-processing;theory-of-computation;} } @article{ dahllof:2002a, author = {Mats Dahll\"of}, title = {Token Dependency Semantics and the Paratactic Analysis of Intensional Constructions}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2002}, volume = {19}, number = {4}, abstract = {This article introduces Token Dependency Semantics (TDS), a surface-oriented and token-based framework for compositional truth-conditional semantics. It is motivated by Davidson's paratactic analysis of semantic intensionality (On Saying That, 1968, Synthese 19: 130-146, which has been much discussed in philosophy. This is the first fully-fledged formal implementation of Davidson's proposal. Operator-argument structure and scope are captured by means of relations among tokens. Intensional constituent tokens represent 'propositional' contents directly. They serve as arguments to the words introducing intensional contexts, rather than being ordinary constituents. The treatment of de re readings involves the use of functions (anchors) assigning entities to argument positions of lexical tokens. Quantifiers are thereby allowed to bind argument places on content tokens. This gives us a simple underspecification-based account of scope ambiguity. The TDS framework is applied to indirect speech reports, mental attitude sentences, control verbs, and modal and agent-relative sentence adverbs in English. This semantics is compatible with a traditional view of syntax. Here, it is integrated into a Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG). The result is a straightforward and ontologically parsimonious analysis of truth-conditional meaning and semantic intensionality. }, pages = {333--368}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;} } @incollection{ dahn:1998a, author = {I. Dahn}, title = {Lattice-Ordered Groups in Deduction}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {III}, Applications}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @incollection{ dahn-schumann_j:1998a, author = {Ingo Dahn and Johann Schumann}, title = {Using Automated Theorem Provers in Verification of Protocols}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {III}, Applications}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;program-verification;} } @article{ dai_p-etal:2013a, author = {Peng Dai and Christopher H. Lin and Mausam and Daniel S. Weld}, title = {{POMDP}-Based Control of Workflows for Crowdsourcing}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {202}, pages = {52--85}, topic = {PDMPs;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @incollection{ daille:1996a, author = {B\'eatrice Daille}, title = {Study and Implementation of Combined Techniques for Automatic Extraction of Terminology}, booktitle = {The Balancing Act: Combining Symbolic and Statistical Approaches to Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Judith Klavans and Philip Resnik}, pages = {49--66}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {statistical-nlp;word-acquisition;} } @incollection{ dainton:2008a, author = {Barry Dainton}, title = {Sensing Change}, booktitle = {Interdisciplinary Core Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {362--384}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {perception;change;} } @incollection{ dainton:2014a, author = {Barry Dainton}, title = {Temporal Consciousness}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2014/entries/consciousness-temporal/}, year = {2014}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;consciousness;}, } @incollection{ daitz:1960a, author = {E. Daitz}, title = {The Picture Theory of Meaning}, booktitle = {Essays in Conceptual Analysis}, publisher = {Macmillam}, year = {1960}, editor = {Antony G.N. Flew}, pages = {1--20}, address = {London}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @inproceedings{ dalal:1988a, author = {Mukesh Dalal}, title = {Investigations Into a Theory of Knowledge Base Revision: Preliminary Report}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {2}, editor = {Paul S. Rosenbloom and Peter Szolovits}, pages = {475--479}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @incollection{ dalal:1992a, author = {Mukesh Dalal}, title = {Tractable Deduction in Knowledge Representation Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {393--402}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;theorem-proving;logic-programming;tractable-logics;} } @article{ dale_aj:1974a, author = {A.J. Dale}, title = {A Defence of Material Implication}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1974}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {91--95}, contentnote = {We are stuck with the material implication if we like exportation}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ dale_aj:1978a, author = {A.J. Dale}, title = {Reference, Truth-Functionality and Causal Sentences}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1978}, volume = {38}, number = {2}, pages = {99--106}, contentnote = {Uses the "slingshot".}, topic = {causality;referential-opacity;} } @article{ dale_aj:1989a, author = {A. J. Dale}, title = {Adams on Modus Tollens}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1989}, volume = {49}, number = {2}, pages = {93--96}, xref = {Commentary on: adams_ew:1988a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @book{ dale_e:1968a, editor = {Ella Dale}, title = {Machine Intelligence 2}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {1968}, address = {New York}, topic = {AI-survey;} } @book{ dale_e-michie_d:1968a, editor = {Ella Dale and Donald Michie}, title = {Machine Intelligence 2}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, year = {1968}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {AI-general;} } @incollection{ dale_r:1988a, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {The Generation of Subsequent Referring Expressions in Structured Discourses}, booktitle = {Advances in Natural Language Generation: an Interdisciplinary Perspective}, publisher = {Pinter Publishers}, year = {1988}, editor = {Michael Zock and Gerard Sabah}, pages = {58--75}, address = {London}, topic = {nl-generation;discourse;referring-expressions;pragmatics;} } @phdthesis{ dale_r:1988b, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Generating Referring Expressions: Constructing Descriptions in a Domain of Objects and Processes}, school = {Centre for Cognitive Science, University of Edinburgh}, year = {1988}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @inproceedings{ dale_r:1989a, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Cooking Up Referring Expressions}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {T}wenty-{S}eventh {A}nnual {M}eeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1989}, pages = {68--75}, missinginfo = {editor}, topic = {nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @phdthesis{ dale_r:1989b, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Generating {R}eferring {E}xpressions in a {D}omain of {O}bjects and {P}rocesses}, school = {Centre for Cognitive Science, University of Edinburgh}, year = {1989}, topic = {nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @inproceedings{ dale_r:1989c, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Cooking Up Referring Expressions}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1989}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, missinginfo = {address, pages, editor}, topic = {nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @incollection{ dale_r:1990a, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Generating Recipes: An Overview of {E}picure}, booktitle = {Current Research in Natural Language Generation}, editor = {Robert Dale and Chris Mellish and Michael Zock}, year = {1990}, publisher = {Academic Press}, address = {London}, pages = {229--255}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @inproceedings{ dale_r:1991b, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Generating Expressions Referring to Eventualities}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual Conference of {C}ognitive {S}cience {S}ociety}, year = {1991}, organization = {Cognitive Science Society}, missinginfo = {editor, pages, publisher, address}, topic = {nl-generation;events;} } @article{ dale_r:1991c, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Content Determination in the Generation of Referring Expressions}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @inproceedings{ dale_r:1991d, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Exploring the Role of Punctuation in the Signalling of Discourse Structure}, pages = {110--120}, booktitle = {Proceedings of a Workshop on Text Representation and Domain Modelling: Ideas from Linguistics and AI}, year = {1991}, organization = {Technical University Berlin}, topic = {punctuation;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ dale_r:1991e, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {The Role of Punctuation in Discourse Structure}, booktitle = {Working Notes for the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Discourse Structure in Natural Language Understanding and Generation}, year = {1991}, organization = {AAAI}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, missinginfo = {pages, editor}, topic = {discourse;discourse-structure;punctuation;pragmatics;} } @book{ dale_r:1992a, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Generating Referring Expressions: Constructing Descriptions in a Domain of Objects and Processes}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262041286}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 325.5 .R44 D351 1992}, topic = {nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @incollection{ dale_r:1992b, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Visible Language: Multimodal Constraints in Information Presentation}, booktitle = {Aspects of Automated Natural Language Generation: 6th International Workshop on Natural Language Generation, {T}rento, {I}taly, April 5--7, 1992}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, editor = {Robert Dale and Eduard Hovy and Dietmar R\"ossner and Oliviero Stock}, pages = {281--283}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-generation;visual-reasoning;multimedia-generation;} } @incollection{ dale_r:1993a, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {The Initial Specifications for Generation}, booktitle = {New Concepts in Natural Language Generation}, publisher = {Pinter Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {Helmut Horacek and Michael Zock}, pages = {271--274}, address = {London}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @inproceedings{ dale_r:1995a, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Generating One-Anaphoric Expressions: Where Does the Decision Lie?}, booktitle = {Working Papers of PACLING--{II}}, year = {1995}, missinginfo = {organization, pages, address, editor}, topic = {nl-generation;anaphora;} } @article{ dale_r:1995b, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Using Linguistic Phenomena to Motivate a Set of Coherence Relations}, journal = {Discourse Processes}, year = {1995}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {35--62}, topic = {discourse;coherence;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ dale_r:1995c, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Referring Expression Generation: Problems Introduced by One-Anaphora}, booktitle = {Principles of Natural Language Generation: Papers from a {D}agstuhl Seminar}, year = {1995}, editor = {Wolfgang Hoeppner and Helmut Horacek}, pages = {40--46}, address = {Dagstuhl}, topic = {nl-generation;anaphora;referring-expressions;} } @incollection{ dale_r:1997a, author = {Robert Dale}, title = {Computer Assistance in Text Creation and Editing}, booktitle = {Survey of the State of the Art in Human Language Technology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, editor = {Giovanni Battista Varile and Antonio Zampolli}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {nl-processing;computer-assisted-writing;} } @incollection{ dale_r-douglas_s:1996a, author = {Robert Dale and Shona Douglas}, title = {Two Investigations into Intelligent Text Processing}, booktitle = {The New Writing Environment}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Mike Sharples and Thea {van der Geest}}, pages = {123--145}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {computer-assisted-writing;} } @book{ dale_r-etal:1990a, editor = {Robert Dale and Chris Mellish and Michael Zock}, title = {Current Research in Natural Language Generation}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1990}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0893915270 (v. 1) 0893915378 (v. 2)}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Robert Dale and Chris Mellish and Michael Zock, "Introduction", pp. 1--15 2. Eduard H. Hovy, "Unresolved Issues in Paragraph Planning", pp. 17--45 3. Donia Scott and Clarisse Sieckenius de Souza, "Getting the Message Across in {RST}-Based Text Generation", pp. 47--73 4. Alison Cawsey, "Generating Explanatory Discourse", pp. 75--101 5. Kathleen McKeown and Michael Elhadad and Yumiko Fukumoto and Jong Lim and Christine Lombardi and Jacques RObin and Frank Smadja, "Natural Language Generation in {COMET}", pp. 103--139 6. Gertjan {van Noord}, "An Overview of Head-Driven Bottom-up Generation", pp. 141--165 7. Koenraad De Smedt, "IPF: An Incremental Parallel Formulator", pp. 167--192 8. Helmut Horacek, "The Architecture of a Generation Component in a Complete Natural Language Dialogue System", pp. 193--228 9. Robert Dale, "Generating Recipes: An Overview of {E}picure", pp. 229--255 10. Ehud Reiter, "Generating Descriptions that Exploit a User's Domain Knowledge", pp. 257--285 11. George Houghton, "The Problem of Serial Order: A Neural Network Model of Sequence Learning and Recall", pp. 287--319 12. Hiraki Kitano, "Parallel Incremental Sentence Production for a Model of Simultaneous Interpretation", pp. 321--351 }, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .N38 C8711 1990.}, rtnote = {Copies of many chapters on file.}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @incollection{ dale_r-etal:1990b, author = {Robert Dale and Chris Mellish and Michael Zock}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Current Research in Natural Language Generation}, year = {1990}, editor = {Robert Dale and Chris Mellish and Michael Zock}, publisher = {Academic Press}, address = {London}, pages = {1--15}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @book{ dale_r-etal:1992a, editor = {Robert Dale and Eduard Hovy and Dietmar R\"ossner and Oliviero Stock}, title = {Aspects of Automated Natural Language Generation: 6th International Workshop on Natural Language Generation, {T}rento, {I}taly, April 5--7, 1992}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0387553991 (U.S.: alk. paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .N38 I58 1992}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Nadia Magnenat-Thalmann, "A Model for Creating and Visualizing Speech and Emotion", pp. 1--12 2. Mark Kantrowitz and Joseph Bates, "Integrated Natural Language Generation Systems", pp. 13--28 3. Helmut Horacek, "An Integrated View of Text Planning", pp. 29--44 4. Robin Rubinoff, "Integrating Text Planning and Linguistic Choice by Annotating Linguistic Structures", pp. 45--56 5. Eduard Hovy and Julia Lavid and Elisabeth Maier and C\'ecile Paris, "Employing Knowledge Resources in a New Text Planner Architecture", pp. 57--72 6. David D. McDonald, "Type-Driven Suppression of Redundancy in the Generation of Inference-Rich Reports", pp. 73--88 7. Michael Elhadad and Jacques Robin, "Controlling Content Realization with Functional Unification Grammars", pp. 89--104 8. Ishizati Masato, "Syntactic Selection in Linguistic Realization: A Comparative Study", pp. 105--134 9. Patrick Saint-Dizier, "A Constraint Logic Programming Treatment of Syntactic Choice in Natural Language Generation", pp. 119--134 10. Nick J. Youd and Scott McGlashen, "Generating Utterances in Dialogue Systems", pp. 135--149 11. Robin P. Fawcett and Bethan L. Davies, "Monologue as a Turn in Dialogue: Towards an Integration of Exchange Structure in Rhetorical Structure Theory", pp. 151--166 12. Alex Lascarides and John Oberlander, "Abducing Temporal Discourse", pp. 167--182 13. Keith Vander Linden and Susanna Cumming and James Martin, "Using System Networks to Build Rhetorical Structures", pp. 183--198 14. Dietmar R\"osner and Manfred Stede, "Customizing {RST} for the Automatic Production of Technical Manuals", pp. 199--214 15. Kentaro Inui and Takenobu Tokunaga and Hozumi Tanaka, "Text Revision: A Model and its Implementation", pp. 215--230 16. Mark A. Jones and Kathleen F. McCoy, "Transparently-Motivated Metaphor Generation", pp. 231--246 17. Wim Classen, "Generating Referring Expressions in a Multimodal Environment", pp. 227--262 18. Norbert Reithinger, "The Performance of an Incremental Generation Component for Multi-Modal Dialog Contributions", pp. 263--276 19. Yigal Arens, "Multimedia Presentation Planning as an Extension of Text Planning", pp. 278--280 20. Robert Dale, "Visible Language: Multimodal Constraints in Information Presentation", pp. 281--283 21. Stephen M. Kerpedjiev, "Generation of Multimodal Weather Reports", pp. 284--286 22. Oliviero Stock, "Steps toward Hypergeneration", pp. 287--289 23. Wolfgang Wahlster and Elisabeth Andr\'e and Wolfgang Finkler and Winfried Graf andd Hans-J\"urgen Profitlich and Thomas Rist and Anne Schauder, "{WIP}: Integrating Text and Graphics Design for Adaptive Information Processing", pp. 290--292 24. Eduard Hovy, "Constructing an Interlingua Using Grammar Resources", pp. 294--296 25. Richard Kittridge, "Bilingual Report Generation: Experience with Interlinguae", pp. 297--299 26. Christian Matthiesson and Keizo Nanri and Zeng Licheng, "Multilingual Generation: Dimensions of Organization and Forms of Representation", pp. 300--302 27. Sergei Nirenberg, "On Language-Independent Inputs for Multilingual Generation", pp. 303--305 28. Dietmar R\"osner, "Remarks on Multilinguality and Generation", pp. 306--308 }, topic = {nl-generation;} } @article{ dale_r-etal:1998a, author = {Robert Dale and Barbara Di Eugenio and Donia Scott}, title = {Introduction to the Special Issue on Natural Language Generation}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {345--353}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @book{ dale_r-etal:2000a, editor = {Robert Dale and Hermann Moisl and Harold Somers}, title = {Handbook of Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Marcel Dekker}, year = {2000}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0824790006}, rtnote = {UMich MEDIA UNION LIBRARY QA 76.9 .N38 H3631 2000}, topic = {nl-processing;} } @incollection{ dale_r-etal:2002a, author = {Robert Dale and Diego Moll\'a Aliod and Rolf Schwitter}, title = {Evangelizing Language Technology: A Practically-Focussed Undergraduate Program}, booktitle = {Effective Tools and Methodologies for Teaching {NLP} and {CL}}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dragomir Radev and Chris Brew}, pages = {26--31}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nlp-pedagogy;} } @article{ dale_r-haddock_n:1991a, author = {Robert Dale and Nicholas Haddock}, title = {Content Determination in the Generation of Referring Expressions}, pages = {252--265}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, year = {1991}, topic = {nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @inproceedings{ dale_r-milosavljevic:1996a, author = {Robert Dale and M. Milosavljevic}, title = {Authoring on Demand: Natural Language Generation in Hypertext Documents}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First {A}ustralian Document Computing Symposium}, year = {1996}, missinginfo = {pages, A's 1st name, editor, organization, publisher}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @article{ dale_r-reiter_e:1995a, author = {Robert Dale and Ehud Reiter}, title = {Computational Interpretations of the {G}ricean Maxims in the Generation of Referring Expressions}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1995}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {233--263}, topic = {implicature;pragmatics;nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @inproceedings{ dale_r-reiter_e:1996a, author = {Robert Dale and Ehud Reiter}, title = {The Role of the {G}ricean Maxims in the Generation of Referring Expressions}, booktitle = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Computational Implicature: Computational Approaches to Interpreting and Generating Conversational Implicature}, year = {1996}, pages = {16--20}, organization = {{AAAI}}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, editor = {Barbara Di Eugenio and Nancy L. Green}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {implicature;pragmatics;nl-generation;referring-expressions;} } @article{ dalessio:1967a, author = {J.C. D'Alessio}, title = {On Subjunctive Conditionals}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1967}, volume = {64}, number = {10}, pages = {306--310}, topic = {conditionals;subjunctive-mood;} } @article{ dalessio:1972a, author = {J.C. D'Alessio}, title = {Austin on {N}owell-{S}mith's Conditional Analysis of `Could Have' and `Can{'}}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1972}, volume = {81}, number = {322}, pages = {260--264}, topic = {JL-Austin;ability;} } @book{ dalgarno:1661a, author = {George Dalgarno}, title = {Ars Signorum, Vulgo Character Universalis et Lingua Philosophica}, publisher = {J. Hayes}, year = {1661}, address = {London}, note = {Reprinted 1968: Menston (Yorkshire): The Scholar Press}, topic = {artificial-languages;} } @article{ dalianis:1999a, author = {Hercules Dalianis}, title = {Aggregation in Natural Language Generation}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {15}, number = {4}, pages = {384--414}, topic = {nl-generation;microplanning;nl-gen-aggregation;} } @incollection{ dalianis-hovy:1996a, author = {Hercules Dalianis and Eduard H. Hovy}, title = {Aggregation in Natural Language Generation}, booktitle = {Trends in Natural Language Generation, An Artificial Intelligence Perspective, Fourth {E}uropean Workshop, {EWNLG} '93, Pisa, Italy, April 28-30, 1993, Selected Papers}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science}, volume = {1036}, year = {1996}, editor = {Giovanni Adorni and Michael Zock}, pages = {88--105}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-generation;microplanning;nl-gen-aggregation;} } @article{ dallachiara_ml:1977a, author = {Maria Luisa Dalla Chiara}, title = {Quantum Logic and the Physical Modalities}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {391--404}, topic = {quantum-logic;modal-logic;} } @article{ dallachiara_ml:1977b, author = {Maria Luisa Dalla Chiara}, title = {Logical Self Reference, Set Theoretical Paradoxes and the Measurement Problem in Quantum Mechanics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {331--347}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @incollection{ dallachiara_ml:1986a, author = {Maria Luisa dalla Chiara}, title = {Quantum Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {III}: Alternatives in Classical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1986}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther}, pages = {427--469}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @incollection{ dallachiara_ml:1992a, author = {Maria Luisa {Dalla Chiara}}, title = {Possible Worlds, Counterfactuals, and Epistemic Operators}, booktitle = {Knowledge, Belief, and Strategic Interaction}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Cristina Bicchieri and Maria Luisa {Dalla Chiara}}, pages = {155--166}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Dalla Chiara"}, topic = {possible-worlds-semantics;epistemic-logic;conditionals;} } @book{ dallachiara_ml-etal:1997a, editor = {Maria Luisa {Dalla Chiara} and Kees Doets and Daniele Mundici and Johan van Benthem}, title = {Logic and Scientific Methods}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1997}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-94-017-0487-8}, topic = {logic-general;philosophy-of-science;} } @incollection{ dallachiara_ml-etal:2007a, author = {Maria Luisa Dalla Chiara and Roberto Giuntini and Miklos R\'edei}, title = {The History of Quantum Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic, Volume 8: The Many Valued and Nonmonotonic Turn in Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {2007}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {205--283}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;quantum-logic;} } @incollection{ dallachiara_ml-giuntini:2002a, author = {Maria Luisa Dalla Chiara and Roberto Giuntini}, title = {Quantum Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {VI}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {129--228}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dallargo-etal:2002a, author = {Ugo Dal Largo and Marco Pistore and Paolo Traverso}, title = {Planning with a Language for Extended Goals}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {447--454}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, contentnote = {An extended goal is a constraint on histories.}, topic = {planning;planning-algorithms;planning-formalisms;} } @article{ dalmonte_t-etal:2020a, author = {Tiziano Dalmonte and Charles Grellois and Nicola Olivetti}, title = {Intuitionistic Non-normal Modal Logics: A General Framework}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {5}, pages = {833--882}, abstract = {We define a family of intuitionistic non-normal modal logics; they can be seen as intuitionistic counterparts of classical ones. We first consider monomodal logics, which contain only Necessity or Possibility. We then consider the more important case of bimodal logics, which contain both modal operators. ... For all logics we provide both a Hilbert axiomatisation and a cut-free sequent calculus, on its basis we also prove their decidability. We then define a semantic characterisation of our logics in terms of neighbourhood models containing two distinct neighbourhood functions corresponding to the two modalities. ... }, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;modal-logic;} } @book{ dalrymple:1995a, editor = {Mary Dalrymple}, title = {Formal Issues in Lexical-Functional Grammar}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, year = {1995}, address = {Stanford}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Ronald M. Kaplan, "The Formal Architecture of Lexical-Functional Grammar " 2. Ronald M. Kaplan and Joan Bresnan, "Lexical-functional Grammar: A Formal System for Grammatical Representation" 3. Ronald M. Kaplan and Annie Zaenen, "Long-Distance Dependencies, Constituent Structure, and Functional Uncertainty" 4. Mary Dalrymple and John T. Maxwell {III} and Annie Zaenen, "Modeling Syntactic Constraints on Anaphoric Binding" 5. Ronald M. Kaplan and John T. Maxwell {III}, "An Algorithm for Functional Uncertainty" 6. Ronald M. Kaplan and John T. Maxwell {III}, "Constituent Coordination in Lexical-Functional Grammar" 7. Annie Zaenen and Ronald M. Kaplan, " Formal Devices for Linguistic Generalizations: West {G}ermanic Word Order in {LFG}" 8. Joan Bresnan, "Linear Order, Syntactic Rank, and Empty Categories: On Weak Crossover" 9. Per-Kristian Halvorsen and Ronald M. Kaplan, "Projections and Semantic Description in Lexical-Functional Grammar" 10. Per-Kristian Halvorsen, "Situation Semantics and Semantic Interpretation in Constraint-Based Grammars" 11. Ronald M. Kaplan et al., "Translation by Structural Correspondences" 12. Ronald M. Kaplan, "Three Seductions of Computational Psycholinguistics" 13. Mark Johnson, "Logic and Feature Structures" 14. John T. Maxwell {III} and Ronald M. Kaplan, " A method for Disjunctive Constraint Satisfaction; The Interface between Phrasal and Functional Constraints" }, ISBN = {1881526372}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 158.25 .F671 1995.}, topic = {LFG;} } @techreport{ dalrymple-etal:1987a, author = {Mary Dalrymple and Ronald M. Kaplan and Lauri Karttunen and Kimmo Koskenniemi and Michael Wescoat}, title = {Tools for Morphological Analysis}, institution = {CSLI}, number = {CSLI--87-108}, year = {1987}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS MS shelves.}, topic = {computational-morphology;} } @article{ dalrymple-etal:1991a, author = {Mary Dalrymple and Stuart M. Shieber and Fernando C.N. Pereira}, title = {Ellipsis and Higher-Order Unification}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1991}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {399--452}, topic = {ellipsis;higher-order-unification;} } @inproceedings{ dalrymple-etal:1994a, author = {Mary Dalrymple and Makoto Kanazawa and Sam Bchombo and Stanley Peters}, title = {What do Reciprocals Mean?}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IV}}, year = {1994}, editor = {Mandy Harvey and Lynn Santelmann}, pages = {61--78}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-semantics;reciprical-constructions;} } @book{ dalrymple-etal:1995a, editor = {Mary Dalrymple and John T. {Maxwell III} and Ronald M. Kaplan and Annie Zaenen}, title = {Formal Issues in Lexical-Functional Grammar}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, year = {1995}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1881526372}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Ronald M. Kaplan, "The formal architecture of lexical-functional grammar" 2. Ronald M. Kaplan and Joan Bresnan, "Lexical-functional grammar: a formal system for grammatical representation" 3. Ronald M. Kaplan and Annie Zaenen, "Long-distance dependencies, constituent structure, and functional uncertainty" 4. Mary Dalrymple, John T. Maxwell III, and Annie Zaenen, "Modeling syntactic constraints on anaphoric binding" 5. Ronald M. Kaplan and John T. Maxwell III, "An algorithm for functional uncertainty" 6. Ronald M. Kaplan and John T. Maxwell III, "Constituent coordination in lexical-functional grammar" 7. Annie Zaenen and Ronald M. Kaplan, "Formal devices for linguistic generalizations: West Germanic word order in LFG" 8. Joan Bresnan, "Linear order, syntactic rank, and empty categories: on weak crossover" 9. Per-Kristian Halvorsen and Ronald M. Kaplan, "Projections and semantic description in lexical-functional grammar" 10. Per-Kristian Halvorsen, "Situation semantics and semantic interpretation in constraint-based grammars" 11. Ronald M. Kaplan ... [et al.], "Translation by structural correspondences" 12. Ronald M. Kaplan, "Three seductions of computational psycholinguistics" 13. Mark Johnson, "Logic and feature structures" 14. John T. Maxwell III and Ronald M. Kaplan, "A method for disjunctive constraint satisfaction ; The interface between phrasal and functional constraints" }, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 158.25 .F671 1995}, topic = {LFG;} } @article{ dalrymple-etal:1997a, author = {Mary Dalrymple and John Lamping and Fernando Pereira and Vijay Saraswat}, title = {Quantifiers, Anaphora, and Intensionality}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1997}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {219--273}, topic = {LFG;linear-logic;nl-semantics;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ dalrymple-etal:1998a, author = {Mary Dalrymple and Makoto Kanazawa and Yookyung Kim and Sam Mchombo and Stanley Peters}, title = {Reciprocal Expressions and the Concept of Reciprocity}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1998}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {159--210}, topic = {nl-semantics;reciprical-constructions;} } @article{ dalton:1995a, author = {Peter Dalton}, title = {Extended Action}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1995}, volume = {24}, number = {3--4}, pages = {253--270}, contentnote = {Considers question of how long an action takes.}, topic = {action;events;interval-logic;} } @book{ damasio_ar:1994a, author = {Antonio Damasio}, title = {DesCartes' Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain}, publisher = {Harper Collins}, year = {1994}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-380-72647-5}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library QP 401 .D21 1994}, topic = {cognitive-neuroscience;emotion;irrationality;} } @book{ damasio_ar:1999a, author = {Antonio Damasio}, title = {The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness}, publisher = {Harcourt Brace}, year = {1999}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-15-601075-5}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, BF 311 .D331 1999.}, xref = {Review: williford:2004a.}, topic = {cognitive-neuroscience;emotion;philosophical-psychology; consciousness;} } @incollection{ damasio_cv-etal:1998a, author = {Carlos Viegas Dam\'asio and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira}, title = {A Survey of Paraconsistent Semantics for Logic Programs}, booktitle = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems, Volume 2: Reasoning with Actual and Potential Contradictions}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Philippe Smets}, pages = {241--320}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {paraconsistency;relevance-logics;logic-programming;} } @incollection{ damasio_cv-pereira_lm:1994a, author = {Carlos Viegas Dam\'asio and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira}, title = {{REVISE}: An Extended Logic Programming System for Revising Knowledge Bases}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {607--618}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-reasoning;logic-programming;kr-course; extended-logic-programming;} } @incollection{ damasio_cv-pereira_lm:1998a, author = {Carlos Viegas Dam\'asio and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira}, title = {A Survey of Paraconsistent Semantics for Logic Programs}, booktitle = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems, Volume 2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Philippe Smets}, pages = {241--320}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {paraconsistency;paraconsistent-reasoning;logic-programming;} } @article{ dambrisio_b:1999a, author = {Bruce {D'Ambrisio}}, title = {Inference in {B}ayesian Networks}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, number = {2}, pages = {21--36}, volume = {20}, year = {1999}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;} } @inproceedings{ dambrosio_b:1987a, author = {Bruce D'Ambrosio}, title = {Extending the Mathematics in Qualitative Process Theory}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, editor = {Kenneth D. Forbus and Howard Shrobe}, pages = {595--599}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, topic = {qualitative-process-theory;} } @inproceedings{ dambrosio_b:1991a, author = {Bruce D'Ambrosio}, title = {Local Expression Languages for Probabilistic Dependence}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 7th Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence (UAI91)}, year = {1991}, pages = {95--102}, missinginfo = {Editor, Organization, Address}, topic = {probabilistic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ dambrosio_b:1994a, author = {Bruce D'Ambrisio}, title = {Symbolic Probabilistic Inference in Large {BN}20 Networks}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 10th Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence (UAI94)}, year = {1994}, pages = {128--125}, missinginfo = {Editor, Organization, Address}, topic = {probabilistic-reasoning;Bayesian-networks;} } @article{ dambrosio_b:1999a, author = {Bruce D'Ambrosio}, title = {Inference in {B}ayesian Networks}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {21--36}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;} } @inproceedings{ dambrosio_b-etal:1992a, author = {Bruce D'Ambrisio and T. Fountain and Zhaoyu Li}, title = {Parallelizing Probabilistic Inference: Some Early Explorations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 8th Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence (UAI92)}, year = {1992}, pages = {59--66}, missinginfo = {Editor, Organization, Address}, topic = {probabilistic-reasoning;parallel-processing;Bayesian-networks;} } @incollection{ damico_r:2006a, author = {Robert D'Amico}, title = {Sensations and Methodology}, booktitle = {Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Muryat Aydede}, pages = {291--305}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-cogsci;phenomenology;} } @article{ damnjanovic:1997a, author = {Zlatan Damnjanovic}, title = {Elementary Realizability}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1997}, volume = {26}, number = {3}, pages = {311--339}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;realizability;} } @incollection{ damon:1991a, author = {William Damon}, title = {Problems of Direction in Socially Shared Cognition}, booktitle = {Perspectives on Socially Shared Cognition}, publisher = {American Psychological Association}, year = {1991}, editor = {Lauren B. Resnick and John M. Levine and Stephanie D. Teasley}, pages = {398--417}, address = {Washington, D.C.}, topic = {social-psychology;shared-cognition;} } @inproceedings{ damonte_m-etal:2016a, author = {Marco Damonte and Shay B. Cohen and Giorgio Satta}, title = {An Incremental Parser for Abstract Meaning Representation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 15th Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics: Volume 1, Long Papers}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2016}, url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1608.06111}, pages = {536--546}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc16}, topic = {semantic-processing;} } @article{ damotta-etal:2008a, author = {Andr\'e da Motta and Salles Barreto and Charles W. Anderson}, title = {Restricted Gradient-Descent Algorithm for Value-Function Approximation in Reinforcement Learning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {4--5}, pages = {454--482}, topic = {reinforcement-learning;} } @book{ damour:2005a, author = {Thibault Damour}, title = {The Pea and the Sun: A Mathamatical Paradox}, publisher = {A.K. Peters, Ltd.}, year = {2005}, address = {Wellesley, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {1-56881-213-2}, topic = {Banach-Tarski-theorem;} } @book{ damper:2001a, editor = {Robert I. Damper}, title = {Data-Driven Techniques in Speech Synthesis}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2001}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-412-81750-0}, xref = {Review: dutoit:2002a}, topic = {speech-generation;machine-learning;} } @article{ damper:2006a, author = {Robert I. Damper}, title = {The logic of {S}earle's {C}hinese Room Argument}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2006}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {163--183}, abstract = {John Searle's Chinese room argument (CRA) is a celebrated thought experiment designed to refute the hypothesis, popular among artificial intelligence (AI) scientists and philosophers of mind, that "the appropriately programmed computer really is a mind". $\ldots$ there is remarkably little agreement on exactly how and why it is flawed. I attempt to set it in a logical framework (due to Sorensen), which allows us to systematise and classify the various objections. Since thought experiments are always posed in narrative form, formal logic by itself cannot fully capture the controversy. On the contrary, much also hinges on how one translates between the informal everyday language in which the CRA was initially framed and formal logic and, in particular, on the specific conception(s) of possibility that one reads into the logical formalism. }, xref = {Formalization of searle_jr:1980c1.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;foundations-of-cognition;machine-intelligence;} } @incollection{ damper-marchand_y:2000a, author = {Robert I. Damper and Yannik Marchand}, title = {Pronunciation by Analogy in Normal and Impaired Readers}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {13--18}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {cognitive-modeling;speech-production;} } @inproceedings{ damso-ruboff:1998a, author = {Martin Damsbo and Peder Thusgaard Ruboff}, title = {An Evolutionary Algorithm for Welding Task Sequence Ordering}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation: Proceedings of {AISC'98}}, year = {1998}, editor = {Jacques Calmet and Jan Plaza}, pages = {120--131}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {genetic-algorithms;scheduling;} } @article{ dancy_j:1984a, author = {Jonathan Dancy}, title = {Even-IFs}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1984}, volume = {58}, number = {2}, pages = {119--128}, topic = {`even';conditionals;} } @article{ dancy_j:1995a, author = {Jonathan Dancy}, title = {Why There Is Really No Such Thing as the Theory of Motivation}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1995}, volume = {95}, note = {Supplementary Series.}, pages = {1--18}, topic = {reasons-for-action;action;} } @book{ dancy_j:2004a, author = {Jonathan Dancy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, title = {Ethics Without Principles}, address = {Oxford}, year = {2004}, ISBN-13 = {9780199270026}, abstract = {The first part ... introduces and defends a distinction between reasons and enabling conditions, and considers some other roles that considerations that are morally relevant but not reasons might play. ... The second part uses these results to argue for holism in the theory of reasons, and to construct an argument from that holism to particularism in ethics, which is characterised as the view that moral thought and judgement in no way depend on a suitable provision of moral principles. There is also a chapter on the epistemology of moral reasons, from a particularist point of view. ... There is a final chapter on holism in the theory of choice.}, topic = {holism;metaethics;ethical-reasoning;} } @incollection{ dandrade:1989a, author = {Roy G. D'Andrade}, title = {Cultural Cognition}, booktitle = {Foundations of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1989}, editor = {Michael I. Posner}, chapter = {20}, pages = {795--830}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;cultural-anthropology;} } @book{ dandrade:1995a, author = {Roy G. D'Andrade}, title = {The Development of Cognitive Anthropology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library GN 502 .D361 1995}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {cultural-anthropology;cognitive-anthropology;} } @book{ dandrade-strauss_c:1992a, editor = {Roy G. D'Andrade and Claudia Strauss}, title = {Human Motives and Cultural Models}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521412331 (hardback)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, HM 101 .H851 1992.}, topic = {emotion;practical-reasoning;pr-course;philosophical-psychology; philosophical-anthropology;} } @article{ dandrade-wish:1985a, author = {R.G. D'Andrade and M. Wish}, title = {Speech Act Theory in Quantitative Research on Interpersonal Behavior}, journal = {Discourse Processes}, year = {1985}, volume = {8}, pages = {229--259}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {speech-acts;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ dandrea-lee_jw:2000a, author = {Raffaello D'Andrea and Jin-Woo Lee}, title = {Cornell {B}ig {R}ed: Small-Size League Winner}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {21}, number = {3}, pages = {41--44}, topic = {RoboCup;robotics;} } @inproceedings{ dang_ht-etal:1998a, author = {Hoa Trang Dang and Karin Kipper and Martha Palmer and Joseph Rosenzweig}, title = {Investigating Regular Sense Extensions based on Intersective {L}evin Classes}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {293--299}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {polysemy;computational-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ dang_ht-palmer_m:2005a, author = {Hoa Trang Dang and Martha Palmer}, title = {The Role of Semantic Roles in Disambiguating Verb Senses}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {42--49}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1006}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;thematic-roles;} } @book{ dangelo-west_db:2000a, author = {J.P. D'Angelo and D.B. West}, title = {Mathematical Thinking: Problem-Solving and Proofs}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {2000}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {mathematics-primer;how-to-prove-it;} } @techreport{ daniel:1977a, author = {L. Daniel}, title = {Planning: Modifying Non-linear Plans}, type = {Working Paper}, number = {24}, institution = {Department of AI, University of Edinburgh}, year = {1977}, topic = {planning-algorithms;} } @incollection{ danieli-etal:1997a, author = {Morena Danieli and Elissbetta Gerbino and Loretta M. Moisa}, title = {Dialogue Strategies for Improving the Usability of Telephone Human-Machine Communication}, booktitle = {Interactive Spoken Dialog Systems: Bridging Speech and {NLP} Together in Real Applications}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Julia Hirschberg and Candace Kamm and Marilyn Walker}, pages = {114--120}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;speech-recognition;} } @article{ daniels_cb:1972a, author = {Charles B. Daniels}, title = {Reference and Singular Referring Terms}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1972}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {86--102}, topic = {reference;referring-expressions;} } @article{ daniels_cb:1990a, author = {Charles B. Daniels}, title = {The Propositional Objects of Mental Attitudes}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1990}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {317--342}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;indexicals;} } @article{ daniels_cb-freeman_jb:1977a, author = {Charles B. Daniels and James B. Freeman}, title = {Classical Second-Order Intensional Logic with Maximal Propositions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {1--31}, topic = {intensional-logic;} } @article{ daniels_tb-pacuit_e:2008a, author = {Tijmen R. Dani\"els and Eric Pacuit}, title = {A General Approach to Aggregation Problems}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2008}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {517--536}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jl19\Pacuit1.pdf}, topic = {aggregation;knowledge-integration;} } @book{ danielson_pa:1998a, editor = {Peter A. Danielson}, title = {Modeling Rationality, Morality, and Evolution}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Peter A. Danielson, "Introduction" I. Rationality 2. Edward F. McClennen, "Rationality and Rules" 3. David Gauthier, "Intention and Deliberation" 4. Michael E. Bratman, "Following Through with One's Plans: Reply to David Gauthier" 5. A. D. Irvine, "How Braess' Paradox Solves Newcomb's Problem" 6. Bryan R. Routledge, "Economics of the Prisoner's Dilemma: A Background" 7. Ronald de Sousa, "Modeling Rationality: Normative or Descriptive?" II. Modeling Social Interaction 10. Leslie Burkholder, "Theorem 1" 11. Louis Marinoff, "The Failure of Success: Intrafamilial Exploitation in the Prisoner's Dilemma" 12. Peter Kollock, "Transforming Social Dilemmas: Group Identity and Co-operation" 13. Bernardo A. Huberman and Natalie S. Glance, "Beliefs and Co-operation" 14. Paul M. Churchland, "The Neural Representation of the Social World" III. Morality 15. David Schmidtz, "Moral Dualism" 16. Duncan MacIntosh, "Categorically Rational Preferences and the Structure of Morality" 17. William J. Talbott, "Why We Need a Moral Equilibrium Theory" 18. Chantale LaCasse and Don Ross, "Morality's Last Chance" IV. Evolution 19. Brian Skyrms, "Mutual Aid: Darwin Meets The Logic of Decision" 20. Elliott Sober, "Three Differences between Deliberation and Evolution" 21. Peter A. Danielson, "Evolutionary Models of Co-operative Mechanisms: Artificial Morality and Genetic Programming" 15. Giovanni Dosi, Luigi Marengo, Andrea Bassanini and Marco Valente, "Norms as Emergent Properties of Adaptive Learning: The Case of Economic Routines" }, ISBN = {0-19-512550-9 (paper), 0-19-512549-5 (cloth)}, topic = {rationality;} } @incollection{ danielson_pa:2011a, author = {Peter Danielson}, title = {Prototyping N-Reasons: A Computer Mediated Ethics Machine}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {442--450}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @article{ danielson_s:1965a, author = {Sven Danielson}, title = {Definitions of `Performatives{'} }, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1965}, volume = {31}, pages = {20--31}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @book{ danielsson_s:1969a, author = {Sven Danielsson}, title = {Preference and Obligation}, publisher = {Filosofiska F\"oreningen}, year = {1969}, address = {Uppsala}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @book{ danlos:1986a, author = {Laurence Danlos}, title = {Studies in Natural Language Processing: The Linguistic Basis of Text Generation}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1986}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @book{ danlos:1987a, author = {Laurence Danlos}, title = {The Linguistic Basis of Text Generation}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Cambridge}, ISBN = {0521329388}, rtnote = {UMich MEDIA UNION LIBRARY, P98 .D183 1987.}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @incollection{ danlos:1998a, author = {Laurence Danlos}, title = {Linguistic Ways for Expressing a Discourse Relation in a Lexicalized Text Generation System}, booktitle = {Discourse Relations and Discourse Markers: Proceedings of the Conference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Manfred Stede and Leo Wanner and Eduard Hovy}, pages = {50--53}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {discourse-cue-words;discourse-structure;nl-generation;} } @article{ danos-etal:1997a, author = {Vincent Danos and Jean-Baptiste Joinet and Harold Schellinx}, title = {A New Deconstructive Logic: Linear Logic}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1997}, volume = {62}, number = {3}, pages = {755--807}, rtnote = {This looks important. Read it.}, topic = {linear-logic;proof-theory;constructive-logic;} } @article{ danto_ac:1958a, author = {Arthur C. Danto}, title = {A Note on Expressions of the Referring Sort}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1958}, volume = {67}, number = {267}, pages = {404}, topic = {definite-descriptions;reference;} } @incollection{ danto_ac:1960a, author = {Arthur C. Danto}, title = {On Consciousness in Machines}, booktitle = {Dimensions of Mind: A Symposium}, publisher = {New York University Press}, year = {1960}, editor = {Sidney Hook}, pages = {180--187}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Hook Collection"}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;machine-intelligence;} } @article{ danto_ac:1964a, author = {Arthur C. Danto}, title = {What We Can Do}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1963}, volume = {60}, number = {15}, pages = {435--445}, rtnote = {I have this issue.}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @book{ danto_ac:1965a, author = {Arthur C. Danto}, title = {Analytical Philosophy of History}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1965}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {philosophy-of-history;} } @article{ danto_ac:1965b, author = {Arthur C. Danto}, title = {Basic Actions}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1965}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {141--148}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @book{ danto_ac:1973a, author = {Arthur Coleman Danto}, title = {Analytical Philosophy of Action}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1973}, address = {Cambridge}, ISBN = {0521201209}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library B 808.5 .D19}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;} } @incollection{ danto_ac:1993a, author = {Arthur Danto}, title = {Metaphor and Cognition}, booktitle = {Knowledge and Language: Volume {III}, Metaphor and Knowledge}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {F.R. Ankersmit and J.J.A. Mooij}, pages = {21--35}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {metaphor;pragmatics;} } @article{ danzer_l:2021a, author = {Lars D\"anzer}, title = {The Explanatory Project of {G}ricean Pragmatics}, journal = {Mind and Language}, year = {2021}, volume = {36}, number = {5}, pages = {683--706}, abstract = {The Gricean paradigm in pragmatics has recently been attacked for its alleged lack of explanatory import, based on the claim that it does not seek accounts of how utterance interpretation actually works, but merely of how it might work. This article rebuts this line of attack by offering a clear and detailed account of the explanatory project of Gricean pragmatics according to which the latter aims for rationalizing explanations of utterance interpretation. ...}, topic = {Grice;foundations-of-pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ daotran_m:2010a, author = {Minh Dao-Tran and Thomas Eiter and Michael Fink and Thomas Krennwallner}, title = {Distributed Nonmonotonic Multi-Context Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {60--70}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We present a distributed algorithm for computing equilibria of heterogeneous nonmonotonic multi-context systems (MCS). As a showcase, we instantiate the MCS framework with answer set program contexts. To characterize equilibria of such MCS, we develop notions of loop formulas that enable reductions to the classi- cal satisfiability problem (SAT). ... we can use SAT solvers for belief set building. We demonstrate this approach by an experimental prototype implementation, which uses an off-the-shelf SAT solver.}, topic = {knowledge-integration;Ai-algorithms;answer-sets;model-checking;} } @article{ dapaznmedeiros:2006a, author = {Maria da Paz N. Medeiros}, title = {A New {S4} Classical Modal Logic in Natural Deduction}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2006}, volume = {71}, number = {3}, pages = {799--809}, topic = {modal-logic;natural-deduction;} } @article{ dar-etal:1999a, author = {Tzachi Dar and Leo Joskowicz and Ehud Rivlin}, title = {Understanding Mechanical Motion: From Images to Behaviors}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {112}, number = {1--2}, pages = {147--179}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We present an algorithm for producing behavior descriptions of planar fixed axes mechanical motions from image sequences using a formal behavior language. The language, which covers the most important class of mechanical motions, symbolically captures the qualitative aspects of objects that translate and rotate along axes that are fixed in space. The algorithm exploits the structure of these motions to robustly recover the objects behaviors. It starts by identifying the independently moving objects, their motion parameters, and their variation with respect to time using normal optical flow analysis, iterative motion segmentation, and motion parameter estimation. It then produces a formal description of their behavior by identifying individual uniform motion events and simultaneous motion changes, and parsing them with a motion grammar. We demonstrate the algorithm on three sets of image sequences: mechanisms, everyday situations, and a robot manipulation scenario.}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;motion-reconstruction;} } @incollection{ daradoumis:1996a, author = {Thanasis Daradoumis}, title = {Towards a Representation of the Rhetorical Structure of Interrupted Exchanges}, booktitle = {Trends in Natural Language Generation, An Artificial Intelligence Perspective, Fourth {E}uropean Workshop, {EWNLG} '93, Pisa, Italy, April 28-30, 1993, Selected Papers}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science}, volume = {1036}, year = {1996}, editor = {Giovanni Adorni and Michael Zock}, pages = {106--124}, address = {New York}, topic = {discourse-structure;} } @article{ daragona_ap:2022a, author = {Antonio Piccolomini d'Aragona}, title = {Proofs, Grounds and Empty Functions: Epistemic Compulsion in {P}rawitz's Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {2}, pages = {249--281}, abstract = {... We aim at singling out three reasons that may have led Prawitz to the ground-theoretic turn, i.e.: a better order in the explanation of the relation between valid inferences and proofs; a notion of valid inference based on which valid inferences and proofs are recognisable as such; a reconstruction of the deductive activity that makes inferences capable of yielding justification per se. ... We conclude by remarking that, in spite of some improvements, the ground-theoretic approach shares with the previous one a problem of vacuous validity which, as Prawitz himself points out, blocks in both cases a satisfactory explanation of epistemic compulsion.}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;proof-theory;} } @incollection{ darden_l:2000a, author = {Lindley Darden}, title = {Strategies for Discovering Mechanisms: Schema Instantiation, Modular Subassembly, Forward/Backward Chaining}, booktitle = {{PSA}'00: Proceedings of the 2000 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2002}, editor = {Jeffrey A. Barrett and J. McKenzie Alexander}, pages = {S354--S377}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;mechanisms;scientific-discovery;} } @article{ darden_l:2000b, author = {Lindley Darden}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}rtificial Intelligence and Scientific Method, Oxford}, by {D}onald {G}illies}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {301--304}, xref = {Review of: gillies_d:1996a.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;machine-learning;} } @article{ dare_b-rosenblatt_l:2018a, author = {Bruno Da R\'e and Lucas Rosenblatt}, title = {Contraction, Infinitary Quantifiers, and Omega Paradoxes}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {4}, pages = {611--629}, xref = {Commentary on: zardini_e:2011a}, topic = {truth;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ darlington:1981a, author = {John Darlington}, title = {An Experimental Program Transformation and Synthesis System}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, pages = {1--46}, topic = {program-synthesis;} } @article{ darnell_r:1974a, author = {Regna Darnell}, title = {Rationalist Aspects of the {W}horf Hypothesis}, journal = {Papers in Philosophy}, year = {1974}, volume = {7}, number = {1-3}, pages = {41--50}, topic = {linguistic-relativity;} } @book{ dartnall:1994a, editor = {Terry Dartnall}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Creativity: An Interdisciplinary Approach}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1994}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-7923-3061-7}, xref = {Review: josephson_sg:1996a.}, topic = {creativity;philosophy-AI;} } @article{ dartnall:2000a, author = {Terry Dartnall}, title = {Reverse Psychologism, Cognition and Content}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {31--52}, topic = {cognitive-states;philosophy-AI;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ darwall-etal:1992a, author = {Stephen Darwall and Allen Gibbard and Peter Railton}, title = {Toward \emph{Fin de Sie\`ecle} Ethics: Some Trends}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1992}, volume = {101}, number = {1}, pages = {115--189}, topic = {ethics;} } @incollection{ darwall_s:2012a, author = {Stephen Darwall}, title = {Bipolar Obligation}, booktitle = {Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Volume 7}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Russ Shafer-Landau}, pages = {333--384}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {metaethics;moral-conflict;} } @incollection{ darwall_s:2016a, author = {Stephen Darwall}, title = {Making the `Hard' Problem of Moral Normativity Easier}, booktitle = {Weighing Reasons}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Errol Lord and Barry Maguire}, pages = {257--278}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {metaethics;} } @phdthesis{ darwiche:1992a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {A Symbolic Generalization of Probability Theory}, school = {Computer Science Department, Stanford University}, year = {1992}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Stanford. California}, topic = {qualitative-probability;abstract-probability;} } @unpublished{ darwiche:1995a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {Structure-Based Generation of Plans}, year = {1995}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Rockwell Science Center.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Year is Guess. Published in some AI conference. Which one?}, topic = {planning;} } @inproceedings{ darwiche:1996a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {Using Knowledge-Base Semantics in Graph-Based Algorithms}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Eighth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, Vol. 2}, year = {1996}, editor = {William J. Clancey and Dan Weld}, pages = {607--613}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {join-trees;AI-algorithms;} } @article{ darwiche:1997a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {A Logical Notion of Conditional Independence: Properties and Applications}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {97}, number = {1--2}, pages = {45--82}, topic = {statistical-(in)dependence;conditional-independence;} } @incollection{ darwiche:1998a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {Compiling Devices: A Structure-Based Approach}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, address = {San Francisco, California}, pages = {156--166}, topic = {kr;diagnosis;device-modeling;kr-course;} } @article{ darwiche:2000a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {Model-Based Diagnosis under Real-World Constraints}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {57--73}, topic = {model-based-reasoning;diagnosis;} } @article{ darwiche:2001a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {Recursive Conditioning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {126}, number = {1--2}, pages = {5--41}, topic = {AI-algorithms;Bayesian-networks;conditioning-methods;} } @incollection{ darwiche:2002a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {A Logical Approach to Factoring Belief Networks}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {409--420}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;Bayesian-networks;AI-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ darwiche:2002b, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {A Compiler for Deterministic, Decomposible Negation Normal Form}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {627--634}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {model-checking;} } @incollection{ darwiche:2008a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {Bayesian Networks}, booktitle = {Handbook of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2008}, editor = {Frank van Harmelen and Vladimir Lifschitz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {467--509}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;} } @book{ darwiche:2009a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {Modeling and Reasoning with {B}ayesian Networks}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780521884389 (hardback)}, rtnote = {Shapiro Science QA279.5 .D37 2009}, xref = {Review: xiang:2009a}, topic = {bayesian-networks;AI-text;} } @inproceedings{ darwiche-ginsberg_ml:1992a, author = {Adnan Darwiche and Matthew L. Ginsberg}, title = {A Symbolic Generalization of Probability Theory}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, editor = {Paul S. Rosenbloom and Peter Szolovits}, pages = {622--627}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-probability;abstract-probability;} } @inproceedings{ darwiche-goldszmidt:1994a, author = {Adnan Darwiche and Mois\'es Goldszmidt}, title = {On the Relation between Kappa Calculus and Probabilistic Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, pages = {145--153}, month = {July}, topic = {qualitative-probability;diagnosis;} } @article{ darwiche-marquis_p:2004a, author = {Adnan Darwiche and Pierre Marquis}, title = {Compiling Propositional Weighted Bases}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {157}, number = {1--2}, pages = {81--113}, topic = {knowledge-integration;complexity-in-AI;} } @techreport{ darwiche-pearl_j:1991a, author = {Adnan Darwiche and Judea Pearl}, title = {On the Logic of Iterated Belief Revision}, institution = {UCLA, Computer Science Department}, number = {R--202}, year = {1991}, address = {Los Angeles, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ darwiche-pearl_j:1994a, author = {Adnan Darwiche and Judea Pearl}, title = {Symbolic Causal Networks}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, editor = {Barbara Hayes-Roth and Richard Korf}, pages = {238--244}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {causal-networks;} } @inproceedings{ darwiche-pearl_j:1994b, author = {Adnan Darwiche and Judea Pearl}, title = {On the Logic of Iterated Belief Revision}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fifth Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Ronald Fagin}, pages = {5--23}, address = {San Francisco}, xref = {Journal publication: darwiche-pearl_j:1997a.}, topic = {belief-revision;conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ darwiche-pearl_j:1994c, author = {Adnan Darwiche and Judea Pearl}, title = {Symbolic Causal Networks for Reasoning about Actions and Plans}, booktitle = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Decision-Theoretic Planning}, year = {1994}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, missinginfo = {editor, pages, etc}, rtnote = {In RHT collection}, topic = {causal-networks;practical-reasoning;pr-course; decision-theoretic-planning;} } @article{ darwiche-pearl_j:1997a, author = {Adnan Darwiche and Judea Pearl}, title = {On the Logic of Iterated Belief Revision}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {89}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--31}, xref = {Conference publication: darwiche-pearl_j:1994b.}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ darwiche-sakame:1995a, author = {Adnan Darwiche and Chiaki Sakama}, title = {Model-Based Diagnosis Using Causal Networks}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {211--218}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {diagnosis;causal-reasoning;causal-networks;} } @inproceedings{ darwiche_a:1995a, author = {Adnan Darwiche}, title = {Structure-Based Generation of Plans}, booktitle = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Decision-Theoretic Planning}, year = {1995}, editor = {Craig Boutilier and Moises Goldszmidt}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, pages = {56--61}, abstract = {I show that (1) compositional planning is possible when goals are independent; (2) there is a calculus for compositional planning, called plan calculus, that depends on the availability of such independence information; and (3) the causal structure of symbolic causal network encodes the independence information required by plan calculus. ... This leads to structure-based algorithms for plan generation; that is, algorithms for which the computational complexity is parameterized by the topology of the corresponding causal structure.}, url = {https://aaai.org/Library/Symposia/Spring/ss95-07.php}, topic = {planning-algorithms;causal-networks;} } @article{ darwish:1983a, author = {Nevin M. Darwish}, title = {A Quantitative Analysis of the Alpha-Beta Pruning Algorithm}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {405--433}, topic = {search;AI-algorithms-analysis;} } @article{ das_n:2019a, author = {Nilanjan Das}, title = {Accuracy and Ur-{P}rior Conditionalization}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {62--96}, topic = {probability-kinematics;} } @article{ das_n-salow_b:2018a, author = {Nilanjan Das and Bernhard Salow}, title = {Transparency and the {KK} Principle}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {52}, number = {1}, pages = {3--23}, topic = {epistemic-logic;knowledge;} } @article{ das_s-ahuja:1996a, author = {Subhodev Das and Narendra Ahuja}, title = {Active Surface Estimation: Integrating Coarse-to-Fine Image Acquisition and Estimation from Multiple Cues}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {83}, number = {2}, pages = {241--266}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper is concerned with the problem of surface reconstruction from stereo images for large scenes having large depth ranges with depth discontinuities. The passive stereo paradigm is inadequate for this problem because of the need to aim cameras in different directions and to fixate at different objects. We present an active approach that involves the following steps. First, a new fixation point is selected from among the nonfixated, low-resolution scene parts of current fixation. Second, a reconfiguration of the cameras is initiated for refixation. As reconfiguration progresses, the images of the new fixation point gradually deblur and the accuracy of the position estimate of the point improves allowing the cameras to be aimed at it with increasing precision. In the third step, the improved depth estimate is used to select focus settings of the cameras, thus completing fixation. Finally, stereo images are acquired and segmented into fixated and nonfixated parts of the scene that are analyzed in parallel.}, topic = {computer-vision;scene-reconstruction;} } @article{ das_s-etal:2013a, author = {Shubhomoy Das and Travis Moore and Weng-Keen Wong and Simone Stumpf and Ian Oberst and Kevin McIntosh and Margaret Burnett}, title = {End-User Feature Labeling: Supervised and Semi-Supervised Approaches Based on Locally-Weighted Logistic Regression}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {204}, pages = {56--74}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @incollection{ das_sk-etal:1996a, author = {Subrata K. Das and John Fox and P. Krause}, title = {A Unified Framework for Hypothetical and Practical Reasoning (1): Theoretical Foundations}, booktitle = {Practical Reasoning: International Conference on Formal and Applied Practical Reasoning, FAPR'96}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Hans J\"urgen Olbach}, pages = {58--72}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {We describe here a general and flexible framework for decision making which embodies the concepts of beliefs, goals, options, arguments and commitments. We have employed these concepts to build a generic decision support system which has been successfully applied in a number of areas in clinical medicine. In this paper, we present the formalisation of the decision making architecture within a framework of modal propositional logics. ...}, topic = {agent-architectures;decision-making;logic-in-AI;practical-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ dasaro_fa-etal:2020a, author = {Fabio A. D'Asaro and Matteo Spezialetti and Luca Raggioli and Silvia Rossi}, title = {Towards an Inductive Logic Programming Approach for Explaining Black-Box Preference Learning Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {855--859}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {In this paper we advocate the use of Inductive Logic Programming as a device for explaining black-box models, e.g. Support Vector Machines (SVMs), when they are used to learn user preferences. We present a case study where we use the ILP system ILASP to explain the output of SVM classifiers trained on preference datasets. ...}, topic = {inductive-logic-programming;explainable-AI;} } @inproceedings{ dasaro_fa-etal:2021a, author = {Fabio Aurelio D'Asaro and Paolo Baldi and Giuseppe Primiero}, title = {Introducing k-lingo: a k-depth Bounded Version of {ASP} System Clingo}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {661--665}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {Depth-Bounded Boolean Logics (DBBL for short) are well-understood frameworks to model rational agents equipped with limited deductive capabilities. ... we propose a limited-depth version of the popular ASP system \clingo, tentatively dubbed k-lingo after the bound k on virtual information. ...}, topic = {depth-bounded-boolean-logics;limited-rationality;} } @incollection{ dascal:1976a, author = {Marcello Dascal}, title = {Levels of Meaning and Moral Discourse}, booktitle = {Language in Focus}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1976}, editor = {Asa Kasher}, pages = {587--625}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {deontic-logic;ethics;} } @incollection{ dascal:1979a, author = {Marcelo Dascal}, title = {Conversational Relevance}, booktitle = {Meaning and Use: Papers Presented at the Second {J}erusalem Philosophy Encounter}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1979}, editor = {Avishai Margalit}, pages = {153--174}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Dascal"}, topic = {relevance;implicature;} } @incollection{ dascal:1979b, author = {Mardelo Dascal}, title = {Contextualism}, booktitle = {Possibilities and Limitations of Pragmatics: Proceedings of the Conference at Urbino, July 8--14, 1979}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {1981}, editor = {Herman Parret and M. Sbis\`a and Jef Verschueren}, pages = {153--177}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {context;contextualism;} } @article{ dascal:1987a, author = {Marcelo Dascal}, title = {Defending Literal Meaning}, journal = {Cognitive Science}, year = {1987}, volume = {11}, pages = {259--281}, topic = {speaker-meaning;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ dascal:1992a, author = {Marcelo Dascal}, title = {On the Pragmatic Structure of Conversation}, booktitle = {(On) {S}earle on Conversation}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {1992}, editor = {Herman Parret and Jef Verschueren}, pages = {35--56}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {foundations-of-pragmatics;discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @article{ dascal:1992b, author = {Marcelo Dascal}, title = {Why Does Language Matter to Artificial Intelligence?}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1992}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {145--174}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @article{ dasgupta-etal:1994a, author = {Pallab Dasgupta and P.P. Chakrabarti and S.C. DeSarkar}, title = {Agent Searching in a Tree and the Optimality of Iterative Deepening}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {71}, number = {1}, pages = {195--208}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The agent searching framework models the effort of a search strategy in terms of the distance traversed by an agent while exploring the search space. The framework has been found to be useful in modeling search problems where the cost of backtracking and retracing search paths is important in determining search complexity. In this paper we show that depth-first iterative deepening (DFID) strategies are optimal for an agent searching in a line, in m concurrent rays, and in uniform b-ary trees. In the conventional search model it is known that DFID is asymptotically optimal for uninformed search of uniform b-ary trees. In this paper we prove the stronger result that for agent searching in uniform b-ary trees, iterative deepening is optimal up to lower-order terms. We also discuss the problems involved in optimally performing agent search in a graph.}, topic = {search;iterative-deepening;} } @article{ dasgupta-etal:1996a, author = {Pallab Dasgupta and P.P. Chakrabarti and S.C. DeSarkar}, title = {Searching Game Trees under a Partial Order}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {82}, number = {1--2}, pages = {237--257}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The problem of partial order game tree search arises from game playing situations where multiple, conflicting and non-commensurate criteria dictate the merit of a position of the game. In partial order game trees, the outcomes evaluated at the tip nodes are vectors, where each dimension of the vector represents a distinct criterion of merit. This leads to an interesting variant of the game tree searching problem where corresponding to every game playing strategy of a player, several outcomes are possible depending on the individual priorities of the opponent. In this paper, we identify the necessary and sufficient conditions for a set of outcomes to be inferior to another set of outcomes for every strategy. Using an algebra called Dominance Algebra on sets of outcomes, we describe a bottom-up approach to find the non-inferior sets of outcomes at the root node. We also identify shallow and deep pruning conditions for partial order game trees and present a partial order search algorithm on lines similar to the alpha-beta pruning algorithm for conventional game trees.}, topic = {search;game-trees;} } @article{ dasgupta-etal:2001a, author = {Pallab Dasgupta and P. P. Chakrabarti and Jatindra Kumar Deka and Sriram Sankaranarayanan}, title = {Min-Max Computation Tree Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {127}, number = {1}, pages = {137--162}, topic = {temporal-logic;model-checking;} } @article{ dash-druzdzel:2008a, author = {Denver Dash and Marek J. Druzdzel}, title = {A Note on the Correctness of the Causal Ordering Algorithm}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {15}, pages = {1800--1808}, topic = {causality;structural-models;} } @article{ dash-lee_ha:2003a, author = {Manjoranjan Dash and Huan Lee}, title = {Consistency-Based Search in Feature Selection}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {151}, number = {1--2}, pages = {155--176}, topic = {feature-selection;search;} } @techreport{ dasigi:1988a, author = {Venu R. Dasigi}, title = {Word Sense Disambiguation in Descriptive Text Interpretation: A Dual-Route Parsimonious Covering Model}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, University of Maryland}, number = {TR-2151}, year = {1988}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {nl-interpretation;disambiguation;} } @book{ dassow-etal:1996a, editor = {J\"urgen Dassow and Grzegorz Rozenberg and Arto Salomaa}, title = {Developments in Language Theory {II}: At The Crossroads of Mathematics, Computer Science, and Biology}, publisher = {World Scientific}, year = {1996}, address = {Singapore}, ISBN = {9810226829}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 267.3 .D482 1996.}, topic = {formal-language-theory;} } @article{ dastani_m:2008a, author = {Mehdi Dastani}, title = {{2APL}: A Practical Agent Programming Language}, journal = {International Journal of Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems}, year = {2008}, volume = {16}, number = {3}, pages = {214--248}, topic = {agent-architectures;programming-languages;} } @inproceedings{ dastani_m-etal:2002a, author = {Mehdi Dastani and Frank de Boer and Frank Dignum and Wiebe van der Hoek and Meindert Kroese and John-Jules Meyer}, title = {Programming the Deliberation Cycle of Cognitive Robots}, booktitle = {Proc. of the 3rd International Cognitive Robotics Workshop}, year = {2002}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Sheila A. McIlRaith}, publisher = {AAAI}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, url = {http://www.aaai.org/Papers/Workshops/2002/WS-02-05/WS02-05-004.pdf}, abstract = {This paper presents an overview of ongoing research that aims to develop a programming language for high level control of cognitive robots and software agents. The language is called 3APL and its formal specification is already presented in (Hindriks et al. 1999). We explain 3APL programming constructs and its existing interpreter. We argue that a part of the deliberation cycle, which is fixed in the interpreter, should be programmable. We discuss a set of programming constructs that can be used to program some aspects of the deliberation cycle.}, topic = {cognitive-robotics;agent-architectures;} } @article{ dastani_m-etal:2004a, author = {Mehdi Dastani and Catholijn M. Jonker and Jan Treur}, title = {A Requirement Specification Language for Configuration Dynamics of Multi-Agent Systems}, journal = {International Journal of Intelligent Systems}, year = {2004}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {277--300}, topic = {muktiagent-systems;} } @article{ dastani_m-etal:2005a, author = {Mehdi Dastani and Joris Hulstijn and L. van der Torre}, title = {How to Decide What to Do?}, journal = {European Journal of Operational Research}, year = {2005}, volume = {160}, number = {3}, pages = {762--784}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my16}, topic = {decision-theory;qualitative-decision-theory;} } @inproceedings{ dastani_m-etal:2005b, author = {Mehdi Dastani and Guido Governatori and Antoni Rotolo and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Preferences of Agents in Defeasible Logic}, booktitle = {AI'05: Proceedings of the 18th Australian Joint conference on Advances in Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, editor = {S. Zhang and R. Jarvis}, pages = {695--704}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {defeasible-logic;multiagent-systems;reasoning-about-preferences;} } @inproceedings{ dastani_m-etal:2005c, author = {Mehdi Dastani and Guido Governatori and Antoni Rotolo and Leendert van der Torre}, title = {Programming Cognitive Agents in Defeasible Logic}, booktitle = {LPAR 2005: Logic for Programming, Artificial Intelligence, and Reasoning}, year = {2005}, editor = {G. Sutcliffe and A. Voronkov}, pages = {621--636}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {defeasible-logic;multiagent-systems;reasoning-about-preferences;} } @article{ dastani_m-etal:2013a, author = {Mehdi Dastani and Davide Gross and John-Jules Meyer}, title = {Normative Multi-Agent Programs}, journal = {International Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2013}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {335--354}, topic = {multiagent-systems;normativity;} } @inproceedings{ dastani_m-indurkhya:2001a, author = {Mehdi Dastani and Bipin Indurkhya}, title = {Modeling Context Effect in Perceptual Domains}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {129--142}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;psychology-of-perception;vision;} } @inproceedings{ dastani_m-lorini_e:2012a, author = {Mehdi Dastani and Emiliano Lorini}, title = {A Logic of Emotions: From Appraisal to Coping}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Autonomous Agents}, year = {2012}, editor = {Vincent Conitzer and Michael Winikoff}, organization = {International Foundation for Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems}, abstract = {Emotion is a cognitive mechanism that directs an agent's thoughts and attention to what is relevant, important, and significant. Such a mechanism is crucial for the design of resource-bounded agents that must operate in highly-dynamic, semi-predictable environments and which need mechanisms for allocating their computational resources efficiently. The aim of this work is to propose a logical analysis of emotions and their influences on an agent's behavior. We focus on four emotion types (viz., hope, fear, joy, and distress) and provide their logical characterizations in a modal logic frame-work. As the intensity of emotion is essential for its influence on an agent's behavior, the logic is devised to represent and reason about graded beliefs, graded goals and intentions. The belief strength and the goal strength determine the intensity of emotions. Emotions trigger different types of coping strategy which are aimed at dealing with emotions either by forming or revising an intention to act in the world, or by changing the agent's interpretation of the situation (by changing beliefs or goals).}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de19\dastani.pdf}, topic = {emoition;emotional-computing;agent-architectures;} } @article{ dastani_m-meyer_jj:2010a, author = {Mehdi Dastani and John-Jules Meyer}, title = {Agents with Emotions}, journal = {International Journal of Intelligent Systems}, year = {2010}, volume = {25}, number = {7}, pages = {636--654}, abstract = {This paper discusses the role of emotions in artificial agent design and implementation. The syntax and semantics of a simplified version of a logic-based agent-oriented programming language is presented. This programming language facilitates the implementation of artificial agents with emotions. Four types of emotions are distinguished: happiness, sadness, anger, and fear. These emotions are defined relative to agent's goals and plans. The emotions result from the agent's deliberation process and influence the deliberation process. The semantics of each emotion type is incorporated in the transition semantics of the presented agent-oriented programming language. This paper is a revised and expanded version of M. Dastani & J.-J. Ch., Meyer, Programming emotional agents, In: Proc. ECAI 2006 Brewka G, Coradeschi S, Perini A, Traverso P, editors. Riva del Garda, IOS Press, Amsterdam, 2006, pp 215--219.}, topic = {emotion;agent-architectures;} } @book{ daston:1988a, author = {Lorraine J. Daston}, title = {Classical Probability in the {E}nlightenment}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {1988}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, ISBN = {9780691006444}, topic = {probability;history-of-science;} } @unpublished{ dau:1973a, author = {Paolo Dau}, title = {Why is {R}ussell's {\em {O}n Denoting} So Confusing?}, year = {1973}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Year is a guess.}, topic = {Russell;deinite-descriptions;} } @unpublished{ dau:1979a, author = {Paolo Dau}, title = {Certain Rather Curious Difficulties}, year = {1979}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosopohy Department, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Year is a guess.}, topic = {Russell;on-denoting;} } @inproceedings{ daugherty_af-forsythe:1988a, author = {Andrew F. Daugherty and Robert Forsythe}, title = {Complete Information Outcomes without Common Knowledge}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge}, year = {1988}, editor = {Moshe Y. Vardi}, pages = {195--209}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {game-theory;mutual-belief;} } @article{ davenport_d:2012a, author = {David Davenport}, title = {Computationalism: Still the Only Game in Town}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2012}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {183--190}, abstract = {Mental representations, Swiatczak (Minds Mach 21:19--32, 2011) argues, are fundamentally biochemical and their operations depend on consciousness; hence the computational theory of mind, based as it is on multiple realisability and purely syntactic operations, must be wrong. Swiatczak, however, is mistaken. Computation, properly understood, can afford descriptions/explanations of any physical process, and since Swiatczak accepts that consciousness has a physical basis, his argument against computationalism must fail. Of course, we may not have much idea how consciousness (itself a rather unclear plurality of notions) might be implemented, but we do have a hypothesis -- that all of our mental life, including consciousness, is the result of computational processes and so not tied to a biochemical substrate. Like it or not, the computational theory of mind remains the only game in town.}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;consciousness;} } @article{ davey_k:2021a, author = {Kevin Davey}, title = {A Note on the Unprovability of Consistency in Formal Theories of Truth}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {6}, pages = {1313--1340}, abstract = {... I argue that there is an important and attractive class of theories of truth that [Field] omitted in his analysis. Such theories cannot prove that all their axioms are true, though unlike many of the cases Field considers, they do not prove that any of their axioms are false or that any of their rules of inference are not truth preserving. I argue that it is the fact that such theories are not finitely axiomatizable that stops them from proving their own consistency.}, topic = {consistency-proofs;axiomatic-truth;} } @book{ david_fm:1999a, author = {Florence N. David}, title = {Games, Gods, and Gambling: A History of Probability and Statistical Ideas}, publisher = {Dover}, year = {1999}, address = {Mineola, New York}, ISBN = {0-486-40023-9 pbk}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. History of science shelves. (In Library.)}, topic = {history-of-probability;history-of-statistics;} } @book{ david_m:1994a, author = {Marian David}, title = {Correspondence and Disquotation: An Essay on the Nature of Truth}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: porter_lf:1998a.}, topic = {truth;disquotational-truth;} } @incollection{ david_m:1997a, author = {Marian David}, title = {Kim's Functionalism}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 11: Mind, Causation, and World}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {133--148}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @incollection{ david_m:2005a, author = {Marian David}, title = {Truth as the Primary Epistemic Goal: A Working Hypothesis}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {363--376 }, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;truth;} } @incollection{ david_m:2008a, author = {Marian David}, title = {Tarski's Convention {T} and the Concept of Truth}, booktitle = {New Essays on {T}arski and Philosophy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Douglas Patterson}, pages = {133--156}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Tarski;history-of-logic;truth;} } @article{ davidson_d:1963a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Actions, Reasons and Causes}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1963}, volume = {60}, pages = {685--700}, number = {23}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1963a2}, topic = {actions;causality;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1963a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Actions, Reasons, and Causes}, booktitle = {Essays on Actions and Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {3--19}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1963a1}, topic = {reasons-for-action;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1963b, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Method of Intension and Extension}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of {R}udolph {C}arnap}, publisher = {Open Court Publishing Company}, year = {1963}, editor = {Paul A. Schilpp}, pages = {351--350}, address = {LaSalle, Ilinois}, topic = {carnap;intensional-logic;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1965a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Theories of Meaning and Learnable Languages}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 1964 Congress for Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1965}, editor = {Yehoshua Bar-Hillel}, pages = {383--394}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1965a2}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;learnability;concept-formation;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1965a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Theories of Meaning and Learnable Languages}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {3--15}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1965a1}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;learnability;concept-formation;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1967a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Logical Form of Action Sentences}, booktitle = {The Logic of Decision and Action}, year = {1967}, editor = {Nicholas Rescher}, pages = {81--95}, publisher = {University of Pittsburgh Press}, address = {Pittsburgh}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1967a2, davidson_d:1967a3}, topic = {action;events;nl-semantics;event-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1967a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Logical Form of Action Sentences}, booktitle = {The Logic of Grammar}, publisher = {Dickenson Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {235--245}, address = {Encino, California}, xref = {Original Publication: davidson_d:1967a1.}, topic = {action;events;nl-semantics;event-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1967a3, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Logical Form of Action Sentences}, booktitle = {Essays on Actions and Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {105--148}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1967a1}, topic = {action;events;nl-semantics;event-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1967b, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Discussion with E. Lemmon, H. Casta\~neda and R. Chisholm}, booktitle = {The Logic of Decision and Action}, year = {1967}, editor = {Nicholas Rescher}, pages = {96--120}, publisher = {University of Pittsburgh Press}, address = {Pittsburgh}, xref = {Discussion of davidson_d:1967a1.}, topic = {action;events;nl-semantics;event-semantics;} } @article{ davidson_d:1967c1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Causal Relations}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1967}, volume = {64}, number = {21}, pages = {691--703}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1967c2.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {causality;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1967c2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Causal Relations}, booktitle = {The Logic of Grammar}, publisher = {Dickenson Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {246--254}, address = {Encino, California}, xref = {Original Publication: davidson_d:1967c1.}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ davidson_d:1967d1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Truth and Meaning}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1967}, volume = {17}, pages = {304--323}, number = {1}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1967d2, davidson_d:1967d3}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1967d2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Truth and Meaning}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {17--36}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1967d1}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1967d3, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Truth and Meaning}, booktitle = {Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel}, year = {1969}, editor = {J.W. Davis and Donald J. Hochberg and W.K. Wilson}, pages = {1--20}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1967d1}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @article{ davidson_d:1968a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {On Saying That}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1968}, volume = {19}, pages = {130--146}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1968a2, davidson_d:1968a3}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Davidson"}, topic = {indirect-discourse;propositional-attitudes;propositions philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1968a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {On Saying That}, booktitle = {The Logic of Grammar}, publisher = {Dickenson Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {143--152}, address = {Encino, California}, xref = {Original Publication: davidson_d:1968a1.}, topic = {indirect-discourse;propositional-attitudes;propositions philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1968a3, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {On Saying That}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {93--108}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Original Publication: davidson_d:1968a1.}, topic = {indirect-discourse;propositional-attitudes;propositions philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1968a4, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {On Saying That}, booktitle = {Words and Objections: Essays on the Work of {W.V.O.} {Q}uine}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1969}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Jaakko Hintikka}, pages = {158--174}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {indirect-discourse;propositional-attitudes;propositions philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1969a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Individuation of Events}, booktitle = {Essays in Honor of Carl G. Hempel}, year = {1969}, editor = {Nicholas Rescher}, pages = {216--234}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1969a2.}, topic = {events;event-individuation;individuation;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1969a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Individuation of Events}, booktitle = {Essays on Actions and Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {149--180}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1969a1}, topic = {events;event-individuation;individuation;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1969a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Individuation of Events}, booktitle = {Essays in Honor of {C}arl {G}. {H}empel}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1969}, editor = {Alan Ross Anderson and Paul Benacerraf and Adolf Gr\"unbaum and Gerald J. Massey and Nicjolas Rescher and Richard S. Rudner}, pages = {216--234}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {events;event-individuation;} } @article{ davidson_d:1969b1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {True to the Facts}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1969}, volume = {66}, number = {21}, pages = {748--764}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1969b2}, topic = {truth;facts;JLAustin;Strawson;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1969b2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {True to the Facts}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {43--54}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1969b1}, topic = {truth;facts;JLAustin;Strawson;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1970a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Semantics for Natural Languages}, booktitle = {Linguaggi nella Societ\'a e nella Tecnica}, publisher = {Edizioni di Communit\`a}, year = {1970}, editor = {Bruno Visentini et al.}, pages = {177--188}, address = {Milan}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1970a2}, topic = {nl-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1970a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Semantics for Natural Languages}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {55--64}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1970a1}, topic = {nl-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1970a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Mental Events}, booktitle = {Experience and Theory}, publisher = {University of Massachusetts Press}, year = {1970}, editor = {Lawrence Foster and J. W. Swanson}, pages = {79--101}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Davidson"}, xref = {Reprinted in davidson_d:1980a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;mind-body-problem;anomalous-monism; mental-events;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1970b1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {How Is Weakness of the Will Possible?}, booktitle = {Moral Concepts}, editor = {Joel Feinberg}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, address = {Oxford}, year = {1970}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1970b1}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {akrasia;volition;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1970b2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {How is Weakness of the Will Possible?}, booktitle = {Essays on Actions and Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {21--42}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1970b2}, topic = {akrasia;volition;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1970c1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Semantics for Natural Languages}, booktitle = {Linguaggi nella Societ\'a e nella Tecnica}, publisher = {Edizioni di Communit\`a}, year = {1970}, editor = {Bruno Visentini et al.}, pages = {177--188}, address = {Milan}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1970c2.}, missinginfo = {other editors}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1970c2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Semantics for Natural Languages}, booktitle = {The Logic of Grammar}, publisher = {Dickenson Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {18--24}, address = {Encino, California}, xref = {Original Publication: davidson_d:1970a1.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @article{ davidson_d:1970d, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Action and Reaction}, journal = {Inquiry}, year = {1970}, volume = {13}, pages = {140--148}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Retrospective on davidson_d:1967a1}, topic = {action;events;nl-semantics;event-semantics;} } @article{ davidson_d:1970e1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Events as Particulars}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1970}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {25--32}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:2001e2}, topic = {events;metaphysics;individuation;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1970e2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Events as Particulars}, booktitle = {Essays on Actions and Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Richard Wollheim and J. Hopkins}, pages = {181--187}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:2001e1}, topic = {events;metaphysics;individuation;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1971a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Agency}, booktitle = {Agent, Action and Reason}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1971}, editor = {Robert Binkley and Richard Bronaugh and Ausonio Marras}, xref= {Republished in davidson_d:1980a}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {action;agency;} } @article{ davidson_d:1971b1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Eternal versus Ephemeral Events}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1971}, volume = {5}, number = {4}, pages = {335--349}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1971b2}, abstract = {Davidson emphasizes that his own ontological approach, as opposed to Chisholm's, grows out of a need to provide a semantic analysis for sentences stating that a (causal) change occurred; and that Chisholm is wrong to divorce matters of metaphysics from matters of entailment.}, topic = {eventsp;causation;philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1971b2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Eternal vs. Ephemeral Events}, booktitle = {Essays on Actions and Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Richard Wollheim and J. Hopkins}, pages = {189--203}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1971b1}, topic = {events;causation;philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1971c1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Agency}, booktitle = {Agent, Action, and Reason}, publisher = {University of Toronto Press}, year = {1971}, editor = {Robert Binkley and Richard Bronaugh and Ausonia Marras}, address = {Toronto}, pages = {3--25}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1971c2}, topic = {agency;philosophy-of-action;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1971c2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Agency}, booktitle = {Essays on Actions and Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {43--61}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1971c1}, topic = {agency;philosophy-of-action;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1973a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {In Defense of Convention {T}}, booktitle = {Truth, Syntax and Modality}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1973}, editor = {Hugues Leblanc}, address = {Amsterdam}, pages = {76--86}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1973a2}, topic = {truth-definitions;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1973a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {In Defense of Convention {T}}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {65--75}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1973a1}, topic = {truth-definitions;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1973b1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Material Mind}, booktitle = {Logic, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science {IV}}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1973}, editor = {Patrick Suppes et al.}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {pages, other editors}, xref = {Republished: davidson_d:1973a2.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;mind-body-problem;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1973b2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Material Mind}, booktitle = {Mind Design: Philosophy, Psychology, Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {John Haugeland}, pages = {339--354}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Originally Published: davidson_d:1973a1.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;mind-body-problem;} } @article{ davidson_d:1973c1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Radical Interpretation}, journal = {Dialectica}, year = {1973}, volume = {27}, number = {3--4}, pages = {313--328}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1973a2}, topic = {radical-interpretation;foundations-of-semantics; philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1973c2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Radical Interpretation}, booktitle = {Inquiries Into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {125--139}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1973c1}, topic = {radical-interpretation;foundations-of-semantics; philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ davidson_d:1974a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Belief and the Basis of Meaning}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1974}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {309--323}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1974a2}, topic = {speaker-meaning;belief;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1974a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Belief and the Basis of Meaning}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {141--154}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1974a1}, topic = {speaker-meaning;belief;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1974a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Philosophy as Psychology}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Psychology}, editor = {S. C. Brown}, publisher = {The Macmillan Press}, year = {1974}, xref = {Reprinted in davidson_d:1980a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ davidson_d:1974b, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Belief and the Basis of Meaning}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1974}, volume = {27}, pages = {309--323}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;communicative-intentions;} } @article{ davidson_d:1974c1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {On the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme}, journal = {Proceedings and Addresses of the {A}merican {P}hilosophical {A}ssociation}, year = {1974}, volume = {47}, pages = {5--20}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1974c2}, topic = {conceptual-frameworks;linguistic-relativity;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1974c2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {On the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {183--198}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1974c1}, topic = {conceptual-frameworks;linguistic-relativity;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1975a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Thought and Talk}, booktitle = {Mind and Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Samuel D. Guttenplan}, pages = {7--23}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1975a2}, topic = {radical-interpretation;propositional-attitudes;belief;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1975a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Thought and Talk}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {155--170}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1975a1}, topic = {radical-interpretation;propositional-attitudes;belief;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1976a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Reply to {F}oster}, booktitle = {Truth and Meaning: Essays in Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Gareth Evans and John McDowell}, pages = {33--41}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1976a2}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1976a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Reply to {F}oster}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {171--179}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1976a1}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @article{ davidson_d:1976a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Hempel on Explaining Action}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {1976}, volume = {10}, pages = {239--253}, topic = {action;explanation;intentionality;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1976b1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Moods and Performances}, booktitle = {Meaning and Use: Papers Presented at the Second {J}erusalem Philosophy Encounter}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1979}, editor = {Avishai Margalit}, missinginfo = {pages}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1976b2.}, topic = {speech-acts;nl-mood;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1976b2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Moods and Performances}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {109--121}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1976b1.}, topic = {speech-acts;nl-mood;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1976c, author = {Donald A. Davidson}, title = {Reply to {F}oster}, booktitle = {Truth and Meaning: Essays in Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Gareth Evans and John Mc{D}owell}, pages = {33--41}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Davidson-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1976d, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Introduction (to a Section on `Formulating the Target')}, booktitle = {Origins and Evolution of Language and Speech}, publisher = {New York Academy of Sciences}, year = {1976}, editor = {Stevan R. Harnad and Horst D. Steklis and Jane Lancaster}, pages = {18--19}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files. "Davidson"}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1977a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Method of Truth in Metaphysics}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {II}: Studies in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, address = {Minneapolis}, year = {1977}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {244--254}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1977a2}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1977a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Method of Truth in Metaphysics}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {199--214}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1977a1}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ davidson_d:1977b1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Reality without Reference}, journal = {Dialectica}, year = {1977}, volume = {31}, number = {1}, pages = {247--253}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1977b2}, topic = {reference;radical-interpretation;foundations-of-semantics; philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1977b2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Reality without Reference}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {215--225}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1977b1}, topic = {reference;radical-interpretation;foundations-of-semantics; philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ davidson_d:1978a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {What Metaphors Mean}, journal = {Critical Inquiry}, year = {1978}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {31--47}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1978a2}, topic = {metaphor;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1978a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {What Metaphors Mean}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {245--264}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1978a1}, topic = {metaphor;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1978b1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Intending}, booktitle = {Philosophy of History and Action}, editor = {Yirmiaku Yovel}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1978}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1978b2}, topic = {intention;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1978b2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Intending}, booktitle = {Essays on Actions and Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {83--102}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1978b1}, topic = {intention;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1978c, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Method of Truth in Metaphysics}, booktitle = {Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {294--304}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {holism;philosophy-of-language;metaphysics;} } @article{ davidson_d:1979a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Quotation}, journal = {Theory and Decision}, year = {1979}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {22-40}, xref = {Commentary: reimer_m:1996a, bennett_j:1988b}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1979a2}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1979a2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Quotation}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {79--92}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1979a1}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1979b1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Moods and Performances}, booktitle = {Meaning and Use: Papers Presented at the Second {J}erusalem Philosophy Encounter}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1979}, editor = {Avishai Margalit}, pages = {9--20}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1976b2}, topic = {speech-acts;nl-mood;imperatives;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1979b2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Moods and Performance}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {109--121}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1976b1}, topic = {speech-acts;nl-mood;imperatives;} } @article{ davidson_d:1979c1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Inscrutability of Reference}, journal = {Southwestern Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {7--19}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:1979a2}, topic = {reference;radical-interpretation;foundations-of-semantics; philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1979c2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Inscrutability of Reference}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {227--241}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1979a1}, topic = {reference;radical-interpretation;foundations-of-semantics; philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ davidson_d:1980a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Essays on Actions and Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1980}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {TC: 1. "Actions, Reasons, and Causes", pp. 3--19 2. "How is Weakness of the Will Possible?", pp. 21--42 3. "Agency", pp. 43--61 5. "Freedom to Act", pp. 63--81 6. "Intending", pp. 83--102 7. "The Logical Form of Action Sentences", pp. 105--148 [Including "Criticism, Comment, and Defence"] 9. "The Individuation of Events", pp. 149--180 10. "Events as Particulars", pp. 181--187 11. "Eternal vs. Ephemeral Events", pp. 189--203 12. "Mental Events", pp. 207--227 [Including "Appendix: Emeroses by Other Names"] 13. "Psychology as Philosophy", pp. 229--244 [Including "Comments and Replies"] 14. "The Material Mind", pp. 245--259 16. "Hempel on Explaining Action", pp. 261--275 17. "Hume's Cognitive Theory of Pride", pp. 277--290 }, ISBN = {0198245297}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B105.A35 D371.}, topic = {action;events;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1982a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Paradoxes of Irrationality}, booktitle = {Philosophical Essays on {F}reud}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1982}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {289--305}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Davidson"}, topic = {irrationality;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ davidson_d:1984a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, edition = {1}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {TC: 1. "Introduction", pp. xiii--xx 2. "Theories of Meaning and Learnable Languages", pp. 3--15 3. "Truth and meaning", pp. 17--36 4. "True to the Facts", pp. 37--54 5. "Semantics for Natural Languages", pp. 55--64 6. "In Defense of Convention T", pp. 65--75 7. "Quotation", pp. 79--92 8. "On Saying That", pp. 93--108 9. "Moods and Performances", pp. 109--121 10. "Radical Interpretation", pp. 125--139 11. "Belief and the Basis of Meaning", pp. 141--154 12. "Thought and Talk", pp. 155--170 13. "Reply to {F}oster", pp. 171--179 14. "On the Very Idea of a Conceptual Scheme", pp. 183--198 15. "The Method of Truth in Metaphysics", pp. 199--214 16. "Reality without Reference", pp. 215--225 17. "The Inscrutability of Reference", pp. 227-- 18. "What Metaphors Mean", pp. 245--264 19. "Communication and Convention", pp. 265--280 }, ISBN = {0199246289}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate P 106 .D271 2001}, xref = {2nd edition: davidson_d:1984a2}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;metaphysics;} } @book{ davidson_d:1984a2, editor = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, edition = {2}, year = {2001}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0199246289}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate P 106 .D271 2001}, xref = {1st edition: davidson_d:1984a1}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;metaphysics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1984b, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Inscrutability of Reference}, booktitle = {Inquiries Into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {227--242}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reference;radical-interpretation;foundations-of-semantics; philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ davidson_d:1984c1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Communication and Convention}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1984}, volume = {59}, number = {1}, pages = {3--17}, xref = {Commentary: blackburn_wk:1987a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, abstract = {Q: Are conventions mere conveniences or social flourishes, or are they necessary to the existence of communication by language? A: They aren't fundamental. In fact, language is fundamental for conventions.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;convention;speech-acts;pragmatics;assertion;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1984c2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Communication and Convention}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {265--280}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:1984c1}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;convention;speech-acts;pragmatics;assertion;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1985a1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Deception and Division}, booktitle = {The Multiple Self}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, editor = {Jon Elster}, pages = {79--92}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {self-deception;practical-reasoning;society-of-mind;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1985a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Deception and Division}, booktitle = {Actions and Events: Perspectives on the Philosophy of {D}onald {D}avidson}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell Ltd.}, year = {1985}, editor = {Ernest LePore and Brian P. McLaughlin}, pages = {138--148}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {self-deception;practical-reasoning;society-of-mind;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1986a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {A Nice Derangement of Epitaphs}, booktitle = {Philosophical Grounds of Rationality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1986}, editor = {Richard E. Grandy and Richard Warner}, pages = {157--174}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;implicature;pragmatics; speaker-meaning;Grice;} } @article{ davidson_d:1987a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {What Metaphors Mean}, journal = {Critical Inquiry}, year = {1987}, volume = {5}, number = {31--47}, pages = {200--220}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {metaphor;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1993a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Thinking Causes}, booktitle = {Mental Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {John Heil and Alfred R. Mele}, pages = {3--17}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {mind-body-problem;causality;anomalous-monism;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1993b, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Causal Relations}, booktitle = {Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Michael Tooley}, pages = {88--104}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {causation;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:1994a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Radical Interpretation Interpreted}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 8: Logic and Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1994}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {121--128}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Zip disk.}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;radical-interpretation;} } @article{ davidson_d:1996a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Folly of Trying to Define Truth}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1996}, volume = {93}, number = {6}, pages = {263--278}, contentnote = {Deals with role of theory of truth in an overall theory of attitudes, etc. Appears to be mainly a criticism of horwich_p:1990a.}, topic = {truth;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:2001a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {xv--xxiii}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ davidson_d:2001b1, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Quotation}, journal = {Theory and Decision}, year = {1979}, volume = {11}, pages = {27--40}, xref = {Republication: davidson_d:2001b2}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:2001b2, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Quotation}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation, 2nd edition}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {79--92}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davidson_d:2001b1}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:2001c, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {Replies to {L}ewis and {Q}uine}, booktitle = {Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Donald Davidson}, pages = {281--285}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;propositions;} } @incollection{ davidson_d:2006a, author = {Donald Davidson}, title = {The Perils and Pleasures of Interpretation}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {1056--1068}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;other-minds;} } @article{ davidson_d-etal:1955a, author = {Donald Davidson and J.C.C. McKinsey and Patrick Suppes}, title = {Outlines of a Formal Theory of Value, {I}}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1955}, volume = {22}, pages = {140--160}, contentnote = {Attempts to explicate the notion of a "rational preference pattern". Pp 145-6 contain a brilliant discussion of whether rational preference is transitive. Other plausible axioms are discussed and defended. Discussion of the problem of setting up an interval or ratio scale of preference measurement. Discussion of von Neuman and Morgenstern's method, Brief discussion of the problems raised by probability. Excellent bibliography.}, topic = {preference;} } @book{ davidson_d-harman_gh:1972a, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, title = {Semantics of Natural Language}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1972}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {90 277 0195 4}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Charles J. Fillmore, "Subjects, Speakers and Roles", pp. 1--24 2. Gilbert H. Harman, "Deep Structure as Logical Form", pp. 25--47 3. Jerry A. Fodor, "Troubles about Actions", pp. 48--69 4. John Robert Ross, "Act", pp. 70--126 5. Terence Parsons, "Some Problems Concerning the Logic of Grammatical Modifiers", pp. 127--141` 6. Richard Montague, "Pragmatics and Intensional Logic", pp. 142-- 7. David Lewis, "General Semantics", pp. 169--218 8. John Wallace, "On the Frame of Reference", pp. 219--252 9. Saul A. Kripke, "Naming and Necessity", pp. 253--355 10. Keith S. Donnellan, "Proper Names and Identifying Descriptions", pp. 356--379 11. Robert C. Stalnaker, "Pragmatics", pp. 380--397 12. Jaakko Hintikka, "The Semantics of Modal Notions and the Indeterminacy of Ontology", pp. 398--414 13. Barbara H. Partee, "P[actiy, Coreference, and Pronouns", pp. 415--441 14. Willard V. Quine, "Methodological Reflections on Current Linguistic Theory", pp. 442--454 15. Peter F. Strawson, "Grammar and Philosophy", pp. 455--472 16. Leonard Linsky, "Analytic/Synthetic and Semantic Theory", pp. 473--482 17. Peter T. Geach, "A Program for Syntax", pp. 483--497 18. James D. McCawley, "A Program for Logic", pp. 498--544 19. George Lakoff, "Linguistics and Natural Logic", pp. 545--665 20. Dana Scott, "Semantical Archaeology: A Parable", pp. 666--674 21. Hector-Neri Casta\~neda, "On the Semantics of the Ought-to-Do", pp. 675--694 22. Bas C. van Fraassen, "Inference and Self-Reference", pp. 695--708 23. Paul Ziff, "What is Said", pp. 709--721 24. L. Jonathan Cohen and Avishai Margalit, "The Role of Inductive Reasoning in the Interpretation of Metaphor", pp. 722--740 25. Patrick Suppes, "Probabilistic Grammars for Natural Languages", pp. 741--762 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LL Collections Shelf.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;} } @book{ davidson_d-harman_gh:1975a, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, title = {The Logic of Grammar}, publisher = {Dickenson Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Donald Davidson and Gilbert Harman, "Introduction", pp. 1--14 2. Donald Davidson, "Semantics for Natural Languages", pp. 18--24 3. Alfred Tarski, "Excerpt from {\it The Concept of Truth in Formalized Languages}, pp. 25--49 4. John Wallace, "Nonstandard Theories of Truth", pp. 50--60 5. Scott Weinstein, "Truth and Demonstratives", pp. 60--63 6. H.P. Grice, "Logic and Conversation", pp. 64--75 7. Willard V. Quine, "Logic as a Source of Syntactical Insights", pp. 153--159 8. Emmon Bach, "Nouns and Noun Phrases", pp. 79--99 9. James D. McCawley, "English as a {VSO} Language", 100--113 10. Gottlob Frege, "On Sense and Reference", pp. 116--128 11. Alonzo Church, "On {C}arnap's Analysis of Statements of Assertion and Belief", pp. 129--142 12. Israel Scheffler, "Beliefs and Desires", pp. 131--142 13. Donald Davidson, "On Saying That", pp. 143--152 14. Willard V. Quine, "Quantifiers and Propositional Attitudes", pp. 153--159 15. David Kaplan, "Quantifying In", pp. 160-- 181 16. Bertrand Russell, "On Denoting", pp. 184--193 17. Willard V. Quine, "Excerpts from {\it Word and Object}, pp. 193--199 18. Tyler Burge, "Reference and Proper Names", pp. 200-- 209 19. David Kaplan, "What is {R}ussell's Theory of Descriptions?", pp. 210--217 20. Hans Reichenbach, "Excerpts from {\it Elements of Symbolic Logic}, pp. 220--234 21. Donald Davidson, "The Logical Form of Action Sentences", pp. 235--245 22. Donald Davidson, "Causal Relations", pp. 246--254 23. Zeno Vendler, "Causal Relations", pp. 255--261 24. Noam Chomsky, "Remarks on Nominalization", pp. 262--289 25. Gilbert Harman, "Logical Form", pp. 289--307 }, address = {Encino, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LL Collections shelf.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ davidson_d-harman_gh:1975b, author = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert Harman}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {The Logic of Grammar}, publisher = {Dickenson Publishing Co.}, year = {1975}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {1--14}, address = {Encino, California}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;nl-semantics;} } @book{ davidson_d-hintikka_j:1969a, editor = {Donald Davidson and Jaakko Hintikka}, title = {Words and Objections: Essays on the Work of {W.V.O.} {Q}uine}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1969}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. J.J.C. Smart, "Quine's Philosophy of Science", pp. 3--13 2. Gilbert Harman, "An Introduction to Translation and Meaning", pp. 14--26 3. Erik Stenius, "Beginning with Ordinary Things", pp. 27--52 4. Noam Chomsky, "Quine's Empirical Assumptions", pp. 53--68 5. Jaakko Hintikka, "Behavioral Criteria of Radical Translation", pp. 69--81 6. Barry Stroud, "Conventionalism and the Indeterminacy of Translation", pp. 83--96 7. Peter F. Strawson, "Singular terms and Predication", pp. 97--117 8. H.P. Grice, "Vacuous Names", pp. 118--145 9. Peter T. Geach, "Quine's Syntactical Insights", pp. 146--157 10. Donald Davidson, "On Saying That", pp. 158--174 11. Dagfinn Follesdal, "Quine on Modality", pp. 175--185 12. Wilfrid Sellars, "Some Problems about Belief", pp. 186--205 13. David Kaplan, "Quantifying In", pp. 206--242 14. George Berry, "Logic with Platonism", pp. 243--277 15. Ronald B. Jensen, "On the Consistency of a Slight (?) Modification of {Q}uine's {\it {N}ew {F}oundations}", pp. 278--291 16. Willard V.O. Quine, "Replies", pp. 292--352 }, topic = {Quine;} } @book{ davidson_d-suppes_p:1957a, author = {Donald Davidson and Patrick Suppes}, title = {Decision Making: An Experimental Approach}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1957}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {0-226-13715-5}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {decision-theory;experimental-economics;} } @book{ davidson_eh:2006a, author = {Eric H. Davidson}, title = {The Regulatory Genome}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2006}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-12-088563-3}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Summer, 2019.}, topic = {gene-regulation;genetics;} } @article{ davidson_eh-erwin_dh:2006a, author = {Eric H. Davidson and Douglas H. Erwin}, title = {Gene Regulatory Networks and the Evolution of Animal Body Plans}, journal = {Science}, year = {2006}, volume = {311}, number = {5762}, pages = {796--800}, abstract = {Development of the animal body plan is controlled by large gene regulatory networks (GRNs), and hence evolution of body plans must depend upon change in the architecture of developmental GRNs. ... We identify a class of GRN component, the kernels" of the network, which, because of their developmental role and their particular internal structure, are most impervious to change. Conservation of phyletic body plans may have been due to the retention since pre-Cambrian time of GRN kernels, which underlie development of major body parts.}, topic = {developmental-biology;gene-regulatory-networks;} } @article{ davidson_eh-etal:2002a, author = {Eric H. Davidson and Jonathan P. Rast and Paola Oliveri and Andrew Ransick and Cristina Calestani and Chiou-Hwa Yuh and Takuya Minokawa and Gabriele Amore and Veronica Hinman and Cesar Arenas-Mena and Ochan Otim and C. Titus Brown and Carolina B. Livi and Pei Yun Lee and Roger Revilla and Alistair G. Rust and Zheng jun Pan and Maria J. Schilstra and Peter J.C. Clarke and Maria I. Arnone and Lee Rowen and R. Andrew Cameron and David R. McClay and Leroy Hood and Hamid Bolouri}, title = {A Genomic Regulatory Network for Development}, journal = {Science}, year = {2002}, volume = {295}, number = {5560}, pages = {1669-1678}, abstract = {A gene regulatory network that controls the specification of endoderm and mesoderm in the sea urchin embryo is summarized here. ... Its architecture reveals specific and general aspects of development, such as how given cells generate their ordained fates in the embryo and why the process moves inexorably forward in developmental time.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe22}, topic = {gene-regulatory-networks;} } @article{ davidson_k:2015a, author = {Kathryn Davidson}, title = {Quotation, Demonstration, and Iconicity}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2015}, volume = {38}, number = {6}, pages = {477--520}, abstract = {Sometimes form-meaning mappings in language are not arbitrary, but iconic: they depict what they represent. Incorporating iconic elements of language into a compositional semantics faces a number of challenges in formal frameworks as evidenced by the lengthy literature in linguistics and philosophy on quotation/direct speech, which iconically portrays the words of another in the form that they were used. This paper compares the well-studied type of iconicity found with verbs of quotation with another form of iconicity common in sign languages: classifier predicates. $\ldots$}, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @book{ davidson_rj-etal:1983a, editor = {Richard J. Davidson and Gary E. Schwartz and David Shapiro}, title = {Consciousness and Self Regulation}, publisher = {Plenum Publishing Corporation}, year = {1983}, address = {New York}, ISBN-13 = {978-0306412141}, ISBN-10 = {0306412144}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-psychology;} } @inproceedings{ davidsson_p:1993a, author = {Paul Davidsson}, title = {Toward a General Solution to the Symbol Grounding Problem: Combining Machine Learning and Computer Vision}, booktitle = {{AAAI} Fall Symposium Series, Machine Learning in Computer Vision: What, Why and How?}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {157--161}, year = {1993}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap21}, topic = {symbol-grounding-problem;} } @article{ davies_a:2011a, author = {Alexander Davies}, title = {Review of \emph{{O}ccasion-Sensitivity: Selected Essays}, by {C}harles {T}ravis}, journal = {Disputatio}, year = {2011}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {309--315}, xref = {Review of: travis_c:2008a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;compositionality;radical-contextualism;} } @incollection{ davies_djm-isard:1972a, author = {D.J.M. Davies and S. Isard}, title = {Utterances as Programs}, booktitle = {Machine Intelligence 7}, publisher = {Edinburgh University Press}, year = {1972}, editor = {Donald Michie and Bernard Meltzer}, pages = {325--339}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {pragmatics;speech-acts;dynamic-semantics;} } @article{ davies_m:1989a, author = {Martin Davies}, title = {\,`Two Examiners Marked Six Scripts.' Interpretations of Numerically Quantified Sentence}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1989}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {293--323}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ davies_m-humberstone_il:1980a, author = {Martin Davies and I. Lloyd Humberstone}, title = {Two Notions of Necessity}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1980}, volume = {38}, pages = {1--30}, topic = {necessary-truth;} } @book{ davies_m-stone_t:1995a, editor = {Martin Davies and Tony Stone}, title = {Folk Psychology: The Theory of Mind Debate}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1995}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate: BF 441 .F65 1995}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Tony Stone and Martin Davies, "Introduction" 1. Jane Heal, "Replication and Functionalism" 2. Robert M. Gordon, "Folk Psychology as Simulation" 3. Alvin I. Goldman, "Interpretation Psychologized" 4. Robert M. Gordon, "The Simulation Theory: Objections and Misconceptions" 5. Steven Stich and Shaun Nichols, "Folk Pyschology: Simulation or Tacit Theory?" 6. Josef Perner and Deborrah Howes, "`He Thinks He Knows': and More Developmental Evidence against the Simulation (Role-Taking) Theory" 7. Robert M. Gordon, "Reply to {S}tich and {N}ichols" 8. Robert M. Gordon, "Reply to {P}erner and {H}owes" 9. Alvin I. Goldman, "In Defense of the Simulation Theory" 10. Paul L. Harris, "From Simulation to Folk Psychology: The Case for Development" 11. Alsion Gopnik and Henry M. Wellman, "Why the Child's Theory of Mind Really {\em Is} a Theory" 12. Simon Baron-Cohen and Pippa Cross, Reading the Eyes: Evidence for the Role of Perception in the Development of a Theory of Mind" 13. Simon Blackburn, "Theory, Observation, and Drama" }, ISBN = {0631195149}, rtnote = {UMich: Undergraduate BF 441 .F65 1995}, topic = {folk-psychology;theory-theory-of-folk-psychology; mental-simulation-theory-of-folk-psychology; propositional-attitude-ascription;} } @book{ davies_m-stone_t:1995b, editor = {Martin Davies and Tony Stone}, title = {Mental Simulation: Evaluations and Applications}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1995}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Tony Stone and Martin Davies, "Introduction" 1. Gary Fuller, "Simulation and Psychological Concepts" 2. Jane Heal, "How to think about Thinking" 3. Robert M. Gordon, "Simulation without Introspection or Interference from Me to You" 4. Norman H. Freeman, "Theories of Mind in Collision: Plausibility and Authority" 5. Steven Stich and Shaun Nichols, "Second Thoughts on Simulation" 6. Jerry A. Fodor, "A Theory of the Child's Theory of Mind" 7. Alan M. Leslie and Tim P. German, "Knowledge and Ability in `Theory of Mind': One-Eyed Overview of a Debate" 8. Gregory Currie, "Imagination and Simulation: Aesthetics Meets Cognitive Science" 9. Paul L. Harris, "Imagining and Pretending" 10. Alvin I. Goldman, "Empathy, Mind, and Morals" 11. Derek Bolton, "Self-Knowledge, Error and Disorder" 12. Adam Morton, "Game Theory and Knowledge by Simulation" 13. John A. Barnden, "Simulative Reasoning, Common-Sense Psychology, and Artificial Intelligence" }, ISBN = {0631198725}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate BF 449.5 .M461 1995}, topic = {folk-psychology;theory-theory-of-folk-psychology; mental-simulation-theory-of-folk-psychology; propositional-attitude-ascription;} } @incollection{ davies_m-stone_t:1995c, author = {Martin Davies and Tony Stone}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Folk Psychology: The Theory of Mind Debate}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Martin Davies and Tony Stone}, pages = {1--44}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. FIle Drawers, "Martin Davies"}, topic = {folk-psychology;theory-theory-of-folk-psychology; mental-simulation-theory-of-folk-psychology; propositional-attitude-ascription;} } @article{ davies_mk:1978a, author = {Martin K. Davies}, title = {Weak Necessity and Truth Theories}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1978}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {415--439}, topic = {modal-logic;truth;} } @article{ davies_mk:1982a, author = {Martin K. Davies}, title = {Individuation and the Semantics of Demonstratives}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {287--310}, topic = {demonstratives;indexicality;quantifying-in-modality;} } @article{ davies_mk:1983a, author = {Martin K. Davies}, title = {Actuality and Context Dependence {II}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1983}, volume = {43}, number = {3}, pages = {128--133}, topic = {actuality;context;} } @incollection{ davies_mk:1996a, author = {Martin K. Davies}, title = {Philosophy of Language}, booktitle = {The {B}lackwell Companion To Philosophy}, publisher = {Blackwell Reference,\}, year = {1996}, editor = {Nicholas Bunnin and E.P. Tsui-James}, pages = {90--139}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ davies_ps:1996a, author = {Paul Sheldon Davies}, title = {Preface: Evolutionary Theory in Cognitive Psychology}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {445--462}, topic = {evolutionary-psychology;} } @article{ davies_ps:1996b, author = {Paul Sheldon Davies}, title = {Discovering the Functional Mesh: On the Methods of Evolutionary Psychology}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1996}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {559--585}, abstract = {The aim of this paper is to clarify and critically assess the methods of evolutionary psychology, and offer a sketch of an alternative methodology. $\ldots$ }, topic = {evolutionary-psychology;} } @book{ davis_a:1996a, author = {A. Davis}, title = {Lexical Semantics and Linking in the Hierarchical Lexicon}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1996}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ davis_ar:2011a, author = {Anthony R. Davis}, title = {Thematic Roles}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {399--419}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;thematic-roles;} } @article{ davis_c:1974a, author = {Charles Davis}, title = {Some Semantically Closed Languages}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1974}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {229--240}, topic = {nl-semantics;semantic-paradoxes;} } @inproceedings{ davis_c-etal:2007a, author = {Christopher Davis and Christopher Potts and Margaret Speas}, title = {The Pragmatic Values of Evidential Sentences}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 17th Semantics and Linguistic Theory Conference: {SALT 17}}, year = {2007}, editor = {Tova Friedman and Masayuki Gibson}, pages = {71--88}, publisher = {Linguistic Society of America}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {evidential-constructions;} } @unpublished{ davis_cc-hellan:1975a, author = {Charles C. Davis and Lars Hellan}, title = {The Syntax and Semantics of Comparative Constructions}, year = {1975}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {Montague-grammar;comparative-constructions;} } @article{ davis_e:1987a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Constraint Propagation with Interval Labels}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {32}, number = {3}, pages = {281--331}, topic = {constraint-propagation;} } @incollection{ davis_e:1989a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Solutions to a Paradox of Perception With Limited Acuity}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {79--82}, address = {San Mateo, California}, contentnote = {This is an attempt to solve the sorites, but Davis seems to be ignorant of the problem or the literature on it.}, topic = {kr;vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @incollection{ davis_e:1990a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Order of Magnitude Reasoning in Qualitative Differential Equations}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {422--434}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning; order-of-magnitude-reasoning;} } @book{ davis_e:1991a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Representations of Common Sense Knowledge}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, address = {San Francisco}, xref = {Reviews: croft_w:1993b, }, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, Q335 .D371 1990.}, isbn = {1-55860-033-7}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;kr;kr-course;} } @incollection{ davis_e:1992a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Infinite Loops in Finite Time: Some Observations}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {47--58}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;temporal-reasoning;kr-course;} } @incollection{ davis_e:1992b, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Axiomatizing Qualitative Process Theory}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {177--188}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;kr;} } @article{ davis_e:1993a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {{\it Representations of Commonsense Knowledge}: Response to the Reviews}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {61}, number = {1}, pages = {175--179}, xref = {Response to reviews of davis_e:1991a.}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;kr;kr-course;} } @article{ davis_e:1994a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Knowledge Preconditions for Plans}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {5}, pages = {721--766}, abstract = {In this paper, we advance and discuss new definitions of 'knowing enough to carry out a plan', for the case of a single agent carrying out a sequence of primitive actions one at a time. We consider both determinate and indeterminate plans. We show how these definitions can be expressed in a formal logic, using a situation calculus model of time and a possible worlds model of knowledge. The definitions strictly subsume previous theories for the single-agent case without concurrent actions. We illustrate the power of the definition by showing that it supports results of the following kinds:}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr22}, topic = {planning;situation-calculus;knowledge-preconditions;} } @article{ davis_e:1999a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Guide to Axiomatizing Domains in First-Order Logic}, journal = {Electronic Newsletter on Reasoning about Actions and Change}, year = {1999}, note = {http://www-formal.stanford.edu/leora/krcourse/ed.axguide}, volume = {99002}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap21\davis.txt}, topic = {macro-formalization;} } @incollection{ davis_e:2001a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Knowledge Representation}, booktitle = {The International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences}, editor = {Neil J. Smelser and Paul B. Baltes}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, year = {2001}, note = {Forthcoming.}, topic = {kr-survey;krcourse;} } @article{ davis_e:2001b, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Two Machine Learning Textbooks: An Instructor's Perspective}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {131}, number = {1--2}, pages = {191--198}, xref = {Review of mitchell_tm:1997b and witten-frank_e:2000a.}, topic = {machine-learning;AI-instruction;} } @incollection{ davis_e:2004a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {A First-Order Theory of Communicating First-Order Formulas}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {235--245}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {multiagent-systems;agent-communication;} } @article{ davis_e:2005a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Knowledge and Communication: A First-Order Theory}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {166}, number = {1--2}, pages = {81--139}, topic = {epistemic-logic;agent-communication;} } @article{ davis_e:2006a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {The Expressivity of Quantifying over Regions}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2006}, volume = {16}, number = {6}, pages = {891--916}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;} } @article{ davis_e:2008a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Pouring Liquids: A Study in Commonsense Physical Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {12--13}, pages = {1540--1578}, topic = {qualitative-physics;common-sense-reasoning;} } @incollection{ davis_e:2008b, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Physical Reasoning}, booktitle = {Handbook of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2008}, editor = {Frank van Harmelen and Vladimir Lifschitz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {597--620}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {qualitative-physics;physical-reasoning;reasoning-about-physical-systems;} } @article{ davis_e:2011a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {How Does a Box Work? A Study in the Qualitative Dynamics of Solid Objects}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {1}, pages = {299--345}, topic = {qualitative-physics;common-sense-reasoning;} } @article{ davis_e:2015a, author = {Ernest Davis}, title = {Ethical Guidelines for A Superintelligence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2015}, volume = {220}, pages = {121--124}, abstract = {Nick Bostrom, in his new book SuperIntelligence, argues that the creation of an artificial intelligence with human-level intelligence will be followed fairly soon by the existence of an almost omnipotent superintelligence, with consequences that may well be disastrous for humanity. He considers that it is therefore a top priority for mankind to figure out how to imbue such a superintelligence with a sense of morality; however, he considers that this task is very difficult. I discuss a number of flaws in his analysis, particularly the viewpoint that implementing ethical behavior is an especially difficult problem in AI research.}, xref = {Critical response to: bostrom_n:2014a}, topic = {technological-singularity;AI-editorial;AI-ethics;} } @book{ davis_e-etal:2011a, editor = {Ernest Davis and Patrick Doherty and Esra Erdem}, title = {Logical Formalizations of Commonsense Reasoning: Papers from the {AAAI} 2011 Spring Symposium ({SS}-11-06)}, publisher = {Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, address = {Palo Alto}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. CD}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;} } @article{ davis_e-etal:2017a, author = {Ernest Davis and Leora Morgenstern and Charles L. {Ortiz, Jr.}}, title = {The First {W}inograd Schema Challenge at {IJCAI}--16}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2017}, volume = {38}, number = {3}, pages = {97--98}, topic = {Turing-test;cognitive-systems;} } @article{ davis_e-marcus_g:2017a, author = {Ernest Davis and Gary Marcus}, title = {Causal Generative Models are Just a Start}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {2017}, volume = {40}, doi = {DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X17000115}, xref = {Commentary on: lake_bm-etal:2017a}, topic = {cognitive-systems;AI-editorial;physical-reasoning;} } @article{ davis_e-morgenstern_l:2001a, author = {Ernest Davis and Leora Morgenstern}, title = {Introduction: Progress in Formal Commonsense Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {153}, number = {5--6}, note = {Introduction to a special issue of {\it Artificial Intelligence}}, pages = {1--12}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;} } @article{ davis_e-morgenstern_l:2005a, author = {Ernest Davis and Leora Morgenstern}, title = {A First-Order Theory of Communication and Multi-Agent Plans}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2005}, volume = {15}, number = {5}, pages = {701--749}, abstract = {This paper presents a theory expressed in first-order logic for describing and supporting inference about action, knowledge, planning, and communication, in an egalitarian multi-agent setting. The underlying ontology of the theory uses a situation-based temporal model and a possible-worlds model of knowledge. ... We demonstrate that the theory is powerful enough to represent several interesting multi-agent planning problems and to justify their solutions.}, topic = {multiagent-systems;multiagent-planning;communication-models;} } @book{ davis_jw-etal:1969a, editor = {J.W. Davis and Donald J. Hochberg and W.K. Wilson}, title = {Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel}, year = {1969}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {978-94-010-9614-0}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Donald Davidson, "Truth and Meaning", pp. 1--20 2. Jaakko Hintikka, "Semantics for Propositional Attitudes", pp. 21--45 3. Wilfrid Sellars, "Some Problems About Belief", pp. 46--65 4. Ernest Sosa, "Quantifiers, Beliefs, and Sellars", pp. 66--73 5. Craig Harrison, "The Unanticipated Examination in View of {K}ripke's Semantics for Modal Logic", pp. 74--88 }, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @book{ davis_ld:1987a, editor = {Lawrence D. Davis}, title = {Genetic Algorithms and Simulated Annealing}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, year = {1987}, address = {Los Altos, California}, ISBN = {0934613443 (U.S.)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 402.5 .D291 1987.}, topic = {genetic-algorithms;} } @book{ davis_ld:1991a, editor = {Lawrence D. Davis}, title = {Handbook of Genetic Algorithms}, publisher = {Van Nostrand Reinhold}, year = {1991}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0442001738}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 402.5 .H361 1991.}, xref = {Reviwew: mitchell_m:1998a.}, topic = {genetic-algorithms;} } @article{ davis_lh:1979a, author = {Lawrence H. Davis}, title = {An Alternative Formulation of {K}ripke's Theory of Truth}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1979}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {289--296}, topic = {truth;} } @book{ davis_lh:1979b, author = {Lawrence H. Davis}, title = {Theory of Action}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1979}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0139131523}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, B105.A35 D26}, topic = {action;philosophy-of-action;} } @incollection{ davis_lh:1985a, author = {Lawrence H. Davis}, title = {Prisoners, Paradox, and Rationality}, booktitle = {Paradoxes of Rationality and Cooperation}, publisher = {The University of British Columbia Press}, year = {1985}, pages = {45--59}, address = {Vancouver}, topic = {rationality;prisoner's-dilemma;} } @incollection{ davis_lh:1985b, author = {Lawrence H. Davis}, title = {Is the Symmetry Argument Valid?}, booktitle = {Paradoxes of Rationality and Cooperation}, publisher = {The University of British Columbia Press}, year = {1985}, pages = {255--263}, address = {Vancouver}, topic = {rationality;prisoner's-dilemma;} } @article{ davis_lh-rosenfeld_a1:1981a, author = {Larry S. Davis and Azriel Rosenfeld}, title = {Cooperating Processes for Low-Level Vision: A Survey}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, volume = {17}, number = {1--3}, pages = {245--263}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Cooperating local parallel processes can be used as aids in assigning numerical or symbolic labels to image or scene parts. Various approaches to using such processes in low-level vision are reviewed, and their advantages are discussed. Methods of designing and controlling such processes are also considered.}, topic = {vision;parallel-processing;distributed-processing;} } @article{ davis_m:1980a, author = {Martin Davis}, title = {The Mathematics of Non-Monotonic Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial intelligence}, year = {1980}, volume = {13}, number = {1--2}, pages = {73--80}, rtnote = {This paper is pretty much out of date.}, contentnote = {M.D. says some things about an early version of circumscription, criticizes Doyle-McDermott for unclarity.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ davis_m:1988a, author = {Martin Davis}, title = {Mathematical Logic and the Origin of Modern Computers}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {149--174}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {history-of-theory-of-computation;history-of-computation; history-of-logic;} } @incollection{ davis_m:1988b, author = {Martin Davis}, title = {Influences of Mathematical Logic on Computer Science}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {315--326}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {history-of-theory-of-computation;history-of-computation; history-of-logic;} } @incollection{ davis_m:1993a, author = {Martin Davis}, title = {First Order Logic}, booktitle = {The Handbook of Logic in Artificial Intelligence and Logic Programming, Volume 1: Deductive Methodologies}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Christopher Hogger and John A. Robinson}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, pages = {31--67}, address = {Oxford}, year = {1993}, missinginfo = {ed's 1st name}, topic = {kr;logic-survey;kr-course;} } @article{ davis_m:1996a, author = {Martin Davis}, title = {American Logic in the 1920s}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {273--278}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @book{ davis_m:2000a, author = {Martin Davis}, title = {The Universal Computer: The Road from {L}eibniz to {T}uring}, publisher = {W.W. Norton \&\ Company}, year = {2000}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-393-04785-7}, topic = {history-of-computer-science;Leibniz;Turing;} } @article{ davis_m:2005a, author = {Martin Davis}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}uring: A Novel about Computation}, by {C}hristos {P}apidimitriou}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {169}, number = {2}, pages = {209--210}, xref = {Review of: papidimitriou:2003a}, topic = {novel;AI-editorial;} } @incollection{ davis_m:2014a, author = {Martin Davis}, title = {Logic and the Development of the Computer}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 9: Computational Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2014}, editor = {J\"org H. Siekmann}, pages = {31--38}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;computational-logic;} } @incollection{ davis_m:2015a, author = {Martin Davis}, title = {Computability and Arithmetic}, booktitle = {Computability: {T}uring, {C}hurch, and Beyond}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {B. Jack Copeland and Carl J. Posy and Oron Shagrir}, pages = {35--53}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {computability;} } @book{ davis_pj:2006a, author = {Philip J. Davis}, title = {Mathematics and Common Sense}, publisher = {A.K. Peters, Ltd.}, year = {2006}, address = {Wellesley, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {1-56881-270-1}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ davis_r:1979a1, author = {Randall Davis}, title = {Interactive Transfer of Expertise: Acquisition of New Inference Rules}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1979}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {121--157}, acontentnote = {Abstract: TEIRESIAS is a program designed to provide assistance on the task of building knowledge-based systems. It facilitates the interactive transfer of knowledge from a human expert to the system, in a high level dialog conducted in a restricted subset of natural language. This paper explores an example of TEIRESIAS in operation and demonstrates how it guides the acquisition of new inference rules. The concept of meta-level knowledge is described and illustrations given of its utility in knowledge acquisition and its contribution to the more general issues of creating an intelligent program.}, xref = {Republication: davis_r:1979a2.}, topic = {knowledge-acquisition;nl-kr;} } @incollection{ davis_r:1979a2, author = {Randall Davis}, title = {Interactive Transfer of Expertise: Acquisition of New Inference Rules}, booktitle = {Readings in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1981}, editor = {Bonnie Webber and Nils J. Nilsson}, pages = {410--430}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: davis_r:1979a1.}, topic = {knowledge-acquisition;nl-kr;} } @article{ davis_r:1982a, author = {Randall Davis}, title = {Expert Systems: Where Are We? And Where Do We Go from Here?}, journal = {{AI} Magazine}, year = {1982}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {3--22}, topic = {expert-systems;} } @article{ davis_r:1984a, author = {Randall Davis}, title = {Diagnostic reasoning based on structure and behavior }, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, volume = {24}, number = {1--3}, pages = {347--410}, xref = {Commentary: davis_r:1993a.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;diagnosis; model-based-reasoning;} } @article{ davis_r:1993a, author = {Randall Davis}, title = {Retrospective on `Diagnostic Reasoning Based on Structure and Behavior'}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {149--157}, xref = {Comment on davis_r:1984.}, topic = {diagnosis;model-based-reasoning;} } @article{ davis_r:1998a, author = {Randall Davis}, title = {What Are Intelligence? And Why?}, journal = {{AI} Magazine}, year = {1998}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {91--110}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;intelligence;} } @article{ davis_r-etal:1977a, author = {Randall Davis and Bruce Buchanan and Edward Shortliffe}, title = {Production Rules as a Representation for a Knowledge-Based Consultation Program}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1977}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {15--45}, topic = {diagnosis;expert-systems;medical-AI;} } @article{ davis_r-etal:1993a, author = {Randall Davis and Bruce G. Buchanan and Edward H. Shortliffe}, title = {Retrospective on `Production Rules as a Representation for a Knowledge-Based Consultation Program'}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {181--189}, xref = {Retrospective commentary on davis_r-etal:1977a.}, topic = {diagnosis;expert-systems;medical-AI;} } @article{ davis_r-smith_rg:1983a, author = {Randall Davis and Reid G. Smith}, title = {Negotiation as a Metaphor for Distributed Problem Solving}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {63--109}, topic = {distributed-AI;social-choice-theory;distributed-processing; negotiation;} } @phdthesis{ davis_s:1968a, author = {Stephen Davis}, title = {Illocutionary Acts and Transformational Grammar}, school = {University of Illinois}, year = {1968}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Urbana, Illinois}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @article{ davis_s:1968b, author = {Stephen Davis}, title = {Principles of Linguistic Philosophy}, journal = {Dialogue}, year = {1968}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {596--603}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ davis_s:1976a, author = {Steven Davis}, title = {Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Bobbs-Merrill}, year = {1976}, address = {Indianapolis}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;speech-acts;indeterminacy-of-translation;} } @article{ davis_s:1979a, author = {Steven Davis}, title = {Perlocutions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {225--243}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @book{ davis_s:1991a, editor = {Steven Davis}, title = {Pragmatics: A Reader}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Kent Bach, "Referential/Attributive", pp. 17--32 2. Robyn Carston, "Implicature, Explicature, and Truth-Theoretic Semantics", pp. 33--51 3. Keith Donnellan, "Reference and Definite Descriptions", pp. 52--64 4. H.P. Grice, "Utterer's Meaning, Sentence-Meaning, and Word-Meaning", pp. 65--76 5. Saul Kripke, "Speaker's Reference and Semantic Reference", pp. 77--96 6. Fran\c{c}ois R\'ecanati, "The Pragmatics of What is Said", pp. 97--120 7. John R. Searle, "Referential and Attributive", pp. 121--134 8. David Kaplan, "On the Logic of Demonstratives", pp. 137--145 9. John Perry, "Frege on Demonstratives", pp. 146--159 10. Howard K. Wettstein, "How to Bridge the Gap betweeb Meaning and Reference", pp. 160--174 11. Herbert H. Clark and Thomas B. Carlson, "Speech Acts and Hearer's Beliefs", pp. 177--198 12. Herbert H. Clark, "Responding to Indirect Speech Acts", pp. 199--230 13. Kent Bach and Robert M. Harnish, "Linguistics Communication: A Schema for Speech Acts", pp. 231--241 14. J.L. Morgan, "Two Types of Convention in Indirect Speech Acts", pp. 242--253 15. John R. Searle, "What is a Speech Act?", pp. 254--264 16. John R. Searle, "Indirect Speech Acts", pp. 265--277 17. Robert C. Stalnaker, "Assertion", pp. 278--289 18. Peter F. Strawson, "Intention and Convention in Speech Acts", pp. 290--301 19. H.P. Grice, "Logic and Conversation", pp. 305--315 20. Robert M. Harnish, "Logical Form and Implicature", pp. 316--364 21. Jerrold M. Sadock, "On Testing for Conversational Implicature", pp. 365--376 22. Deirdre Wilson and Dan Sperber, "Inference and Implicature", pp. 377--393 23. Irene Heim, "On the Projection Problem for Presuppositions", pp. 397--405 24. Lauri Karttunen, "Presupposition and Linguistic Content", pp. 406--415 25. David Lewis, "Scorekeeping in a Language Game", pp. 416--427 26. Scott Soames, "How Presuppositions Are Inherited: A Solution to the Projection Problem", pp. 428--470 27. Robert C. Stalnaker, "Pragmatic Presuppositions", pp. 471--482 28. Merrie Bergmann, "Metaphorical Assertions", pp. 485--494 29. Donald Davidson, "What Metaphors Mean", pp. 495--506 30. A.P. Martinich, "A Theory for Metaphor", pp. 507--518 31. John R. Searle, "Metaphor", pp. 519--539 32. Dan Sperber and Deirdre Wilson, "Loose Talk", pp. 540--549 33. Dan Sperber and Deirdre Wilson, "Irony and the Use-Mention Distinction", pp. 550--564 34. Asa Kasher, "Pragmatics and the Modularity of Mind", pp. 567--582 35. Deirdre Wilson and Dan Sperber, "Pragmatics and Modularity", pp. 583--595 }, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate Library, P 99.4 .P72 P7361 1991.}, topic = {pragmatics;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ davis_s:1991b, author = {Steven Davis}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Pragmatics: A Reader}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Steven Davis}, pages = {3--13}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {pragmatics;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ davis_s:1992a, editor = {Steven Davis}, title = {Connectionism: Theory and Practice}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-507666-4 (paper), 0-19-507665-6 (cloth)}, contentnote = {TC: 1. G.E. Hinton and S. Becker, "Using Coherence Assumptions to Discover the Underlying Causes of the Sensory Input" 2. Michael I. Jordan and Robert A. Jacobs, "Comment" 3. Paul M. Churchland, "A Deeper Unity: Some Feyerabendian Themes in Neurocomputational Form" 4. Charles Travis, "Comment" 5. David E. Rumelhart, "Towards a Microstructural Account of Human Reasoning" 6. Mark S. Seidenberg, "Connectionism Without Tears" 7. Michael E. J. Masson, "Comment" 10. Jeffrey L. Elman, "Grammatical Structure and Distributed Representations" 11. Tim van Gelder, "Comment" 12. Terence Horgan and John Tienson, "Structured Representations in Connectionist Systems?" 13. John Goldsmith, "Local Modelling in Phonology" 14. William Ramsey, "Connectionism and the Philosophy of Mental Representation" 15. Steven W. Zucker, Allan Dobbins, and Lee Iverson, "Connectionism and the Computational Neurobiology of Curve Detection" 16. David Kirsh, "PDP Learnability and Innate Knowledge of Language" }, topic = {connectionism;connectionist-models;} } @article{ davis_s:1997a, author = {Stephen Davis}, title = {Grice on Natural and Non-Natural Meaning}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1997}, volume = {26}, number = {3--4}, pages = {405--419}, topic = {Grice;speaker-meaning;} } @book{ davis_s-gillon_bs:2004a, editor = {Steven Davis and Brendon S. Gillon}, title = {Semantics: A Reader}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ davis_s-mithun:1979a, editor = {Steven Davis and Marianne Mithun}, title = {Linguistics, Philosophy, and {M}ontague Grammar}, publisher = {University of Texas Press}, year = {1979}, address = {Austin, Texas}, ISBN = {0292746253}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P158.5 .C74 1977.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Steven Davis and Marianne Mithun, "Introduction", pp. ix--xv 2. Emmon Bach, "Montague Grammar and Classical Transformational Grammar", pp. 3--49 3. Barbara H. Partee, "Constraining Transformational Montague Grammar: A Framework and a Fragment", pp. 51--101 4. James D. McCawley, "Helpful Hints to the Ordinary Working Montague Grammarian", pp. 103--125 5. Terence Parsons, "Type Theory and Ordinary Language", pp. 127--151 6. David R. Dowty, "Dative 'Movement' and Thomason's Extensions of Montague Grammar", pp. 153--222 7. Muffy E. A. Siegel, "Measure Adjectives in Montague Grammar", pp. 223--262 8. Michael Bennett, "Mass Nouns and Mass Terms in Montague Grammar", pp. 263--285 9. Jeroen Groenendijk and Martin Stokhof, "Infinitives and Context in Montague Grammar", pp. 287--309 10. James Waldo, "A PTQ Semantics for Sortal Incorrectness", pp. 311--331 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {Montague-grammar;} } @article{ davis_wa:1979a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Indicative and Subjunctive Conditionals}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1979}, volume = {88}, number = {4}, pages = {544--564}, xref = {Comments: hazen_ap:1980a.}, topic = {subjunctive-mood;conditionals;} } @article{ davis_wa:1980a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Lowe on Indicative and Counterfactual Conditionals}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1980}, volume = {40}, number = {4}, pages = {184--186}, xref = {Commentary on: lowe_ej:1979a}, xref = {Reply: lowe_ej:1980a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ davis_wa:1980b, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Swain's Counterfactual Analysis of Causation}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1980}, volume = {38}, number = {2}, pages = {169--176}, xref = {Commentary on: swain_m:1978a}, topic = {events;causality;conditionals;} } @article{ davis_wa:1980c, author = {Wayne A, Davis}, title = {Jackson on Counterfactuals}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {58}, number = {1}, pages = {62--65}, xref = {Commentary on: jackson_fc:1977a}, topic = {conditionals;causality;} } @article{ davis_wa:1982a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Weirich on Conditional and Expected Utility}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1982}, volume = {74}, number = {6}, pages = {342--350}, topic = {utility;foundations-of-utility;} } @article{ davis_wa:1983a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Weak and Strong Conditionals}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1983}, volume = {64}, pages = {57--71}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ davis_wa:1984a1, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {A Causal Theory of Intending}, journal = {American Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1984}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {43--54}, abstract = {...I defend the view that believing and desiring something are necessary for intending it. They are not sufficient, however, for some things we both expect and want (e.g., the sun to rise tomorrow) are unintendable. Restricting the objects of intention to our own future actions is unwarranted and unhelpful. Rather, the belief involved in intending must be based on the desire in a certain way. ...}, xref = {Republication of: davis_wa:1984a2}, topic = {intention;} } @incollection{ davis_wa:1984a2, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {A Causal Theory of Intending}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of Action}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Alfred R. Mele}, pages = {131--148}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: davis_wa:1984a1}, topic = {intention;} } @incollection{ davis_wa:1986a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {The Two Senses of Desire}, booktitle = {The Ways of Desire: New Essays in Philosophical Psychology on the Concept of Wanting}, publisher = {Precedent Publishing, Inc.}, year = {1986}, editor = {Joel Marks}, pages = {63--82}, address = {Chicago}, contentnote = {Sense 1: Synonymous with `want', `wish', `would like': volitive desire, connected to will, intention. Sense 2: Syononymous with `appetite', `craving', etc. Connected to appetite.}, topic = {desire;philosophical-psychology;} } @article{ davis_wa:1992a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Speaker Meaning}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1992}, volume = {15}, pages = {223--253}, number = {3}, topic = {speaker-meaning;} } @article{ davis_wa:1993a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}robabilistic Causality}, by {E}llery {E}ells}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1993}, volume = {102}, number = {3}, pages = {410--412}, xref = {Review of eells:1991a.}, topic = {causality;probability;} } @book{ davis_wa:1998a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Implicature: Intention, Convention, and Principle in the Failure of {G}ricean Theory}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521623197}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 85 .G735 D38 1998.}, xref = {Review: saul_j:2001a.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "W Davis"}, topic = {implicature;Grice;} } @book{ davis_wa:2003a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Meaning, Expression and Thought}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521555132}, contentnote = {Apparently this contains an attempt to relate linguistic meaning to conventions. }, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ davis_wa:2005a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Concept Individuation, Possession Conditions, and Propositional Attitudes}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2004}, volume = {39}, number = {1}, pages = {140--166}, topic = {concepts;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ davis_wa:2010a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Implicature}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, howpublished = {\url{http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2010/entries/implicature/}}, year = {2010}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file}, topic = {implicature;}, } @incollection{ davis_wa:2010b, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Irregular Negations: Implicature and Idiom Theories}, booktitle = {Meaning and Analysis: New Essays on {G}rice}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2010}, editor = {Klaus Petrus}, pages = {103--137}, address = {New York}, topic = {Grice;negation;implicature;idioms;} } @article{ davis_wa:2015a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {The Semantics of Actuality Terms: Indexical Vs. Descriptive Theories}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2015}, volume = {49}, number = {3}, pages = {470--503}, topic = {indexicals;actuality;} } @book{ davis_wa:2016a, author = {Wayne Davis}, title = {Irregular Negations, implicatures, and Idioms}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2016}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-94-017-7546-5}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {negation;idioms;implicature;} } @article{ davis_wa:2022a, author = {Wayne A. Davis}, title = {Quotational Reports}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {5}, pages = {1063--1090}, abstract = {This is a study of the syntax and semantics of reports containing speech-act and propositional attitude verbs with quotational complements. I make the case that while the quotational complements of some verbs, including utter, are nominal and metalinguistic, those of others, including assert and believe, are clausal and nonmetalinguistic. Quotational reports with 'say' are ambiguous. ... Unlike that-clauses, quote-clauses force deictic shift and are unambiguously opaque. ... }, topic = {direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ davis_ws-carnes:1991a, author = {William S. Davis and James R. Carnes}, title = {Clustering Temporal Intervals to Generate Reference Hierarchies}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {111--117}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;temporal-reasoning;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ davison_a:1970a, author = {Alice Davison}, title = {Causal Adverbs and Performative Verbs}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society}, year = {1970}, pages = {190--201}, publisher = {Chicago Linguistics Society}, address = {Chicago University, Chicago, Illinois}, missinginfo = {editor}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ davison_a:1975a, author = {Alice Davison}, title = {Indirect Speech Acts and What to Do With Them}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics 3: Speech Acts}, year = {1975}, editor = {Peter Cole and Jerry Morgan}, pages = {143--186}, publisher = {Academic Press}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;indirect-speech-acts;} } @incollection{ davison_a:1981a, author = {Alice Davison}, title = {Syntactic and Semantic Indeterminacy Resolved: A Mostly Pragmatic Analysis of the {H}indi Conjunctive Participle}, booktitle = {Radical Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Peter Cole}, pages = {101--128}, address = {New York}, topic = {pragmatics;Hindi-language;} } @article{ davison_a:1983a, author = {Alice Davison}, title = {Linguistic or Pragmatic Description in the Context of the Performadox}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1983}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {499--526}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @book{ davison_p-etal:1978a, editor = {Peter Davison and Rolf Meyersohn and Edward Shils}, title = {Uses of Literacy: Media}, publisher = {Chadwyck-Healy}, year = {1978}, address = {Cambridge}, ISBN = {0914146521 (Somerset)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P91.25 .U84 1978.}, topic = {sociology-of-literature;mass-media;} } @book{ davison_p-etal:1978b, editor = {Peter Davison and Rolf Meyersohn and Edward Shils}, title = {Literature and Society}, publisher = {Somerset House}, year = {1978}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0914146483}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, PN51 .L77 1978.}, topic = {sociology-of-literature;} } @article{ dawar_a-gurevich_y:2002a, author = {Anuj Dawar and Yuri Gurevich}, title = {Fixed Point Logics}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {65--88}, topic = {fixpoints;extensions-of-FOL;finite-model-theory;} } @article{ dawar_a-otto_m:2009a, author = {Anuj Dawar and Martin Otto}, title = {Modal Characterization Theorems over Special Classes of Frames}, journal = {Annals of Pure and Applied Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {101}, number = {1}, pages = {1--42}, abstract = {We investigate model theoretic characterisations of the expressive power of modal logics in terms of bisimulation invariance. The paradigmatic result of this kind is van Benthem's theorem, which says that a first-order formula is invariant under bisimulation if, and only if, it is equivalent to a formula of basic modal logic. The present investigation primarily concerns ramifications for specific classes of structures. ... }, topic = {modal-logic;model-theory;} } @book{ dawes:1972a, author = {Robyn M. Dawes}, title = {Fundamentals of Attitude Measurement}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1972}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {0471199494}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate Bf323.C5 D27}, topic = {soical-psychology;attitudes-in-psychology;} } @article{ dawid:1979a, author = {A.P. Dawid}, title = {Conditional Independence in Statistical Theory}, journal = {Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series B}, year = {1979}, volume = {41}, pages = {1--31}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {statistical-(in)dependence;} } @article{ dawid:2009a, author = {Richard Dawid}, title = {On the Conflicting Assessments of the Current Status of String Theory}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2009}, volume = {76}, number = {5}, pages = {984--996}, rtnote = {{PSA}2008: Proceedings of the 2008 Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {I}}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;string-theory;} } @article{ dawkins:1995a, author = {John Dawkins}, title = {Teaching Punctuation as a Rhetorical Tool}, journal = {College Composition and Communication}, year = {1995}, volume = {46}, number = {4}, pages = {533--548}, topic = {punctuation;} } @article{ dawson_ee:1959a, author = {Edward E. Dawson}, title = {A Model for Deontic Logic}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1959}, volume = {19}, number = {4}, pages = {73--78}, url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/3326437}, contentnote = {Develops Alan Anderson's idea about how to reduce deontic to alethic modal logic.}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @book{ dawson_jw:1997a, author = {John W. {Dawson, Jr.}}, title = {Logical Dilemmas: The Life and Work of {K}urt {G}\"odel}, publisher = {A.K. Peters}, year = {1997}, address = {Wellesley, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {1568810253}, rtnote = {UMich Science Library, QA 29 .G58 D391 1997.}, topic = {goedel;history-of-logic;} } @book{ dawson_mrw:1998a, author = {Michael R.W. Dawson}, title = {Understanding Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1999}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-631-20895-X (pb)}, xref = {Review: shapiro_la:2000a}, topic = {cogsci-general;} } @article{ dawson_mrw-etal:2000a, author = {M.R.W. Dawson and D.A. Medler and D.B. McCaughan and L. Willson and M. Carbonaro}, title = {Using Extra Output Learning to Insert a Symbolic Theory into a Connectionist Network}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {171--201}, topic = {connectionism;symbolic-reasoning;} } @article{ dawson_mrw-piercey:2001a, author = {Michael R.W. Dawson and C. Darren Piercey}, title = {On the Subsymbolic Nature of a PDP Architecture that Uses a Nonmonotonic Activation Function}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {197--218}, abstract = {PDP networks that use nonmonotonic activation functions often produce hidden unit regularities that permit the internal structure of these networks to be interpreted $\ldots$ We conclude that current evidence involving interpretations of nonmonotonic PDP networks actually illustrates the differences between symbolic and subsymbolic processing. }, topic = {connectionism;symbolic-reasoning;} } @book{ day_di-kovacs:1996a, editor = {Donald L. Day and Diane K. Kovacs}, title = {Computers, Communication and Mental Models}, publisher = {Taylor \& Francis}, year = {1996}, address = {London}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Rodney Fuller, "Human-computer-human Interaction: How Computers Affect Interpersonal Communication" 2. Jeremy Roschelle, "Designing for Cognitive Communication: Epistemic Fidelity or Mediating Collaborative Inquiry?" 3. Lajos Balint, "Computer-mediated interpersonal Communication: The {HCHI} Approach" 4. John Wood and Paul Taylor, "Mapping the Mapper" 5. Phil Moose et al., "Mapping Spatial Cognition with Computers" 6. Munir Mandviwalla, "The World View of Collaborative Tools" 7. Ray Paul and Peter Thomas, "Computer-Based Simulation Models for Problem-Solving: Communicating Problem Understandings" 10. Jozsef Toth, "The Effects of Combining Interactive Graphics and Text in Computer-Mediated Small Group Decision-Making" }, ISBN = {0748405437 (pbk)}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, P 96 .D36 C67 1996.}, topic = {HCI;} } @article{ day_ma:1977a, author = {Michael A. Day}, title = {An Axiomatic Approach to First Law Thermodynamics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {119--134}, topic = {formalizations-of-physics;} } @incollection{ dayal_v:2011a, author = {Veneeta Dayal}, title = {Bare noun phrases}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {1088--1108}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;generics;} } @incollection{ dayal_vs:1985a, author = {Veneeta S. Dayal}, title = {Quantification in Correlatives}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {179--205}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;relative-clauses;adjuncts;} } @article{ dayal_vs:1992a, author = {Veneeta S. Dayal}, title = {Scope Marking as Indirect WH-Dependency}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1993--1994}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {137--170}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;nl-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ dayal_vs:1995a, author = {Veneeta S. Dayal}, title = {Licensing {\em any} in Non-Negative/Non-Modal Contexts}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {V}}, year = {1995}, editor = {Mandy Simons and Teresa Galloway}, pages = {72--93}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;free-choice-`any/or';} } @book{ dayal_vs:1996a, author = {Veneeta S. Dayal}, title = {Locality in {Wh} Quantification: Questions and Relative Clauses in {H}indi}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1996}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {079234099X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, PK 1933 .D391 1996.}, topic = {interrogatives;Hindi-language;} } @inproceedings{ dayal_vs:1997a, author = {Vaneeta S. Dayal}, title = {Free Relatives and `Ever': Identity and Free Choice Readings}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1997}, editor = {Aaron Lawson}, pages = {99--116}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;free-choice-`any/or';relative-clauses;} } @article{ dayal_vs:1998b, author = {Vaneeta S. Dayal}, title = {{\it Any} As Inherently Modal}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1998}, volume = {21}, number = {5}, pages = {433--476}, topic = {free-choice-`any/or';nl-quantifiers;} } @inproceedings{ dayal_vs:1999a, author = {Veneeta S. Dayal}, title = {Bare {NP}'s, Reference to Kinds, and Incorporation}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IX}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1999}, editor = {Tanya Matthews and Devon Strolovitch}, pages = {34--51}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;Hindi-language;anaphora;} } @article{ dayal_vs:2004a, author = {Veneeta S. Dayal}, title = {Number Marking and (In)Definiteness in Kind Terms}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {393--450}, topic = {plural;indefiniteness;generics;} } @incollection{ dayal_vs:2013a, author = {Veneeta S. Dayal}, title = {A Viability Constraint on Alternatives for Free Choice}, booktitle = {Alternatives in Semantics}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amanira F\v{a}l\v{a}u\c{s}}, pages = {88--122}, address = {New York}, topic = {alternatives;free-choice-'any/or';} } @book{ dayan-abbott_lf:2001a, author = {Peter Dayan and L.F. Abbott}, title = {Theoretical Neuroscience: Computational and Mathematical Modeling of Neural Systems}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-262-04199-7 (Hbk), 987-0-0262-54185-5 (Pbk)}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. CogSci shelves.}, topic = {computational-neuroscience;} } @article{ de_m-omori_h:2018a, author = {Michael De and Hitoshi Omori}, title = {There is More to Negation than Modality}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {2}, pages = {281--299}, topic = {negation;} } @book{ deal_ar:2020a, author = {Amy Rose Deal}, title = {A Theory of Indexical Shift: Meaning, Grammar, and C rosslinguistic Variation}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2020}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780262044189}, topic = {indexicals;indirect-discourse;indexical-shift;} } @incollection{ dealmeida_c:2007a, author = {Claudio de Almeida}, title = {Moorean Absurdity: An Epistemological Analysis}, booktitle = {Moore's Paradox: New Essays on Belief, Rationality, and the First Person}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, editor = {Mitchell S. Green and John N. Williams}, pages = {53--75}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;} } @techreport{ dean_t:1985a, author = {Thomas Dean}, title = {Temporal Imagery: An Approach to Reasoning about Time for Planning and Problem Solving}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, Yale University}, number = {CSD/RR \#443}, year = {1985}, address = {New Haven, Connecticut}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;planning-formalisms;} } @inproceedings{ dean_t:1986a, author = {Thomas Dean}, title = {Intractability and Time Dependent Planning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Workshop on Planning and Reasoning about Action}, organization = {AAAI}, month = {July}, pages = {143--164}, year = {1986}, topic = {planning;} } @article{ dean_t:1991a, author = {Thomas Dean}, title = {Decision-Theoretic Control of Inference for Time-Critical Applications}, journal = {International Journal of Intelligent Systems}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {417--441}, year = {1991}, topic = {limited-rationality;pr-course;} } @book{ dean_t:1999a, editor = {Thomas Dean}, title = {Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1999}, address = {San Francisco}, volume = {1}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {AI-general;} } @book{ dean_t:1999b, editor = {Thomas Dean}, title = {Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1999}, address = {San Francisco}, volume = {2}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {AI-general;} } @article{ dean_t-broddy:1988a1, author = {Thomas Dean and Mark Broddy}, title = {Reasoning about Partially Ordered Events}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {36}, number = {3}, pages = {375--399}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper describes a class of temporal reasoning problems involving events whose order is not completely known. We examine the complexity of such problems and show that for all but trivial cases these problems are likely to be intractable. As an alternative to a complete, but potentially exponential-time decision procedure, we provide a partial decision procedure that reports useful results and runs in polynomial time.}, xref = {Republication: dean_t-broddy:1988a2.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ dean_t-broddy:1988a2, author = {Tom Dean and Mark Broddy}, title = {Reasoning about Partially Ordered Events}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {382--393}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: dean_t-boddy:1988a1.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ dean_t-etal:1993a, author = {Thomas Dean and Leslie Pack Kaelbling and Jak Kirman and Ann Nicholson}, title = {Planning with Deadlines in Stochastic Domains}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Richard E. Fikes and Wendy Lehnert}, pages = {574--579}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {planning;resource-limited-reasoning;} } @article{ dean_t-etal:1995a, author = {Thomas Dean and Leslie Pack Kaelbling and Jak Kirman and Ann Nicholson}, title = {Planning under Time Constraints in Stochastic Domains}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {76}, number = {1--2}, pages = {35--74}, topic = {planning;resource-limited-reasoning;} } @book{ dean_t-etal:1995b, author = {Thomas Dean and James Allen and Y. Aloimonos}, title = {Artificial Intelligence: Theory and Practice}, publisher = {Benjamin/Cummins Publishing}, year = {1995}, address = {Redwood City, California}, ISBN = {0-8053-2547-6}, xref = {Reviews: duboulay:2001a, furbach:2003a.}, topic = {AI-intro;AI-text;} } @article{ dean_t-mcdermott_d:1987a, author = {Thomas Dean and Drew McDermott}, title = {Temporal Data Base Management}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {32}, number = {1}, pages = {1--55}, missinginfo = {specific topics}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ dean_t-siegle_g:1990a, author = {Thomas Dean and Greg Siegle}, title = {An Approach to Reasoning About Continuous Change for Applications in Planning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, editor = {Thomas Dietterich and William Swartout}, pages = {132--137}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, abstract = {... We ... explore some of the issues involved in implementing a practical system that derives conclusions consistent with such a hybrid calculus. Models for real-valued parameters are specified as systems of ordinary differential equations, and constructs are provided for reasoning about how these models change over time. ...}, topic = {continuous-change;planning-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ dean_t-wellman_mp:1989a, author = {Thomas Dean and Michael P. Wellman}, title = {On the Value of Goals}, booktitle = {Proceedings from the {R}ochester Planning Workshop: From Formal Systems to Practical Systems}, year = {1989}, editor = {Josh Tenenberg and Jay Weber and James Allen}, pages = {129--140}, topic = {intention;foundations-of-planning;} } @article{ dean_w:2018a, author = {Walter Dean}, title = {Strict Finitism, Feasibility, and the Sorites}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {295--346}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @article{ dean_w:2020a, author = {Walter Dean}, title = {Ncompleteness Via Paradox and Completeness}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, abstract = {This paper explores the relationship borne by the traditional paradoxes of set theory and semantics to formal incompleteness phenomena. A central tool is the application of the Arithmetized Completeness Theorem to systems of second-order arithmetic and set theory in which various "paradoxical notions" for first-order languages can be formalized. I will first discuss the setting in which this result was originally presented by Hilbert & Bernays (1939) and also how it was later adapted by Kreisel (1950) and Wang (1955) in order to obtain formal undecidability results. A generalization of this method will then be presented whereby Russell's paradox, a variant of Mirimanoff's paradox, the Liar, and the Grelling-Nelson paradox may be uniformly transformed into incompleteness theorems. Some additional observations are then framed relating these results to the unification of the set theoretic and semantic paradoxes, the intensionality of arithmetization (in the sense of Feferman, 1960), and axiomatic theories of truth.}, pages = {541--592}, topic = {paradoxes;(in)completeness;} } @article{ dean_w-walsh_s:2017a, author = {Walter Dean and Sean Walsh}, title = {The Prehistory of the Subsystems of Second-Order Arithmetic}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {10}, number = {2}, pages = {357--396}, topic = {formalizations-of-arithmetic;} } @article{ deane:1995a, author = {Paul Deane}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}omputational Lexical Semantics}, edited by {P}atrick {S}aint-{D}izier and {E}velyne {V}iegas}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1995}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {593--597}, xref = {Review of: saintdizier-viegas:1995a.}, topic = {machine-translation;nl-kr;computational-lexical-semantics; lexical-processing;} } @inproceedings{ deane:2005a, author = {Paul Deane}, title = {A Nonparametric Method for Extraction of Candidate Phrasal Terms}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {605--613}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1075}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;phrasal-terms;} } @incollection{ deangelli-etal:1999a, author = {Antonella de Angeli and Laurent Romary and Frederic Wolf}, title = {Ecological Interfaces: Extending the Pointing Paradigm by Visual Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {91--104}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;HCI;} } @book{ dear:2006a, author = {Peter Dear}, title = {The Intelligibility of Nature: How Science Makes Sense of the World}, publisher = {Chicago University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Chicago}, xref = {Review: garber:2011a}, topic = {history-of-science;} } @article{ dearden-boutilier_c:1997a, author = {Richard Dearden and Craig Boutilier}, title = {Abstraction and Approximate Decision-Theoretic Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {89}, number = {1--2}, pages = {219--283}, topic = {planning;Markov-decision-processes;abstraction; decision-theory;qualitative-utility;} } @article{ deas_r:1989a, author = {Robert Deas}, title = {Sorensen's Sorites}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1989}, volume = {49}, number = {1}, pages = {26--31}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @article{ deasy_d:2016a, author = {Daniel Deasy}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Moving Spotlight: An Essay on Time and Ontology}, by {R}oss {C}ameron}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2016}, volume = {113}, number = {9}, pages = {472--477}, xref = {Review of: cameron_r:2015a}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;A-series-B-series;} } @article{ deasy_d:2017a, author = {Daniel Deasy}, title = {What is Presentism?}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {51}, number = {2}, pages = {378--397}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;} } @article{ debacker-etal:2010a, author = {Philippe De Backer and Danny De Waele and Linda Van Speybroeck}, title = {Ins and Outs of Systems Biology vis-\'a-vis Molecular Biology: Continuation or Clear Cut?}, journal = {Acta Biotheoretica}, year = {2010}, volume = {58}, number = {1}, pages = {15--49}, topic = {systems-biology;molecular-biloogy;} } @book{ debakker-etal:1989a, editor = {J.W. de Bakker and W.P. de Roever and Grezegorz Rozenburg}, title = {Linear Time, Branching Time and Partial Order in Logics and Models for Concurrency}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1989}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, rtnote = {UMich Media Library QA 76.5 .L5231 1989}, isbn = {038751080X}, topic = {temporal-logic;modal-logic;branching-time;tmix-project; concurrency;} } @book{ debeaugrande:1980a, author = {Robert de Beaugrande}, title = {Text, Discourse, and Process: Toward a Multidisciplinary Science of Texts}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Corp.}, year = {1980}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, rtnote = {Pitt Information Sciences P302 .D35 1980}, topic = {discourse-analysis;} } @book{ debeauregarde:1984a, author = {Robert de Beaugrande}, title = {Text Production: Toward a Science of Composition}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Corp.}, year = {1984}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, rtnote = {HILLMAN P211 D35 1984}, topic = {discourse-analysis;} } @book{ debeauregarde-dressler_w:1981a, author = {R. {de Beauregard} and W. Dressler}, title = {Introduction to Text Linguistics}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1981}, address = {London}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name; check topic}, rtnote = {Not in Hillman Apparently contains useful review of text gr.}, topic = {pragmatics;text-linguistics;discourse;} } @incollection{ debessonet:1995a, author = {Gary G. deBessonet}, title = {Towards a Sentential `Reality' for the Android}, booktitle = {Android Epistemology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Kenneth M. Ford and Clark Glymour and Patrick J. Hayes}, pages = {215--241}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {semantic-similarity;} } @incollection{ debille:1991a, author = {Lieve Debille}, title = {Anaphora Resolution in {MMI2}}, booktitle = {Working Papers in Computational Semantics, Dialogue and Discourse}, publisher = {Department of Mathematics, University of Oslo}, year = {1991}, editor = {Harold L. Somers}, pages = {63--70}, address = {P.O. Box 1053-Blindern, 0316 Oslo 3, Norway}, topic = {anaphora;anaphora-resolution;nl-processing;} } @inproceedings{ debona_g-etal:2016a, author = {Glauber De Bona and Marcelo Finger and M\'arcio Moretto Ribeiro and Yuri David Santos and Renata Wassermann}, title = {Consolidating Probabilistic Knowledge Bases via Belief Contraction}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {125--134}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... [We] study the applicability of AGM-like operations to probabilistic bases. ... We aim to identify the reasons why the set of AGM postulates based on discrete operations of deletions and accretions is too coarse to treat finely adjustable probabilistic formulas. We propose new principles that allow one to deal with the consolidation of inconsistent probabilistic bases, presenting a finer method called liftable contraction. Furthermore, we show that existing methods for probabilistic consolidation via distance minimization are particular cases of the methods proposed. }, topic = {belief-revision;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ debrabanter:2005a, author = {Phillipe De Brabanter}, title = {Questions and the Intrusion of Non-Linguistic Communication into Utterances}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {126--139}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;direct-discourse;} } @incollection{ debreu:1954a, author = {Gerard Debreu}, title = {Representation of a Preference Ordering by a Numerical Function}, booktitle = {Decision Processes}, editor = {R. M. Thrall and C. H. Coombs and R. L. Davis}, year = {1954}, publisher = {John Wiley \& Sons}, address = {New York}, topic = {decision-theory;qualitative-utility;preferences;} } @book{ debreu:1959a, author = {Gerard Debreu}, title = {Theory of Value: an Axiomatic Analysis of Economic Equilibrium}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1959}, address = {New York}, topic = {decision-theory;} } @incollection{ debruijn-etal:2008a, author = {Jos de Bruijn and Thomas Eiter and Hans Tompits}, title = {Embedding Approaches to Combining Rules and Ontologies into Autoepistemic Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {485--495}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {The combination of rules and ontologies has a central role in the ongoing development of the Semantic Web. In previous work, autoepistemic logic (AEL) was advocated as a uniform host formalism to study different such combinations, enabling comparisons on a common basis. In this paper, we continue this line of research and investigate different embeddings of major proposals to combine rules and ontologies into first-order autoepistemic logic (FO-AEL). In particular, we present embeddings for dl-programs, r-hybrid knowledge bases, and hybrid MKNF knowledge bases, which are representatives of different combination types. We study the embeddings in the context of FO-AEL under the standard-names assumption, but we also discuss variants using the any- and all-names semantics. Our results provide interesting insights into the properties of the discussed combination formalisms. }, topic = {computational-ontology;autoepistemic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ decarlo-etal:2002a, author = {Douglas DeCarlo and Corey Revilla Matthew Stone and Jennifer J. Venditti}, title = {Making Discourse Visible: Coding and Animating Conversational Facial Displays}, booktitle = {Proceedings of Computer Animation 2002 (CA 2002)}, year = {2002}, editor = {Norman Badler and Nadia Magnenat-Thalmann and Rick Parent and Daniel Thalmann}, pages = {11--16}, publisher = {{IEEE} Computer Society Press}, address = {New York}, topic = {animation;facial-expression;nl-generation;} } @article{ decarlo_d-etal:2004a, author = {Douglas DeCarlo and Matthew Stone and Corey Revilla and Jennifer J. Venditti}, title = {Specifying and Animating Facial Signals for Discourse in Embodied Conversational Agents}, journal = {Computer Animation and Virtual Worlds}, year = {2004}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {27--38}, topic = {animation;facial-expression;nl-generation;} } @article{ decelles_d:1977a, author = {David DeCelles}, title = {Divine Prescience and Human Freedom in {A}ugustine}, journal = {Augustine Studies}, year = {1977}, volume = {8}, pages = {151--160}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @article{ decety_j:2010a, author = {Jean Decety}, title = {The Neurodevelopment of Empathy in Humans}, journal = {Developmental Neuroscience}, year = {2010}, volume = {32}, number = {4}, pages = {257--267}, abstract = {... The purpose of this paper is to critically examine the current knowledge in developmental and affective neuroscience with an emphasis on the perception of pain in others. It will be argued that human empathy involves several components: affective arousal, emotion understanding and emotion regulation, each with different developmental trajectories. These components are implemented by a complex network of distributed, often recursively connected, interacting neural regions including the superior temporal sulcus, insula, medial and orbitofrontal cortices, amygdala and anterior cingulate cortex, as well as autonomic and neuroendocrine processes implicated in social behaviors and emotional states. ...}, doi = {http://doi.org/10.1159/000317771}, topic = {empathy;cognitive-neuroscience;agent-modeling;} } @article{ decew:1981a, author = {Judith Wagner Decew}, title = {Conditional Obligation and Counterfactuals}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {55--72}, topic = {conditionals;deontic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dechaine:1991a, author = {Rose-Marie Dechaine}, title = {Bare Sentences}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {I}}, year = {1991}, editor = {Steven Moore and {Adam Zachary} Wyner}, pages = {31--50}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {tense-aspect;} } @inproceedings{ dechesne_f-wang_yj:2007a, author = {Francien Dechesne and Yanjing Wang}, title = {Dynamic Epistemic Verification of Security Protocols: Framework and Case Study}, booktitle = {A Meeting of the Minds: Proceedings of the Workshop on Logic, Rationality, And Interaction, Beijing 2007}, year = {2007}, pages = {129--143}, publisher = {College Publications}, address = {London}, abstract = {We propose a dynamic epistemic framework for the verification of security protocols. First, we introduce a dynamic epistemic logic equipped with iteration and cryptographic supplements in which we can formalize and check (epistemic) requirements of security protocols. On top of this, we give a general guide how to go from a protocol specification to its representation in our framework. We demonstrate this by checking requirements of a simplified version of a protocol for confidential message comparison.}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;cryptography;computer-security;} } @article{ dechoudhury_m-kiciman_e:2018a, author = {Munmun De Choudhury and Emre Kiciman}, title = {Integrating Artificial and Human Intelligence in Complex, Sensitive Problem Domains: Experiences from Mental Health}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2018}, volume = {39}, number = {3}, pages = {69--80}, topic = {medical-AI;} } @book{ dechter-etal:2010a, editor = {Rina Dechter and Hector Geffner and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Heuristics, Probability and Causality: A Tribute to {J}udea {P}earl}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2010}, address = {London}, topic = {AI-general;probability;causality;} } @article{ dechter_r:1990a, author = {Rina Dechter}, title = {Enhancement Schemes For Constraint Processing: Backjumping, Learning, and Cutset Decomposition}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {41}, number = {3}, pages = {273--312}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;AI-algorithms;} } @article{ dechter_r:1992a, author = {Rina Dechter}, title = {From Local to Global Consistency}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {55}, number = {1}, pages = {87--108}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In reasoning tasks involving the maintenance of consistent databases (so-called "constraint networks"), it is customary to enforce local consistency conditions in order to simplify the subsequent construction of a globally coherent model of the data. In this paper we present a relationship between the sizes of the variables' domains, the constraints' arity and the level of local consistency sufficient to ensure global consistency. Based on these parameters a new tractability classification of constraint networks is presented. We also show, based on this relationship, that any relation on bi-valued variables which is not representable by a network of binary constraints cannot be represented by networks with any number of hidden variables.}, topic = {consistency-checking;constraint-networks;} } @inproceedings{ dechter_r:1999a, author = {Rina Dechter}, title = {Unifying Structure-Driven Inference}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {AI-algorithms;constraint-satisfaction; probabilistic-reasoning;decision-theoretic-planning;} } @article{ dechter_r:1999b, author = {Rina Dechter}, title = {Bucket Elimination: A Unifying Framework for Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {113}, number = {1--2}, pages = {41--85}, topic = {dynamic-programming;constraint-satisfaction; constraint-networks;search;Bayesian-networks;} } @book{ dechter_r:2003a, author = {Rina Dechter}, title = {Constraint Processing}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2003}, address = {San Francisco}, xref = {Review: bartak:2005a}, ISBN = {9781558608900}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ dechter_r-dechter_a:1996a, author = {Rina Dechter and Avi Dechter}, title = {Structure-Driven Algorithms for Truth Maintenance}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {82}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--20}, topic = {truth-maintenance;belief-revision;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ dechter_r-etal:1989a1, author = {Rina Dechter and Itay Meiri and Judea Pearl}, title = {Temporal Constraint Networks}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {83--93}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Journal publication: dechter_r-etal:1989a2.}, topic = {kr;temporal-reasoning;kr-course;} } @article{ dechter_r-etal:1991a2, author = {Rina Dechter and Itat Meiri and Judea Pearl}, title = {Temporal Constraint Networks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {49}, number = {1--3}, pages = {61--95}, xref = {Conference publication: dechter_r-etal:1989a1.}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;constraint-satisfaction;kr;krcourse;} } @article{ dechter_r-fatah:2001a, author = {Rina Dechter and Yousri El Fatah}, title = {Topological Parameters for Time-Space Tradeoff}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {125}, number = {1--2}, pages = {93--118}, topic = {problem-solving;complexity-in-AI;tree-clustering-algorithms; AI-algorithms;} } @article{ dechter_r-mateescu:2006a, author = {Rina Dechter and Robert Mateescu}, title = {{AND/OR} Search Spaces for Graphical Models}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {2--3}, pages = {73--106}, topic = {search;Bayesian-networks;graph-based-reasoning;} } @article{ dechter_r-meiri:1994a, author = {Rina Dechter and Itay Meiri}, title = {Experimental Evaluation of Preprocessing Algorithms for Constraint Satisfaction Problems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {68}, number = {2}, pages = {211--241}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper presents an experimental evaluation of two orthogonal schemes for preprocessing constraint satisfaction problems (CSPs). The first of these schemes involves a class of local consistency techniques that includes directional arc consistency, directional path consistency, and adaptive consistency. The other scheme concerns the prearrangement of variables in a linear order to facilitate an efficient search. In the first series of experiments, we evaluated the effect of each of the local consistency techniques on backtracking and backjumping. Surprisingly, although adaptive consistency has the best worst-case complexity bounds, we have found that it exhibits the worst performance, unless the constraint graph was very sparse. Directional arc consistency (followed by either backjumping or backtracking) and backjumping (without any preprocessing) outperformed all other techniques: moreover, the former dominated the latter in computationally intensive situations. The second series of experiments suggests that maximum cardinality and minimum width are the best preordering (i.e., static ordering) strategies, while dynamic search rearrangement is superior to all the preorderings studied. }, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;arc-consistency;experimental-AI;} } @article{ dechter_r-pearl_j:1987a, author = {Rina Dechter and Judea Pearl}, title = {Network-Based Heuristics for Constraint-Satisfaction Problems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {1--38}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;graph-based-reasoning; heuristics;} } @article{ dechter_r-pearl_j:1989a, author = {Rina Dechter and Judea Pearl}, title = {Tree Clustering for Constraint Networks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {38}, number = {3}, pages = {353--366}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;AI-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ dechter_r-pearl_j:1991a, author = {Rina Dechter and Judea Pearl}, title = {A Relational Framework for Causal Modeling}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {Barbara J. Grosz and John Mylopoulos}, pages = {1164--1170}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {causality;causal-networks;} } @article{ dechter_r-pearl_j:1992a, author = {Rina Dechter and Judea Pearl}, title = {Structure Identification in Relational Data}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {58}, number = {1--3}, pages = {237--270}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper presents several investigations into the prospects for identifying meaningful structures in empirical data, namely, structures permitting effective organization of the data to meet requirements of future queries. We propose a general framework whereby the notion of identifiability is given a precise formal definition similar to that of learnability. Using this framework, we then explore if a tractable procedure exists for deciding whether a given relation is decomposable into a constraint network or a CNF theory with desirable topology and, if the answer is positive, identifying the desired decomposition. Finally, we address the problem of expressing a given relation as a Horn theory and, if this is impossible, finding the best k-Horn approximation to the given relation. We show that both problems can be solved in time polynomial in the length of the data.}, topic = {Horn-approximation;} } @incollection{ dechter_r-rish:1994a, author = {Rina Dechter and Irina Rish}, title = {Directional Resolution: The {D}avis-{P}utnam Procedure, Revisited}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {134--145}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;theorem-proving;kr-course;} } @article{ declerck:1979a, author = {Renaat Declerck}, title = {On the Progressive and the `Imperfective Paradox{'} }, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1979}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {267--272}, topic = {tense-aspect;imperfective-paradox;} } @book{ declerck:1991a, author = {Renaat Declerck}, title = {Tense in English: Its Structure and Use}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1991}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0-415-06151-2}, topic = {nl-tense;} } @article{ declerck-depraetere:1995a, author = {Renaat Declerck and Ilse Depraetere}, title = {The Double System of Tense Forms Referring to Future Time in {E}nglish}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1995}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {269--310}, abstract = {As is well known, some types of subclause in English differ from independent clauses in that they require a different tense form when the reference is to the future. We say I will be happy if the weather is nice tomorrow, but not*I am happy if the weather is nice tomorrow or *I will be happy if the weather will be nice tomorrow. As is clear from these examples, the two ways of referring to the future are subject to different conditions, and each has a distribution of its own. This article investigates the two systems in detail. It shows how they fit into a more general theory of tense, offers an explanation for their different distributions and examines the subtle semantic differences between their uses in clauses that allow both (e.g. restructive relative clauses). }, topic = {nl-tense;} } @book{ declerck_r-reed_s:2001a, author = {Renaat Declerck and Susan Reed}, title = {Conditionals: A Comprehensive Empirical Analysis}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {2001}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {9783110851748}, topic = {conditionals;descriptive-grammar;} } @inproceedings{ declercq_s-etal:2014a, author = {Sofie De Clercq and Kim Bauters and Steven Schockaert and Martine De Cock and Ann Now\'e}, title = {Using Answer Set Programming for Solving Boolean Games}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {602--605}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... introduce a method for finding the pure Nash equilibria based on disjunctive answer set programming. Our method is furthermore capable of finding the core elements and the Pareto optimal equilibria, and can easily be modified to support other forms of optimality, thanks to the declarative nature of disjunctive answer set programming. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {answer-set-programming;game-theory;Nash-equilibria;} } @article{ declerk:1988a, author = {Renaat Declerk}, title = {Restrictive `When'-Clauses}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1988}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {131--168}, topic = {nl-semantics;conditionals;sentence-focus;pragmatics;} } @article{ decock-douven_i:2014a, author = {Lieven Decock and Igor Douven}, title = {What is Graded Membership?}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2014}, volume = {48}, number = {4}, pages = {653--682}, topic = {vagueness;distributed-representations;} } @inproceedings{ decolnets_a-mengel_s:2021a, author = {Alexis de ColnetS and Stefan Mengel}, title = {A Compilation of Succinctness Results for Arithmetic Circuits}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {205--215}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we study the relative succinctness of classes of AC with different combinations of common restrictions. ...}, topic = {circuit-design;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ decooman-etal:2011a, author = {Gert de Cooman and Enrique Mirada and Marco Zaffalon}, title = {Independent Natural Extension}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {12--13}, pages = {1911--1950}, topic = {epistemic-independence;probability;} } @article{ decooman-hermans:2008a, author = {Gert de Cooman and Filip Hermans}, title = {Imprecise Probability Trees: Bridging Two Theories of Imprecise Probability}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {172}, number = {11}, pages = {1400--1427}, topic = {interval-based-probabilities;} } @article{ decooman-zaffalon:2004a, author = {Gen de Cooman and Marco Zaffalon}, title = {Updating Beliefs with Incomplete Observations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {159}, number = {1--2}, pages = {75--125}, topic = {bayesian-networks;belief-revision;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ decornulier:1978a, author = {Benoit de Cornulier}, title = {Paradoxical Self-Reference}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1978}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {435}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ decoste:1991a, author = {Dennis DeCoste}, title = {Dynamic Across-Time Measurement Interpretation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {51}, number = {1--3}, pages = {273--341}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Incrementally maintaining a qualitative understanding of physical system behavior based on observations is crucial to tasks such as real-time control, monitoring, and diagnosis. This paper describes the DATMI theory for interpretation tasks. The key idea of DATMI is to dynamically maintain a concise representation of the space of local and global interpretations across time that are consistent with the observations. This representation has two key advantages. First, a set of possible interpretations is more useful than a single (best) candidate for many tasks, such as conservative monitoring. Second, this representation simplifies switching to alternative interpretations when data are faulty or incomplete. Domain-specific knowledge about state and transition probabilities can be used to suggest the interpretation which is most likely. Domain-specific knowledge about durations of states and paths of states can also be used to further constrain the interpretation space. When no consistent interpretation exists, faulty-data hypotheses are generated and then tested by adjusting the interpretation space. The DATMI theory has been tested via implementation and we describe its performance on two examples.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ decristofaro-etal:1999a, author = {Jonathan DeCristofaro and Michael Strube and Kathleen F. McCoy}, title = {Building a Tool for Annotating Reference in Discourse}, booktitle = {The Relation of Discourse/Dialogue Structure and Reference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, editor = {Dan Cristea and Nancy Ide and Daniel Marcu}, pages = {54--62}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {anaphora;corpus-annotation;reference;discourse-tagging;} } @article{ dee-etal:2009a, author = {Hannah M. Dee and David C. Hogg}, title = {Navigational Strategies in Behaviour Modelling}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {2}, pages = {329--342}, topic = {computer-vision;intentionality;} } @article{ definetti:1937a1, author = {Bruno de Finitti}, title = {La Pr\'evision: Ses Lois Logiques, Ses Sources Subjectives}, journal = {Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincar\'e}, year = {1937}, volume = {7}, pages = {1--68}, xref = {See definetti:1937a2 for English Translation.}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {subjective-probabilty;qualitative-probability; foundations-of-probability;foundations-of-statistics;} } @incollection{ definetti:1937a2, author = {Bruno De Finetti}, title = {Foresight: Its Logical Laws, Its Subjective Sources}, booktitle = {Studies in Subjective Probability}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1964}, editor = {Henry E. {Kyburg, Jr.} and Howard E. Smokler}, pages = {93--158}, address = {New York}, xref = {Original publication: definetti:1937a1.}, note = {Originally published in 1937 under the title `La Prevision: Ses Lois Logiques, Ses Sources Subjectives'.}, topic = {subjective-probabilty;qualitative-probability; foundations-of-probability;foundations-of-statistics;} } @book{ definetti:1990a, author = {Bruno De Finetti}, title = {Theory of Probability: A Critical Introductory Treatment}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1990}, volume = {1}, note = {First published in 1970.}, address = {New York}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @book{ definetti:1990b, author = {Bruno De Finetti}, title = {Theory of Probability: A Critical Introductory Treatment}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1990}, volume = {2}, note = {First published in 1970.}, address = {New York}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @article{ defreitas-etal:2003a, author = {Renata P. de Freitas and Jorge P. Viana and Mario R.F. Benevides and Sheila R.M. Veloso and Paulo A.S. Veloso}, title = {Squares in Fork Arrow Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2003}, volume = {32}, number = {4}, pages = {343--355}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @incollection{ degand:1996a, author = {Liesbeth Degand}, title = {A {D}utch Component for a Multilingual Systemic Text Generation System}, booktitle = {Trends in Natural Language Generation, An Artificial Intelligence Perspective, Fourth {E}uropean Workshop, {EWNLG} '93, Pisa, Italy, April 28-30, 1993, Selected Papers}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science}, volume = {1036}, year = {1996}, editor = {Giovanni Adorni and Michael Zock}, pages = {350--367}, address = {New York}, topic = {multilingual-nlp;nl-generation;} } @incollection{ degand:1998a, author = {Liesbeth Degand}, title = {On Classifying Connectives and Coherence Relations}, booktitle = {Discourse Relations and Discourse Markers: Proceedings of the Conference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Manfred Stede and Leo Wanner and Eduard Hovy}, pages = {36--42}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {discourse-cue-words;discourse-structure;} } @book{ degaynesford:2006a, author = {Maximilian De Gaynesford}, title = {{I}: The Meaning of the First Person Term}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-19-928782-6}, xref = {Review: bermudez_jl:2000a}, topic = {first-person;demonstratives;} } @article{ degeilh-preller:2005a, author = {Sylvain Degeilh and Anne Preller}, title = {Efficiency of Pregroups and the {F}rench Noun Phrase}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2005}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {423--444}, topic = {pregroups;complexity-theory;grammar-formalisms;} } @incollection{ degelder:1996a, author = {Beatrice de Gelder}, title = {Modularity and Logical Cognitivism}, booktitle = {Connectionism, Concepts, and Folk Psychology: The Legacy of {A}lan {T}uring: Volume {II}}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter J.R. Millican and Andy Clark}, pages = {147--168}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {modularity;foundations-of-psychology;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo-etal:2021b, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Antonio Di Stasio and Giuseppe Perelli and Shufang Zhu}, title = {Synthesis with Mandatory Stop Actions}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {227--246}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we consider synthesis (i.e., planning) for LTLf goals under LTL environment specifications in the case the agent must mandatorily stop at a certain point. ... we add to the agent goal, expressed in LTLf, a safety goal, expressed in LTL. Safety goals must hold forever, even when the agent stops, since the environment can still continue its evolution. Hence the agent, before stopping, must ensure that her safety goal will be maintained even after she stops. To do synthesis in this case, we devise an effective approach that mixes a synthesis technique based on finite-state automata (as in the case of LTLf goals) and model-checking of nondeterministic Buchi automata. }, topic = {plan-synthesis;plan-verification;} } @article{ degiacomo_g:1996a, author = {Giuseppe {De Giacomo}}, title = {Eliminating `Converse' from Converse {PDL}}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1996}, volume = {5}, number = {2}, pages = {193--208}, topic = {dynamic-logic;modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g:2010a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo}, title = {Generalized Planning with Loops under Strong Fairness Constraints}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {351--361}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We consider a generalized form of planning, possibly involving loops, that arises in nondeterministic domains when explicit strong fairness constraints are asserted over the planning domain. ... We show that planning for reachability and maintenance goals is EXPTIME-complete in this setting, that is, it has the same complexity as conditional planning in nondeterministic domains (without strong fairness constraints). We also show that within the EXPTIME bound one can solve the more general problems of realizing agent planning programs as well as composition-based planning in the presence of strong fairness constraints.}, topic = {planning-algorithms;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ degiacomo_g-etal:1996a, author = {Giuseppe {De Giacomo} and Luca Iocchi and Daniele Nardi and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {Moving a Robot: The {KR\&R} Approach at Work}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {198--209}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;cognitive-robotics;description-logics;robot-motion; kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-etal:1997a, author = {Guiseppe De Giacomo and Yves Lesp\'erance and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Reasoning about Concurrent Execution, Prioritized Interrupts, and Exogenous Actions in the Situation Calculus}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Martha Pollack}, pages = {1221--1226}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {situation-calculus;concurrency;cognitive-robotics;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-etal:1997b, author = {Guiseppe De Giacomo and Luca Iocchi and Daniel Nardi and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {Planning with Sensing for a Mobile Robot}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {ECP}-97: Fourth {E}uropean Conference on Planning}, year = {1997}, editor = {Sam Steele and Rachid Alami}, pages = {158--170}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, url = {http://www.dis.uniroma1.it/~iocchi/publications/iocchi-ecp97.pdf}, abstract = {We present an attempt to reconcile the theoretical work on reasoning about action with the realization of agents, in particular mobile robots. Specifically, we present a logical framework for representing dynamic systems based on description logics, which allows for the formalization of sensing actions. We address the generation of conditional plans by defining a suitable reasoning method in which a plan is extracted from a constructive proof of a query expressing a given goal. We also present an implementation of such a logical framework, which has been tested on the mobile robot `Tino'.}, topic = {cognitive-robotics;sensing-actions;} } @incollection{ degiacomo_g-etal:1998a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Raymond Reiter and Mikhail Soutchanski}, title = {Execution Monitoring of High-Level Robot Plans}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {453--464}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;kr-course;} } @article{ degiacomo_g-etal:2000a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Yves Lesp\'erance and Hector Levesque}, title = {{C}on{G}olog, a Concurrent Programming Language Based on the Situation Calculus}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {121}, number = {1--2}, pages = {109--169}, topic = {Golog;situation-calculus;concurrency;cognitive-robotics;} } @incollection{ degiacomo_g-etal:2002a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Yves Lesp\'erance and Hector J. Levesque and Sebastian Sardi\~na}, title = {On the Semantics of Deliberation in {I}ndi{G}olog--from Theory to Implementation}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {603--614}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;Golog;planning-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-etal:2010a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Yves Lesp\'erance and Adrian R. Pearce}, title = {Situation Calculus Based Programs for Representing and Reasoning about Game Structures}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {445--455}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we develop a logical framework for specifying these types of problems/games based on the situation calculus and ConGolog. The framework incorporates game-theoretic path quantifiers as in ATL. ... we develop a method for dealing with infinite state settings using fixpoint approximation and "characteristic graphs".}, topic = {situation-calculus;game-theory;reasoning-about-games;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-etal:2012a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Yves Lesp\'erance and Fabio Patrizi}, title = {Bounded Situation Calculus Action Theories and Decidable Verification}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {467--477}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We define a notion of bounded action theory in the situation calculus, where the theory entails that in all situations, the number of ground fluent atoms is bounded by a constant. ... The main result of the paper is that verification of an expressive class of first-order mu-calculus temporal properties in such theories is in fact decidable.}, topic = {situation-calculus;(un)decidability;} } @article{ degiacomo_g-etal:2013a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Fabio Patrizi and Sebastian Sardi\~na}, title = {Automatic Behavior Composition Synthesis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {196}, pages = {106--142}, topic = {behavior-composition;kr;planning-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-etal:2020a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Bastien Maubert and Aniello Murano}, title = {Nondeterministic Strategies and their Refinement in Strategy Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {294--303}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... We show that strategic problems involving strategy refinement can be solved elegantly in the framework of Strategy Logic (SL), a very expressive logic to reason about strategic abilities. Specifically, we introduce an extension of SL with nondeterministic strategies and an operator expressing strategy refinement. We show that model checking this logic can be done at no additional computational cost with respect to standard SL, and can be used to solve a variety of problems such as synthesis of maximally permissive strategies or refinement of Nash equilibria.a}, topic = {strategy-logic;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-etal:2020b, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Antonio Di Stasio and Moshe Y. Vardi and Shufang Zhu}, title = {Two-Stage Technique for {LTLf} Synthesis Under {LTL} Assumptions}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {304--314}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we ... show how to effectively handle any kind of LTL assumptions. Specifically, we devise a two-stage technique for solving LTLf under general LTL assumptions and show empirically that this technique performs much better than standard LTL synthesis.}, topic = {linear-temporal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-etal:2020c, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Marco Favorito and Luca Iocchi and Fabio Patrizi and Alessandro Ronca}, title = {Temporal Logic Monitoring Rewards via Transducers}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {860--870}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... We contribute to the techniques to handle temporal rewards and to the solutions to engineer them. We first present an approach to compiling temporal rewards which merges the formula automata into a single transducer, sometimes saving up to an exponential number of states. We then define monitoring rewards, which add a further level of abstraction to temporal rewards by adopting the four-valued conditions of runtime monitoring; we argue that our compilation technique allows for an efficient handling of monitoring rewards. Finally, we discuss application to reinforcement learning.}, topic = {Markov-decision-processes;reinforcement-learning;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-etal:2021a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Aniello Murano and Fabio PatriziGiu and Giuseppe Perelli}, title = {Timed Trace Alignment with Metric Temporal Logic over Finite Traces}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {227--236}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we study the timed version of trace alignment, where events are paired with timestamps and specifications are provided in metric temporal logic over finite traces (MTLf ), essentially a superlanguage of LTLf. ... The main contribution of the paper is a provably correct, effective technique for Timed Trace Alignment that takes advantage of results on MTLf decidability as well as on reachability for well-structured transition systems.}, topic = {metric-temporal-logic;} } @incollection{ degiacomo_g-lenzerini_m:1994a, author = {Giuseppe {De Giacomo} and Maurizio Lenzerini}, title = {Description Logics With Inverse Roles, Functional Restrictions, and N-ary Relations}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Craig Mac{N}ish and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and David Pearce}, pages = {332--346}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {extensions-of-kl1;description-logics;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-lenzerini_m:1995a, author = {Giuseppe {De Giacomo} and Maurizio Lenzerini}, title = {What's in an Aggregate: Foundations for Description Logics with Tuples and Sets}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {801--807}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {Read this for KR?}, topic = {kr;description-logics;extensions-of-kl1;kr-course;} } @incollection{ degiacomo_g-lenzerini_m:1996a, author = {Giuseppe {De Giacomo} and Maurizio Lenzerini}, title = {{TB}ox and {AB}ox Reasoning in Expressive Description Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {316--327}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;description-logics;extensions-of-kl1;classifier-algorithms; kr-course;} } @article{ degiacomo_g-lenzerini_m:1997a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Maurizio Lenzerini}, title = {A Uniform Framework for Concept Definitions in Description Logics}, journal = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research}, year = {1997}, volume = {6}, pages = {87--110}, topic = {description-logics;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-lesperance_y:2021a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Yves Lesp\'erance}, title = {The Nondeterministic Situation Calculus}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {216--226}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... Various approaches have been proposed to accommodate nondeterminism on top of the standard situation calculus language, for instance by introducing nondeterministic programs as in Golog and ConGolog. But a key problem in these approaches is that they don't clearly distinguish between choices that can be made by the agent and choices that are made by the environment ... we propose a simple extension to the standard situation calculus that accommodates nondeterministic actions and preserves Reiter's solution to the frame problem and answering projection queries through regression. We also provide a formalization of FOND planning and show how ConGolog high-level program execution in nondeterministic domains can be defined.}, topic = {(non)determinism;situation-calculus;GoLog;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-levesque_hj:1999a, author = {Guiseppe De Giacomo and Hector Levesque}, title = {Projection using Regression and Sensors}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, editor = {Thomas Dean}, pages = {160--165}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {planning;sensing-actions;} } @incollection{ degiacomo_g-levesque_hj:2000a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Two Approaches to Efficient Open-World Reasoning}, booktitle = {Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Jack Minker}, pages = {59--78}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {logic-in-AI;kr;query-evaluation;temporal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ degiacomo_g-rossali:1999a, author = {Giuseppe De Giacomo and Riccardi Rosali}, title = {Minimal Knowledge Approach to Reasoning about Actions and Sensing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Action and Change}, year = {1999}, editor = {Michael Thielscher}, pages = {25--32}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {action-formalisms;sensing-actions;} } @incollection{ degrazia_d:2009a, author = {David DeGrazia}, title = {Self-Awareness in Animals}, booktitle = {The Philosophy of Animal Minds}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert K. Lurz}, pages = {201--217}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {animal-cognition;philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;} } @book{ degremont_c-etal:2008a, editor = {Cedric Degr\'emont and Laurent Keiff and Heige R\"uyckert}, title = {Dialogues, Logics and Other Strange Things: Essays in Honour of {S}hahid {R}ahman}, publisher = {College Publications}, year = {2008}, address = {London}, ISBN = {978-1904987130}, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @article{ degremont_c-roy_o:2012a, author = {C\'edric D\'egremont and Oliver Roy}, title = {Agreement Theorems in Dynamic-Epistemic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {41}, number = {4}, pages = {735--764}, topic = {dynamic-logic;epistemic-logic;} } @book{ degroot:1965a, author = {Adriaan de Groot}, title = {Thought and Choice in Chess}, publisher = {Amsterdam University Press}, year = {1965}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {general-game-playing;} } @inproceedings{ degroote:2006a, author = {Philippe de Groote}, title = {Towards a {M}ontagovian Account of Dynamics}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XVI}}, year = {2006}, editor = {Masayuki Gibson and Jonathan Howell}, publisher = {CLC Publications}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, url = {http://research.nii.ac.jp/salt16/proceedings/degroote.new.pdf}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;context;intensional-logic;} } @article{ degroote-kanazawa:2013a, author = {Phillipe de Groote and Makoto Kanazawa}, title = {A Note on Intensionalization}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2013}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {173--194}, topic = {intensionality;intensionalization;} } @article{ degroote-lamarche:2002a, author = {Philippe de Groote and Fran\c{c}ois Lamarche}, title = {Classical Non-Associative {L}ambek Calculus}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2002}, volume = {71}, number = {3}, pages = {355--388}, topic = {Lambek-calculus;linear-logic;proof-complexity;} } @article{ degtyarev-etal:2003a, author = {Anatoli Degtyarev and Michael Fisher and Alexei Lisitsa}, title = {Equality and Monadic First-Order Temporal Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2003}, volume = {72}, number = {2}, pages = {147--156}, topic = {modal-logic;identity;(in)completeness;} } @incollection{ dehaan_f:2006a, author = {Ferdinand de Haan}, title = {Typological Approaches to Modality}, booktitle = {The Expression of Modality}, publisher = {Mouton-de Gruyter}, year = {2006}, editor = {William Frawley}, pages = {27--70}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-modality;typology;} } @incollection{ dehaan_f:2012a, author = {Ferdinand de Haan}, title = {Evidentiality and Mirativity}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {1020--1046}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;evidential-constructions;mirativity;} } @inproceedings{ dehaan_r:2018a, author = {Ronald de Haan}, title = {Hunting for Tractable Languages for Judgment Aggregation}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {194--203}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we consider the languages of Krom formulas, (definite) Horn formulas, and Boolean circuits in decomposable negation normal form (DNNF). We illustrate the use of the positive complexity results that we obtain for these languages with a concrete application: voting on how to spend a budget (i.e., participatory budgeting).}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {knowledge-integration;aggregation;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ dehaan_r:2018b, author = {Ronald de Haan}, title = {A Parameterized Complexity View on Description Logic Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {359--368}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {/// we argue that the framework of parameterized complexity has a lot to offer for the complexity analysis of description logic reasoning problems---when one takes a progressive and forward-looking view on parameterized complexity tools. We substantiate our argument by means of three case studies. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {description-logics;complexity-in-AU;} } @inproceedings{ dehaan_r-szeider_s:2014a, author = {Ronald de Haan and Stefan Szeider}, title = {The Parameterized Complexity of Reasoning Problems Beyond {NP}}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {82--91}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Recent research shows that in certain cases one can break through these [transformation] complexity barriers by fixed-parameter tractable (fpt) reductions which exploit structural aspects of problem instances in terms of problem parameters. In this paper we develop a general theoretical framework that supports the classification of parameterized problems on whether they admit such an fpt-reduction to SAT or not. We instantiate our theory by classifying the complexities of ... the consistency problem for disjunctive answer set programming and a robust version of constraint satisfaction. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ dehaan_r-szeider_s:2016a, author = {Ronald de Haan and Stefan Szeider}, title = {Parameterized Complexity Results for Symbolic Model Checking of Temporal Logics}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, pages = {453--462}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we provide a complete parameterized complexity classification for the model checking problem for symbolically represented Kripke structures for various fragments of the temporal logics LTL, CTL and CTL*. We argue that a known result from the literature for a restricted fragment of LTL can be seen as an fpt-reduction to SAT, and show that such reductions are not possible for any of the other fragments of the temporal logics that we consider. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {model-checking;temporal-logic;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ dehaas-adriaans_p:1999a, author = {Erik de Haas and Pieter Adriaans}, title = {Substructural Logic: A Unifying Framework for Second Generation Datamining Algorithms}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {121--126}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {substructural-logics;data-mining;} } @book{ dehaene_s:1997a, author = {Stanislaus Dehaene}, title = {The Number Sense: How the Mind Creates Mathematics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;foundations-of-cognition; psychology-of-mathematics;} } @book{ dehaene_s:2001a, editor = {Stanislas Dehaene}, title = {The Cognitive Neuroscience of Consciousness}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-54131-9}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Stanislas Dehaene, "Towards a cognitive neuroscience of consciousness: basic evidence and a workspace framework", pp. 1--38 2. Jan Driver and Patrik Vuilleumier, "Perceptual Awareness and Its Loss in Unilateral Neglect and Extinction", pp. 39--88 3. Nancy Kanwisher "Neural events and perceptual awareness", pp. 89--114 4. Philip M. Merikle and Daniel Smilek and John D. Eastwood, "Perception without Awareness: Perspectives from Cognitive Psychology", pp. 115--134 5. Josef Parvici and Antonio Damasio, "Consciousness and the Brainstem", pp. 135--160 6. Anthony I. Jack and Tim Shallice, "Introspective Physicalism as an Approach to the Science of Consciousness", pp. 161--196 7. Ned Block, "Paradox and Cross Purposes in Recent Work on Consciousness", pp. 197--220 8. Daniel Dennett, "Are We Explaining Consciousness yet?", pp. 221--238 }, note = {Reprinted from Cognition, 79.1--2, 2001}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @book{ dehaene_s:2014a, author = {Stanislas Dehaene}, title = {Consciousness and the Brain: Deciphering How the Brain Codes Our Thoughts}, publisher = {Viking Press}, year = {2014}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {978-0-14-312626-3}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Fall, 2017}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ dehaene_s-etal:2014a, author = {Stanislas Dehaene and Lucie Charles and Jean-R\'emi King and S\'ebastien Marti}, title = {Toward a Computational Theory of Conscious Processing}, journal = {Current Opinion in Neurobiology}, year = {2014}, volume = {25}, pages = {76--84}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se17}, topic = {consciousness;neurocognition;computational-neuroscience;} } @article{ dehaene_s-naccache_l:2001a, author = {Stanislas Dehaene and Lionel Naccache}, title = {Towards a Cognitive Neuroscience of Consciousness: Basic Evidence and a Workspace Framework}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {2001}, volume = {79}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--37}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc17}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @incollection{ dehe_n:2007a, author = {Nicole Deh\'e}, title = {The Relation between Syntactic and Prosodic Parenthesis}, booktitle = {Parentheticals}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {2007}, editor = {Nicole Deh\'e and Yordanka Kavalova}, pages = {261--284}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {parentheticals;prosody;} } @book{ dehe_n-kavalova_y:2007a, editor = {Nicole Deh\'e and Yordanka Kavalova}, title = {Parentheticals}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {2007}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {9789027233707 }, contentnote = {TC: 1. Nicole Deh\'e and Yordanka Kavalova, "Parentheticals: An Introduction", pp. 1--22 2. Gunther Kaltenb\"ock, "Spoken Parenthetical Clauses in {E}nglish: A Taxonomy", pp. 25--52 3. Markus Steinbach, "Integrated Parentheticals and Assertional Complements", pp. 53--87 4. Christian Fortmann, "The Complement of Reduced Parentheticals", pp. 89--119 5. Tanja Kiziak, "Long Extraction or Parenthetical Insertion? Evidence from Judgement Studies", pp. 121--144 6. Yordanka Kavalova, "And-Parenthetical Clauses", pp. 145--172 7. Francesca Del Gobbo, "On the Syntax and Semantics of Appositive Relative Clauses", pp. 173--201 8. Mark de Vries, "Invisible Constituents? Parentheticals as B-Merged Adverbial Phrases", pp. 203--234 9. Stefan Schneider, "Reduced Parenthetical Clauses in {R}omance Languages: A Pragmatic Typology", pp. 237--258 10. Nicole Deh\'e, "The Relation between Syntactic and Prosodic Parenthesis", pp. 261--284 11. Sandra D\"oring, "Quieter, Faster, Lower, and Set off by Pauses? Reflections on Prosodic Aspects of Parenthetical Constructions in Modern {G}erman", pp. 285--307}, topic = {parentheticals;} } @incollection{ dehe_n-kavalova_y:2007b, author = {Nicole Deh\'e and Yordanka Kavalova}, title = {Parentheticals: An Introduction}, booktitle = {Parentheticals}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {2007}, editor = {Nicole Deh\'e and Yordanka Kavalova}, pages = {1--22}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {parentheticals;} } @article{ dehelian_l-mcclennen_ef:1993a, author = {Laura DeHelian and Edward F. McClennen}, title = {Planning and the Stability of Intention: A Comment}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1993}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {319--333}, topic = {plans;intention;} } @inproceedings{ dehghani_m-etal:2008a, author = {Morteza Dehghani and Emmett Tomai and Ken Forbus and Matthew Klenk}, title = {An Integrated Reasoning Approach to Moral Decision-Making}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-Third National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, editor = {Dieter Fox and Carla Gomes}, pages = {1280--1286}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr17}, abstract = {...The impacts of secular versus sacred values are modeled via qualitative reasoning, using an order of magnitude representation. MoralDM uses a combination of first-principles reasoning and analogical reasoning to determine consequences and utilities when making moral judgments. We describe how MoralDM works and show that it can model psychological results and improve its performance via accumulating examples.}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ dehghani_m-etal:2011a, author = {Morteza Dehghani and Emmett Tomai and Ken Forbus and Matthew Klenk}, title = {An Integrated Reasoning Approach to Moral Decision Making}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {422--441}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ dehoop:1985a, author = {Helen de Hoop}, title = {On the Characterization of the Weak-Strong Distinction}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {421--450}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;existential-constructions;} } @article{ dehoop-deswart_p:2004a, author = {Helen de Hoop and Peter de Swart}, title = {Contrast in Discourse: Guest Editors' Introduction}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2004}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {87--93}, abstract = {Contrast is a discourse relation that involves a comparison between two situations that are similar in one way, but different in another. In this special issue on the relation of Contrast in discourse the following questions are explored. How is Contrast marked (by the speaker) and how is it identified (by the hearer)? What is the discourse function of establishing Contrast? How do we account for the similarities as well as the differences between different types of linguistic tools and what cross-linguistic variation do we find? The present article serves as a brief introduction to the studies presented in this special issue on Contrast. }, topic = {discourse-contrast;} } @incollection{ dehoop_h:2013a, author = {Helen de Hoop}, title = {Type Shifting}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 3}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {2259--2271}, address = {The Hague}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja22}, topic = {nl-semantics;type-shifting;} } @article{ deigan_m:2020a, author = {Michael Deigan}, title = {A Plea for Inexact Truthmaking}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2020}, volume = {43}, number = {5}, pages = {515--536}, abstract = {Kit Fine (2017) distinguishes between inexact and exact truthmaking. He argues that the former can be defined from the latter, but not vice versa, and so concludes that truthmaker semanticists should treat the exact variety of truthmaking as primitive. I argue that this gets things backwards. We can define exact truthmaking in terms of inexact truthmaking and we can't define inexact truthmaking in terms of exact truthmaking. I conclude that it's inexact truthmaking, rather than exact truthmaking, that truthmaker semanticists should treat as the primitive semantic relation.}, topic = {truthmaking;} } @article{ dejaegher:2003a, author = {Kris De Jaegher}, title = {A Game-Theoretic Rationale for Vagueness}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {26}, number = {5}, pages = {637--659}, topic = {game-theoretic-semantics;vagueness;} } @incollection{ dejager-etal:2002a, author = {Samson de Jager and Alistair Knott and Ian Bayard}, title = {A {DRT}-Based Framework for Presupposition in Dialogue Management}, booktitle = {{EDILOG} 2002: Proceedings of the Sixth Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, publisher = {Cognitive Science Centre, University of Edinburgh}, year = {2002}, editor = {Johan Bos and Mary Ellen Foster and Colin Mathesin}, pages = {61--68}, address = {Edinburgh}, topic = {DTR;presupposition;computational-discourse;} } @incollection{ dejean:1998a, author = {Herv\'e D\'ejean}, title = {Morphemes as Necessary Concept for Structures Discovery from Untagged Corpora}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {295--298}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {corpus-tagging;morphology;grammar-learning;} } @incollection{ dejean:2000a, author = {Herv\'e D\'ejean}, title = {{ALLiS}: A Symbolic Learning System for Natural Language Learning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {95--98}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;grammar-learning;} } @incollection{ dejean:2000b, author = {Herv\'e D\'ejean}, title = {Learning Syntactic Structures with {XML}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {133--135}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;corpus-annotation;XML;} } @book{ dejnozka:1999a, author = {Jan Dejno\v{z}ka}, title = {{B}ertrand {R}ussell on Modality and Logical Relevance}, publisher = {Ashgate}, year = {1999}, address = {Aldershot}, ISBN = {1-84014-981-7}, xref = {Review: griffin_n:2001a.}, topic = {Russell;modal-logic;modality;relevance-logic;} } @article{ dejong_gf:1994a, author = {Gerald F. DeJong}, title = {Learning to Plan in Continuous Domains}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {65}, number = {1}, pages = {71--141}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In this paper, we propose an approach to planning in domains with continuous world features. We argue that current models of world change (including traditional planners, reactive systems, and many connectionist systems) implicitly adopt a discrete action assumption which precludes efficient reasoning about continuous world change. A formalism for continuous world change is outlined, and an ideal continuous domain planner is defined. An implemented computationally tractable approximation to the ideal planner is discussed and its behavior is described. Empirically, the implementation is shown to exhibit some of the important design features of the new planning approach. Learning plays a central role in this approach. With experience, accuracy is increased and planning time is reduced even though the system's background knowledge of the world is only approximate or "plausible". The acquired planning concepts are most accurate in situations similar to the ones in which they are most exercised. Thus, the approach possesses a natural adaptation to systematic properties implicit in the observed distribution of problems.}, topic = {planning;reasoning-about-continuous-time;} } @article{ dejong_gf-bennett_sw:1997a, author = {Gerald D. DeJong and Scott W. Bennett}, title = {Permissive Planning: Extending Classical Planning to Uncertain Task Domains}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {89}, number = {1--2}, pages = {173--217}, topic = {planning;explanation-based-learning;uncertainty-in-AI;} } @article{ dejong_gf-gratch_j:1991a, author = {Gerald F. DeJong and Jonathan Gratch}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}earning Search Control Knowledge: An Explanation-Based Approach}, by {S}teve {M}inton}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {50}, number = {1}, pages = {117--127}, xref = {Review of minton:1988a.}, topic = {machine-learning;explanation-based-learning; procedural-control;} } @article{ dejong_h-rip:1997a, author = {Hidde de Jong and Arie Rip}, title = {The Computer Revolution in Science: Steps Toward the Realization of Computer-Supported Discovery Procedures}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {91}, number = {2}, pages = {225--256}, topic = {automated-scientific-discovery;} } @article{ dejong_h-vanraalte:1999a, author = {Hidde de Jong and Frank {van Raalte}}, title = {Comparative Envisionment Construction: A Technique for the Comparative Analysis of Dynamical Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {115}, number = {2}, pages = {145--214}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;dynamic-systems;} } @incollection{ dejongh_d-liu_fr:2009a, author = {Dick de Jongh and Fenrong Liu}, title = {Preference, Priorities, and Belief}, booktitle = {Preference Change: Approaches from Philosophy, Economics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Till Gr\"une-Yadoff and Sven O. Hansson}, pages = {85--121}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {preference;preference-logics;optimality-theory;} } @article{ dekel_e-etal:1998a, author = {Eddie Dekel and Barton Lipman and Aldo Rustichini}, title = {Standard State-Space Models Preclude Unawareness}, journal = {Econometrica}, year = {1998}, volume = {66}, number = {1}, pages = {159--173}, topic = {limited-rationality;hyperintensionality;game-theory;} } @incollection{ dekel_e-gul:1997a, author = {Eddie Dekel and Farouk Gul}, title = {Rationality and Knowledge in Game Theory}, booktitle = {Advances in Economics and Econometrics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, editor = {D. Kreps and K. Wallis}, address = {Cambridge, England}, year = {1997}, topic = {game-theory;rationality;mutual-belief;} } @article{ dekemper:2007a, author = {Joseph Dekemper}, title = {B-Theory, Fixity, and Fatalism}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2007}, volume = {41}, number = {3}, pages = {429--452}, topic = {temporal-becoming;(in)determinism;} } @article{ dekenessey:2020a, author = {Brendan de Kenessey}, title = {Promises as Proposals in Joint Practical Deliberation}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2020}, volume = {54}, number = {1}, pages = {204--232}, topic = {promising;social-reasoning;speech-acts;} } @article{ dekenessy:2016a, author = {Brendan de Kenessy}, title = {{R}eview of \emph{Reasoning: A Social Picture}, by {A}nthony {S}imon {L}aden}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2016}, volume = {125}, number = {3}, pages = {435--439}, xref = {Review of: laden_as:2012a}, topic = {group-action;group-attitudes;group-planning;} } @techreport{ dekker_p:1990a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {The Scope of Negation in Discourse}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP--90--09}, year = {1991}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland }, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {negation;dynamic-logic;Montague-grammar;} } @techreport{ dekker_p:1991a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Updates in Dynamic Semantics}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP--91--06}, year = {1991}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;dynamic-logic;} } @techreport{ dekker_p:1992a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Updates in Dynamic Semantics}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP--92--04}, year = {1992}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;dynamic-logic;} } @article{ dekker_p:1993a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Existential Disclosure}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1993}, volume = {16}, number = {6}, pages = {561--587}, topic = {dynamic-logic;relational-nouns;adverbs;nl-tense;} } @inproceedings{ dekker_p:1994a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Predicate Logic with Anaphora}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IV}}, year = {1994}, editor = {Mandy Harvey and Lynn Santelmann}, pages = {79--95}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-semantics;anaphora;dynamic-logic;donkey-anaphora;} } @article{ dekker_p:1996a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {The Values of Variables in Dynamic Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1996}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {211--257}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;discourse-representation-theory;donkey-anaphora; anaphora;pragmatics;} } @article{ dekker_p:1998a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Speaker's Reference, Descriptions and Information Structure}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1998}, volume = {15}, number = {4}, pages = {335--354}, abstract = {The notion of information developed in systems of dynamic semantics is applied in an analysis of the referential interpretation of definite descriptions, and the specific interpretation of indefinite ones. A Russellian treatment of descriptions is upgraded with the dynamic semantic notion of a discourse referent, and this enables a combination of contextually given information with information which is properly semantic. The analysis is sharpened by the addition of a partition of utterances into a ground and a focus part. The two extensions suffice to account for the most important features of situations which involve the referential use of expressions in both a semantically and pragmatically satisfactory way. A by-product is a rudimentary analysis of negative existential statements involving names. }, topic = {definite-descriptions;dynamic-semantics;} } @book{ dekker_p:1999a, editor = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, address = {Amsterdam}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Horacio Arlo-Costa and Rohit Parikh, "Two Place Probabilities, Full Belief and Belief Revision", pp. 1--6 2. Tim Fernando, "Non-Monotonicity from Constructing Semantic Representations", pp. 7--12 3. Peter Krause, "Identification Language Games", pp. 13--18 4. Henk Zeevat, "Explaining Presupposition Triggers", pp. 19--24 5. Anthony S. Gillies, "The Epistemics of Presupposition", pp. 25--30 6. Jonathan Ginzburg and Ivan Sag, "Constructional Ambiguity in Conversation", pp. 31--36 7. Alice ter Meulen, "Binding by Implicit Arguments", pp. 37--42 8. Christof Monz, "Modeling Ambiguity in a Multi-Agent System", pp. 43--48 9. C.F.M Vermeulen, "Two Approaches to Modal Interaction in Discourse", pp. 49--54 10. Maria Aloni and David I. Beaver and Brady Zack Clark, "Focus and Topic Sensitive Operators", pp. 55--61 11. David I. Beaver, "The Logic of Anaphora Resolution", pp. 61--66 12. Sigrid Beck, "Plural Predication and Partitional Discourses", pp. 67--72 13. Agnes Bende-Farkas, "Incorporation as Unification", 73--78 14. Martin van der Berg, "Questions as First-Class Citizens", pp. 79--84 15. Remko Bonnema and Paul Buying and Remko Scha, "A New Probability Model for Data Oriented Parsing", pp. 85--90 16. Robin Clark and Natasha Kurtonina, "Consequences from {Q}uine", 91--95 17. Alexis Dimitriades, "Reciprocal Interpretation with Functional Pronouns", pp. 97--102 18. Edit Doron, "The Semantics of Transitivity Alternations", pp. 103--108 19. Markus Egg, "Deriving and Resolving Ambiguities in {\it wieder} Sentences", pp. 109--115 20. Javier Gutu\'errez-Rexach, "Cross-Linguistic Semantics of Weak Pronouns in Doubling Structures", pp. 115--120 21. Erik de Haas and Pieter Adriaans, "Substructural Logic: A Unifying Framework for Second Generation Datamining Algorithms", pp. 121--126 22. Caroline Haycock and Roberto Zamparelli, "Toward a Unified Analysis of {DP} Conjunction", pp. 127--132 23. Gerhard J\"ager, "Deconstruction {J}acobson's {\bf Z}", pp. 133--138 24. Theo M.V. Janssen, "{IF} Logic and Informational Independence", pp. 139--144 25. Jan Jaspars and Alexander Koller, "A Calculus for Direct Deduction with Dominance Effects", pp. 145--150 26. Jacques Jayez and Dani\'ele Godard, "True to Facts", pp. 151--156 27. Arivind K. Joshi and Seth Kulick and Natasha Kurtonina, "Semantic Composition for Partial Proof Trees", pp. 157--162 28. Reinhard Kahle, "A Proof Theoretic View of Intensionality", pp. 163--168 29. Laura Kallmeyer and Aravind Joshi, "Factoring Predicate Argument and Scope Semantics: Underspecified Semantics with {LTAG}", pp. 169--174 30. Ruth Kempson and Wilfried Meyer-Viol, "The Dynamics of Tree Growth and Quantifier Construal", pp. 175--180 31. Sarah D. Kennelly and Fabien Reniers, "Cumulativity \& Distributivity Interaction of Polyadic Quantifiers", pp. 181--186 32. Rodger Kibble and Richard Power, "Using Centering Theory to Plan Coherent Texts", pp. 187--192 33. Rick W.F. Nouwen, "DPL with Control Elements", pp. 193--198 34. Ranier Osswald, "Semantics for Attribute-Value Theories", pp. 199--204 35. Marc Pauly, "Modeling Coalitional Power in Modal Logic", pp. 205--210 36. Robert van Rooy, "Questioning to Resolve Decision Problems", pp. 211--216 37. Isabelle Teller, "Towards a Semantic-Based Theory of Language Learning", pp. 217--222 38. Louise Vigeant, "A Different Game? Game Theoretical Semantics as a New Paradigm", pp. 223--228 39. Yoad Winter, "Plural Type Quantification", pp. 229--234 40. Berislav \v{Z}arni\'c, "A Dynamic Solution for the Problem of Validity of Practical Propositional Inference", pp. 235--240 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LL Collections Shelf.}, topic = {nl-semantics;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ dekker_p:2000a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {The Semantics of Dynamic Conjunction}, booktitle = {Logic, Language, and Computation, Volume 3}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2000}, editor = {Lawrence Cavedon and Patrick Blackburn and Nick Braisby and Atushi Shimojina}, pages = {107--127}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {coordination;dynamic-logic;} } @unpublished{ dekker_p:2001a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {`Only If' and `Only{'}}, year = {2001}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Amsterdam. http://turing.wins.uva.nl/{\user}pdekker/Papers/OIAO.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {conditionals;`only-if';dynamic-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ dekker_p:2001b, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {On \emph{If} and \emph{Only}}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2001}, editor = {Rachel Hastings and Brendan Jackson and Zsofia Zvolenszky}, pages = {114--133}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {nl-semantics;conditionals;`only-if';donkey-anaphora;dynamic-semantics;} } @article{ dekker_p:2001c, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Dynamics and Pragmatics of Peirce's Puzzle}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {211--241}, abstract = {An intriguing puzzle due to Charles Sanders Peirce (Peirce 1906) has recently regained the interest of semanticists. It has been argued that the puzzle should be analysed by means of a dynamic or E-type analysis of non-bound pronouns. In this paper we first argue that 'Peirce's Puzzle', basically, doesn't have anything to do with non-bound pronouns and that, consequently, a dynamic or E-type analysis of pronouns misses the point. We next show that Peirce's own, intuitively correct, observations can be seen to follow from independently motivated principles governing the use of indefinite noun phrases. The puzzle constitutes further motivation for a perspective on the semantics/pragmatic interface recently under development in a dynamic setting. }, topic = {nl-quantification;anaphora;dynamic-semantics;} } @article{ dekker_p:2002a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Meaning and Use of Indefinite Expressions}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2002}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {141--194}, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ dekker_p:2002b, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {On Context and Identity}, booktitle = {Context-Dependence in the Analysis of Linguistic Meaning}, publisher = {Brill Publishing}, year = {2002}, editor = {Hans Kamp and Barbara Partee}, pages = {91--116}, address = {Leiden}, abstract = {... we discuss how (direct) reference, and so-called 'de re' attitudes fit in [a dynamic epistemic] framework. ...}, topic = {dynamic-semantiocs;} } @article{ dekker_p:2003a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Meanwhile, within the {F}rege Boundary}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {26}, number = {5}, pages = {547--556}, abstract = {In this paper, I want to contribute to understanding and improving on Keenan'ss intriguing equivalence result about reducible type <2> quantifiers (Keenan, 1992). I give an alternative proof of his result which generalizes to type <2> quantifiers, andI show how the reduction of a reducible type <2> quantifier to (the composition of) ntype quantifiers can be effected.}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;} } @inproceedings{ dekker_p:2003b, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Topical Restriction and Answerhood}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 7}, editor = {Matthias Weisgerber}, year = {2003}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz, Arbeitspapier 114}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/TE3NGVlY/}, pages = {110--119}, abstract = {... We attempt to ... develop the minimal formal tools required to study the logical properties of the various issues involved [in information structure] and integrate them step by step. We successively deal with anaphoric connections between pronouns and other terms in terms of individual satisfaction by possible witnesses; with questions and topics in terms of sets of possible witnesses; with topical restriction and answerhood in terms of topical satisfaction; we conclude with a compositional deconstruction of Henk Zeevat's exhaustification operation}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;s-topic;} } @article{ dekker_p:2008a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {A Multi-Dimensional Treatment of Quantification in Extraordinary {E}nglish}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {31}, number = {1}, pages = {101--127}, topic = {nl-semantics;presupposition;anaphora;nl-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ dekker_p:2011a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Dynamic Semantics}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {923--945}, address = {The Hague}, abstract = {In this article we give an introduction to the idea and workings of dynamic semantics. We start with an overview of its historical background and motivation. An in-depth description of a paradigm version of dynamic semantics, Dynamic Predicate Logic, is given in section 2. In section 3 we show how the dynamic paradigm can be used to account for a number of empirical phenomena, and we discuss some extensions of the basic paradigm, systematically incorporating previously deemed pragmatic aspects of meaning. We conclude with a discussion of some theoretical issues surrounding dynamic semantics ...}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;} } @incollection{ dekker_p:2012a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Presupposition}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Companion to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Gillian Russell and Delia Graff Fara}, pages = {42--52}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {presupposition;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ dekker_p:2015a, author = {Paul J.E. Dekker}, title = {Not \emph{Only} {B}arbara}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2015}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {95--129}, topic = {syllogistic;nl-quantifiers;} } @article{ dekker_p:2016a, author = {Paul Dekker}, title = {Exclusively Indexical Deduction}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2016}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {603--635}, topic = {discourse-representation-theory;proof-theory;} } @incollection{ dekker_p-aloni_m:2016a, author = {Paul Dekker and Maria Aloni}, title = {Questions}, booktitle = {Cambridge Handbook of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Maria Aloni and Paul Dekker}, pages = {560--592}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-semantics;interrogatives;} } @article{ dekker_p-pauly_m:2002a, author = {Paul Dekker and Marc Pauly}, title = {Editorial: Logic and Games}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2002}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {287--288}, topic = {game-theory;game-theoretic-semantics;dynamic-logic;} } @article{ dekker_p-pinon:2001a, author = {Paul Dekker and Christopher Pi\~non}, title = {Guest Editors' Preface}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {179--201}, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;} } @book{ dekker_p-stokhof_m:1991a, editor = {Paul Dekker and Martin Stokhof}, title = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1991}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {nl-semantics;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ dekker_p-zimmermann_te:2016a, author = {Paul Dekker and Thomas Ede Zimmermann}, title = {Reference}, booktitle = {Cambridge Handbook of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Maria Aloni and Paul Dekker}, pages = {173--205}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-semantics;reference;} } @inproceedings{ dekleer:1977a1, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {Multiple Representations of Knowledge in a Mechanics Problem Solver}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1977}, editor = {Raj Reddy}, pages = {299--304}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, xref = {See dekleer:1977a2.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;kr;} } @incollection{ dekleer:1977a2, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {Multiple Representations of Knowledge in a Mechanics Problem Solver}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {40--45}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Conference publication: dekleer:1977a1.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;kr;} } @inproceedings{ dekleer:1979a1, author = {Johan de kleer}, title = {The Origin and Resolution of Ambiguities in Causal Arguments}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1979}, editor = {Bruce Buchanan}, pages = {197--203}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, xref = {Republication: dekleer:1979a2.}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;causality;disambiguation;} } @incollection{ dekleer:1979a2, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {The Origin and Resolution of Ambiguities in Causal Arguments}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {624--630}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: dekleer:1979a1.}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;causality;disambiguation;} } @article{ dekleer:1984a, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {How Circuits Work}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, volume = {24}, number = {1--3}, pages = {205--280}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;} } @article{ dekleer:1984b, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Fifth Generation: Artificial Intelligence and {J}apan's Computer Challenge to the World}, by {E}.{A}. {F}eigenbaum and {P}. {M}c{C}orduck}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {222--226}, xref = {Review of feigenbaum-mccorduck:1983a.}, topic = {popular-computer-science;cs-journalism;} } @article{ dekleer:1985a, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {Review of \emph{{B}uilding Expert Systems}, by {F}. {H}ayes-{R}oth, {D}.{A}. {W}aterman and {D}ouglas {B}. Lenat}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {105--107}, xref = {Review of hayesroth_f-etal:1983a.}, topic = {expert-systems;} } @article{ dekleer:1986a1, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {An Assumption-Based {TMS}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1986}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {127--162}, xref = {Republication: dekleer:1986a2.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Truth Maintenance"}, topic = {truth-maintenance;} } @incollection{ dekleer:1986a2, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {An Assumption-Based {TMS}}, booktitle = {Readings in Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1987}, editor = {Matthew L. Ginsberg}, pages = {280--297}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Original Publication: dekleer:1986a1.}, topic = {truth-maintenance;} } @article{ dekleer:1986b, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {Extending the {ATMS}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1986}, volume = {28}, number = {2}, pages = {163--196}, topic = {truth-maintenance;} } @article{ dekleer:1986c, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {Problem Solving with the {ATMS}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {28}, number = {2}, pages = {197--224}, topic = {truth-maintenance;} } @inproceedings{ dekleer:1991a, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {Exploiting Locality in a {TMS}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {Thomas Dean and Kathy McKeown}, pages = {264--271}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap21}, topic = {truth-maintenance;} } @article{ dekleer:1993a, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {A Perspective on Assumption-Based Truth Maintenance}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {63--67}, xref = {Retrospective commentary on dekleer:1986a.}, topic = {truth-maintenance;} } @article{ dekleer:1993b, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {A View on Qualitative Physics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {105--114}, topic = {qualitative-physics;} } @article{ dekleer:1993c, author = {Johan de Kleer}, title = {In Defense of Nonmonotonic Information}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {3}, issue = {3}, pages = {174--175}, xref = {kr;foundations-of-kr;logic-in-AI;} } @incollection{ dekleer-bobrow_dg:1977a1, author = {Johan de Kleer and Daniel G. Bobrow}, title = {Qualitative Reasoning with Higher-Order Derivatives}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {127--132}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: dekleer:1977a1}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ dekleer-bobrow_dg:1977a2, author = {Johan de Kleer and Daniel C. Bobrow}, title = {Qualitative Reasoning with Higher-Order Derivatives}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 4th National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman}, pages = {86--91}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, xref = {Republication: dekleer:1977a2}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;} } @article{ dekleer-brown_js:1984a1, author = {Johan de Kleer and John Seely Brown}, title = {A Qualitative Physics Based on Confluences}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, volume = {24}, number = {1--3}, pages = {7--83}, xref = {Republication: dekleer-brown_js:1984a2.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;} } @incollection{ dekleer-brown_js:1984a2, author = {Johan de Kleer and John Seely Brown}, title = {A Qualitative Physics Based on Confluences}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {88--126}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: dekleer-brown_js:1984a1.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;} } @article{ dekleer-brown_js:1986a1, author = {Johan de Kleer and John Seely Brown}, title = {Theories of Causal Ordering}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1986}, volume = {29}, number = {1}, pages = {33--61}, xref = {Commentary on iwasaki-simon_ha:1986a.}, xref = {Republication of: dekleer-brown_js:1986a1.}, topic = {causality;qualitative-reasoning;} } @incollection{ dekleer-brown_js:1986a2, author = {Johan de Kleer and John Seely Brown}, title = {Theories of Causal Ordering}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {646--660}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: dekleer-brown_js:1986a1.}, topic = {causality;qualitative-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ dekleer-etal:1990a, author = {Johan de Kleer and Alan K. Mackworth and Raymond Reiter}, title = {Characterizing Diagnoses}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, editor = {Thomas G. Dietterich and William Swartout}, pages = {324--330}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, note = {Most approaches to model-based diagnosis describe a diagnosis for a system as a set of failing components that explains the symptoms. In order to characterize the typically very large number of diagnoses, usually only the minimal such sets of failing components are represented. This method of characterizing all diagnoses is inadequate in general, in part because not every superset of the faulty components of a diagnosis necessarily provides a diagnosis. In this paper we analyze the notion of diagnosis in depth exploiting the notions of implicate/implicant and prime implicate/ implicant. We use these notions to propose two alternative approaches for addressing the inadequacy of the concept of minimal diagnosis. First, we propose a new concept, that of kernel diagnosis, which is free of the problems of minimal diagnosis. Second, we propose to restrict the axioms used to describe the system to ensure that the concept of minimal diagnosis is adequate. }, topic = {diagnosis;abduction;} } @article{ dekleer-konolige_k:1989a, author = {Johan de Kleer and Kurt Konolige}, title = {Eliminating the Fixed Predicates from a Circumscription}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {39}, number = {3}, pages = {391--398}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Parallel predicate circumscription is the primary circumscriptive technique used in formalizing commonsense reasoning. In this paper we present a direct syntactic construction for transforming any parallel predicate circumscription using fixed predicates into an equivalent one which does not. Thus, we show that predicate circumscription is no more expressive with fixed predicates than without. We extend this result to prioritized circumscription. These results are expected to be useful for comparing circumscription to other nonmonotonic formalisms (such as autoepistemic logic and assumption-based truth maintenance) and for implementing fixed predicates. }, topic = {autoepistemic-logic;circumscription;nonmonotonic-logic; truth-maintenance;} } @article{ dekleer-williams_bc:1987a1, author = {Johan de Kleer and Brian C. Williams}, title = {Diagnosing Multiple Faults}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {32}, number = {1}, pages = {97--130}, xref = {Republication: dekleer-williams_bc:1987a2.}, topic = {diagnosis;} } @incollection{ dekleer-williams_bc:1987a2, author = {Johan de Kleer and Brian C. Williams}, title = {Diagnosing Multiple Faults}, booktitle = {Readings in Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1987}, editor = {Matthew L. Ginsberg}, pages = {372--388}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Original Publication: dekleer-williams:1987a1.}, topic = {diagnosis;} } @article{ dekoning-etal:2000a, author = {Kees de Koning and Bert Bredeweg and Joost Breuker and Bob Wielinga}, title = {Model-Based Reasoning about Learner Behaviour}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {117}, number = {2}, pages = {173--229}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Automated handling of tutoring and training functions in educational systems requires the availability of articulate domain models. In this article we further develop the application of qualitative models for this purpose. A framework is presented that defines a key role for qualitative models as interactive simulations of the subject matter. Within this framework our research focuses on automating the diagnosis of learner behaviour. We show how a qualitative simulation model of the subject matter can be reformulated to fit the requirements of general diagnostic engines such as GDE. It turns out that, due to the specific characteristics of such models, additional structuring is required to produce useful diagnostic results. A set of procedures is presented that automatically maps detailed simulation models into a hierarchy of aggregated models by hiding non-essential details and chunking chains of causal dependencies. The result is a highly structured subject matter model that enables the diagnosis of learner behaviour by means of an adapted version of the GDE algorithm. An experiment has been conducted that shows the viability of the approach taken, i.e., given the output of a qualitative simulator the procedures we have developed automatically generate a structured subject matter model and subsequently use this model to successfully diagnoses learner behaviour. }, topic = {qualitative-modeling;model-based-reasoning;diagnosis;} } @inproceedings{ dekuthy_c:2016a, author = {Kordula De Kuthy}, title = {Annotating Questions under Discussions in Authentic Data}, booktitle = {{SEMDIAL} 2016: Proceedings of the 20th Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue}, year = {2016}, editor = {Julie Hunter and Mandy Simmons and Matthew Stone}, organization = {semdial.org}, note = {http://semdial.org/anthology/events/semdial-2016/}, topic = {question-under-discussion;discourse-tagging;} } @incollection{ dekuyper:1995a, author = {Jo DeKuyper and Didier Keymeulen and Luc Steels}, title = {A Hybrid Architecture for Modeling Liquid Behavior}, booktitle = {Diagrammatic Reasoning}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Janice Glasgow and N. Hari Narayanan and B. Chandrasekaran}, pages = {731--751}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {diagrams;reasoning-with-diagrams; physical-reasoning;visual-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ dekydtspotter:1993a, author = {Pierre Aime Dekydtspotter}, title = {The Syntax and Semantics of the {F}rench {\it Ne Que} Construction}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {III}}, year = {1993}, editor = {Utpal Lahiri and Zachary Wyner}, pages = {38--56}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {sentence-focus;French-language;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ delacruz_eb:1972a, author = {Enrique B. Delacruz}, title = {Factives and Proposition Level Constructions in a {M}ontague Grammar}, booktitle = {Papers in {M}ontague Grammar}, publisher = {Linguistics Department, UCLA}, year = {1972}, editor = {Robert Rodman}, pages = {101--126}, address = {Los Angeles, California}, note = {ULCA Occasional Papers in Linguistics, No. 2}, topic = {Montague-grammar;(counter)factive-constructions;} } @phdthesis{ delacruz_eb:1974a, author = {Enrique Delacruz}, title = {Presupposition: Towards an Analysis}, school = {UCLA}, year = {1974}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Los Angeles}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. (Chs 1,5)}, topic = {presupposition;Montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ delacruz_eb:1976a, author = {Enrique B. Delacruz}, title = {Factives and Proposition Level Constructions in {M}ontague Grammar}, booktitle = {Montague Grammar}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Barbara H. Partee}, pages = {177--199}, address = {New York}, topic = {Montague-grammar;(counter)factive-constructions; propositions;} } @article{ delacruz_o-etal:2002a, author = {Omar de la Cruz and Eric Hall and Paul Howard and Jean E. Rubin and Adrianne Stanley}, title = {Definitions of Compactness and the Axiom of Choice}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {67}, number = {1}, pages = {143--161}, topic = {topology;axiom-of-choice;} } @book{ delahunty:1982a, author = {Gerald P. Delahunty}, title = {Topics in the Syntax and Semantics of {E}nglish Cleft Sentences}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {cleft-constructions;presupposition;pragmatics;} } @article{ delancey_s:1984a, author = {Scott DeLancey}, title = {Notes on Agentivity and Causation}, journal = {Studies in Language}, year = {1984}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {181--213}, topic = {agency;nl-causatives;} } @book{ delancy:2002a, author = {Craig Delancy}, title = {Passionate Engines: What Emotions Reveal about the Mind and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: scarantino_a:2003a.}, topic = {emotion;philosophy-and-AI;} } @incollection{ delancy_s:1983a, author = {Scott Delancy}, title = {Agentivity and Causation: data from {N}ewari}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society}, publisher = {Berkeley Linguistics Society}, year = {1983}, address = {University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California}, pages = {54--63}, topic = {agentivity;nl-causatives;Sino-Tibetan-languages;} } @inproceedings{ delancy_s:1985a, author = {Scott Delancy}, title = {Agentivity and Syntax}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-First Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society: Parasession on Causatives and Agentivity}, year = {1985}, publisher = {Chicago Linguistics Society}, address = {Chicago University, Chicago, Illinois}, editor = {William H. Eilfort and Paul D. Kroeber}, pages = {1--12}, topic = {agentivity;} } @incollection{ delannoy:1999a, author = {Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Delannoy}, title = {Argumentation Mark-Up: A Proposal}, booktitle = {Towards Standards and Tools for Discourse Tagging: Proceedings of the Workshop}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1999}, editor = {Marilyn Walker}, pages = {18--25}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {discourse-tagging;corpus-linguistics;argumentation;} } @article{ delavalette_gr-etal:2008a, author = {Gerard Renardel de Lavalette and Barteld Kooi and Rineke Verbrugge}, title = {Strong Completeness and Limited Canonicity for {PDL}}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2008}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {69--87}, topic = {dynamic-logic;completeness-theorems;infinitary-logic;} } @incollection{ delazariradek_k:2020a, author = {Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek}, title = {What Should a Consequentialist Promote?}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Consequentialism}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2020}, editor = {Douglas W. Portmore}, pages = {197--219}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {... I will ask what intrinsic good or goods a consequentialist should value. ... I will ask whether consequentialists should be concerned with what is good for someone or rather with what is good "for the world." To answer this, I will discuss how best to understand the notion of welfare. Finally, I will consider different welfarist theories and suggest a possible candidate for the most promising one.}, topic = {utilitarianism;welfare-economics;} } @article{ delcerro-etal:1994a, author = {Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzog and J\'er\^ome Lang}, title = {From Ordering-Based Nonmonotonic Reasoning to Conditional Logics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {66}, number = {2}, pages = {375--393}, contentnote = {Shows how to get a Lehmann-Magidor conditional from a Gardenfors-Makinson ordering on formulas. They do not seem to be conversant with the earlier work on conditionals.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;conditional-logic;belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ deleng-heintz_f:2018a, author = {Daniel de Leng and Fredrik Heintz}, title = {Partial-State Progression for Stream Reasoning with Metric Temporal Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {633--634}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... Our main contribution is an extension of the progression procedure to handle partial state information. For each missing truth value, we efficiently consider all consistent hypotheses by branching progression for each such hypothesis. The resulting procedure is flexible, allowing a trade-off between faster but approximate and slower but precise partial-state progression. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {progression;metric-temporal-logic;} } @article{ deleon_c:2023a, author = {Christian De Leon}, title = {Pointing to Communicate: The Discourse Function and Semantics of Rich Demonstration}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {4}, pages = {839--870}, abstract = {Deictic (or pointing) gestures are traditionally known to have a simple function: to supply something as the referent of a demonstrative linguistic expression. I argue that deixis can have a more complex function. A deictic gesture can be used to say something in conversation and can thereby become a full discourse move in its own right. ... }, topic = {demonstratives;gestures;} } @inproceedings{ deleoni_m-etal:2020a, author = {Massimiliano de Leoni and Paolo Felli and Marco Montali}, title = {Strategy Synthesis for Data-Aware Dynamic Systems with Multiple Actors}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {315--325}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we consider a simple, yet relevant model for data-aware dynamic systems (DDSs), consisting of a finite-state control structure defining the executability of actions that manipulate a finite set of variables with an infinite domain. On top of this model, we consider a data-aware version of reactive synthesis, where execution strategies are built by guaranteeing the satisfaction of a desired linear temporal property that simultaneously accounts for the system dynamics and data evolution.}, topic = {strategy-synthesis;} } @incollection{ delfitto:2004a, author = {Denis Delfitto}, title = {On the Logical Form of Imperfective Aspect}, booktitle = {The Syntax of Time}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Jacqueline Gu\'eron and Jacqueline Lecarme}, pages = {115--142}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn13}, topic = {progressive-aspect;imperfective-paradox;tense-aspect;} } @incollection{ delfitto-bertinetto:2000a, author = {Denis Delfitto and Pier Marco Bertinetto}, title = {Word Order and Quantification over Times}, booktitle = {Speaking of Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2000}, editor = {James Higginbotham and Fabio Pianesi and Achille C. Varzi}, pages = {207--243}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {events;nl-semantics;event-semantics;adverbs;} } @article{ delgado_j:2002a, author = {Jordi Delgado}, title = {Emergence of Social Conventions in Complex Networks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {141}, number = {1--2}, pages = {171--185}, topic = {multiagent-systems;convention;coordination;} } @article{ delgado_k-etal:2011a, author = {Karina Valdivia Delgado and Scott Sanner and Leliane Nunes de Barros}, title = {Efficient Solutions to Factored {MDP}s with Imprecise Transition Probabilities}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {9--10}, pages = {1498--1527}, topic = {Markov-decision-processes;} } @article{ delgado_l:2019a, author = {Laura Delgado}, title = {Between Singularity and Generality: The Semantic Life of Proper Names}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {42}, number = {4}, pages = {381--417}, abstract = {... In this paper I argue that the Predicate View of proper names is mistaken. I first argue against the syntactic evidence used to support the view and against the predicativist's methodology of inferring a semantic account for proper names based on incomplete syntactic data. I also show that Predicativism can neither explain the behaviour of proper names in full generality, nor claim the fundamentality of predicative names. ... I propose that proper names -- albeit fundamentally singular referential terms -- express generality in two senses. First, by being used as predicates, since then they are true of many individuals; and second, by being referentially related to many individuals. ...}, topic = {proper-names;} } @incollection{ delgobbo_f:2007a, author = {Francesca Del Gobbo}, title = {On the Syntax and Semantics of Appositive Relative Clauses}, booktitle = {Parentheticals}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {2007}, editor = {Nicole Deh\'e and Yordanka Kavalova}, pages = {173--201}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {parentheticals;appositive-constructions;} } @inproceedings{ delgrande_j:2020a, author = {James Delgrande}, title = {A Preference-Based Approach to Defeasible Deontic Inference}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {326--335}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {In this paper we present an approach to defeasible deontic inference. Given a set of rules R expressing conditional obligations and a formula A giving contingent information, the goal is to determine the most desirable outcome with respect to this information. Semantically, the rules R induce a partial preorder on the set of models, giving the relative desirability of each model. Then the set of minimal A models characterises the best that can be attained given that A holds. ... The approach yields desirable and intuitive results, including for the various "paradoxes" of deontic reasoning. The approach also highlights an interesting difference in how specificity is dealt with in nonmonotonic and deontic reasoning.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no22}, topic = {reasooning-about-preferences;reasoning-about-oblications;deontic-logic; nonbmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ delgrande_j-wassermann_r:2010a, author = {James Delgrande and Renata Wassermann}, title = {Horn Clause Contraction Functions: Belief Set and Belief Base Approaches}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {143--152}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we consider approaches to belief contraction in Horn knowledge bases. ... constructions of the specific operators and sets of postulates are provided, and representation results are obtained. As well, we show that problems arising with earlier work are resolved by these approaches. }, topic = {belief-revision;Horn-theories;} } @inproceedings{ delgrande_jp:1987a, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {A Logic for Representing Default and Prototypical Properties}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, editor = {Arivind Joshi}, pages = {423--429}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal publication: delgrande_jp:1987b.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;generics;} } @article{ delgrande_jp:1987b, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {A First-Order Conditional Logic for Prototypical Properties}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, year = {1987}, pages = {105--130}, topic = {nonmonotonic-conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;generics;} } @article{ delgrande_jp:1988a, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {An Approach to Default Reasoning Based on a First-Order Conditional Logic: Revised Report}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {36}, pages = {63--90}, number = {1}, topic = {nonmonotonic-conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @unpublished{ delgrande_jp:1989a, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {A Semantics for a Class of Inheritance Networks}, year = {1989}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, School of Computing Science, Simon Frazer University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {inheritance-theory;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ delgrande_jp:1992a, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {Accessibility in Logics of Explicit Belief}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {450--461}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality;} } @inproceedings{ delgrande_jp:1995a, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {Syntactic Conditional Closures for Defeasible Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {1488--1494}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;conditionals;} } @article{ delgrande_jp:1998a, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {On First-Order Conditional Logics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {105}, number = {1--2}, pages = {105--137}, topic = {conditionals;lottery-paradox;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ delgrande_jp:1998b, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {Conditional Logics for Defeasible Logics}, booktitle = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems, Volume 2: Reasoning with Actual and Potential Contradictions}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Phillipe Besnard and Anthony Hunter}, pages = {135--173}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ delgrande_jp:2003a, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {Weak Conditional Logics of Normality}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, editor = {Georg Gottlob and Toby Walsh}, pages = {873--878}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract ={$\ldots$ In this paper, we develop an alternative interpretation, in which a default is regarded more like a rule, leading from premises to conclusion. To this end, a general semantic framework under a `rule-based' interpretation is developed, and a family of weak conditional logics is specified, along with associated proof theories. Nonmonotonic inference is defined very easily in these logics. One obtains a rich set of nonmonotonic inferences concerning the incorporation of irrelevant properties and of property inheritance. Moreover, this interpretation resolves problems that have been associated with previous approaches. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn14}, topic = {default-logic;} } @incollection{ delgrande_jp:2008a, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {Horn Clause Belief Change: Contraction Functions}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {156--165}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {The standard (AGM) approach to belief change assumes that the underlying logic is at least as strong as classical propositional logic. This paper investigates an account of belief change, specifically contraction, where the underlying logic is that governing Horn clauses. Thus this work sheds light on the theoretical underpinnings of belief change by weakening a fundamental assumption of the area. This topic is also of independent interest since Horn clauses have been used in areas such as deductive databases and logic programming. It proves to be the case that there are two distinct classes of contraction functions for Horn clauses: e-contraction, which applies to entailed formulas, and i-contraction, which applies to formulas leading to inconsistency. E-contraction is applicable in yet weaker systems where there may be no notion of negation (such as in definite clauses). I-contraction on the other hand has severe limitations, which makes it of limited use as a belief change operator. In both cases we explore the class of maxichoice functions which, we argue, is the appropriate approach for contraction in Horn clauses theories. }, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ delgrande_jp:2014a, author = {James P. Delgrande}, title = {Towards a Knowledge Level Analysis of Forgetting}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {606--609}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {.... Here, we view forgetting as an abstract operator, independent of the underlying logic. We argue that forgetting amounts to a reduction in the signature of a language of a logic, and that the result of forgetting elements of a signature in a theory is the set of logical consequences over the reduced language. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {forgetting;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-etal:1994a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Torsten Schaub and {W. Ken} Jackson}, title = {Alternative Approaches to Default Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, volume = {70}, year = {1994}, pages = {167--237}, topic = {default-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-etal:2001a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Arvind Gupta and Tim Van Allen}, title = {A Comparison of Point-Based Approaches to Qualitative Temporal Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {131}, number = {1--2}, pages = {135--170}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ delgrande_jp-etal:2002a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Torsten Schaub and Hans Tompits and Kevin Wang}, title = {Towards a Classification of Preference Handling Approaches in Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {Preferences in {AI} and {CP}: Symbolic Approaches}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Ulrich Junker}, pages = {16--24}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my14}, topic = {preferences;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ delgrande_jp-etal:2004a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Torsten Schaub and Hans Tompits}, title = {Domain-Specific Preferences for Causal Reasoning and Planning}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {673--682}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {causal-reasoning;planning;preferences;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-etal:2004b, author = {James Delgrande and Torsten Schaub and Hans Tompits and Kewen Wang}, title = {A classification and Survey of Preference Handling Approaches}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {308--334}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-etal:2005a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Abhaya C. Nayak and Maurice Pagnicco}, title = {Gricean Belief Change}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2005}, volume = {79}, number = {1}, pages = {97--113}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @incollection{ delgrande_jp-etal:2006a, author = {James Delgrande and Didier Dubois and J\'er\^ome Lang}, title = {Iterated Revision as Prioritized Merging}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {210--220}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {belief-revision;preferences;knowledge-integration;} } @incollection{ delgrande_jp-etal:2008a, author = {James Delgrande and Torsten Schaub and Hans Tompits and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Belief Revision of Logic Programs under Answer Set Semantics}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {411--421}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {We address the problem of belief revision in (nonmonotonic) logic programming under answer set semantics: given logic programs P and Q, the goal is to determine a program R that corresponds to the revision of P by Q, denoted P * Q. Unlike previous approaches in logic programming, our formal techniques are analogous to those of distance-based belief revision in propositional logic. In developing our results, we build upon the model theory of logic programs furnished by SE models. Since SE models provide a formal, monotonic characterisation of logic programs, we can adapt well-known techniques from the area of belief revision to revision in logic programs $\ldots$ }, topic = {belief-revision;answe-sets;} } @inproceedings{ delgrande_jp-gupta_a2:1996a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Arvind Gupta}, title = {A Representation for Efficient Temporal Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Eighth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, Vol. 2}, year = {1996}, editor = {William J. Clancey and Dan Weld}, pages = {381--388}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;kr;krcourse;} } @incollection{ delgrande_jp-jackson_wk:1991a, author = {James P. Delgrande and W. Ken Jackson}, title = {Default Logic Revisited}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {118--127}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {default-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;kr-course;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-jin_y:2012a, author = {James Delgrande and Yi Jin}, title = {Parallel Belief Revision: Revising by Sets of Formulas}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {176}, pages = {2223--2245}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-lang_j:2015a, author = {James Delgrande and J\'er\^ome Lang}, title = {Guest Editors' Introduction}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {2}, note = {Introduction to a special volume on knowledge representation}, pages = {111--115}, topic = {knowledge-representation;} } @inproceedings{ delgrande_jp-levesque_hj:2012a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {Belief Revision with Sensing and Fallible Actions}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {148--157}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we present a general approach to reasoning about action and belief change in such a setting [w. sensing actions]. ... Our approach is based on an epistemic extension to basic action theories expressed in the situation calculus, augmented by a plausibility relation over situations. The agent's belief state is updated by suitably modifying the plausibility relation following the execution of an action. We show that our account generalises previous approaches, and fully handles belief revision, sensing, and erroneous actions. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no22}, topic = {sensing-actions;belief-revision;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-levesque_hj:2019a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {An Epistemic Approach to Nondeterminism: Believing in the Simplest Course of Events}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2019}, volume = {107}, number = {3}, pages = {859--886}, abstract = {This paper describes an approach for reasoning in a dynamic domain with nondeterministic actions in which an agent's (categorical) beliefs correspond to the simplest, or most plausible, course of events consistent with the agent's observations and beliefs. The account is based on an epistemic extension of the situation calculus, a first-order theory of reasoning about action that accommodates sensing actions. ... The agent maintains as its set of contingent beliefs the most plausible, or simplest, picture of the world, consistent with its beliefs and actions it believes it executed; yet it may modify these in light of later information.}, topic = {(in)determinism;situation-calculus;epistemic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ delgrande_jp-peppas_p:2018a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Pavlos Peppas}, title = {Incorporating Relevance in Epistemic States in Belief Revision}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {230--239}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We present an account of relevance in belief revision where, intuitively, one wants to only consider the relevant part of an agent's epistemic state in a revision. ... Corresponding postulates and a representation result are given. The overall approach is compared to that of Parikh's for language splitting as well as with multivalued dependencies in relational databases. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {belief-revision;relevance;} } @incollection{ delgrande_jp-schaub_t:1994a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Torsten Schaub}, title = {A General Approach to Specificity in Default Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {146--157}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;specificity;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-schaub_t:1997a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Torsten H. Schaub}, title = {Compiling Specificity into Approaches to Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {90}, number = {1--2}, pages = {301--348}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;specificity;kr;} } @inproceedings{ delgrande_jp-schaub_t:1999a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Torsten Schaub}, title = {The Role of Default Logic in Knowledge Representation: Preliminary Draft}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {default-logic;common-sense-reasoning; common-sense-logicism;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-schaub_t:2000a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Torsten Schaub}, title = {Expressing Preferences in Default Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {123}, number = {1--2}, pages = {41--87}, topic = {default-logic;default-preferences;} } @incollection{ delgrande_jp-schaub_t:2000b, author = {James P. Delgrande and Torsten Schaub}, title = {The Role of Default Logic in Knowledge Representation}, booktitle = {Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Jack Minker}, pages = {107--126}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {logic-in-AI;kr;nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic; nonmonotonic-prioritization;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-schaub_t:2003a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Torsten Schauab}, title = {A Consistency-Based Approach to Belief Change}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {151}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--41}, topic = {belief-revision;consistency-checking;} } @article{ delgrande_jp-schaub_t:2004a, author = {James P. Delgrande and Torsten Schaub}, title = {Reasoning with Sets of Defaults in Default Logic}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {56--88}, abstract = {We present a general approach for representing and reasoning with sets of defaults in default logic, focussing on reasoning about preferences among sets of defaults. First, we consider how to control the application of a set of defaults so that either all apply (if possible) or none do (if not). From this, an approach to dealing with preferences among sets of default rules is developed. $\ldots$ The approach differs from other work, in that we obtain standard default theories and do not rely on prioritised versions of default logic. $\ldots$ we directly generate just those extensions containing the most preferred applied rules; $\ldots$ we show how semi-monotonic default theories can be encoded so that reasoning can be carried out at the object level. With this, we can reason about default extensions from within the framework of standard default logic. Hence one can encode notions such as skeptical and credulous conclusions $\dots$}, topic = {nm-reasoning;default-logic;prioritized-default-logic;} } @inproceedings{ deligne-sagisaka:1998a, author = {Sabine Deligne and Yoshinori Sagisaka}, title = {Learning a Syntagmatic and Paradigmatic Structure from Language Data with a Bi-Multigram Model}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {300--306}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {word-sequence-probabilities;} } @incollection{ delima_ef:1997a, author = {Erika F. de Lima}, title = {Assigning Grammatical Relations with a Back-Off Model}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {90--96}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {empirical-methods-in-nlp;corpus-tagging; grammatical-relations;German-language;} } @incollection{ delima_ef:1998a, author = {Erica F. de Lima}, title = {Induction of a Stem Lexicon for Two-Level Morphological Analysis}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {267--268}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-morphology;word-acquisition;machine-learning;} } @article{ delin:1992a, author = {Judy Delin}, title = {Properties of {\em It}-Cleft Presupposition}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1992}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {289--306}, topic = {presupposition;cleft-constructions;} } @inproceedings{ delin-etal:1993a, author = {Judy Delin and Donia Scott and Tony Hartley}, title = {Knowledge, Intention, Rhetoric: Levels of Variation in Multilingual Instructions}, booktitle = {{ACL} Workshop on Intentionality and Structure in Discourse Relations}, pages = {7--10}, address = {Columbus, Ohio}, year = {1993}, topic = {discourse-structure;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ delin-etal:1994a, author = {Judy Delin and Anthony Hartley and C\'ecile Paris and Donia Scott and Keith Vander Linden}, title = {Expressing Procedural Relationships in Multilingual Instructions}, booktitle = {Seventh International Workshop on Natural Language Generation}, address = {Kennebunkport, Maine}, year = {1994}, pages = {61--70}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @article{ delin-knight_k:2006a, author = {Shou de Lin and Kevin Knight}, title = {Discovering the Linear Writing Order of a Two-Dimensional Hieroglyphic Script}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {4--5}, pages = {409--438}, topic = {decipherment;machine-learning;} } @book{ delisle:1973a, author = {Gilles L. Delisle}, title = {Discourse and Backwards Pronominalization: Preliminary Version}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1973}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {anaphora;} } @inproceedings{ delisle-etal:1998a, author = {Sylvain Delisle and Sylvain L\'etourneau and Stan Matwin}, title = {Experiments with Learning Parsing Heuristics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {307--314}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ dellamonica_d-etal:2018a, author = {Dario Della Monica and Nicola Gigante and Angelo Montanari and Pietro Sala}, title = {A Novel Automata-Theoretic Approach to Timeline-Based Planning}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {541--550 }, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we present a novel automata-theoretic characterisation of timeline-based planning where the existence of a plan is shown to be equivalent to the nonemptiness of the language recognised by a nondeterministic finite-state automaton that suitably encodes all the problem constraints (timelines and synchronisation rules).}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {planning-algorithms;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ dellapierta-etal:1997a, author = {Stephen Della Pietra and Mark Epstein and Salim Roukos and Todd Ward}, title = {Fertility Models for Statistical Natural Language Understanding}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {168--173}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-semantics;statistical-nlp;} } @article{ dellarocca-roversi:1997a, author = {Simona Ronchi Della Rocca and Luca Roversi}, title = {Lambda Calculus and Intuitionistic Linear Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1997}, volume = {59}, number = {3}, pages = {417--448}, topic = {lambda-calculus;intuitionistic-logic;linear-logic;} } @article{ delmasrigoutsos:1997a, author = {Yannis Delmas-Rigoutsos}, title = {A Double Deduction System for Quantum Logic Based on Natural Deduction}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {57--67}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @article{ delmol:2006a, author = {Liesbeth del Mol}, title = {Closing the Circle: An Analysis of {P}ost's Early Work}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2006}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {267--289}, topic = {history-of-logic;computability;formal-language-theory;} } @inproceedings{ delobelle_j-etal:2016a, author = {J\'er\^ome Delobelle and Adrian Haret and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Jean-Guy Mailly and Julien Rossit and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Merging of Abstract Argumentation Frameworks}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {33--42}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... While AGM-like representation results for revision of argumentation frameworks (AFs) are now available, similar results for the problem of merging are still missing. In this paper, we close this gap and adapt model-based propositional belief merging to define extension-based merging operators for AFs. We state an axiomatic and a constructive characterization of merging operators through a family of rationality postulates and a representation theorem. Then we exhibit merging operators which satisfy the postulates. In contrast to the case of revision, we observe that obtaining a single framework as result of merging turns out to be a more subtle issue. Finally, we establish links between our new results and previous approaches to merging of AFs, which mainly relied on axioms from Social Choice Theory, but lacked AGM-like representation theorems. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;abstract-argumentation;belief-revision;} } @article{ delpinal_g:2018a, author = {Guillermo Del Pinal}, title = {Meaning, Modulation, and Context: a Multidimensional Semantics for Truth-Conditional Pragmatics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2018}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {165--207}, abstract = {The meaning that expressions take on particular occasions often depends on the context in ways which seem to transcend its direct effect on context-sensitive parameters. 'Truth-conditional pragmatics' is the project of trying to model such semantic flexibility within a compositional truth-conditional framework. Most proposals proceed by radically 'freeing up' the compositional operations of language. I argue, however, that the resulting theories are too unconstrained, and predict flexibility in cases where it is not observed. ... Under certain conditions, the non-extension determining information of an expression e can enter into the compositional processes that determine the meaning of more complex expressions which contain e. This paper presents and motivates a set of type-driven compositional operations that can access non-extension determining information and introduce bits of it into the meaning of complex expressions. The resulting multidimensional semantics has the tools to deal with key cases of semantic flexibility in appropriately constrained ways, making it a promising framework to pursue the project of truth-conditional pragmatics.}, topic = {compositionality;lexical-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ delpinal_g:2022a, author = {Guillermo Del Pinal}, title = {Probabilistic Semantics for Epistemic Modals: Normality Assumptions, Conditional Epistemic Spaces and the Strength of Must and Might}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {4}, pages = {985--1026}, abstract = {... I propose instead a broadly Kratzerian account according to which must \phi entails that Pr(\phi)=1 and might \phi that Pr(\phi)>0, given a body of evidence and a set of normality assumptions about the world. ... I discuss some implications of these results for more general discussions concerning the empirical and theoretical motivation to adopt a probabilisitic semantic framework.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn23}, topic = {epistemic-modals;probability-semantics;} } @article{ delpinal_g-waldon_b:2019a, author = {Guillermo Del Pinal and Brandon Waldon}, title = {Modals under Epistemic Tension}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2019}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {135--188}, abstract = {Recently, [Kratzer's] account has been challenged by invoking contexts of "epistemic tension": i.e., cases in which an assertion that must \phi is conjoined with the possibility that must\lnot\phi, and cases in which speakers try to downplay a previous assertion that must \phi, after finding out that \lnot\phi. ... Von Fintel and Gillies ... propose a return to a simpler modal ... account ... [while] Lassiter ... following Swanson ... and Egan&Weatherstone proposes a more revisionary account which treats must and might as probabilistic operators. ... we present a series of experiments ... We show that ... accounts a la Kratzer fit the overall pattern of results better than either of their recent competitors. ...}, topic = {epistemic-modals;experimental-semantics;} } @article{ delprete_f:2008a, author = {Fabio Del Prete}, title = {A Non-Uniform Semantic Analysis of the {I}talian Temporal Connectives \emph{Prina} and \emph{Dopo}}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2008}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {157--203}, topic = {temporal-adverbials;Italian-language;} } @incollection{ delprete_f:2012a, author = {Fabio del Prete}, title = {Imperfectivity and Habituality in Italian}, booktitle = {Genericity}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Alda Mari and Claire Beyssade and Fabio Del Prete}, pages = {222--249}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {generics;imperfective-aspect;Italian-language;} } @article{ delprete_f-zucchi_s:2021a, author = {Fabio Del Prete and Sandro Zucchi}, title = {Gender in Conditionals}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2021}, volume = {44}, number = {4}, pages = {953--980}, abstract = {... We compare these cases [of gender as presuposition] to previously reported shifty readings of indexicals in so-called "epistemic conditionals" and propose a unified account of locally projected gender presuppositions and shifty indexicals based on the idea that indicative conditionals are Kaplanian monsters. }, topic = {presupposition;conditionals;} } @incollection{ delval:1992a, author = {Alvaro Del Val}, title = {Computing Knowledge Base Updates}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {740--750}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;database-update;belief-revision;} } @incollection{ delval:1994a, author = {Alvaro del Val}, title = {Tractable Databases: How to Make Propositional Unit Resolution Complete Through Compilation}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {551--561}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;theorem-proving;complexity-in-AI;tractable-logics;kr-course;} } @article{ delval:2000a, author = {Alvaro del Val}, title = {On Some Tractable Classes in Deduction and Abduction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {116}, number = {1--2}, pages = {297--313}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;kr-course;} } @article{ delval:2005a, author = {Alvaro del Val}, title = {First Order {LUB} Approximations: Characterization and Algorithms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {162}, number = {1--2}, pages = {7--48}, topic = {problem-reformulation;theorem-proving;approximation;} } @inproceedings{ delval-etal:1997a, author = {Alvaro del Val and Pedrito {Maynard-Reid II} and Yoav Shoham}, title = {Qualitative Reasoning about Perception and Belief}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Martha Pollack}, pages = {508--513}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;reasoning-about-uncertainty; perception;belief;} } @inproceedings{ delval-shoham_y1:1993a, author = {Alvaro {d}el {V}al and Yoav Shoham}, title = {Deriving Properties of Belief Update From Theories of Action {II}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {732--737}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {See delval-shoham_y1:1994a for journal publication.}, topic = {belief-revision;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ delval-shoham_y1:1994a, author = {Alvaro {d}el {V}al and Yoav Shoham}, title = {Deriving Properties of Belief Update From Theories of Action}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1994}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {81--119}, contentnote = {This is about revising your beliefs in response to changes in the world, not about AGM update. Authors argue that the this is NM temporal reasoning.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {kr;belief-revision;nonmonotonic-logic;kr-course;} } @article{ demantaras-arcos:2002a, author = {Ramon Lopez de Mantaras and Josep Lluis Arcos}, title = {{AI} and Music: From Composition to Expressive Performance}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {23}, number = {3}, pages = {43--57}, topic = {AI-and-music;} } @article{ demantaras-arcos:2012a, author = {Ramon Lopez de Mantaras and Josep Llu\'is Arcos}, title = {Playing with Cases}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2012}, volume = {33}, number = {4}, pages = {22--32}, topic = {AI-and-music;case-based-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ demarcken:1995a, author = {Carl de Marcken}, title = {Lexical Heads, Phrase Structure, and Induction of Grammar}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third Workshop on Very Large Corpora}, year = {1995}, editor = {David Yarovsky and Kenneth Church}, pages = {14--26}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;machine-learning;grammar-learning;} } @inproceedings{ demarcken:1996a, author = {Carl de Marcken}, title = {Linguistic Structure as Composition and Perturbation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {335--341}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {word-learning;computational-lexical-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ demarneffe_mc-etal:2019a, author = {Marie-Catherine de Marneffe and Mandy Simons and Judith Tonhauser}, title = {The {C}ommitment{B}ank: Investigating Projection in Naturally Occurring Discourse}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 23}, year = {2019}, editor = {M. Teresa Espinal and Elena Castroviejo and Manuel Leonetti and Louise McNally and Cristina Real-Puigdollers}, pages = {107--124}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur {S}emantik}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {https://ojs.ub.uni-konstanz.de/sub/index.php/sub/issue/view/26}, abstract = {This paper describes a new resource, the CommitmentBank, developed for the empirical investigation of the projection of finite clausal complements. A clausal complement is said to project when its content is understood as a commitment of the speaker even though the clause occurs under the scope of an entailment canceling operator such as negation or a question. ...}, topic = {corpus;presupposition;} } @article{ demartino_b-etal:2006a, author = {Benedetto De Martino and Dharshan Kumaran and Ben Seymour and Raymond J. Dolan}, title = {Frames, Biases, and Rational Decision-Making in the Human Brain}, journal = {Science}, year = {2006}, volume = {313}, number = {5787}, pages = {684---687}, abstract = {Human choices are remarkably susceptible to the manner in which options are presented. This so-called 'framing effect' represents a striking violation of standard economic accounts of human rationality, although its underlying neurobiology is not understood. We found that the framing effect was specifically associated with amygdala activity, suggesting a key role for an emotional system in mediating decision biases. Moreover, across individuals, orbital and medial prefrontal cortex activity predicted a reduced susceptibility to the framing effect. This finding highlights the importance of incorporating emotional processes within models of human choice and suggests how the brain may modulate the effect of these biasing influences to approximate rationality.}, topic = {cognitive-neuroscience;emotion;decision-making;} } @inproceedings{ demello-sanderson:1986a, author = {L. DeMelloh and A.C. Sanderson}, title = {And/Or Graph Representation of Assembly Plans}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1986}, editor = {Tom Kehler and Stan Rosenschein}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, missinginfo = {pages = {1113--??}}, topic = {planning-algorithms;and/or-graphs;} } @inproceedings{ demelo_aa-etal:2020a, author = {Alexsander Andrade de Melo and Mateus De Oliveira Oliveira}, title = {Symbolic Solutions for Symbolic Constraint Satisfaction Problems}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {49--58}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we introduce a PSPACE-hard notion of symbolic constraint satisfaction problem where both instances and solutions for these instances are implicitly represented by ordered decision diagrams (i.e. read-once, oblivious, branching programs). Our main result states that given an ordered decision diagram D of length k and width w specifying a CSP instance, one can determine in time f(w,w')*k whether there is an ODD of width at most w' encoding a solution for this instance. ... }, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ demey_l-smessaert_h:2018a, author = {Lorenz Demey and Hans Smessaert}, title = {Combinatorial Bitstring Semantics for Arbitrary Logical Fragments}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {2}, pages = {325--363}, topic = {bitstrings;logical-geometry;public-announcements;} } @article{ demey_s:1991a, author = {Sjaak de Mey}, title = {{`Only'} as a Determiner and as a Generalized Quantifier}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1991}, volume = {8}, number = {1--2}, pages = {91--106}, abstract = {Two types of linguistic theories have been particularly concerned with the analysis of `only': pragmatics, in particular focus theory and presupposition theory, and generalized quantifier (GQ) theory, the latter in the negative sense that it has been eager to show that only is not a GQ. Judging from such analyses, then, it would appear that the analysis of only is not at home in the grammar of natural language. The main negative point of the present article is to dispute this. The main positive point is the observation that there are strong relationships between all, the and only. We propose a way to account for them. }, topic = {s-focus;presupposition;generalized-quantifiers;`only';} } @incollection{ demirdache-uribeetxebarria:2008a, author = {Hamida Demirdache and Myriam Uribe-Etxebarria}, title = {On the Temporal Syntax of Non-Root Modals}, booktitle = {Time and Modality}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2008}, editor = {Jacquelin Gu\`eron and Jacquelin Lecarme}, pages = {79--113}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-modality;} } @inproceedings{ demolombe_r:1995a, author = {Robert Demolombe}, title = {Reasoning about Topics: Towards a Formal Theory}, booktitle = {Formalizing Context}, year = {1995}, editor = {Sa\v{s}a Buva\v{c}}, pages = {55--59}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {context;d-topic;} } @inproceedings{ demolombe_r:1999a, author = {Robert Demolombe}, title = {Multivalued Logics and Topics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Practical Reasoning and Rationality}, year = {1999}, editor = {John Bell}, pages = {1--7}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {multivalued-logic;relevance ;} } @incollection{ demolombe_r:2012a, author = {Robert Demolombe}, title = {Causality in the Context of Multiple Agents}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic in Computer Science: 11th International Conference, {DEON} 2012}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2012}, editor = {Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Jan Broersen and Dag Elgesem}, pages = {1--15}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {multiagent-systems;causality;} } @incollection{ demolombe_r-herzig_a:2004a, author = {Robert Demolombe and Andreas Herzig}, title = {Obligation Change in Dependence Logic and Situation Calculus}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic in Computer Science}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2004}, editor = {Alessio Lomuscio and Donald Nute}, pages = {57--73}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. In \fe19\Lomuscio.pdf}, abstract = {Obligation change raises the 'frame problem' which is to characterise what obligations remain unchanged after an action has been performed. ... In this paper simple solutions are proposed thanks to the restriction to obligations that take the form of modal literals. These solutions are presented in the framework of dependence logic and of situation calculus, and it is shown that they are based on the same intuitive idea. This idea is to express that we have a complete representation of actions and circumstances that can change an obligation.}, topic = {deontic-logic;situation-change;deontic-dynamics;} } @incollection{ demolombe_r-jones_aji:2002a, author = {Robert Demolombe and Andrew J.I. Jones}, title = {Actions and Normative Positions: A Modal-Logical Approach}, booktitle = {A Companion to Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dale Jacquette}, pages = {694--705}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {deontic-logic;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @inproceedings{ demolombe_r-parra:2000a, author = {Robert Demolombe and Maria del Pilar Pozos Parra}, title = {A Simple and Tractable Extension of Situation Calculus to Epistemic Logic}, booktitle = {Twelfth International Symposium on Methodologies for Intelligent Systems ({ISMIS} 2000)}, year = {2000}, editor = {Zbigniew W. Ras and Setsuo Ohsuga }, pages = {515--524}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {situation-calculus;epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ demonte:2011a, author = {Violeta Demonte}, title = {Adjectives}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 2}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {1314--1340}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;adjectives;} } @article{ demopoulos_w:1982a, author = {William Demopoulos}, title = {The Rejection of Truth-Conditional Semantics by {P}utnam and {D}ummett}, journal = {Philosophical Topics}, year = {1982}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {135--153}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ demopoulos_w:1994a, author = {William Demopoulos}, title = {Frege and the Rigorization of Analysis}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1994}, volume = {23}, number = {3}, pages = {225--245}, topic = {Frege;} } @article{ demopoulos_w:1999a, author = {William Demopoulos}, title = {On the Theory of Meaning of `On Denoting'}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1999}, volume = {33}, number = {3}, pages = {439--458}, topic = {Russell;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ demopoulos_w:2004a, author = {William Demopoulos}, title = {Elementary Propositions and Essentially Incomplete Knowledge: A Framework for the Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2004}, volume = {38}, number = {1}, pages = {86--109}, topic = {foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @article{ demopoulos_y-etal:2002a, author = {Yiannis Demopoulos and Bernhar Nebel and Francesca Toni}, title = {On the Computational Complexity of Assumption-Based Argumentation for Default Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {141}, number = {1--2}, pages = {57--78}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;complexity-in-AI;} } @book{ demori:1998a, editor = {Renato de Mori}, title = {Spoken Dialogues with Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Renato de Mori, "Problems and Methods for Solution", pp. 1--22 2. Maurizio Onologi and Piergiorgio Svaizer and Renato de Mori, "Acoustic Transduction", pp. 23--67 3. Bianca Angelini and Daliele Falavigna and Maurizio Onologi and Renato de Mori, "Basic Speech Sounds, their Analysis and Features", pp. 69--121 4. Diego Giuliani and Daniele Falavigna and Renato de Mori, "Parameter Transformation", pp. 123--139 5. Fabio Brugnara and Renato de Mori, "Acoustic Modeling", pp. 141--170 6. Fabio Brugnara and Renato de Mori, "Training of Acoustic Models", pp. 171--197 7. Marcello Federico and Renato de Mori, "Language Modeling", pp. 199--230 8. Mauro Cettolo and Roberto Gretter and Renato de Mori, "Knowledge Integration", pp. 231--256 9. Mauro Cettolo and Roberto Gretter and Renato de Mori, "Search and Generation of Word Hypotheses", pp. 287--309 10. Edmondo Trentin and Yoshua Bengio and Cesare Furlanello and Renato de Mori, "Neural Networks for Speech Recognition", pp. 311--361 11. Diego Giuliani and Renato de Mori, "Speaker Adaptation", pp. 363--403 12. Chafic Mokbel and Denis Jouvet and Jean Monn\'e and Renato de Mori, "Robust Speech Recognition", pp. 405--460 13. Anna Corazza and Renato de Mori, "On the Use of Formal Grammars", 461--484 14. Roland Kuhn and Renato de Mori, "Sentence Interpretation", pp 485--522 15. David Sadek and Renato de Mori, "Dialogue Systems", pp. 523--561 16. Christel Sorin and Renato de Mori, "Sentence Generation", pp. 563--582 17. Giuliano Antoniol and Roberto Fiutem and Gianni Lazzari and Renato de Mori, "System Architectures and Applications", pp. 583--609 }, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 S661 1998.}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ demori:1998b, author = {Renato de Mori}, title = {Problems and Methods for Solution}, booktitle = {Spoken Dialogues with Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Renato de Mori}, pages = {1--22}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {This is an overview, and introduction to demori:1998a.}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @article{ demos_r:1960a, author = {Raphael Demos}, title = {Lying to Oneself}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1960}, volume = {57}, number = {18}, pages = {588--595}, xref = {Commentary: canfield_j-mcnally_p:1961a}, topic = {self-deception;belief;attention;} } @article{ demos_r:1964a, author = {Raphael Demos}, title = {Plato's Theory of Language}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1964}, volume = {62}, number = {20}, pages = {595--610}, xref = {Comments: ackrill:1964a.}, topic = {Plato;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ demri_s:1994a, author = {St\'ephanie Demri}, title = {Efficient Strategies for Automated Reasoning in Modal Logics}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Craig Mac{N}ish and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and David Pearce}, pages = {182--197}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {modal-logic;theorem-proving;} } @article{ demri_s:1999a, author = {St\'ephane Demri}, title = {A Logic with Relative Knowledge Operators}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1999}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {167--185}, topic = {epistemic-logic;complexity-theory;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ demri_s-denivelle:2005a, author = {St\'ephane Demri and Hans de Nivelle}, title = {Deciding Regular Grammar Logics with Constants}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2005}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {289--329}, topic = {guarded-fragments;decidability;subtheories-of-FOL;} } @book{ demri_s-etal:2016a, author = {St\'ephane Demri and Valentin Gornako and Martin Lange}, title = {Temporal Logics in Computer Science: Finite-State Systems}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {978-1107028364}, xref = {Reviews: lodaya_k:2017a, pinchinat_s:2019a}, topic = {temporal-logic;decidability;} } @article{ demri_s-gabbay_dm:2000a, author = {St\'ephanie Demri and Dov Gabbay}, title = {On Modal Logics Characterized by Models with Relative Accessibility Relations: Part {II}}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2000}, volume = {66}, number = {3}, pages = {349--384}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ demri_s-gore:2000a, author = {St\'ephane Demri and Rajeev Gor\'e}, title = {Display Calculi for Logics with Relative Accessibility Relations}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {213--236}, topic = {epistemic-logic;modal-logic;proof-theory;display-logic;} } @article{ dendikken-etal:1996a1, author = {Marcel den Dikken and Richard Larson and Peter Ludlow}, title = {Intensional `Transitive' Verbs and Concealed Complement Clauses}, journal = {Revista de Linguistica}, year = {1996}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {29--46}, xref = {Republication: dendikken-etal:1996a2}, topic = {intensional-transitive-verbs;} } @incollection{ dendikken-etal:1996a2, author = {Marcel den Dikken and Richard K. Larson and Peter Ludlow}, title = {Intensional `Transitive' Verbs and Concealed Complement Clauses}, booktitle = {Readings in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter Ludlow}, pages = {1041--1053}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Republication of: dendikken-etal:1996a1}, topic = {intensional-transitive-verbs;intensionality;} } @article{ dendikken_m:2011a, author = {Marcel den Dikken}, title = {Phi-feature Inflection and Agreement: An Introduction}, journal = {Natural Language and Linguistic Theory}, year = {2011}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {857--887}, topic = {agreement;grammatical-gender;grammatical-number;} } @article{ denecke_hm:1977a, author = {Heinz-Martin Denecke}, title = {Quantum Logic of Quantifiers}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {405--413}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @incollection{ denecke_m:1997a, author = {Matthias Denecke}, title = {A Programmable Multi-Blackboard Architecture for Dialogue Processing Systems}, booktitle = {Interactive Spoken Dialog Systems: Bridging Speech and {NLP} Together in Real Applications}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Julia Hirschberg and Candace Kamm and Marilyn Walker}, pages = {98--105}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @inproceedings{ denecke_m-waibel:1999a, author = {Matthias Denecke and Alex Waibel}, title = {Integrating Knowledge Sources for the Specification of a Task-Oriented Dialogue System}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Knowledge and Reasoning in Practical Dialogue Systems}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jan Alexandersson}, pages = {33--40}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @inproceedings{ denecker_m:2000a, author = {Marc Denecker}, title = {Extending Classical Logic with Inductive Definitions}, booktitle = {International Conference on Computational Logic: CL 2000}, year = {2000}, editor = {John Lloyd and Veronica Dahl and Ulrich Furbach and Manfred Kerber and Kung-Kiu Lau and Catuscia Palamidess}, pages = {703--717}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {The goal of this paper is to extend classical logic with a generalized notion of inductive definition supporting positive and negative induction, to investigate the properties of this logic, its relationships to other logics in the area of non-monotonic reasoning, logic programming and deductive databases, and to show its application for knowledge representation by giving a typology of definitional knowledge.}, topic = {extensions-of-FOL;inductive-definitions;logic-programming;} } @incollection{ denecker_m:2004a, author = {Marc Denecker}, title = {What's in a Model? Epistemological Analysis of Logic Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {106--113}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {logic-programming;foundations-of-kr ;} } @inproceedings{ denecker_m-etal:1999a, author = {Marc Denecker and Viktor Marek and Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski}, title = {Approximating Operators, Stable Operators, Well-Founded Fixpoints and Applications in Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;logic-programming;stable-models; fixpoint-semantics;} } @incollection{ denecker_m-etal:2000a, author = {Marc Denecker and V. Wiktor Marek and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, title = {Uniform Semantic Treatment of Default and Autoepistemic Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {74--84}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {... We develop a general semantic approach to autoepistemic and default logics that is based on the notion of a belief pair and that exploits the lattice structure of the collection of all belief pairs. ... we introduce a monotone operator on the lattice of belief pairs. We then show that a whole family of semantics can be defined in a systematic and principled way in terms of fixpoints of this operator (or as fixpoints of certain closely related operators). ... Our results establish conclusively that default logic can be viewed as a fragment of autoepistemic logic, a result that has been long anticipated. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {default-logic;autoepistemic-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;fixpoint-semantics;} } @incollection{ denecker_m-etal:2000b, author = {Marc Denecker and Viktor Marek and Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski}, title = {Approximations, Stable Operators, Well-Founded Fixpoints and Applications in Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Jack Minker}, pages = {127--144}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {logic-in-AI;nonmonotonic-logic;fixpoint-semantics; stable-models;auotepistemic-logic;logic-programming;} } @incollection{ denecker_m-etal:2002a, author = {Marc Denecker and Victor W. Marek and Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski}, title = {Ultimate Approximations in Nonmonotonic Knowledge Representation Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {177--188}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-logic;well-founded-semantics; logic-programming;stable-models;} } @article{ denecker_m-etal:2003a, author = {Marc Denecker and Victor W. Marek and Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski}, title = {Uniform Semantic Treatment of Default and Autoepistemic Logics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {143}, number = {1}, pages = {79--122}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19\denecker.ps}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;autoepistemic-logic;default-logic;} } @incollection{ denecker_m-kakas_ac:2002a, author = {Mack Denecker and Antonis C. Kakas}, title = {Abduction in Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Computational Logic: Logic Programming and Beyond: Essays in Honour of {R}obert {A}. {K}owalski, Part I}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2002}, editor = {Antonis C. Kakas and Fereidoon Sadri}, pages = {402--436}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {abduction;logic-programming;} } @incollection{ denecker_m-ternovska:2004b, author = {Marc Denecker and Eugenia Ternovska}, title = {Inductive Situation Calculus}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {545--555}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. OFR Summer, 2014.}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;action-formalisms;ramification-problem; non-monotone-inductive-definitions;} } @article{ denecker_m-ternovska:2007a, author = {Marc Denecker and Eugenia Ternovska}, title = {Inductive Situation Calculus}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {5--6}, pages = {332--360}, topic = {situation-calculus;ramification-problem;} } @inproceedings{ denecker_m-vennekens_j:2014a, author = {Marc Denecker and Joost Vennekens}, title = {The Well-Founded Semantics is the Principle of Inductive Definition, Revisited}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {22--31}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In the past, there have been several attempts to explain logic programming under the well-founded semantics as a logic of inductive definitions. A weakness in all is the absence of an obvious connection between how we understand various types of informal inductive definitions in mathematical text and the complex mathematics of the well-founded semantics. We formalize the induction process in the most common principles and prove that the well-founded model construction generalizes them all. }, topic = {kr;logic[]-programming;inductive-definitions;} } @book{ denicola_dr:2017a, author = {Daniel R. Denicola}, title = {Understanding Ignorance: The Surprising Impact of What We Don't Know}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780262036443}, abstract = {... Ignorance about American government and history is so alarming that the ideal of an informed citizenry now seems quaint. Conspiracy theories and false knowledge thrive. This may be the Information Age, but we do not seem to be well informed. In this book, philosopher Daniel DeNicola explores ignorance --its abundance, its endurance, and its consequences. DeNicola examines many forms of ignorance, using the metaphors of ignorance as place, boundary, limit, and horizon. He treats willful ignorance and describes the culture in which ignorance becomes an ideological stance. He discusses the ethics of ignorance, including the right not to know, considers the supposed virtues of ignorance, and concludes that there are situations in which ignorance is morally good. ... }, topic = {ignorance;ethics;social-commentary;} } @article{ denicola_r-etal:1993a, author = {Rocco De Nicola and Alessandro Fantechi and Stefania Gnesi and Gioia Ristori}, title = {An Action-Based Framework for Verifying Logical and Behavioral Properties of Concurrent Systems}, journal = {Computer Networks and {ISDN} Systems}, year = {1993}, volume = {25}, number = {7}, pages = {761--778}, contentnote = {Abstract: A system is described which supports proving both behavioural and logical properties of concurrent systems; these are specified by means of a process algebra and its associated logic. The logic is an action based version of the branching time logic CTL, which we call ACTL. It is interpreted over transition labelled structures while CTL is interpreted over state labelled ones. The core of the system are two existing tools, AUTO and EMC. The first builds the labelled transition system corresponding to a term of a process algebra and permits proof of equivalence and simplification of terms, while the second checks the validity of CTL logical formulae. The integration is realized by means of two translation functions from the action based branching time logic ACTL to CTL and from transition-labelled to state-labelled structures. The correctness of the integration is guaranteed by the proof that the two translation functions when coupled preserve satisfiability of logical formulae. }, url = {http://rep1.iei.pi.cnr.it/~gnesi/publications/cnisdn.ps.gz}, topic = {concurrency;branching-time;} } @article{ denivelle:1998a, author = {Hans de Nivelle}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Resolution Calculus}, by {A}lexander {L}eitsch}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1998}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {499--502}, topic = {resolution;theorem-proving;} } @article{ denivelle_h-etal:2000a, author = {Hans De Nivelle and Renate A. Schmidt and Ullrich Hustadt}, title = {Resolution-Based Methods for Modal Logics}, journal = {Logic Journal of {IGPL}}, year = {2000}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {265--292}, topic = {modal-logic;theorem-proving;} } @article{ denkel_a:1980a, author = {Arda Denkel}, title = {On Failure to Refer}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1980}, volume = {89}, number = {356}, pages = {599--604}, topic = {reference-gaps;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1964a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Real Patterns}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1964}, volume = {88}, number = {1}, pages = {27--51}, topic = {belief;philosophy-of-perception;} } @book{ dennett_dc:1969a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Content and Consciousness}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1969}, address = {London}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF311 .D39}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. M&M Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1971a1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Intentional Systems}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1971}, volume = {68}, pages = {87--106}, number = {4}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc11, \m&m\resource\dennet1.pdf}, rtnote = {Reading notes on file. "Dennett".}, xref = {Republished: dennett_dc:1971a2.}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;philosophy-of-psychology; philosophy-of-AI;philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1971a2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Intentional Systems}, booktitle = {Mind Design: Philosophy, Psychology, Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {John Haugeland}, pages = {220-- 242}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Originally Published: dennett_dc:1971a1.}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;philosophy-of-psychology; philosophy-of-AI;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1972a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Reply to {A}rbib and {G}underson}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {23--38}, address = {New York}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1973a1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Mechanism and Responsibility}, booktitle = {Essays on Freedom of Action}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1973}, editor = {Ted Honderich}, pages = {157--184}, address = {London}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1973a2}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;responsibility;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1973a2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Mechanism and Responsibility}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {233--255}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1973a1}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;responsibility;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1975a1, author = {Douglas C. Dennett}, title = {Brain Writing and Mind Reading}, booktitle = {Language, Mind, and Knowledge. {M}innesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Vol. 7}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Keith Gunderson}, pages = {403--415}, address = {Minneapolis, Minnesota}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1975a1}, topic = {mental-representations;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1975a2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Brain Writing and Mind Reading}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {39--50}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1975a1}, topic = {mental-representations;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1975b1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Why the Law of Effect Won't Go Away}, journal = {Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour}, year = {1975}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {169--188}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. m&m\resource\dennett5.pdf}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1975b2}, topic = {foundations-of-psychology;regress-arguments;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1975b2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Why the Law of Effect Will Not Go Away}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {71--89}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1975b1}, topic = {foundations-of-psychology;regress-arguments;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1976a1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Are Dreams Experiences?}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1976}, volume = {73}, number = {2}, pages = {151--171}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1976a2}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;dreaming;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1976a2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Are Dreams Experiences?}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {128--148}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1976a2}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;dreaming;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1977a1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Critical Notice: \emph{The Language of Thought}, by {J}erry {F}odor}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1977}, volume = {86}, number = {342}, pages = {265--280}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1977a2}, topic = {mental-language;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1977a2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {A Cure for the Common Code?}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {90--108}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1977a1}, topic = {mental-language;} } @book{ dennett_dc:1978a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, address = {Montgomery, Vermont}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. "Intentional Systems", pp. 3--22 2. "Reply to {A}rbib and {G}underson", pp. 23--38 3. "Brain Writing and Mind Reading", pp. 39--50 4. "Skinner Skinned", pp. 53--70 5. "Why the Law of Effect Will Not Go Away", pp. 71--89 6. "A Cure for the Common Code?", pp. 90--108 7. "Artificial Intelligence as Philosophy and as Psychology", pp. 109--126 8. "Are Dreams Experiences?", pp. 128--148 9. "Toward a Cognitive Theory of Consciousness", pp. 149--173 10. "Two Approaches to Mental Images", pp. 174--189 11. "Why You Can't Make a Computer That Feels Pain", pp. 190--229 12. "Mechanism and Responsibility", pp. 233--255 13. "The Abilities of Men and Machines", pp. 256--266 14. "Conditions of Personhood", pp. 267--285 15. "On Giving Libertarians What They Say They Want", pp. 286--299 16. "How to Change Your Mind", pp. 300--309 17. "Where Am I?", pp. 310--323 }, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;freedom;volition;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1978b1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Toward a Cognitive Theory of Consciousness}, booktitle = {Perception and Cognition: Issues in the Foundations of Psychology}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {C. Wade Savage}, pages = {201--228}, address = {Minneapolis}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr13\dennett.pdf}, rtnote = {Rnotes on file. RNotes files, "Dennett".}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1978b2}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;foundations-of-psychology;consciousness; cognitive-architectures;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1978b2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Toward a Cognitive Theory of Consciousness}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {149--173}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1978b1}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;foundations-of-psychology;consciousness; cognitive-architectures;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1978c, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Intentional Systems}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {3--22}, address = {Montgomery, Vermont}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no14\dennett.pdf}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;philosophy-of-psychology; philosophy-of-AI;philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1978d, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Skinner Skinned}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {53--70}, address = {New York}, adhocnote = {This is first appearance of this essay}, topic = {behaviorism;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1978e, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Two Approaches to Mental Images}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {174--189}, address = {New York}, adhocnote = {This is first appearance of this essay}, topic = {mental-representations;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1978f1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Why You Can't Make a Computer That Feels Pain}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1978}, volume = {38}, number = {3}, pages = {415--456}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1978f2}, rtnote = {Reading notes on file. "Dennett".}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;pain;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1978f2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Why You Can't Make a Computer That Feels Pain}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {190--229}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1978f1}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;pain;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1978g, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {The Abilities of Men and Machines}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {256--266}, address = {New York}, adhocnote = {This is first appearance of this essay}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;goedels-first-theorem;mechanistic-thesis;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1978h, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {On Giving Libertarians What They Say They Want}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {286--299}, address = {New York}, adhocnote = {This is first appearance of this essay}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1979a1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Artificial Intelligence as Philosophy and as Psychology}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Humanities Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Martin Ringle}, address = {Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey}, pages ={57--80}, xref = {Other publication: dennett_dc:1979a2}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1979a2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Artificial Intelligence as Philosophy and as Psychology}, booktitle = {Brainstorms}, publisher = {Bradford Books}, year = {1978}, editor = {Gregory R. Rock and Joan Marsh}, pages = {109--126}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1978a1}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1981a1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {True Believers: The Intentional Strategy and Why It Works}, booktitle = {Scientific Explanation: Papers based on {H}erbert {S}pencer Lectures Given in the {U}niversity of {O}xford}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Anthony F. Heath}, pages = {37--61}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. See dennett_dc:1981a2.}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1981a2.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1981a2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {True Believers: The Intentional Strategy and Why It Works}, booktitle = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {13--35}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \m&m\resource\dennet2.pdf}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1981a1.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1981b, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Making Sense of Ourselves}, booktitle = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {83--101}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;consciousness;rationality;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1982a1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Styles of Mental Representation}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1982/83}, volume = {38}, pages = {213--226}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1982a2.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1982a2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Styles of Mental Representation}, booktitle = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {213--225}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1982a1.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1982b, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Recent Work in Philosophy of Interest to {AI}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1982}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {3--5}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1982c1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Beyond Belief}, booktitle = {Thought and Object}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1982}, editor = {Andrew Woodfield}, pages = {1--95}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1982b2.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1982c2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Beyond Belief}, booktitle = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {117--202}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1982c1.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1983a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Styles of Mental Representation}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1983}, volume = {83}, note = {Supplementary Series.}, pages = {213--226}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;philosophy-of-language; philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1983b1, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Intentional Systems in Cognitive Ethology: The `{P}anglossian Paradigm' Defended}, journal = {The Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1983}, volume = {6}, pages = {343-390}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Republication: dennett_dc:1983b2.}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1983b2, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Intentional Systems in Cognitive Ethology: The `{P}anglossian Paradigm' Defended}, booktitle = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {237--268}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of: dennett_dc:1983b1.}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ dennett_dc:1984a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Elbow Room: The Varieties of Free Will Worth Wanting}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: greenspan:1986a.}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1984b, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Recent Work in Philosophy {II}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1984}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {231--233}, topic = {frame-problem;philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1986a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {The Moral First Aid Manual}, booktitle = {The {T}anner Lectures on Human Values, Volume {VIII}}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge, England}, year = {1988}, pages = {119--147}, topic = {ethics;} } @book{ dennett_dc:1987a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {026204093-X}, contentnote = {TC: 1. "Setting Off on the Right Foot", pp. 1--12 2. "True Believers: The Intentional Strategy and Why It Works", pp. 13--35 3. "Three Kinds of Intentional Psychology", pp. 43--81 4. "Making Sense of Ourselves", pp. 83--101 5. "Beyond Belief", pp. 117--202 6. "Styles of Mental Representation", pp. 213--225 7. "Intentional Systems in Cognitive Ethology: The `{P}anglossian Paradigm' Defended", pp. 237--268 8. "Evolution, Error, and Intentionality", pp. 287--321 9. "Fast Thinking", pp. 323--337 10. "Mid-Term Examination: Compare and Contrast", pp. 339--350 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {intentionality;philosophy-of-psychology;philosophy-of-mind; foundations-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1987b, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Cognitive Wheels: The Frame Problem of {AI}}, booktitle = {The Robot's Dilemma: The Frame Problem in Artificial Intelligence}, editor = {Zenon Pylyshyn}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Co.}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, year = {1987}, pages = {41--64}, topic = {frame-problem;philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1987c, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Setting Off on the Right Foot}, booktitle = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {1--12}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;folk-psychology;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1987d, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Three Kinds of Intentional Psychology}, booktitle = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {43--81}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1987e, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Evolution, Error, and Intentionality}, booktitle = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {287--321}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1987f, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Fast Thinking}, booktitle = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {323--337}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1987g, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Mid-Term Examination: Compare and Contrast}, booktitle = {The Intentional Stance}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett}, pages = {339--350}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1988a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {When Philosophers Encounter Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {Daedalus}, year = {1988}, volume = {117}, number = {1}, pages = {283--295}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Dennett"}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @book{ dennett_dc:1991a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Consciousness Explained}, publisher = {Little, Brown and Co.}, year = {1991}, address = {Boston}, xref = {Reviews: lycan_wg:1993a, elton:1994a.}, ISBN = {0316180653}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, C 105 .C477 D451 1991.}, xref = {Review: korb_kb:1993a}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1992a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Real Consciousness}, booktitle = {Consciousness in Philosophy and Cognitive Neuroscience}, publisher = {Laurence Erlbaum}, year = {1992}, editor = {Antti Revonsuo and Matti Kamppinen}, pages = {55--63}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1992b, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Instead of Qualia}, booktitle = {Consciousness in Philosophy and Cognitive Neuroscience}, publisher = {Laurence Erlbaum}, year = {1992}, editor = {Antti Revonsuo and Matti Kamppinen}, pages = {129--139}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, topic = {qualia;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1993a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Book Review of `Unified Theories of Cognition' ({A}llen {N}ewell)}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {285--294}, xref = {Review of newell_a:1992a.}, topic = {SOAR;cognitive-architectures;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1994a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Language and Intelligence}, booktitle = {What is Intelligence?}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jean Khalfa}, pages = {161--178}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;foundations-of-cognition; foundations-of-language;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ dennett_dc:1995a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {The Unimagined Preposterousness of Zombies}, journal = {Journal of Consciousness Studies}, year = {1995}, volume = {2}, number = {4}, pages = {322--326}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17\dennett3.pdf}, xref = {Reprinted in Brainchildren}, topic = {zombies;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ dennett_dc:1996a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Kinds of Minds: Toward an Understanding of Consciousness}, publisher = {Basic Books}, year = {1996}, address = {New York}, topic = {consciousness;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:1996b, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Producing Future by Telling Stories}, booktitle = {The Robot's Dilemma Revisited: The Frame Problem in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Co.}, year = {1996}, editor = {Kenneth M. Ford and Zenon Pylyshyn}, pages = {1--7}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, topic = {frame-problem;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @book{ dennett_dc:1998a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Brainchildren: Essays on Developing Minds}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-54090-8}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dennett_dc:2001a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Are We Explaining Consciousness Yet?}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {2001}, volume = {79}, number = {1--2}, pages = {221--237}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc17}, rtnote = {Rnotes on file. "Dennett"}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:2001b, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {The Zombic Hunch: Extinction of an Illusion}, booktitle = {Philosophy at the New Millennium}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Anthony O'Hear}, pages = {27--43}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17\dennett2.pdf}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;zombies;} } @article{ dennett_dc:2003a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Explaining the `Magic' of Consciousness}, journal = {Journal of Cultural and Evolutionary Psychology}, year = {2003}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {7--19}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;} } @book{ dennett_dc:2005a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Sweet Dreams}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-04225-8}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ dennett_dc:2006a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Sweet Dreams: Philosophical Obstacles to a Science of Consciousness}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780-262-54191-6}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:2009a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Intentional Systems Theory}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Ansgar Beckermann and Brian P. McLaughlin and Sven Walter}, pages = {339--350}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. m&m\resource\dennett4.pdf}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;philosophy-of-psychology; philosophy-of-AI;philosophy-of-mind;intentionality;} } @article{ dennett_dc:2011a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Embodied Mind}, by {F}rancisco {J}. {V}arela et al.}, journal = {American Journal of Psychology}, year = {2011}, volume = {106}, number = {1}, pages = {121--125}, url = {http://ase.tufts.edu/cogstud/papers/varela.htm}, xref = {Review of: varela-etal:2011a}, topic = {embodiment;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @incollection{ dennett_dc:2016a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Jonathan Bennett's Rationality}, booktitle = {Ten Neglected Classics of Philosophy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Eric Schliesser}, pages = {256-271}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {Bennet's Rationality is an imaginative essay that sought to change the methodology of conceptual analysis, i.e. ordinary language philosophy, by asking how language contributed to human rationality. ... Bennett considered much more abmbitiously the central rational principles of 'human talk.'}, xref = {Commentary on: bennett_j:1976a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;semantics;speaker-meaning;Grice; convention;} } @article{ dennett_dc:2018a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Facing up to the Hard Question of Consciousness}, journal = {Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B}, year = {2018}, volume = {373}, number = {1755}, pages = {1--7}, abstract = {The so-called 'hard problem of consciousness' is a chimera, a distraction from the hard question of consciousness, which is once some content reaches consciousness, 'then wha thappens?'. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr22\Dennett1.pdf}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dennett_dc:2018b, author = {Daniel C. Dennett}, title = {Review of \emph{{O}ther Minds: The Octopus, the Sea and the Deep Origins of Consciousness}, by {P}eter {G}odfrey-{S}mith}, journal = {Biology and Philosophy}, year = {2018}, volume = {34}, xref = {Review of: godfreysmith_p:2016a}, topic = {animal-intelligence;consciousness;} } @book{ dennett_dc-hofstadter_dr:1981a, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett and Douglas R. Hofstadter}, title = {The Mind's {I}}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, year = {1981}, address = {New York}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Jorge Luis Borges, "Borges and I", pp. 19--20. 2. D.E. Harding, "On Having No Head", pp. 23--30 3. Harold J. Morowitz, "Rediscovering the Mind", pp. 34--42 4. Alan M. Turing, "Computing Machinery and Intelligence", pp. 53--68 5. Douglas E. Hofstadter, "The Turing Test: A Coffeehouse Conversation", pp. 69--92 6. Stanislaw Lem, "The Princess Ineffabelle", pp. 96--99 7. Terrel Miedaner, "The Soul of Martha, a Beast", pp. 100--108 8. Terrel Miedaner, "The Soul of Mark III Beast", pp. 109--113 9. Allen Wheelis, "Spirit", pp. 119--122 10. Richard Dawkins, "Selfish Genes and Selfish Memes", pp. 124--144 11. Douglas E. Hofstadter, "Prelude $\ldots$ Ant Fugue", pp. 149--191 12. Arnold Zuboff, "The Story of a Brain", pp. 202--212 13. Daniel C. Dennett, "Where Am {I}?", pp. 217--229 14. David Hawley Sanford, "Where Was {I}?", pp. 232--240 15. Justin Lieber, "Beyond Rejection", pp. 242--252 16. Rudy Rucker, "Software", pp. 253--265 17. Christopher Cherniak, "The Riddle of the Universe and Its Solution", pp. 269--276 18. Stanislaw Lem, "The Seventh {S}ally or How {T}rurl's Own Perfection Led to No Good", pp. 287--294 19. Stanislaw Lem, "Non Serviam", pp. 296--317 20. Raymond M. Smullyan, "Is God a Taoist?", pp. 321--343 21. Jorge Luis Borges, "The Circular Ruins", pp. 344--373 22. John R. Searle, "Minds, Brains, and Programs", pp. 353--384 23. Raymond M. Smullyan, "An Unfortunate Dualist", pp. 383--384 24. Thomas Nagel, "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?", pp. 391--403 25. Raymond M. Smullyan, "An Epistemological Nightmare", pp. 415--426 26. Douglas E. Hofstadter, "A Conversation with Einstein's Brain", pp. 430--457 27. Robert Nozick, "Fiction", pp. 461--464 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, } @article{ dennett_dc-kinsbourne_m:1992a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett and Marcel Kinsbourne}, title = {Time and the Observer: The Where and When of Consciousness in the Brain}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {1993}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {175--220}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no17\dennett1.pdf}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-psychology;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dennett_dc-lambert_e:2017a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett and Enoch Lambert}, title = {Thinking Like Animals or Thinking Like Colleagues?}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {2017}, volume = {40}, doi = {DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0140525X17000127}, xref = {Commentary on: lake_bm-etal:2017a}, topic = {cognitive-systems;AI-editorial;computational-ethics;} } @book{ dennett_dc-lambert_k:1978a, editor = {Daniel C. Dennett and Karel Lambert}, title = {The Philosophical Lexicon}, year = {1978}, note = {Privately published.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Dennett"}, topic = {humor;philosophy-general;} } @unpublished{ dennett_dc-steglichpetersen:2008a, author = {Daniel C. Dennett and Asbj{\o}rn Steglich-Petersen}, title = {The Philosophical Lexicon, 2008 Edition}, year = {2008}, note = {http://www.philosophicallexicon.com/}, topic = {humor1;} } @book{ dennis-tapsfield:1996a, editor = {Ian Dennis and Patrick Tapsfield}, title = {Human Abilities: Their Nature and Measurement}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1996}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;measurement-in-behavioral-science;} } @article{ denoex:2008a, author = {Thierry Den{\oe}x}, title = {Conjunctive and Disjunctive Combination of Belief Functions Induced by Nondistinct Bodies of Evidence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {2--3}, pages = {234--264}, topic = {Dempster-Shafer-theory;} } @article{ denoex-etal:2010a, author = {Thierry Den{\oe}ux and Zoulficar Younes and Fahed Abdallah}, title = {Representing Uncertainty on Set-Valued Variables Using Belief Functions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {7--8}, pages = {479--499}, topic = {Dempster-Shafer-theory;evidence;} } @article{ denyer_n:2003a, author = {Nicholas Denyer}, title = {Rieger's Problem with {F}rege's Ontology}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2003}, volume = {63}, number = {2}, pages = {166--170}, xref = {Commentary on: rieger_a:2002a}, topic = {Frege;philosophical-ontology;} } @book{ denzin-lincoln:1998a, editor = {Norman K. Denzin and Yvonna S. Lincoln}, title = {The Landscape of Qualitative Research}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1998}, address = {Thousand Oaks, California}, topic = {qualitative-methods;} } @book{ denzin-lincoln:1998b, editor = {Norman K. Denzin and Yvonna S. Lincoln}, title = {Strategies of Qualitative Inquiry}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1998}, address = {Thousand Oaks, California}, topic = {qualitative-methods;} } @book{ denzin-lincoln:1998c, editor = {Norman K. Denzin and Yvonna S. Lincoln}, title = {Collecting and Interpreting Qualitative Materials}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1998}, address = {Thousand Oaks, California}, topic = {qualitative-methods;} } @incollection{ denzinger-dahn:1998a, author = {J. Denzinger and I. Dahn}, title = {Cooperating Theorem Provers}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {II}, Systems and Implementation Techniques}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @incollection{ denzinger-fuchs_m:1998a, author = {J. Denzinger and M. Fuchs}, title = {A Comparison of Equality Reasoning Heuristics}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {II}, Systems and Implementation Techniques}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @article{ deo:2009a, author = {Ashwini Deo}, title = {Unifying the Imperfective and the Progressive: Partitions in Quantificational Domains}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2009}, volume = {32}, number = {5}, pages = {475--521}, topic = {progressive-aspect;} } @incollection{ deo:2012a, author = {Ashwini Deo}, title = {Morphology}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {155--183}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;morphology;} } @inproceedings{ depaiva:2003a, author = {Valeria de Paiva}, title = {Natural Deduction and Context as (Constructive) Modality}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Fourth International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2003}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Chiara Ghidini and Roy M. Turner and Fausto Giunchiglia}, pages = {116--129}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;proof-theory;modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ depaiva_v:2013a, author = {Valeria de Paiva}, title = {Contexts for Quantification}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 11th International Symposium on Logical Formalizations of Commonsense Reasoning 2013}, year = {2013}, editor = {Loizos Michael and Charlie Ortiz and Benjamin Johnston}, organization = {Commonsense Reasoning}, address = {Stanford, California}, url = {https://vcvpaiva.github.io/includes/pubs/depaiva_commonsense2013.pdf}, topic = {context;textual-inferemce;} } @inproceedings{ depaiva_v-etal:2007a, author = {Valeria de Paiva and Cleo Condoravdi and Richard Crouch and Lauri Karttunen}, title = {Textual Inference Logic: Take Two}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Workshop on Contexts and Ontologies: Representation and Reasoning (C\&O:RR) collocated with the 6th International and Interdisciplinary Conference on Modelling and Using Context}, year = {2007}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and J\'er\^ome Euzenat and Chiara Ghidini and Deborah L Mcguinness}, publisher = {CEUR Workshop Proceedings}, address = {Aachen}, abstract = {This note describes a logical system based on concepts and contexts, whose aim is to serve as a representation language for meanings of natural language sentences. The logic is a theoretical description of the output of an evolving implemented system, the system Bridge, which we are developing at PARC, as part of the AQUAINT program. The note concentrates on the results of an experiment which changed the underlying ontology of the representation language from CYC to a version of WordNet/VerbNet.}, topic = {textual-inference;} } @article{ depaul:2002a, author = {Michael R. DePaul}, title = {Review of \emph{{K}nowledge in a Social World}, by {A}lvin {L}. {G}oldman}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2002}, volume = {36}, number = {2}, pages = {335--350}, xref = {Review of: goldman:1999a.}, topic = {epistemology;social-philosophy;} } @book{ depaul-ramsey_w:1998a, editor = {Michael R. De{P}aul and William Ramsey}, title = {Rethinking Intuition}, publisher = {Rowman \& Littlefield Publishers, Inc.}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {common-sense;intuitions;} } @incollection{ depauw-daelemans:2000a, author = {Guy de Pauw and Walter Daelemans}, title = {The Role of Algorithm Bias vs. Information Source in Learning Algorithms for Morphosyntactic Disambiguation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {19--24}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;disambiguation;} } @unpublished{ depietto_m:2016a, author = {Maria De Pietto}, title = {Review of ``What Can {AI} do for Ethics?,'' by {H}elen {S}eville and {D}ebora {G}. {F}ield}, year = {2016}, note = {Unpublished manuscript}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr17}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess. Data Missing for this entry.}, url = {http://http-server.carleton.ca/~aramirez/4406/Reviews/MDePietto.pdf}, xref = {Review of: seville_h-field_dh:2011a}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @article{ depraetere:1995a, author = {Ilse Depraetere}, title = {On the Necessity of Distinguishing Between (Un)Boundedness and (A)Telicity}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1995}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {1--19}, topic = {Aktionsarten;} } @incollection{ depraetere:2012a, author = {Ilse Depraetere}, title = {Time in Sentences with Modal Verbs}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {989--1019}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;nl-modality;} } @inproceedings{ deprez:1994a, author = {Viviane Deprez}, title = {Questions with Floated Quantifiers}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IV}}, year = {1994}, editor = {Mandy Harvey and Lynn Santelmann}, pages = {96--113}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;interrogatives;} } @article{ dequeiroz:2008a, author = {Ruy J.G.B. de Queiroz}, title = {On Reduction Rules, Meaning-As-Use, and Proof-Theoretic Semantics}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2008}, volume = {90}, number = {2}, pages = {211--217}, topic = {proof-theory;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ deraedt:1997a, author = {Luc de Raedt}, title = {Logical Settings for Concept-Learning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {95}, number = {1}, pages = {187--201}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ deraedt:1998a, author = {Luc De Raedt}, title = {An Inductive Logic Programming Query Language for Database Mining (Extended Abstract)}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation: Proceedings of {AISC'98}}, year = {1998}, editor = {Jacques Calmet and Jan Plaza}, pages = {1--13}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {inductive-logic-programming;} } @article{ deraedt-bruynooghe_m:1992a, author = {Luc De Raedt and Maurice Bruynooghe}, title = {Belief Updating from Integrity Constraints and Queries}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {53}, number = {2--3}, pages = {291--307}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ deraedt-dzeroski:1994a, author = {Luc De Raedt and Sa\v{s}o D\v{z}eroski}, title = {First-Order jk-Clausal Theories Are {PAC}-Learnable}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {70}, number = {1--2}, pages = {375--392}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We present positive PAC-learning results for the nonmonotonic inductive logic programming setting. In particular, we show that first-order range-restricted clausal theories that consist of clauses with up to k literals of size at most j each are polynomial-sample polynomial-time PAC-learnable with one-sided error from positive examples only. In our framework, concepts are clausal theories and examples are finite interpretations. We discuss the problems encountered when learning theories which only have infinite nontrivial models and propose a way to avoid these problems using a representation change called flattening. Finally, we compare our results to PAC-learnability results for the normal inductive logic programming setting. }, topic = {Horn-clause-abduction;PAC-learnability;polynomial-algorithms;} } @incollection{ deraedt-ramon:2004a, author = {Luc De Raedt and Jan Ramon}, title = {Condensed Representations for Inductive Logic Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {438--446}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {inductive-logic-programming;} } @article{ dere_b-etal:2022a, author = {Bruno Da R\`e and Damian Szmuc and Paula Teijeiro}, title = {Derivability and Metainferential Validity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {6}, pages = {1521--1547}, abstract = {The aim of this article is to study the notion of derivability and its semantic counterpart in the context of non-transitive and non-reflexive substructural logics. For this purpose we focus on the study cases of the logics ST and TS. In this respect, we show that this notion doesn’t coincide, in general, with a nowadays broadly used semantic approach towards metainferential validity: the notion of local validity. Following this, and building on some previous work by Humberstone, we prove that in these systems derivability can be characterized in terms of a notion we call absolute global validity. ... }, topic = {metainference;validity;} } @article{ derijk:1978a, author = {L.M. De Rijk}, title = {On Ancient and Medieval Semantics and Metaphysics}, journal = {Vivarium}, year = {1978}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, pages = {81--107}, topic = {medieval-logic;medieval-philosophy;metaphysics;philosophy-of-language;} } @techreport{ derijke_m:1990a, author = {Maarten de Rijke}, title = {The Modal Logic of Inequality}, institution = {Institute for Language, Logic and Information, University of Amsterdam}, number = {LP-90-15}, year = {1990}, address = {Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science, Roeterssraat 15, 1018WB Amsterdam, Holland }, xref = {Journal publication: derijke_m:1990b}, topic = {modal-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ derijke_m:1990b, author = {Maarten de Rijke}, title = {The Modal Logic of Inequality}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1992}, volume = {57}, number = {2}, pages = {566--584}, topic = {modal-logic;completeness-theorems;} } @incollection{ derijke_m:1994a, author = {Maarten de Rijke}, title = {Meeting Some Neighbours: A Dynamic Logic Meets Theories of Change and Knowledge Representation}, booktitle = {Logic and information}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jan van Eijck and Albert Visser}, pages = {170--195}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, rtnote = {An early dynamic epistemic logic logic paper}, topic = {dynamic-logic;modal-logic;epistemic-logic;} } @book{ derijke_m:1995a, editor = {Maarten de Rijke}, title = {Diamonds and Defaults}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Johan van Benthem, "Beyond Accessibility: Functional Models for Modal Logic", pp. 1--18 2. Patrick Blackburn, "Modal Logic and Attribute Value Structures", pp. 19--65 3. Tijn Borghus, "Interpreting Modal Natural Deduction in Type Theory", pp. 67--102 4. Kosta Do\v{s}en, "Modal Translations in K and D", pp. 103--127 5. Jan O.M. Jaspars, "Logical Omniscience and Inconsistent Belief", pp. 129--146 6. Catholijn Jonker, "Cautious Backtracking in Truth Maintenance Systems", pp. 147--173 7. Marcus Kracht, "How Completeness and Correspondence Theory Got Married", pp. 175--214 8. Dirk Roorda, "Dyadic Modalities and Lambek Calculus", pp. 215--253 9. Valentin Shehtman, "A Logic with Progressive Tenses", pp. 255--285 10. Edith Spaan, "The Complexity of Propositional Tense Logics", pp. 287--307 11. Elias Thijsse, "On Total Awareness Logics", pp. 309--347 12. Yde Venema, "Completeness via Completeness: Since and Until", pp. 349--358 13. Gerard Vreeswijk, "The Feasibility of Defeat in Defeasible Reasoning", pp. 359--380 }, rtnote = {HILLMAN QA9.46 D53 1993}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;logic-in-AI;} } @article{ derijke_m:1995b, author = {Maarten de Rijke}, title = {The Logic of {P}eirce Algebras}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1993}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {227--250}, topic = {algebraic-logic;modal-logic;} } @book{ derijke_m:1997a, author = {Maarten de Rijke}, title = {Advances in Intensional Logic}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Johan van Benthem and N. Alechina, "Modal Quantification over Structured Domains" 2. Patrick Blackburn and W. Meyer-Viol, "Model Logic and Model-Theoretic Syntax" 3. R.J.C.B. Queroz and Dov Gabbay, "The Functional Interpretation of Modal Necessity" 4. V.V. Rybakov, "Logics of Schemes for "First-Order Theories and Poly-Modal Propositional Logic" 5. J. Seligman, "The Logic of Correct Description" 6. D. Vakaralov, "Modal Logic of Arrows" 7. H. Wansing, "A Full-Circle Theorem for Simple Tense Logic" 8. M. Zakharyaschev, "Canonical Formulas for Modal and Superintuitionistic Logics: A Short Outline" 9. E.N. Zalta, "The Modal Subject Calculus and its Interpretation" }, ISBN = {0792347110}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ derijke_m:1997b, author = {Maarten de Rijke}, title = {A System of Dynamic Modal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {109--142}, topic = {dynamic-logic;modal-logic;} } @article{ derijke_m:1999a, author = {Maarten de Rijke}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}ogical Reasoning with Diagrams}, edited by {G}erard {A}llwein and {J}on {B}arwise}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1999}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {387--390}, xref = {Review of allwein-barwise_kj:1996a.}, topic = {diagrams;reasoning-with-diagrams; logical-reasoning;visual-reasoning;} } @article{ derijke_m:1999b, author = {Maarten de Rijke}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}nformation Flow: The Logic of Distributed Systems}, by {J}on {B}arwise and {J}erry {S}eligman}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {64}, number = {4}, pages = {1836}, xref = {Review of barwise_kj-seligman_j:1997a.}, topic = {information-flow-theory;distributed-systems;} } @article{ derijke_m:2000a, author = {Maartin de Rijke}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}andbook of Tableau Methods}, edited by {M}arcello {D}'{A}gostino, {D}ov {M}. {G}abbay, {R}einer {H}\"anle and {J}oachim {P}osegga}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {518--523}, xref = {Review of: dagostino_m-etal:1999a.}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @incollection{ derijke_m:2001a, author = {Maarten de Rijke}, title = {Computing with Meaning}, booktitle = {Logic in Action}, publisher = {Institute for Logic, Language, and Computation, University of Amsterdam}, year = {2001}, editor = {Johan van Benthen and Paul Dekker and Jan van Eijck and Maarten de Rijke and Yde Venema}, pages = {75--113}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {computational-semantics;information-retrieval;} } @article{ derijke_m-venema_y:1995a, author = {Maarten de Rijke and Yde Venema}, title = {Sahlqvist's Theorem for Boolean Algebras with Operators with an Application to Cylindric Algebras}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1995}, volume = {54}, number = {1}, pages = {61--78}, topic = {algebraic-logic;} } @incollection{ derijke_m-wansing_h:2002a, author = {Maarten de Rijke and Heinrich Wansing}, title = {Proofs and Expressiveness in Alethic Modal Logic}, booktitle = {A Companion to Philosophical Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dale Jacquette}, pages = {422--441}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {proof-theory;modal-logic;} } @article{ dermitas-kokkinakis:1995a, author = {Evangelos Dermitas and George Kokkinakis}, title = {Automatic Stochastic Tagging of Natural Language Texts}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1995}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {137--163}, topic = {part-of-speech-tagging;statistical-nlp;} } @article{ derose_k:1991a, author = {Keith DeRose}, title = {Epistemic Possibilities}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1991}, volume = {100}, number = {4}, pages = {581--605}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au23}, topic = {possibility;knowledge;epistemic-modals;} } @article{ derose_k:1992a, author = {Keith DeRose}, title = {Contextualism and Knowledge Attributions}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {1992}, volume = {52}, number = {4}, pages = {913--929}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja11}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {knowledge;context;contextualism;} } @article{ derose_k:1995a, author = {Keith DeRose}, title = {Solving the Skeptical Problem}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1995}, volume = {104}, number = {1}, pages = {1--52}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {agent-attitudes;context;skepticism;} } @article{ derose_k:1998a, author = {Keith DeRose}, title = {Simple Might's, Indicative Possibilities, and the Open Future}, journal = {The Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1998}, volume = {48}, number = {1}, pages = {67--82}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {epistemic-modals;branching-time;} } @incollection{ derose_k:1999a, author = {Keith DeRose}, title = {Can it be that it Would Have been Even Though it Might Not Have been?}, journal = {Philosophical Perspectives}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 13: Epistemology, 1999}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1999}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {385--413}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {conditionals;conditional-excluded-middle;} } @article{ derose_k:2002a, author = {Keith DeRose}, title = {Assertion, Knowledge, and Context}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2002}, volume = {111}, number = {2}, pages = {167--203}, topic = {context;knowledge;} } @book{ derose_k:2009a, author = {Keith DeRose}, title = {The Case for Contextualism: Knowledge, Skepticism, and Context, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199564460}, xref = {Reviews: mckenna_r-pritchard_d:2011a, baumann_p:2010a}, topic = {context;knowledge;skepticism;contextualism;epistemology; skepticism;} } @article{ derose_k-grandy_re:1999a, author = {Keith DeRose and Richard E. Grandy}, title = {Conditional Assertions and `Biscuit' Conditionals}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1999}, volume = {33}, number = {3}, pages = {405--420}, contentnote = {A "biscuit conditional" is one like Austin's example, "There are biscuits on the sideboard if you want some".}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {biscuit-conditionals;conditional-assertion;conditionals;} } @article{ derosset_l:2014a, author = {Louis deRosset}, title = {Possible Worlds for Modal Primitivists}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {109--131}, topic = {philosophy-of-possible-worlds;} } @article{ derosset_l:2014b, author = {Louis Derosset}, title = {On Weak Ground}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {713--744}, topic = {truthmaking;} } @article{ derosset_l:2016a, author = {Louis deRosset}, title = {Modal Logic and Contingentism: A Comment on {T}imothy {W}illiamson's {M}odal {L}ogic as {M}etaphysics}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2016}, volume = {76}, number = {2}, pages = {155---172}, DOI = {doi:10.1093/analys/anw005}, xref = {Commentary on: williamson_t:2013a}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;first-order-modal-logic;} } @article{ derosset_l-fine_k:2023a, author = {Louis deRosset and Kit Fine}, title = {A Semantics for the Impure Logic of Ground}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2023}, volume = {52}, number = {2}, pages = {415--493}, abstract = {This paper establishes a sound and complete semantics for the impure logic of ground. ... }, topic = {truthmaking;} } @article{ derouck_m:1980a, author = {Marc De Rouck}, title = {On the Semantical Valuation of Sentences}, journal = {Logique et Analyse}, year = {1980}, volume = {23}, number = {89}, pages = {63--106}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @book{ derouilhan:1996a, author = {Philippe de Rouilhan}, title = {Russell et le Cercle des Paradoxes}, publisher = {\'Epim\'eth\'ee}, year = {1996}, address = {Presses Universitaires de France}, xref = {Review: dacosta-bueno_o:1999a.}, topic = {Russell;paradoxes;} } @book{ derrida:1993a, author = {Jacques Derrida}, title = {Aporias}, publisher = {Stanford University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Contemporary Philosophy Shelves.}, topic = {postmodernism;} } @article{ dershowitz:1985a, author = {Nachum Dershowitz}, title = {Synthetic Programming}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages = {323--373}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Given a formal specification for a desired program, our goal is to transform it step-by-step into executable code. We proceed in a top-down fashion - as suggested by `structured programming' methodology. Each step consists of applying a synthesis rule to rewrite a segment of the developing program in increased detail. If every step is transparent enough to ensure correctness, each partial program in the series is sure to be equivalent to its predecessor. In particular, the final program is guaranteed to satisfy the initial specifications. In this paper, we concentrate on automatable strategies for the formation of iterative loops, giving rules based on `invariant assertions' and on `subgoal assertions'. }, topic = {automatic-programming;} } @article{ dershowitz-gurevich_y:2008a, author = {Nachum Dershowitz and Yuri Gurevich}, title = {A Natural Axiomatization of Computability and Proof of {C}hurch's Thesis}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {299--350}, topic = {computability;Church's-thesis;abstract-state-machines;} } @techreport{ derthick:1988a, author = {Mark Derthick}, title = {Mundane Reasoning by Parallel Constraint Satisfaction}, institution = {Carnegie Mellon University}, number = {CMU--CS--88--182}, year = {1988}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {connectionist-plus-symbolic-architectures;description-logics;} } @article{ derthick:1990a, author = {Mark Derthick}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}onnections and Symbols}, edited by {S}teven {P}inker and {J}acques {M}ehler}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {43}, number = {2}, pages = {251--265}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;connectionism;} } @article{ derthick:1990b, author = {Mark Derthick}, title = {Mundane Reasoning by Settling on a Plausible Model}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {46}, number = {1--2}, pages = {107--157}, topic = {connectionist-plus-symbolic-architectures;} } @article{ deruyver-etal:2009a, author = {Aline Deruyver and Yann Hod and Luc Brun}, title = {Image Interpretation with a Conceptual Graph: Labeling Over-Segmented Images and Detection of Unexpected Objects}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {14}, pages = {1245--1265}, topic = {image-interpretation;conceptual-graphs;arc-(in)consistency;} } @article{ deruyver-hod:1997a, author = {A. Deruyver and Y. Hod\'e}, title = {Constraint Satisfaction Problem with Bilevel Constraint: Application to Interpretation of Over Segmented Images}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {93}, number = {1--2}, pages = {321--335}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In classical finite-domain constraint satisfaction problems, the assumption made is that only one value is associated with only one variable. For example, in pattern recognition one variable is associated with only one segmented region. However, in practice, regions are often over-segmented which results in failure of any one to one mapping. This paper proposes a definition of finite-domain constraint satisfaction problems with bilevel constraints in order to take into account a many to one relation between the values and the variables. The additional level of constraint concerns the data assigned to the same complex variable. Then, we give a definition of the arc consistency problem for bilevel constraint satisfaction checking. A new algorithm for arc consistency to deal with these problems is presented as well. This extension of the arc consistency algorithm retains its good properties and has a time complexity in O(en3d2) in the worst case. This algorithm was tested on medical images. These tests demonstrate its reliability in correctly identifying the segmented regions even when the image is over-segmented.}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;arc-(in)consistency;image-processing;} } @inproceedings{ deryck_m-etal:2021a, author = {Marjolein Deryck and Nuno Comenda and Bart Coppens and Joost Vennekens}, title = {Combining Logic and Natural Language Processing to Support Investment Management}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {666--670}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {This paper presents an application that we developed to assist users with the creation of an investment profile for the selection of financial assets. It consists of a natural language interface, an automatic translation to a declarative FOL knowledge base, and the IDP reasoning engine with multiple forms of logical inference. The application speeds up the investment profile creation process, and reduces the considerable inherent operational risk linked to the creation of investment profiles}, topic = {nlp-and-logic;} } @book{ desain-honing:1992a, author = {Peter Desain and Henkjan Honing}, title = {Music, Mind and Machine: Studies in Computer Music, Music Cognition and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Thesis Publishers}, year = {1992}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {9051701497}, xref = {Review: smoliar:1996a.}, contentnote = {Includes material from both authors' theses and most of their published works that were completed at the Utrecht Centre for Knowledge Technology and at City University in London. Includes bibliographical references.}, rtnote = {UMich MUSIC, ML 1380 .D4711 1992}, xref = {Review: smoliar:1996a.}, topic = {AI-and-music;} } @incollection{ desaintcyr-prade_h:2006a, author = {Florence Dupin de Saint-Cyr and Henri Prade}, title = {Possibilistic Handling of Uncertain Default Rules with Applications to Persistence Modeling and Fuzzy Default Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {440--450}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {default-logic;possibilistic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ desaintcyr_fd-prade_h:2020a, author = {Florence Dupin De Saint-Cyr and Henri Prade}, title = {Jokes and Belief Revision}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {336--340}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {The paper deals with a topic little studied in artificial intelligence: the understanding of humor. In this preliminary study, we try to identify the basic mechanism at work in quips and narrative jokes. ... the punchline, which triggers a revision, is both surprising and explains perfectly what was reported in the beginning of the joke. }, topic = {humor2;belief-revision;} } @incollection{ desaussure_l-sthioul:2012a, author = {Louis de Saussure and Bertrand Sthioul}, title = {The Surcompos\'e Past Tense}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {586--610}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;nl-tense;} } @book{ descartes:1641a1, author = {Rene DesCartes}, title = {Meditationes de Prima Philosophia}, publisher = {Michaelem Soly}, year = {1641}, address = {Paris}, xref = {English translation: descartes:1641a2}, topic = {philosophy-classics;Descartes;} } @book{ descartes:1641a2, author = {Rene DesCartes}, title = {Meditations on First Philosophy}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cambridge, England}, note = {English translation by John Cottingham}, xref = {Translation of: descartes:1641a1}, topic = {philosophy-classics;Descartes;} } @book{ deschreye:1999a, editor = {Danny De Schreye}, title = {Logic Programming: Proceedings of the 1999 International Conference on Logic Programming}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262541041}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.63 .L6431 1999.}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @article{ deschreye-etal:1989a, author = {Danny de Schreye and Maurice Bruynooghe and Kristof Verschaetse}, title = {On the Existence of Nonterminating Queries for a Restricted Class of {PROLOG}-Clauses}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {237--248}, topic = {Prolog;AI-algorithms-analysis;} } @article{ descles-etal:2014a, author = {Jean-Pierre DesCl\'es and Anca Chirstine Pascu and Hee-Jin Ro}, title = {Aspecto-Temporal Meanings Analyzed by Combinatory Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2014}, volume = {23}, number = {3}, pages = {253--274}, topic = {combinatory-logic;nl-semantics;tense-aspect;} } @incollection{ descles-guentcheva:2012a, author = {Jean-Pierre Descl\'es and Zlatka Guentch\'eva}, title = {Universals and Typology}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {123--154}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;language-universals;linguistic-typology;} } @article{ descotte-latombe:1985a, author = {Yannick Descotte and Jean-Claude Latombe}, title = {Making Compromises among Antagonist Constraints in a Planner}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {183--217}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja14.}, topic = {planning-algorithms;conflict-resolution;} } @inproceedings{ desevin_e-thalmann_d:2005a, author = {E. de Sevin and D. Thalmann}, title = {A Motivational Model of Action Selection for Virtual Humans}, booktitle = {Computer Graphics International 2005}, year = {2005}, editor = {Baining Guo and Hanspeter Pfister and Dimitris Samaris}, pages = {213--220}, organization = {{IEEE}}, publisher = {{IEEE} Computer Society Press}, address = {New York}, topic = {motivation;emotional-computing;} } @article{ desjardins-etal:1999a, author = {Marie E. {des}{J}ardins and Edmund H. Durfee and Charles L {Ortiz, Jr.} and Michael Wolverton}, title = {A Survey of Research in Distributed, Continual Planning}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, pages = {13--22}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Desjardins".}, topic = {distributed-systems;planning;multiagent-planning;} } @article{ desjardins-etal:2008a, author = {Marie E. {des}{J}ardins and Matthew E. Gaston and Dragomir Radev}, title = {Introduction to the Special Issue on {AI} and Networks}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2008}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {11--15}, topic = {networks;network-models;} } @article{ desjardins-wolverton:1999a, author = {Marie E. {des}{J}ardins and Michael Wolverton}, title = {Coordinating a Distributed Planning System}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, pages = {45--53}, topic = {multiagent-planning;distributed-systems;cooperation;} } @inproceedings{ desmedt:1984a, author = {Koenraad De Smedt}, title = {Using Object-Oriented Knowledge-Representation Techniques in Morphology and Syntax Programming}, booktitle = {Proceedings, Sixth {E}uropean {C}onference on {A}rtificial {I}ntelligence}, year = {1984}, pages = {181--184}, missinginfo = {editor, organization, publisher, address }, topic = {morphology;inheritance;nm-ling;} } @phdthesis{ desmedt:1990a, author = {Koenraad De Smedt}, title = {Incremental Sentence Generation: A Computer Model of Grammatical Encoding}, school = {Katholieke Universiteit te Nijmegen}, year = {1990}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Nijmegen}, note = {Nijmegen Institute for Cognition Research and Information Technology Technical Report 90-01, 1990.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-generation;inheritance;nm-ling;} } @incollection{ desmedt:1990b, author = {Koenraad De Smedt}, title = {{IPF}: An Incremental Parallel Formulator}, booktitle = {Current Research in Natural Language Generation}, year = {1990}, editor = {Robert Dale and Chris Mellish and Michael Zock}, publisher = {Academic Press}, address = {London}, pages = {167--192}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @incollection{ desmedt-etal:1996a, author = {Koenraad De Smedt and Helmut Horacek and Michael Zock}, title = {Architectures for Natural Language Generation: Problems and Perspectives}, booktitle = {Trends in Natural Language Generation, An Artificial Intelligence Perspective, Fourth {E}uropean Workshop, {EWNLG} '93, Pisa, Italy, April 28-30, 1993, Selected Papers}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science}, volume = {1036}, year = {1996}, editor = {Giovanni Adorni and Michael Zock}, pages = {17--46}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr23}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @incollection{ desmedt-kempen:1991a, author = {Koenraad De Smedt and Gerard Kempen}, title = {Segment Grammar: A Formalism for Incremental Sentence Generation}, booktitle = {Natural Language Generation in Artificial Intelligence and Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, address = {Dordrecht}, year = {1991}, editor = {C\'{e}cile L. Paris and William R. Swartout and William C. Mann}, pages = {329--349}, topic = {nl-generation;grammar-formalisms;} } @incollection{ desousa:1986a, author = {Ronald B. de Sousa}, title = {Desire and Time}, booktitle = {The Ways of Desire: New Essays in Philosophical Psychology on the Concept of Wanting}, publisher = {Precedent Publishing, Inc.}, year = {1986}, editor = {Joel Marks}, pages = {83--100}, address = {Chicago}, topic = {desire;philosophical-psychology;temporal-reasoning; practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @book{ desousa:1987a, author = {Ronald Desousa}, title = {The Rationality of Emotion}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {emotion;} } @article{ desousa:1998a, author = {Ronald Desousa}, title = {Individual Natures}, journal = {Philosophia}, year = {1998}, volume = {26}, number = {1--2}, pages = {3--22}, contentnote = {Considers the question of whether there can be laws about human beings.}, topic = {philosophy-of-psychology;human-nature;} } @article{ desousa:2000a, author = {Ronald de Sousa}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}rtificial Intelligence and Literary Creativity: Inside the Mind of {BRUTUS}, a Storytelling Machine}, by {S}elmer {B}ringsford and {D}avid {A}. {F}errucci}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, volume = {26}, number = {2}, pages = {642--647}, xref = {Review of: bringsford-ferrucci:2000a}, topic = {automated-creative-writing;} } @incollection{ desousa:2014a, author = {Ronald de Sousa}, title = {Emotion}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/emotion/}, year = {2014}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, address = {Stanford, Dalifornia}, edition = {Spring 2014}, topic = {emotion;} } @article{ desousa_rb:1978a, author = {Ronald B. de Sousa}, title = {Delf-Deceptive Emotions}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1978}, volume = {75}, number = {11}, pages = {684--697}, topic = {self-deception;emotion;} } @inproceedings{ desrivieres-levesque_hj:1986a, author = {Jim des Rivi\'eres and Hector J. Levesque}, title = {The Consistency of Syntactical Treatments of Knowledge}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the First Conference}, year = {1986}, editor = {Joseph Y. Halpern}, pages = {115--130}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc.}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {syntactic-attitudes;} } @techreport{ desrivieres-smith_bc1:1984a, author = {Jim des Rivi\'eres and Brian C. Smith}, title = {The Implementation of Procedurally Reflective Languages}, institution = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, number = {CSLI--84--9}, year = {1984}, address = {Stanford, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {self-reference;programming-languages;} } @inproceedings{ deswart_h:1992a, author = {Henri\'ette de Swart}, title = {Intervention Effects, Monotonicity and Scope}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {II}}, year = {1992}, editor = {Chris Barker and David Dowty}, pages = {387--406}, publisher = {CLC Publications}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-quantification;anaphora;} } @incollection{ deswart_h:2011a, author = {Henriette de Swart}, title = {Mismatches and Coercion}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {574--596}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;semantic-coercion;} } @incollection{ deswart_h:2016a, author = {Henri\"ette de Swart}, title = {Negation}, booktitle = {Cambridge Handbook of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Maria Aloni and Paul Dekker}, pages = {467--489}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-semantics;negation;} } @phdthesis{ deswart_h1:1991a, author = {Henriette de Swart}, title = {Adverbs of Quantification: A Generalized Quantifier Approach}, school = {Rijksuniversiteit Groningen}, year = {1991}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Groningen}, topic = {adverbs-of-quantification;} } @book{ deswart_h1:1998a, author = {Henriette de Swart}, title = {Introduction to Natural Language Semantics}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1998}, address = {Stanford, California}, xref = {Review: hartmann_k-zimmerman_te:2000a.}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ deswart_h1:1999a, author = {Henriette de Swart}, title = {Indefinites between Predication and Reference}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IX}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1999}, editor = {Tanya Matthews and Devon Strolovitch}, pages = {273--297}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;} } @incollection{ deswart_h1:1999b, author = {Henriette de Swart}, title = {Position and Meaning: Time Adverbials in Context}, booktitle = {Focus: Linguistic, Cognitive, and Computational Perspectives}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {Peter Bosch and Rob {van der Sandt}}, pages = {336--362}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {temporal-adverbials;} } @incollection{ deswart_h1:2012a, author = {Henriette de Swart}, title = {Verbal Aspect}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {752-780}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;perfective-aspect;progressive-aspect;} } @article{ deswart_h1-sag_ia:2002a, author = {Henriette De Swart and Ivan A. Sag}, title = {Negation And Negative Concord In Romance}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {25}, number = {4}, pages = {373--417}, abstract = {This paper addresses the two interpretations that a combination ofnegative indefinites can get in concord languages like French:a concord reading, which amounts to a single negation, and a doublenegation reading. We develop an analysis within a polyadic framework,where a sequence of negative indefinites can be interpreted as aniteration of quantifiers or via resumption $\ldots$}, topic = {negation;Romance-languages;} } @incollection{ deswart_h2-rauszer:1995a, author = {Harrie de Swart and Cecylia Rauszer}, title = {Different Approaches to Knowledge, Common Knowledge and {A}umann's Theorem}, booktitle = {Knowledge and Belief in Philosophy and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Akedemie Verlag}, year = {1995}, editor = {Armin Laux and Heinrich Wansing}, pages = {87--102}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {epistemic-logic;mutual-belief;} } @article{ deswart_hcm:2006a, author = {H.C.M. de Swart}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} Modern Perspective on Type Theory---From its Origins until Today}, by {F}arouz {K}amareddine, {T}wan {L}aan and {R}ob {N}ederfelt}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2006}, volume = {15}, number = {3}, pages = {297--302}, xref = {Review of: kamareddine_f-etal:2004a.}, topic = {type-theory;} } @article{ deswart_hcm-posy_cj:1981a, author = {H.C.M. Deswart and Carl J. Posy}, title = {Validity and Quantification in Intuitionism}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {117--126}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;} } @article{ detlefsen:1979a, author = {Michael Detlefsen}, title = {On Interpreting {G}\"odel's Second Theorem}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1979}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {297--313}, topic = {goedels-second-theorem;} } @book{ detlefsen:1986a, author = {Michael Detlefsen}, title = {Hilbert's Program}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1986}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {90-277-2151-3}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Philsci Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;foundations-of-mathematics; Hilbert's-program;} } @article{ detlefsen:1990a, author = {Michael Detlefsen}, title = {On the Alleged Refutation of {H}ilbert's Program Using {G}\"odel's First Incompleteness Theorem}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1990}, volume = {19}, number = {4}, pages = {343--377}, contentnote = {Kreisel, Prawitz, Simpson, and Smorynski have claimed that G1 provides a refutation of Hilbert's program at least as good as that provided by G1.}, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;Hilbert's-program;} } @article{ detlefsen:2002a, author = {Michael Detlefsen}, title = {L\"ob's Theorem as a Limitation on Mechanism}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {353--381}, abstract = {We argue that L\"ob's Theorem implies a limitation on mechanism. Specifically, we argue, via an application of a generalized version of L\"ob's Theorem, that any particular device known by an observer to be mechanical cannot be used as an epistemic authority (of a particular type) by that observer: either the belief-set of such an authority is not mechanizable or, if it is, there is no identifiable formal system of which the observer can know (or truly believe) it to be the theorem-set. This gives, we believe, an important and hitherto unnoticed connection between mechanism and the use of authorities by human-like epistemic agents. }, topic = {(in)completeness;epistemology;} } @book{ detmer:1986a, author = {David Detmer}, title = {Freedom as a Value: A Critique of the Ethical Theory of {J}ean-{P}aul {S}artre}, publisher = {Open Court}, year = {1986}, address = {La Salle, Ilinois}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. History of philosophy shelves.}, topic = {Sartre;ethics;} } @article{ detoffoli_s:2017a, author = {Silvia de Toffoli}, title = {{`}Chasing the Diagram: The Use pf Visualizations in Algebraic Reasoning}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {158--186}, topic = {reasoning-with-diagrams;mathematical-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ deuser_k-naumov_p:2018a, author = {Kaya Deuser and Pavel Naumov}, title = {Navigability with Bounded Recall}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {635--636}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {The paper studies navigability by machines with bounded recall in mazes with imperfect information. The main result is a sound and complete logical system for the relation "there is a machine with at most n states that can navigate from a set of classes of indistinguishable rooms X to a set of classes of indistinguishable rooms Y.'' ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {limited-rationality;robot-navigation;} } @article{ deutsch_d:1985a, author = {David Deutsch}, title = {Quantum Theory, the {C}hurch-{T}uring Principle and the Universal Quantum Computer}, journal = {Proceedings of the Royal Society, London A}, year = {1985}, volume = {400}, number = {1818}, pages = {97--117}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @unpublished{ deutsch_d-ekert:1999a, author = {David Deutsch and Artur Ekert}, title = {Quantum Communication Moves into the Unknown}, year = {1999}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {quantum-computating;} } @article{ deutsch_d-etal:2000a, author = {David Deutsch and Artur Ekhert and Rosella Lupacchini}, title = {Machines, Logic and Quantum Physics}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {265--283}, topic = {quantum-computating;} } @article{ deutsch_h:1984a, author = {Harry Deutsch}, title = {Paraconsistent Analytic Implication}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1984}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {1--11}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @incollection{ deutsch_h:1998a, author = {Harry Deutsch}, title = {Identity and General Similarity}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 12: Language, Mind, and Ontology}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {177--199}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {identity;similarity;} } @article{ deutsch_h:2008a, author = {Harry Deutsch}, title = {Review of {The Nature and Structure of Content}}, journal = {Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews}, year = {2008}, month = {May}, note = {Available at {\tt http://ndpr.nd.edu/re\-view.cfm?id=13165}.}, xref = {Review of: king_jc:2007a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;structured-propositions;} } @article{ deutsch_h:2014a, author = {Harry Deutsch}, title = {Resolution of Some Paradoxes of Propositions}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2014}, volume = {74}, number = {1}, pages = {26--34}, xref = {The idea is that the intensional paradoxes are like the set-theoretical ones, but Deutsch doesn't seem to provide the sort of motivation for a solution that can be provided by Z-F.}, topic = {intensional-paradoxes;} } @book{ deutsch_w:1981a, editor = {Werner Deutsch}, title = {The Child's Construction of Language}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {9780122135804}, topic = {psycholinguistics;L1-acquisition;} } @incollection{ deutsch_wa-etal:1997a, author = {Werner A. Deutsch and Ralf Vollman and Anton Noll and Sylvia Moosm\"uller}, title = {An Open Systems Approach to an Acoustic-Phonetic Continuous Speech Database: The {S}-{T}ools Database-Management System ({STDBMS})}, booktitle = {Linguistic Databases}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1997}, editor = {John Nerbonne}, pages = {77--92}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {linguistic-databases;} } @article{ deutscher_m:1965a, author = {Max Deutscher}, title = {A Note on Saying and Disbelieving}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1965}, volume = {25}, number = {3}, pages = {53--57}, xref = {Commentary: bonney_wl:1965a}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ deutscher_m:1967a, author = {Max Deutscher}, title = {Bonney on Saying and Disbelieving}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1967}, volume = {27}, number = {6}, pages = {184--186}, xref = {Reply to: bonney_wl:1965a}, topic = {Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ deutscher_m:1967b, author = {Max Deutscher}, title = {Hintikka's Conception of Epistemic Logic}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1969}, volume = {47}, number = {2}, pages = {205--208}, topic = {epistemic-logic;Hintikka;} } @incollection{ devanbu-litman_dj:1991a, author = {Premkumar Devanbu and Diane J. Litman}, title = {Plan-Based Terminological Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {128--138}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Superseded by devanbu-litman_dj:1996a}, topic = {kr;description-logics;extensions-of-kl1;kr-course;} } @article{ devanbu-litman_dj:1996a, author = {Premkumar Devanbu and Diane J. Litman}, title = {Taxonomic Plan Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {84}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--35}, xref = {See devanbu-litman_dj:1991a}, topic = {kr;description-logics;extensions-of-kl1;kr-course;} } @phdthesis{ devault_d:2000a, author = {David DeVault}, title = {Participating in Task-Oriented Dialogue under Uncertainty}, school = {Department of Computer Science, Rutgers}, year = {2000}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @inproceedings{ devault_d:2003a, author = {David DeVault}, title = {Domain Inference in Incremental Interpretation}, booktitle = {Fourth Workshop on Inference in Computational Semantics (ICoS-4)}, year = {2003}, editor = {Patrick Blackburn and Johan Bos}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, abstract = {Speakers in dialogue describe domain-specific actions, goals, conditions and plans using the general resources of their linguistic knowledge. Interlocutors must recognize these descriptive connections through inference---and they must do so incrementally, since they need interpretations of partial utterances to inform their on-line participation in conversational interaction. This paper explores techniques that dialogue systems can use to achieve incremental interpretation, even when domain reasoning is modular, genuinely nonlinguistic and potentially expensive. ...}, topic = {computational-dialogue;activity-recognition;} } @phdthesis{ devault_d:2008a, author = {David {DeVault}}, title = {Contribution Tracking: Participating in Task-Oriented Dialogue under Uncertainty}, school = {Department of Computer Science, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey}, year = {2008}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, url = {http://people.ict.usc.edu/~devault/publications/devault_dissertation.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap11\devault1.pdf}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertaintyb;computational-dialogue; discourse-interpretation;} } @inproceedings{ devault_d-etal:2004a, author = {David DeVault and Charles Rich and Candace L. Sidner}, title = {Natural Language Generation and Discourse Context: Computing Distractor Sets from the Focus Stack}, booktitle = {17th International {FLAIRS} Conference ({FLAIRS}-2004)}, year = {2004}, editor = {Valerie Barr and Zdravko Markov}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {887--892}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, url = {www.research.rutgers.edu/~ddevault/publications/flairs04.pdf}, topic = {referring-expressions;nl-generation;context;discourse-focus;} } @inproceedings{ devault_d-etal:2005a, author = {David DeVault and Natalia Kariaeva and Anubha Kothari and Iris Oved and Matthew Stone}, title = {An Information-State Approach to Collaborative Reference}, booktitle = {ACL 2005 Proceedings Companion Volume. Interactive Poster and Demo Track}, year = {2005}, editor = {Masaaki Nagata and Ted Pedersen}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, note = {URL: http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~mdstone/pubs/acl05ip.pdf}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, pages = {1--4}, topic = {referring-expressions;computational-dialogue;collaboration;} } @inproceedings{ devault_d-etal:2006a, author = {David DeVault and Iris Oved and Matthew Stone}, title = {Societal Grounding is Essential to Meaningful Language Use}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-First National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, editor = {Yolanda Gil and Raymond Mooney}, pages = {747--754}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, url = {http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~mdstone/pubs/aaai06.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn10}, abstract = {... we argue that perceptual grounding alone does not suffice to explain the specific, stable meanings human speakers attribute to each other. Instead, human attributions of meaning depend on a process of societal grounding by which individual language speakers coordinate their perceptual experience and linguistic usage with other members of their linguistic communities. ... We illustrate the importance and role of societal grounding using an implemented dialogue system that collaboratively identifies visual objects with human user}, topic = {foundations-of-pragmatics;conversational-record; symbol-grounding-problem;social-cognition;shared-cognition; contextual-grounding;} } @inproceedings{ devault_d-etal:2009a, author = {David DeVault and Kenji Sagae and David Traum}, title = {Can I Finish? Learning When to Respond to Incremental Interpretation Results in Interactive Dialogue}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the SIGDIAL 2009 Conference}, year = {2009}, editor = {Patrick Healey and Roberto Pieraccini and Donna Byron and Steve Young and Matthew Purver}, pages = {11--20}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @inproceedings{ devault_d-stone_m:2004a, author = {David DeVault and Matthew Stone}, title = {Interpreting Vague Utterances in Context}, booktitle = {The 20th International Conference on Computational Linguistics (COLING 2004)}, year = {2004}, editor = {and }, pages = {1247--1253}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap21}, topic = {nl-processing;vagueness;context;} } @unpublished{ devault_d-stone_m:2005a, author = {David DeVault and Matthew Stone}, title = {An Implementable Semantics for Utterance Context}, year = {2005}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Rutgers University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\DeVault.pdf}, url = {http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~mdstone/pointers/naacl06.pdf}, topic = {context;conversational-record;mutual-belief;} } @inproceedings{ devault_d-stone_m:2006a, author = {David {DeVault} and Matthew Stone}, title = {Scorekeeping in an Uncertain Language Game}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 10th Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue ({S}em{D}ial-10)}, year = {2006}, pages = {139--146}, url = {http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~mdstone/pubs/devault-brandial06.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap11\devault3.pdf }, abstract = {Received views of utterance context in pragmatic theory characterize the occurrent subjective states of interlocutors using notions like common knowledge or mutual belief. We argue that these views are not compatible with the uncertainty and robustness of context-dependence in human-human dialogue. We present an alternative characterization of utterance context as objective and normative. This view reconciles the need for uncertainty with received intuitions about coordination and meaning in context, and can directly inform computational approaches to dialogue.}, topic = {computational-dialogue;context;} } @inproceedings{ devault_d-stone_m:2007a, author = {David {DeVault} and Matthew Stone}, title = {Managing Ambiguities across Utterances in Dialogue}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 11th Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue ({D}ecalog 2007)}, year = {2007}, editor = {Ron Artstein and Laure Vieu}, pages = {49--56}, publisher = {semdial.org}, address = {Dublin}, topic = {computational-dialogue;ambiguity;} } @unpublished{ devault_d-stone_m:2009a, author = {David DeVault and Matthew Stone}, title = {Acquiring Interpretive Preferences from Dialogue Dynamics}, year = {2009}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, ICT and Rutgers}, rtnote = {To appear in ECAL 2009}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {machine-learning;abduction;computational-dialogue;} } @inproceedings{ devault_d-stone_m:2009b, author = {David {DeVault} and Matthew Stone}, title = {Learning to Interpret Utterances Using Dialogue History}, year = {2009}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 12th Conference of the {E}uropean {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics ({EACL})}, editor = {Alex Lascarides and Claire Gardent and Joakim Nivre}, pages = {184--192}, url = {http://people.ict.usc.edu/~devault/publications/devault_stone_eacl2009.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap11\devault2.pdf}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania}, topic = {computational-dialogue;machine-learning;disambiguation;} } @incollection{ devault_d-stone_m:2014a, author = {David DeVault and Matthew Stone}, title = {Pursuing and Demonstrating Understanding in Dialogue}, booktitle = {Natural Language Generation in Interactive Systems}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Amanda Stent and Srinivas Bangalore}, pages = {34--61}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe18}, topic = {conversation;computational-dialogue;conversational-record;} } @article{ dever_j:1999a, author = {Josh Dever}, title = {Compositionality as Methodology}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {311--326}, topic = {compositionality;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ dever_j:2001a, author = {Josh Dever}, title = {Complex Demonstratives}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2001}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {271--330}, topic = {demonstratives;nl-quantifiers;complex-demonstratives;} } @article{ dever_j:2003a, author = {Josh Dever}, title = {Review of \emph{{P}roblems of Compositionality\/}, by {Z}olt\'an {G}endler {S}zab\'o}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2003}, volume = {112}, number = {2}, pages = {254--258}, xref = {Review of: szabo_zg:2000a.}, topic = {compositionality;foundations-of-semantics;nl-semantics philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ dever_j:2003b, author = {Josh Dever}, title = {Modal Fictionalism and Compositionality}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2003}, volume = {114}, pages = {223--251}, topic = {philosophy-of-possible-worlds;} } @unpublished{ dever_j:2004a, author = {Josh Dever}, title = {Semantic Value}, year = {2004}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Texas at Austin}, rtnote = {Forthcoming in \emph{Elservier Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics.}}, url = {https://webspace.utexas.edu/deverj/personal/papers/sv.pdf}, topic = {nl-semantics;compositionality;} } @article{ dever_j:2004b, author = {Joshua Dever}, title = {Binding into Character}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {34}, pages = {Supplement 29--80}, abstract = {... I argue here that the autonomy thesis is unmotivated, and show that we can separate Kaplan's notion of character into two independent components: an aspect of meaning which is context-sensitive, and an aspect of meaning that is exempted from scopal interactions with other operators. The resulting semantic framework allows constructions similar to Kaplan's rejected notion of 'monsters begat by elegance', but which are both more empirically adequate and more theoretically versatile. ... I show how [my] distinction allows a defusing of Kripke's modal argument against a descriptive theory of names. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers?}, topic = {context;foundations-of-semantics;proper-names;} } @incollection{ dever_j:2006a, author = {Josh Dever}, title = {Compositionality}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {633--666}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {compositionality;} } @unpublished{ dever_j:2006b, author = {Josh Dever}, title = {Living the Life Aquatic: Does Presupposition Accommodation Mandate Dynamic Semantics?}, year = {2006}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Texas}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers}, topic = {presupposition;accommodation;dynamic-semantics;} } @incollection{ dever_j:2009a, author = {Josh Dever}, title = {The Disunity of Truth}, booktitle = {Compositionality, Context and Semantic Values}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert J. Stainton and Christopher Viger}, pages = {147--191}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {... I sketch a minimalist variant of the pre-Fregean picture [of semantics] which escapes Frege's criticisms by positing a thin notion of semantic content which then interacts with a multiplicity of kinds of truth to account for phenomena such as modality. ... I argue that thinking of supertruth and determinate truth as setwise truth properties allows an understanding of supervaluationist approaches to vagueness which escapes both Williamson's objections to and a needless metalinguistic orientation of traditional supervaluationism.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc21}, topic = {truth;supervaluations;vagueness;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ dever_j:2012a, author = {Josh Dever}, title = {Compositionality}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Companion to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Gillian Russell and Delia Graff Fara}, pages = {91--102}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {compositionality;nl-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ dever_j:2013a, author = {Josh Dever}, title = {The Revenge of the Semantics-Pragmatics Discussion}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 27: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2013}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {104--144}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {foundations-of-pragmatics;philosophy-of-language;propositions;} } @article{ devett:2008a, author = {Michael Devett}, title = {Resurrecting Biological Essentialism}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2008}, volume = {75}, number = {3}, pages = {344--382}, topic = {philosophy-of-biology;species;essentialism;} } @article{ devidi-solomon_g:1999a, author = {David De{V}idi and Graham Solomon}, title = {Tarski on ``Essentially Richer'' Metalanguages}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {28}, number = {1}, pages = {1--28}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;Tarski;Tarski-hierarchy;} } @article{ devignemont-jacob_p:2012a, author = {Fr\'ed\'erique de Vignemont and Pierre Jacob}, title = {What Is it Like to Feel Another's Pain?}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2012}, volume = {79}, number = {2}, pages = {295--316}, topic = {empathy;} } @article{ deville-etal:1999a, author = {Yvres Deville and Olivier Barette and Pascal van Hentenryck}, title = {Constraint Satisfaction over Connected Row-Convex Constraints}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {109}, number = {1--2}, pages = {243--271}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;} } @article{ devito_cl-oehrle_rt:1991a, author = {Carl L. Devito and Richard T. Oehrle}, title = {A Language Based on the Fundamental Facts of Science}, journal = {Journal of the British Interplanetary Society}, year = {1991}, volume = {43}, number = {12}, pages = {561--568}, abstract = {The problem of how to communicate with the members of an alien society has been discussed by many authors but only one, Hans Freudenthal, has constructed a language for this purpose. Freudenthal assumes nothing other than the ability to reason as humans do ... [We assume] our correspondents can count, understand chemical elements, are familiar with the melting and boiling behaviour of a pure substance and understand the properties of the gaseous state. All this should be known to any society capable of developing the radio telescope.}, topic = {alien-communication-languages;} } @article{ devitt_m:1975a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Suspension of Judgment: A Response to {H}eidelberger on {K}aplan}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1975}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {17--24}, topic = {quantifying-in-modality;} } @book{ devitt_m:1981a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Designation}, publisher = {Columbia University Press}, year = {1981}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0231051263}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B105.R25 D49.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {reference;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ devitt_m:1984a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Thoughts and Their Ascription}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {IX}: Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {385--420}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @book{ devitt_m:1984b, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Realism and Truth}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell}, year = {1984}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631135359}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B835 .D481 1984.}, topic = {truth;philosophical-realism;} } @incollection{ devitt_m:1987a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Putting Metaphysics First: A Response to {J}ames {T}omberlin}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 12: Language, Mind, and Ontology}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Rosanna Keefe and Peter Smith}, pages = {499--502}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ devitt_m:1993a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {A Critique of the Case for Semantic Holism}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 7: Language and Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {281--306}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, contentnote = {"... semantic, or meaning, holism is the doctrine that all of the inferential properties of an expression constitute its meaning."}, topic = {holism;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ devitt_m:1994a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {The Methodology of Naturalistic Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1994}, volume = {91}, number = {10}, pages = {545--572}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ devitt_m:1995a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Coming to Our Senses: A Naturalistic Program for Semantic Localism}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521495431 (hardback)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 325 .D48 1996.}, xref = {Critical review: richard:1997a. Review: gert_h:1998a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ devitt_m:1997a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Meanings and Psychology: A Response to {M}ark {R}ichard}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1997}, volume = {31}, number = {1}, pages = {115--131}, rtnote = {Reply to richard:1997a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ devitt_m:1998a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Putting Metaphysics First: A Response to {J}ames {T}omberlin}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 12: Language, Mind, and Ontology}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {499--502}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ devitt_m:2005a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {There Is No a Priori}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {185--194}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;a-priori;} } @incollection{ devitt_m:2005b, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Is There a Priori Knowledge? Reply to {B}onJour}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {197--199}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: bonjour_l:2005b}, topic = {knowledge;a-priori;} } @book{ devitt_m:2006a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Ignorance of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-925097 (pbk)}, xref = {Reviews: ludlow_p:2009a, fitzgerald_g:2009a. Reply to review: http://devitt.commons.gc.cuny.edu/files/2013/04/HATCHET-JOB3.pdf}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Study Reading Shelves.}, topic = {Chomsky;competence;philosophy-of-linguistics;psychologism;} } @article{ devitt_m:2011a, author = {Michael Devitt}, title = {Methodology and the Nature of Knowing How}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2011}, volume = {108}, number = {4}, pages = {205--218}, topic = {knowing-how;} } @book{ devitt_m-hanley:2006a, editor = {Michael Devitt and Richard Hanley}, title = {The {B}lackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2006}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-631-23142-0}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ devitt_m-sterelny:1987a, author = {Michael Devitt and Kim Sterelny}, title = {Language and Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell}, year = {1987}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631150110}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, 800 D4868La.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ devitt_m-sterelny:1989a, author = {Michael Devitt and Kim Sterelny}, title = {Linguistics: What's Wrong with `The Right View{'} }, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 3: Philosophy of Mind and Action Theory}, publisher = {Ridgeview Publishing Company}, year = {1989}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {497--531}, address = {Atasacadero, California}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;psychological-reality; functionalism;} } @book{ devitt_m-sterelny:1999a, author = {Michael Devitt and Kim Sterelny}, title = {Language and Reality: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, edition = {2}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-54099-1}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ devlin_j:2003a, author = {John Devlin}, title = {An Argument for an Error Theory of Truth}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 17: Language and Philosophical Linguistics, 2003}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2003}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Dean Zimmerman}, pages = {51--82}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {truth;metaphysics;} } @incollection{ devlin_k:2006a, author = {Keith Devlin}, title = {Situation Theory and Situation Semantics}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 7: Logic and the Modalities in the Twentieth Century}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2006}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {601--664}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;situation-theory;} } @incollection{ devlin_s-tail:1997a, author = {Siohan Devlin and John Tait}, title = {The Use of a Psycholinguistic Database in the Simplification of Text for Aphasic Readers}, booktitle = {Linguistic Databases}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1997}, editor = {John Nerbonne}, pages = {161--174}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;text-simplification;} } @article{ devos_m-etal:2023a, author = {Mirjam de Vos and Rineke Verbrugge and Barteld Kooi}, title = {Solutions to the Knower Paradox in the Light of {H}aack's Criteria}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2023}, volume = {52}, number = {4}, pages = {1101--1132}, abstract = {This article presents a fresh look at [the Knower] paradox and some well-known solutions from the literature. ... This article aims to describe to what extent the knower paradox can be solved using provability logic and to what extent the solutions proposed in the literature satisfy Haack's criteria. Finally, the article offers some reflections on the relation between knowledge, proof, and provability, as inspired by the knower paradox and its solutions. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se23}, topic = {intensional-paradoxes;} } @incollection{ devries_m:2007a, author = {Mark de Vries}, title = {Invisible Constituents? Parentheticals as {B}-Merged Adverbial Phrases}, booktitle = {Parentheticals}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {2007}, editor = {Nicole Deh\'e and Yordanka Kavalova}, pages = {203--234}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {parentheticals;} } @article{ devuyst:1985a, author = {Jan de Vuyst}, title = {The Present Perfect in {D}utch and {E}nglish}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1985}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {137--163}, abstract = {Certain differences between Dutch and English use of the present perfect are considered in relation to a more general difference between the two languages that involves temporal inclusion. It is shown that Dutch and English exploit different means of expressing a temporal inclusion relation between two events, notably where Vendler's activities and accomplishments are concerned. Precisely in those cases Dutch and English use the present perfect in different ways. But when there are no differences in the expression of temporal inclusion, notably where Vendler's states are concerned, the two languages use the present perfect in the same way. }, topic = {perfective-aspect;Dutch-language;} } @article{ dewaal:2014a, author = {Frans De Waal}, title = {One for All}, journal = {Scientific American}, year = {2012}, volume = {311}, pages = {68--71}, month = {August 19}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no14\deWaal-sciam-14.pdf}, topic = {altruism;evolutionary-psychology;} } @article{ deweerd-etal:2013a, author = {Harmen de Weerd and Rineke Verbrugge and Bart Verheij}, title = {How Much Does It Help to Know What She Knows You Know? An Agent-Based Simulation Study}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {199--200}, pages = {67--92}, topic = {iterated-attitudes;reasoning-about-games;} } @article{ dewhurst_j:2014a, author = {Joe Dewhurst}, title = {Mechanistic Miscomputation: A Reply to {F}resco and {P}rimiero}, journal = {Philosophy and Technology}, year = {2014}, volume = {27}, number = {2}, pages = {495--498}, abstract = {fresco_n-primiero_g:2013a ... misconstrues the mechanistic approach to miscomputation, which I will argue should not recognise design errors as miscomputations per se. I argue that a computing mechanism, if it is functioning correctly in the physical sense, cannot miscompute on the basis of an error made by an external agent, such as a programmer. This is partially acknowledged in the distinction that Fresco and Primiero make between errors of functioning and errors of design, but they go on to describe both as cases of miscomputation, which I will argue is a mistake, at least with regard to the analysis made by the mechanistic account.}, xref = {Reply to: fresco_n-primiero_g:2013a}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;physical-realizations-of-computation; function;} } @article{ dewhurst_j:2018a, author = {Joe Dewhurst}, title = {Computing Mechanisms without Proper Functions}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2018}, volume = {28}, number = {3}, pages = {569--88}, abstract = {The aim of this paper is ... a version of Gualtiero Piccinini's mechanistic account of computation that does not need to appeal to any notion of proper (or teleological) functions. ... computing mechanisms are understood in terms of Carl Craver's perspectival account of mechanistic functions. According to this approach, the mechanistic function of performing a computation can only be attributed relative to an explanatory perspective, but such attributions are nonetheless constrained by the underlying physical structure of the system in question, thus avoiding unlimited pancomputationalism. If successful, this approach would carry with it fewer controversial assumptions than Piccinini's original account, which requires a robust understanding of proper functions. ...}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;physical-realizations-of-computation;function;} } @article{ dewhurst_j:2018b, author = {Joe Dewhurst}, title = {Individuation without Representation}, journal = {British Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year = {2018}, volume = {69}, number = {1}, pages = {103--116}, abstract = {Shagrir ([2001]) and Sprevak ([2010]) explore the apparent necessity of representation for the individuation of digits (and processors) in computational systems. I will first offer a response to Sprevak's argument that does not mention Shagrir's original formulation, which was more complex. I then extend my initial response to cover Shagrir's argument, thus demonstrating that it is possible to individuate digits in non-representational computing mechanisms. I also consider the implications that the non-representational individuation of digits would have for the broader theory of computing mechanisms.}, topic = {representation;philosophy-of-computation;} } @article{ dewinter:2010a, author = {Jan De Winter}, title = {Explanations in Software Engineering: The Pragmatic Point of View}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {277--289}, abstract = {$\ldots$ I offer a defense of the idea that several explanation-types are legitimate in software engineering, and that the appropriateness of an explanation-type depends on (a) the engineer's interests, and (b) the format of the explanation-seeking question he asks, with this format depending on his interests. This idea is defended by considering examples that are representative for explanatory practice in software engineering. Different kinds of technological explanation are spelled out, and the dependence of their appropriateness on interests and question-formats is extensively illustrated. }, topic = {philosophy-of-computer-science;software-engineering;} } @incollection{ dewitt_bs:1973a, author = {Bryce S. DeWitt}, title = {Quantum Mechanics and Reality}, booktitle = {The Many-Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {1973}, editor = {Bryce S. DeWitt and R. Neil Graham}, pages = {155--165}, address = {Princeton}, topic = {foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @book{ dewitt_bs-graham_rn:1973a, author = {Bryce S. {de}Witt and R. Neil Graham}, title = {The Many-Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {1973}, address = {Princeton}, topic = {foundations-of-quantum-mechanics;branching-time;} } @article{ dewitt_r:2005a, author = {Richard DeWitt}, title = {On Retaining Classical Truths and Classical Deducibility in Many-Valued and Fuzzy Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2005}, volume = {34}, number = {5--6}, pages = {545--560}, topic = {multivalued-logic;} } @book{ dey-etal:2005a, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, title = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3-540-26924-X}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Fabio N. Akras, "Modelling the Context of Learning Interactions in Intelligent Learning Environments", pp. 1-14 2. Horacio Arl\'o Costa, William Taysom, "Contextual Modals", pp. 15-28 3. Mary Bazire and Patrick br\'ezillon, "Understanding Context before Using It", pp. 29-40 4. Claudia Bianchi and Nicla Vassallo, "Epistemological Contextualization: A Semantic Perspective", pp. 41-54 5. Patrick br\'ezillon, "Task-Realization Models in Contextual Graphs", pp. 55-68 6. Nicholas J. Bullot, "Context-Dependent and Epistemic Uses of Attention for Perceptual-Demonstrative Identification", pp. 69-82 7. Donna K. Byron, Thomas Mampilly, Vinay Sharma and Tianfang Xu, "Utilizing Visual Attention for Cross-Modal Coreference Interpretation", pp. 83-96 8. Henning Christiansen and Veronica Dahl, "Meaning in Context", pp. 97-111 9. Norman H. Cohen, Paul Castro and Archan Misra, "Descriptive Naming of Context Data Providers", pp. 112-125 10. Phillipe De Brabanter, "Questions and the Intrusion of Non-Linguistic Communication into Utterances", pp. 126-139 11. Mattias Esbjornssen and Alexandra Weilemann, "Mobile Phone Talk in Context", pp. 140-154 12. John A. Flanagan, "Unsupervised Clustering of Context Data and Learning User Requirements for a Mobile Device", pp. 155-168 13. Ovidiu Fortu and Dan Moldovan, "Identification of Textual Contexts", pp. 169-182 14. Evgenia Hristova and Maurice Grinberg, "Investigation of Context Effects in Iterated Prisoner's Dilemma Game", pp. 183-196 15. Ashraf Khalil and Kay Connelly, "Context-Aware Configuration: A Study on Improving Cell Phone Awareness", pp. 197-209 16. Ronney Kramer, Marko Modsching, Jorg Schulze and Klaus ten Hagen, "Context-Aware Adaptation in a Mobile Tour Guide", pp. 210-224 17. Myriam Lamolle and Maurizio Mancini and Catherine Pelachaud and Sarkis Abrillian and Jean-Claude Martin and Laurence Devillers, "Contextual Factors and Adaptive Multimodal Human-Computer Interaction: Multi-Level Specification of Emotion and Expressivity in Embodied Conversational Agents", pp. 225-240 18. Frederic Landragin, "Modeling Context for Referring in Multimodal Dialogue Systems", pp. 240-253 19. David Leake and Ana Maguitman and Thomas Reichherzer, "Exploiting Rich Context: An Incremental Approach to Context-Based Web Search", pp. 254-267 20. Seunghwa Lee and Heeyong Youn and Eunseek Lee, "Context Adaptive Self-Configuration System Based on Multi-Agent", pp. 268-277 21. Laure Leger and Charles Tijus and Thierry Baccino, "Effect of the Task, Visual and Semantic Context on Word Target Detection", pp. 278-292 22. Nils Malzahn and Sam Zeini and Andreas Harrer, "Ontology Facilitated Community Navigation -- Who Is Interesting for What I am Interested In?", pp. 292-303 23. Carlos Martin-Vide and Victor Mitrana, "Contextual Information Systems", pp. 304-315 24. Nako Matsumoto and Akifumi Toksumi, "Context Building through Socially-Supported Belief", pp. 316-325 25. Naomi Nagy and Xiaoli Zhang and George Nagy and Edgar W. Schneider, "A Quantitative Categorization of Phonemic Dialect Features in Context", pp. 326-338 26. Dympna O'Sullivan and Eoin McLoughlin and Michela Bertolotto and David Wilson, "Context-Oriented Image Retrieval", pp. 339-352 27. Amir Padovitz and Seng W. Loke and Arkady Zaslavsky and Bernard Berg and Claudio Bartolini, "An Approach to Data Fusion for Context Awareness", pp. 353-367 28. Giovanni Pezzulo and Gianguglielmo Calvi, "Dynamic Computation and Context Effects in Hybrid Architecture AKIRA", pp. 368-382 29. Iyad Rahwan and Fernando Koch and Connor Graham and Anton Katton and Liz Sonenberg, "Goal-Directed Automated Negotiation for Supporting Mobile User Coordination", pp. 382-395 30. William J. Rappaport, "In Defense of Contextual Vocabulary Acquisition -- How to Do Things with Words in Context", pp. 396-409 31. Sarunas Raudys and Aini Hussain and Viktorias Justickis and Alvydas Pumputis and Arunas Augustinaitis, "Functional Models of Criminality: Simulation Study", pp. 410-423 32. Floris Roelofsen and Luciano Serafini, "Minimality and Non-Determinism in Multi-Context Systems", pp. 424-435 33. Esther Romero and Belen Soria, "`I' as a Pure Indexical and Metonymy as Language Reduction", pp. 426-450 34. Hedda R. Schmidke, "Granularity as a Parameter of Context", pp. 450-463 35. Sandra de A. Siebra and Ana Carolina Salgado and Patricia A. Tedesco and Patrick br\'ezillon, "Identifying the Interaction Context in CSCLE", pp. 464-475 36. Alexander Smirnov and Michael Pashkin and Nikolai Chilov and Tatania Levashova, "Operational Decision Support: Context-Based Approach and Technological Framework", pp. 476-489 37. Alan N. Steinberg, "Threat Assessment Technology Development", pp. 490-501 38. Richmond H. Thomason, "Making Contextual Intensional Logic Nonmonotonic", pp. 502-514 39. Sriharsha Veeramachaneni and Prateek Sarkar and George Nagy, "Modeling Context as Statistical Dependence", pp. 515-528 40. Xiaojie Wang, "Robust Utilization of Context in Word Sense Disambiguation", pp. 529-541 41. Elizabetti Zibetti and Charles Tijus, "Understanding Actions: Contextual Dimensions and Heuristics", pp. 542-555 42. Andreas Zimmerman and Andreas Lorenz and Marcus Specht, "Applications of a Context-Management System", pp. 556-569 }, topic = {context;} } @inproceedings{ dhami_ds-etal:2021a, author = {Devendra Singh Dhami and Mayukh Das and Sriraam Natarajan}, title = {Beyond Simple Images: Human Knowledge-Guided {GAN}s for Clinical Data Generation}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {247--257}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... The use of GANs to generate clinical data has been rare due to the inability of GANs to faithfully capture the intrinsic relationships between features given a small amount of observational data. We hypothesize and verify that this challenge can be mitigated by incorporating rich domain knowledge in the form of expert advice in the generative process. Specifically, we propose human-allied GANs that uses correlation advice from humans to create synthetic clinical data. }, topic = {interactive-machine-learning;computational-ontology;} } @unpublished{ dhingra_b-etal:2016a, author = {Bhuwan Dhingra and Lihong Li and Xiujun Li and Jianfeng Gao and Yun-Nung Chen and Faisal Ahmed and Li Deng}, title = {End-to-End Reinforcement Learning of Dialogue Agents for Information Access}, year = {2016}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/1609.00777}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16}, rtnote = {Rtrnote: Reading notes on file. Research Notes. "Misc"}, topic = {machine-learning;computational-dialogue;} } @book{ diaconescu:2008a, author = {R\v{a}zvan Diaconescu}, title = {Institution-Independent Model Theory}, publisher = {Birkha\"user Verlag}, year = {2008}, address = {Basil}, ISBN = {978-3-7643-8708-2}, xref = {Review: tarlecki:2014a}, topic = {institutions;abstract-model-theory;category-theory;} } @inproceedings{ diakidoy_ia-etal:2014a, author = {Irene-Anna Diakidoy and Antonis Kakas and Loizos Michael and Rob Miller}, title = {A Psychology-Inspired Approach to Automated Narrative Text Comprehension}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {610--613}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We report on an ongoing research program to develop a formal framework for automated narrative text comprehension, bringing together know-how from research in Artificial Intelligence and the Psychology of Reading and Comprehension. It uses argumentation to capture appropriate solutions to the frame, ramification, and qualification problems, and their generalizations as required for text comprehension. In this first part of the study we concentrate on the central problem of integration of the explicit information from the text narrative with the reader's implicit commonsense world knowledge, and the associated tasks of elaboration and revision. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {narrative-understanding;abstract-argumentation;temporal-reasoning;} } @article{ diamantidis-etal:2000a, author = {N.A. Diamantidis and D. Karlis and E.A. Giakoumakis}, title = {Unsupervised Stratification of Cross-Validation for Accuracy Estimation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {116}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--16}, topic = {machine-learning;accuracy-estimation;} } @book{ diamond-teichman_j:1979a, editor = {Cora Diamond and Jenny Teichman}, title = {Intention and Intentionality: Essays in Honour of {G.E.M}. {A}nscombe}, publisher = {Harvester Press}, year = {1979}, address = {Brighton}, ISBN = {0855279850}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BC199.I55 I62.}, topic = {Anscombe;intention;intentionality;} } @book{ diaper:1989a, editor = {Dan Diaper}, title = {Task Analysis for Human-Computer Interaction}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood}, year = {1989}, address = {Chichester}, ISBN = {0470216069 (Halsted Press)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 T371 1989.}, topic = {HCI;} } @article{ dibernardo_g:1976a, author = {G Di Bernardo}, title = {{`}Is-Ought Question' e Logica Deontica}, journal = {Revista di Filosofia}, year = {1976}, volume = {67}, pages = {169--180}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @article{ dicher_b:2016a, author = {Bogdan Dicher}, title = {Weak Disharmony: Some Lessons for Proof-Theoretic Semantics}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2016}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {583--602}, topic = {proof-theory;substructural-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dichev:2001a, author = {Christo Dichev}, title = {A Framework for a Context-Driven Web Resource Directory}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {433--436}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;information-retrieval;} } @article{ dickason_a:1976a, author = {Anne Dickason}, title = {Aristotle, the Sea Fight, and The Cloud}, journal = {Journal of the History of Philosophy}, year = {1976}, volume = {14}, pages = {11--22}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {Aristotle;future-contingent-propositions;} } @incollection{ dickie_i:2016a, author = {Imogen Dickie}, title = {The Essential Connection Between Epistemology and The Theory of Reference}, booktitle = {Knowledge and Mind}, publisher = {Wiley Blackwell}, year = {2016}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {99--129}, address = {Boston and Oxford}, topic = {reference;epistemology;} } @inproceedings{ dickinson_m-meurers:2005a, author = {Markus Dickinson and W. Detmar Meurers}, title = {Detecting Errors in Discontinuous Structural Annotation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {322--329}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1040}, topic = {corpus-annotation;} } @article{ dickmanns:1998a, author = {Ernst D. Dickmanns}, title = {Vehicles Capable of Dynamic Vision: A New Breed of Technical Beings?}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {103}, number = {1--2}, pages = {49--76}, topic = {autonomous-vehicles;computer-vision;} } @article{ dickson:1999a, author = {Michael Dickson}, title = {Review of \emph{{I}nterpreting the Quantum World}, by {J}effrey {B}ub}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1999}, volume = {66}, number = {3}, pages = {495--496}, xref = {Review of bub:1997a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-quantum-mechanics;} } @article{ dickson:2012a, author = {Michael Dickson}, title = {Review of \emph{{Q}uantum Theory at the Crossroads: Reconsidering the 1927 {S}olvay {C}onference}, by {G}uido {B}acciagaluppi and {A}ntony {V}alentini}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2012}, volume = {79}, number = {1}, pages = {175--177}, xref = {Review of: bacciagaluppi-valentini:2009a.}, topic = {history-of-physics;quantum-mechanics;} } @incollection{ diday:1991a, author = {E Diday}, title = {From Data Analysis to Uncertainty Knowledge Analysis}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {153--160}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;possibility-theory;} } @incollection{ dierbach-chester:1991a, author = {Charles Dierbach and Daniel L. Chester}, title = {A Formal Basis for Analogical Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {139--150}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;analogy;abstraction;kr-course;analogical-reasoning;} } @article{ dierbach-chester:1997a, author = {Charles Dierbach and Daniel L. Chester}, title = {Abstractional Concept Mapping: A Foundational Model for Analogical Reasoning}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {32--86}, topic = {analogy;metaphor;pragmatics;analogical-reasoning;} } @article{ dierckes_ce:1980a, author = {Claire E. Dierckes}, title = {Descartes and the Unlimited Freedom of the Will}, journal = {Dialogue (Phi Sigma Tau)}, year = {1980}, volume = {23}, pages = {1--13}, topic = {freedom;volition;Descartes;} } @incollection{ dierge_fc:2013a, author = {Friedrich Christoph Dierge}, title = {Performative Utterances}, booktitle = {Pragmatics of Speech Actions}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Marina Sbis\'a and Ken Turner}, pages = {203--234 }, address = {The Hague}, topic = {pragmatics;speech-acts;} } @book{ diesing:1992a, author = {Molly Diesing}, title = {Indefinites}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves. (2x)}, topic = {indefiniteness;nl-quantifiers;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ diesing:2000a, author = {Molly Diesing}, title = {Aspect in {Y}iddish: The Semantics of an Inflectional Head}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2000}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {173--253}, topic = {tense-aspect;Yiddish-language;} } @article{ diesing-jelinek_e:1995a, author = {Molly Diesing and Eloise Jelinek}, title = {Double-Access Sentences and References to States}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {1995}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {123--176}, topic = {LF;nl-semantics;nl-syntax;} } @book{ diesling:1992a, author = {Molly Diesling}, title = {Indefinites}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;GB-syntax;} } @incollection{ diessel_h:2013a, author = {Hedger Diessel}, title = {Deixis and Demonstratives}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 3}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {2407--2432}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;deixis;demonstratives;} } @book{ dietrich_e:1994a, editor = {Eric Dietrich}, title = {Thinking Computers and Virtual Persons: Essays on the Intentionality of Machines}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1994}, address = {San Diego}, ISBN = {0-12-215495-9.}, xref = {Review: wilson_ra:1995a.}, topic = {machine-intelligence;intentionality;} } @article{ dietrich_e:1998a, author = {Eric Dietrich}, title = {It Only Seems as if Zombies are Logically Possible, or How Consciousness Hides the Truth of Materialism: A Critical Review of The Conscious Mind}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {441--461}, xref = {Review of: chalmers_dj:1996a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;} } @incollection{ dietrich_e:2011d, author = {Eric Dietrich}, title = {\emph{Homo Sapiens 2.0}: Building the Better Robots of Our Nature}, booktitle = {Machine Ethics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2011}, editor = {Susan Anderson and Michael Anderson}, pages = {531--545}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {computational-ethics;} } @incollection{ dietrich_e-fields_c:1996a, author = {Eric Dietrich and Chris Fields}, title = {The Role of the Frame Problem in {F}odor's Modularity Thesis: A Case Study of Rationalist Cognitive Science}, booktitle = {The Robot's Dilemma Revisited: The Frame Problem in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Co.}, year = {1996}, editor = {Kenneth M. Ford and Zenon Pylyshyn}, pages = {9--24}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, topic = {frame-problem;cognitive-modularity;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @article{ dietrich_e-gillies_as:2000a, author = {Eric Dietrich and Anthony Gillies}, title = {Consciousness and the Limits of Our Imagination}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2000}, volume = {85}, number = {1}, pages = {361--381}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dietrich_f:2007a, author = {Franz Dietrich}, title = {A Generalised Model of Judgement Aggregation}, journal = {Social Choice and Welfare}, year = {2007}, volume = {28}, number = {4}, pages = {517--536}, abstract = {We discuss a general approach to judgement aggregation based on lattice theory. Agents choose elements of a lattice, and an aggregation procedure yields a 'social choice' based on the individual choices. ... Our aim is to systematically investigate how properties of a given lattice induce constraints on aggregation procedures that lead up to impossibility theorems. We ... allow for non-atomistic lattices and this raises some subtle issues. We ... go on prove an impossibility result that highlights the role of certain lattice theoretical properties. These properties reflect some of the traditional axioms or other aspects of traditional systems.}, topic = {aggregation;knowledge-integration;lattice-theory;} } @article{ dietrich_f:2019a, author = {Franz Dietrich}, title = {A Theory of {B}ayesian Groups}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2019}, volume = {53}, number = {3}, pages = {708--736}, topic = {aggregarion;group-attitudes;group-reasoning;Bayesian-reasoning;} } @article{ dietrich_f-etal:2019a, author = {Franz Dietrich and Antonios Staras and Robert Sugden}, title = {A {B}roomean Model of Rationality and Reasoning}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {116}, number = {11}, pages = {585--614}, topic = {practical-reasoning;rationality;} } @article{ dietrich_f-list_c:2007a, author = {Franz Dietrich and Christian List}, title = {Arrow's Theorem in Judgement Aggregation}, journal = {Social Choice and Welfare}, year = {2007}, volume = {29}, number = {2}, pages = {603--617}, abstract = {... After proving a general impossibility theorem, we construct an embedding of preference aggregation into judgement aggregation and prove Arrow's theorem as a corollary of our result. Although we provide a new proof of Arrow's theorem, our main aim is to identify the analogue of Arrow's theorem in judgement aggregation, to clarify the relation between judgement and preference aggregation and to illustrate the generality of the judgement aggregation model.}, topic = {aggregation;knowledge-integration;Arrow's-theorem;} } @article{ dietrich_f-list_c:2013a, author = {Franz Dietrich and Christian List}, title = {A Reason-Based Theory of Rational Choice}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2013}, volume = {46}, number = {1}, pages = {104--134}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my14}, topic = {reasons-for-action;practical-reasoning;rationality;} } @article{ dietrich_f-list_c:2013b, author = {Franz Dietrich and Christian List}, title = {Where Do Preferences Come From?}, journal = {International Journal of Game Theory}, year = {2013}, volume = {42}, number = {3}, pages = {613--637}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr18}, topic = {preferences;motivation;} } @article{ dietrich_f-list_c:2018a, author = {Franz Dietrich and Christian List}, title = {From Degrees of Belief to Binary Beliefs: Lessons from Judgment Aggregation Theory}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2018}, volume = {115}, number = {5}, pages = {225--270}, abstract = {What is the relationship between degrees of belief and binary beliefs? Can the latter be expressed as a function of the former -- a so-called belief-binarization rule -- without running into difficulties such as the lottery paradox? We show that this problem can be usefully analyzed from the perspective of judgment-aggregation theory. Although some formal similarities between belief binarization and judgment aggregation have been noted before, the connection between the two problems has not yet been studied in full generality. In this paper, we seek to fill this gap. ... Our [baseline impossibility] theorem shows that, except in limiting cases, there exists no belief-binarization rule satisfying four initially plausible desiderata. Surprisingly, this result is a direct corollary of the judgment-aggregation variant of Arrow's classic impossibility theorem in social choice theory.}, topic = {belief;knowledge-integration;probability;} } @unpublished{ dietterich_t-horvitz_e:2015a, author = {Tom Dietterich and Eric Horvitz}, title = {Benefits and Risks of Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2015}, url={https://medium.com/@tdietterich/benefits-and-risks-of-artificial-intelligence-460d288cccf}, note = {unpublished editorial}, topic = {AI-editorial;} } @article{ dietterich_tg:1998a, author = {Thomas G. Dietterich}, title = {Machine-Learning Research: Four Current Directions}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1998}, volume = {18}, number = {4}, pages = {97--136}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @article{ dietterich_tg:2017a, author = {Thomas G. Dietterich}, title = {Steps Toward Robust Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2017}, volume = {38}, number = {3}, pages = {3--24}, topic = {robust-AI;reasoning-about-uncertainty;causal-modeling;} } @article{ dietterich_tg-etal:1997a, author = {Thomas G. Dietterich and Richard H. Lathrop and Tom\'as Lozano-P\'erez}, title = {Solving the Multiple Instance Problem with Axis-Parallel Rectangles}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {89}, number = {1--2}, pages = {31--71}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The multiple instance problem arises in tasks where the training examples are ambiguous: a single example object may have many alternative feature vectors (instances) that describe it, and yet only one of those feature vectors may be responsible for the observed classification of the object. This paper describes and compares three kinds of algorithms that learn axis-parallel rectangles to solve the multiple instance problem. Algorithms that ignore the multiple instance problem perform very poorly. An algorithm that directly confronts the multiple instance problem (by attempting to identify which feature vectors are responsible for the observed classifications) performs best, giving 89% correct predictions on a musk odor prediction task. The paper also illustrates the use of artificial data to debug and compare these algorithms. }, topic = {machine-learning;} } @article{ dietterich_tg-michalski:1981a, author = {Thomas G. Dietterich and Ryszard S. Michalski}, title = {Inductive Learning of Structural Descriptions: Evaluation Criteria and Comparative Review of Selected Methods}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, volume = {16}, number = {3}, pages = {257--294}, topic = {machine-learning;structure-learning;} } @article{ dietterich_tg-michalski:1985a, author = {Thomas G. Dietterich and Ryszard S. Michalski}, title = {Discovering Patterns in Sequences of Events}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {187--232}, topic = {machine-learning;structure-learning;} } @incollection{ dietz_r:2008a, author = {Richard Dietz}, title = {Betting on Borderline Cases}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 22, 2008: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {John Hawthorne}, pages = {47--88}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {vagueness;probability;} } @article{ dietz_r-douven_i:2010a, author = {Richard Dietz and Igor Douven}, title = {Ramsey's Test, {A}dams' Thesis, and Left-Nested Conditionals}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {3}, number = {3}, pages = {467--484}, topic = {conditionals;probability;Ramsey-test;} } @book{ dietz_r-moruzzi_s:2009a, editor = {Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi}, title = {Cuts and Clouds: Vaguenesss, its Nature and its Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199570386}, contentnote = {TC: 0. Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi, "Introduction", pp. 1--18 1. Agustin Rayo, "A Metasemantic Account of Vagueness", pp. 23--45 2. Scott Soames, "The Possibility of Partial Definition", pp. 46--62 3. Matti Eklund, "Vagueness and Second-Level Indeterminacy", pp. 63--76 4. Brian Weatherson, "Vagueness as Indeterminacy", pp. 77--90 5. Dorothy Edgington, "Sorensen on Vagueness and Contradiction", pp. 91--106 6. Stephen Schiffer, "Vague Properties", pp. 109--130 7. Nathan Salmon, "Vagaries about Vagueness", pp. 131--148 8. Stewart Shapiro, "Vagueness, Metaphysics, and Objectivity", pp. 149--162 9. Sven Rosenkranz, "Agnosticism and Vagueness", pp. 165--186 10. J.C. Beall, "Vague Intensions: A Modest Marriage Proposal", pp. 187--199 11. Hartry Field, "This Magic Moment: {H}orwich on the Boundary of Vague Terms", pp. 200--208 12. Leon Horsten, "Perceptual Indiscriminability and the Concept of a Color Shade", pp. 209--227 13. Mario G\"omez-Torrente, "The Sorites, Linguistic Preconceptions, and the Dual Picture of Vaguenes", pp. 228--253 14. Peter Pagin, "Vagueness and Central Gaps", pp. 254--272 15. Jonas {\AA}kerman, "Hold the Context Fixed---Vagueness Still Remains", pp. 275--288 16. Andrea Iacona, "Saying More (or Less) Than One Thing", pp. 289--303 17. Max K\"olbel, "Vagueness as Semantic", pp. 304--326 18. Dan L\"opez De Sa, "How to Respond to Borderline Cases", pp. 327--340 19. Manuel Garc\"ia-Carpintero, "Supervaluationism and the Report of Vague Contents", pp. 345--359 20. Rosanna Keefe, "Supervaluationism, Indirect Speech Reports, and Demonstratives", pp. 360--372 21. Delia Graff Fara, "Scope Confusions and Unsatisfiable Disjuncts: Two Problems for Supervaluationism", pp. 373--382 22. Dominic Hyde, "The Prospects of a Paraconsistent Response to Vagueness", pp. 385--405 23. Graham Priest, "Non-Transitive Identity", pp. 406--416 24. Graeme Forbes, "Identity and the Facts of the Matter", pp. 419--447 25. John MacFarlane, "Fuzzy Epistemicism", pp. 448--463 26. Mark Richard, "Indeterminacy and Truth-Value Gaps", pp. 464--481 27. Peter Simons, "Supernumeration: Vagueness and Numbers", pp. 482--490 28. Nicholas J.J. Smith, "Degree of Belief is Expected Truth Value", pp. 491--506 29. Diana Raffman, "Demoting Higher-Order Vagueness", pp. 509--522 30. Crispin Wright, "The Illusion of Higher-Order Vagueness", pp. 523--549 31. Cian Dorr, "Iterating Definiteness", pp. 550--575 }, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ dietz_r-moruzzi_s:2009b, author = {Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi}, title = {Introduction (to \emph{Cuts and Clouds}}, booktitle = {Cuts and Clouds: Vaguenesss, its Nature and its Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi}, pages = {1--18}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {vagueness;} } @phdthesis{ dieugenio:1993a, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio}, title = {Understanding Natural Language Instuctions: A Computational Approach to Purpose Clauses}, school = {Computer Science Department, University of Pennsylvania}, year = {1993}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Philadelphia, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS MS shelves.}, topic = {plan-recognition;nl-interpretation;} } @incollection{ dieugenio:1994a, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio}, title = {Action Representation for Interpreting Purpose Clauses in Natural Language Instructions}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {158--169}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {action-formalisms;} } @incollection{ dieugenio:1997a, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio}, title = {Centering in {I}talian}, booktitle = {Centering Theory in Discourse}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Marilyn A. Walker and Arivind K. Joshi and Ellen Prince}, pages = {115--137}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {anaphora-resolution;discourse;pragmatics;Italian-language; centering;} } @article{ dieugenio:2000a, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio}, title = {Review of \emph{{L}exical Semantics and Knowledge Representation in Multilingual Text Generation}, by {M}anfred {S}tede}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, volume = {26}, number = {2}, pages = {270--273}, xref = {stede:1999a.}, topic = {nl-kr;lexical-semantics;computational-semantics;nl-generation; multilingual-nlp;multilingual-lexicons;} } @unpublished{ dieugenio-etal:1997a, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio and Pamela W. Jordan and Liina Pylkk\"anen}, title = {The {COCONUT} Manual}, year = {1997}, month = {September}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Intelligent Systems Program, University of Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Files.}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;discourse;} } @inproceedings{ dieugenio-etal:1997b, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio and Pamela W. Jordan and Richmond H. Thomason and Johanna D. Moore}, title = {Reconstructed Intentions in Collaborative Problem Solving Dialogues}, booktitle = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Communicative Action in Humans and Machines}, year = {1997}, pages = {36--42}, organization = {{AAAI}}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, editor = {David R. Traum}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {speech-acts;corpus-linguistics;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ dieugenio-etal:1997c, author = {Barbara Dieugenio and Johanna D. Moore and Massimo Paolucci}, title = {Learning Features that Predict Cue Usage}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {80--87}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {discourse-cue-words;corpus-linguistics;} } @inproceedings{ dieugenio-etal:1998a, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio and Pamela W. Jordan and Johanna D. Moore and Richmond H. Thomason}, title = {An Empirical Investigation of Collaborative Dialogues}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {325--329}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {discourse;collaborationn;} } @incollection{ dieugenio-etal:2003a, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio and Susan Haller and Michael Glass}, title = {Development and Evaluation of {NL} Interfaces in a Small Shop}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Natural Language Generation in Spoken and Written Dialogue}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Reva Freedman and Charles Callaway}, pages = {15--22 }, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {nl-generation;computational-dialogue;nlp-evaluation;} } @inproceedings{ dieugenio-etal:2005a, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio and Davide Fossati and Dan Yu and Susan Haller and Michael Glass}, title = {Aggregation Improves Learning: Experiments in Natural Language Generation for Intelligent Tutoring Systems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {50--57}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1007}, topic = {nl-generation;nl-tutoring;} } @article{ dieugenio-glass:2004a, author = {Barbara di Eugenio and Michael Glass}, title = {The Kappa Statistic: A Second Look}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {3}, pages = {95--101}, topic = {nl-statistics;intercoder-agreement;} } @inproceedings{ dieugenio-webber_bl:1992a, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio and Bonnie Webber}, title = {Plan Recognition in Understanding Instructions}, booktitle = {First International Conference on Artificial Intelligence Planning Systems}, year = {1992}, missinginfo = {editor, pages, organization, publisher, address}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Pragmatics files. Venue is a guess.}, abstract = {Plan recognition is generally understood as the process of inferring the higher level goals that an action is meant to achieve. In this paper, we will discuss such inferences in the context of understanding and executing Natural Language instructions and show that they follow from the partial nature of Natural Language descriptions: borrowing the term from Lewis [1979], we collectively call them accommodation. Accommodation can be seen as a type of plan recognition: we will compare accommodation with other kinds of inferences that have been studied in the plan recognition literature -- in particular by Kautz [1990] and Pollack [1986].}, topic = {plan-recognition;nl-interpretation;} } @article{ dieugenio-webber_bl:1996a, author = {Barbara Di Eugenio and Bonnie Lynn Webber}, title = {Pragmatic Overloading in Natural Language Instructions}, journal = {International Journal of Expert Systems}, year = {1996}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {53--84}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {pragmatics;implicature;} } @article{ diez:1996a, author = {F.J. Di\'ez}, title = {Local Conditioning in {B}ayesian Networks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {87}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--20}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;conditioning-methods;} } @article{ diez:2000a, author = {Gustavo Fern\'andez Diez}, title = {Five Observations Concerning the Intended Meaning of the Intuitionistic Logical Constants}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {409--424}, topic = {foundations-of-intuitionistic-logic;} } @article{ diffie-hellman_me:1976a, author = {W. Diffie and M.E. Hellman}, title = {New Directions in Cryptography}, journal = {{IEEE} Transactions on Information Theory}, year = {1976}, volume = {22}, number = {5}, pages = {644--654}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {cryptography;} } @article{ difinetti_b:1937a1, author = {Bruno di Finetti}, title = {La Prevision: Ses Lois Logiques, Ses Sources Subjectives}, journal = {Annales de l'Institut Henri Poincare}, year = {1937}, volume = {7}, pages = {1--68}, xref = {English Translation: difinetti_b:1937a2}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @incollection{ difinetti_b:1937a2, author = {Bruno di Finetti}, title = {Foresight: Its Logical Laws, Its Subjective Sources}, booktitle = {Studies in Subjective Probability}, publisher = {Wiley}, year = {1964}, editor = {Henry E. Kyburg, Jr. and Howard E. Smokler}, pages = {53--118}, address = {New York}, note = {Translatd by Henry E. Kyburg, Jr. and Howard E. Smokler}, xref = {Translation of: difinetti_b:1937a1}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @article{ diggs:1952a, author = {B.J. Diggs}, title = {Counterfactual Conditionals}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1952}, volume = {61}, pages = {513--527}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Review: anderson_ar:1954b.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ dignum_f:1999a, author = {Frank Dignum}, title = {Autonomous Agents with Norms}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence and Law}, year = {1999}, volume = {7}, number = {1}, pages = {69--79}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no21}, abstract = {A method for forcing norms onto individual agents in a multi-agent system is presented. ... Agents are further assumed to act in accordance with advice obtained from a normative decision module, with which they can communicate. Norms act as global constraints on the evaluations performed in the decision module and hence no action that violates a norm will be suggested to any agent. ... The method strives to characterise real-time decision making in agents, in the presence of risk and uncertainty.}, topic = {deontic-logic;group-reasoning;multiagent-systems;social-institutions;} } @inproceedings{ dignum_f-etal:2000a, author = {Frank Dignum and David N. Morley and Liz Sonenberg and Lawrence Cavedon}, title = {Towards Socially Sophisticated {BDI} Agents}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {ICMAS} 4th International Conference on Multi-Agent Systems}, year = {2000}, pages = {111--118}, organization = {IEEE Computer Society}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {agent-architectures;social-reasoning;} } @article{ dignum_f-etal:2002a, author = {Frank Dignum and David Kinny and Liz Sonenberg}, title = {From Desires, Obligations and Norms to Goals}, journal = {Cognitive Science Quarterly}, year = {2002}, volume = {2}, number = {3--4}, pages = {407--430}, abstract = {... we argue that the inclusion of both desires and goals in the same model can be important, particularly in a Multi-Agent System context, where other sources of individual motivation such as obligations and norms may be present. This leads us to propose an extended BDI architecture in which obligations, norms and desires are distinguished from goals and explicitly represented. In this paper we consider suitable logical representations for and properties of these elements, and describe the basic method of operation of the architecture, focusing on how goal generation and goal maintenance may occur.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de22}, topic = {BDI-architectures;goal-formation;intention;} } @article{ dignum_fpm-etal:1996a, author = {Frank Dignum and John-Jules Ch. Meyer and Roel Wieringa}, title = {Free Choice and Contextually Permitted Actions}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1996}, volume = {57}, number = {1}, pages = {193--220}, topic = {deontic-logic;permission;nondeterministic-action;} } @article{ dignum_fpm-etal:2015a, author = {Frank Dignum and Virginia Dignum and Rui Prada and Catholijn Jonker}, title = {A Conceptual Architecture for Social Deliberation in Multi-Agent Organizations}, journal = {International Journal of Multiagent and Grid Systems}, year = {2015}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {147--166}, abstract = {In this paper, we explore how the concepts of social practices and social identities can be used to structure deliberations about interactions. We then show the consequences for the architecture and reasoning capabilities of these systems.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my21}, topic = {cognitive-architectures;social-reasoning;} } @phdthesis{ dignum_v:2004a, author = {VIrginia DIgnum}, title = {A Model for Organizational Interaction: Based on Agents, Founded in Logic}, school = {University of Utrecht}, year = {2004}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Utrecht}, url = {https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/39700309.pdf}, topic = {multiagent-systems;agent-communication;theory-of-organizations;} } @book{ dijkstra_ew:1976a, author = {Edsger W. Dijkstra}, title = {A Discipline of Programming}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1976}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, ISBN = {013215871X}, rtnote = {Umich Media Union Library, QA76.6 .D59.}, topic = {structured-programming;} } @book{ dijkstra_ew:1982a, author = {Edsger W. Dijkstra}, title = {Selected Writings on Computing: A Personal Perspective}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1982}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0387906525}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA76.24 .D541 1982.}, topic = {structured-programming;programming-languages;} } @book{ dijkstra_ew-scholten:1990a, author = {Edsger W. Dijkstra and Carel S. Scholten}, title = {Predicate Calculus and Program Semantics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1990}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0387969578}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 9.35 .D551 1989.}, topic = {semantics-of-programming-languages;} } @book{ dijkstra_t-desmedt:1996a, editor = {Ton Dijkstra and Koenrad de Smedt}, title = {Computational Psycholinguistics: {AI} And Connectionist Models of Human Language Processing}, publisher = {Taylor and Francis}, year = {1996}, address = {Bristol, Pennsylvania}, ISBN10 = {074840466X}, topic = {psycholinguistics;} } @book{ dijstra_ew-scholten:1990a, author = {Edsger W. Dijstra and Carol S. Scholten}, title = {Predicate Calculus and Program Semantics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1990}, address = {New York}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {semantics-of-programming-languages;} } @incollection{ dik-kahrel:1996a, author = {Simon C. Dik and Peter Kahrel}, title = {Generating Sentences Using {P}rof{G}lot}, booktitle = {Trends in Natural Language Generation, An Artificial Intelligence Perspective, Fourth {E}uropean Workshop, {EWNLG} '93, Pisa, Italy, April 28-30, 1993, Selected Papers}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science}, volume = {1036}, year = {1996}, editor = {Giovanni Adorni and Michael Zock}, pages = {314--330}, address = {New York}, topic = {Prolog;functional-grammar;nl-generation;} } @article{ dikovsky_a:2017a, author = {Alexander Dikovsky}, title = {Linguistic $\leftrightarrow$ Rational Agents' Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2017}, volume = {26}, number = {4}, pages = {341--437}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @article{ dillenburg-nelson_pc:1994a, author = {John F. Dillenburg and Peter C. Nelson}, title = {Perimeter Search}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {65}, number = {1}, pages = {165--178}, acontentnote = {Abstract: A technique for improving heuristic search efficiency is presented. This admissible technique is referred to as perimeter search since it relies on a perimeter of nodes around the goal. The perimeter search technique works as follows: First, the perimeter is generated by a breadth-first search from the goal to all nodes at a given depth d. The path back to the goal along with each perimeter node's state descriptor are stored in a table. The search then proceeds normally from the start state. During each node generation, however, the current node is compared to each node on the perimeter. If a match is found, the search can terminate with the path being formed with the path from the start to the perimeter node together with the previously stored path from the perimeter node to the goal. Both analytical and experimental results are presented to show that perimeter search is more efficient than IDA* and A* in terms of time complexity and number of nodes expanded for two problem domains. }, topic = {search;} } @book{ dilley:1999a, editor = {Roy Dilley}, title = {Sixth Workshop in Social Anthropology}, publisher = {Berghahn Books}, year = {1999}, ISBN = {1-57181-700-X}, missinginfo = {address}, topic = {context;cultural-anthropology;} } @book{ dillon:1977a, author = {George L. Dillon}, title = {Introduction to Contemporary Linguistic Semantics}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1977}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0-13-479451-6}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @book{ dilman:1999a, author = {Ilham Dilman}, title = {Free Will: An Historical and Philosophical Introduction}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1999}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0 415 20055 4(Hb), 0 415 20056 3 (Pb)}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @article{ dilworth:2006a, author = {John Dilworth}, title = {A Reflexive Dispositional Analysis of Mechanistic Perception}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2006}, volume = {16}, number = {4}, pages = {479--493}, abstract = {$\ldots$ perceptual mechanisms enhance evolutionary fitness by facilitating sensorily mediated causal interactions between an organism Z and items X in its environment. A `reflexive' theory of perception of this kind is outlined, according to which an organism Z perceives an item X just in case X causes a sensory organ zi of Z to cause Z to acquire a disposition toward the very same item X that caused the perception. $\ldots$ }, topic = {perception;dispositions;} } @article{ dilworth:2008a, author = {John Dilworth}, title = {Semantic Naturalization via Interactive Perceptual Causality}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {4}, pages = {527-546}, abstract = {A novel semantic naturalization program is proposed. Its three main differences from informational semantics approaches are as follows. First, it makes use of a perceptually based, four-factor interactive causal relation in place of a simple nomic covariance relation. Second, it does not attempt to globally naturalize all semantic concepts, but instead it appeals to a broadly realist interpretation of natural science, in which the concept of propositional truth is off-limits to naturalization attempts. And third, it treats all semantic concepts as being purely abstract, so that concrete cognitive states are only indexed by them rather than instantiating them. }, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ dilworth:2010a, author = {John Dilworth}, title = {More on the Interactive Indexing Semantic Theory}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {455--474}, abstract = {This article further explains and develops a recent, comprehensive semantic naturalization theory, namely the interactive indexing (II) theory as described in my 2008 Minds and Machines article `Semantic Naturalization via Interactive Perceptual Causality' (Vol. 18, pp. 527--546). }, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @unpublished{ dimaio-zanardo:1995a, author = {Maria Di Maio and Alberto Zanardo}, title = {Synchronized Histories in {P}rior-{T}homason Representation of Branching Time}, year = {1995}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {branching-time;} } @techreport{ dimaio-zanardo:1996a1, author = {Maria Di Maio and Alberto Zanardo}, title = {A {G}abbay-Rule Free Axiomatization of $T\times W$ Validity}, institution = {Universit\'a degli Studia di Padova}, number = {27}, year = {1996}, address = {Padova}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under Zanardo.}, xref = {Journal Publication: dimaio-zanardo:1998a.}, topic = {branching-time;completeness-theorems;tmix-project;} } @article{ dimaio-zanardo:1996a2, author = {Maria Concetta Di Maio and Alberto Zanardo}, title = {A {G}abbay-Rule Free Axiomatization of $T{\times}W$ Validity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {27}, number = {5}, pages = {435--487}, xref = {Tech Report: dimaio-zanardo:1996a1.}, topic = {branching-time;completeness-theorems;tmix-project; temporal-logic;} } @article{ dimitri:2003a, author = {Nicola Dimitri}, title = {Coordination in an Email Game with `Almost Common Knowledge{'}}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2003}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {1--11}, topic = {game-theory;mutual-beliefs;communication-protocols;} } @incollection{ dimitriades:1999a, author = {Alexis Dimitriades}, title = {Reciprocal Interpretation with Functional Pronouns}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {96--102}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {reciprical-constructions;} } @inproceedings{ dimitriadis:1999a, author = {Alexis Dimitriadis}, title = {Reconciling Dependent Plurals with Each Other}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IX}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1999}, editor = {Tanya Matthews and Devon Strolovitch}, pages = {52--69}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;anaphora;} } @inproceedings{ dimitriadis:2001a, author = {Alexis Dimitriadis}, title = {Function Domains in Variable-Free Semantics}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2001}, editor = {Rachel Hastings and Brendan Jackson and Zsofia Zvolenszky}, pages = {134--151}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;variable-free-semantics;} } @book{ dimitriou:1977a, author = {Anton Dimitriou}, title = {History of Logic, Volume {I}}, publisher = {Abacus Press}, year = {1977}, address = {Tunbridge Wells}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. History of Logic Shelves.}, isbn = {0-85626-143-2}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @book{ dimitriou:1977b, author = {Anton Dimitriou}, title = {History of Logic, Volume {II}}, publisher = {Abacus Press}, year = {1977}, address = {Tunbridge Wells}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. History of Logic Shelves.}, isbn = {0-85626-143-2}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @book{ dimitriou:1977c, author = {Anton Dimitriou}, title = {History of Logic, Volume {III}}, publisher = {Abacus Press}, year = {1977}, address = {Tunbridge Wells}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. History of Logic Shelves.}, isbn = {0-85626-143-2}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @book{ dimitriou:1977d, author = {Anton Dimitriou}, title = {History of Logic, Volume {IV}}, publisher = {Abacus Press}, year = {1977}, address = {Tunbridge Wells}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. History of Logic Shelves.}, isbn = {0-85626-143-2}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dimitrova-etal:1998a, author = {Ludmila Dimitrova and Tomaz Erjavec and Nancy Ide and Heiki Jaan Kaalep and Vladimir Petkevic and Dan Tufis}, title = {Multext-East: Parallel and Comparable Corpora and Lexicons for Six Central and Eastern European Languages}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {315--319}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;} } @incollection{ dimitrovavulchanova:2012a, author = {Mila Dimitrova-Vulchanova}, title = {Voice}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Tense and Aspect}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Robert I. Binnick}, pages = {939--959}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {tense-aspect;nl-voice;} } @article{ dimopoulos_y:1992a, author = {Yannis Dimopoulos}, title = {On the Semantics of Inheritance Networks}, journal = {Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {19--28}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @incollection{ dimopoulos_y:1994a, author = {Yannis Dimopoulos}, title = {The Computational Value of Joint Consistency}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Craig Mac{N}ish and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and David Pearce}, pages = {50}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {default-logic;} } @incollection{ dimopoulos_y-etal:2000a, author = {Yannis Dimopoulos and Bernhard Nebel and Francesca Toni}, title = {Finding Admissible and Preferred Arguments Can be Very Hard}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {53--61}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {... we analyse the computational complexity of credulous and sceptical reasoning under the semantics of admissible and preferred arguments for (the propositional variant of) some well-known frame works for nonmonotonic reasoning, i.e. Theorist, Circumscription and Autoepistemic Logic. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ dimopoulos_y-etal:2002a, author = {Yannis Dimopoulos and Bernhard Nebel and Francesca Toni}, title = {On the Computational Complexity of Assumption-Based Argumentation for Default Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {141}, number = {1--2}, pages = {57--78}, xref = {Discussion of: bondarenko-etal:1997a}, topic = {non-monotonic-reasoning;abduction;argument-based-defeasible-reasoning; argument-based-defeasible-reasoning;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ dimopoulos_y-magirou:1994a, author = {Yannis Dimopoulos and Vanegis Magirou}, title = {A Graph Theoretic Approach to Default Logic}, journal = {Information and Computation Archive}, year = {1994}, volume = {112}, number = {2}, pages = {239--256}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;default-logic;inheritance-theory;} } @article{ dinaso:2002a, author = {Mauro Di Naso}, title = {An Axiomatic Presentation of the Nonstandard Methods in Mathematics}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {67}, number = {1}, pages = {315--325}, topic = {nonstandard-set-theory;} } @inproceedings{ ding_y-palmer_m:2005a, author = {Yuan Ding and Martha Palmer}, title = {Machine Translation Using Probabilistic Synchronous Dependency Insertion Grammars}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {541--548}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1067}, topic = {statistical-nlp;machine-translation;} } @article{ ding_yf:2021a, author = {Yifeng Ding}, title = {On the Logic of Belief and Propositional Quantification}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {5}, pages = {1143--1198}, abstract = {We consider extending the modal logic KD45, commonly taken as the baseline system for belief, with propositional quantifiers that can be used to formalize natural language sentences such as "everything I believe is true" or "there is something that I neither believe nor disbelieve." Our main results are axiomatizations of the logics with propositional quantifiers of natural classes of complete Boolean algebras with an operator (BAOs) validating KD45. Among them is the class of complete, atomic, and completely multiplicative BAOs validating KD45. Hence, by duality, we also cover the usual method of adding propositional quantifiers to normal modal logics by considering their classes of Kripke frames. In addition, we obtain decidability for all the concrete logics we discuss.}, topic = {modal-logic;propositional-quantifiers;} } @article{ dinges_a:2015a, author = {Alexander Dinges}, title = {The Many-Relations Problem for Adverbialism}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2015}, volume = {75}, number = {2}, pages = {231--237}, DOI = {doi:10.1093/analys/anv020}, abstract = {Adverbialists propose to analyse sentences of the form 'Jane has a blue afterimage' as 'Jane afterimages blue-ly'. One commonly raised objection to adverbialism is the many-property problem, the problem of accounting for sentences that seem to ascribe more than one property to an afterimage (e.g. 'Jane has a blue and square afterimage'). ... In this note, ... I will argue that the many-property problem resurfaces at the level of relations and that, at this level, no solution for the problem is in sight.}, topic = {adverbs;epistemology;phenomenalism;} } @book{ dingwall_wo:1971a, editor = {William Orr Dingwall}, title = {A Survey of Linguistic Science}, publisher = {Privately Published, Linguistics Program, University of Maryland.}, year = {1971}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Chu-Wu Kim, "Experimental Phonetics" 2. Harry A. Whitaker, "Neurolinguistics" 3. Philip B. Gough, "Experimental Psycholinguistics" 4. Dan I. Slobin, "Developmental Psycholinguistics" 5. William Labov, "Methodology" 6. Theodore Lightner, "Generative Phonology" 7. Paul Kiparsky, "Historical Linguistics" 8. Barbara Hall Partee, "Linguistics Metatheory" 9. Robert E. Wall, "Mathematical Linguistics" 10. Joyce Friedman, "Computational Linguistics" 11. William Orr Dingwall, "Linguistics as Psychology" }, topic = {linguistic-theory-survey;} } @incollection{ dingwall_wo:1971b, author = {William Orr Dingwall}, title = {Linguistics as Psychology}, booktitle = {A Survey of Linguistic Science}, publisher = {Privately Published, Linguistics Program, University of Maryland.}, year = {1971}, editor = {William Orr Dingwall}, pages = {758--802}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {foundations-of-linguistics;philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @inproceedings{ dini-etal:1998a, author = {Luca Dini and Vittorio Di Tomaso and Fr\'ed\'erique Segond}, title = {Error Driven Word Sense Disambiguation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {320--321}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;machine-learning;} } @incollection{ dinola-etal:1991a, author = {Antonio di Nola and Witold Pedrycz and Salvatore Sessa}, title = {Difference Fuzzy Relation Equations: Studies in Dynamical Systems}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {161--165}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {fuzzy-logic;dynamic-systems;} } @book{ dinsmore:1981a, author = {John D. Dinsmore}, title = {The Inheritance of Presuppositions}, publisher = {John Benjamin}, year = {1981}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @book{ dinsmore:1981b, author = {John D. Dinsmore}, title = {Pragmatics, Formal Theory, and the Analysis of Presupposition}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @book{ dinsmore:1991a, author = {John Dinsmore}, title = {Partitioned Representations: A Study in Mental Representation, Language Understanding, and Linguistic Structure}, Publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1991}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0792313488}, xref = {Review: ballim:1995a.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 37.5 .C66 D561 1991.}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;psycholinguistics;} } @book{ dinsmore:1992a, editor = {John Dinsmore}, title = {Symbolic and Connectionist Paradigms: Closing the Gap}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1992}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, ISBN = {080581079X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF 311 .S95 1992.}, topic = {connectionist-plus-symbolic-architectures;} } @article{ dinsmore_j:1982a, author = {John Dinsmore}, title = {The Semantic Nature of Reichenbach's Tense System}, journal = {Glossa}, year = {1982}, volume = {15}, pages = {216-239}, topic = {Reichenbach;temporal-logic;} } @article{ dinverno-etal:2012a, author = {Mark d'Inverno and Michael Luck and Pablo Noriega and Juan A. Rodriguez-Aguilar and Carles Sierra}, title = {Communicating Open Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {186}, pages = {38--94}, topic = {agent-communication;artificial-institutions; artificial-communication;} } @inproceedings{ dionne:1992a, author = {Bob Dionne}, title = {Structural Subsumption as a Basis for Intensional Semantics}, booktitle = {Working Notes, {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Issues in Description Logics: Users Meet Developers}, year = {1992}, editor = {Robert MacGregor}, pages = {27--30}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {description-logics;algebraic-semantics;} } @techreport{ dionne-etal:1992a, author = {Robert Dionne and Eric Mays and Frank J. Oles}, title = {Disjunctive Concept Algebras}, institution = {{IBM}}, number = {RC 18458}, year = {1992}, contentnote = {An abstact, algebraic semantics for description logics. See brink-schmidt_ph:1992a.}, topic = {description-logics;algebraic-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ dionne-etal:1992b, author = {Robert Dionne and Eric Mays and Frank J. Oles}, title = {A Non-Well-Founded Approach to Terminological Cycles}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, editor = {Paul S. Rosenbloom and Peter Szolovits}, pages = {761--766}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {kr;classifier-algorithms;description-logics;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ dionne-etal:1993a, author = {Robert Dionne and Eric Mays and Frank J. Oles}, title = {The Equivalence of Model-Theoretic and Structural Subsumption in Description Logics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {710--716}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, contentnote = {Proves a result about an abstact, algebraic semantics for description logics. See dionne-etal:1992a, brink-schmidt_ph:1992a.}, topic = {description-logics;algebraic-semantics;} } @article{ dipellegrino_g-etal:1992a, author = {G. di Pellegrino and L. Fadiga and L. Fogassi and V. Gallese and G. Rizzolatti}, title = {Understanding Motor Events: A Neurophysiological Study}, journal = {Experimental Brain Research}, year = {1992}, volume = {91}, pages = {176--180}, abstract = {Neurons of the rostral part of inferior premotor cortex of the monkey discharge during goal-directed hand movements such as grasping, holding, and tearing. We report here that many of these neurons become active also when the monkey observes specific, meaningful hand movements performed by the experimenters. }, doi = {http://doi.org/10.1007/BF00230027}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ dipert:1994a, author = {Randall R. Dipert}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}inds, Brains and Machines}, by {G}eoffrey {B}rown}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {370--373}, xref = {Review of: brown_g1:1989.}, topic = {machine-intelligence;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dipriso:2002a, author = {Carlos Augusto Di Priso}, title = {Review of First and Second Editions of {\it Computable Functions, Logic, and the Foundations of Mathematics}, by {R}ichard {L}. {E}pstein and {W}alter {A}. {C}arnielli}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {101--104}, xref = {Review of: epstein_rl-carnielli_wa:1989a, epstein_rl-carnielli_wa:2000a.}, topic = {computability;goedels-first-theorem;goedels-second-theorem;} } @article{ disalle_r:2002a, author = {Robert DiSalle}, title = {Conventionalism and Modern Physics: A Reassessment}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2002}, volume = {36}, number = {2}, pages = {169--200}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;conventionalism;} } @incollection{ disciullo:1992a, author = {Anna-Maria Di Sciullo}, title = {Deverbal Compounds and the External Argument}, booktitle = {Thematic Structure: Its Role in Grammar}, publisher = {Foris Publications}, year = {1992}, editor = {Iggy M. Roca}, pages = {65--78}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {thematic-roles;argument-structure;derivational-morphology;} } @book{ disciullo:1997a, editor = {Anna-Maria di Sciullo}, title = {Projections and Interface Conditions: Essays on Modularity}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0195104145}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 37 .P7441 1997.}, topic = {cognitive-modularity;} } @incollection{ disciullo:1999a, author = {Anna-Maria Di Sciullo}, title = {Formal Context and Morphological Analysis}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {105--118}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;morphology;} } @book{ disciullo-williams_e:1987a, author = {Anna-Maria Di Sciullo and Edwin Williams}, title = {On the Definition of Word}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1987}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-54047-9}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves. ON LOAN SGT 1/2016}, topic = {lexicon;nl-syntax;morphology;} } @inproceedings{ distel_f-etal:2014a, author = {Felix Distel and Jamal Atif and Isabelle Bloch}, title = {Concept Dissimilarity with Triangle Inequality}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {614--617}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In this work we present a theoretical framework for dissimilarity measures ... Our approach is based on concept relaxations, operators that perform stepwise generalizations on concepts. We prove that from any relaxation we can derive a dissimilarity measure that satisfies a number or properties that are important when comparing concepts. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {dissimilarity-measures;description-logics;} } @article{ ditter_a:2022a, author = {Andreas Ditter}, title = {Essence and Necessity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {3}, pages = {653--690}, abstract = {... This paper defends the view that ... metaphysical necessity is a special case of essence. ... The argument is made against the backdrop of a novel, higher-order logic of essence (HLE), whose core features are introduced in the first part of the paper. ... I investigate three different reductive hypotheses and argue that two of them fare better than their non-reductive rivals: they are simpler, more natural, and more systematic. Specifically, I argue that one candidate reduction, according to which metaphysical necessity is truth in virtue of the nature of all propositions, is superior to the others, ...}, topic = {metaphysical-necessity;reduction;} } @book{ dittmar:1976a, author = {Norbert Dittmar}, title = {Sociolinguistics: A Critical Survey of Theory and Application}, publisher = {Edward Arnold}, year = {1976}, address = {London}, note = {translated from the German by Peter Sand.}, rtnote = {HILLMAN P325 F66 1987}, topic = {sociolinguistics;discourse-analysis;} } @book{ dittmar:1976b, author = {Norbert Dittmar}, title = {Sociolinguistics: An International Handbook of the Science of Language and Society}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1976}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {HILLMAN P40 S633 1987}, topic = {sociolinguistics;} } @article{ divay-vitale:1997a, author = {Michel Divay and Anthony J. Vitale}, title = {Algorithms for Grapheme-Phoneme Translation for {E}nglish and {F}rench: Applications}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, volume = {23}, number = {4}, pages = {495--523}, topic = {grapheme-phoneme-translation;} } @article{ divers_j:1995a, author = {John Divers}, title = {Modal Fictionalism Cannot Deliver Possible Worlds Semantics}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1995}, volume = {55}, number = {2}, pages = {81--89}, topic = {philosophy-of-possible-worlds;} } @article{ divers_j:1999a, author = {John Divers}, title = {A Modal Fictionalist Result}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1999}, volume = {33}, number = {3}, pages = {317--346}, topic = {philosophy-of-possible-worlds;} } @book{ divers_j:2002a, author = {John Divers}, title = {Possible Worlds}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2002}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0-415-15555-X}, rtnote = {UMich Library (GRAD) B8355 .D58 2002}, topic = {philosophy-of-possible-worlds;} } @book{ dix_a:1993a, author = {Alan Dix}, title = {Human-Computer Interaction}, publisher = {Prentice Hall}, year = {1993}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0134372115 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 H851 1993.}, topic = {HCI;} } @book{ dix_a:1998a, author = {Alan Dix}, title = {Human-Computer Interaction}, publisher = {Prentice Hall Europe}, edition = {2}, year = {1998}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0132398648}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 H851 1998.}, topic = {HCI;} } @incollection{ dix_j:1991a, author = {J\"urgen Dix}, title = {Cumulativity and Rationality in Semantics of Normal Logic Programs}, booktitle = {Nonmonotonic and Inductive Logics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {J\"urgen Dix and Klaus P. Jantke and P.H. Schmidt}, pages = {13--37}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;logic-programming;cumulativity;} } @incollection{ dix_j:1992a, author = {J\"urgen Dix}, title = {A Framework for Representing and Characterizing Semantics of Logic Programs}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {591--602}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;logic-programming;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ dix_j:1995a, author = {J\"urgen Dix}, title = {A Classification Theory of Semantics of Normal Logic Programs {I}: Strong Properties}, journal = {Fundamenta Mathematicae}, year = {1995}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {227--255}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @article{ dix_j:1995b, author = {J\"urgen Dix}, title = {A Classification Theory of Semantics of Normal Logic Programs {II}: Weak Properties}, journal = {Fundamenta Mathematicae}, year = {1995}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {257--288}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @incollection{ dix_j:1996a, author = {J\"urgen Dix}, title = {Semantics of Logic Programs: Their Intuitions and Formal Properties, An Overview}, booktitle = {Logic, Action, and Information: Essays on Logic in Philosophy and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, editor = {Andr\'e Fuhrmann and Hans Rott}, pages = {241--327}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {Looks like a useful survey.}, topic = {logic-programming;fixpoints;semantics-of-programming-languages;} } @book{ dix_j-etal:1991a, editor = {J\"urgen Dix and Klaus P. Jantke and P.H. Schmidt}, title = {Nonmonotonic and Inductive Logics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Gerhard Brewka and David C. Makinson and Karl Schlechta, Cumulative Inference Relations for JTMS and Logic Programming 2. J\"urgen Dix, Cumulativity and Rationality in Semantics of Normal Logic Programs 3. Heinich Herre, Nonmonotonic Reasoning and Logic Programs 4. Michael Freund, Supracompact Inference Operations 5. Gerhard J\"ager, Notions of Nonmonotonic Derivability 6. Wiktor Marek and Grigori F. Schwartz and Miroslaw Truszczynski, Ranges of Strong Modal Nonmonotonic Logics 7. Helmut Thiele, On Generation of Cumulative Inference Operators by Default Deduction Rules 8. Emil Weydert, Qualitative Magnitude Reasoning: Towards a New Syntax and Semantics for Default Reasoning 9. Klaus P. Jantke, Monotonic and Nonmonotonic Inductive Inference of Functions and Patterns 10. Steffen Lange, A Note on Polynomial-Time Inference of $k$-Variable Pattern Languages 11. Rolf Wiehagen, A Thesis in Inductive Inference 12. Thomas Zeugmann, Inductive Inference of Optimal Programs: Survey and Open Problems 13. J\"urgen Kalinski, Autoepistemic Expansions with Incomplete Belief Introspection }, rtnote = {COMPUTER SCI LIB QA76.73 N66 1991}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logics;induction;} } @book{ dix_j-etal:1995a, editor = {J\"urgen Dix and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Teodor Przymusinski}, title = {Non-Monotonic Extensions of Logic Programming}, year = {1993}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540564543}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.63 .N681}, rtnote = {Library has 1994-1996}, topic = {logic-programming;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @book{ dix_j-etal:1998a, editor = {J\"urgen Dix and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Teodor C. Przymusinski}, title = {Logic Programming and Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540649581 (softcover)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.63 .L7371 1997}, topic = {logic-programming;kr;} } @book{ dix_j-etal:1998b, editor = {J\"urgen Dix and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Ulrich Furbach}, title = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence European Workshop, {JELIA}'98, Dagstuhl, Germany, October 12-15, 1998}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3-540-65141-1 (Softcover)}, contentnote = {Blurb: The 25 revised full papers presented were carefully selected from a total of 65 submissions. Also included are two abstracts of invited talks. The papers are organized in topical sections on logic programming, epistemic logics, theorem proving, non-monotonic reasoning, non-standard logics, knowledge representation, and higher order logics. }, topic = {logics-in-AI;} } @article{ dix_j-etal:2001a, author = {J\"urgen Dix and Sarit Kraus and V.S. Subrahmanian}, title = {Temporal Agent Programs}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {127}, number = {1}, pages = {87--135}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;logic-programming; agent-oriented-programming;} } @article{ dix_j-makinson_dc:1992a, author = {J\"urgen Dix and David C. Makinson}, title = {The Relationship Between {KLM} and {MAK} Models for Nonmonotonic Inference Operations}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1992}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {131--140}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;model-preference;} } @book{ dixit_a-nalebuff_b:1991a, author = {Avinash Dixit and Barry Nalebuff}, title = {Thinking Strategically}, publisher = {Norton}, year = {1991}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-393-32946-1}, abstract = {Thinking Strategically is a crash course in outmaneuvering any rival. This entertaining guide builds on scores of case studies taken from business, sports, the movies, politics, and gambling. It outlines the basics of good strategy making and then shows how you can apply them in any area of your life.}, topic = {practical-reasoning-self-help;} } @article{ dixon_c-etal:2002a, author = {Clare Dixon and Michael Fisher and Alexander Bolotov}, title = {Clausal Resolution in a Logic of Rational Agency}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {139}, number = {1}, pages = {47--89}, topic = {branching-time;epistemic-logic;theorem-proving;} } @article{ dixon_l-etal:2009a, author = {Lucas Dixon and Alan Smaill and Tracy Tsang}, title = {Plans, Actions, and Dialogues Using Linear Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2009}, volume = {18}, number = {2}, pages = {251--289}, topic = {linear-logic;planning-formalisms;} } @incollection{ dixon_rmw:1971a, author = {Robert M.W. Dixon}, title = {A Method of Semantic Description}, booktitle = {Semantics: An Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1971}, editor = {Danny D. Steinberg and Leon A. Jacobovits}, pages = {436--471}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {Australian-languages;lexical-semantics;structural-semantics;} } @book{ dixon_rmw:1982a, author = {Robert M.W. Dixon}, title = {Where Have All the Adjectives Gone? And Other Essays in Semantics and Syntax}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1982}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {902793309X}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate 805 J36 v.107.}, topic = {adjectives;universal-grammar;typology;} } @incollection{ dixon_rmw:2004a, author = {Robert M.W. Dixon}, title = {Adjective Classes in Typological Perspective}, booktitle = {Adjective Classes: A Cross-Linguistic Typology}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Robert M.W. Dixon and Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald}, pages = {1--49}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {adjectives;universal-grammar;typology;} } @book{ dixon_rmw-aikhenvald:2004a, editor = {Robert M.W. Dixon and Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald}, title = {Adjective Classes: A Cross-Linguistic Typology}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0199270937}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate P 273 .A331 2004.}, topic = {adjectives;universal-grammar;typology;} } @techreport{ dixon_s-foo:1992a, author = {Simon Dixon and Norman Y. Foo}, title = {Encoding the {ATMS} in {AGM} Logic (Revised)}, institution = {Computer Science Department, University of Sydney}, number = {441}, year = {1992}, address = {Sydney}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {belief-revision;truth-maintenance;} } @inproceedings{ dixon_s-foo:1993a, author = {Simon Dixon and Norman Y. Foo}, title = {Connections between the {ATMS} and {AGM} Belief Revision}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {534--539}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {truth-maintenance;belief-revision;} } @article{ dixon_ts:2020a, author = {T. Scott Dixon}, title = {Between Atomism and Superatomism}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {6}, pages = {1215---1241}, abstract = {... superatomism is the claim that parthood is well-founded, which implies that every proper parthood chain terminates, and has been discussed as a stronger alternative to standard atomism. Third, there is a principle that lies between these two theses in terms of its relative strength: strong atomism, the claim that every maximal proper parthood chain terminates. I prove ... logical relationships which hold amongst these three atomistic principles, and argue that, whether one adopts classical extensional mereology or a system strictly weaker than it in which parthood is a partial order, standard atomism is a more defensible addition to one's mereology than either of the other two principles ...}, topic = {mereology;} } @article{ djalali_aj:2014a, author = {Alex J. Djalali}, title = {Synthetic logic}, journal = {Linguistic Issues in Language Technology}, year = {2014}, volume = {9}, pages = {151--166}, DOI = {https://doi.org/10.33011/lilt.v9i.1333}, abstract = {... MacCartney (2009) and MacCartney and Manning (2009) (henceforth M&M) recently developed an algorithmic approach to natural logic that attempts to combine insights from both monotonicity calculi and various syllogistic fragments to derive compositionally the relation between two NL sentences from the relations of their parts. ... The purpose of this paper is to give M&M's [join] table a proper logical treatment. As I will show, the table has the underlying form of a syllogistic fragment and relies on a sort of generalized transitive reasoning.}, topic = {textual-inference;} } @article{ djalali_aj:2017a, author = {Alex J. Djalali}, title = {A Constructive Solution to the Ranking Problem in Partial Order Optimality Theory}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2017}, volume = {26}, number = {2}, pages = {89--108}, topic = {optimality-theory;} } @phdthesis{ djordjevic:2005a, author = {Vladan Djordjevic}, title = {Counterfactuals}, school = {University of Alberta}, year = {2005}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Edmonton}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ djukic:2001a, author = {George Djukic}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Limits of Mathematics: A Course on Information Theory and the Limits of Reasoning}, by {G}regory {J}. {C}haitin}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {68}, number = {3}, pages = {407--410}, xref = {Review of: chaitin:1998a.}, topic = {algorithmic-information-theory;algorithmic-complexity;} } @incollection{ dmello_sk-graesser_ac:2015a, author = {Sidney K. D'Mello and Art C. Graesser}, title = {Feeling, Thinking, and Computing with Affect-Aware Learning Technologies}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {419--434}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;emotional-computing;} } @article{ doan-halevy:2005a, author = {AnHai Doan and Alon Y. Halevy}, title = {Semantic Integration Research in the Database Community: A Brief Survey}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2005}, volume = {26}, number = {1}, pages = {83--94}, topic = {knowledge-integration;databases;} } @inproceedings{ doannguyen:1998a, author = {Hai Doan-Nguyen}, title = {Accumulation of Lexical Sets: Acquisition of Dictionary Resources and Production of New Lexical Sets}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {330--335}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {computational-lexicography;automated-lexical-acquisition;} } @article{ dobbyn-stuart_s:2003a, author = {Chris Dobbyn and Susan Stuart}, title = {The Self as an Embedded Agent}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2003}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {187--201}, abstract = {In this paper we consider the concept of a self-aware agent. $\ldots$ }, topic = {introspection;embodiment;philosophy-od-mind;} } @article{ dobler_t:2019a, author = {Tamara Dobler}, title = {Occasion-Sensitive Semantics for Objective Predicates}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {42}, number = {5}, pages = {451--474}, abstract = {In this paper I propose a partition semantics ... for sentences containing objective predicates that takes into account the phenomenon of occasion-sensitivity associated with so-called Travis cases ... . The key idea is that the set of worlds in which a sentence is true has a more complex structure as a result of different ways in which it is made true. Different ways may have different capacities to support the attainment of a contextually salient domain goal. I suggest that goal-conduciveness decides whether some utterance of a sentence is accepted as true on a particular occasion at a given world. ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap20}, topic = {context;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ dobrinen:2003a, author = {Natasha Dobrinen}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} Mathematical Introduction to Logic}, by {H}.{B}. {E}nderton}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2003}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {406--407}, xref = {Review of: enderton:2001a.}, topic = {logic-intro;} } @inproceedings{ dobroviesorin_c:1997a, author = {Carmen Dobrovie-Sorin}, title = {Types of Predicates and the Representation of Existential Readings}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1997}, editor = {Aaron Lawson}, pages = {117--134}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;existential-rules;} } @incollection{ dobroviesorin_c:2012a, author = {Carmen Dobrovie-Sorin}, title = {Generic Plural and Mass Indefinites}, booktitle = {Genericity}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Alda Mari and Claire Beyssade and Fabio Del Prete}, pages = {93--115}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {generics;plural;mass-terms;mass-term-semantics;} } @article{ dodd_j:1997a, author = {Julian Dodd}, title = {On a {D}avidsonian Objection to Minimalism}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1997}, volume = {57}, number = {4}, pages = {267--272}, xref = {Commentary on: horwich:1990a}, topic = {truth;deflationary-analyses;} } @article{ dodd_j:2010a, author = {Julian Dodd}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}ruth and Truth-Making}, edited by {E}. {J}onathan {L}owe and {A}dolf {R}ami}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2010}, volume = {70}, number = {3}, pages = {567--571}, xref = {Review of: lowe_ej-rami_a:2009a}, topic = {truth-making;} } @article{ doder_d-ognjanovic_z:2017a, author = {Dragan Doder and Zoran Ognjanovi\'c}, title = {Probabilistic Logics with Independence and Confirmation}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2017}, volume = {105}, number = {5}, pages = {843--969}, topic = {probability-semantics;} } @article{ dodigcrnkovic:2003a, author = {Gordana Dodig-Crnkovic}, title = {Shifting the Paradigm of Philosophy of Science: Philosophy of Information and a New Renaissance}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2003}, volume = {13}, number = {1}, pages = {521--536}, abstract = {Computing is changing the traditional field of Philosophy of Science in a very profound way. $\ldots$ }, topic = {philosophy-of-science;philosophy-and-computer-science;} } @article{ dodigcrnkovic:2011a, author = {Gordana Dodig-Crnkovic}, title = {Significance of Models of Computation, from {T}uring Model to Natural Computation}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {301--322}, abstract = {The increased interactivity and connectivity of computational devices along with the spreading of computational tools and computational thinking across the fields, has changed our understanding of the nature of computing. In the course of this development computing models have been extended from the initial abstract symbol manipulating mechanisms of stand-alone, discrete sequential machines, to the models of natural computing in the physical world, generally concurrent asynchronous processes capable of modelling living systems, their informational structures and dynamics on both symbolic and sub-symbolic information processing levels. Present account of models of computation highlights several topics of importance for the development of new understanding of computing and its role: natural computation and the relationship between the model and physical implementation, interactivity as fundamental for computational modelling of concurrent information processing systems such as living organisms and their networks, and the new developments in logic needed to support this generalized framework. Computing understood as information processing is closely related to natural sciences; it helps us recognize connections between sciences, and provides a unified approach for modeling and simulating of both living and non-living systems. }, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;} } @book{ doedens:1994a, author = {Crist-Jan Doedens}, title = {Text Databases: One Database Model and Several Retrieval Languages}, publisher = {Editions Rodopi}, year = {1994}, missinginfo = {address}, ISBN = {90-5183-729-1}, xref = {Review: ide:1998a}, topic = {textual-databases;} } @article{ doerge:2010a, author = {Friedrich Christoph Doerge}, title = {The Collapse of Insensitive Semantics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2010}, volume = {33}, number = {2}, pages = {117--140}, topic = {context-sensitivity;} } @article{ doering:1997a, author = {Frank D\"oring}, title = {The {R}amsey Test and Conditional Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1997}, volume = {26}, number = {4}, pages = {359--376}, topic = {CCCP;conditionals;probability-kinematics;} } @incollection{ doetjes-honcoop:1997a, author = {Jenny Doetjes and Martin Honcoop}, title = {The Semantics of Event-Based Readings: A Case for Pair-Quantification}, booktitle = {Ways of Scope Taking}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {Anna Szabolcsi}, pages = {263--310}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;nl-quantifiers;events;Aktionsarten;measures;} } @incollection{ doetjes_j:2013a, author = {Jenny Doetjes}, title = {Count/Mass Distinctions across Languages}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 3}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {2559--2580}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {mass-terms;mass-term-semantics;nl-semantics;typology;language-universals;} } @inproceedings{ doetjes_j-etal:2009a, author = {Jenny Doetjes and Camelia Constantinescu and Kate\v{r}ina Sou\v{c}kov\'a}, title = {A Neo-{K}leinian Approach to Comparatives}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 19th Semantics and Linguistic Theory Conference: {SALT 19}}, year = {2009}, editor = {Ed Cormany and Satoshi Ito and David Lutz}, pages = {124--141}, publisher = {Linguistic Society of America}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {nl-semantics;comparative-constructions;} } @book{ doets:1996a, author = {Kees Doets}, title = {Basic Model Theory}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1996}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-57586-049-X (hard cover), 1-57586-048-1 (paperback)}, xref = {Review: blackburn_p:1999a}, topic = {model-theory;logic-intro;} } @book{ doets-vaneijck_j:2004a, author = {Kees Doets and Jan van Eijck}, title = {The {H}askell Road to Logic, Maths and Progamming}, publisher = {King's College Publications}, year = {2004}, address = {London}, ISBN = {3-540-21202-7}, xref = {Review: lammel:2007a.}, topic = {logic-intro;} } @incollection{ dogett-stoljar_d:2010a, author = {Tyler Dogett and Daniel Stoljar}, title = {Does {N}agel's Footnote 11 Solve the Mind-Body Problem?}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2010}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {125--143}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;mind-body-problem;} } @incollection{ doherty-etal:1996a, author = {Patrick Doherty and Witold {\L}ukaszewicz and Andrzej Sza{\l}as}, title = {General Domain Circumscription and its First-Order Reduction}, booktitle = {Practical Reasoning: International Conference on Formal and Applied Practical Reasoning, FAPR'96}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Hans J\"urgen Olbach}, pages = {93--109}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {circumscription;} } @inproceedings{ doherty_p:1989a, author = {Patrick Doherty}, title = {A Correspondence Between Inheritance Properties and a Logic of Preferential Entailment}, booktitle = {Methodologies for Intelligent Systems}, year = {1989}, editor = {Zbigniew Ras}, pages = {395--402}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Co.}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {inheritance-theory;model-preference;} } @book{ doherty_p:1996a, editor = {Patrick Doherty}, title = {Partiality, Modality, and Nonmonotonicity}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1996}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-57586-030-9}, xref = {Review: vaneijck_r:1999a}, topic = {partial-logic;modal-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ doherty_p:1999a, author = {Patrick Doherty}, title = {A Semantics for Inheritance Hierarchies with Exceptions Using a Logic of Preferential Entailment}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2nd Scandinavian Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 1989}, year = {1999}, editor = {Hannu Jaakkola and Seppo Linnainmaa}, pages = {117--130}, publisher = {IOS Press}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {inheritance;preferential-entailment;} } @incollection{ doherty_p:2004a, author = {Patrick Doherty}, title = {Advanced Research with Autonomous Unmanned Aerial Vehicles}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {731--732}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {cognitive-robotics;autonomous-vehicles;agent-architectures;} } @incollection{ doherty_p-etal:1998a, author = {Patrick Doherty and Witold {\L}ukasziewicz and Ewa Madali\'nska-Bugaj}, title = {The {PMA} and Relativizing Change for Action Update}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {258--269}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;belief-revision;temporal-reasoning;action-formalisms; kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ doherty_p-etal:2000a, author = {Patrick Doherty and G\"osta Granlund and Krzystof Kuchcinski and Erik Sandewall and Klas Nordberg and Erik Skarman and Johan Wiklund}, title = {The {WITAS} {U}nmanned {A}erial {V}ehicle {P}roject}, booktitle = {ECAI 2000. Proceedings of the 14th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, editor = {W. Horn}, year = {2000}, address = {Berlin}, pages = {747---755}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {cognitive-robotics;autonomous-vehicles;agent-architectures;} } @article{ doherty_p-etal:2001a, author = {Patrick Doherty and Jonas Kvarnstr\"om}, title = {{TAL}planner: A Temporal Logic-Based Planner}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2001}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {95--102}, topic = {planning;planning-algorithms;planning-systems;} } @unpublished{ doherty_p-etal:2002a, author = {Patrick Doherty and Tommy Persson and Bj\"orn Wingman and Patrick Haslum and Frederik Heintz}, title = {A {CORBA}-Based Deliberative/Reactive Architecture for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles}, year = {2002}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Link\"oping University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, contentnote = {Describes deliberative architecture actually used in unmanned helicopter project.}, topic = {cognitive-robotics;autonomous-vehicles;} } @book{ doherty_p-etal:2003a, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John McCarthy and Mary-Anne Williams}, title = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Logical Formalization of Commonsense Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, ISBN = {1-57735-182-7 SS-03-05}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS MS shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Eyal Amir and Stuart Russell, "Logical Filtering", pp. 1--8 2. Marcello Balduccini and Michael Gelfond, "Logic Programs with Consistency-Restoring Rules", pp. 9--18 3. Chitta Baral and Tran Cao Son and Le-Chi Tuan, "Golog$+${HTNT}t\raisebox{.5ex}{\scritpsize TM}: Adding Time and Intervals to Procedural and Hierarchical Control Knowledge", pp. 19--26 4. Brandon Bennett, "The Role of Definitions in Construction and Analysis of Formal Ontologies", pp. 27--35 5. Sergey Blok and Douglas Medin and Daniel Osherson, "Probability from Similarity", pp. 36--42 6. Pedro Cabalar, "A Preliminary Study on Reasoning about Causes", pp. 43--50 7. Jonathan Campbell and Vladimir Lifschitz, "Reinforcing a Claim in Commonsense Reasoning", pp. 51--56 8. Hei Chan and Adnan Darwiche, "Revisiting the Problem of Belief Revision with Uncertain Evidence", pp. 57--63 9. Andrew S. Gordon and Jerry R. Hobbs, "Coverage and Competency in Formal Theories: A Commonsense Theory of Memory", pp. 64--73 10. Jerry R. Hobbs and James Pustejovsky, "Annotating and Reasoning about Time and Events", pp. 74--82 11. Mark Hopkins and Judea Pearl, "Clarifying the Use of Structural Models for Commonsense Causal Reasoning", pp. 83--89 12. Ozan Kahramanogullari and Michael Thielscher, "A Formal Assessment Result for FLuent Calculus", pp. 90--97 13. Antonis Kakas and Loizos Michael, "On the Qualification Problem and Elaboration Tolerance", pp. 98--106 14. Ranjit Nair and Miland Tambe and Stacy Marsella, "Integrating Belief-Desire-Intention Approaches with {POMDPS}: The Case of Team-Oriented Programs", pp. 107--115 15. Aarati Parmar, "Some Mathematical Structures Underlying Efficient Planning", pp. 116--124 16. Marcus V. Santos and Paulo E. Santos, "Sensor Data Assimilation as Database Transactions", pp. 125--130 17. Catherine Tessier, "Towards a Commonsense Estimator for Activity Tracking", pp. 131--138 18. Richmond H. Thomason, "Ability and Action", pp. 139--145 }, topic = {common-sense-logicism;common-sense-reasoning;} } @incollection{ doherty_p-etal:2004a, author = {Patrick Doherty and Andrzej Szalas and Witold Lukasiewicz}, title = {Approximative Query Techniques for Agents with Heterogeneous Ontologies and Perceptive Capabilities}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {459--468}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {computational-ontology;kb-query-processing;} } @book{ doherty_p-etal:2006a, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, title = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Jon Doyle, "On Mechanization of Thought Processes (Extended Abstract)", p. 2 2. David Maier and Alon Halevy, and Michael Franklin, "Dataspaces: Co-Existence with Heterogeneity", p. 3 3. Alan Rector, "Users Are Always Right $\ldots$ Even When They Are Wrong: Making Knowledge Representation Viable and Useful", pp. 3--4 4. Joseph Y. Halpern and Leandro Chaves R\'ego, "Reasoning about Knowledge of Unawareness", pp. 6--13 5. Lawrence E. Blume and David A. Easley and Joseph Y. Halpern, "Redoing the Foundatios of Decision Theory", pp. 14--24 6. Pedro Calabar and Sergei Odintsov and David Pearce, "Logical Foundations of Well-Founded Semantics", pp. 25--35 7. Brandon Bennett, "A Theory of Vague Adjectives Grounded in Relevant Observables", pp. 36--44 8. Hongkai Liu and Carsten Lutz and Maja Milicic and Frank Wolter, "Updating Description Logic ABoxes", pp. 46--56 9. Ian Horrocks and Oliver Kutz and Ulrike Sattler, "The Even More Irresistible {SROIQ}", pp. 57--67 10. Riccardo Rosati, "{DL}+log: Tight Interaction of Description Languages and Disjunctive Datalog", pp. 68--78 11. Balder den Cate and Willem Conradie and Maarten Marx and Yde Venema, "Definitorually Complete Description Logics", pp. 79--89 12. Evren Siren and Bernardo Cueneca Grau and Bijan Parsia, "From Wine to Water: Optimizing Description Logic Reasoning for Nominals", pp. 90--99 13. Scott Sanner and Sheila A. McIlraith, "An Ordered Theory Resolution Calculus for Hybrid Reasoning in First-Order Extensions of Desription Logic", pp. 100--110 14. Sylvie Coste-Marquis and Caroline Devred and Pierre Marquis, "Constrained Argumentation Frameworks", pp. 112--122 15. Philippe Besnard and Anthony Hunter, "Knowledebase Compilation for Efficient Logical Argumentation", pp. 123--12 16. Meghyn Bienvenu and Christian Fritz and Sheila A. McIlraith, "Planning with Qualitative Temporal Preferences", pp. 134--144 17. Yann Chevaleyre and Ulle Endriss and J\'erome Lang, "Expressive Power of Weighted Propositional Formulas for Cardinal Preference Modeling", pp. 145--152 18. Christian Fritz and Sheila A. McIlraith, "Decision-Theoretic {\sc Golog} with Qualitative Preferences", pp. 153--163 19. Thomas Lukasiewicxz and J\"org Schellhase, "Variable-Strength Conditional Preferences for Matchmaking in Description Logics", pp. 164--174 20. Didier Dubois and H\'elene Fargier, "Qualitative Decision Making with Bipolar Information", pp. 175--185 21. Silvio Ghilardi and Carsten Lutz and Frank Woller, "Did {I} Damage My Ontology? A Case for Conservative Extensions in Description Logics", pp. 187--197 22. Bernardo Cuenca Grau and Bijan Parsia and Evren Sirin and Aditya Kalyanpur, "Modularity and Web Ontologies", pp. 198--208 23. James Delgrande and Didier Dubois and J\'er\^ome Lang, "Iterated Revision as Prioritized Merging", pp. 210--220 24. Benoit Gaudou and Andreas Herzig and Dominique Longin, "Grounding and the Expression of Belief", pp. 221--229 25. Richard Booth and Thomas Meyer and Ka-Shu Wong, "A Bad Day Surfing Is Better than a Good Day Working: How to Revise a Total Preorder", pp. 230--238 26. Jonathan Ben-Naim, "Lack of Finite Characterizations for the Distance-Based Revision", pp. 239--248 27. Anthony Hunter and Sebastian Konieczny, "Shapley Inconsistency Values", pp. 249--258 28. Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Dominico Lembo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Ricardo Rosati, "Data Complexity of Query Answering in Description Logics", pp. 260--270 29. Madalina Croitoru and Ernesto Compatangelo, "A Tree Decomposition Algorithm for Conceptual Graph Projection", pp. 271--276 30. Michael Wachter and Rolf Haenni, "Propositional {DAG}s: A New Graph-Based Language for Representing Boolean Functions", pp. 277--285 31. Sylvie Coste-Marquis and H\'elene Fargier and J\'er\^ome Lang and Daniel Le Berre and Pierre Marquis, "Representing Policies for Quantified Boolean Formulas", pp. 286--296 32. Yan Chen and Fangzhen Lin and Yisong Wang and Mingyi Zhang, "First-Order Loop Formulas for Normal Logic Programs", pp. 298--307 33. Yan Zhang, "Computational Properties of Epistemic Logic Programs", pp. 308--317 34. Jens Cla{\ss}en and Gerhard Lakemeyer, "Foundations for Knowledge-Based Programs Using ${\cal ES}$", pp. 318--328 35. Umberto Straccia, "Query Answering under the Any-World Assumption for Normal Logic Programs", pp. 329--339 36. Thomas Eiter and Michael Fink and Hans Tompits and Patrick Traxler and Stefan Woltran, "Replacements in Non-Ground Answer-Set Programming", pp. 340--350 37. David Randall and Mark Witkowski, "Abductive Visual Perception with Feature Clouds", pp. 352--361 38. Michael Thielscher and Thomas Witkowski, "The Features-and-Fluents Semantics for the Fluent Calculus", pp. 362--370 39. Victor Jauregui, "Semantical Considerations for a Logic of Actions: An Imperative Manifesto", pp. 371--376 40. Selim T. Erdogan and Vladimir Lifschitz, "Actions as Special Cases", pp. 377--387 41. Miroslaw Truszcynski, "Strong and Uniform Equivalence of Nonmonotonic Theories---An Algebraic Approach", pp. 389--399 42. Piero Bonatti and Carsten Lutz and Frank Wolter, "Description Logics with Circumscription", pp. 400--410 43. Thomas {\AA}gotnes and Natasha Alechina, "Semantics for Dynamic Syntactic Epistemic Logics", pp. 411--419 44. Didier Dubois and Angelo Gilio and Gabriele Kern-Isherner, "Probabilistic Abduction without Priors", pp. 420--430 45. Anna Zamansky and Arnon Avron, "Non-Deterministic Semantics for First-Order Paraconsistent Logics", pp. 431--439 46. Florence Dupin de Saint-Cyr and Henri Prade, "Possibilistic Handling of Uncertain Default Rules with Applications to Persistence Modeling and Fuzzy Default Reasoning", pp. 440--450 47. Blai Bonet and Hector Geffner, "Heuristics for Planning with Penalties and Rewards using Compiled Knowledge", pp. 451--462 48. Sebastian Sardina and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Ynes Lesp\'erance and Hector J. Levesque, "On the Limits of Planning over Belief States under Strict Uncertainty", pp. 463--471 49. Marco Ragni and Stefan W\"olfl, "Temporalizing Cardinal Directions: From Constraint Satisfaction to Planning", pp. 472--480 50. Tan Cao Son and Phan Huy Tu, "On the Completeness of Approximation Based Reasoning and Planning in Action Theories with Incomplete Information", pp. 481--491 51. Jorge A. Baier and Sheila A. McIlraith, "On Planning with Programs that Sense", pp. 492--502 52. Robert Feldman and Gerhard Brewka and Sandro Wenzel, "Planning with Prioritized Goals", pp. 503--513 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS Conference shelves.}, topic = {kr;} } @inproceedings{ doherty_p-etal:2012a, author = {Patrick Doherty and Jonas Kvarnstr\"om and Andrzej Szalas}, title = {Temporal Composite Actions with Constraints}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {478--488}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... The main goal of this paper is to propose a mission specification language ... . It is based on extending both the syntax and semantics of a well-established formalism for reasoning about action and change, Temporal Action Logic (TAL), in order to represent temporal composite actions with constraints. The results include a sound and complete proof theory for this extension. ... }, topic = {task-specification;} } @incollection{ doherty_p-kvarnstrom:2008a, author = {Patrick Doherty and James Kvarnstr\"om}, title = {Temporal Action Logics}, booktitle = {Handbook of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2008}, editor = {Frank van Harmelen and Vladimir Lifschitz and Bruce Porter}, pages = {709--757}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {reasoning-about-actions;ramification-problem; qualification-problem;} } @article{ doherty_p-kvarnstrom_j:2001a, author = {Patrick Doherty and Jonas Kvarnstr\"om}, title = {{TAL}planner: A Temporal Logic-Based Planner}, journal = {AI Magazine}, year = {2001}, volume = {22}, number = {3}, pages = {95--102}, topic = {planning-algorithms;} } @article{ doherty_p-kvarnstrom_j:2001b, author = {Patrick Doherty and Jonas Kvarnstr\"om}, title = {{TAL}planner: A Temporal Logic-Based Forward Chaining Planner}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {30}, pages = {119--169}, topic = {planning-algorithms;} } @incollection{ doherty_p-szalas:2008a, author = {Patrick Doherty and Andrzej Szalas}, title = {Reasoning with Qualitative Preferences and Cardinalities using Generalized Circumscription}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {560--570}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {$\ldots$ In this paper, we show how generalized circumscription can be used as a highly expressive framework for qualitative preference modeling. Generalized circumscription proposed by Lifschitz allows for predicates (and thus formulas) to be minimized relative to arbitrary pre-orders (reflexive and transitive). Although it has received little attention, we show how it may be used to model and reason about elaborate qualitative preference relations. $\ldots$ This paper shows how a large variety of preference theories represented using generalized circumscription can in fact be reduced to logically equivalent first-order theories in a constructive way. $\ldots$ }, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;circumscription;} } @article{ dohrn_d:2017a, author = {Daniel Dohrn}, title = {Nobody Bodily Knows Possibility}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2017}, volume = {114}, number = {12}, pages = {678--686}, topic = {knowledge-of-possibility;} } @inproceedings{ doi-etal:1998a, author = {Shinichi Doi and Shin-ichiro Kamei and Kiyoshi Yamabana}, title = {A Text Input Front-End Processor as an Information Access Platform}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {336--340}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {computer-assisted-writing;} } @article{ dolev-etal:1986a, author = {D. Dolev and Joseph Y. Halpern and H.R. Strong}, title = {On the Possibility and Impossibility of Achieving Clock Synchronization}, journal = {Journal of Computer and System Sciences}, year = {1986}, volume = {32}, number = {2}, pages = {230--250}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {distributed-systems;synchronization;communication-protocols;} } @article{ dolev-etal:1990a, author = {D. Dolev and R. Reischuk and H.R. Strong}, title = {Early Stopping in {B}yzantine Agreement}, journal = {Journal of the {ACM}}, year = {1990}, volume = {34}, number = {7}, pages = {720--741}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {distributed-systems;Byzantine-agreement;communication-protocols;} } @inproceedings{ dolev-strong:1982a, author = {D. Dolev and H.R. Strong}, title = {Polynomial Algorithms for Multiple Processor Agreement}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual {ACM} Symposium on Theory of Computing}, year = {1982}, pages = {401--407}, organization = {{ACM}}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {distributed-systems;communication-protocols;polynomial-algorithms;} } @article{ dominey-boucher:2005a, author = {Peter Ford Dominey and Jean-David Boucher}, title = {Learning to Talk about Events from Narrated Video in a Construction Grammar Framework}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {167}, number = {1--2}, pages = {31--61}, topic = {situated-nlp;machine-language-learning;} } @book{ domingos:2015a, author = {Pedro Domingos}, title = {The Master Algorithm}, publisher = {Basic Books}, year = {2015}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {978-0-465-06570-7}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Fall, 2016.}, topic = {machine-learning;} } @incollection{ domini:2003a, author = {Francesco M. Domini}, title = {Complexity of Reasoning}, booktitle = {The Description Logic Handbook: Theory, Implementation and Applications}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Franz Baader and Diego Calvanese and Deborah L. McGuinness and Daniele Nardi and Peter Patel-Schneider}, pages = {96--136}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {description-logics;complexity-in-AI;} } @book{ domolki-gergely:1981a, editor = {B. D\"om\"olki and T. Gergely}, title = {Mathematical Logic in Computer Science}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Co.}, year = {1981}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {0444854401}, rtnote = {UMich Science, QA1 .B925 no.26.}, topic = {logic-in-cs;logic-in-cs-intro;} } @article{ domotor:1972a, author = {Zoltan Domotor}, title = {Causal Models and Space-Time Geometries}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1972}, volume = {24}, number = {1}, pages = {5--57}, topic = {causality;philosophy-of-space;philosophy-of-physics;} } @article{ domotor:1978a, author = {Zoltan Domotor}, title = {Axiomatization of Jeffrey Utilities}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1978}, volume = {39}, pages = {165--210}, topic = {decision-theory;expected-utility;} } @phdthesis{ domschlak:2002a, author = {Carmel Domschlak}, title = {Modeling and Reasoning about Inferences with {CP}-Nets}, school = {Ben-Gurion University of the Negev}, year = {2002}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Be'er Sheva}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Shelves.}, topic = {CP-nets;preference;qualitative-utility;} } @incollection{ domschlak-brafman_ri:2002a, author = {Carmel Domschlak and Ronen I. Brafman}, title = {{CP}-Nets: Reasoning and Consistency Testing}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {121--132}, address = {San Francisco, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {kr;CP-nets;preference-representation;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ domshlak-etal:2011a, author = {Carmel Domshlak and Eyke H\"ullermeier and Souhila Kaci and Henri Prade}, title = {Preferences in {AI}: An overview}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {7--8}, pages = {1037--1052}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;} } @article{ domshlak-etal:2012a, author = {Carmel Domshlak and Michael Katz and Sagi Lefler}, title = {Landmark-Enhanced Abstraction Heuristics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {189}, pages = {48--68}, topic = {planning-algorithms;heuristics;search;abstraction;} } @article{ domsky:2004a, author = {Daren Domsky}, title = {There Is No Door: Finally Solving the Problem of Moral Luck}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2004}, volume = {101}, number = {9}, pages = {445--464}, topic = {moral-luck;} } @article{ donagan_a:1963a, author = {Alan Donagan}, title = {Universals and Metaphysical Realism}, journal = {The Monisr}, volume = {47}, year = {1963}, pages = {211--246}, topic = {philosophical-realism;metaphysics;} } @article{ donagan_a:1970a, author = {Alan Donagan}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Encyclopedia of Philosopy}, edited by {P}aul {E}dwards}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1970}, volume = {79}, number = {1}, pages = {83--138}, xref = {Review of: edwards_p:1967a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no21}, contentnote = {Contains a useful overview of the analyticity issue.}, topic = {philosophy-general;analytic-philosophy;} } @article{ donagan_a:1984a, author = {Alan Donagan}, title = {Consistency in Rationalist Moral Systems}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, volume = {81}, year = {1984}, pages = {291--309}, topic = {ethics;moral-conflict;} } @article{ donaho:2002a, author = {Stephen Donaho}, title = {Standard Quantification Theory in the Analysis of {E}nglish}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {31}, number = {6}, pages = {499--526}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;type-free-theories;type-theory;} } @article{ donald:1987a, author = {Bruce R. Donald}, title = {A Search Algorithm for Motion Planning with Six Degrees of Freedom}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {31}, number = {3}, pages = {295--353}, topic = {motion-planning;search;} } @article{ donald:1988a, author = {Bruce R. Donald}, title = {A Geometric Approach to Error Detection and Recovery for Robot Motion Planning with Uncertainty}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {37}, number = {1--3}, pages = {223--271}, topic = {motion-planning;} } @article{ donald:1995a, author = {Bruce R. Donald}, title = {On Information Invariants in Robotics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {72}, number = {1--2}, pages = {217--304}, acontentnote = {Abstract: We consider the problem of determining the information requirements to perform robot tasks, using the concept of information invariants. This paper represents our attempt to characterize a family of complicated and subtle issues concerned with measuring robot task complexity. We also provide a first approximation to a purely operational theory that addresses a narrow but interesting special case. We discuss several measures for the information complexity of a task: (a) How much internal state should the robot retain? (b) How many cooperating agents are required, and how much communication between them is necessary? (c) How can the robot change (side-effect) the environment in order to record state or sensory information to perform a task? (d) How much information is provided by sensors? and (e) How much computation is required by the robot? We consider how one might develop a kind of ``calculus'' on (a)--e) in order to compare the power of sensor systems analytically. To this end, we attempt to develop a notion of information invariants. We develop a theory whereby one sensor can be ``reduced'' to another (much in the spirit of computation-theoretic reductions), by adding, deleting, and reallocating (a-e) among collaborating autonomous agents.}, topic = {robotics;} } @article{ donaldson_t:2017a, author = {Thomas Donaldson}, title = {The (Metaphysical) Foundations of Arithmetic?}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {51}, number = {4}, pages = {775--801}, topic = {grounding;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ donath:2000a, author = {Judith S. Donath}, title = {Being Real}, booktitle = {The Robot in the Garden: Telerobotics and Telepistemology in the Age of the Internet}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2000}, editor = {Ken Goldberg}, pages = {296--311}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Out for reading, Jan. 2012.}, topic = {Turing-test;} } @article{ doner-hodges_w:1988a, author = {John Doner and Wilfrid Hodges}, title = {Alfred {T}arski and Decidable Theories}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1958}, volume = {53}, number = {1}, pages = {20--35}, topic = {Tarski;history-of-logic;decidability;} } @article{ dong_hm:2021a, author = {Huimin Dong}, title = {Logic of Defeasible Permission and Its Dynamics}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {2021}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {1158--1193}, abstract = {... This paper first introduces the notion of normality to develop a sound and complete deontic logic for defeasible permission, which can be used to analyse several notions in natural language and in game theory. Further, following Lewis' idea of norm change, a systematic way to capture various dynamics for updating permission and obligation is proposed.}, topic = {permission;deontic-dynamics;} } @inproceedings{ dong_l-lapata_m:2016a, author = {Li Dong and Mirella Lapata}, title = {Language to Logical Form with Neural Attention}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 54th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2016}, pages = {33--43}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, abstract = {Semantic parsing aims at mapping natural language to machine interpretable meaning representations. Traditional approaches rely on high-quality lexicons, manually-built templates, and linguistic features which are either domain- or representation-specific. In this paper we present a general method based on an attention-enhanced encoder-decoder model. We encode input utterances into vector representations, and generate their logical forms by conditioning the output sequences or trees on the encoding vectors. Experimental results on four datasets show that our approach performs competitively without using hand-engineered features and is easy to adapt across domains and meaning representations.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc16}, topic = {semantic-processing;distributed-representations;computational-semantics;} } @article{ dong_ts:2008a, author = {Tiansi Dong}, title = {A Comment on {RCC}: From {RCC} to {RCC}$^{++}$}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {37}, number = {4}, pages = {319--352}, topic = {region-connection-calculus;} } @inproceedings{ dongha-castelfranchi_c:1995a, author = {Paul Dongha and Cristiano Castelfranchi}, title = {Rationality in Commitment}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Rational Agency: Concepts, Theories, Models, and Applications}, year = {1995}, editor = {Michael Fehling}, pages = {32--40}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {intention;commitment;} } @incollection{ donghong-changning:1997a, author = {Ji Donghong and Huang Changning}, title = {Word Sense Disambiguation Based on Structured Semantic Space}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Ralph Weischedel}, pages = {187--196}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {empirical-methods-in-nlp;lexical-disambiguation;} } @incollection{ donghong-etal:1998a, author = {Ji Donghong and He Jun and Huang Changning}, title = {Learning New Compositions from Given Ones}, booktitle = {{CoNLL97}: Computational Natural Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {T. Mark Ellison}, pages = {25--32}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;grammar-learning;} } @incollection{ donini_fm-etal:1991a, author = {Francesco M. Donini and Maurizio Lenzerini and Daniele Nardi and Werner Nutt}, title = {The Complexity of Concept Languages}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {151--162}, address = {San Mateo, California}, contentnote = {This is a useful survey paper on complexity issues for taxonomic logics.}, topic = {kr;kr-complexity-analysis;description-logics;kr-course;} } @article{ donini_fm-etal:1992a, author = {Francesco M. Donini and Maurizio Lenzerini and Daniele Nardi and Bernhard Hollunder and Werner Nutt and Alberto Spaccamela}, title = {The Complexity of Existential Quantification in Concept Languages}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {53}, number = {2--3}, pages = {309--327}, contentnote = {Adding unrestricted E to basic L without disjunction results in NP-completeness.}, topic = {kr-complexity-analysis;description-logics;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ donini_fm-etal:1992b, author = {Francesco M. Donini and Maurizio Lenzerini and Daniele Nardi and Andrea Schaerf}, title = {Adding Epistemic Operators to Concept Languages}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {342--353}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {description-logics;epistemic-logic;reasoning-about-knowledge;} } @incollection{ donini_fm-etal:1996a, author = {Francesco M. Donini and Maurizio Lenzerini and Daniele Nardi and Andrea Schaerf}, title = {Reasoning in Description Logics}, booktitle = {Principles of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1996}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {191--236}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {description-logics;} } @incollection{ donini_fm-etal:1996b, author = {Francesco M. Donini and Fabio Massacci and Daniele Nardi and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {A Uniform Tableaux Method for Nonmonotonic Modal Logics}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence: European Workshop, {Jelia}'96, Ivora, Portugal, September 30 - October 3, 1996.}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Ewa Orlowska}, pages = {87--103}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {theorem-proving;nonmonotonic-logic;modal-logic; nonmonotonic-reasoning-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ donini_fm-etal:1997a, author = {Francesco M. Donini and Daniele Nardi and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {Autoepistemic Description Logics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Martha Pollack}, pages = {136--141}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {We present Autoepistemic Description Logics (ADLs), in which the language of Description Logics is augmented with modal operators interpreted according to the nonmonotonic logic MKNF. We provide decision procedures for query answering in two very expressive ADLs. We show their representational features by addressing defaults, integrity constraints, role and concept closure. ... ADLs provide a formal characterization of a wide variety of nonmonotonic features commonly available in frame-based systems and needed in the development of practical applications.}, topic = {autoepistemic-logic;description-logics;} } @article{ donini_fm-etal:1998a, author = {Francesco M. Donini and Maurizio Lenzerini and Daniele Nardi and Werner Nutt and Andrea Schaerf}, title = {An Epistemic Operator for Description Logics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {100}, number = {1--2}, pages = {225--274}, topic = {extensions-of-kl1;epistemic-logic; reasoning-about-knowledge;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ donini_fm-etal:2002a, author = {Francesco M. Donini and Paolo Liberatore and Fabio Massacci and Marco Scaerf}, title = {Solving {QBF} with {SMV}}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {578--589}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;model-checking;} } @article{ donini_fm-etal:2002b, author = {Francesco M. Donini and Daniele Nardi and Riccardo Rosati}, title = {Description Logics of Minimal Knowledge and Negation as Failure}, journal = {{ACM} Transactions on Computational Logic}, year = {2002}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {177--225}, topic = {description-logics;nonmonotonic;logic;} } @article{ donini_fm-massacchi:2000a, author = {Francesco M. Donini and Fabio Massacchi}, title = {{\sc EXPtime} Tableaux for ${\cal ALC}$}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {124}, number = {1}, pages = {87--138}, topic = {modal-logic;description-logics;theorem-proving;} } @article{ donnellan_k:1966a1, author = {Keith Donnellan}, title = {Reference and Definite Descriptions}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1966}, volume = {75}, pages = {281--304}, xref = {Republication: donnellan_k:1966a2.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Donellan"}, topic = {definite-descriptions;} } @article{ donnellan_k:1966b, author = {Keith Donnellan}, title = {Substitution and Reference}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1966}, volume = {63}, number = {21}, pages = {685--688}, topic = {referential-opacity;reference;} } @incollection{ donnellan_k:1971a, author = {Keith Donnellan}, title = {Reference and Definite Descriptions}, booktitle = {Semantics: An Interdisciplinary Reader in Philosophy, Linguistics, and Psychology}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1971}, editor = {Danny D. Steinberg and Leon A. Jacobovits}, pages = {100--114}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Republication of: donnellan_k:1966a1.}, topic = {definite-descriptions;} } @incollection{ donnellan_k:1972a, author = {Keith S. Donnellan}, title = {Proper Names and Identifying Descriptions}, booktitle = {Semantics of Natural Language}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1972}, editor = {Donald Davidson and Gilbert H. Harman}, pages = {356--379}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {proper-names;definite-descriptions;reference;} } @article{ donnellan_k:1977a, author = {Keith Donnellan}, title = {The Contingent A Priori and Rigid Designators}, journal = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {12--27}, topic = {contingent-a-priori;reference;} } @incollection{ donnellan_k:1978a1, author = {Keith Donnellan}, title = {Speaker Reference, Descriptions and Anaphora}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics 9: Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Peter Cole}, pages = {47--68}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication: donnellan_k:1978a2.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {referring-expressions;definite-descriptions;anaphora; philosophy-of-language;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ donnellan_k:1978a2, author = {Keith S. Donnellan}, title = {Speaker Reference, Descriptions, and Anaphora}, booktitle = {Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {28--44}, address = {Minneapolis}, xref = {Republication of donnellan_k:1978a1.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {referring-expressions;definite-descriptions;anaphora; philosophy-of-language;pragmatics; reference;} } @incollection{ donnellan_k:1978b, author = {Keith S. Donnellan}, title = {The Contingent {\it A Priori} and Rigid Designators}, booktitle = {Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {45--60}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {reference;a-priori;rigid-designators;} } @incollection{ donnellan_k:1981a, author = {Keith Donnellan}, title = {Intuitions and Presuppositions}, booktitle = {Radical Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Peter Cole}, pages = {129--142}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {presupposition;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ donnellan_k:1990a, author = {Keith S. Donnellan}, title = {Belief and the Identity of Reference}, booktitle = {Propositional Attitudes: The Role of Content in Logic, Language, and Mind}, publisher = {Center for the Study of Language and Information}, year = {1990}, editor = {C. Anthony Anderson and Joseph Owens}, pages = {201--214}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;reference;} } @incollection{ donnellan_k:1993a, author = {Keith S. Donnellan}, title = {There Is a Word for that Kind of Thing: An Investigation of Two Thought Experiments}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 7: Language and Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {155--171}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {twin-earth;philosophical-thought-experiments;} } @article{ donnelly_m:2004a, author = {Maureen Donnelly}, title = {A Formal Theory for Reasoning about Parthood, Connection, and Location}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {160}, number = {1--2}, pages = {145--172}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;mereology;} } @article{ donnelly_m:2019a, author = {Maureen Donnelly}, title = {Review of \emph{{V}arieties of Continua: From Regions to Points and Back}, by {G}eoffrey {H}ellman and {S}tewart {S}hapiro}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {116}, number = {3}, pages = {174--178}, topic = {continuity;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @unpublished{ doody:2016a, author = {Ryan Doody}, title = {Lying and Denying}, year = {2016}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Linguistics and Philosophy, MIY}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my16}, topic = {misleading;lying;} } @incollection{ doran_c-etal:2004a, author = {Christine Doran and John Aberdeen and Laurie Damianos and Lynette Hirschman}, title = {Comparing Several Aspects of Human-Computer and Human-Human Dialogues}, booktitle = {Current and New Directions in Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Jan van Kuppevelt and Ronnie W. Smith}, pages = {133--160}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {HCI;computational-dialogue;} } @incollection{ doran_rb-ward_g:2019a, author = {Ryan B. Doran and Gregory Ward}, title = {A Taxonomy of Uses of Demonstratives}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Reference}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2019}, editor = {Jeannette Gundel and Barbara Abbott}, pages = {236--259}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reference;demonstratives;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ dorato:2000a, author = {Mauro Dorato}, title = {Becoming and the Arrow of Causation}, booktitle = {{PSA}'1998: Proceedings of the 1998 Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposium Papers}, publisher = {Philosophy of Science Association}, year = {2000}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {S523--S534}, address = {Newark, Delaware}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;temporal-direction;causality;} } @article{ dorbolo:2006a, author = {Jon Dorbolo}, title = {Introduction}, note = {Introduction to a special issue on Daniel Dennett}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2006}, volume = {16}, number = {1}, pages = {3--5}, topic = {Daniel-Dennett;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ dordan:1992a, author = {Olivier Dordan}, title = {Mathematical Problems Arising in Qualitative Simulation of a Differential Equation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {55}, number = {1}, pages = {61--86}, topic = {differential-equations;qualitative-simulation;} } @article{ dore_c:1962a, author = {Clement Dore}, title = {On the Meaning of \emph{Could Have}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1962}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {41--43}, xref = {Commentary on: austin_jl:1956a}, xref = {Followup: dore_c:1963a}, topic = {ability;conditionals;freedom;counterfactual-past;} } @article{ dore_c:1963a, author = {Clement Dore}, title = {More on the Meaning of `Could Have{'}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1963}, volume = {24}, number = {2}, pages = {41--43}, xref = {Followup on: dore_c:1962a}, topic = {conditionals;ability;counterfactual-past;freedom;} } @article{ dore_c:1963b, author = {Clement Dore}, title = {Is Free Will Compatible With Determinism?}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1963}, volume = {72}, pages = {500--501}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {freedom;(in)determinism;} } @article{ dorigo-colombetti:1994a, author = {Marco Dorigo and Marco Colombetti}, title = {Robot Shaping: Developing Autonomous Agents through Learning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {71}, number = {2}, pages = {321--370}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Learning plays a vital role in the development of autonomous agents. In this paper, we explore the use of reinforcement learning to ``shape'' a robot to perform a predefined target behavior. We connect both simulated and real robots to ALECSYS, a parallel implementation of a learning classifier system with an extended genetic algorithm. After classifying different kinds of Animat-like behaviors, we explore the effects on learning of different types of agent's architecture and training strategies. We show that the best results are achieved when both the agent's architecture and the training strategy match the structure of the behavior pattern to be learned. We report the results of a number of experiments carried out both in simulated and in real environments, and show that the results of simulations carry smoothly to physical robots. While most of our experiments deal with simple reactive behavior, in one of them we demonstrate the use of a simple and general memory mechanism. As a whole, our experimental activity demonstrates that classifier systems with genetic algorithms can be practically employed to develop autonomous agents.}, topic = {machine-learning;robotics;reinforcement-learning;} } @book{ dorigo-stutzle:2004a, author = {Marco Dorigo and Thomas St\"utzle}, title = {Ant Colony Optimization}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262042193}, rtnote = {UMich: Shapiro Science QA 402.5 .D641 2004}, xref = {Review: blum_c:2005a}, topic = {swarm-intelligence;} } @article{ doring_f:1994a, author = {Frank D\"oring}, title = {Probabilities of Conditionals and Conditional Probabilities}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1994}, volume = {103}, pages = {689--700}, rtnote = {Look at this.}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Correction: doring:1996a.}, topic = {conditionals;probabilities;} } @article{ doring_f:1996a, author = {Frank D\"oring}, title = {On the Probabilities of Conditionals}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1996}, volume = {105}, number = {2}, pages = {231}, xref = {This is a correction to doring:1994a.}, topic = {conditionals;probabilities;} } @inproceedings{ doring_f:1998a, author = {Frank D\"oring}, title = {Why {B}ayesian Psychology Is Incomplete}, booktitle = {{PSA}98: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part 1: Contributed Papers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {379--389}, organization = {Philosophy of Science Association}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, address = {Chicago, Illinois}, topic = {probability-kinematics;} } @article{ doring_f:2000a, author = {Frank D\"oring}, title = {Conditional Probability and {D}utch Books}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2000}, volume = {67}, number = {3}, pages = {391--409}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;Dutch-book-argument;} } @incollection{ doring_s:2007a, author = {Sandra D\"oring}, title = {Quieter, Faster, Lower, and Set off by Pauses? Reflections on Prosodic Aspects of Parenthetical Constructions in Modern {G}erman}, booktitle = {Parentheticals}, publisher = {John Benjamins}, year = {2007}, editor = {Nicole Deh\'e and Yordanka Kavalova}, pages = {285--307}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {parentheticals;prosody;} } @incollection{ doris-nichols_s:2012a, author = {John M. Doris and Shaun Nichols}, title = {Broadminded: Sociality and the Cognitive Science of Morality}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Eric Margolis and Richard Samuels and Stephen P. Stich}, pages = {425--453}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;social-cognition;} } @inproceedings{ dormoy-raimann:1988a1, author = {Jean-Luc Dormoy and Olivier Raimann}, title = {Assembling a Device}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, editor = {Reid Smith and Tom Mitchell}, pages = {330--335}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, xref = {Republication: dormoy-raimann:1988a2.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;} } @incollection{ dormoy-raimann:1988a2, author = {Jean-Luc Dormoy and Olivier Raimann}, title = {Assembling a Device}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {306--311}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: dormoy-raimann:1988a1.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;} } @book{ dorn-weingartner:1985a, editor = {Georg Dorn and Paul Weingartner}, title = {Foundations of Logic and Linguistics: Problems and Solutions}, publisher = {Plenum Press}, year = {1985}, address = {New York}, topic = {logic-survey;} } @inproceedings{ dorna-etal:1998a, author = {Michael Dorna and Anette Frank and Josef {van Genabith} and Martin C. Emele}, title = {Syntactic and Semantic Transfer with {F}-Structures}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {341--347}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {machine-translation;LFG;} } @article{ dorndorf-etal:2000a, author = {Ulrich Dorndorf and Erwin Pesch and To\`an Phan-Huy}, title = {Constraint Propagation Techniques for the Disjunctive Scheduling Problem}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {122}, number = {1--2}, pages = {189--240}, topic = {constraint-propagation;scheduling;} } @incollection{ dornheim:1998a, author = {Christoph Dornheim}, title = {Undecidability of Plane Polynomial Mereotopology}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {342--353}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;spatial-reasoning;compolexity-iun-AI; undecidability;kr-course;} } @article{ doron:1988a, author = {Edit Doron}, title = {The Semantics of Predicate Nominals}, journal = {Linguistics}, year = {1988}, volume = {26}, number = {2}, pages = {281--301}, rtnote = {E.D. argues that `is' is not always identity when complemented by noun phrases. She does, however, think it sometimes is. She develops a number of diagnostics---both semantic and syntactic---for deciding whether a particular occurrence of a noun phrase in predicative position is predicative or referential. --Delia Graff.}, topic = {nl-semantics;predicate-nominals;copula;itentity;predication;} } @inproceedings{ doron:1991a, author = {Edit Doron}, title = {Point of View as a Factor of Content}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {I}}, year = {1991}, editor = {Steven Moore and {Adam Zachary} Wyner}, pages = {51--64}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {context;direct-discourse;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ doron:1999a, author = {Edit Doron}, title = {The Semantics of Transitivity Alternations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {103--108}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {transitivity-alternations;combinatory-logic;} } @article{ doron:2003a, author = {Edit Doron}, title = {Agency and Voice: The Semantics of the {S}emitic Templates}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2003}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {1--67}, topic = {argument-structure;Semitic-languages;} } @incollection{ doron:2003b, author = {Edit Doron}, title = {Bare Singular Reference to Kinds}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XIII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2003}, editor = {Robert B. Young and Yuping Zhou}, pages = {73--90}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;generics;reference;} } @article{ dorr_bj:1992a, author = {Bonnie J. Dorr}, title = {The Use of Lexical Semantics in Interlingual Machine Translation}, journal = {Machine Translation}, year = {1992}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {135--193}, topic = {machine-translation;lexical-semantics;} } @article{ dorr_bj:1993a, author = {Bonnie Jean Dorr}, title = {Interlingual Machine Translation: a Parameterized Approach}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {63}, number = {1--2}, pages = {429--492}, topic = {machine-translation;interlinguas;} } @book{ dorr_bj:1993b, author = {Bonnie Dorr}, title = {Machine Translation: A View From the Lexicon}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {machine-translation;computational-lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ dorr_bj:1995a, author = {Bonnie Jean Dorr}, title = {A Lexical-Semantic Solution to the Divergence Problem in Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Computational Lexical Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Patrick Saint-Dizier and Evelyne Viegas}, pages = {367--395}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-kr;machine-translation;computational-lexical-semantics;} } @article{ dorr_bj:2001a, author = {Bonnie Jean Dorr}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he {MIT} Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences,} edited by {R}obert {A}. {W}ilson and {F}rank {C}. {K}eil}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {130}, number = {2}, pages = {183--184}, xref = {Review of: wilson_ra-keil:1999a.}, topic = {cognitive-science-general;cognitive-science-survey; nl-processing;} } @article{ dorr_bj-etal:1995a, author = {Bonnie Jean Dorr and Dekang Lin and Jye-hoon Lee and Sungki Suh}, title = {Efficient Parsing for {K}orean and {E}nglish: A Parameterized Message-Passing Approach}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1995}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {255--263}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;machine-translation; government-binding-theory;machine-translation; Korean-language;} } @inproceedings{ dorr_bj-gaasterland:1995a, author = {Bonnie Jean Dorr and Terry Gaasterland}, title = {Selecting Tense, Aspect, and Connecting Words in Language Generation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {1299--1305}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-generation;tense-aspect;} } @inproceedings{ dorr_bj-olsen_b:1997a, author = {Bonnie Dorr and Broman Olsen}, title = {Deriving Verbal and Compositional Lexical Aspect for {NLP} Applications}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {151--158}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {tense-aspect;lexical-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ dorr_bj-voss_cr:1993a, author = {Bonnie Jean Dorr and Clare R. Voss}, title = {Machine Translation of Spatial Expressions: Defining the Relation Between an Interlingua and a Knowledge Representation System}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Richard E. Fikes and Wendy Lehnert}, pages = {374--379}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {nl-kr;machine-translation;computational-lexical-semantics; spatial-semantics;interlinguas;} } @article{ dorr_c:2002a, author = {Cian Dorr}, title = {Sleeping Beauty: In Defense of {E}lga}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2002}, volume = {62}, pages = {292--296}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {sleeping-beauty-problem;} } @incollection{ dorr_c:2003a, author = {Cian Dorr}, title = {Vagueness without Ignorance}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 17: Language and Philosophical Linguistics, 2003}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2003}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Dean Zimmerman}, pages = {83--113}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ dorr_c:2005a, author = {Cian Dorr}, title = {Propositions and Counterpart Theory}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2005}, volume = {65}, number = {3}, pages = {210--218}, topic = {propositions;counterpart-theory;} } @incollection{ dorr_c:2009a, author = {Cian Dorr}, title = {Iterating Definiteness}, booktitle = {Cuts and Clouds: Vaguenesss, its Nature and its Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi}, pages = {550--575}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ dorr_c:2015a, author = {Cian Dorr}, title = {How Vagueness Could be Cut at Any Order}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {1--10}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ dorr_c:2016a, author = {Cian Dorr}, title = {To Be {F} Is to be {G}}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 30: Metaphysics}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2016}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {39--134}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {metaphysics;identity;} } @book{ dorr_c-etal:2021a, author = {Cian Dorr and John Hawthorne and Julian Yli-Vakkuri}, title = {The Bounds of Possibility: Puzzles of Modal Variation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2021}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-284665-5}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Spring, 2022}, topic = {possibility;modality;vagueness;} } @article{ dorr_c-goodman_j2:2020a, author = {Cian Dorr and Jeremy Goodman}, title = {Diamonds are Forever}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2020}, volume = {54}, number = {3}, pages = {632--665}, topic = {temporal-necessity;} } @article{ dorr_c-hawthorne_j2:2014a, author = {Cian Dorr and John Hawthorne}, title = {Semantic Plasticity and Speech Reports}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2014}, volume = {123}, number = {3}, pages = {281--338}, abstract = {Most meanings we express belong to large families of variant meanings, among which it would be implausible to suppose that some are much more apt for being expressed than others. This abundance of candidate meanings creates pressure to think that the proposition attributing any particular meaning to an expression is modally plastic: its truth depends very sensitively on the exact microphysical state of the world. However, such plasticity seems to threaten ordinary counterfactuals whose consequents contain speech reports, since it is hard to see how we could reasonably be confident in a counterfactual whose consequent can be true only if a certain very finely tuned microphysical configuration obtains. This essay develops the foregoing puzzle and explores several possible solutions.}, topic = {speaker-meaning;conditionals;propositions;foundations-of-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ dorre:1996a, author = {Jochen D\"orre}, title = {Parsing for Semidirectional {L}ambek Grammar is {NP}-Complete}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {95--100}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;Lambek-calculus;parsing-algorithms;} } @inproceedings{ dorre:1997a, author = {Jochen D\"orre}, title = {Efficient Construction of Underspecified Semantics under Massive Ambiguity}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {386--393}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {semantic-underspecification;} } @article{ dorre-etal:1994a, author = {Jochen D\"orre and Esther K\"onig and Dov Gabbay}, title = {Fibred Semantics for Feature-Based Grammar Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1994}, volume = {5}, number = {3--4}, pages = {387--422}, topic = {categorial-grammar;feature-structure-logic;unification-of-FSs; fibred-semantics;} } @incollection{ dorsey_d:2020a, author = {Dale Dorsey}, title = {Consequences}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Consequentialism}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2020}, editor = {Douglas W. Portmore}, pages = {93--112}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {... This essay considers a number of traditional approaches to understanding the consequence relation. While many traditional approaches treat the consequence relation as built upon a causal relation, I hold that there are good reasons to doubt that the consequence relation should be understood in terms of causal relations, even if supplemented with the identity relation. Instead, I argue for a contrastive approach that, while not entirely free of problems, does a better job than standard accounts at capturing the relationship between an act and its consequences.}, topic = {utilitarianism;causality;actions;} } @article{ dosen_k:1981a, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {A Reduction of Classical Propositional Logic to the Conjunction Negation Fragment of an Intuitionistic Relevant Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1981}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {399--408}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;relevance-logic;} } @incollection{ dosen_k:1988a, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {Second-Order Logic without Variables}, booktitle = {Categorial Grammar}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {1988}, editor = {Wojciech Buszkowski and Witold Marcisziewski and Johan van Benthem}, pages = {245--264}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {combinatory-logic;higher-order-logic;} } @article{ dosen_k:1992a, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {Modal Logic as Metalogic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1992}, volume = {1}, number = {3}, pages = {173--201}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ dosen_k:1992b, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {The First Axiomatization of Relevant Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1992}, volume = {21}, number = {4}, pages = {339--356}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ dosen_k:1992c, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {Modal Translations in Substructural Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1992}, volume = {21}, number = {3}, pages = {283--336}, topic = {substructural-logics;modal-logic;} } @incollection{ dosen_k:1993b, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {Modal Translations in {\bf K} and {\bf D}}, booktitle = {Diamonds and Defaults}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, editor = {Maarten de Rijke}, year = {1993}, pages = {103--127}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {modal-logic;deontic-logic;} } @book{ dosen_k:1994a, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {Substructural Logics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, series = {Studies in Logic and Computation}, number = {2}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {019853778}, topic = {substructural-logics;} } @incollection{ dosen_k:1994b, author = {Kosta Dosen}, title = {Logical Constants as Punctuation Marks}, booktitle = {What is a Logical System?}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Dov Gabbay}, pages = {273--296}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {proof-theory;logical-constants;} } @article{ dosen_k:1996a, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {Deductive Completeness}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {243--283}, rtnote = {This looks like a nice paper. Read it.}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @article{ dosen_k:2001a, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}n Introduction to Substructural Logics}, by {G}reg {R}estall}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {527--530}, xref = {Review of: restall_g:2000a}, topic = {substructural-logics;linear-logic;proof-theory;} } @article{ dosen_k:2003a, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en}, title = {Identity of Proofs Based on Normalization and Generality}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2003}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {477--502}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @article{ dosen_k-adzic_m:2019a, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en and Milo\v{s} Ad\v{z}i\'c}, title = {G\"odel on Deduction}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2019}, volume = {107}, number = {1}, pages = {31--51}, topic = {Goedel;proof-theory;history-of-logic;} } @article{ dosen_k-petric:2002a, author = {Kosta Do\v{s}en and Zoran Petri\'c}, title = {Bicartesian Coherence}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2002}, volume = {71}, number = {3}, pages = {331--353}, topic = {Lambek-calculus;categorial-grammar;} } @article{ doshi:2012a, author = {Prashant Doshi}, title = {Decision Making in Complex Multiagent Contexts: A Tale of Two Frameworks}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2012}, volume = {33}, number = {4}, pages = {82--95}, topic = {decision-making;autonomous-agents;Markov-decision-processes; practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ doshivelez-etal:2012a, author = {Finale Doshi-Velez and Joelle Pineau and Nicholas Roy}, title = {Reinforcement Learning with Limited Reinforcement: Using {B}ayes Risk for Active Learning in {POMDP}s}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {187--188}, pages = {115--132}, topic = {reinforcement-learning;PDMPs;} } @inproceedings{ dotlacil_j-roelofsen_f:2019a, author = {Jakub Dotla\v{c}il and Floris Roelofsen}, title = {Dynamic Inquisitive Semantics: Anaphora and Questions}, booktitle = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 23}, year = {2019}, editor = {Eva Csipak and Hedde Zeijlstra}, publisher = {Georg-{A}ugust-{U}niversit\"at {G}\"ottingen}, address = {G\"ottingen}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/Tg3ZGI2M/Dotlacil.pdf}, pages = {365--382}, abstract = {This paper develops a dynamic inquisitive semantics and illustrates its potential to capture interactions between anaphora and questions.}, topic = {dynamic-semantics;inquisitive-semantics;anaphora;interrogatives;} } @book{ double:1991a, author = {Richard Double}, title = {The Non-Reality of Free Will}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: ravizza:1993a}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @incollection{ dougherty_p-rysiew_p:2005c, author = {Trent Dougherty and Patrick Rysiew}, title = {Should Knowledge Come First? Still Nowhere Else to Start}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {25--26}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: williamson_t:2005b}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;} } @article{ dougherty_rc:1969a, author = {Ray C. Dougherty}, title = {An Interpretive Theory of Pronominal Reference}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1969}, volume = {5}, pages = {488--519}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {anaphora;} } @article{ dougherty_rc:1973a, author = {Ray C. Dougherty}, title = {A Survey of Linguistic Methods and Arguments}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1973}, volume = {10}, number = {3}, pages = {423--490}, topic = {generative-semantics;} } @article{ dougherty_rc:1974a, author = {Ray C. Dougherty}, title = {The Syntax and Semantics of `Each Other' Constructions}, journal = {Foundations of Language}, year = {1974}, volume = {12}, pages = {1--47}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {reciprical-constructions;} } @incollection{ dougherty_rc:1974b, author = {Ray C. Dougherty}, title = {What Explanation Is and Isn't}, booktitle = {Explaining Linguistic Phenomena}, publisher = {Hemisphere Publishing Corp.}, year = {1974}, editor = {David Cohen}, pages = {125--151}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;linguistics-methodology; explanation;} } @incollection{ dougherty_rc:1976a, author = {Ray C. Dougherty}, title = {Argument Invention: The Linguist's `Feel' for Science}, booktitle = {Assessing Linguistic Arguments}, publisher = {Hemisphere Publishing Corporation}, year = {1976}, editor = {Jessica R. Wirth}, pages = {111--165}, address = {Washington, D.C.}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;foundations-of-linguistics;} } @book{ dougherty_rc:1995a, author = {Ray C. Dougherty}, title = {Natural Language Computing}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1995}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-processing;PROLOG;} } @incollection{ dougherty_t-rysiew_p:2005a, author = {Trent Dougherty and Patrick Rysiew}, title = {What Is Knowledge-first Epistemology?}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {10--16}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;} } @incollection{ dougherty_t-rysiew_p:2005b, author = {Trent Dougherty and Patrick Rysiew}, title = {Should Knowledge Come First? Experience First}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {17--21}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Commentary on: williamson_t:2005a}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;} } @article{ dougherty_t-rysiew_p:2009a, author = {Trent Dougherty and Patrick Rysiew}, title = {Fallibilism, Epistemic Possibility, and Concessive Knowledge Attributions}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {2009}, volume = {78}, number = {1}, pages = {123--139}, topic = {epistemic-modals;epistemology;} } @article{ douglas_m:1990a, author = {M. Douglas}, title = {Risk as a Forensic Resource}, journal = {Daedalus}, year = {1990}, volume = {119}, pages = {1--16}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {risk;} } @incollection{ doumas-hummel:2005a, author = {Leonidas A. A. Doumas and John E. Hummel}, title = {Approaches to Modeling Human Mental Representations: What Works, What Doesn't, and Why}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Keith J. Holyoak and Robert G. Morrison}, pages = {73--91}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;mental-representations;} } @article{ dourash:2001a, author = {Paul Dourash}, title = {Seeking a Foundation for Context-Aware Computing}, journal = {Human-COmputer Interaction}, year = {2001}, volume = {16}, number = {2}, pages = {395--432}, topic = {context-aware-computing;} } @article{ dournaee:2010a, author = {Blake H. Dournaee}, title = {Comments on `The Replication of the Hard Problem of Consciousness in AI and Bio-AI{'}}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {303--309}, abstract = {In their joint paper entitled `The Replication of the Hard Problem of Consciousness in AI and BIO-AI' (Boltuc et al. Replication of the hard problem of conscious in AI and Bio- AI: An early conceptual framework 2008), Nicholas and Piotr Boltuc suggest that machines could be equipped with phenomenal consciousness, which is subjective consciousness that satisfies Chalmer's hard problem $\dots$ The purpose of this paper is to comment on the argument for his conclusion and offer additional properties of H-consciousness that can be used to make the conclusion falsifiable through scientific investigation rather than relying on the limits of human understanding. }, topic = {consciousness;philosophy-of-mind;machine-intelligence;} } @inproceedings{ doutre_s-etal:2014a, author = {Sylvie Doutre and Andreas Herzig and Laurent Perrussel}, title = {A Dynamic Logic Framework for Abstract Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {62--71}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We provide a logical analysis of abstract argumentation frameworks and their dynamics. Following previous work, we express attack relation and argument status by means of propositional variables and define acceptability criteria by formulas of propositional logic. We here study the dynamics of argumentation frameworks in terms of basic operations on these propositional variables, viz. change of their truth values. We describe these operations in a uniform way within a well-known variant of Propositional Dynamic Logic PDL: the Dynamic Logic of Propositional Assignments, DL-PA. The atomic programs of DL-PA are assignments of propositional variables to truth values, and complex programs can be built by means of the connectives of sequential and nondeterministic composition and test. We start by showing that in DL-PA, the construction of extensions can be performed by a DL-PA program that is parametrized by the definition of acceptance. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {kr;abstract-argumentation;dynamic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ douven_i:1998a, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {Inference to the Best Explanation Made Coherent}, booktitle = {{PSA}98: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part 1: Contributed Papers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Don A. Howard}, pages = {424--435}, organization = {Philosophy of Science Association}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, address = {Chicago, Illinois}, topic = {explanation;abduction;} } @article{ douven_i:1999a, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {Putnam's Model-Theoretic Argument Reconstructed}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1999}, volume = {96}, number = {9}, pages = {479--490}, topic = {philosophical-realism;} } @article{ douven_i:2002a, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {A New Solution to the Paradoxes of Rational Acceptability}, journal = {British Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year = {2002}, volume = {53}, number = {3}, pages = {391--410}, abstract = {The Lottery Paradox and the Preface Paradox both involve the thesis that high probability is sufficient for rational acceptability. The standard solution to these paradoxes denies that rational acceptability is deductively closed. This solution has a number of untoward consequences. The present paper suggests that a better solution to the paradoxes is to replace the thesis that high probability suffices for rational acceptability with a somewhat stricter thesis. This avoids the untoward consequences of the standard solution. The new solution will be defended against a seemingly obvious objection.}, topic = {lottery-paradox;paradox-of-the-preface;} } @article{ douven_i:2003a, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {Nelkin on the Lottery Paradox}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2003}, volume = {112}, number = {3}, pages = {395--404}, xref = {Commentary on: nelkin_dk:2000a.}, topic = {lottery-paradox;} } @article{ douven_i:2006a, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {Assertion, Knowledge, and Rational Credibility}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2006}, volume = {115}, number = {4}, pages = {449--485}, topic = {assertion;knowledge;} } @article{ douven_i:2007a, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {Fitch's Paradox and Probabilistic Antirealism}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {86}, number = {2}, pages = {149--182}, topic = {Fitch-paradox;knowability-paradox;} } @article{ douven_i:2008a, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {Kaufmann on the Probabilities of Conditionals}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {37}, number = {3}, pages = {259--266}, xref = {Commentary on kaufmann_s:2004c.}, topic = {cccp;conditionals;probability;} } @article{ douven_i:2008b, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {The Lottery Paradox and our Epistemic Goal}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {2008}, volume = {89}, number = {2}, pages = {204--225}, abstract = {Many have the intuition that the right response to the Lottery Paradox is to deny that one can justifiably believe of even a single lottery ticket that it will lose. The paper shows that from any theory of justification that solves the paradox in accordance with this intuition, a theory not of that kind can be derived that also solves the paradox but is more conducive to our epistemic goal than the former. It is argued that currently there is no valid reason not to give preference to the derived accounts over the accounts from which they come.}, topic = {lottery-paradox;} } @article{ douven_i:2011a, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {Further Results on the Intransitivity of Evidential Support}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {487--497}, topic = {evidential-support;} } @incollection{ douven_i:2011b, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {Abduction}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/abduction/}, year = {2011}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, address = {Stanford, Dalifornia}, topic = {abduction;} } @article{ douven_i:2012a, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {The Sequential Lottery Paradox}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {1}, pages = {55--57}, topic = {lottery-paradox;} } @article{ douven_i:2019a, author = {Igor Douven}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Stability of Belief: How Rational Belief Coheres with Probability}, by {H}annes {L}eitgeb}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2019}, volume = {128}, number = {3}, pages = {371--375}, xref = {Review of: leitgeb_h:2017a}, topic = {belief;probability;} } @article{ douven_i-etal:2013a, author = {Igor Douven and Lieven Decock and Richard Dietz and Paul \'Egr\'e}, title = {Vagueness: A Conceptual Spaces Approach}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {42}, number = {1}, pages = {137--160}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ douven_i-uffink:2003a, author = {Igor Douven and Jos Uffink}, title = {The Preface Paradox Revisited}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2003}, volume = {59}, number = {3}, pages = {389--420}, abstract = {The Preface Paradox has led many philosophers to believe that, if it is assumed that high probability is necessary for rational acceptability, the principleaccording to which rational acceptability is closed under conjunction (CP)must be abandoned. In this paper we argue that the paradox is far less damaging to CP than is generally believed. We describe how, given certain plausibleassumptions, in a large class of cases in which CP seems to lead tocontradiction, it does not do so after all. A restricted version of CP canthus be maintained.}, topic = {paradox-of-the-preface;} } @article{ douven_i-williamson_t:2006a, author = {Igor Douven and Timothy Williamson}, title = {Generalizing the Lottery Paradox}, journal = {The {B}ritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year = {2006}, volume = {57}, number = {4}, pages = {755--779}, abstract = {This paper is concerned with formal solutions to the lottery paradox on which high probability defeasibly warrants acceptance. It considers some recently proposed solutions of this type and presents an argument showing that these solutions are trivial in that they boil down to the claim that perfect probability is sufficient for rational acceptability. The argument is then generalized, showing that a broad class of similar solutions faces the same problem. }, topic = {lottery-paradox;} } @article{ douvewn_i-verbrugge_r:2010a, author = {Igor Douven and Reineke Verbrugge}, title = {The {A}dams Family}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {2010}, volume = {217}, number = {3}, pages = {302--318}, abstract = {According to Adams's Thesis, the acceptability of anindicative conditional sentence goes by the conditional probability of its consequent given its antecedent. We test, for the first time, whether this thesis is descriptively correct and show that it is not; in particular, we show that it yields the wrong predictions for people's judgments of the acceptabilityof important subclasses of the class of inferential conditionals.}, topic = {conditionals;CCCP;cognitive-psychology;} } @incollection{ dow-ribierodacostawerlang:1992a, author = {James Dow and S\'ergio {Ribiero da Costa Werlang}}, title = {The Ex Ante Non-Optimality of the {D}empster-{S}chafer Updating Rule for Ambiguous Beliefs}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fourth Conference ({TARK} 1992)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Yoram Moses}, pages = {163--166}, address = {San Francisco}, note = {A commentary on \cite{gilboa-schmeidler:1992a}.}, topic = {probability-kinematics;} } @article{ dowden:1984a, author = {Bradley H. Dowden}, title = {Accepting Inconsistencies from Paradoxes}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1984}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {125--130}, topic = {paraconsistency;semantic-paradoxes;} } @incollection{ dowding_j-etal:2003a, author = {John Dowding and Gregory Aist and Beth Ann Hockey and Elizabeth Owen Bratt}, title = {Generating Canonical Examples Using Candidate Words}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the 2003 {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Natural Language Generation in Spoken and Written Dialogue}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Reva Freedman and Charles Callaway}, pages = {23--27}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {nl-generation;} } @incollection{ dowding_k-vanhees_m:2009a, author = {Keith Dowding and Martin van Hees}, title = {Freedom of Choice}, booktitle = {Handbook of Rational and Social Choice}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Paul Anand and Prasanta Pattanaik and Clemens Puppe}, pages = {374--392}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {This chapter introduces and reviews the extensive literature using an axiomatic-deductive approach to the measurement of freedom of choice and suggest some new avenues of research. ... we distinguish a diversity and an opportunity issue. Diversity is usually addressed without recourse to preferences and the two lines can therefore also be referred to as non-preference-based and preference-based approaches to the measurement of freedom of choice. ... we ... ask whether the literature tries to measure the extent of a person's freedom or its value. If it is the former then the differences between the two types of approach can be explained by their underlying definition of freedom. If it is the latter then important elements are not captured by any of the axiomatic formulations: namely the costs of choice. ... }, topic = {freedom;public-policy;} } @article{ dowe_p:1998a, author = {Phil Dowe}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Facts of Causation}, by {D}.{H}. {M}ellor}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1998}, volume = {65}, number = {1}, pages = {162--130}, xref = {Review of: mellor_dh:1995a.}, topic = {causality;} } @book{ dowe_p:2000a, author = {Phil Dowe}, title = {Physical Causation}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780521039758}, abstract = {Dowe discusses ... the conserved quantities account of causal processes ... The book describes causal processes and interactions in terms of conserved quantities: a causal process is the worldline of an object which possesses a conserved quantity, and a causal interaction involves the exchange of conserved quantities. ...}, topic = {causation;philosophy-of-physics;} } @article{ dowe_p:2009a, author = {Phil Dowe}, title = {Every Now and Then: A-Theory and Loops in Time}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2009}, volume = {106}, number = {12}, pages = {641--665}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;temporal-cycles;A-series-B-series;} } @article{ dowe_p:2009b, author = {Phil Dowe}, title = {Would-Cause Semantics}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2009}, volume = {76}, number = {5}, pages = {701--711}, rtnote = {{PSA}2008: Proceedings of the 2008 Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {I}}, topic = {conditionals;causality;} } @book{ dowe_p-noordhof_p:2003a, editor = {Phil Dowe and Paul Noordhof}, title = {Cause and Chance: Causation in an Indeterministic World}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2003}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0415000983 (hardback)}, xref = {Review: glymour_c:2005a.}, topic = {conditionals;causality;} } @book{ dowek_g:2018a, author = {Gilles Dowek}, title = {Computation, Proof, Machine: Mathematics Enters a New Age}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2018}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9781139026581}, note = {Translated by Pierre Guillot and Marion Roman}, abstract = {...[Explores the] hidden history that follows the thread of computation. Along the way it invites us to reconsider the dialog between mathematics and the natural sciences, as well as the relationship between mathematics and computer science. It also sheds new light on philosophical concepts, such as the notions of analytic and synthetic judgment. Finally, it brings us to the brink of the new age, in which machine intelligence offers new ways of solving mathematical problems previously inaccessible.}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @incollection{ dowell_j:2012a, author = {Janice Dowell}, title = {Contextualist Solutions to Three Puzzles about Practical Conditionals}, booktitle = {Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Volume 7}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Russ Shafer-Landau}, pages = {271--303}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {This chapter discusses three puzzles about practical conditionals and inferences ... The chapter first introduces the puzzle cases and six desiderata for their solutions, and then shows how only flexible contextualism about 'ought' is able to resolve each while satisfying all six desiderata.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de21}, topic = {'ought';contextualism;conditional-obligation;anankastic-conditionals;} } @incollection{ dowell_jd:2012a, author = {Janice D. Dowell}, title = {Contextualist Solutions to Three Puzzles about Practical Conditionals}, booktitle = {Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Volume 7}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Russ Shafer-Landau}, pages = {271--303}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe20}, contentnote = {The 3 puzzles are: (1) gentle murder, (2)anankastic condtionals, (3) miners.}, topic = {deontic-logic;context;conditionals;anankastic-conditionals;} } @article{ downey_d-etal:2010a, author = {Doug Downey and Oren Etzioni and Stephen Soderland}, title = {Analysis of a Probabilistic Model of Redundancy in Unsupervised Information Extraction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {11}, pages = {726--748}, topic = {machine-learning;information-extraction;} } @article{ downey_r-greenberg_n:2018a, author = {Rod Downey and Noam Greenberg}, title = {A Hierarchy of Computably Enumerable Degrees}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {24}, number = {1}, pages = {53--89}, topic = {computability;} } @article{ downey_rg-etal:2006a, author = {Rodney G. Downey and Denis R. Hirschfield and Andr\'e Nies and Sebastian A. Terwuin}, title = {Calibrating Randomness}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2006}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {411--491}, topic = {randomness;} } @book{ downey_rg-hirschfeldt:2010a, author = {Rodney G. Downey and Denis R. Hirschfeldt}, title = {Algorithmic Randomness and Complexity}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2010}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Review: bienvenu_l:2012a.}, topic = {randomness;} } @book{ downing_kl:2015a, author = {Keith L. Downing}, title = {Intelligence Emerging: Adaptavity and Search in Evolving Neural Systems}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0-262-02913-1}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CogSci Shelves}, topic = {emergence;AI-general;neural-computation;} } @article{ downing_p:1975a, author = {Peter Downing}, title = {Conditionals, Impossibilities and Material Implications}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1975}, volume = {35}, number = {3}, pages = {84--91}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ downing_p:1977a, author = {Pamela Downing}, title = {On the Creation and Use of {E}nglish Compound Nouns}, journal = {Language}, year = {1977}, volume = {53}, number = {4}, pages = {810--842}, topic = {compound-nouns;} } @article{ downing_pb:1959a, author = {Peter B. Downing}, title = {Subjunctive Conditionals, Time Order, and Causation}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society, New Series}, year = {1959}, volume = {59}, pages = {125--140}, topic = {conditionals;temporal-reasoning;causality;} } @techreport{ dowty_dr:1972a, author = {David Dowty}, title = {Studies in the Logic of Verb Aspect and Time Reference in {E}nglish}, institution = {Department of Linguistics, University of Texas}, year = {1972}, address = {Austin, Texas}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {nl-tense;tense-aspect;} } @inproceedings{ dowty_dr:1972b, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {On the Syntax and Semantics of the Atomic Predicate {CAUSE}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society}, year = {1972}, pages = {62--74}, publisher = {Chicago Linguistics Society}, editor = {Paul M. Peranteau and Judith N. Levi and Gloria C. Phares}, address = {Chicago University, Chicago, Illinois}, rtnote = {I have CLS 8.}, topic = {lexical-semantics;causality;} } @incollection{ dowty_dr:1972c, author = {David Dowty}, title = {Temporally Restrictive Adjectives}, booktitle = {Syntax and Semantics, Volume 1}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1972}, editor = {John P. Kimball}, pages = {51--53}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {adjectives;adverbs;nl-tense;} } @article{ dowty_dr:1975a, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {The Stative in the Progressive and Other Essence/Accident Contrasts}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1975}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {579--588}, rtnote = {Prepub copy in files}, topic = {stative-constructions;} } @incollection{ dowty_dr:1976a, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {Montague Grammar and the Lexical Decomposition of Causative Verbs}, booktitle = {Montague Grammar}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Barbara H. Partee}, pages = {201--245}, address = {New York}, topic = {Montague-grammar;lexical-semantics;} } @article{ dowty_dr:1977a, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {Toward a Semantic Analysis of Verb Aspect and the {E}nglish `Imperfective' Progressive}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {45--77}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;progressive-aspect;imperfective-paradox;} } @unpublished{ dowty_dr:1978b, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {Addendum to `Dative Movement and {T}homason's Extensions of {M}ontague Grammar{'} }, year = {1978}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, The Ohio State University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Dowty"}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, topic = {Montague-grammar;} } @article{ dowty_dr:1978c, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {Governed Transformations as Lexical Rules in {M}ontague Grammar}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1978}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {393--428}, topic = {Montague-grammar;meaning-postulates;lexical-semantics;} } @book{ dowty_dr:1979a, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {Word Meaning in {M}ontague Grammar}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1979}, address = {Dordrecht, Holland}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {nl-semantics;montague-grammar;lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ dowty_dr:1979b, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {Dative `Movement' and {T}homason's Extensions of {M}ontague Grammar}, booktitle = {Linguistics, Philosophy, and Montague Grammar}, publisher = {University of Texas Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Steven Davis and Marianne Mithun}, pages = {157--222}, address = {Austin, Texas}, topic = {Montague-grammar;} } @incollection{ dowty_dr:1981a, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {Grammatical Relations and {M}ontague Grammar}, booktitle = {The Nature of Syntactic Representation}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1982}, editor = {Pauline I. Jacobsen and Geoffrey K. Pullum}, pages = {79--130}, abstract = {In this paper I want to describe a universal theory of 'grammatical relations' that arises naturally within the formal theory of syntax and semantics of natural language developed originally by Richard Montague and subsequently extended in a certain series of treatments of Montague's ideas [by Thomason, Dowty, Bach, and Schmerling]. ... I believe this analysis of grammatical relations is supported by some of the same observations as are the related theories of Relational Grammar and Arc Pair Grammar ...}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {Montague-grammar;grammatical-relations;meaning-postulates;} } @article{ dowty_dr:1982a, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {Tenses, Time Adverbs, and Compositional Semantic Theory}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1982}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {23--55}, topic = {nl-tense;nl-semantics;temporal-adverbials; semantic-compositionality;} } @inproceedings{ dowty_dr:1985a, author = {David Dowty}, title = {Type Raising, Functional Composition, and Non-Constituent Conjunction}, booktitle = {Categorial Grammars and Natural Language Structures}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, editor = {Richard T. Oehrle and Emmon Bach and Deirdre Wheeler}, year = {1988}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Dowty"}, topic = {categorial-grammar;nl-semantic-types;coordination;} } @article{ dowty_dr:1985b, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {On Recent Analyses of the Semantics of Control}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {291--331}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Dowty2.pdf}, topic = {Montague-grammar;nl-semantics;syntactic-control;} } @article{ dowty_dr:1986a, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {Preface}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1986}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {1--3}, note = {To a special volume on tense and aspect in discourse.}, topic = {nl-semantics;events;tense-aspect;Aktionsarten;} } @article{ dowty_dr:1986b, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {The Effects of Aspectual Class on the Temporal Structure of Discourse: Semantics or Pragmatics?}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1986}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {37--62}, topic = {Aktionsarten;nl-semantics;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ dowty_dr:1988a, author = {David Dowty}, title = {On the Semantic Content of the Notion of `Thematic Role{'}}, booktitle = {Properties, Types and Meaning, Vol. 2}, year = {1988}, editor = {Gennaro Chierchia and Barbara Partee and Raymond Turner}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, pages = {69--129}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {thematic-roles;} } @article{ dowty_dr:1991a, author = {David Dowty}, title = {Thematic Proto-Roles and Argument Selection}, journal = {Language}, year = {1991}, volume = {67}, number = {3}, pages = {547--619}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {thematic-roles;argument-structure;} } @inproceedings{ dowty_dr:1994a, author = {David Dowty}, title = {The Role of Negative Polarity and Concord Marking in Natural Language Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {IV}}, year = {1994}, editor = {Mandy Harvey and Lynn Santelmann}, pages = {114--144}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {nl-agreement;polarity;parsing-as-deduction;} } @incollection{ dowty_dr:1996a, author = {David R. Dowty}, title = {Toward a Minimalist Theory of Syntactic Structure}, booktitle = {Discontinuous Constituency}, publisher = {Mouton De Gruyter}, year = {1996}, editor = {Harry Bunt and Arthur van Horck}, pages = {10--62}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Dowty1.pdf}, contentnote = {Tries to assume for syntactic purposes a minimum of constituent structure.}, topic = {foundations-of-syntax;constituent-structure;} } @book{ dowty_dr-etal:1981a, author = {David R. Dowty and Robert Wall and Stanley Peters}, title = {Introduction to {M}ontague Semantics}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1981}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {902771142-9}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves. Spare copy phildept.}, rtnote = {semantics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;montague-grammar;} } @book{ dowty_dr-etal:1985a, editor = {David R. Dowty and Lauri Karttunen and Arnold M. Zwicky}, title = {Natural Language Parsing: Psychological, Computational, And Theoretical Perspectives}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, ENgland}, ISBN = {0521262038}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P98 .N31 1985.}, topic = {parsing-psychology;} } @incollection{ doyle_j:1979a1, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Reason Maintenance and Belief Revision}, booktitle = {Readings in Uncertain Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Glenn Shafer and Judea Pearl}, pages = {259--279}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {truth-maintenance;belief-revision;} } @article{ doyle_j:1979b1, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {A Truth Maintenance System}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1979}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {231--272}, xref = {Republications: doyle_j:1979b2, doyle_j:1979b3.}, topic = {truth-maintenance;} } @incollection{ doyle_j:1979b2, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {A Truth Maintenance System}, booktitle = {Readings in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1981}, editor = {Bonnie Webber and Nils J. Nilsson}, pages = {496--516}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: doyle_j:1979b1.}, topic = {truth-maintenance;} } @incollection{ doyle_j:1979b3, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {A Truth Maintenance System}, booktitle = {Readings in Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1987}, editor = {Matthew L. Ginsberg}, pages = {259--279}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Original Publication: doyle_j:1979b1.}, topic = {truth-maintenance;} } @techreport{ doyle_j:1980a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {A Model for Deliberation, Action, and Introspection}, institution = {Artificial Intelligence Laboratory}, number = {AI TR 581}, year = {1980}, address = {Massachusetts Institute of Technology}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;practical-reasoning;autonomous-agents;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1982a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {What is {C}hurch's Thesis? An Outline}, year = {1982}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University.}, topic = {Church's-thesis;} } @techreport{ doyle_j:1982b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {The Foundations of Psychology}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University}, number = {Technical Report No. CMU-CS-82-149.}, year = {1982}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. I believe this was published IJCAI-83.}, topic = {foundations-of-psychology;} } @techreport{ doyle_j:1983a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Some Theories of Reasoned Assumptions}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University}, number = {CMU-CS-83-125}, year = {1983}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;foundations-of-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ doyle_j:1983b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {The Ins and Outs of Reason Maintenance}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, pages = {349--351}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, missinginfo = {editor}, topic = {truth-maintenance;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1983c, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Methodological Simplicity in Expert System Construction}, year = {1983}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {expert-systems;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @techreport{ doyle_j:1983d1, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {A Society of Mind}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University}, number = {Technical Report No. CMU-CS-83-127.}, year = {1983}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Conference publication doyle_j:1983d1.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;foundations-of-reasoning; agent-architectures;} } @inproceedings{ doyle_j:1983d2, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {A Society of Mind---Multiple Perspectives, Reasoned Assumptions, and Virtual Copies}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, editor = {Barbara Hayes-Roth and Richard Korf}, pages = {309--313}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, xref = {Techreport doyle_j:1983d1.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;foundations-of-reasoning; agent-architectures;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1983e, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Admissible State Semantics for Representational Systems}, year = {1983}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {semantics-of-programming-languages;} } @techreport{ doyle_j:1983f, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {What Should {AI} Want from the Supercomputers?}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University}, number = {Technical Report No. CMU-CS-83-150}, year = {1982}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {AI-editorial;supercomputers;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1984a1, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Reasoned Assumptions and {P}areto Optimality}, year = {1984}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Publication: doyle_j:1984a2.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;foundations-of-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ doyle_j:1984a2, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Reasoned Assumptions and {P}areto Optimality}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, editor = {Arivind Joshi}, pages = {87--90}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Publication of: doyle_j:1984a1.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;foundations-of-reasoning;} } @techreport{ doyle_j:1984b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Expert Systems without Computers}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University}, number = {CMU-CS-84-116}, year = {1984}, address = {Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {expert-systems;AI-methodology;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1984c, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Circumscription and Implicit Definability}, year = {1984}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {circumscription;definability;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1986a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Bounded Rationality and Rational Self-Government}, year = {1986}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {limited-rationality;rationality-and-cognition;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1986b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Considered Actions, Reliable Reasoning, and Rational Self-Government}, year = {1986}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {limited-rationality;rationality-and-cognition;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1986c, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Logic, Rationality, and Rational Psychology}, year = {1986}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Probably published as comment on McDermott's Critique.}, topic = {AI-methodology;logic-in-AI;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1986d, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {How to Frame It: Modern Applied Logic from the Top Down, or Secrets of the Metamathematicans}, year = {1986}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie-Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {art-of-formalization;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1987a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Rational Self-Government}, year = {1987}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {limited-rationality;pr-course;} } @article{ doyle_j:1987b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Logic, Rationality and Rational Psychology}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {3}, issue = {3}, pages = {175--176}, xref = {kr;foundations-of-kr;logic-in-AI;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1987c, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Big Problems for Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {AI-editorial;} } @inproceedings{ doyle_j:1988a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Knowledge, Representation, and Rational Self-Government}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge}, year = {1988}, editor = {Moshe Y. Vardi}, pages = {345--354}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {rationality;nonmonotonic-reasoning;decision-theory;} } @techreport{ doyle_j:1988b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Implicit Knowledge and Rational Representation}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University}, number = {Technical Report No. CMU-CS-88-134.}, year = {1988}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {knowledge;epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality;} } @techreport{ doyle_j:1988c, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {On Universal Theories of Defaults}, institution = {Computer Science Department, Carnegie Mellon University}, number = {CMU-CS-88-111}, year = {1988}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;foundations-of-reasoning;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1988d, author = {Jon Doyle and Elisha P. Sacks}, title = {Stochastic Analysis of Qualitative Dynamics}, year = {1988}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {qualitative-physics;} } @techreport{ doyle_j:1988e, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Artificial Intelligence and Rational Self-Government}, institution = {Carnegie- Mellon University Computer Science Department}, number = {CS-88-124}, year = {1988}, address = {Pittsburgh}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {limited-rationality;rationality-and-cognition;} } @inproceedings{ doyle_j:1989a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Reasoning, Representation, and Rational Self-Government}, booktitle = {Methodologies for Intelligent Systems}, year = {1989}, editor = {Zbigniew Ras}, pages = {395--402}, publisher = {North-Holland}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;AI-and-economics;} } @article{ doyle_j:1989b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Constructive Belief and Rational Representation}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {1--11}, topic = {epistemic-logic;belief;AI-and-economics;} } @inproceedings{ doyle_j:1990a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Rationality and Its Roles in Reasoning (Extended Abstract)}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, editor = {Thomas Dietterich and William Swartout}, pages = {1093--1100}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, topic = {rationality;utility-theory;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1990b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Rational Belief Revision}, year = {1990}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Carnegie Mellon University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, url = {http://www.csc.ncsu.edu/faculty/doyle/}, topic = {rationality;belief-revision;} } @incollection{ doyle_j:1991a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {The Foundations of Psychology: A Logico-Computational Inquiry into the Concept of Mind}, booktitle = {Philosophy and {AI}: Essays at the Interface}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Robert Cummins and John L. Pollock}, pages = {39--77}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-AI;philosophy-of-psychology;foundations-of-AI; foundations-of-psychology;} } @incollection{ doyle_j:1991b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Rational Belief Revision}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {163--174}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;belief-revision;kr-course;} } @incollection{ doyle_j:1992a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Reason Maintenance and Belief Revision: Foundations Vs. Coherence Theories}, booktitle = {Belief Revision}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Peter G\"ardenfors}, pages = {29--52}, address = {Cambridge}, topic = {belief-revision;truth-maintenance;} } @incollection{ doyle_j:1992b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Reason Maintenance and Belief Revision}, booktitle = {Belief Revision}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Peter G\"ardenfors}, pages = {29--51}, address = {Cambridge}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ doyle_j:1992c, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Rationality and Its Roles in Reasoning}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {376--409}, topic = {rationality;practical-reasoning;pr-course;foundations-of-planning;} } @article{ doyle_j:1994a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Reasoned Assumptions and Rational Psychology}, journal = {Fundamenta Informaticae}, year = {1994}, volume = {20}, number = {1--3)}, pages = {35--73}, topic = {limited-rationality;rationality-and-cognition;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1995a, author = {John Doyle}, title = {Contextual Equivalence and \emph{Ceteris Paribus} Comparatives}, year = {1995}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Laboratory for Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {foundations-of-planning;qualitative-utility;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:1997a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {An Outline of Qualitative Decision Theory}, year = {1997}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Laboratory for Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @article{ doyle_j:1998a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Methodological Simplicity in Expert System Construction: The Case of Judgments and Reasoned Assumptions}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1998}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {39--43}, abstract ={Here we survey recent developments concerning reasoned assumptions which offer hope for avoiding the practical elusiveness of probabilistic rules while retaining theoretical power, for basing systems on the information unhesitatingly gained from expert informants, and reconstructing the entailed degrees of belief later.}, topic = {truth-maintenance;expert-systems;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:2000a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Mind, Matter, and Mechanics}, year = {2000}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Laboratory for Computer Science, Massachusetts Institute of Technology}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, xref = {Book publication: doyle_j:2006a.}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;rational-mechanics;} } @article{ doyle_j:2002a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {What is {C}hurch's Thesis? An Outline}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2002}, volume = {12}, number = {4}, pages = {519--530}, topic = {Church's-thesis;} } @unpublished{ doyle_j:2003a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {The Mechanical Foundations of Psychology and Economics}, year = {2003}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, North Carolina State University}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {foundations-of-psychology;} } @article{ doyle_j:2004a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Prospects for Preferences}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, year = {2004}, pages = {111--136}, rtnote = {In RT collection. \se10}, abstract = {This article examines prospects for theories and methods of preferences, both in the specific sense of the preferences of the ideal rational agents considered in economics and decision theory and in the broader interplay between reasoning and rationality considered in philosophy, psychology, and artificial intelligence. Modern applications seek to employ preferences as means for specifying, designing, and controlling rational behaviors as well as descriptive means for understanding behaviors. We seek to understand the nature and representation of preferences by examining the roles, origins, meaning, structure, evolution, and application of preferences.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Preferences".}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preferences;reasoning-about-preferences;} } @book{ doyle_j:2006a, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {Extending Mechanics to Minds: The Mechanical Foundations of Psychology and Economics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;rational-mechanics;} } @incollection{ doyle_j:2006b, author = {Jon Doyle}, title = {On Mechanization of Thought Processes (Extended Abstract)}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {2}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;rational-mechanics;} } @article{ doyle_j-dean_t:1997a, author = {Jon Doyle and Thomas Dean}, title = {Strategic Directions in Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {{AI} Magazine}, year = {1997}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {87--102}, topic = {AI-survey;} } @inproceedings{ doyle_j-etal:1991a, author = {Jon Doyle and Yoav Shoham and Michael P. Wellman}, title = {A Logic of Relative Desire (Preliminary Report)}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixth International Symposium on Methodologies for Intelligent Systems}, year = {1991}, editor = {Zbigniew Ras}, pages = {16--31}, series = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Doyle1.pdf}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @book{ doyle_j-etal:1994a, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, title = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, address = {San Francisco}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Alessandro Artale and Enrico Franconi, "A Computational Account for a Description Logic of Time and Action", pp. 3--14 2. Giuseppe Attardi and Maria Simi, "Proofs in Context", pp. 16--26 3. John A. Barnden and Stephen Helmreich and Eric Iverson and Gees C. Stein, "An Integrated Implementation of Simulative, Uncertain, and Metaphorical Reasoning about Mental States", pp. 27--38 4. Rachel Ben-Eliyahu and Luigi Palopoli, "Reasoning with Minimal Models: Efficient Algorithms and Applications", pp. 39--50 5. Brandon Bennett, "Spatial Reasoning with Propositional Logics", pp. 51--62 6. Alexander Bochman, "On the Relation Between Default and Modal Consequence Relations", pp. 63--74 7. Craig Boutilier, "Toward a Logic for Qualitative Decision Theory", pp. 75--86 8. Ronen Brafman and Moshe Tennenholtz, "Belief Ascription and Mental-Level Modeling", pp. 87--98 9. Marco Cadoli and Thomas Eiter and Georg Georg Gottlob, "Default Logic as a Query Language", pp. 99--108 10. Marco Calvanese and Maurizio Lenzerini and Daniele Nardi, "A Unified Framework for Class-Based Representation Formalisms", pp. 109--120 11. William W. Cohen and Haym Hirsh, "Learning the Classical Description Logic: Theoretical and Experimental Results", pp. 121--133 12. Rina Dechter and Irina Rish, "Directional Resolution: The {D}avis-{P}utnam Procedure, Revisited", pp. 134--145 13. James P. Delgrande and Torsten Schaub, "A General Approach to Specificity in Default Reasoning", pp. 146--157 14. Barbara Di Eugenio, "Action Representation for Interpreting Purpose Clauses in Natural Language Instructions", pp. 158--169 15. Didier Dubois and Henri Prade, "Conditional Objects as Nonmonotonic Consequence Relations: Main Results", pp. 170--177 16. Oren Etzioni and Keith Golden and Daniel Weld, "Tractable Closed World Reasoning with Updates", pp. 178--189 17. Nir Friedman and Joseph Y. Halpern, "A Knowledge-Based Framework for Belief Change, Part {II}: Revision and Update", pp. 190--201 18. Nir Friedman and Joseph Y. Halpern, "On the Complexity of Conditional Logics", pp. 202--213 19. Alfonso Gereveni and Lenhart Schubert, "An Efficient Method for Managing Disjunctions in Qualitative Temporal Reasoning", pp. 214--225 20. Matthew L. Ginsberg and Davis A. McAllester, "{GSAT} and Efficient Backtracking", pp. 226--227 21. Robert P. Goldman and Mark S. Broddy, "Representing Uncertainty in Simple Planners", pp. 238--245 22. N.M. Gotts, "How Far Can We `C'? Defining a Doughnut Using Connection Alone", pp. 246--257 23. Thomas R. Gruber and Gregory R. Olsen, "An Ontology for Engineering Mathematics", pp. 258--269 24. Nicola Guarino and Massimiliano Carrara and Pierdaniele Giaretta, "An Ontology of Meta-Level Categories", pp. 270--280 25. Anthony Hunter, "Defeasible Reasoning with Structured Information", pp. 281--292 26. Kausumo Inoue and Chiaki Sakama, "On Positive Occurrences of Negation as Failure", pp. 293--304 27. Manfred Jaeger, "Probabilistic Reasoning in Terminological Logics", pp. 305--316 28. Yuejun J. Jiang, "On Multiagent Autoepistemic Logic---An Exospectrive View", pp. 317--328 29. Subbarao Kambhampati, "Refinement Search as a Unifying Framework for Analyzing Planning Algorithms", pp. 329--340 30. G. Neelakantan Kartha and Vladimir Lifschitz, "Actions with Indirect Effects (Preliminary Report)", pp. 341--350 31. Jana Koehler, "An Application of Terminological Logics to Case-Based Reasoning", pp. 351--362 32. Sven Koenig and Reid G. Simmons, "Risk-Sensitive Planning with Probabilistic Decision Graphs", pp. 363--373 33. Kurt Konolige, "Easy to be Hard: Difficult Problems for Greedy Algorithms", pp. 374--378 34. Manolis Koubarakis, "Complexity Results for First-Order Theories of Temporal Constraints", pp. 379--390 35. Benjamin J. Kuipers and Benjamin Shultz, "Reasoning in Logic about Continuous Systems", pp. 391--402 36. Gerhard Lakemeyer and Susanne Meyer, "Enhancing the Power of a Decidable First-Order Reasoner", pp. 403--413 37. Phillipe Lamarre and Yoav Shoham, "Knowledge, Certainty, Belief, and Conditionalization", pp. 415--424 38. Fangzhen Lin and Raymond Reiter, "How to Progress a Database (and Why) {I}: Logical Foundations", pp. 425--436 39. L. Thorne McCarty, "Modalities Over Actions {I}. Model Theory.", pp. 437--448 40. Sheila A. McIlraith, "Generating Terms Using Abduction", pp. 449--460 41. Yves Moinard, "Preferential Entailments for Circumscription", pp. 461--472 42. Ilkka Niemel\"a, "A Decision Method for Nonmonotonic Logic Based on Autoepistemic Reasoning", pp. 473--484 43. Lin Padgham and Patrick Lambris, "A Framework for Part-of Hierarchies in Terminological Logics", pp. 485--496 44. Anand S. Rao, "Means-End Recognition---Towards a Theory of Reactive Recognition", pp. 497--508 45. Klaus Schild, "Terminological Cycles and the Propositional $\mu$-Calculus", pp. 509--520 46. Bart Selman, "Near-Optimal Plans, Tractability, and Reactivity", pp. 521--529 47. Sekwah Tan and Judea Pearl, "Specification and Evaluation of Preferences Under Uncertainty", pp. 530--539 48. Gunnar Teege, "Making the Difference: A Subtraction Operation for Description Logics", pp. 540--550 49. Alvaro del Val, "Tractable Databases: How to Make Propositional Unit Resolution Complete Through Compilation", pp. 551--561 50. Jeffrey {Van Baalen} and Richard E. Fikes, "The Role of Reversible Grammars in Translating Between Representation Languages", pp. 562--571 51. Peter {Van Beek} and Rina Dechter, "Constraint Tightness versus Global Consistency", pp. 572--582 52. Wiebe {van der Hoek} and Elias Thijsse, "Honesty in Partial Logic", pp. 583--594 53. Ron {van der Meyden}, "Mutual Belief Revision (Preliminary Report)", pp. 595--606 54. Carlos Viegas Dam\'asio and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira, "{REVISE}: An Extended Logic Programming System for Revising Knowledge Bases", pp. 607--618 55. Mary-Anne Williams, "Transmutations of Knowledge Systems", pp. 619--629 56. Jaime Carbonell, "Knowledge Representation Issues in Integrated Planning and Learning Systems (Abstract)", p. 633 57. Didier Dubois and Henri Prade, "Non-Standard Theories of Uncertainty in Knowledge Representation and Reasoning", pp. 634--645 58. William A. Woods, "Beyond Ignorance-Based Systems (Abstract)", p. 646 }, topic = {kr;} } @incollection{ doyle_j-mcgeachie:2003a, author = {Jon Doyle and Michael McGeachie}, title = {Exercising Qualitative Control in Autonomous Adaptive Survivable Systems}, booktitle = {Self-Adaptive Software: Applications}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {Robert Laddaga and Howie Shrobe and Paul Robertson}, pages = {158--170}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {autonomous-agents;qualitative-reasoning;} } @article{ doyle_j-patil:1989a, author = {Jon Doyle and Ramesh Patil}, title = {Two Theses of Knowledge Representation: Language Restrictions, Taxonomic Classifications, and the Utility of Representation Services}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {48}, number = {3}, pages = {261--298}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Doyle"}, topic = {kr;description-logics;kr-course;} } @book{ doyle_j-thomason_rh:1997a, editor = {Jon Doyle and Richmond H. Thomason}, title = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Qualitative Preferences in Deliberation and Practical Reasoning}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-utility;practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ doyle_j-thomason_rh:1999a, author = {Jon Doyle and Richmond H. Thomason}, title = {Background to Qualitative Decision Theory}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {55--68}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @incollection{ doyle_j-wellman_mp:1989a1, author = {Jon Doyle and Michael Wellman}, title = {Impediments to Universal Preference-Based Default Theories}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {94--102}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: doyle_j-wellman_mp:1989a2}, topic = {kr;kr-course;foundations-of-nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ doyle_j-wellman_mp:1989a2, author = {Jon Doyle and Michael P. Wellman}, title = {Impediments to Universal Preference-Based Default Theories}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {49}, number = {1--3}, pages = {97--128}, xref = {Conference publication: doyle_j-wellman_mp:1989a1.}, topic = {kr;kr-course;foundations-of-nonmonotonic-logic;} } @article{ doyle_j-wellman_mp:1991b, author = {Jon Doyle and Michael P. Wellman}, title = {Impediments to Universal Preference-Based Default Theories}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {49}, number = {1--3}, pages = {97}, contentnote = {This paper shows that Arrow's theorem applies to preferences of defaults.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;welfare-economics;Arrow's-theorem;} } @inproceedings{ doyle_j-wellman_mp:1992a, author = {Jon Doyle and Michael P. Wellman}, title = {Modular Utility Representation for Decision-Theoretic Planning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First International Conference on Artificial Intelligence Planning Systems}, year = {1992}, pages = {236--242}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @inproceedings{ doyle_j-wellman_mp:1994a, author = {Jon Doyle and Michael P. Wellman}, title = {Representing Preferences as \emph{Ceteris Paribus} Comparatives}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Decision-Theoretic Planning}, year = {1994}, pages = {69--75}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {Unpublished other than distribution to conferees. --RT}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Doyle"}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preferences;} } @inproceedings{ doyle_rj-etal:1986a, author = {R.J. Doyle and D.J. Atkinson and R.S. Doshi}, title = {Generating perception requests and expectations to verify the execution of plans}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1986}, editor = {Tom Kehler and Stan Rosenschein}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, missinginfo = {pages 81ff}, topic = {plan-monitoring;} } @article{ drabble:1993a, author = {Brian Drabble}, title = {{EXCALIBUR}: A Program for Planning and Reasoning with Processes}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {62}, number = {1}, pages = {1--40}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This article describes research aimed at building a hierarchical partial order planner which is capable of interacting with a constantly changing world. The main aim is to verify a planning and execution strategy based on qualitative process theory which allows a greater level of interaction between the planner and the real world than exists within current planners. A variety of techniques are described which allow the planner to create a model of the world in which plan failures can be analysed and faulty plans repaired. These techniques also allow the planner to react to changes in the world outside of the plan which it has been told previously to avoid happening, e.g., an explosion.}, topic = {hierarchical-planning;partial-order-planning; plan-execution;} } @unpublished{ drachman:1975a, author = {Gaberell Drachman}, title = {The Syntax of Casual Speech}, year = {1975}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Salzburg}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-syntax;casual-speech;} } @book{ drake_fr:1974a, author = {Frank R. Drake}, title = {Set Theory: An Introduction to Large Cardinals}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Company}, year = {1974}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \au22\SetTheory}, topic = {set-theory;} } @article{ drakengren-bjareland:1999a, author = {Thomas Drakengren and Marcus Bj\"areland}, title = {Reasoning about Action in Polynomial Time}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {115}, number = {1}, pages = {1--24}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;planning-algorithms;polynomial-algorithms;} } @article{ drakengren-jonsson_p:1997a, author = {Thomas Drakengren and Peter Jonsson}, title = {Twenty-One Large Tractable Subclasses of {A}llen's Algebra}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {93}, number = {1--2}, pages = {297--319}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;kr;kr-course;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ drakengren-jonsson_p:1998a, author = {Thomas Drakengren and Peter Jonsson}, title = {A Complete Classification of Tractability in {A}llen's Algebra Relative to Subsets of Basic Relations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {106}, number = {2}, pages = {205--219}, topic = {temporal-reasonong;kr-course;kr-complexity-analysis;} } @incollection{ drakos:1988a, author = {Nikos Drakos}, title = {Reason Maintenance in Horn-Clause Logic Programs}, booktitle = {Reason Maintenance Systems and Their Applications}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood, Ltd.}, year = {1988}, editor = {Barbara Smith and Gerald Kelleher}, pages = {77--97}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {truth-maintenance;logic-programming;} } @book{ drange_tm:1966a, author = {Theodore M. Drange}, title = {Type Crossings}, publisher = {Mouton}, year = {1966}, address = {The Hague}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {sortal-incorrectness;category-mistakes;} } @article{ drange_tm:1990a, author = {Theodore M. Drange}, title = {Liar Syllogisms}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1990}, volume = {50}, number = {1}, pages = {1--7}, contentnote = {Consider an argument whose only premiss says of that very argument that it is valid, and whose conclusion is false.}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @inproceedings{ draper_d-etal:1994a, author = {Denise Draper and Steve Hanks and Daniel Weld}, title = {Probabilistic Planning With Information Gathering and Contingent Execution}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second International Conference on {AI} Planning Systems}, year = {1994}, editor = {K. Hammond}, pages = {31--36}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {probabilistic-planning;} } @inproceedings{ draper_d-hanks_s:1994a, author = {Denise Draper and Steve Hanks}, title = {Localized Partial Evaluation of Belief Networks}, booktitle = {Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence: Proceedings of the Tenth Conference}, year = {1994}, editor = {Ramon Lopez de Mantaras and David Poole}, pages = {170--177}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {probabilistic-planning;partial-evaluation;} } @incollection{ draper_dl-hanks_s:1994a, author = {Denise L. Draper and Steven Hanks}, title = {Localized Partial Evaluation of Belief Networks}, booktitle = {Uncertainty Proceedings 1994}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {1994}, editor = {Ramon Lopez de Mantaras and David Poole}, pages = {170--177}, address = {Amsterdam}, abstract = {... We present the localized partial evaluation (LPE) propagation algorithm, which computes interval bounds on the marginal probability of a specified query node by examining a subset of the nodes in the entire network. ... LPE has the "anytime" property of being able to produce better solutions (tighter intervals) given more time to consider more of the network.}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;reasoning-about-probability;} } @article{ draper_sw:1981a, author = {Stephen W. Draper}, title = {The Use of Gradient and Dual Space in Line-Drawing Interpretation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, volume = {17}, number = {1--3}, pages = {461--508}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper reviews the application of gradient space and dual space in programs that interpret line-drawings and examines whether they can provide a basis for a fully adequate program. Mackworth's program Poly is analyzed at length. Counterexamples show first that the procedure must be generalized from gradient to dual space, and then that constraints in the form of inequalities as well as equations must he handled which necessitates a radical re-design. A proof that Poly itself is valid under perspective as well as orthographic projection although its derivation in terms of gradient space is not, further indicates that gradient (or dual) space is not the important element in Mackworth's approach. Other ways of using dual space by Kanade and Huffman are discussed but they do not convincingly rebut the conclusion that dual space is peripheral to the design of a competent program. Finally the conclusion that the plane equation approach derived from the developments described, while theoretically adequate, is awkward to use because it fails to offer intuitive clarity, is supported by contrasting it with the alternative method of sidedness reasoning.}, topic = {line-drawings;} } @unpublished{ drapkin-etal:1987a, author = {Jennifer Drapkin and M. Miller and Donald Perlis}, title = {On Default Handling: Consistency Before and After}, year = {1987}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Computer Science, University of Maryland}, xref = {Jennifer Drapkin = Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;reasoning-about-consistency;} } @inproceedings{ dras:1997a, author = {Mark Dras}, title = {Representing Paraphrases using Synchronous {TAG}s}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {516--518}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-translation;paraphrasing;TAG-grammar;} } @article{ dray_w:1962a, author = {William H. Dray}, title = {Choosing and Doing}, journal = {Dialogue}, year = {1962}, volume = {1}, pages = {129--152}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {action;} } @article{ dray_wh:1960a, author = {William H. Dray}, title = {Taylor and {C}hisholm on Making Things to Have Happened}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1960}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, pages = {79--82}, xref = {Commentary on: chisholm_rm-taylor_r:1960a}, topic = {temporal-direction;causality;} } @incollection{ dray_wh:1962b, author = {William H. Dray}, title = {Must Effects Have Causes?}, booktitle = {Analytical Philosophy, First Series}, publisher = {Barnes and Noble}, year = {1962}, editor = {Ronald J. Butler}, pages = {20--25}, address = {New York}, xref = {Comments on: vendler:1962a.}, topic = {ordinary-language-philosophy;causality;} } @incollection{ drayson:2012a, author = {Zoe Drayson}, title = {The Uses and Abuses of the Personal/Subpersonal Distinction}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 26: Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2012}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {1--18}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @article{ dreier_j:1996a, author = {James Dreier}, title = {Expressivist Embeddings and Minimal Truth}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1996}, volume = {83}, number = {1}, pages = {29--51}, topic = {expressivism;} } @article{ dreier_j:1999a, title = {Transforming Expressivism}, author = {James Dreier}, journal = {No\^us}, pages = {558--72}, volume = {33}, year = {1999}, topic = {expressivism;} } @article{ dreier_j:2004a, author = {James Dreier}, title = {Lockean and Logical Truth Conditions}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {1}, pages = {84--91}, xref = {Commentary on: jackson_fc-pettit_p:1998a}, topic = {expressivism;imperatives;} } @incollection{ dreier_j:2004b, author = {James Dreier}, title = {Why Ethical Satisficing Makes Sense and Rational Satisficing Doesn't}, booktitle = {Satisficing and Maximizing: Moral Theorists on Practical Reason}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Michael Byron}, pages = {131--154}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {satisficing;practical-reasoning;rationality;} } @incollection{ dreier_j:2006a, title = {Negation for Expressivists: A Collection of Problems with a Suggestion for their Solution}, author = {James Dreier}, booktitle = {Oxford Studies in Metaethics: Volume 1}, editor = {R. Shafer-Landau}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, topic = {expressivism;Frege-Geach-problem;} } @article{ dreier_j:2015a, author = {Jamie Dreier}, title = {Truth and Disagreement in Impassioned Belief}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2015}, volume = {75}, number = {3}, pages = {450--459}, xref = {Commentary on: ridge_m:2014a}, xref = {Reply: ridge_m:2015b}, doi = {doi:10.1093/analys/anv025}, topic = {normativity;belief;} } @article{ dreischner:1977a, author = {M. Dreischner}, title = {Is (Quantum) Logic Empirical?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {415--423}, topic = {quantum-logic;} } @unpublished{ dreizen:1976a, author = {Felix Dreizen}, title = {The Proper Treatment of Negation in Ordinary {R}ussian}, year = {1976}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Haifa.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Year is a guess.}, topic = {negation;Montague-grammar;Russian-language;} } @incollection{ drescher_n-etal:2008a, author = {Christian Drescher and Martin Gebser and Torsten Grote and Benjamin Kaufmann and Arne K\"onig and Max Ostrowski and Torsten Schaub}, title = {Conflict-Driven Disjunctive Answer Set Solving}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {422--432}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {We elaborate a uniform approach to computing answer sets of disjunctive logic programs based on state-of-the-art Boolean constraint solving techniques. Starting from a constraint-based characterization of answer sets, we develop advanced solving algorithms, featuring backjumping and conflict-driven learning using the First-UIP scheme as well as sophisticated unfounded set checking. As a final result, we obtain a competitive solver for $\Sigma_2^P$-complete problems, taking advantage of Boolean constraint solving technology without using any legacy solvers as black boxes. }, topic = {anwer-sets;disjunctive-logic-programming;} } @article{ dresher-hornstein_n:1976a, author = {Bezalem E. Dresher and Norbert H. Hornstein}, title = {On the Supposed Contribution of Artificial Intelligence to the Scientific Study of Language}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {1976}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {321--398}, topic = {linguistic-theory-and-nl-processing;} } @article{ dresher-hornstein_n:1999a, author = {Bezalem E. Dresher}, title = {Charting the Learning Path: Cues to Parameter Setting}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1999}, volume = {30}, number = {1}, pages = {27--96}, topic = {parameter-setting;} } @article{ dresner_e:2001a, author = {Eli Dresner}, title = {Tarski's Restricted Form and {N}eale's Quantificational Treatment of Proper Names}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2001}, volume = {24}, number = {4}, pages = {405--415}, topic = {identity;variable-binding;nl-quantification;} } @article{ dresner_e:2002a, author = {Eli Dresner}, title = {Holism, Language Acquisition, and Algebraic Logic}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {25}, number = {4}, pages = {419--452}, abstract = {In the first section of this paper I present a well known objection to meaning holism, according to which holism is inconsistent with natural language being learnable. Then I show that the objection fails if language acquisition includes stages of partial grasp of the meaning of at least some expressions, and I argue that standard model theoretic semantics cannot fully capture such stages. In the second section the above claims are supported through a review of current research into language acquisition. Finally, in the third section it is argued that contemporary algebraic logical systems consist in a superior formal vehicle through which to capture stages of partial grasp of meaning; this claim is supported by concrete examples.}, topic = {semantic-holism;L1-acquisition;} } @article{ dresner_e:2004a, author = {Eli Dresner}, title = {Over-Assignment of Structure}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {33}, number = {5}, pages = {467--480}, topic = {analogy;metaphilosophy;} } @article{ dresner_e:2008a, author = {Eli Dresner}, title = {Turing-, Human- and Physical Computability: An Unasked Question}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {349-355}, abstract = {In recent years it has been convincingly argued that the Church-Turing thesis concerns the bounds of human computability: The thesis was presented and justified as formally delineating the class of functions that can be computed by a human carrying out an algorithm. Thus the Thesis needs to be distinguished from the so-called Physical Church-Turing thesis (or Thesis M), according to which all physically computable functions are Turing computable. $\dlots$ }, topic = {Church's-thesis;} } @article{ dresner_e:2010a, author = {Eli Dresner}, title = {Measurement-Theoretic Representation and Computation-Theoretic Realization}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2010}, volume = {107}, number = {6}, pages = {275--292}, topic = {mental-representations;measurement-theory;} } @article{ dresner_e:2019a, author = {Eli Dresner}, title = {Holism, Meaning Similarity and Inferential Space---a Measurement Theoretic Approach}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {4}, pages = {611--630}, abstract = {Proponents of meaning holism often invoke notions of meaning similarity and semantic spatiality in order to counter accusations that holism renders language unstable and chaotic. However, talk of such notions often falls short of being explicit and formal. In this paper I present an algebraically couched theory of inferential similarity and spatiality, motivated by measurement theory, and I apply it to the discussion of meaning holism. I argue that the proposed theory offers new and improved conceptual resources for facing the challenges raised against the thesis. }, topic = {semantic-holism;measurement-theory;} } @incollection{ dressler_o-strauss_p:1996a, author = {Oskar Dressler and Peter Strauss}, title = {The Consistency-Based Approach to Automated Diagnosis of Devices}, booktitle = {Principles of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1996}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {267--311}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {diagnosis;} } @book{ dressler_w:1972a, author = {Wolfgang Dressler}, title = {Einf\"uring in die {T}extlinguistik}, publisher = {Niemeyer}, year = {1972}, address = {T\"ubingen}, rtnote = {Hillman }, topic = {text-grammar;text-linguistics;discourse;pragmatics;} } @book{ dressler_w:1972b, editor = {Wolfgang Dressler}, title = {{T}extlinguistik}, publisher = {Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft}, year = {1972}, address = {Darmstadt}, rtnote = {Hillman HILLMAN P302 .T424}, topic = {text-grammar;text-linguistics;discourse;pragmatics;} } @article{ dretske_f:1981a, author = {Fred Dretske}, title = {The Pragmatic Dimension of Knowledge}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1981}, volume = {40}, number = {3}, pages = {363--378}, topic = {knowledge;context;alternatives;} } @incollection{ dretske_f:1995a, author = {Fred Dretske}, title = {Meaningful Perception}, volume = {2}, edition = {2}, booktitle = {An Invitation to Cognitive Science: Visual Cognition}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Stephen M. Kosslyn and Daniel N. Osherson}, chapter = {4}, pages = {331--352}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc17}, topic = {human-vision;logic-of-perception;} } @incollection{ dretske_f:2005a, author = {Fred Dretske}, title = {Is Knowledge Closed under Known Entailment? The Case against Closure}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {27--39}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;epistemic-closure;} } @incollection{ dretske_f:2005b, author = {Fred Dretske}, title = {Is Knowledge Closed under Known Entailment? Reply to {H}awthorne}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {56--59}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: hawthorne_j:2005a}, topic = {knowledge;epistemic-closure;} } @incollection{ dretske_f:2006a, author = {Fred Dretske}, title = {The Epistemology of Pain}, booktitle = {Pain: New Essays on its Nature and the Methodology of its Study}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Muryat Aydede}, pages = {59--73}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @article{ dretske_fi:1968a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Reasons and Consequences}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1968}, volume = {28}, number = {5}, pages = {166--168}, topic = {deductive-reasoning;belief;} } @book{ dretske_fi:1969a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Seeing and Knowing}, publisher = {Chicago University Press}, year = {1969}, address = {Chicago}, xref = {Review: aldrich_vc:1970a.}, topic = {logic-of-perception;epistemology;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ dretske_fi:1970a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Epistemic Operators}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1970}, volume = {67}, number = {24}, pages = {1007--1023}, topic = {epistemic-logic;propositional-attitudes;sentence-focus;pragmatics;} } @article{ dretske_fi:1971a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Conclusive Reasons}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1971}, volume = {49}, number = {1}, pages = {1--22}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn13}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasonng;knowledge;epistemic-reasons;} } @article{ dretske_fi:1972a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Contrastive Statements}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1972}, volume = {81}, number = {4}, pages = {411--437}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {sentence-focus;contrastive-stress;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ dretske_fi:1974a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Explanation in Linguistics}, booktitle = {Explaining Linguistic Phenomena}, publisher = {Hemisphere Publishing Corp.}, year = {1974}, editor = {David Cohen}, pages = {21--41}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;linguistics-methodology; explanation;} } @article{ dretske_fi:1977a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Laws of Nature}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1977}, volume = {44}, pages = {248--268}, topic = {natural-laws;causality;} } @incollection{ dretske_fi:1978a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Referring to Events}, booktitle = {Contemporary Perspectives in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {369--378}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {events;JL-Austin;sentence-focus;} } @article{ dretske_fi:1980a, author = {Fred. I. Dretske}, title = {The Intentionality of Cognitive States}, journal = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy}, year = {1980}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {281--294}, topic = {intentionality;propositional-attitudes;} } @book{ dretske_fi:1981a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Knowledge and the Flow of Information}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1981}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;information-flow-theory; theories-of-information;} } @article{ dretske_fi:1981b, author = {Fred Dretske}, title = {The Pragmatic Dimension of Knowledge}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1981}, volume = {40}, number = {3}, pages = {363--378}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja20}, topic = {reasons-for-knowledge;knowledge;alternativess;context;} } @article{ dretske_fi:1985a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Constraints and Meaning}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {9--12}, topic = {situation-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;} } @book{ dretske_fi:1988a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Explaining Behavior: Reasons in a World of Causes}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1988}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: mclaughlin_bp:1991a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;belief;desire;} } @incollection{ dretske_fi:1989a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Reasons and Causes}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 3: Philosophy of Mind and Action Theory}, publisher = {Ridgeview Publishing Company}, year = {1989}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {1--15}, address = {Atasacadero, California}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {reasons-for-action;desires;} } @incollection{ dretske_fi:1990a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Seeing, Believing, and Knowing}, booktitle = {An Invitation to Cognitive Science. Volume 2: Visual Cognition and Action}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel N. Osherson and Howard Lasnik}, pages = {129--148}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Dretske"}, topic = {philosophy-of-perception;} } @incollection{ dretske_fi:1993a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Mental Events as Structuring Causes of Behaviour}, booktitle = {Mental Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {John Heil and Alfred R. Mele}, pages = {131--136}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {mind-body-problem;causality;} } @article{ dretske_fi:1993b, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Conscious Experience}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1992}, volume = {102}, number = {406}, pages = {263--183}, xref = {Commentary: seager_w:1994a}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no16}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;} } @article{ dretske_fi:1994a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {The Explanatory Role of Information}, journal = {Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, Series A: Physical Sciences and Engineering}, year = {1994}, volume = {349}, number = {1689}, pages = {9--69}, note = {Available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/09628428.html}, topic = {information-flow-theory;foundations-of-AI;theories-of-information;} } @book{ dretske_fi:1995a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {Naturalizing the Mind}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-04149-9}, xref = {Review: aizawa_k:1996a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ dretske_fi:2007a, author = {Fred I. Dretske}, title = {What Change Blindness Teaches about Consciousness}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2007}, editor = {John Hawthorne}, pages = {215--230}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;perception;} } @incollection{ dretske_fi-enc_b:1984a, author = {Fred I. Dretske and Berent En\c}, title = {Causal Theories of Knowledge}, booktitle = {Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. Uehling, Jr. and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {517--528}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {knowledge;causality;} } @inproceedings{ drexler_d-etal:2021a, author = {Dominik Drexler and Jendrik Seipp and Hector Geffner}, title = {Expressing and Exploiting the Common Subgoal Structure of Classical Planning Domains Using Sketches}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {258--268}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we ... [use] a simple but powerful language for expressing finer problem decompositions introduced recently by Bonet and Geffner, called policy sketches. ... We show that many planning domains that cannot be solved by SIW are provably solvable in low polynomial time with the SIW_R algorithm, the version of SIW that employs user-provided policy sketches. Policy sketches are thus shown to be a powerful language for expressing domain-specific knowledge in a simple and compact way and a convenient alternative to languages such as HTNs or temporal logics. ...}, topic = {plan-syntesis;computational-ontology;} } @article{ dreyfus_hl:1965a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus}, title = {Why Computers Must Have Bodies in Order to Be Intelligent}, journal = {Review of Metaphysics}, year = {1965}, volume = {21}, pages = {13--32}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @book{ dreyfus_hl:1972a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus}, title = {What Computers Can't Do: A Critique of Artificial Reason}, publisher = {Harper and Row}, year = {1972}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Cogsci Shelf. m&mcourse;}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ dreyfus_hl:1981a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus}, title = {From Micro-Worlds to Knowledge Representation: {AI} at an Impasse}, booktitle = {Mind Design: Philosophy, Psychology, Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {John Haugeland}, pages = {161--204}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Excerpted from introduction to dreyfus_hl:1972a.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @book{ dreyfus_hl:1992a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus}, title = {What Computers Still Can't Do: A Critique of Artificial Reason}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Reviews: collins_hm:1996a, haugeland_j:1996a, koschmann:1996a, mccarthy_j1:1996a, strom-darden_l:1996a. Commentary: dreyfus_hl:1999a.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, Q 335 .D79 1992, UMich Media Library, Q 335 .D79 1992.}, ISBN = {0060906243}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @article{ dreyfus_hl:1996a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus}, title = {Response to My Critics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {80}, number = {1}, pages = {171--191}, xref = {Commentary on reviews of dreyfus:1992a.}, rtnote = {Rnotes on file. Rnotes files, "Misc"}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @article{ dreyfus_hl:2007a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus}, title = {Why {H}eideggerian {AI} Failed and How Fixing it Would Require Making it More {H}eideggerian}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {18}, pages = {1137--1160}, topic = {phenomenology;foundations-of-AI;AI-editorial;} } @incollection{ dreyfus_hl:2008a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus}, title = {Why {H}eideggerian {AI} Failed and How Fixing It Would Require Making It More {H}eideggerian}, booktitle = {The Mechanical Mind in History}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Phil Husbands and Owen Holland and Michael Wheeler}, pages = {331--372}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @article{ dreyfus_hl:2012a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus}, title = {A History of First Step Fallacies}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2012}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {87--99}, abstract = {In the 1960s, without realizing it, AI researchers were hard at work finding the features, rules, and representations needed for turning rationalist philosophy into a research program, and by so doing AI researchers condemned their enterprise to failure. About the same time, a logician, Yehoshua Bar-Hillel, pointed out that AI optimism was based on what he called the 'first step fallacy'. First step thinking has the idea of a successful last step built in. Limited early success, however, is not a valid basis for predicting the ultimate success of one's project. Climbing a hill should not give one any assurance that if he keeps going he will reach the sky. Perhaps one may have overlooked some serious problem lying ahead. There is, in fact, no reason to think that we are making progress towards AI or, indeed, that AI is even possible, in which case claiming incremental progress towards it would make no sense. In current excited waiting for the singularity, religion and technology converge. Hard headed materialists desperately yearn for a world where our bodies no longer have to grow old and die. They will be transformed into information, like Google digitizes old books, and we will achieve the promise of eternal life. As an existential philosopher, however, I suggest that we may have to overcome the desperate desire to digitalize our bodies so as to achieve immortality, and, instead, face up to and maybe even enjoy our embodied finitude. }, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @article{ dreyfus_hl:2013a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus}, title = {Standing up to Analytic Philosophy and Artificial Intelligence at {MIT} in the {S}ixties}, journal = {Proceedings and Addresses of the {A}merican {P}hilosophical {A}ssociation}, year = {2013}, volume = {87}, pages = {78--92}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @book{ dreyfus_hl-dreyfus_se:1986a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus}, title = {Mind Over Machine: The Power of Human Intuition and the Expertise in the Era of the Computer}, publisher = {Free Press}, year = {1986}, address = {New York}, xref = {Review: koschmann:1987a.}, topic = {philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ dreyfus_hl-dreyfus_se:1987a, author = {Hubert L. Dreyfus and Stuart E. Dreyfus}, title = {How to Stop Worrying about the Frame Problem Even though It's Computationally Intractable}, booktitle = {The Robot's Dilemma: The Frame Problem in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Co.}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, year = {1987}, editor = {Zenon Pylyshyn}, pages = {95--111}, topic = {frame-problem;philosophy-AI;} } @incollection{ driankov-hellendoorn:1991a, author = {Dimiter Driankov and Hans Hellendoorn}, title = {Towards a Logic for a Fuzzy Logic Controller}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {166--171}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {fuzzy-logic;} } @incollection{ driver_j:2012a, author = {Julia Driver}, title = {Luck and Fortune in Moral Evaluation}, booktitle= {Contrastivism in Philosophy}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Martijn Blaauw}, pages = {154--172 }, address = {Oxford}, topic = {contrastivism;modal-luck;} } @article{ driver_j-vuilleumier_p:2001a, author = {Jan Driver and Patrik Vuilleumier}, title = {Perceptual Awareness and Its Loss in Unilateral Neglect and Extinction}, journal = {Cognition}, year = {2001}, volume = {79}, number = {1--2}, pages = {39--88}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ drobyshevich_s:2019a, author = {Sergey Drobyshevich}, title = {Disentangling Structural Connectives or Life Without Display Property}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {2}, pages = {279--303}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;natural-deduction;logical-connectives;} } @article{ drobyshevich_s-wansing_h:2020a, author = {Sergey Drobyshevich and Heinrich Wansing}, title = {Proof Systems for Various {FDE}-Based Modal Logics}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {13}, number = {4}, pages = {720--747}, abstract = {We present novel proof systems for various {FDE}-based modal logics.}, topic = {modal-logic;proof-theory;multivalued-logic;relevance-logic;} } @article{ drucker_d:2020a, author = {Daniel Drucker}, title = {The Attitudes We Can Have}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2020}, volume = {129}, number = {1}, pages = {591--642}, topic = {attitude-formation;} } @inproceedings{ drummond:1985a, author = {Mark Drummond}, title = {Refining and Extending the Procedural Net}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, editor = {Arivind Joshi}, pages = {1010--1015}, year = {1985}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, contentnote = {Introduces the idea of a plan net.}, topic = {planning;} } @incollection{ drummond:1989a, author = {Mark Drummond}, title = {Situated Control Rules}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {103--113}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;kr-course;planning-formalisms;planning;} } @inproceedings{ druzdel:1997a, author = {Marek Druzdel}, title = {An Incompatibility Between Preferential Ordering And the Decision-Theoretic Notion of Utility}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Qualitative Preferences in Deliberation and Practical Reasoning}, year = {1997}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {35--40}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-utility;preferences;foundations-of-utility;} } @inproceedings{ druzdzel-henrion_m:1993a, author = {Marek Druzdzel and Max Henrion}, title = {Efficient Reasoning in Qualitative Probabilistic Networks}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Richard E. Fikes and Wendy Lehnert}, pages = {548--553}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, topic = {Bayesian-networks;} } @incollection{ dry-aristar_ar:1998a, author = {Helen Aristar Dry and Anthony Rodrigues Aristar}, title = {The Internet: An Introduction}, booktitle = {Using Computers in Linguistics: A Practical Guide}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {1998}, editor = {John Lawler and Aristar Dry}, pages = {26--61}, address = {London}, topic = {internet-general;} } @article{ dryer_dp:1966a, author = {D.P. Dryer}, title = {The Concept of Existence in h{K}ant}, journal = {The Monist}, year = {1966}, volume = {50}, number = {1}, pages = {17--33}, topic = {(non)existence;Kant;} } @inproceedings{ duarte_mrc-etal:2018a, author = {Mario Ricardo Cruz Duarte and Boris Konev and Ana Ozaki}, title = {ExactLearner: A Tool for Exact Learning of {EL} Ontologies}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {409--414}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We present ExactLearner, a tool for exactly learning and teaching EL terminologies. ... We evaluate ExactLearner's performance on ELontologies from the Oxford ontology repository and demonstrate that despite the algorithm being exponential, it successfully terminates for small and medium size ontologies.}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {computational-ontology;machine-learning;} } @inproceedings{ dubarle:1951a, author = {H.D. Dubarle}, title = {La Logique Symbolique d'Inspiration Nominaliste et sa Signification Philosophique}, booktitle = {Congr\'es Internationale de Philosophie des Sciences}, year = {1951}, pages = {55--67}, publisher = {Hermann \&\ Cie}, address = {Paris}, xref = {Review: gotlind:1959b}, topic = {philosopical-ontology;nominalism;foundations-of-mathematics;} } @inproceedings{ dubey:2005a, author = {Amit Dubey}, title = {What to Do When Lexicalization Fails: Parsing {G}erman with Suffix Analysis and Smoothing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {314--321}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1039}, topic = {automated-corpus-annotationJapanese-language;} } @article{ dubois_d-etal:1991a, author = {Didier Dubois and J\'er\v{o}me Lang and Henri Prade}, title = {Timed Possibilistic Logic}, journal = {Fundamenta Informaticae}, year = {1991}, volume = {15}, number = {3--4}, pages = {211--234}, rtnote = {This volume in RHT collection.}, topic = {temporal-logic;possibilistic-logic;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-etal:1991b, author = {Didier Dubois and J. Lang and Henri Prade}, title = {A Brief Overview of Possibilistic Logic}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {53--57}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;possibilistic-logic;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-etal:1994b, author = {Didier Dubois and J\'er\^ome Lang and Henri Prade}, title = {Possibilistic Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Logic in Artificial Intelligence and Logic Programming, Volume 3: Nonmonotonic Reasoning and Uncertain Reasoning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Christopher J. Hogger and John A. Robinson}, pages = {439--513}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {possibilistic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dubois_d-etal:1997a, author = {Didier Dubois and H\'elene Fargier and Henri Prade}, title = {Decision Making Under Ordinal Preferences and Uncertainty}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Qualitative Preferences in Deliberation and Practical Reasoning}, year = {1997}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {41--46}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-utility;decision-analysis;possibilistic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dubois_d-etal:1997b, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade and R\'egis Sabbadin}, title = {A Possibilistic Logic Machinery for Qualitative Decision}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Qualitative Preferences in Deliberation and Practical Reasoning}, year = {1997}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {47--54}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {qualitative-utility;possibilistic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dubois_d-etal:1997c, author = {Didier Dubois and Luis Fari\~nas Del Cerro and Andreas Herzig and Henri Prade}, title = {Qualitative Relevance and Independence: A Roadmap}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Martha Pollack}, pages = {62--67}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning'belief-revision;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-etal:1998a, author = {Didier Dubois and Llu\'is Godo and Henri Prade and Adriana Zapico}, title = {Making Decision in a Qualitative Setting: from Decision under Uncertainty to Case-Based Decision}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {594--605}, address = {San Francisco, California}, rtnote = {Title is correct, "decision", not "decisions"}, topic = {kr;qualitative-utility;case-based-reasoning;practical-reasoning;pr-course; possibilistic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dubois_d-etal:1998b, author = {Didier Dubois and D. Le Berre and Henri Prade and H. Zapico}, title = {Making Decision in a Qualitative Setting: From Decision under Uncertainty to Case-Based Decision}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Ninth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference}, year = {1998}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {588--593}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {kr;qualitative-utility;case-based-reasoning;practical-reasoning;pr-course; possibilistic-logic;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-etal:1998c, author = {Didier Dubois and Serafin Moral and Henri Prade}, title = {Belief Change Rules in Ordinal and Numerical Uncertainty Theories}, booktitle = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems, Volume 3: Belief Change}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, pages = {311--392}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ dubois_d-etal:1998d, author = {Didier Dubois and Daniel Le Berre and Henri Prade and R\'egis Sabbadin}, title = {Logical Representation and Computation of Optimal Decisions in a Qualitative Setting}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fifteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {588---593}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {qualitative-utility;decision-making;} } @article{ dubois_d-etal:2000a, author = {Didier Dubois and Petr H\'ajek and Henri Prade}, title = {Knowledge-Driven versus Data-Driven Logics}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {65--89}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;kr;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-etal:2002a, author = {Didier Dubois and H\'el\`ene Fargier and Patrice Perny}, title = {On the Limitations of Ordinal Approaches to Decision-Making}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {133--144}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {decision-making-under-uncertainty;qualitative-utility;} } @article{ dubois_d-etal:2003a, author = {Didier Dubois and H\'elene Fargier and Patrice Perny}, title = {Qualitative Decision Theory with Preference Relations and Comparative Uncertainty: An Axiomatic Approach}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {148}, number = {1--2}, pages = {219--260}, topic = {possibility-theory;fuzzy-set-theory;qualitative-utility;} } @book{ dubois_d-etal:2004a, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, title = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. John Bell, "Causation and Causal Conditionals", pp. 2--11 2. Joseph Y. Halpern, "Sleeping Beauty Reconsidered: Conditioning and Reflection in Asynchronous Systems", pp. 12--22 3. Thomas Lukasiewitz, "Weak Nonmonotonic Probabilistic Logics", pp. 23--33 4. Gabriel Kern-Isberner and Jens Fissler, "Knowledge Discovery by Reversing Inductive Knowledge Representation", pp. 34--43 5. Anthony Galton, "Multidimensional Mereotopology", pp. 45--54 6. Stefan Schultz and Udo Hahn, "Parthood as Spatial Inclusion---Evidence from Biometrical Conceptualizations", pp. 55--63 7. Murray Shanahan and David Rundell, "A Logic-Based Formulation of Active Visual Perception", pp. 64--72 8. Fiora Pirri, "Indoor Environment Classification and Perceptual Matching", pp. 73--83 9. Fusan Yaman and Dana Nau and V.S. Subramanian, "A Logic of Motion", pp. 85--94 10. Jean Fran\c{c}ois Condotta and G\'erard Ligozat, "Axiomatizing the Cyclic Interval Calculus", pp. 95--104 11. Marc Denecker, "What's in a Model? Epistemological Analysis of Logic Programming", pp. 106--113 12. James M. Fielding and Jonathan Simon and Werner Ceusters and Barry Smith, "Ontological Theory for Ontological Engineering: Biomedical Systems Information Integration", pp. 114--120 13. Joseph Y. Halpern, "Intransitivity and Vagueness", pp. 121--129 14. Salem Benferhat and Jean Fran\c{c}ois Bonnefon and Rui Da Silva Neves, "An Experimental Analysis of Possibilistic Default Reasoning", pp. 130--139 15. Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz and Roman Schindlauer and Hans Tompits, "Combining Answer Set Programming with Description Logics for the Semantic Web", pp. 141--151 16. Ullrich Hustadt and Boris Motik and Ulrike Sattler, "Reducing ${\cal SHIQ}^-$ Description Logic to Disjunctive Datalog Programs", pp. 152--162 17. Volker Haarslev and Ralf M\"oller, "Optimization Techniques for Retrieving Resources Described in {OWL/RDF} Documents: First Results", pp. 163--173 18. Leila Amgoud and Henri Prade, "Reaching Agreement through Argumentation: A Possibilistic Approach", pp. 175--182 19. Philippe Besnard and Sylvie Doutre, "Characterization of Semantics for Argument Systems", pp. 183--193 20. Leila Amgoud and Claudette Cayrol, "On the Use of an {ATMS} for Handling Conflicting Desires", pp. 194--201 21. Sylvie Coste-Marquis and Jer\^ome Lang and Paolo Liberatore and Pierre Marquis, "Expressive Power and Succinctness of Propositional Languages for Preference Representation", pp. 203--212 22. Gerhard Brewka, "Complex Preferences for Answer Set Optimization", pp. 213--223 23. Christophe Gonzales and Patrice Perny, "{GAI} Networks for Utility Elicitation", pp. 224--233 24. Ernest Davis, "A First-Order Theory of Communicating First-Order Formulas", pp. 235--245 25. B\`inh V\~u Tr\^an and James Harland and Margaret Hamilton, "Observation Expectation Reasoning in Agent Systems", pp. 246--254 26. Guido Boella and Leendert van der Torre, "Regulative and Constitutive Norms in Normative Multiagent Systems", pp. 255--265 27. Claudio Massalo and Laure Vieu and Emanuele Bottazzi and Carola Catenacci and Roberta Ferrario and Aldo Gangemi and Nicola Guarino, "Social Roles and Their Descriptions", pp. 267--277 28. Ken Kaneiwa and Riichiro Mizoguchi, "Sort-Hierarchy and Rigidity", pp. 278--268 29. Pawel Garbacz, "The Four Dimensions of Artifacts", pp. 289--299 30. Carol Eschenbach, "How to Interleave Knowledge about Object Structure and Concepts", pp. 300--309 31. Thomas Meyer and Norman Y. Foo and Rex Kwok and Dongmo Zhang, "Logical Foundations of Negotiation: Strategies and Preferences", pp. 311--318 32. Pavlos Peppas and Samir Chopra and Norman Y. Foo, "Distance Semantics for Relevance-Sensitive Belief Revision", pp. 319--328 33. Isabelle Bloch and Ram\'on Pino-P\'erez and Carlos Uzc\'ategui, "A Unified Treatment for Knowledge Dynamics", pp. 329--337 34. Boris Mailh\'e and Henri Prade, "Updating of a Probabilistic Knowledge Base by Crisp or Fuzzy Transition Rules", pp. 338--346 35. Guilin Qi and Weiru Liu and David H. Glass, "A Split-Combination Method for Merging Inconsistent Possibilistic Knowledge Bases", pp. 348--356 36. Patricia Everaere and S\'ebastian Konieczny and Pierre Marquis, "On Merging Strategy-Proofness", pp. 357--367 37. Luciano Serafini and Floris Roelofsen, "Satisfiability for Propositional Concepts", pp. 369--376 38. Thomas Eiter and Wolfgang Faber and Michael Fink and Gerald Pfeifer and Stefan Woltran, "Complexity of Model Checking and Bounded Predicate Arities for Non-Ground Answer Set Programming", pp. 377--387 39. Marco Cadoli and Toni Mancini, "Automated Reformulation of Specifications by Safe Delay of Constraints", pp. 388--398 40. Perry Groot and Annette ten Teije and Frank van Harmelen, "Towards a Structured Analysis of Approximate Problem Solving: A Case Study in Classification", pp. 399--406 41. Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Baget, "Improving the Forward-Chaining Algorithm for Conceptual Graphs Rules", pp. 407--414 42. Gregory Provan, "Inferential Complexity Control for Model-Based Abduction", pp. 415--425 43. Alexander Bochman, "A Causal Logic of Logic Programming", pp. 427--437 44. Luc De Raedt and Jan Ramon, "Condensed Representations for Inductive Logic Programming", pp. 438--446 45. Thomas Eiter and Michael Fink and Hans Tompits and Stefan Woltran, "On Eliminating Disjunctions in Stable Logic Programming", pp. 447--457 46. Patrick Doherty and Andrzej Szalas and Witold Lukasiewicz, "Approximative Query Techniques for Agents with Heterogeneous Ontologies and Perceptive Capabilities", pp. 459--468 47. Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Domenico Lembo and Maurizio Lenzerini and Riccardo Rosati, "What to Ask to a Peer: Ontology-Based Query Reformulation", pp. 469--478 48. Clinton Smyth and David L. Poole, "Qualitative Probabilistic Matching with Hierarchical Descriptions", pp. 479--486 49. Samil Mishra and Bruce Porter and Pedro Romero and Dan Tecuci and Peter Yeh, "A Question-Answering System for {AP} Chemistry: Assessing {KR\&R} Technologies", pp. 488--497 50. Youngia Park, "Gloss{O}nt: A Concept-Based Ontology Building Tool", pp. 498--506 51. Noah S. Friedland and Paul G. Allen and Michael Witbrock and Gavin Matthews and Nancy Salay and Pierluigi Miraglia and Jurgen Angele and Steffen Staub and David Israel and Vinay Chaudhri and Bruce Porter and Ken Barker and Peter Clark, "Towards a Quantitative, Platform-Independent Analysis of Knowledge Systems", pp. 507--514 52. Gerhard Lakemeyer and Hector Levesque, "Situations, Si! Situation Terms, No!", pp. 516--526 53. Andreas Herzig and Dominique Longin, "{C\&L} Intentions Revisited", pp. 527--535 54. Fangzhen Lin, "Discovering State Invariants", pp. 536--544 55. Marc Denecker and Eugenia Ternovska, "Inductive Situation Calculus", pp. 545--555 56. Nam Tran and Chitta Baral, "Reasoning about Triggered Actions in {A}ns{P}rolog and Its Applications to Molecular Interactions in Cells", pp. 554--563 57. Stuart C. Shapiro, "A Logic of Arbitrary and Indefinite Objects", pp. 565--575 58. Kaile Su and Guanfeng Lv and Yan Zhang, "Reasoning about Knowledge by Variable Forgetting", pp. 576--586 59. Yongmei Liu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Hector J. Levesque, "A Logic of Limited Belief for Reasoning with Disjunctive Information", pp. 587--597 60. Eric Pacuit and Samer Salame, "Majority Logic", pp. 598--604 61. Yi Zhou and XiaoPing Chen, "Partial Implication Semantics for Desirable Propositions", pp. 606--611 62. Ronald P.A. Petrick and Fahiem Bacchus, "Extending the Knowledge-Based Approach to Planning with Incomplete Information and Sensing", pp. 613--622 63. Yves Martin and Imam Narasamdya and Michael Thielscher, "Knowledge of Other Agents and Communicative Actions in the Fluent Calculus", pp. 623--633 64. Alfredo Gabaldon, "Precondition Control and the Progression Algorithm", pp. 634--643 65. J\'erome Lang, "A Preference-Based Interpretation of Others Agents' Actions", pp. 644--653 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS Conference shelves.}, topic = {kr;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-etal:2006a, author = {Didier Dubois and Angelo Gilio and Kern-Isherner}, title = {Probabilistic Abduction without Priors}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {420--430}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {abduction;Bayesian-reasoning;} } @article{ dubois_d-etal:2007a, author = {Didier Dubois and H\'el\`ene Fargier and Patrice Perny}, title = {Corrigendum to `Qualitative Decision Theory with Preference Relations and Comparative Uncertainty: An Axiomatic Approach'}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {5--6}, pages = {361--362}, xref = {Correction to: dubois-fargier:2006a}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-etal:2007b, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade and Llu\'is Godo}, title = {Fuzzy-Set Based Logics---An History-Oriented Presentation of Their Main Developments}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic, Volume 8: The Many Valued and Nonmonotonic Turn in Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {2007}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {325--449}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;fuzzy-set-theory;} } @inproceedings{ dubois_d-etal:2012a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade and Steven Schockaert}, title = {Stable Models in Generalized Possibilistic Logic}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {519--529}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We introduce an axiomatization showing that GPL [generalized possibilistic logic] is a fragment of a graded version of the modal logic KD, and we prove soundness and completeness w.r.t. a semantics in terms of possibility distributions. Next, we reveal a close link between the well-known stable model semantics for logic programming and the notion of minimally specific models in GPL. ... }, topic = {stable-models;possibilistic-logic;} } @article{ dubois_d-etal:2017a, author = {Didier Dubois and Emiliano Lorini and Henri Prade}, title = {The Strength of Desires: a Logical Approach}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2017}, volume = {27}, number = {1}, pages = {199--231}, abstract = {... [We] propose a formal approach to reasoning about desires, understood as logical propositions which we would be pleased to make true, also acknowledging the fact that desire is a matter of degree. It is first shown that, at the static level, desires should satisfy certain principles that differ from those to which beliefs obey. ...}, topic = {desire;practical-reasoning;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-fargier:2006a, author = {Didier Dubois and H\'elene Fargier}, title = {Qualitative Decision Making with Bipolar Information}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {175--185}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, xref = {Correction: dubois_d-etal:2007a}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @article{ dubois_d-prade_h:1986a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Belief Structures, Possibility Theory, and Decomposible Confidence Measures on Finite Sets}, journal = {Computers and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1986}, volume = {5}, pages = {403--416}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {qualitative-probability;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @book{ dubois_d-prade_h:1986b, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Possibility Theory: An Approach to Computerized Processing of Uncertainty}, publisher = {Plenum Press}, year = {1986}, address = {New York}, topic = {qualitative-probability;reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ dubois_d-prade_h:1988a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Default Reasoning and Possibility Theory}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {243--257}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;possibility-theory;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-prade_h:1991a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Conditional Objects and Non-Monotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}'91: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1991}, editor = {James F. Allen and Richard E. Fikes and Erik Sandewall}, pages = {175--185}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;conditionals;conditional-reasoning;} } @article{ dubois_d-prade_h:1991b, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Epistemic Entrenchment and Possibilistic Logic}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2991}, volume = {50}, number = {2}, pages = {223--239}, topic = {possibilistic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dubois_d-prade_h:1992a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Possibilistic Logic, Preferential Models, and Related Issues}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {Barbara Grosz and John Mylopoulos}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {qualitative-probability;reasoning-about-uncertainty; model-preference;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-prade_h:1992b, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Belief Change and Possibility Theory}, booktitle = {Belief Revision}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Peter G\"ardenfors}, pages = {142--182}, address = {Cambridge}, topic = {belief-revision;qualitative-probability; reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-prade_h:1994a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Conditional Objects as Nonmonotonic Consequence Relations: Main Results}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {170--177}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;conditionals;nonmonotonic-reasoning;kr-course;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-prade_h:1995a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Conditional Objects, Possibility Theory and Default Rules}, booktitle = {Conditionals: From Philosophy to Computer Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, editor = {Gabriella Crocco and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig}, pages = {301--336}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {conditionals;nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ dubois_d-prade_h:1995b, author = {Didier Dubois and Henry Prade}, title = {Possibility Theory as a Basis for Qualitative Decision Theory}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {1924--1930}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-prade_h:1996a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Non-Standard Theories of Uncertainty in Plausible Reasoning}, booktitle = {Principles of Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {1996}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {1--32}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;Bayesian-networks; possibilistic-logic;} } @book{ dubois_d-prade_h:1998a, editor = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems: Belief Change}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, volume = {3}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentsnote = {TC: 1. Didier Dubois and Henri Prade, "Introduction: Revising, Updating and Combining Knowledge", pp. 1--15 2. Sven Ove Hansson, "Revision of Belief Sets and Belief Bases", pp. 16--75 3. Bernhard Nebel, "How Hard is it to Revise a Belief Base?", pp. 77--145 4. Sten Lindstr\"om and Wlodek Rabinowicz, "Conditionals and the {R}amsey Test", pp. 147--188 5. Andreas Herzig, "Logics for Belief Base Updating", pp. 189--231 6. Laurence Cholvy, "Reasoning about Merged Information", pp. 233--263 7. Philippe Smets, "Numerical Representation of Uncertainty", pp. 265--309 8. Didier Dubois and Serafin Moral and Henri Prade, "Belief Change Rules in Ordinal and Numerical Uncertainty Theories", pp. 311--392 9. J\"org Gebhardt and Rudolf Kruse, "Parallel Combination of Information Sources", pp. 393--439 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. Logic edited shelves.}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-prade_h:1998b, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Possibility Theory: Qualitative and Quantitative Aspects}, booktitle = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems, Volume 1: Quantified Representation of Uncertainty and Imprecision}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Philippe Smets}, pages = {169--226}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {possibility-theory;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-prade_h:1998c, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Introduction: Revising, Updating and Combining Knowledge}, booktitle = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems, Volume 3: Belief Change}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, pages = {1--15}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {belief-revision;knowledge-integration;} } @inproceedings{ dubois_d-prade_h:1999a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Decision, Nonmonotonic Reasoning and Possibilistic Logic}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {qualitative-decision-theory;possibilistic-logic;} } @article{ dubois_d-prade_h:2003a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Fuzzy Set Possibility Theory-Based Methods in Artificial Intelligence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {148}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--9}, topic = {possibility-theory;fuzzy-set-theory;} } @incollection{ dubois_d-prade_h:2014a, author = {Didier Dubois and Henri Prade}, title = {Possibilistic Logic---An Overview}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 9: Computational Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2014}, editor = {J\"org H. Siekmann}, pages = {283--342}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;possibilistic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dubois_j:1996a, author = {John Dubois}, title = {Dialogic Syntax}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the International Pragmatics Association}, year = {1996}, month = {July}, rtnote = {Conference held in Mexico City.}, rtnote = {Cited in RHT-JH ACL97 paper.}, contentnote = {Has to do with pattern repetition in discourse.}, topic = {discourse;pragmatics;} } @article{ duboulay:2001a, author = {Benedict du Boulay}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}rtificial Intelligence: A New Synthesis}, by {N}ils {J}. {N}ilsson, {\it Artificial Intelligence: Theory and Practice}, by {T}homas {D}ean, {J}ames {F}. {A}llen, and {Y}. {A}loimonos, {\it Computational Intelligence: A Logical Approach}, by by {D}avid {P}oole, {A}lan {M}ackworth, and {R}andy {G}oebel, {\it Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach}, by {S}tuart {R}ussell and {P}eter {N}orvig }, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {125}, number = {1--2}, pages = {227--232}, xref = {Review of nilsson_nj:1998a, allen_jf-etal, poole_dl-etal:1988a, russell-norvig:1995a, }, topic = {AI-intro;AI-text;} } @incollection{ dubreu:1954a, author = {G. Dubreu}, title = {Representation of a Preference Ordering by a Numerical Function}, booktitle = {Decision Processes}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1960}, address = {New York}, editor = {Robert M. Thrall and C.H. Coombs and R.L. Davis}, pages = {159--165}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, E's 1st name}, topic = {qualitative-preference;} } @article{ duc_h:1997a, author = {Hon Duc}, title = {Reasoning about Rational, but not Logically Omniscient, Agents}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {5}, pages = {633--648}, abstract = {We propose a new solution to the so-called Logical Omniscience Problem of epistemic logic. ... axioms for epistemic logics must have the following form: if the agent knows all premisses of a valid inference rule, and if she thinks hard enough, then she will know the conclusion. To formalize such an idea, we propose to dynamize epistemic logic, that is, to introduce a dynamic component into the language. We develop a logic based on this idea and show that it is suitable for formalizing the notion of actual, or explicit knowledge.}, topic = {limited-rationality;epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality; dynamic-logic;} } @incollection{ duc_hn:1996a, author = {Ho Ngoc Duc}, title = {Reasoning about Rational, but not Logically Omniscient Agents (Extended Abstract)}, booktitle = {Practical Reasoning: International Conference on Formal and Applied Practical Reasoning, FAPR'96}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Hans J\"urgen Olbach}, pages = {110--110}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {We propose in the paper a new solution to the so-called Logical Omniscience Problem of epistemic logic. ... We shall show that axioms for epistemic logics must have the following form: if the agent knows all premises of a valid inference rule, and if she thinks hard enough, then she will know the conclusion. To formalize such an idea, we propose to 'dynamize' epistemic logic, that is, to introduce a dynamic abstract component into the language. ...}, topic = {hyperintensionality;dynamic-logic;} } @article{ duc_hn:1997a, author = {Hon N. Duc}, title = {Reasoning about Rational, but Not Logically Omniscient, Agents}, journal = {Journal of Logic and Computation}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {5}, pages = {633--648}, abstract = {We propose a new solution to the so-called Logical Omniscience Problem of epistemic logic. ... We shall argue that [weakening classical epistemic logics] solution is not satisfactory: in this way omniscience can be avoided, but many intuitions about the concepts of knowledge and belief are lost. We shall show that axioms for epistemic logics must have the following form: if the agent knows all premisses of a valid inference rule, and if she thinks hard enough, then she will know the conclusion. To formalize such an idea, we propose to dynamize epistemic logic, that is, to introduce a dynamic component into the language. We develop a logic based on this idea and show that it is suitable for formalizing the notion of actual, or explicit knowledge.}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality;} } @phdthesis{ duc_hn:2001a, author = {Hon N. Duc}, title = {Resource-Bounded Reasoning about Knowledge}, school = {Universit\"at Leipzig.}, year = {2001}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Leiozig}, topic = {dynamic-epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality;} } @article{ ducasse_cj:1925a1, author = {Curt J. Ducasse}, title = {Explanation, Nechanism, and Teleology}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1925}, volume = {22}, number = {6}, pages = {150--155}, xref = {Republication: ducasse_cj:1925a2}, topic = {teleology;explanation;} } @incollection{ ducasse_cj:1925a2, author = {Curt J. Ducasse}, title = {Explanation, Nechanism, and Teleology}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {540--544}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: ducasse_cj:1925a1}, topic = {teleology;explanation;} } @article{ ducasse_cj:1926a, author = {Curt J. Ducasse}, title = {On the Nature and Observability of the Causal Relation}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1926}, volume = {23}, pages = {57--68}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ ducasse_cj:1940a, author = {Curt J. Ducasse}, title = {Propositions, Opinions, Sentences, and Facts}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1940}, volume = {37}, number = {26}, pages = {701--711}, topic = {propositions;} } @incollection{ ducasse_cj:1993a, author = {C.J. Ducasse}, title = {On the Nature and Observability of the Causal Relation}, booktitle = {Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Michael Tooley}, pages = {125--136}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {causation;} } @book{ duchan-etal:1995a, editor = {Judith F. Duchan and Gail A. Bruder and Lynne E. Hewitt}, title = {Deixis in Narrative: A Cognitive Science Perspective}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1995}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, xref = {Reviews: cremers:1996a, graesser_ac-bowers_ca:1996a.}, ISBN = {0-8058-1463-9}, topic = {deixis;psycholinguistics;pragmatics;narrative-genre;} } @inproceedings{ duckham_m-etal:2014a, author = {Matt Duckham and Sanjiang Li and Weiming Liu and Zhiguo Long}, title = {On Redundant Topological Constraints}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {618--621}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... It is natural to ask how to compute a prime subnetwork, and when it is unique. In this paper, we show that this problem is in general intractable, but becomes tractable if $\Gamma$ is over a tractable subclass of RCC. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {qualitative-spatial-reasoning;} } @book{ dudek-jenkin:2000a, author = {Gregory Dudek and Michael Jenkin}, title = {Computational Principles of Mobile Robotics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-52156-876-5}, xref = {Review: prince_cg:2004a}, topic = {robotics;} } @inproceedings{ dudley_r-etal:2017a, author = {Rachel Dudley and Meredith Rowe and Valentine Hacquard and Jeffrey Lidz}, title = {Discovering the factivity of `know{'}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 27th Semantics and Linguistic Theory Conference: {SALT 27}}, year = {2017}, editor = {Dan Burgdorf and Jacob Collard and Sireemas Maspong and Brynhildur Stef\'ansd\'ottir.}, pages = {600--619}, publisher = {Lingustic Society of America}, address = {Washington, DC}, topic = {L1-acquisition;presuppostion;factivity;} } @unpublished{ dudman_vh:1981a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Time and Tense in {E}nglish}, year = {1981}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Macquarie University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-tense;conditionals;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1983a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Tense and Time in {E}nglish Verb CLusters of the Primary Pattern}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Linguistics}, year = {1983}, volume = {3}, number = {1}, pages = {25--44}, topic = {nl-tense;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1984a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Conditional Interpretations of `If' Sentences}, journal = {Australian Journal of Linguistics}, year = {1984}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {143--204}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1984b, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Parsing {\it If\/}-Sentences}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1984}, volume = {44}, number = {4}, pages = {145--153}, contentnote = {Without being sophisticated about grammar or compositionality, Dudman offers a classification of conditionals. He is concerned, among other things, with the interaction between conditionals and generics.}, xref = {Commentary: alexander_i:1985a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1985a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Thinking about the Future}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1985}, volume = {45}, number = {4}, pages = {183--186}, topic = {conditionals;nl-tense;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1987a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Appiah on `If{'}}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1987}, volume = {47}, number = {2}, pages = {74--79}, xref = {Commentary on: appiah_ka:1985a}, xref = {Reply: appiah_a:1987a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1988a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Indicative and Subjunctive}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1988}, volume = {48}, number = {3}, pages = {113--122}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap11}, contentnote = {Dudman claims English has no subjunctive.}, topic = {conditionals;indicative-conditionals;subjunctive-mood;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1989a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Vive la R\'evolution!}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1989}, volume = {93}, number = {392}, pages = {591--603}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11}, topic = {conditionals;nl-tense;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1990a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Grammar, Semantics and Conditionals}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1990}, volume = {50}, number = {4}, pages = {214--224}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1991a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Jackson Classifying Conditionals}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1991}, volume = {51}, number = {3}, pages = {131--136}, xref = {Commentary on: jackson_f:1990a}, xref = {Reply: jackson_fc:1991b}, topic = {conditionals;indicative-conditionals;subjunctive-mood;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1992a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Probability and Assertion}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1992}, volume = {52}, number = {4}, pages = {204--211}, topic = {assertion;probability;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1994a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {On a Point of Logic}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1994}, volume = {54}, number = {4}, pages = {208--214}, contentnote = {Contains criticism of Stalnaker. Dudman seems to think that conditionals are irreducible, repeats a version of the circularity objection.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ dudman_vh:1998a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {On the Grammar of Conditionals: Reply to {B}arker}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1998}, volume = {58}, number = {4}, pages = {277--285}, xref = {Reply to: barker_s:1996a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ dudman_vh:2000a, author = {Victor H. Dudman}, title = {Classifying `Conditionals': the Traditional Way Is Wrong}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2000}, volume = {60}, number = {2}, pages = {147}, topic = {conditionals;} } @incollection{ duffield_n:2014a, author = {Nigel Duffield}, title = {Inadvertent Cause and the Unergative-Unaccusative Split in {V}ietnamese and {E}nglish}, booktitle = {Causation in Grammatical Structures}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Bridget Copley and Fabienne Martin}, pages = {328--350}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantics;causality;agency;nl-causality;nl-causatives;event-structure; unergatives: Vietnamese-language;} } @article{ dufourd-etal:1998a, author = {Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Dufourd and Pascal Mathis and Pascal Schreck}, title = {Geometric Construction by Assembling Solved Subfigures}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {99}, number = {1}, pages = {73--119}, topic = {computer-aided-design;geometrical-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ dufourlussier_v-etal:2014a, author = {Valmi Dufour-Lussier and Alice Hermann and Florence Le Ber and Jean Lieber}, title = {Belief Revision in the Propositional Closure of a Qualitative Algebra}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {622--625}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... Belief revision in the propositional closure of QAs is studied, an algorithm for a family of revision operators is designed, and an open-source implementation is made freely available on the web. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ dukeyonge_j:2016a, author = {Jennifer Duke-Yonge}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}eplacing Truth}, by {K}evin {S}charp}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2016}, volume = {76}, number = {1}, pages = {88--96}, DOI = {doi:10.1093/analys/anv070}, xref = {Review of: scharp_k:2013a}, topic = {truth;semantic-paradoxes;context;} } @book{ dumas-redish:1993a, author = {Joseph S. Dumas and Janice C. Redish}, title = {A Practical Guide to Usability Testing}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing Corp.}, year = {1993}, address = {Norwood, New Jersey}, ISBN = {089391990X (cl)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 D861 1993.}, topic = {HCI;} } @article{ dummett_m:1956a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Nominalism}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1956}, volume = {65}, number = {4}, pages = {491--505}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ dummett_m:1959a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Wittgenstein's Philosophy of Mathematics}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1959}, volume = {68}, pages = {324--348}, topic = {Wittgenstein;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @article{ dummett_m:1959b, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Truth}, journal = {Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society}, year = {1959}, volume = {59}, number = {1}, pages = {141--162}, topic = {truth;assertion;truth-value-gaps;} } @article{ dummett_m:1960a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {A Defense of {M}c{T}aggart's Proof of the Unreality of Time}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1960}, volume = {69}, number = {4}, pages = {497--504}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;} } @article{ dummett_m:1960b, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Review of `{P}resupposing', by {W}ilfrid {S}ellars, `A Reply to {M}r. {S}ellars', by {P}eter {F}. {S}trawson, `{P}resupposition and Implication', by {M}ax {B}lack, and `{P}hilosophers and Presuppositions', by {V}ergil {H}. {D}ykstra }, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1960}, volume = {25}, number = {4}, pages = {336--339}, xref = {Review of: sellars_wp:1954a, strawson_pf:1954a, black_m:1958f, and dykstra:1960a}, topic = {presupposition;} } @article{ dummett_m:1964a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Bringing about the Past}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1964}, volume = {73}, number = {3}, pages = {338--359}, xref = {Reprinted in lepoidevin_r-macbeath_m:1993a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;causality;} } @book{ dummett_m:1973a, author = {Michael A.E. Dummett}, title = {Frege: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Duckworth}, year = {1973}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Authored Shelves}, topic = {Frege;philosophy-of-logic;philosophy-of-language;} } @inproceedings{ dummett_m:1973b, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {The Philosophical Basis of Intuitionistic Logic}, booktitle = {Logic Colloquium 73}, year = {1973}, editor = {H. E. Rose and J. C. Shepherdson}, pages = {5--40}, publisher = {North-Holland Publishing Co.}, address = {Amsterdam}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Dummett"}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Dummett"}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;intuitionistic-logic;} } @article{ dummett_m:1974a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {The Significance of {Q}uine's indeterminacy Thesis}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1974}, volume = {27}, pages = {351--397}, topic = {indeterminacy-of-translation;} } @article{ dummett_m:1974b, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Reply to {Q}uine}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1974}, volume = {27}, pages = {413--416}, topic = {indeterminacy-of-translation;} } @article{ dummett_m:1975a1, author = {Michael A.E. Dummett}, title = {Wang's Paradox}, journal = {Synt\`hese}, year = {1975}, volume = {30}, pages = {301--324}, missinginfo = {number}, xref = {Republication: dummett_m:1975a2.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe17}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading Notes on File. Rnotes drawers, "Dummett"}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1975a2, author = {Michael A.E. Dummett}, title = {Wang's Paradox}, booktitle = {Vagueness: A Reader}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Rosanna Keefe and Peter Smith}, pages = {99--118}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of dummett_m:1975a1.}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1975b1, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {What Is a Theory of Meaning?}, booktitle = {Mind and Language: {W}olfson College Lectures}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Samuel D. Guttenplan}, address = {Oxford}, missinginfo = {pages}, xref = {Republication: dummett_m:1975b2.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1975b2, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {What Is a Theory of Meaning?}, booktitle = {Readings in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter Ludlow}, pages = {129--155}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of dummett_m:1975b1.}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1976a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {What is a Theory of Meaning ({II})}, booktitle = {Truth and Meaning: Essays in Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Gareth Evans and John Mc{D}owell}, pages = {67--137}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;Davidson-semantics;} } @book{ dummett_m:1977a, author = {Michael A.E. Dummett}, title = {Elements of Intuitionism}, publisher = {Clarendon Press}, address = {Oxford}, year = {1977}, topic = {intuitionistic-mathematics;foundations-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1979a, author = {Michael A.E. Dummett}, title = {What Does the Appeal to Use Do for the Theory of Meaning?}, booktitle = {Meaning and Use: Papers Presented at the Second {J}erusalem Philosophy Encounter}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1979}, editor = {Avishai Margalit}, pages = {123--135}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Dummett"}, topic = {foundations-of-pragmatics;pragmatics;foundations-of-semantics; language-use;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1979b, author = {Michael A.E. Dummett}, title = {Common-Sense and Physics}, booktitle = {Perception and Identity}, publisher = {MacMillan}, year = {1979}, editor = {G.F. Macdonald}, address = {London}, missinginfo = {pages, E's 1st name}, topic = {common-sense;foundations-of-physics;} } @article{ dummett_m:1979c, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Was {F}rege a Philosopher of Language?}, journal = {Revue Internationale de Philosophie}, year = {1979}, volume = {23}, number = {130}, pages = {786--810}, topic = {Frege;philosophhy-of-language;} } @article{ dummett_m:1988a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {More about Thoughts}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1988}, volume = {30}, number = {1}, pages = {1--19}, topic = {Frege;foundations-of-semantics;} } @book{ dummett_m:1991a, editor = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Frege and Other Philosophers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-824870-9}, contentnote = {TC: 1. "Frege on the Consistency of Mathematical Theories", pp. 1--16 2. "Frege and the Paradox of Analysis", pp. 17--52 3. "On a Question of Frege's About Right Ordered Groups (with S. A. Adeleke and P. M. Neumann), pp. 53--64 4. "Frege's `{K}erns\"atze Zur {L}ogik{'}", pp. 65--78 5. "Frege as a Realist", pp. 79--96 6. "Objectivity and Reality in Lotze and Frege", pp. 97--125 7. "Frege and Kant on Geometry", pp. 126--157 8. "An Unsuccessful Dig", pp. 158--198 9. "Second Thoughts", pp. 199--216 10. "Which End of the Telescope?", pp. 217--236 11. "Frege and Wittgenstein", pp. 237--248 12. "Frege's Myth of the Third Realm", pp. 249--262 13. "Thought and Perception: The Views of Two Philosophical Innovators", pp. 263--288 14. "More About Thoughts", pp. 289--314 15. "The Relative Priority of Thought and Language", pp. 315--324 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Authored Shelves}, topic = {Frege;history-of-philosophy;history-of-logic;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1991b, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Frege on the Consistency of Mathematical Theories}, booktitle = {Frege and Other Philosophers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Michael Dummett}, pages = {1--16}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Frege;(in)consistency;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1991c, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Frege and the Paradox of Analysis}, booktitle = {Frege and Other Philosophers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Michael Dummett}, pages = {17--52}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Frege;paradox-of-analysis;definitions;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1991d, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Frege as a Realist}, booktitle = {Frege and Other Philosophers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Michael Dummett}, pages = {79--96}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Frege;philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1991e, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Frege and {K}ant on Geometry}, booktitle = {Frege and Other Philosophers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Michael Dummett}, pages = {126--157}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Frege;Kant;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1991f, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Frege's Myth of the Third Realm}, booktitle = {Frege and Other Philosophers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Michael Dummett}, pages = {249--262}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Frege;philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1991g, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Thought and Perception: The Views of Two Philosophical Innovators}, booktitle = {Frege and Other Philosophers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Michael Dummett}, pages = {263--288}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Brentano;Frege;epistemology;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1991h, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {The Relative Priority of Thought and Language}, booktitle = {Frege and Other Philosophers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Michael Dummett}, pages = {315--324}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;philosophy-of-mind;} } @book{ dummett_m:1991i, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {The Logical Basis of Metaphysics}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780674537866}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-logic;} } @book{ dummett_m:1993a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {The Seas of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-824011-2}, contentnote = {TC: 1. "What is a Theory of Meaning? (I)", pp. 1--33 2. "What is a Theory of Meaning? (II)", pp.34--93 3. "What do I Know When I Know a Language", pp. 94--105 4. "What does the Appeal to Use do for the Theory of Meaning?", pp. 106--116 5. "Language and Truth", pp. 117--146 6. "Truth and Meaning", pp. 147--165 7. "Language and Communication", pp. 166--187 8. "The Source of the Concept of Truth", pp. 188--201 9. "Mood, Force, and Convention", pp. 202--223 10. "Frege and Husserl on Reference", pp. 224--229 11. "Realism", pp. 230--276 12. "Existence", pp. 277--307 13. "Does Quantification Involve Identity?", pp. 308--327 14. "Could there be Unicorns", pp. 328--348 15. "Causal Loops", pp. 349--375 16. "Common Sense and Physics", pp. 376--410 17. "Testimony and Memory", pp. 411--428 18. "What is Mathematics About?", pp. 429--445 19. "Wittgenstein on Necessity: Some Reflections", pp. 446--461 20. "Realism and Anti-Realism", pp. 462--478 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {metaphysics;philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ dummett_m:1993b, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Origins of Analytic Philosophy}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-674-64473-5}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {Frege;history-of-philosophy;analytic-philosophy;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:1993c, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Mood, Force and Convention}, booktitle = {The Seas of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, editor = {Michael Dummett}, pages = {202--223}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {speech-acts;convention;} } @article{ dummett_m:2001a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Victor's Error}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2001}, volume = {61}, number = {1}, pages = {1--2}, topic = {truth;knowledge;} } @article{ dummett_m:2003a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Truth and the Past. Lecture {III}: The Metaphysics of Time}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {100}, number = {1}, pages = {38--53}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;philosophical-realism;} } @incollection{ dummett_m:2006a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {The Vicious Circle Principle}, booktitle = {Cambridge and {V}ienna: {F}rank {P}. {R}amsey and the {V}ienna {C}ircle}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2006}, editor = {Maria Carla Galavotti}, pages = {29--33}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Dummett"}, topic = {Russell;paradoxes;vicious-circle-principle;} } @book{ dummett_m:2009a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {The Nature and Future of Philosophy}, publisher = {Columbia University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {978-0-231-15052-1}, topic = {philosophy-general ;} } @article{ dummett_m:2021a, author = {Michael Dummett}, title = {Sense and Reference from a Constructivist Standpoint}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {485--500}, abstract = {This paper was read by Michael Dummett at Leiden University on September 26, 1992}, topic = {constructivism;foundations-of-semantics;sense-reference;;} } @article{ dummett_m-lemon_ej:1959a, author = {Michael A.E. Dummett and E.J. Lemon}, title = {Modal logics between {S4} and {S5}}, journal = {Zeitschrift f\"{u}r {M}athematische {L}ogik und {G}rundlagen der {M}athematik}, volume = {5}, year = {1959}, pages = {250--264}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ dumoncel_jc:1981a, author = {J.C. Dumoncel}, title = {The Metaphysical Foundations of Modal Semantics}, journal = {Archives de Philosophie}, year = {1981}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {403--414}, topic = {foundations-of-modal-logic;metaphysics;} } @book{ dumouchiel_p-damiano_l:2017a, author = {Paul Dumouchiel and Luisa Damiano}, title = {Living with Robots}, Publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {9780674971738}, note = {Translated by Malcolm DeBevoise}, abstract = {Living with Robots recounts a foundational shift in robotics, from artificial intelligence to artificial empathy, and foreshadows an inflection point in human evolution. As robots engage with people in socially meaningful ways, social robotics probes the nature of the human emotions that social robots are designed to emulate.}, topic = {social-robotics;} } @article{ dunaway_b:2017a, author = {Billy Dunaway}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Meaning of `Ought': Beyond Descriptivism and Expressivism in Metaethics}, by {M}atthew {C}hirsman}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2017}, volume = {114}, number = {3}, pages = {155--159}, xref = {Review of: chirsman:2015a}, topic = {'ought';deontic-modals;inferentialism;} } @article{ dunaway_b:2018a, author = {Billy Dunaway}, title = {Review of \emph{{O}ntology and the Ambitions of Metaphysics}, by {T}homas {H}ofweber}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2018}, volume = {127}, number = {2}, pages = {260--264}, xref = {Review of: hofweber_t:2016a}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @article{ dunaway_b-mcpherson_t:2016a, author = {Billy Dunaway and Tristram McPherson}, title = {Reference Magnetism as a Solution to the Moral Twin Earth Problem}, journal = {Ergo}, year = {2016}, volume = {3}, number = {25}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.3998/ergo.12405314.0003.025}, abstract = {'Moral Twin Earth' thought experiments constitute a central semantic challenge to naturalistic normative realism. This paper first outlines a general framework for understanding the challenge, according to which (i) central normative terms are semantically stable in ways that contrast with many other paradigmatic descriptive terms, and (ii) realists should expect to have a unified metasemantic theory that explains the difference in stability between the normative and descriptive terms in question. The most attractive way of meeting this challenge, we argue, appeals to the idea of reference magnetism. According to this influential idea, some properties are reference magnets, which (roughly) means that they are comparatively easy to refer to. We argue that (together with other plausible assumptions) reference magnetism can provide an attractive explanation of both the general phenomenon of varying semantic stability, and the distinctive semantic stability of normative terms. We illustrate this by showing that reference magnetism can smoothly vindicate plausible judgments about Moral Twin Earth cases. We conclude by offering an alternative gloss on our account, for those wary of the metaphysical commitments we propose. The alternative account adapts our proposal to provide a debunking explanation of the apparent semantic stability of normative terms.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr17}, topic = {normativity;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ dunbar_k-fugelsang:2005a, author = {Kevin Dunbar and Jonathan Fugelsang}, title = {Scientific Thinking and Reasoning}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Keith J. Holyoak and Robert G. Morrison}, pages = {705--726}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;scientific-reasoning;} } @article{ dunbar_rim:1998a, author = {Robin I.M. Dunbar}, title = {The Social Brain Hypothesis}, journal = {Foundations in Social Neuroscience}, year = {1998}, volume = {6}, number = {5}, pages = {178--190}, doi = {http://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1520-6505(1998)6:5<178::AID-EVAN5>3.3.CO;2-P}, topic = {social-intelligence;human-evolution;} } @article{ duncan_c:2007a, author = {Craig Duncan}, title = {The Persecutor's Wager}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2007}, volume = {116}, number = {1}, pages = {1--50}, topic = {consequentialism;} } @book{ duncan_s-fiske:1977a, author = {Starkey {Duncan, Jr.} and Donald W. Fiske}, title = {Face-To-Face Interaction: Research, Methods, and Theory}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1977}, address = {Hillsdale, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0470991135}, rtnote = {UMich Social Work, BF637.C45 D92.}, topic = {facial-expression;social-psychology;interpersonal-communication;} } @article{ duncanjones:1949a, author = {Austin Duncan-Jones}, title = {Fugitive Propositions}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1949}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {21--24}, topic = {'now';propositions;} } @article{ duncanjones:1964a, author = {Austin Duncan-Jones}, title = {Performance and Promise}, journal = {Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1964}, volume = {14}, pages = {97--117}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ dung_pm:1993a, author = {Phanh Minh Dung}, title = {On the Acceptability of Arguments and its Fundamental Role in Nonmonotonic Reasoning and Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {852--857}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;argument-based-defeasible-reasoning;} } @article{ dung_pm:1995a, author = {Phan Minh Dung}, title = {On the Acceptability of Arguments and Its Fundamental Role in Nonmonotonic Reasoning, Logic Programming, and n-Person Games}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {77}, number = {2}, pages = {321--357}, topic = {argument-based-defeasible-reasoning; nonmonotonic-reasoning;logic-programming;game-theory;} } @article{ dung_pm:1995b, author = {Phan Minh Dung}, title = {An Argumentation Theoretic Foundation for Logic Programming}, journal = {Journal of Logic Programming}, year = {1995}, volume = {22}, pages = {151--177}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;logic-programming;} } @article{ dung_pm-etal:2006a, author = {Phan Minh Dung and Robert A. Kowalski and Francesca Toni}, title = {Dialectic Proof Procedures for Assumption-Based, Admissible Argumentation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {2}, pages = {114--159}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;admissibility-semantics;nonmonotonic-logic; nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ dung_pm-etal:2007a, author = {Phan Minh Dung and Paolo Mancarella and Francesca Toni}, title = {Computing Ideal Sceptical Argumentation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {10--15}, pages = {642--674}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ dung_pm-son_tc:1996a, author = {Phan Minh Dung and Tran Cao Son}, title = {Non-Monotonic Inheritance, Argumentation, and Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Logic Programming and Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, year = {1996}, pages = {317--329}, missinginfo = {editor, publisher, organization, address}, topic = {logic-programming;abstract-argumentation;inheritance-theory;} } @incollection{ dung_pm-son_tc:1996b, author = {Phan Minh Dung and Tran Cao Son}, title = {An Argumentation-Theoretic Approach to Reasoning with Specificity}, booktitle = {{KR}'96: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Luigia Carlucci Aiello and Jon Doyle and Stuart Shapiro}, pages = {506--517}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;default-logic;specificity;inheritance-theory;} } @article{ dung_pm-son_tc:2001a, author = {Phan Minh Dung and Tran Cao Son}, title = {An Argument-Based Approach to Reasoning with Specificity}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2001}, volume = {133}, number = {1--2}, pages = {35--85}, topic = {nonmonotonic-reasoning;specificity; argument-based-defeasible-reasoning;} } @incollection{ duninkeplicz_b:1994a, author = {Barbara Dunin-K\c{e}plicz}, title = {An Architecture with Multiple Meta-Levels for the Development of Correct Programs}, booktitle = {Logic Programming Synthesis and Transformation, Meta-Programming in Logic: Fourth International Workshops, {LOBSTR}'94 and {META}'94, Pisa, Italy}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Laurent Fribourg and Franco Turini}, pages = {293--310}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {metaprogramming;} } @book{ duninkeplicz_b-verbrugge_r:2010a, author = {Barbara Dunin-K\c{e}plicz and Rineke Verbrugge}, title = {Teamwork in Multi-Agent Systems: A Formal Approach}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {2010}, address = {Chicister}, ISBN = {978-0-470-69988-1}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr19}, topic = {multi-agent-systems;cooperation;} } @article{ dunn_jm:1967a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Drange's Paradox Lost}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1967}, volume = {6}, number = {18}, pages = {94--95}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {truth-value-gaps;semantic-paradoxes;} } @unpublished{ dunn_jm:1969a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Natural Language Versus Formal Language}, year = {1969}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Indiana University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {relevance-logic;natural-language/formal-language;} } @article{ dunn_jm:1975a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Axiomatizing {B}elnap's Conditional Assertion}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1975}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {383--397}, topic = {conditional-assertion;} } @article{ dunn_jm:1976a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Intuitive Semantics for First-Degree Entailment and `Coupled Trees{'} }, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1976}, volume = {29}, pages = {149--168}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ dunn_jm:1980a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {A Sieve for Entailments}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1980}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {41--57}, topic = {relevance-logics;} } @incollection{ dunn_jm:1986a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Relevance Logic and Entailment}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {III}: Alternatives in Classical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1986}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther}, pages = {117--224}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ dunn_jm:1987a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Relevant Predication {I}: the Formal Theory}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1987}, volume = {16}, number = {4}, pages = {347--381}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @incollection{ dunn_jm:1989a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Relevance Logic and Entailment}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {III}}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1989}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {117--224}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @incollection{ dunn_jm:1990a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {The Frame Problem and Relevant Predication}, booktitle = {Knowledge Representation and Defeasible Reasoning}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1990}, editor = {Henry Kyburg and Ronald Loui and Greg Carlson}, pages = {89--95}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {kr;frame-problem;relevance-logic;} } @article{ dunn_jm:1990b, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Relevant Predication {II}: Intrinsic Properties and Internal Relations}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1990}, volume = {60}, pages = {117--206}, topic = {relevant-predication;relevance-logic;real-properties; internal/external-properties;} } @incollection{ dunn_jm:1990c, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Relevant Predication {III}: Essential Properties}, booktitle = {Truth or Consequences: Essays in Honor of {N}uel {B}elnap}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1990}, editor = {J. Michael Dunn and Anil Gupta}, pages = {77--95}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {relevant-predication;relevance-logic;real-properties; internal/external-properties;} } @unpublished{ dunn_jm:1990d, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Gaggle Theory: An Abstraction of {G}alois Connections and Residuation, with Applications to Negation, Implication, and Various Logical Operators}, year = {1990}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Indiana University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {algebraic-logic;relevance-logic;} } @incollection{ dunn_jm:1993a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Star and Perp: Two Treatments of Negation}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives, Volume 7: Language and Logic}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1993}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, pages = {331--357}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {negation;relevance-logic;} } @article{ dunn_jm:1995a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Positive Modal Logic}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {1995}, volume = {55}, number = {2}, pages = {259--271}, contentnote = {Axiomatizes negation-free minimal modal logic.}, topic = {modal-logic;positive-logic;} } @article{ dunn_jm:1996a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Is Existence a (Relevant) Predicate?}, journal = {Philosophical Topics}, year = {1996}, volume = {24}, number = {1}, pages = {1--34}, topic = {logic-of-existence;relevance-logic;} } @article{ dunn_jm:2000a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Partiality and its Dual}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2000}, volume = {66}, number = {1}, pages = {5--40}, topic = {relevance-logic;partial-logic;4-valued-logic;} } @article{ dunn_jm:2010a, author = {J. Michael Dunn}, title = {Contradictory Information: Too Much of a Good Thing}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {39}, number = {4}, pages = {453--472}, topic = {paraconsistency;} } @article{ dunn_jm-belnap_nd:1968a, author = {J. Michael Dunn and Nuel D. {Belnap, Jr.}}, title = {The Substitution Interpretation of the Quantifiers}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1968}, volume = {2}, number = {1}, pages = {177--185}, topic = {substitutional-quantification;} } @article{ dunn_jm-belnap_nd:1968b, author = {J. Michael Dunn and Nuel D. Belnap, Jr.}, title = {Homomorphisms of Intensionally Complemented Distributive Lattices}, journal = {Mathematische Annalen}, year = {1968}, volume = {176}, number = {1}, pages = {28--38}, topic = {lattice-theory;relevance-logic;} } @book{ dunn_jm-epstein_g:1977a, editor = {J. Michael Dunn and George Epstein}, title = {Modern Uses Of Multiple-Valued Logic: Invited Papers From the Fifth International Symposium on Multiple-Valued Logic, held at Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, May 13--16, 1975}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1977}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {9027707472}, rtnote = {UMich Science, QA9.45 .I571 1975}, topic = {multivalued-logic;} } @article{ dunn_jm-etal:2005a, author = {J. Michael Dunn and Tobia J. Hagge and Lawrence S. Moss and Zhenghan Wang}, title = {Quantum Logic as Motivated by Quantum Computing}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2005}, volume = {70}, number = {2}, pages = {353--359}, topic = {quantum-logic;quantum-computing;} } @book{ dunn_jm-gupta_a1:1990a, editor = {J. Michael Dunn and Anil Gupta}, title = {Truth or Consequences: Essays in Honor of {N}uel {B}elnap}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1990}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {philosophical-logic;} } @incollection{ dunn_jm-restall_g:2002a, author = {Mike Dunn and Greg Restall}, title = {Relevance Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {VI}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {1--128}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {relevance-logic;} } @article{ dunne_pe:2009a, author = {Paul E. Dunne}, title = {The Computational Complexity of Ideal Semantics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {18}, pages = {1559--1591}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ dunne_pe-benchcapon_t:1997a, author = {Paul E. Dunne and Trevor J.M. Bench-Capon}, title = {The Maximum Length of Prime Implicates for Instances of {3-SAT}}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {92}, number = {1--2}, pages = {317--329}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Schrag and Crawford (1996) present strong experimental evidence that the occurrence of prime implicates of varying lengths in random instances of 3-SAT exhibits behaviour similar to the well-known phase transition phenomenon associated with satisfiability. Thus, as the ratio of number of clauses (m) to number of propositional variables (n) increases, random instances of 3-SAT progress from formulae which are generally satisfiable through to formulae which are generally not satisfiable, with an apparent sharp threshold being crossed when m/n ~4.2. For instances of 3-SAT, Schrag and Crawford (1996) examine with what probability the longest prime implicate has length k (for k>=0)-unsatisfiable formulae correspond to those having only a prime implicate of length 0-demonstrating that similar behaviour arises. It is observed by Schrag and Crawford (1996) that experiments failed to identify any instance of 3-SAT over nine propositional variables having a prime implicate of length 7 or greater, and it is conjectured that no such instances are possible. In this note we present a combinatorial argument establishing that no 3-SAT instance on n variables can have a prime implicate whose length exceeds max(n/2 +1, 2n/3, validating this conjecture for the case n=9. We further show that these bounds are the best possible. An easy corollary of the latter constructions is that for all k>3, instances of k-SAT on n variables can be formed, that have prime implicates of length n-o(n).}, topic = {prime-implicants;model-checking;} } @article{ dunne_pe-benchcapon_t:2002a, author = {Paul E. Dunne and T.J.M. Bench-Capon}, title = {Coherence in Finite Argument Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {141}, number = {1--2}, pages = {187--203}, topic = {argument-systems;} } @article{ dunne_pe-benchcapon_t:2003a, author = {Paul E. Dunne and Trevor Bench-Capon}, title = {Two Party Immediate Response Disputes: Properties and Efficiency}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {149}, number = {2}, pages = {221--230}, topic = {proof-theory;algorithmic-complexity;dialogue-games;} } @article{ dunne_pe-etal:2005a, author = {Paul E. Dunne and Michael Woodridge and Michael Laurence}, title = {The Complexity of Contract Negotiation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {164}, number = {1--2}, pages = {23--46}, topic = {automated-negotiation;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ dunne_pe-etal:2009a, author = {Paul E. Dunne and Sarit Kraus and Efrat Manisterski and Michael Wooldridge}, title = {Solving Coalitional Resource Games}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {174}, number = {1}, pages = {20--50}, topic = {coalitional-games;computational-bargaining;} } @article{ dunne_pe-etal:2011a, author = {Paul E. Dunne and Anthony Hunter and Peter McBurney and Simon Parsons and Michael Wooldridge}, title = {Weighted Argument Systems: Basic Definitions, Algorithms, and Complexity Results}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {2}, pages = {457--486}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ dunne_pe-etal:2013a, author = {Paul E. Dunne and Wolfgang Dvo\v{r}\`ak and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Parametric Properties of Ideal Semantics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2013}, volume = {202}, pages = {1--28}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @inproceedings{ dunne_pe-etal:2014a, author = {Paul E. Dunne and Wolfgang Dvorak and Thomas Linsbichler and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Characteristics of Multiple Viewpoints in Abstract Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {72--81}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we present a formal basis for examining extension-based semantics in terms of the sets of extensions that these may express within a single [argumentation framework] AF. We provide a number of characterization theorems which guarantee the existence of AFs whose set of extensions satisfy specific conditions and derive preliminary complexity results for decision problems that require such characterizations. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {kr;abstract-argumentation;} } @article{ duntsch-gediga:1998a, author = {Ivo D\"untsch and G\"unther Gediga}, title = {Uncertainty Measures for Rough Set Prediction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {106}, number = {1}, pages = {109--137}, topic = {data-prediction;rough-sets;} } @article{ duntsch-orlawska:2000a, author = {Ivo D\"untsch and Ewa Or{\l}awska}, title = {A Proof System for Contact Relation Algebras}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {29}, number = {3}, pages = {241--262}, topic = {spatial-reasoning;qualitative-geometry;mereology; completeness-theorems;} } @article{ duong-etal:2009a, author = {Thi Duong and Dinh Phung and Hung Bui and Svetha Venkatesh}, title = {Efficient Duration and Hierarchical Modeling for Human Activity Recognition}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {7--8}, pages = {830--856}, topic = {activity-recognition;} } @incollection{ dupindesaintcyr:2008a, author = {Florence Dupin de Saint-Cyr}, title = {Scenario Update Applied to Causal Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {188--197}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {In this paper, we propose to define the update of a scenario (sequence of observations at different time points) by a piece of information (value of a fluent or event occurrence) at a given time point. This operation computes the possible world evolutions (called trajectories) satisfying this piece of information that are the most in accordance with the initial scenario. It enables us to identify the consequences that a modification may involve on the evolution of the world. Updating scenarios allows us to define formally the counter-factual aspect of causation: to check if an event is a cause in a given scenario amounts to update this scenario by the non-occurrence of this event. }, topic = {causal-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;counterfactuals;} } @article{ dupont_i:1970a, author = {Inge Dupont}, title = {Zur {F}rage der {E}xistenz-vorassetsungen in der {L}ogic}, journal = {Notre {D}ame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1970}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {89--96}, topic = {logic-of-existence;} } @article{ dupre_g:2021a, author = {Gabe Dupre}, title = {What Would it Mean for Natural Language to be the Language of Thought?}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2021}, volume = {44}, number = {4}, pages = {773--812}, abstract = {Traditional arguments against the identification of the language of thought with natural language assume a picture of natural language which is largely inconsistent with that suggested by contemporary linguistic theory. This has led certain philosophers and linguists to suggest that this identification is not as implausible as it once seemed. In this paper, I discuss the prospects for such an identification in light of these developments in linguistic theory. I raise a new challenge against the identification thesis: the existence of ungrammatical but acceptable expressions seems to require a gap between thought and language. I consider what must be the case in order for this objection to be dealt with. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection, \se21}, topic = {mental-language;} } @article{ dupre_g:2022a, author = {Gabe Dupre}, title = {Realism and Observation: The View from Generative Grammar}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2022}, volume = {89}, number = {3}, pages = {565--584}, topic = {philosophical-realism;philosophy-of-science;philosophy-of-linguistics; competence;} } @incollection{ dupre_j:1984a, author = {John Dupr\'e}, title = {Probabilistic Causality Emancipated}, booktitle = {Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. Uehling, Jr. and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {169--175}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {causality;probability;} } @article{ dupre_j:1999a, author = {John Dupr\'e}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}ow the Mind Works}, by {S}tephen {P}inker}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1999}, volume = {66}, number = {3}, pages = {489--507}, xref = {Review of pinker:1997a.}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ dupre_j:2000a, author = {John Dupr\'e}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Social Construction of What?}, by {I}an {H}acking}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2000}, volume = {97}, number = {5}, pages = {673--676}, topic = {social-constructivism;philosophy-of-science;} } @book{ dupuy:1997a, editor = {Jean-Pierre Dupuy}, title = {Perspectives on Self-Deception}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {self-deception;} } @book{ dupuy:2009a, author = {Jean-Pierre DuPuy}, title = {On the Origins of Cognitive Science: The Mechanization of the Mind}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN-10 = {0-262-51239-8}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, xref = {Review: piccinini_g:2002a.}, topic = {history-of-science;cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ durand-etal:2012a, author = {Arnauld Durand and Neil D. Jones and Johann A. Makowsky and Malika More}, title = {Fifty Years of the Spectrum Problem: Survey and New Results}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {18}, number = {4}, pages = {505--553}, topic = {finite-model-theory;} } @article{ durand-etal:2015a, author = {Arnaud Durand and Johannes Ebbing and Juha Kontinen and Heribert Vollmer}, title = {Dependence Logic with a Majority Quantifier}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2015}, volume = {24}, number = {3}, pages = {289--305}, topic = {dependence-logic;} } @book{ duranti-goodwin_c:1992a, editor = {Alessandro Duranti and Charles Goodwin}, title = {Rethinking Context: Language as an Interactive Phenomenon}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052138169X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, P 35 .R461 1992.}, topic = {context;sociolinguistics;} } @article{ durfee_eh:1999a, author = {Edmund H. Durfee}, title = {Distributive Continual Planning for Unmanned Ground Vehicle Teams}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, number = {4}, pages = {55--61}, topic = {multiagent-planning;distributed-systems;} } @article{ durfee_eh-etal:1995a, author = {Edmund H. Durfee and Victor R. Lesser and Daniel D. Corkill}, title = {Trends in Cooperative Distributed Problem Solving}, journal = {{IEEE} Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering}, year = {1989}, volume = {1}, pages = {63--83}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {distributed-systems;} } @article{ durfee_eh-etal:2002a, author = {Edmynd H. Durfee and Sarit Kraus and Hideyuki Nakashima and Milind Tambe}, title = {Editorial (for Special Issue on the International Conference on Multiagent Systems 2000)}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {142}, number = {2}, pages = {95--97}, topic = {multiagent-systems;} } @inproceedings{ durfee_eh-montgomery_ta:1991a, author = {Edmund H. Durfee and Thomas A. Montgomery}, title = {A Hierarchical Protocol for Coordinating Multiagent Behaviors}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {Thomas Dean and Kathleen McKeown}, pages = {86--93}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {coordinating-behavior;action-descriptions;communication-protocols;} } @book{ during_i:1961a, author = {Ingemar D\"uring}, title = {Aristotle's {P}rotrepticus: An Attempt at Reconstruction}, year = {1961}, publisher = {Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis}, address = {Gothenburg}, topic = {Aristotle;} } @book{ during_i:1969a, author = {Ingemar D\"uring}, title = {Naturphilosophie bei {A}ristoteles und {T}heophrast}, publisher = {Stiehm}, year = {1969}, address = {Heidelberg}, topic = {Aristitle;ancient-physics;ancient-science;} } @book{ durlach-mavor:1995a, editor = {Nathaniel I. Durlach and Anne S. Mavor}, title = {Virtual Reality: Scientific and Technological Challenges}, publisher = {National Academy Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Washington, D.C.}, ISBN = {0309051355}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 V67 1995.}, topic = {virtual-reality;} } @article{ durstandersen:1995a, author = {Per Durst-Andersen}, title = {Imperative Frames and Modality. Direct vs. Indirect Speech Acts in {R}ussian, {D}anish, and {E}nglish}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1995}, volume = {18}, number = {6}, pages = {655--675}, topic = {speech-acts;pragmatics;indirect-speech-acts;} } @article{ dusche:1995a, author = {M. Dusche}, title = {Interpreted Logical Forms as Objects of the Attitudes}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1995}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {301--315}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;hyperintensionality; structured-propositions;} } @book{ dutoit:1997a, author = {Thierry Dutoit}, title = {An Introduction to Text-to-Speech Synthesis}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, address = {Dordrecht}, ISBN = {0-7923-4498-7}, xref = {Review: fitzpatrick:1998a}, topic = {speech-generation;} } @article{ dutoit:2002a, author = {Thierry Dutoit}, title = {Review of \emph{{D}ata-Driven Techniques in Speech Synthesis}, edited by {R}.{I}. {D}amper}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2002}, volume = {28}, number = {4}, pages = {570--572}, xref = {Review of: damper:2001a}, topic = {speech-generation;machine-learning;} } @incollection{ dutoit-stylianou:2003a, author = {Thierry Dutoit and Yannis Stylianou}, title = {Text-to-Speech Synthesis}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Ruslan Mitkov}, pages = {323--338}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-processing;speech-generation;} } @article{ duzi_m:2010a, author = {Marie Du\v{z}\'i}, title = {The Paradox of Inference and the Non-Triviality of Analytic Information}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {39}, number = {5}, pages = {473--510}, topic = {paradox-of-analysis;hyperintensionality;} } @book{ duzi_m-etal:2010a, author = {Marie Du\c{z}\'i and Bjorn Jespersen and Pavel Materna}, title = {Procedural Semantics for Hyperintensional Logic: Foundations and Applications of Transparent Intensional Logic}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2010}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-90-4818811-6}, topic = {transparent-intentional-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dvorak_w-etal:2010a, author = {Wolfgang Dvo\v{r}\'ak and Reinhard Pichler and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Towards Fixed-Parameter Tractable Algorithms for Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {112--122}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Abstract argumentation frameworks have received a lot of interest in recent years. Most computational problems in this area are intractable but several tractable fragments have been identified.... The goal of this paper is to turn the theoretical tractability results into efficient algorithms and to explore the potential of directed notions of tree-width for defining larger tractable fragments.}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;AI-algorithms;} } @article{ dvorak_w-etal:2012a, author = {Wolfgang Dvo\v{r}\'ak and Reinhard Pichler and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Towards Fixed-Parameter Tractable Algorithms for Abstract Argumentation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {186}, pages = {1--37}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;AI-algorithms;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ dvorak_w-etal:2012b, author = {Wolfgang Dvo\v{r}\'ak and Sebastian Ordyniak and Stefan Szeider}, title = {Augmenting Tractable Fragments of Abstract Argumentation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {186}, pages = {157--173}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;AI-algorithms;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ dvorak_w-etal:2012c, author = {Wolfgang Dvor\'ak and Matti J\"arvisalo and Johannes Peter Wallner and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Complexity-Sensitive Decision Procedures for Abstract Argumentation}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {54--64}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we present a generic approach for reasoning over AFs, based on the novel concept of complexity-sensitivity. Establishing the theoretical foundations of this approach, we derive several new complexity results for preferred, semistable and stage semantics which complement the current complexity landscape for abstract argumentation, providing further understanding on the sources of intractability of AF reasoning problems. ... First experimental results show that the SAT-based instantiation of our novel approach outperforms existing systems. }, topic = {abstract-argumentation;software-testing;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ dvorak_w-etal:2014a, author = {Wolfgang Dvo\v{r}\'ak and Matti J\"arvisalo and Johannes Peter Wallner and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Complexity-Sensitive Decision Procedures for Abstract Argumentation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2014}, volume = {206}, pages = {53--78}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ dvorak_w-etal:2020a, author = {Wolfgang Dvo\v{r}\'ak and Anna Rapberger and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Argumentation Semantics under a Claim-Centric View: Properties, Expressiveness and Relation to {SETAFs}}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {341--350}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {Claim-augmented argumentation frameworks (CAFs) constitute a generic formalism for conflict resolution of conclusion-oriented problems in argumentation. CAFs extend Dung argumentation frameworks (AFs) by assigning a claim to each argument. ... we introduce claim-level semantics (cl-semantics) for CAFs where maximization is performed on the claim-level. We compare these two approaches for five prominent semantics (preferred, naive, stable, semi-stable, and stage) and relate in total eleven CAF semantics to each other. }, topic = {abstract-argumentation;argumentation-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ dvorak_w-etal:2021a, author = {Wolfgang Dvo\v{r}\'ak and Matthias K\"onig and Stefan Woltran}, title = {On the Complexity of Preferred Semantics in Argumentation Frameworks with Bounded Cycle Length}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {671--675}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we study the complexity of this problem w.r.t. the length of the cycles in the considered AF. Our results show which bounds are necessary to decrease the complexity to coNP and P, respectively. We also consider argumentation frameworks with collective attacks and achieve Pi^P_2-hardness already for cycles of length 4.}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ dvorak_w-etal:2022a, author = {Wolfgang Dvo\v{r}\'ak and Matthias K\"onig and Markus Ulbricht and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Rediscovering Argumentation Principles Utilizing Collective Attacks}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {122--131}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Argumentation Frameworks (AFs) are a key formalism in AI research. Their semantics have been investigated in terms of principles, which define characteristic properties in order to deliver guidance for analysing established and developing new semantics. ... We extend the principle-based approach to Argumentation Frameworks with Collective Attacks (SETAFs) and provide a comprehensive overview of common principles for their semantics. ...}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ dvovak_p:2008a, author = {Petr Dvo\v{a}\'ak}, title = {Relational Logic of {J}uan {C}aramuel}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 2: Mediaeval and Renaissance Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2008}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {645--665}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;medieval-logic;} } @inproceedings{ dwork-moses_y:1986a1, author = {Cynthia Dwork and Yoram Moses}, title = {Knowledge and Common Knowledge in a {B}yzantine Environment}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the First Conference}, year = {1986}, editor = {Joseph Y. Halpern}, pages = {149--169}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc.}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {See dwork-moses_y:1986a2}, topic = {epistemic-logic;mutual-belief;Byzantine-agreement;} } @article{ dwork-moses_y:1986a2, author = {Cynthia Dwork and Yoram Moses}, title = {Knowledge and Common Knowledge in a {B}yzantine Environment: Crash Failures}, journal = {Information and Computation}, year = {1990}, volume = {88}, number = {2}, pages = {156--186}, xref = {See dwork-moses_y:1986a1}, topic = {epistemic-logic;mutual-belief;Byzantine-agreement;} } @book{ dworkin_g:1988a, author = {Gerald Dworkin}, title = {The Theory and Practice of Autonomy}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1988}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @book{ dworkin_r:2011a, author = {Ronald Dworkin}, title = {Justice for Hedgehogs}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {978-0674072251}, xref = {Review: waldron:2014a}, topic = {philosophy-of-law;} } @article{ dwyer-pietroski_pm:1996a, author = {Susan Dwyer and Paul M. Pietrowski}, title = {Believing in Language}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1996}, volume = {63}, number = {3}, pages = {338--373}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @book{ dybjer-etal:1994a, editor = {Peter Dybjer and B. Nordstr\"om and J. Smith}, title = {Types for Proofs and Programs: Selected Papers}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {type-theory;proof-theory;programming-languages;} } @book{ dybjer-etal:1995a, editor = {Peter Dybjer and Bengt Nordstr\"om and Jan Smith}, title = {Types for Proofs and Programs: International Workshop {TYPES}'94, {B}estad, {S}weden, June 6--10}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1995}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3-540-60579-7}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Reni M. C. Ahn, "Communication Contexts: a Pragmatic Approach to Information Exchange", pp. 1--13 2. Herman Geuvers, "A Short and Flexible Proof of Strong Normalization for the Calculus of Constructions", pp. 14--38 3. Eduardo Giminez, "Codifying Guarded Definitions with Recursive Schemes", pp. 39--59 4. Healfdene Goguen, "The Metatheory of {UTT}", pp. 60--82 5. Pascal Manoury, "A User's Friendly Syntax to Define Recursive Functions as Typed lambda-Terms", pp. 83--100 6. Tobias Nipkow, Konrad Slind, "I/Q Automata in Isabelle/HOL", pp. 101--119 7. Lawrence C. Paulson, "A Concrete Final Coalgebra Theorem for {ZF} Set Theory", pp. 120--139 8. Robert Pollack, "On Extensibility of Proof Checkers", pp. 140--161 9. Aarne Ranta, "Syntactic Categories in the Language of Mathematics", pp. 162--182 10. Amokrane Saobi, "Formalization of a Lamda-Calculus with Explicit Substitutions in {Coq}", pp. 183--202 }, topic = {type-theory;logic-in-cs;} } @incollection{ dybkjaer_l-bernsen:2000a, author = {Laila Dybkjaer and Niels Ole Bernsen}, title = {The {MATE} Markup Framework}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First {SIGdial} Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Laila Dybkjaer and Koiti Hasida and David R. Traum}, pages = {19--28}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;corpus-annotation;corpus-tagging;} } @incollection{ dybkjaer_l-etal:1997a, author = {Laila Dybkj{\ae}r and Niels Ole Bernsen and Hans Dybkj{\ae}r}, title = {Generality and Objectivity: Central Issues in Putting a Dialogue Evaluation Tool into Practical Use}, booktitle = {Automatic Information Extraction and Building of Lexical Semantic Resources for {NLP} Applications}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Piek Vossen and Geert Adriaens and Nicoletta Calzolari and Antonio Sanfilippo and Yorick Wilks}, pages = {17--24}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;nlp-evaluation;} } @incollection{ dybkjaer_l-etal:1997b, author = {Laila Dybkj{\ae}r and Niels Ole Bernsen and Hans Dybkj{\ae}r}, title = {Generality and Objectivity: Central Issues in Putting a Dialogue Evaluation Tool into Practical Use}, booktitle = {Interactive Spoken Dialog Systems: Bridging Speech and {NLP} Together in Real Applications}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Julia Hirschberg and Candace Kamm and Marilyn Walker}, pages = {17--24}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-dialogue;nlp-evaluation;} } @book{ dybkjaer_l-etal:2000a, editor = {Laila Dybkjaer and Koiti Hasida and David R. Traum}, title = {Proceedings of the First {SIGdial} Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Shu Nakazoto, "Japanese Dialogue Corpus of Multi-Level Annotation", pp. 1--8 2. Claudia Soria and Roldano Cattoni and Morena Danielli, "{ADAM}: An Architecture for {XML}-Based Dialogue Annotation on Multiple Levels", pp. 9--18 3. Laila Dybkjaer and Niels Ole Bernsen, "The {MATE} Markup Framework", pp. 19--28 4. Nigel Ward, "Issues in the Transcription of {E}nglish Conversational Grunts", pp. 29--35 5. Ilana Mushim and Lesley Stirling and Janet Fletcher and Roger Wales, "Identifying Prosodic Indicators of Dialogue Structure: Some Methodological and Theoretical Considerations", pp. 36--45 6. Holger Schauer, "From Elementary Discourse Units to Complex Ones", pp. 46--55 7. Costanza Navaretta, "Abstract Anaphora Resolution in {D}anish", pp. 56--65 8. Simon Corston-Oliver, "Using Decision Trees to Select the Grammatical Relation of a Noun Phrase", pp. 66--73 9. Dragomir Radev, "A Common Theory of Information Fusion from Multiple Text Sources", pp. 74--83 10. Guido Boella and Rossana Damiano and Leonardo Lesmo, "Social Goals in Conversational Cooperation", pp. 84--93 11. Preetam Maloor and Joyce Chai, "Dynamic User Level and Utility Measurement for Adaptive Dialog in a Help-Desp System", pp. 94--101 12. Mare Koit and Haldur Oim, "Dialogue Management in the Agreement Negotiation Process: A Model that Involves Natural Reasoning", pp. 102--111 13. Staffan Larsson and Annie Zaenen, "Document Transformations and Information States",pp. 112--120 14. Annika Flycht-Eriksson and Arne J\"onsson, "Dialogue and Domain Knowledge Management in Dialogue Systems", pp. 121--130 15. Eli Hagen and Fred Popowich, "Flexible Speech Act Based Dialogue Management", pp. 131--140 16. Sado Kurohashi and Wataru Higasa, "Dialogue Helpsystem Based on Flexible Matching of User Query with Natural Language Knowledge Base", pp. 141--149 17. Jun-Ichi Hirasawa and Kohji Dohsaka and Kiyoaki Aikawa, "{WIT}: A Toolkit for Building Robust and Real-Time Spoken Dialogue Systems", pp. 150--159 18. Jan Alexandersson and Paul Heisterkamp, "Some Notes on the Complexity of Dialogues", pp. 160--169 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, topic = {computational-dialogue;} } @book{ dyck_c:2014a, author = {Cory Dyck}, title = {Kant and Rational Psychology}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: pruneabretonnet_t:2018a}, topic = {Kant;philosophical-psychology;} } @article{ dyck_jl:1991a, author = {Jennifer L. Dyck}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}ognitive Psychology: An Overview for Cognitive Scientists}, by {L}awrence {W}. {B}arsalou}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1991}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {415--417}, xref = {Review of: barsalou:1992a}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;} } @article{ dyckhoff:1992a, author = {Roy Dyckhoff}, title = {Contraction-free Sequent Calculi for Intuitionistic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1992}, volume = {57}, number = {3}, pages = {795--807}, topic = {proof-theory;intuitionistic-logic;} } @book{ dyckhoff:1994a, editor = {Roy Dyckhoff}, title = {Proceedings of the 4th International Workshop Extensions of Logic Programming: {ELP'93}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0387580255}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.63 .E471 1993.}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @book{ dyckhoff:1994b, editor = {Roy Dyckhoff}, title = {Extensions of Logic Programming: 4th International Workshop, {S}t {A}ndrews, {M}arch 29-April 1, 1993}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0387580255}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.63 .E471 1993.}, topic = {extensions-of-logic-programming;} } @article{ dyckhoff:2001a, author = {Roy Dyckhoff}, title = {Review of \emph{{B}asic Proof Theory}, by {A}.{S}. {T}roelstra and {H}. {S}chwichtenberg}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2001}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {280}, xref = {Review of troelstra-schwichtenberg:2000a.}, topic = {proof-theory;} } @book{ dyckhoff-etal:1996a, editor = {Roy Dyckhoff and Heinrich Herre and Peter Schroeder-Heister}, title = {Extensions of Logic Programming: 5th International Workshop, {L}eipzig, {G}ermany, {M}arch 28-30, 1996}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3540609830}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.63 .E471 1996.}, topic = {extensions-of-logic-programming;} } @article{ dyckhoff-weinsing:2001a, author = {Roy Dyckhoff and Heinrich Weinsing}, title = {Editorial}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2001}, volume = {69}, number = {1}, pages = {3--4}, topic = {proof-theory;semantic-tableaux;modal-logic;} } @book{ dyer:1983a, author = {Michael G. Dyer}, title = {In-Depth Understanding: A Computer Model of Integrated Processing for Narrative Comprehension}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI shelves.}, topic = {text-understanding;story-understanding; memory-models;conceptual-dependency;} } @article{ dykstra_d:2018a, author = {Denise Dykstra}, title = {Review of \emph{{H}ow Physics Makes Us Free}, by Jennam .T. {I}smael}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2018}, volume = {127}, number = {2}, pages = {256--260}, xref = {Review of: ismael_jt:2016a}, topic = {freedom;volition;} } @article{ dykstra_vh:1960a, author = {Vergil H. Dykstra}, title = {Philosophers and Presuppositions}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1960}, volume = {69}, number = {273}, pages = {63--68}, zref = {Review: dummett_m:1960b}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {presupposition;} } @article{ dym:1985a, author = {Clive L. Dym}, title = {Review of \emph{{B}uilding Expert Systems}, by {F}. {H}ayes-{R}oth, {D}.{A}. {W}aterman and {D}ouglas {B}. {L}enat}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {25}, number = {1}, pages = {101--104}, xref = {Review of hayesroth_f-etal:1983a.}, topic = {expert-systems;} } @article{ dym:1985b, author = {Clive L. Dym}, title = {Review of \emph{{A} Practical Guide to Designing Expert Systems}, by {S}.{M}. {W}eiss and {C}.{A}. {K}ulikowski}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {25}, number = {2}, pages = {238--239}, xref = {Review of weiss_sm-kulikowski:1984a.}, topic = {expert-systems;} } @inproceedings{ dymetman:1998a, author = {Marc Dymetman}, title = {Group Theory and Linguistic Processing}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {348--352}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {categorial-grammar;Lambek-calculus;grammar-formalisms; group-theory;} } @inproceedings{ dyrkolbotn_sk:2014a, author = {Sjur Kristoffer Dyrkolbotn}, title = {How to Argue for Anything: Enforcing Arbitrary Sets of Labellings using AFs}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {626--629}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we restrict attention to the preferred and semistable semantics, showing that as long as we have a sufficient number of fresh arguments available, we can in fact argue for anything. That is, for any set of finite labellings there is an AF that enforces exactly this set as the outcome of argumentation }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;} } @book{ dyson_f:1979a, author = {Freeman Dyson}, title = {Disturbing the Universe}, publisher = {Basic Books}, year = {1979}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-465-01677-4}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. OFR Winter, 2020}, topic = {science-essay;science-biography;physics-biography;} } @book{ dyson_fj:2007a, author = {Freeman J. Dyson}, title = {A Many-Colored Glass}, publisher = {University of Virginia Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Charlottesville, Virginia}, ISBN = {978-0-8139-2663-6}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Science Shelves. OFR Fall, 2016 }, topic = {science-essay;} } @book{ dyson_gb:1997a, author = {George B. Dyson}, title = {Darwin Among the Machines: The Evolution of Global Intelligence}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley}, year = {1997}, address = {Boston}, ISBN = {ISBN 0-7382-0030-1}, rtnote = {Speculation about evolutionary algorithms and the emergence of consciousness in, e.g., the WWW.}, topic = {history-of-AI;history-of-computer-science; popular-computer-science;} } @article{ dzhafarov_dd:2017a, author = {Damir D. Dzhafarov}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}uring {C}omputability}, by {{R}obert {I}. {S}oare}}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {113--115}, xref = {Review of: soare_r1:2016a}, topic = {computability;} } @article{ dzhafarov_dd:2019a, author = {Damir D. Dzhafarov}, title = {A Note on the Reverse Mathematics of the Sorites}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {30--56}, topic = {sorites-paradox;reverse-mathematics;proof-theory;} } @article{ dzik_w-wojtylak_p:2019a, author = {Wojciech Dzik and Piotr Wojtylak}, title = {Unification in Superintuitionistic Predicate Logics and Its Applications}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {12}, number = {1}, pages = {37--61}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;} } @book{ eades-zhang_k:1996a, editor = {Peter Eades and Kang Zhang}, title = {Software Visualisation}, publisher = {World Scientific}, year = {1996}, address = {Singapore}, ISBN = {9810228260}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.758 .S649 1996.}, topic = {software-engineering;} } @article{ eagle_a:2011a, author = {Antony Eagle}, title = {Deterministic Chance}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2011}, volume = {44}, number = {2}, pages = {269--299}, topic = {(in)determinism;ability;} } @book{ earley_je:2003a, editor = {Joseph E. {Earley, Sr.}}, title = {Chemical Explanations: Characteristics, Development, Autonomy}, publisher = {New York Academy of Sciences}, year = {2003}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {1573314560}, xref = {Review: glymour_c:2004a.}, topic = {philosophey-of-chemistry;} } @article{ earman_j:1971a, author = {John Earman}, title = {Laplacian Determinism, or Is This Any Way to Run A Universe?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1971}, volume = {68}, pages = {729--45}, number = {21}, topic = {physical-determinism;} } @article{ earman_j:1976a, author = {John Earman}, title = {Causation: A Matter of Life and Death}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1976}, volume = {18}, number = {73}, pages = {5--25}, topic = {causality;} } @incollection{ earman_j:1979a, author = {John Earman}, title = {Was {L}eibniz a Relationist?}, booktitle = {Midwest Studies in Philosophy Volume {V}: Studies in Metaphysics}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. {Uehling, Jr.} and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {263--276}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {Leibniz;philosophy-of-space;sufficient-reason;} } @book{ earman_j:1983a, editor = {John Earman}, title = {Testing Scientific Theories: {M}innesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Volume {III}}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, address = {Minneapolis}, year = {1983}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Philsci Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;confirmation;} } @incollection{ earman_j:1984a, author = {John Earman}, title = {Laws of Nature: The Empiricist Challenge}, booktitle = {Profiles (An International Series on Contemporary Philosophers and Logicians), Vol. 4}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1984}, editor = {Bogdan R.J. and D.M. Armstrong}, pages = {191--223}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {natural-laws;} } @book{ earman_j:1986a, author = {John Earman}, title = {A Primer on Determinism}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, year = {1986}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {(in)determinism;} } @book{ earman_j:1992a, author = {John Earman}, title = {Bayes or Bust: A Critical Examination of Confirmation Theory}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {confirmation-theory;} } @book{ earman_j:1995a, author = {John Earman}, title = {Bangs, Crunches, Whimpers, and Shrieks: Singularities and Acausalities in Relativistic Spacetime}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: callendar_c:1998a.}, topic = {spacetime-singularities;philosophy-of-physics;} } @incollection{ earman_j:2002a, author = {John Earman}, title = {Laws of Nature}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Science: Contemporary Readings}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2002}, editor = {Yuri Balashov and Alexander Rosenberg}, pages = {115--126}, address = {London and New York}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;natural-laws;} } @incollection{ earman_j:2008a, author = {John Earman}, title = {How Determinism Can Fail in Classical Physics and How Quantum Physics Can (Sometimes) Provide a Cure}, booktitle = {{PSA}06: Proceedings of the 2006 Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {II}: Symposia Papers}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Jason Alexander and Cristina Bicchieri}, pages = {817--829}, address = {Chicago}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;(in)determinism;} } @book{ earman_j-etal:1977a, editor = {John S. Earman and Clark N. Glymour and John J. Stachel}, title = {Foundations of Space-Time Theories: {M}innesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Volume {VIII}}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, address = {Minneapolis}, year = {1977}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Philsci Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;philosophy-of-physics;} } @article{ earman_j-etal:2002a, author = {John Earman and John T. Robert and Sheldon Smith}, title = {\emph{Ceteris Paribus} Post}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2002}, volume = {57}, number = {3}, pages = {281--301}, abstract = {We argue here that [the claim] that there are numerous examples of CP laws in physics, is false. Moreover, ... we suggest that otherwise unproblematic claims are rendered untestable by the mere addition of the CP operator. Thus, "CP all Fs are Gs" when read as a straightforward statement of fact, cannot be the stuff of scientific theory. Rather, we suggest that when "ceteris paribus" appears in scientific works it plays a pragmatic role of pointing to more respectable claims.}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;natural-laws;} } @article{ earman_j-etal:2002b1, author = {John Earman and Clark Glymour and Sandra Mitchell}, title = {Editorial}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2002}, volume = {57}, number = {3}, pages = {277--280}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my19}, xref = {Republication: earman_j-etal:2002b2}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;} } @incollection{ earman_j-etal:2002b2, author = {John Earman and Clark Glymour and Sandra D. Mitchell}, title = {Editorial}, booktitle = {Ceteris Paribus Laws}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {John Earman and Clark Glymour and Sandra Mitchell}, pages = {1--4}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Republication of: earman_j-etal:2002b1}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;} } @article{ earman_j-etal:2002c1, author = {John Earman and John Roberts and Sheldon Smith}, title = {Ceteris Paribus Lost}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2002}, volume = {57}, number = {3}, pages = {281--301}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my18}, xref = {Republicsation: earman_j-etal:2002c1}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;natural-laws;philosophy-of-physics;} } @incollection{ earman_j-etal:2002c2, author = {John Earman and John Roberts and Sheldon Smith}, title = {Ceteris Paribus Lost}, booktitle = {Ceteris Paribus Laws}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {John Earman and Clark Glymour and Sandra Mitchell}, pages = {5--23}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Republication of: earman_j-etal:2002c1}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;natural-laws;philosophy-of-physics;} } @book{ earman_j-etal:2003a, editor = {John Earman and Clark Glymour and Sandra Mitchell}, title = {Ceteris Paribus Laws}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2003}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN-10 = {1-4020-1020-6}, contentnote = {TC: 1. John Earman and Clark Glymour and Sandra D. Mitchell, "Editorial", pp. 1--4 2. John Earman and John Roberts and Sheldon Smith, "Ceteris Paribus Lost", pp. 5--23 3. Jim Woodward, "There Is No Such Thing as a \emph{Ceteris Paribus} Law", pp. 27--52 4. Sandra D. Mitchell, "\emph{Ceteris Paribus}---An Inadequate Representation for Biological Contingency", pp. 53--74 5. Gerhard Schurtz, "\emph{Ceteris Paribus} Laws: Classification and Deconstruction", pp. 75--96 6. Wolfgang Spohn, "Laws, \emph{Ceteris Paribus} Conditions, and the Dynamics of Belief", pp. 97--118 7. Clark Glymour, "A Semantics and Methodology for \emph{Ceteris Paribus} Hypotheses", pp. 119--129 8. Marc Lange, "Who's Afraid of \emph{Ceteris Paribus} Laws? Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Them", pp. 131--147 9. Nancy Cartwright, "In Favor of Laws that are Not \emph{Ceteris Paribus} After All", pp. 149--163 10. Mehmet Elgin and Elliott Sober, "Cartwright on Explanation and Idealization", pp. 155--174 }, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;} } @incollection{ earman_j-etal:2003b, author = {John Earman and Clark Glymour and Sandra D. Mitchell}, title = {Editorial}, booktitle = {Ceteris Paribus Laws}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {John Earman and Clark Glymour and Sandra Mitchell}, pages = {1--4}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;} } @article{ earman_j-roberts_j:1999a, author = {John Earman and John Roberts}, title = {Ceteris Paribus: There is No Problem of Provisos}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1999}, volume = {118}, number = {3}, pages = {439--478}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my17}, abstract = {Much of the literature on ceteris paribus laws is based on a misguided egalitarianism about the sciences. For example, it is commonly held that the special sciences are riddled with ceteris paribus laws; from this many commentators conclude that if the special sciences are not to be accorded a second class status, it must be ceteris paribus all the way down to fundamental physics. We argue that the (purported) laws of fundamental physics are not hedged by ceteris paribus clauses and provisos. Furthermore, we show that not only is there no persuasive analysis of the truth conditions for ceteris paribus laws, there is not even an acceptable account of how they are to be saved from triviality or how they are to be melded with standard scientific methodology. Our way out of this unsatisfactory situation to reject the widespread notion that the achievements and the scientific status of the special sciences must be understood in terms of ceteris paribus laws.}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;natural-laws;} } @article{ earman_j-ruetsche:2005a, author = {John Earman and Laura Ruetsche}, title = {Relativistic Invariance and Modal Interpretations}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2005}, volume = {72}, number = {4}, pages = {557--583}, topic = {modal-interpretation-of-qm;} } @book{ earnshaw-etal:1993a, editor = {R.A. Earnshaw and M.A. Gigante and H. Jones.}, title = {Virtual Reality Systems}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1993}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0122277481}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 V5711 1993.}, topic = {virtual-reality;} } @article{ eastman_cm:1973a, author = {Charles M. Eastman}, title = {Automated Space Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1973}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {41--64}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper both reviews current procedures and introduces new ones for the automated generation of two-dimensional arrangements. General properties of the task and some sufficiency conditions for dealing with it are identified. The treatment of these properties in existing programs are reviewed. The task is also organized into its component decision rules. One exemplification of these rules is described which utilizes the sufficiency conditions and is implemented in the General Space Planner (GSP) program in operation at Carnegie-Mellon University [3], [4]. The performance of GSP in solving a set of spatial arrangement tasks is described and some future extensions outlined. A secondary purpose of this paper is to more fully introduce this problem domain to the artificial intelligence literature. Not only is it an interesting problem class now only the province of humans, but it has wide application. Throughout the presentation, both the commonalities and disparities of this task domain with other AI tasks are explicated.}, topic = {planning;spatial-arrangement-tasks;spatial-reasoning;} } @phdthesis{ easwaran_k:2008a, author = {Kenny Easwaran}, title = {The Foundations of Conditional Probability}, school = {Group in Logic and the Methodology of Science, University of California at Berkeley}, year = {2008}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {Berkeley, California}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @article{ easwaran_k:2011a, author = {Kenny Easwaran}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Evolution of Logic}, by {{W}ilbur {D}. {H}art}}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2011}, volume = {17}, number = {4}, pages = {533--535}, xref = {Review of: hart_wd:2010a}, topic = {history-of-logic;} } @article{ easwaran_k:2014a, author = {Kenny Easwaran}, title = {Regularity and Hyperreal Credences}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2014}, volume = {123}, number = {1}, pages = {1--41}, abstract = {$\ldots$ Skyrms 1980 and Lewis 1980 $\ldots$ recommend that we should instead use a much richer set of numbers, called the hyperreals [for subjective probabilities]. This essay argues that this popular view is the result of two mistakes. The first mistake, which this essay calls the numerical fallacy, is to assume that a distinction that isn't represented by different numbers isn't represented at all in a mathematical representation. In this case, the essay claims that although the real numbers do not make all relevant distinctions, the full mathematical structure of a probability function does. The second mistake is that the hyperreals make too many distinctions. They have a much more complex structure than credences in ordinary propositions can have, so they make distinctions that don't exist among credences. $\ldots$ }, topic = {foundations-of-probability;primitive-conditional-probability; nonstandard-probability;} } @article{ easwaran_k:2015a, author = {Kenny Easwaran}, title = {Formal Epistemology}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {6}, pages = {651--662}, topic = {epistemic-logic;probability;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @article{ eaton_e-etal:2014a, author = {Eric Eaton and Carla P. Gomes and Brian Williams}, title = {Computational Sustainability}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2014}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {3--7}, topic = {computational-sustainability;} } @article{ eaton_e-etal:2014b, author = {Eric Eaton and Carla Gomes and Brian C. Williams}, title = {Computational Sustainability}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2014}, volume = {35}, number = {3}, pages = {3--7}, topic = {computational-sustainability;} } @article{ eaton_ps-etal:1998a, author = {Peggy S. Eaton and Eugene C. Freuder and Richard J. Lewis}, title = {Constraints and Agents: Confronting Ignorance}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1998}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {51--65}, topic = {constraint-based-reasoning;artificial-societies; autonomous-agents;} } @book{ eatwell-etal:1987a, editor = {John Eatwell and Murray Milgate and Peter Newman}, title = {The New Palgrave: Utility and Probability}, publisher = {Macmillan}, year = {1987}, address = {New York}, topic = {foundations-of-utility;utility;} } @incollection{ ebbinghaus:1995a, author = {Hans-Dieter Ebbinghaus}, title = {On the Model Theory of Some Generalized Quantifiers}, booktitle = {Quantifiers: Logic, Models, and Computation, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Micha{\l} Krynicki and Marcin Mostowski and Les{\l}aw W. Szczerba}, pages = {25--62}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {generalized-quantifiers;} } @book{ ebbinghaus-etal:1989a, editor = {Hans-Dieter Ebbinghaus and J. Fernandez-Prida and M. Garrido and D. Lascar and M. Rodriguez Artalejo}, title = {Logic Colloquium '87: Proceedings of the Colloquium Held in {G}ranada, {S}pain July 20--25, 1987}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1989}, address = {Amsterdam}, contentnote = {TC: 1. F. Delon, "Model Theory of Henselian Valued Fields" 2. F.R. Drake, "On the Foundations of Mathematics in 1987" 3. J.E. Fenstad, "Logic and Natural Language Systems" 4. J. Flum, "Model Theory of Regular and Compact Spaces" 5. W. Hodges, "Categoricity and Permutation Groups" 6. E. Hrushovski, "Unidimensional Theories. An Introduction to Geometric Stability Theory" 7. J.I. Ihoda, "Unbounded Filters on omega" 8. G. Jager, "Type Theory and Explicit Mathematics" 9. P. Koepke, "An Introduction to Extenders and Core Models for Extender Sequences" 10. G. Kreisel, "Logical Aspects of the Axiomatic Method: On Their Significance in Foundations and in Some (Now) Traditional, Common or Garden Varieties of Mathematics 11. A. Kucera, "On the Use of Diagonally Nonrecursive Functions" 12. G. Longo, "Some Aspects of Impredicativity: Notes on Weyl's Philosophy of Mathematics and on Today's Type Theory" 13. J. Meseguer, "General Logics" 14. J. Van Benthem, "Semantic Parallels in Natural Language and Computation" }, topic = {model-theory;foundations-of-mathematics;} } @incollection{ ebbinghaus-flum:2001a, author = {Hans Dieter Ebbinghaus and J\"org Flum}, title = {Mathematics of Logic Programming}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {I}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2001}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {313--370}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @book{ ebbinghaus_hd-etal:1989a, editor = {H.-D. Ebbinghaus and J Fernandez-Prida and M. Garrido and D. Lascar and M.R. Artalejo}, title = {Logic Colloquium '87: Proceedings of the Colloquium Held in {G}ranade, {S}pain, {J}uly 20--25, 1987}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1989}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {0 444 88022 4}, topic = {logic-general;} } @article{ ebbs_g:1989a, author = {Gary Ebbs}, title = {Skepticism, Objectivity and Brains in Vats}, journal = {Pacific Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1989}, volume = {73}, number = {3}, pages = {239--266}, topic = {skepticism;} } @article{ ebbs_g:2002a, author = {Gary Ebbs}, title = {Learning from Others}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2002}, volume = {36}, number = {4}, pages = {525--549}, topic = {radical-interpretation;} } @book{ ebbs_g:2009a, author = {Gary Ebbs}, title = {Truth and Words}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199692262}, xref = {Review: kac_mb:2011a}, topic = {truth;semantic-paradoxex;} } @book{ ebbs_g:2017a, author = {Gary Ebbs}, title = {Carnap, {Q}uine, and {P}utnam on Methods of Inquiry}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2017}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9781107178151}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;Carnap;Quine;Hilary-Putnam;} } @article{ ebelsduggan_sc:2021a, author = {Sean C. Ebels-Duggan}, title = {Deductive Cardinality Results and Nuisance-Like Principles}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {592--623}, topic = {foundations-of-set-theory;Russell-paradox;} } @article{ ebendt-drechsler:2009a, author = {R\"udiger Ebendt and Rolf Drechsler}, title = {Weighted A* search---unifying view and application}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {14}, pages = {1310-1342}, topic = {A*-algorithm;search;planning;} } @incollection{ eberhardt_f:2011a, author = {Frederick Eberhardt}, title = {Hans {R}eichenbach's Probability Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 10: Inductive Logic}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2011}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Stephan Hartman and John Woods}, pages = {357--389}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;probability;Reichenbach;} } @incollection{ eberle_k:2013a, author = {Kurt Eberle}, title = {Semantic Issues in Machine Translation}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 3}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {2931--2960}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {computational-semantics;machine-translation;} } @article{ eberle_r:1969a, author = {Rolf Eberle}, title = {Denotationless Terms and Predicates Expressive of Positive Qualities}, journal = {Theoria}, year = {1969}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {104--122}, topic = {logic-of-existence;} } @article{ eberle_r:1984a, author = {Rolf Eberle}, title = {Logic with a Relative Truth Predicate and `that'-Terms}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1984}, volume = {59}, number = {2}, pages = {151--185}, topic = {truth;indirect-discourse;syntactic-attitudes;} } @article{ ebersole_fb:1952a, author = {Frank B. Ebersole}, title = {Verb Tenses as Expressors and Indicators}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1952}, volume = {12}, number = {5}, pages = {101--113}, xref = {Review: JSL XX 299}, topic = {temporal-logic;nl-tense;} } @article{ ebersole_fb:1963a, author = {Frank B. Ebersole}, title = {Whether Existence is a Predicate}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1963}, volume = {60}, number = {18}, pages = {509--523}, topic = {(non)existence;} } @unpublished{ ebert_c:2011a, author = {Christian Ebert}, title = {Presuppositions and Information Structure as Incremental Interpretation Instructions}, year = {2011}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Linguistics, University of T\"ubingen}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap11}, topic = {presupposition;information-structure;} } @book{ ebert_c-endrias_c:2006a, editor = {Christian Ebert and Cornelia Endriss}, title = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 10}, year = {2006}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/WNhMGJiY/}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ ebert_c-etal:2004a, author = {Christian Ebert and Shalom Lappin and Howard Gregory and Nicolas Nicolov}, title = {Full Paraphrase Generation for Fragments in Dialogue}, booktitle = {Current and New Directions in Discourse and Dialogue}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2004}, editor = {Jan van Kuppevelt and Ronnie W. Smith}, pages = {161--182}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {ellipsis;n;nl-generation;} } @article{ ebert_c-etal:2014a, author = {Christian Ebert and Cornelia Ebert and Stefan Hinterwimmer}, title = {A Unified Analysis of Conditionals as Topics}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2014}, volume = {37}, number = {5}, pages = {353--408}, abstract = {We bring out syntactic and semantic similarities of two types of conditionals with fronted antecedents [normal indicative conditionals (NCs) and biscuit conditionals (BCs)] and two types of left dislocation constructions in German (German left dislocation and hanging topic left dislocation), which mark two types of topicality (aboutness topicality and relevance topicality). On the basis of these similarities we argue that (the antecedent if-clauses of) NCs and BCs are aboutness topics and relevance topics, respectively.}, topic = {conditionals;s-topic;} } @article{ echavarria:2009a, author = {Ricardo Restrepo Echavarria}, title = {Russell's Structuralism and the Supposed Death of Computational Cognitive Science}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2009}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {181--197}, abstract = {John Searle believes that computational properties are purely formal and that consequently, computational properties are not intrinsic, empirically discoverable, nor causal $\ldots$ This paper formulates a not-so-explored version of Searle's problem with computational cognitive science, and refutes it by suggesting how our understanding of computation is far from implying the structuralism Searle vitally attributes to it. $\ldots$ }, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ echeverri_s:2017a, author = {Santiago Echeverri}, title = {Visual Reference and Iconic Content}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2017}, volume = {84}, number = {4}, pages = {761--781}, topic = {human-vision;symbol-grounding-problem;referene;} } @article{ eckardt_r:1999a, author = {Regine Eckardt}, title = {Normal Objects, Normal Worlds and the Meaning of Generic Sentences}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1999}, volume = {16}, number = {3}, pages = {237--278}, abstract = {It has sometimes been proposed that generic sentences make statements about prototypic members of a category. In this paper I will elaborate this view and develop an account where generic sentences express quantification about the normal exemplars in a category -- here and in counterfactual worlds sufficiently similar to our own. Comparing the account to the currently most widespread analysis which views generic sentences as universal quantifications in carefully chosen best-possible worlds, we find that an analysis that is based on the choice of normal objects does better justice to the data in question than an analysis that relies on a choice of normal worlds alone. A further conceptual advantage of an explicit separation of (a) a choice of best exemplars and (b) a modal component of generic quantification consists in the fact that it highlights that different generic sentences can rely on different kinds of choice of best exemplar. Comparing their logical behaviour, I will demonstrate that we should at least distinguish between normal-generic sentences and ideal-generic sentences. Finally, the paper proves that the account I propose is a modal variant of some recent purely extensional default logics, developed in AI. }, topic = {generics;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ eckardt_r:1999b, author = {Regine Eckardt}, title = {Focus with Nominal Quantifiers}, booktitle = {Focus: Linguistic, Cognitive, and Computational Perspectives}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, editor = {Peter Bosch and Rob {van der Sandt}}, pages = {166--185}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {sentence-focus;nl-quantifiers;} } @incollection{ eckardt_r:2000a, author = {Regine Eckardt}, title = {Causation, Contexts, and Event Individuation}, booktitle = {Speaking of Events}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2000}, editor = {James Higginbotham and Fabio Pianesi and Achille C. Varzi}, pages = {105--121}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {events;event-individuation;event-semantics;nl-causatives;} } @article{ eckardt_r:2001a, author = {Regine Eckardt}, title = {Reanalyzing {\em Selbst}}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {371--412}, topic = {German-language;reflexive-constructions;nl-semantics;} } @article{ eckardt_r:2004a, author = {Regine Eckardt}, title = {Comments to Interpreting Focus by {B}art {G}eurts and {R}ob van der {S}andt}, journal = {Theoretical Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {1}, pages = {77--86}, xref = {Commentary on: geurts_b-vandersandt_r:2004a}, topic = {sentence-focus;presupposition;'only';'too';} } @article{ eckardt_r:2012a, author = {Regine Eckardt}, title = {\emph{Hereby} Explained: An Event-Based Account of Performative Utterances}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2012}, volume = {35}, number = {1}, pages = {21--55}, abstract = {Several authors propose that performative speech acts are self-guaranteeing due to their self-referential nature (Searle 1989; Jary 2007). The present paper offers an analysis of self-referentiality in terms of truth conditional semantics, making use of Davidsonian events. I propose that hereby can denote the ongoing act of information transfer (more mundanely, the utterance) which thereby enters the meaning of the sentence. $\ldots$}, topic = {explicit-performatives;} } @incollection{ eckardt_r:2013a, author = {Regina Eckardt}, title = {Grammaticalization and Semantic Reanalysis}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 3}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2013}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {2675--2701}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {grammaticalization;nl-semantics;} } @book{ eckardt_r:2014a, author = {Regine Eckardt}, title = {The Semantics of Free Indirect Discourse: How Texts Allow Us to Mind-Read and Eavesdrop}, publisher = {Brill}, year = {2014}, address = {Leiden}, ISBN = {978-90-04-26673-5}, topic = {free-indirect-discourse;indirect-discourse;} } @book{ eckardvont:1993a, author = {Barbara von Eckardt}, title = {What is Cognitive Science?}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-22046-6}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, topic = {cognitive-science-general;philosophy-of-cogsci;} } @inproceedings{ ecke_a-etal:2014a, author = {Andreas Ecke and Rafael Pe\~naloza and Anni-Yasmin Turhan}, title = {Answering Instance Queries Relaxed by Concept Similarity}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {248--257}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we formalize the task of instance query answering for crisp DL KBs using concepts relaxed by concept similarity measures. We investigate computation algorithms for this task in the DL EL, their complexity and properties for the employed similarity measure ...}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {semantic-similarity;kb-query-processing;description-logics;} } @article{ eckert_d-herzberg_fs:2018a, author = {Daniel Eckert and Frederic S.Herzberg}, title = {The Birth of Social Choice Theory from the Spirit of Mathematicsl Logic: {A}rrow's Theorem in the Framework of Model Theory}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2018}, volume = {106}, number = {5}, abstract = {... we show in a model-theoretic framework how Arrow's use of von Neumann and Morgenstern's concept of winning coalitions allows to exploit the algebraic structures involved in preference aggregation; this approach entails an alternative indirect ultrafilter proof for Arrow's dictatorship result. This link also connects Arrow's seminal result to key developments and concepts in the history of model theory, notably ultraproducts and preservation results.}, pages = {893--911}, topic = {Arrow's-theorem;preference-aggregation;social-choice-theory;model-theory;} } @incollection{ eckman_fr:1976a, author = {Fred R. Eckman}, title = {Empirical and Nonempirical Generalizations in Syntax}, booktitle = {Assessing Linguistic Arguments}, publisher = {Hemisphere Publishing Corporation}, year = {1976}, editor = {Jessica R. Wirth}, pages = {35--48}, address = {Washington, D.C.}, topic = {philosophy-of-linguistics;foundations-of-linguistics;} } @book{ eckman_fr:1977a, author = {Fred R. Eckman}, title = {On the Explanation of Some Typological Facts about Raising}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1976}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {transformational-grammar;universal-grammar;} } @book{ eco:1976a, author = {Umberto Eco}, title = {A Theory of Semiotics}, publisher = {Indiana University Press}, year = {1976}, address = {Bloomington, Indiana}, topic = {semiotics;} } @book{ eco:1979a, author = {Umberto Eco}, title = {The Role of the Reader}, publisher = {Indiana University Press}, year = {1979}, address = {Bloomington, Indiana}, topic = {semiotics;} } @article{ edalat:1997a, author = {Abbas Edalat}, title = {Domains for Computation in Mathematics, Physics, and Exact Real Arithmetic}, journal = {Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1997}, volume = {3}, number = {4}, pages = {401--452}, topic = {domain-theory;} } @unpublished{ edelberg:1977a, author = {Walter Edelberg}, title = {A Semantical Theory of Conditional and Tense Logic}, year = {1977}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, note = {Unpublished Manuscript, Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260.}, topic = {conditionals;temporal-logic;branching-time;} } @phdthesis{ edelberg:1984a, author = {Walter Edelberg}, title = {Intentional Identity}, school = {Philosophy Department, University of Pittsburgh}, year = {1984}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;intentional-identity;singular-propositions;} } @article{ edelberg:1986a, author = {Walter Edelberg}, title = {A New Puzzle about Intentional Identity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1986}, volume = {15}, number = {1}, pages = {1--27}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;intentional-identity; singular-propositions;} } @article{ edelberg:1991a, author = {Walter Edelberg}, title = {A Case for a Heretical Deontic Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1991}, volume = {20}, number = {1}, pages = {1--35}, topic = {deontic-logic;arbitrary-objects;} } @article{ edelberg:1992b, author = {Walter Edelberg}, title = {Intentional Identity and the Attitudes}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1992}, volume = {15}, number = {6}, pages = {561--596}, topic = {nl-semantics;propositional-attitudes;intentional-identity; singular-propositions;} } @article{ edelberg:1994a, author = {Walter Edelberg}, title = {Propositions, Circumstances, Objects}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1994}, volume = {23}, number = {1}, pages = {1--34}, rtnote = {Read this.}, topic = {possible-worlds-semantics;propositional-attitudes; intentional-identity;singular-propositions;} } @article{ edelberg:1995a, author = {Walter Edelberg}, title = {A Perspectivalist Semantics for the Attitudes}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {1995}, volume = {3}, pages = {316--342}, contentnote = {Idea is that truth is rel. to a belief system. Belief systems aren't modeled at any fine degree of granularity. Essentially, they are unanalyzed indices.}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {nl-semantics;propositional-attitudes;intentional-identity; singular-propositions;} } @article{ edelberg:2006a, author = {Walter Edelberg}, title = {Intrasubjective Intentional Identity}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2006}, volume = {103}, number = {1}, pages = {481--502}, topic = {intentional-identity;} } @article{ edelkamp_s-helmut:2001a, author = {Stefan Edelkamp and Malte Helmut}, title = {{MIPS}: The Model-Checking Integrated Planning System}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2001}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {67--71}, topic = {planning;planning-algorithms;planning-systems;} } @article{ edelman_gm:2003a, author = {Gerald M. Edelman}, title = {Naturalizing Consciousness: A Theoretical Framework}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of United States of America}, year = {2003}, volume = {100}, number = {9}, pages = {5520--5524}, topic = {consciousness;} } @book{ edelman_gm-tononi_g:2000a, author = {Gerald M. Edelman and Giulio Tononi}, title = {A Universe of Consciousness: How Matter Becomes Imagination}, publisher = {Basic Books}, year = {2000}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0-465-01377-5}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, topic = {consciousness;cognitive-neuroscience;} } @article{ edelman_lb-etal:2009a, author = {Lucas B. Edelman and Sriram Chandrasekaran and Nathan D. Price}, title = {Systems Biology of Embryogenesis}, journal = {Reproduction, Fertility and Development}, year = {2009}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {98--195}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1071/RD09215}, abstract = {The development of a complete organism from a single cell involves extraordinarily complex orchestration of biological processes that vary intricately across space and time. Systems biology seeks to describe how all elements of a biological system interact in order to understand, model and ultimately predict aspects of emergent biological processes. Embryogenesis represents an extraordinary opportunity (and challenge) for the application of systems biology. Systems approaches have already been used successfully to study various aspects of development, from complex intracellular networks to four-dimensional models of organogenesis. Going forward, great advancements and discoveries can be expected from systems approaches applied to embryogenesis and developmental biology.}, url = {https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2921326/}, topic = {systems-biology;developmental-biology;} } @article{ edelman_s:1995a, author = {Shimon Edelman}, title = {Representation, Similarity, and the Chorus of Prototypes}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1995}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {45--68}, abstract = {It is proposed to conceive of representation as an emergent phenomenon that is supervenient on patterns of activity of coarsely tuned and highly redundant feature detectors. $\ldots$}, topic = {representation;cognitive-architectures;} } @article{ eden_ah:2007a, author = {Amnon H. Eden}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Essential {T}uring}, edited by {B}. {J}ack {C}opeland}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2007}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {121--123}, xref = {Review of: copeland_bj:2004a.}, topic = {Turing;Turing-test;history-of-logic;} } @article{ eden_ah:2007b, author = {Amnon H. Eden}, title = {Three Paradigms of Computer Science}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2007}, volume = {17}, number = {2}, pages = {135--167}, abstract = {We conclude that distinct positions taken in regard to [philosophical] questions [among computer scientists] emanate from distinct sets of received beliefs or paradigms within the discipline: - The rationalist paradigm - The technocratic paradigmm - The scientific paradigm $\ldots$}, topic = {philosophy-of-computer-science;} } @article{ eden_ah:2008a, author = {Amnon Eden}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}cience Fiction and Philosophy}, edited by {S}usan {S}chneider}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {481--482}, xref = {Review of: schneider_s:2009a.}, topic = {science-fiction-and-philosophy;} } @article{ eden_ah:2011a, author = {Amnon H. Eden}, title = {Some Philosophical Issues in Computer Science}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {2}, pages = {123--133}, abstract = {Since the birth of computing as an academic discipline, the disciplinary identity of computing has been debated fiercely. The most heated question has concerned the scientific status of computing. Some consider computing to be a natural science and some consider it to be an experimental science. Others argue that computing is bad science, whereas some say that computing is not a science at all. This survey article presents viewpoints for and against computing as a science. Those viewpoints are analyzed against basic positions in the philosophy of science. The article aims at giving the reader an overview, background, and a historical and theoretical frame of reference for understanding and interpreting some central questions in the debates about the disciplinary identity of computer science. The article argues that much of the discussion about the scientific nature of computing is misguided due to a deep conceptual uncertainty about science in general as well as computing in particular. }, note = {Introduction to a special issue on philosophy of computer science}, topic = {philosophy-of-computer-science;} } @book{ eden_ah-etal:2012a, editor = {Amnon H. Eden and James H. Moor and Johnny H. S{\o}raker and Eric Steinhart}, title = {Singularity Hypotheses: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2012}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {9783642325601}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Amnon H. Eden and Eric Steinhart and David Pearce and James H. Moor, "Singularity Hypotheses: An Overview", pp. 1-12 2. Luke Muehlhauser and Anna Salamon, "Intelligence Explosion: Evidence and Import", pp. pp. 15--42 3. Itamar Arel, "The Threat of a Reward-Driven Adversarial Artificial General Intelligence", pp. 43--60 4. J\"urgen Schmidhuber, "New Millennium AI and the Convergence of History: Update of 2012", pp. 61--82 5. Richard Loosemore and Ben Goertzel, "Why an Intelligence Explosion is Probable", pp. 83--98 6. Luke Muehlhauser and Louie Helm, "The Singularity and Machine Ethics", pp. 101--126 7. Roman V. Yampolskiy and Joshua Fox, "Artificial General Intelligence and the Human Mental Model", pp. 129--145 8. James D. Miller, "Some Economic Incentives Facing a Business that Might Bring About a Technological Singularity", pp. 147--159 9. Steve Omohundro, "Rational Artificial Intelligence for the Greater Good", pp. 161--169 10. Eliezer Yudkowsky, "Friendly Artificial Intelligence", pp. 181--195 11. David Pearce, "The Biointelligence Explosion", pp. 199--238 12. Randal A. Koene, "Embracing Competitive Balance: The Case for Substrate-Independent Minds and Whole Brain Emulation", pp. 241--267 13. Dennis Bray, "Brain Versus Machine", pp. 269--270 14. David Roden, "The Disconnection Thesis", pp. 281--298 15. Eric Horvitz and Bart Selman, "Interim Report from the Panel Chairs: AAAI Presidential Panel on Long-Term AI Futures", pp. 301--308 16. Theodore Modis, "Why the Singularity Cannot Happen", pp. 311--346 17. Alessio Plebe and Pietro Perconti, "The Slowdown Hypothesis", pp. 349--365 18. Diane Proudfoot, "Software Immortals: Science or Faith?", pp. 367--392 19. Selmer Bringsjord and Alexander Bringsjord and Paul Bello, "Belief in The Singularity is Fideistic", pp. 395--412 20. Eric J. Chaisson, "A Singular Universe of Many Singularities: Cultural Evolution in a Cosmic Context", pp. 413--440 }, topic = {technological-singularity;} } @incollection{ eden_ah-etal:2012b, author = {Amnon H. Eden and Eric Steinhart and David Pearce and James H. Moor}, title = {Singularity Hypotheses: An Overview}, booktitle = {Singularity Hypotheses: A Scientific and Philosophical Assessment}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2012}, editor = {Amnon H. Eden and James H. Moor and Johnny H. S{\o}raker and Eric Steinhart}, pages = {1-12}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {technological-singularity;} } @article{ eder_g:2014a, author = {G\"unther Eder}, title = {Remarks on Compositionality and Weak Axiomatic Theories of Truth}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2014}, volume = {43}, number = {2--3}, pages = {541--547}, topic = {compositionality;truth-definitions;} } @article{ eder_g:2021a, author = {G\"unther Eder}, title = {Projective Duality and the Rise of Modern Logic}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {27}, number = {4}, pages = {351--384}, topic = {history-of-logic;duality;} } @article{ eder_g-schiemer_g:2018a, author = {G\"unther Eder and Georg Schiemer}, title = {Hilbert, Duality, and the Geometrical Roots of Model Theory}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {48--86}, topic = {projective-geometry;history-of-logic;} } @book{ edgar:1997a, author = {Stacey L. Edgar}, title = {Morality and Machines: Perspectives on Computer Ethics}, publisher = {Jones and Bartlett Publishers}, year = {1997}, address = {Sudbury, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-7637-0184-X.}, xref = {Review: whitby_b:1999a.}, topic = {computers-and-ethics;social-impact-of-computation;} } @article{ edgar:1999a, author = {Stacey L. Edgar}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}eflections on Artificial Intelligence: The Legal, Moral, and Ethical Dimensions}, by {B}lay {W}hitby}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1999}, volume = {9}, number = {1}, pages = {133--139}, xref = {Review of: whitby_b:1996a.}, topic = {social-political-implications-of-AI;} } @article{ edgeley:1965a, author = {R. Edgeley}, title = {Practical Reason}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1965}, volume = {74}, number = {294}, pages = {174--191}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @incollection{ edgeley:1978a, author = {R. Edgeley}, title = {Practical Reason}, booktitle = {Practical Reasoning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1978}, editor = {Joseph Raz}, pages = {18--33}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @article{ edgington_d:1980a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {Meaning, Bivalence and Realism}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1980/81}, volume = {81}, pages = {153--173}, topic = {philosophical-realism;Davidson-semantics;truth-value-gaps;} } @article{ edgington_d:1991a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {The Mystery of the Missing Matter of Fact}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1991}, volume = {65}, pages = {185--209}, note = {Supplementary Series}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe22\Jeffrey-Edgington.pdf}, contentnote = {Contains a useful summary of views on which if any conditionals state matters of fact. Is inconclusive about many of the issues.}, topic = {conditionals;probability-kinematics;} } @incollection{ edgington_d:1991b, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {Do Conditionals Have Truth Conditions?}, booktitle = {Conditionals}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Frank Jackson}, pages = {176--201}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Edgington"}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ edgington_d:1992a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {Validity, Uncertainty, and Vagueness}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1992}, volume = {52}, number = {4}, pages = {193--203}, topic = {validity;vagueness;} } @article{ edgington_d:1993a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {Wright and {S}ainsbury on Higher-Order Vagueness}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1993}, volume = {53}, number = {4}, pages = {193--200}, xref = {Commentary on: wright_c:1992a, sainsbury_rm:1991c}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no16}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ edgington_d:1995a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {On Conditionals}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1995}, volume = {104}, number = {413}, pages = {235--329}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, xref = {Commentary: barker_sj:1998a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ edgington_d:1996a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {Lowe on Conditional Probability}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1996}, volume = {105}, pages = {617--630}, topic = {conditionals;probability;} } @article{ edgington_d:1997a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {Truth, Objectivity, Counterfactuals, and {G}ibbard}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {1997}, volume = {106}, number = {420}, pages = {107--116}, contentnote = {This is about Gibbard's Sly Pete example.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @incollection{ edgington_d:1997b, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {Vagueness by Degrees}, booktitle = {Vagueness: A Reader}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Rosanna Keefe and Peter Smith}, pages = {294--316}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ edgington_d:2003a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {Counterfactuals and the Benefit of Hindsight}, booktitle = {Cause and Chance: Causation in an Indeterministic World}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2003}, editor = {Phil Dowe and Paul Noordhof}, pages = {12--27}, address = {London}, topic = {conditionals;} } @incollection{ edgington_d:2006a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {The Pragmatics of the Logical Constants}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {768--793}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {logical-constants;conditionals;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ edgington_d:2007a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {On Conditionals}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {XIV}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2007}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {127--221}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr19}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ edgington_d:2008a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {The Presidential Address: Counterfactuals}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian {S}ociety}, year = {2008}, volume = {108}, number = {1}, pages = {1--21}, abstract = {I argue that the suppositional view of conditionals, which is quite popular for indicative conditionals, extends also to subjunctive or counterfactual conditionals. ... The strongest evidence for the view comes from focusing on the fact that conditional judgements are often uncertain; and conditional uncertainty, which is a well-understood notion, does not function like uncertainty about matters of fact. I argue that the evidence for this view is as strong for subjunctives as it is for indicatives.}, topic = {conditionals;conditional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ edgington_d:2009a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {Sorensen on Vagueness and Contradiction}, booktitle = {Cuts and Clouds: Vaguenesss, its Nature and its Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi}, pages = {91--106}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ edgington_d:2019a, author = {Dorothy Edgington}, title = {Review of \emph{Vagueness and Thought}, by Andrew Bacon}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {116}, number = {12}, pages = {691--698}, xref = {Review of: bacon_a:2018c}, topic = {vagueness;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ edidin:1984a, author = {Aron Edidin}, title = {Inductive Reasoning and the Uniformity of Nature}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1984}, volume = {13}, number = {3}, pages = {285--302}, topic = {induction;} } @article{ edis:1998a, author = {Taner Edis}, title = {How G\"odel's Theorem Supports the Possibility of Machine Intelligence}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {2}, pages = {251--262}, abstract = {G\"odel's Theorem is often used in arguments against machine intelligence, suggesting humans are not bound by the rules of any formal system. However, G\"odelian arguments can be used to support AI, provided we extend our notion of computation to include devices incorporating random number generators. $\ldots$ }, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;machine-intelligence;} } @incollection{ edmonds_b:1999a, author = {Bruce Edmonds}, title = {The Pragmatic Roots of Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Contexts: Proceedings of the Second International and Interdisciplinary Conference, {CONTEXT}'99}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paolo Bouquet and Luigi Serafini and Patrick Br\'ezillon and Massimo Benerecetti and Francesca Castellani}, pages = {119--134}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;connectionist-models;} } @inproceedings{ edmonds_b:2001a, author = {Bruce Edmonds}, title = {Learning Appropriate Contexts}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {143--155}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;machine-learning;} } @incollection{ edmonds_b:2009a, author = {Bruce Edmonds}, title = {The Social Embedding of Intelligence}, booktitle = {Parsing the {T}uring Test: Philosophical and Methodological Issues in the Quest for the Thinking Computer}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert Epstein and Gary Roberts and Grace Beber}, pages = {211--235}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de12}, topic = {Turing-test;machine-intelligence;social-intelligence;} } @inproceedings{ edmonds_b-moss_s:1995a, author = {Bruce Edmonds and Scott Moss}, title = {Modeling the Bounded Rationality of Agents by Modeling and limited Incremental Search}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Rational Agency: Concepts, Theories, Models, and Applications}, year = {1995}, editor = {Michael Fehling}, pages = {43--47}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {bounded-rationality;planning;} } @book{ edmonson_ja:1976a, author = {Jerry A. Edmonson}, title = {Strict and Sloppy Identity in $\lambda$-Categorial Grammar}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1982}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {categorial-grammar;sloppy-identity;} } @unpublished{ edmonson_ja:1977a, author = {Jerry A. Edmonson}, title = {`{B}oth' in $\lambda$-Categorial Grammar}, year = {1977}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Technical University Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Date is a guess.}, topic = {categorial-grammar;} } @article{ edmonson_ja-plank:1978a, author = {Jerold A. Edmonson and Frans Plank}, title = {Great Expectations: An Intensive Self Analysis}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1978}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {373--413}, topic = {intensifiers;} } @book{ edmonson_wj:1981a, author = {Willis J. Edmonson}, title = {Spoken Discourse: A Model for Analysis}, publisher = {Longman}, year = {1981}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {Chapter 6 in RHT Collection.}, topic = {discourse;pragmatics;text-linguistics;} } @incollection{ edmonson_wj:1981b, author = {Willis J. Edmonson}, title = {Illocutionary Verbs, Illocutionary Acts, and Conversational Behavior}, booktitle = {Words, Worlds, and Contexts: New Approaches to Word Semantics}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1981}, editor = {Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser}, pages = {485--494}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {speech-acts;} } @incollection{ edwards_awf:1998a, author = {Anthony W.F. Edwards}, title = {Statistical Inference}, booktitle = {Handbook of Defeasible Reasoning and Uncertainty Management Systems, Volume 1: Quantified Representation of Uncertainty and Imprecision}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Philippe Smets}, pages = {357--366}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {statistical-inference;} } @book{ edwards_d:1997a, author = {Derek Edwards}, title = {Discourse and Cognition}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1997}, address = {Thousand Oaks, California}, topic = {discourse;philosophy-of-language;pragmatics;} } @book{ edwards_d-potter_j:1992a, author = {Derek Edwards and Jonathan Potter}, title = {Discursive Psychology}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1992}, address = {Newbury Park, California}, rtnote = {Hillman P302.8 E39 1992}, topic = {discourse;} } @book{ edwards_j:1754a, author = {Jonathan Edwards}, title = {Freedom of the Will}, publisher = {Yale University Press}, year = {1957}, address = {New Haven, Connecticut}, note = {Originally published in 1754.}, topic = {freedom;(in)determinism;} } @article{ edwards_js:1974a, author = {J.S. Edwards}, title = {A Confusion About If-Then}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1974}, volume = {34}, number = {3}, pages = {84--90}, contentnote = {The issue is the material conditional, illustrated by apparently invalid arguments that are valid for the horseshoe. It isn't clear what the alleged confusion is supposed to be.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ edwards_k:2017a, author = {Kevan Edwards}, title = {Keeping (Direct) Reference in Mind}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {51}, number = {2}, pages = {342--367}, topic = {reference;} } @book{ edwards_p:1967a, editor = {Paul Edwards}, title = {The Encyclopedia of Philosopy}, publisher = {The Macmillan Company}, year = {1967}, address = {New York}, xref = {Review: donagan_a:1970a}, topic = {philosophy-general;analytic-philosophy;} } @book{ edwards_p:1972a, editor = {Paul Edwards}, title = {The Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, publisher = {MacMillan Publishing Co.}, year = {1972}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Encyclopedia/Handbook Shelves}, topic = {philosophy-handbook/encyclopedia;} } @book{ edwards_p-pap_a:1958a, editor = {Paul Edwards and Arthur Pap}, title = {A Modern Introduction to Philosophy}, publisher = {Allen \&\ Unwin}, year = {1958}, address = {New York}, topic = {philosophy-intro;} } @incollection{ edwards_w:1977a, author = {Ward Edwards}, title = {Use of Multiattribute Utility Measurement for Social Decision Making}, booktitle = {Conflicting Objectives in Decisions}, publisher = {John Wiley and Sons}, year = {1977}, editor = {David E. Bell and Ralph L. Keeney and Howard Raiffa}, pages = {247--276}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {An applied paper.}, topic = {decision-analysis;multiattribute-utility;} } @article{ edwards_w-barron_fh:1994a, author = {Ward Edwards and F. Hutton Barron}, title = {{SMARTS} and {SMARTER}: Improved Simple Methods for Multiattribute Utility Measurement}, journal = {Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes}, year = {1994}, volume = {60}, pages = {306--325}, number = {3}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {preference-elicitation;multiattribute-utility;} } @article{ eells_et:1981a, author = {Ellery T. Eells}, title = {Causality, Utility and Decision}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1981}, volume = {48}, pages = {295--395}, miscnote = {D. Lewis cites this in connection with "tickle defense", see lewis_dk:1981a1.}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {decision-theory;causal-decision-theory;} } @book{ eells_et:1982a, author = {Ellery T. Eells}, title = {Rational Decision and Causality}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1982}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {foundations-of-decision-theory;causal-decision-theory;} } @article{ eells_et:1984a, author = {Ellery T. Eells}, title = {Newcomb's Many Solutions}, journal = {Theory and Decision}, year = {1984}, volume = {16}, pages = {59--105}, missinginfo = {number}, abstract = {I examine the analyses proposed by Levi (1975), Horgan (1981), and Kyburg (1980). I argue that the first two are not genuine solutions to the problem, but that the third, if appropriately elaborated and modified, is correct.}, topic = {Newcomb-problem;causal-decision-theory;} } @article{ eells_et:1985a, author = {Ellery T. Eells}, title = {Levi's `The Wrong Box{'} }, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1985}, volume = {82}, number = {2}, pages = {91--104}, topic = {Newcomb-problem;} } @book{ eells_et:1991a, author = {Ellery T. Eells}, title = {Probabilistic Causality}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: davis_wa:1993a.}, ISBN = {0521392446}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, QA 279.4 .E341 1991}, topic = {causality;probability;} } @book{ eells_et-maruszewski_t:1991a, editor = {Ellery T. Eells and Tomasz Maruszewski}, title = {Probability and Rationality: Studies On {L}. {J}onathan {C}ohen's Philosophy of Science}, publisher = {Rodopi}, year = {1991}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {9051833164}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B 809.8 .P88 v.21}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;philosophy-of-science;} } @book{ eells_et-skyrms_b:1994a, editor = {Ellery T. Eells and Brian Skyrms}, title = {Probability and Conditionals: Belief Revision and Rational Decision}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1994}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {Hillman BC141 P69 1994}, contentnote = { 1. Patrick Suppes, "Some Questions about Adams' Conditionals" 2. Brian Skyrms, "Adams Conditionals" 3. Robert C. Stalnaker, "Letter to Brian Skyrms" 4. Robert C. Stalnaker and Richard Jeffrey, "Conditionals as Random Variables" 5. Judea Pearl, "From Adams' Conditionals to Default Expressions, Causal Conditionals, and Counterfactuals" 6. Alan H\'ajek and Ned Hall, "The Hypothesis of the Conditional Construal of Conditional Probability" 7. Alan H\'ajek, "Triviality on the Cheap?" 8. Ned Hall, "Back in the CCCP" 9. Charles Chihara, "The Howson-Urbach Proofs of Bayesian Principles" 10. Vann McGee, "Learning the Impossible" 11. Patrick Suppes, "A Brief Survey of Adams' Contributions to Philosophy" }, xref = {Reviews: halpern_jy:2000a, gardner_r:2000a.}, topic = {probability;conditionals;CCCP;} } @article{ eels_et-fitelson_b:2000a, author = {Ellery T. Eels and Branden Fitelson}, title = {Measuring Confirmation and Evidence}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2000}, volume = {97}, number = {5}, pages = {663--672}, topic = {confirmation;} } @article{ effingham_n:2020a, author = {Nick Effingham}, title = {Review of \emph{{W}hat Truth Is}, by {M}ark {J}ago}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2020}, volume = {129}, number = {3}, pages = {661--664}, xref = {Review of: jago_m:2018}, topic = {truthmaking;foundations-of-semantics;truth;metaphysics;semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ efird_d-stoneham_t:2005a, author = {David Efird and Tom Stoneham}, title = {Truthmakers and Possible Worlds}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2005}, volume = {65}, number = {4}, pages = {290--294}, topic = {truthmaking;possible-worlds;} } @article{ egan_a:2006a, author = {Andy Egan}, title = {Appearance Properties?}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2006}, volume = {40}, number = {3}, pages = {495--521}, topic = {phenomenal-properties;propositional-attitudes;indexicals;} } @unpublished{ egan_a:2007a1, author = {Andy Egan}, title = {Epistemic Modals, Relativism, and Assertion}, year = {2007}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Australian National University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, xref = {Publication: egan:2007a2.}, topic = {epistemic-modals;context;} } @article{ egan_a:2007a2, author = {Andy Egan}, title = {Epistemic Modals, Relativism, and Assertion}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2007}, volume = {133}, number = {1}, pages = {1--22}, doi = {10.1007/s11098-006-9003-x}, xref = {Publication of: egan:2007a1.}, topic = {epistemic-modals;context;} } @unpublished{ egan_a:2007a, author = {Andy Egan}, title = {\emph{De Gustibus Non Disputandum} (at Least, Not Always)}, year = {2007}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Australian National University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Egan"}, url = {http://www1.umn.edu/cclub/Files/de_gustibus.2007.10.18.pdf}, topic = {context;predicates-of-taste;aesthetics;} } @article{ egan_a:2007b, author = {Andy Egan}, title = {Some Counterexamples to Causal Decision Theory}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2007}, volume = {116}, number = {1}, pages = {93--114}, topic = {causal-decision-theory;} } @article{ egan_a:2008a, author = {Andy Egan}, title = {Pretence for the Common Idiom}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2008}, volume = {42}, number = {3}, pages = {381-409}, topic = {idioms;} } @article{ egan_a:2009a, author = {Andy Egan}, title = {Billboards, Bombs and Shotgun Weddings}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2009}, volume = {166}, number = {2}, pages = {251--279}, abstract = {... we need a theory of context-dependence that allows for content to depend not just on the features of the utterance's origin, but also on features of its destination. There are cases in which a single utterance semantically conveys different propositions to different members of its audience, which force us to say that what a sentence conveys depends not just on the context in which it is uttered, but also on the context in which it is received}, topic = {context;audience-sensitivity;} } @incollection{ egan_a:2011a, author = {Andy Egan}, title = {Relativism About Epistemic Modals}, booktitle = {A Companion to Relativism}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, year = {2011}, editor = {Steven D. Hales}, pages = {219--241}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {relativism;epistemic-modals;} } @incollection{ egan_a:2017a, author = {Andy Egan}, title = {Relativism about Epistemic Modals}, booktitle = {A Companion to the Philosophy of Language, Second Edition}, publisher = {John Wiley \&\ Sons}, volume = {2}, year = {2017}, editor = {Bob Hale and Crispin Wright and Alexander Miller}, pages = {843--864}, address = {New York}, abstract = {... contextualism is the main competitor to relativism, and probably is the default starting point view. Accordingly, much of the motivation for relativism comes from the purported inadequacy of the contextualist options. The chapter ... discusses the internal workings of two different sorts of relativist theories and some standard arguments relativists have deployed to motivate relativism over contextualism. ... }, topic = {philosophical-realism;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ egan_a:2018a, author = {Andy Egan}, title = {De Se Pragmatics}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 32: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Wiley Periodicals}, year = {2018}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Jason Turner}, pages = {144--164}, address = {Malden, Massachusetts}, topic = {self-locating-constructions;foundations-of-pragmatics;} } @article{ egan_a-elga_a:2005a, author = {Andy Egan and Adam Elga}, title = {I Can't Believe {I}'m Stupid}, journal = {Philosophical Perspectives}, year = {2005}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {77--93}, abstract = {It is bad news to find out that one's cognitive or perceptual faculties are defective. Furthermore, it's not always transparent how one ought to revise one's beliefs in light of such news.}, topic = {self-knowledge;belief-revision;} } @incollection{ egan_a-etal:2005a, author = {Andy Egan and John Hawthorne and Brian Weatherson}, title = {Epistemic Modals in Context}, booktitle = {Contextualism in Philosophy: Knowledge, Meaning, and Truth}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Gerhard Preyer and Georg Peter}, pages = {131--168}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\egan1.pdf.}, contentnote = {Defends relativism.}, topic = {epistemic-modals;context;modals;epistemology;nl-semantics;contextualism;} } @book{ egan_a-weatherson_b:2011a, author = {Andy Egan and Brian Weatherson}, title = {Epistemic Modality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199591589}, xref = {Review: willer_m:2013a, gregory_d:2012a}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Brian Weatherson and Andy Egan, "Introduction: Epistemic Modals and Epistemic Modality" 2. Frank Jackson, "Possibilities for Representation and Credence: Two-Space-ism vs. One-Space-ism" 3. David Chalmers, "The Nature of Epistemic Space" 4. Robert Stalnaker, "Conditional Propositions and Conditional Assertions" 5. Jonathan Schaffer, "Perspective in Taste Predicates and Epistemic Modals" 6. 'Kai von Fintel and Anthony Gillies, "Might' Made Right" 7. Kent Bach, "Perspectives on Possibilities: Contextualism, Relativism, or What?" 8. John MacFarlane, "Epistemic Modals are Assessment-Sensitive" 9. Seth Yalcin, "Nonfactualism about Epistemic Modals" 10. Eric Swanson, "How Not to Theorize about the Language of Subjective Uncertainty" 11. Stephen Yablo, "A Problem about Permission and Possibility"}, topic = {epistemic-modals;} } @article{ egan_f:1995a, author = {Frances Egan}, title = {Computation and Content}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {1995}, volume = {104}, number = {2}, pages = {181--203}, topic = {philosophy-of-computation;} } @article{ egan_f:1998a, author = {Frances Egan}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}epresentations, Targets, and Attitudes}, by {R}obert {C}ummins}, journal = {Philosophical Review}, year = {1998}, volume = {107}, number = {1}, pages = {118--120}, xref = {Review of cummins_r:1996a.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;philosophy-of-mind; foundations-of-semantics;intentionality; foundations-of-cognition;} } @incollection{ egan_f:2012a, author = {Frances Egan}, title = {Representationalism}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Eric Margolis and Richard Samuels and Stephen P. Stich}, pages = {250--272}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {foundations-of-cogsci;mental-representations;} } @article{ egg_m:1995a, author = {Markus Egg}, title = {The Intergressive as a New Category of Verbal Aktionsart}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1995}, volume = {12}, number = {4}, pages = {311--356}, abstract = {The topic of this paper are predicates like to play a sonata or to cough, whose classification in proposed systems of aknonsarten is unsatisfactory I will present an augmentation of Doweys system of aknonsart to classify these predicates adequately. This revised classification employs the features interval-based (- can be evaluated with respect to extended periods of time only), bounded and telic. Boundedness and telicity are different features. Bounded predicates apply to limited stretches of time only, telic predicates introduce a change of state. The features are ordered (telic predicates are bounded, bounded predicates are interval-based) and distinguish four mutually non-overlapping groups of aknonsarten: state, process, intergressives and change. Intergressive predicates are represented as in Dowty (1979), i.e more complex predicates are analysed as less complex ones linked by suitable operators. Two intergressive operators account for the whole range of intergressive predicates. The close parallel between the classification of Aktinonsarten and the classification of nominal expressions carries over to the distinction of intergressive and change predicates. Next, an extension of one intergressive operator to non-temporal domains will be sketched and, finally, I will show that the assumption of an intergressive akuonsart has wide repercussions in other semantic fields. }, topic = {Aktionsarten;} } @incollection{ egg_m:1999a, author = {Markus Egg}, title = {Deriving and Resolving Ambiguities in {\it wieder} Sentences}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twelfth {A}msterdam Colloquium}, publisher = {ILLC/Department of Philosophy, University of Amsterdam}, year = {1999}, editor = {Paul Dekker}, pages = {109--115}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {ambiguity;semantic-underspecification;optimality-theory;} } @article{ egg_m:2003a, author = {Markus Egg}, title = {Beginning Novels and Finishing Hamburgers: Remarks on the Semantics of `to begin'}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2003}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {163--191}, abstract = {Verbs like begin may take either a VP or an NP complement, but their meaning is pretty similar in both cases, e.g. for begin, the start of an eventuality is at stake. Pustejovsky's approach captures this similarity in terms of an invariant meaning of the verb, which entails a process of reinterpretation for the transitive variant of the verb. I will show that while the intuitions of this proposal are on the right track, its actual implementation suffers from a number of shortcomings. I will offer an analysis that preserves Pustejovsky's intuition but avoids these shortcomings. My analysis is based on an appropriate underspecification formalism. }, topic = {event-structure;} } @book{ egg_m:2006a, author = {Markus Egg}, title = {Flexible Semantics for Reinterpretation Phenomena}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2006}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-57586-502-5}, xref = {Review: pulman_sg:2007a}, topic = {metoynymy;pragmatics;coercion;} } @inproceedings{ egg_m:2007a, author = {Markus Egg}, title = {The Syntax and Semantics of Relative Clause Modification}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Sixteenth Computational Linguistics in the {N}etherlands}, year = {2007}, editor = {Khal`il Simanan, Maarten de Rijke, Remko Scha and Rob van Son}, publisher = {Universiteit Amsterdam.}, address = {Amsterdam}, url = {https://www.researchgate.net/publication/220778300_Syntax_and_Semantics_of_Relative_Clause_Modification}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no19}, topic = {relative-clauses;nl-semantic-types;underspecified-types;} } @incollection{ egg_m:2011a, author = {Markus Egg}, title = {Semantic Underspecification}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {535--573}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;underspecification-theory;} } @inproceedings{ egg_m-etal:1998a, author = {Markus Egg and Joachim Niehren and Peter Ruhrberg and Feiyu Xu}, title = {Constraints over Lambda-Structures in Semantic Underspecification}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {353--359}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {semantic-underspecification;} } @article{ egg_m-etal:2001a, author = {Markus Egg and Manfred Pinkal and James Pustejovsky}, title = {Editorial (for a Special Issue on Underspecification)}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2001}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {411--416}, topic = {semantic-underspecification;} } @article{ egg_m-etal:2001b, author = {Markus Egg and Alexander Koller and Joachim Niehren}, title = {The Constraint Language for Lambda Structures}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2001}, volume = {10}, number = {4}, pages = {457--485}, topic = {semantic-underspecification;anaphora;ellipsis;} } @book{ egidi-morris_r2:2008a, editor = {Massimo Egidi and Robin Morris}, title = {Economics, Bounded Rationality, and the Cognitive Revolution}, publisher = {Edward Elgar Publishing Limited}, year = {2008}, isbn = {978-1-84720-896-5}, address = {Cheltenham}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, topic = {limited-rationality;pr-course;} } @book{ egli-etal:1995a, editor = {Urs Egli and Peter E. Pause and Christoph Schwarze and Arnim von Stechow and G\"otz Wienold}, title = {Lexical Knowledge in the Organisation of Language}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Co.}, year = {1995}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {1556195680 (alk. paper)}, rtnote ={UMich Hatcher Graduate P 326 .L3831 1995}, topic = {lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ egli_u-vonheusinger_k:1995a, author = {Urs Egli and Klaus von Heusinger}, title = {The Epsilon Operator and the E-type Pronouns}, booktitle = {Lexical Knowledge in the Organisation of Language}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Co.}, year = {1995}, editor = {Urs Egli and Peter E. Pause and Christoph Schwarze and Arnim von Stechow and G\"otz Wienold}, pages = {121--144}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {Hilbert's-epsilon-function;anaphora;donkey-anaphora;} } @incollection{ egli_u1:1998a, author = {Urs Egli}, title = {Cuts in Tableaux}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {I}, Foundations: Calculi and Methods}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;proof-theory;} } @inproceedings{ egli_u1-schmitt_s:1998a, author = {Uwe Egli and Stephen Schmitt}, title = {Intuitionistic Proof Transformations and Their Application to Constructive Program Synthesis}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Symbolic Computation: Proceedings of {AISC'98}}, year = {1998}, editor = {Jacques Calmet and Jan Plaza}, pages = {132--144}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {theorem-proving;intuitionistic-logic;} } @incollection{ egli_u2:1979a, author = {Urs Egli}, title = {The {S}toic Concept of Anaphora}, booktitle = {Semantics from Different Points of View}, year = {1979}, editor = {Rainer B\"auerle and Urs Egli and Arnim {von Stechow}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, pages = {284--283}, topic = {Stoic-philosophy;anaphora;} } @book{ egli_u2:1995a, editor = {Urs Egli}, title = {Lexical Knowledge in the Organization of Language}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {1995}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {1556195680}, rtnote = {Umich Graduate Library, P 326 .L3831 1995.}, topic = {lexicon;} } @article{ egli_u2-schmitt_s:1999a, author = {Uwe Egli and Stephen Schmitt}, title = {Intuitionistic Proof Transformations, Their Complexity, and Application to Constructive Program Synthesis}, journal = {Fundamenta Informaticae}, year = {1999}, volume = {39}, number = {1--2}, pages = {59--83}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {theorem-proving;intuitionistic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ egly_u-woltran_s:2006a, author = {Urs Egly and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Reasoning in Argumentation Frameworks Using Quantified Boolean Formulas}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2006 conference on Computational Models of Argument: {COMMA} 2006}, year = {2006}, editor = {Paul E. Dunne and Trevor J.M. Bench-Capon}, pages = {1233--144}, publisher = {IOS Press}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;propositional-quantifiers;} } @article{ egre_p:2005a, author = {Paul \'Egr\'e}, title = {Semantic Bootstrapping of Type-Logical Grammar}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2005}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {13--48}, topic = {provability-logic;syntactic-attitudes;} } @incollection{ egre_p:2013a, author = {Paul \`Egr\'e}, title = {Hyperintensionality and De Re Beliefs: A Counterpart-Theoretic Account}, booktitle = {Epistemology, Context, Formalism}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Franck Lihoreau and Manuel Rebuschi}, pages = {209--240}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {hyperintensionality;counterpart-theory;belief;} } @incollection{ egre_p:2014a, author = {Paul \'Egr\'e}, title = {Intentional Action and the Semantics of Gradable Expressions (on the {K}nobe Effect)}, booktitle = {Causation in Grammatical Structures}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Bridget Copley and Fabienne Martin}, pages = {176--205}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantics;causality;agency;nl-causality;nl-causatives;event-structure;} } @article{ egre_p:2015a, author = {Paul \'Egr\'e}, title = {Vagueness: Why Do We Believe in Tolerance?}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {44}, number = {6}, pages = {663--679}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ egre_p:2016a, author = {Paul Egr\'e}, title = {Conditionals}, booktitle = {Cambridge Handbook of Formal Semantics}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Maria Aloni and Paul Dekker}, pages = {490--524}, address = {Cambridge, England}, contentnote = {This is a good general introduction to the history, the different proposals, and the issues.}, topic = {nl-semantics;conditionals;indicative-conditionals;} } @article{ egre_p-etal:2021a, author = {Paul \'Egr\'e and Lorenzo Rossi and Jan Sprenger}, title = {De {F}inettian Logics of Indicative Conditionals Part {I}: Trivalent Semantics and Validity}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {2}, pages = {187--213}, abstract = {This paper explores trivalent truth conditions for indicative conditionals, examining the "defective" truth table proposed by de Finetti (1936) and Reichenbach (1935, 1944). On their approach, a conditional takes the value of its consequent whenever its antecedent is true, and the value Indeterminate otherwise. Here we deal with the problem of selecting an adequate notion of validity for this conditional. ... }, topic = {indicative-conditionals;probability;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ egre_p-etal:2021b, author = {Paul \'Egr\'e and Lorenzo Rossi and Jan Sprenger}, title = {De Finettian Logics of Indicative Conditionals Part {II}: Proof Theory and Algebraic Semantics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {2}, pages = {215--247}, abstract = {... Here we provide the proof theory for the resulting logics DF/TT and CC/TT, using tableau calculi and sequent calculi, and proving soundness and completeness results. Then we turn to the algebraic semantics, where both logics have substantive limitations ...}, topic = {indicative-conditionals;probability;multivalued-logic;} } @article{ egre_p-etal:2021c, author = {Paul \'Egr\'e and Paul Marty and Bryan Renne}, title = {Knowledge, Justification, and Adequate Reasons}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {3}, pages = {687--727}, abstract = {Is knowledge definable as justified true belief ('JTB')? We argue that one can legitimately answer positively or negatively, depending on whether or not one's true belief is justified by what we call adequate reasons. To facilitate our argument we introduce a simple propositional logic of reason-based belief, and give an axiomatic characterization of the notion of adequacy for reasons. ...}, xref = {Correction: egre_p-etal:2021b}, topic = {knowledge;belief;} } @article{ egre_p-etal:2021d, author = {Paul \'Egr\'e and Paul Marty and Bryan Renne}, title = {Erratum: Knowledge, Justification, and Adequate Reasons}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {14}, number = {4}, pages = {1089}, xref = {Correction to: egre_p-etal:2021a}, topic = {knowledge;belief;} } @article{ egre_p-etal:2023a, author = {Paul \'Egr\'e and Benjamin Spector and Steven Verheyen}, title = {On the Optimality of Vagueness: "around", "between" and the {G}ricean Maxims}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {5}, pages = {1075--1130}, abstract = {Why is ordinary language vague? We argue that in contexts in which a cooperative speaker is not perfectly informed about the world, the use of vague expressions can offer an optimal tradeoff between truthfulness (Gricean Quality) and informativeness (Gricean Quantity). ... vague sentences can be more informative than their precise counterparts. We give a probabilistic treatment of the interpretation of "around" ... }, topic = {vagueness;probability;communicative-strategies;} } @book{ egre_p-klinedinst_p:2011a, editor = {Paul \'Egr\'e and Nathan Klinedinst}, title = {Vagueness and Language Use}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2011}, address = {Basingstoke, UK}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ egre_p-omadigain_c:2019a, author = {Paul Egr\'e and Cathal O'Madigain}, title = {Concept Utility}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2019}, volume = {116}, number = {10}, pages = {525--554}, contentnote = {This paper proposes a method of scoring taxonomies for inclusiveness and homgeneity. } , topic = {concepts;taxonomies;(un)natural-predicates;} } @article{ ehrgott:2008a, author = {Matthias Ehrgott}, title = {Multiobjective Optimization}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2008}, volume = {29}, number = {4}, pages = {47--57}, topic = {reasoning-about-preferences;optimization;multiattribute-utility;} } @book{ ehrhard-etal:2004a, author = {Thomas Ehrhard and Jean-Yves Girard and Paul Ruet and P. Scott}, title = {Linear Logic in Computer Science}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521608570}, xref = {Review: murawski:2006a.}, rtnote = {Umich Shapiro Science QA 9.54 .L46 2004}, topic = {linear-logic;logic-and-computer-science;} } @incollection{ ehrich_v:1991a, author = {Veronika Ehrich}, title = {Nominalisierungen}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {441--458}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-semantics;nominalization;} } @incollection{ ehrig-etal:1992a, author = {Hartmut Ehrig}, title = {Introduction to Graph Grammars with Applications to Semantic Networks}, booktitle = {Semantic Networks in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Pergamon Press}, year = {1992}, editor = {Fritz Lehmann}, pages = {557--572}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {kr;semantic-networks;kr-course;} } @article{ ehring_d:1981a, author = {Douglas Ehring}, title = {On {M}ackie's New Account of Causal Priority}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1981}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {82--83}, topic = {causality;} } @article{ ehring_d:1990a, author = {Douglas Ehring}, title = {Nonbranching and Nontransitivity}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1990}, volume = {50}, number = {4}, pages = {268--271}, topic = {idfividuation;} } @book{ ehring_d:1997a, author = {Douglas Ehring}, title = {Causation and Persistence: A Theory of Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: robb:2003a}, topic = {causality;metaphysics;} } @book{ ehring_d:2011a, author = {Douglas Ehring}, title = {Tropes: Properties, Objects and Mental Causation}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199608539}, xref = {Review: gibb_sc:2012a}, abstract = {...presents a defense of tropes--properties and relations understood as particulars--and of trope bundle theory as the best accounts of properties and objects, and advocates a specific brand of trope nominalism, Natural Class Trope Nominalism. This position rejects the existence of universals, and holds that the nature of each individual trope is determined by its membership in various natural classes of tropes ... The first part of the book provides a general introduction and defense of tropes and trope bundle theory. Ehring demonstrates that there are tropes and indicates some of the things that tropes can do for us metaphysically, including helping to solve the problems of mental causation, while remaining neutral between different theories of tropes. In the second part he offers a more specific defense of Natural Class Trope Nominalism, and provides a full analysis of what a trope is. }, topic = {reasons-for-action;metaphysics;properties;} } @book{ ehrlich:1992a, author = {Eugene Ehrlich}, title = {Theory and Problems of Punctuation, Capitalization, and Spelling}, publisher = {McGraw-Hill}, year = {1992}, address = {Hong Kong}, series = {Schaum's Outline Series}, edition = {2}, topic = {spelling;punctuation;} } @article{ ehrlich_p:2022a, author = {Philip Ehrlich}, title = {Are Poits (Necessarily) Unextended?}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2022}, volume = {89}, number = {4}, pages = {784--801}, abstract = {Since Euclid defined a point as "that which has no part" it has been widely assumed that points are necessarily unextended. It has also been assumed that this is equivalent to saying that points or, more properly speaking, degenerate segments, have length zero. We challenge these assumptions by providing models of Euclidean geometry where the points are extended despite the fact that the degenerate segments have null lengths, and observe that whereas the extended natures of the points are not recognizable in the given models, they can be recognized and characterized by structures that are suitable expansions of the models.}, topic = {foundations-of-geometry;} } @book{ ehrman:1966a, author = {Madeline Ehrman}, title = {The Meanings of the Modals in Present-day {A}merican {E}nglish}, publisher = {Mouton}, address = {The Hague}, year = {1966}, topic = {nl-modality;nl-modality;modals;} } @incollection{ eichberger_j-kelsey_d:2009a, author = {J\"urgen Eichberger and David Kelsey}, title = {Ambiguity}, booktitle = {Handbook of Rational and Social Choice}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Paul Anand and Prasanta Pattanaik and Clemens Puppe}, pages = {113--139}, abstract = {Ambiguity refers to a decision situation under uncertainty where there is incomplete information about the likelihood of events. Different formal models of this notion have been developed with differing implications the representation of ambiguity and ambiguity aversion.}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;reasoning-about-probabilities;} } @book{ eikmeyer-rieser_h:1981a, editor = {Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser}, title = {Words, Worlds, and Contexts: New Approaches to Word Semantics}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1981}, address = {Berlin}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser, "Word Semantics from Different Points of View: An Introduction to the Present Volume", pp. 1--18 2. Max J. Cresswell, "Adverbs of Causation", pp. 21--37 3. Angelika Kratzer, "The Notional Category of Modality", pp. 38--74 4. Peter R. Lutzeier, "Words and Worlds", pp. 75--106 5. Ekkehard K\"onig, "The Meaning of Scalar Particles in {G}erman", pp. 107--132 6. Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser, "Meanings, Intensions, and Stereotypes: A New Approach to Linguistic Semantics", pp. 133--150 7. Michael Grabski, "Quotations as Indexicals and Demonstratives", pp. 151--167 8. John C. Bigelow, "Truth and Universals", pp. 168--189 9. Burghard S. Rieger, "Feasible Fuzzy Semantics: On Some Problems of How to Handle Word Meaning Empirically", pp. 193--209 10. Joachim Ballweg and Helmut Frosh, "Formal Semantics for the Progressive of Stative and Non-Stative Verbs", pp. 210--221 11. Joachim Ballweg, "Simple Present Tense and Progressive Periphrases in German", pp. 222--233 12. Wolfgang Wildgen, "Archetypal Dynamics in Word Semantics: An Application of Catastrophe Theory", pp. 234--296 13. Thomas T. Ballmer and Waltraud Brennenstuhl, "An Empirical Approach to Frametheory: Verb Thesausus Organization", pp. 297--319 14. Dieter Mertzing, "Frame Representation and Lexical Semantics", pp. 320--342 15. Fritz Neubauer and Janos S. Pet\"ofi, "Word Semantics, Lexical Systems, and Text Interpretations", pp. 343--377 16. Horst Geckeler, "Structural Semantics", pp. 381--413 17. Thomas T. Ballmer and Waltraud Brennenstuhl, "Lexical Analysis and Language Theory", pp. 414--461 18. Angelika Ballweg-Schramm, "Some Comments on Lexical Fields and Their Use in Lexicography", pp. 462--468 19. Manfred Pinkal, "Some Semantic and Pragmatic Properties of {G}erman {\it glauben}", pp. 469--484 20. Willis J. Edmonson, "Illocutionary Verbs, Illocutionary Acts, and Conversational Behavior", pp. 485--494 21. Walther Kindt, "Word Semantics and Conversational Analysis", pp. 500--509 }, xref = {Review: bosch_p:1984b}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library P 325 .W591}, topic = {nl-semantics;context;lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ eikmeyer-rieser_h:1981b, author = {Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser}, title = {Word Semantics from Different Points of View: An Introduction to the Present Volume}, booktitle = {Words, Worlds, and Contexts: New Approaches to Word Semantics}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1981}, pages = {1--18}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Eikmeyer"}, topic = {lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ eikmeyer-rieser_h:1981c, author = {Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser}, title = {Meanings, Intensions, and Stereotypes: A New Approach to Linguistic Semantics}, booktitle = {Words, Worlds, and Contexts: New Approaches to Word Semantics}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1981}, editor = {Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser}, pages = {133--150}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {vagueness;context;dynamic-semantics;compositionality; foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ eikmeyer-rieser_h:1983a, author = {Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser}, title = {A Formal Theory of Context Dependence and Context Change}, booktitle = {Approaching Vagueness}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1983}, editor = {Thomas T. Ballmer and Manfred Pinkal}, pages = {131--188}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {vagueness;context;} } @incollection{ eikmeyer-rieser_h:1983b, author = {Hans-J\"urgen Eikmeyer and Hannes Rieser}, title = {A Nominalistic Approach to Ambiguity and Vagueness Considered from a Mildly {P}latonistic Point of View}, booktitle = {Approaching Vagueness}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1983}, editor = {Thomas T. Ballmer and Manfred Pinkal}, pages = {393--422}, address = {Amsterdam}, contentnote = {This is based on the approach of scheffler_i:1982a.}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ eilan_n:2005a, author = {Naomi Eilan}, title = {Joint Attention, Communication, and Mind}, booktitle = {Joint Attention: Communication and Other Minds}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Naomi Eilan and Christoph Hoerl and Teresa McCormack and Johannes Roessler}, pages = {1--33}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {group-attitudes;} } @book{ eilan_n-etal:1993a, editor = {N. Eilan and R. McCarthy and M. W. Brewer}, title = {Spatial Representation: Problems in Philosophy and Psychology}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1993}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {spatial-representation;} } @book{ eilan_n-etal:2005a, editor = {Naomi Eilan and Christoph Hoerl and Teresa McCormack and Johannes Roessler}, title = {Joint Attention: Communication and Other Minds}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780199245635}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Naomi Eilan, "Joint Attention, Communication, and Mind", pp. 1--33 2. Jane Heal, "Joint Attention and Understanding the Mind", pp. 34--44 3. Josep Call and Michael Tomasello, "What Chimpanzees Know about Seeing Revisited: An Explanation of the Third Kind", pp. 45--64 4. Joan-Carlos Gomez, "Joint Attention and the Notion of Subject: Insights from Apes, Normal Children, and Children with Autism", pp. 65--84 5. Vasudevi Reddy, "Before the 'Third Element': Understanding Attention to Self", pp. 85--109 6. Amanda L. Woodward, "Infants' Understanding of the Actions Involved in Joint Attention", pp. 110--128 7. Fabio Franco, "Infant pointing: Harlequin, of Two Masters", pp. 110--128 8. Mark A. Sabbagh and Dare Baldwin, "Understanding the Role of Communicative Intentions in Word Learning", pp. 129--164 9. R. Peter Hobson, "What Puts the Jointness into Joint Attention?", pp. 185--204 10. Sue Leekam, "Why Do Children with Autism Have a Joint Attention Impairment?", pp. 205--259 11. Johannes Roessler, "Joint Attention and the Problem of Other Minds", 230--286 12. Christoph Hoerl and Teresa McCormack, "Joint Reminiscing as Joint Attention to the Past", pp. 260--286 13. John Campbell, "Joint Attention and Common Knowledge", pp. 287--297 14. Christopher Peacocke, "Joint attention: its Nature, Reflexivity, and Relation to Common Knowledge?", pp. 298--323 }, topic = {joint-intention;mutual-belief;} } @article{ einheuser_i:2006a, author = {Iris Einheuser}, title = {Counterconventional Conditionals}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2006}, volume = {159}, number = {3}, pages = {459--482}, abstract = {Some philosophical positions maintain that some aspect of reality depends on human practices, cognitive attitudes or sentiments. This paper presents a framework for understanding such positions in a way that renders them immune to a number of natural but allegedly devastating objections. }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc18}, topic = {convention;conditionals;} } @article{ einheuser_i:2010a, author = {Iris Einheuser}, title = {The Model-Theoretic Argument against Quantifying Everything}, journal = {Dialectica}, year = {2010}, volume = {64}, number = {2}, pages = {237--246}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de18}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;unrestrictive-quantification; domain-of-quantification;} } @article{ einhorn_hj-hogarth_tm:1986a, author = {Hillel J. Einhorn and Robin M. Hogarth}, title = {Judging Probable Cause}, journal = {Psychological Bulletin}, year = {1986}, volume = {99}, number = {1}, pages = {3--19}, abstract = {Argues that people use systematic rules for assessing cause, both in science and everyday inference. By explicating the processes that underlie the judgment of causation, the authors review and integrate various theories of causality proposed by psychologists, philosophers, statisticians, and others. ... It is suggested that the idea of a 'causal field' is central for determining causal relevance, differentiating causes from conditions, determining the salience of alternative explanations, and affecting molar versus molecular explanations. ...}, topic = {causality;cognitive-psycholoy;} } @article{ eisenhart:1989a, author = {K. Eisenhart}, title = {Agency Theory: An Assessment and Review}, journal = {Academy of Management Review}, year = {1989}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {57--74}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {agent-modeling;autonomous-agents;} } @article{ eisenstadt_sa-simon_ha:1997a, author = {Stuart A. Eisenstadt and Herbert A. Simon}, title = {Logic and Thought}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {365--385}, abstract = {Rips, in The Psychology of Proof, argues that, through the processes of evolution, logic (e.g., modus ponens) has become established in the human mind as the basis for thinking, and that production systems rest on this foundation. In this paper we defend the converse argument that, through evolution, a production system architecture has become the basis for human thinking, and that formal logics rest on this production system and the accompanying mechanisms for recognition and search. It is through the `automaticity' of the execution of productions that we experience the compellingness of deductive arguments. }, xref = {Critical study of: rips:1994a}, topic = {psychology-of-deduction;evolutionary-psychology;} } @book{ eiser:1984a, editor = {J. Richard Eiser}, title = {Attitudinal Judgment}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1984}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {0387909117}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF323.C5 A841 1984.}, topic = {social-psychology;attitudes-in-psychology;} } @book{ eiser:1986a, author = {J. Richard Eiser}, title = {Social Psychology: Attitude, Cognition, and Social Behavior}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1986}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0521326788}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, HM251 .E42921 1986.}, topic = {social-psychology;cognitive-psychology;attitudes-in-psychology;} } @article{ eisinger-etal:1991a, author = {Norbert Eisinger and Hans J\"urgen Ohlbach and Axel Pr\"acklein}, title = {Reduction Rules For Resolution-Based Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {50}, number = {2}, pages = {141--181}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Inference rules for resolution-based systems can be classified into deduction rules, which add new objects, and reduction rules, which remove objects. Traditional reduction rules like subsumption do not actively contribute to a solution, but they help to avoid redundancies in the search space. We present a number of advanced reduction rules, which can cope with high degrees of redundancy and play a distinctly active part because they find trivial solutions on their own and thus relieve the control component for the deduction rules from low level tasks. We describe how these reduction rules can be implemented with reasonable efficiency in a clause graph resolution system, but they are not restricted to this particular representation. }, topic = {theorem-proving;resolution;redundancy-elimination;} } @incollection{ eisinger-olbach:1993a, author = {Norbert Eisinger and Hans J\"urgen Olbach}, title = {Deduction Systems Based on Resolution}, booktitle = {The Handbook of Logic in Artificial Intelligence and Logic Programming, Volume 1: Deductive Methodologies}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Christopher Hogger and John A. Robinson}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, pages = {184--273}, address = {Oxford}, year = {1993}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {kr;logic-in-AI-survey;theorem-proving;resolution ;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ eisner:1996a, author = {Jason Eisner}, title = {Efficient Normal-Form Parsing for Combinatory Categorial Grammar}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {79--86}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;categorial-grammar;} } @inproceedings{ eisner:1997a, author = {Jason Eisner}, title = {Eficient Generation in Primitive Optimality Theory}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {313--320}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {computational-phonology;optimality-theory;} } @article{ eisner:2000a, author = {Jason Eisner}, title = {Review of \emph{{O}ptimality Theory}, by Ren\'e {K}ager}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, volume = {26}, number = {2}, pages = {286--290}, xref = {Review of: kager:1999a.}, topic = {optimality-theory;} } @incollection{ eisner:2002a, author = {Jason Eisner}, title = {An Interactive Spreadsheet for Teaching the Forward-Backward Algorithm}, booktitle = {Effective Tools and Methodologies for Teaching {NLP} and {CL}}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dragomir Radev and Chris Brew}, pages = {9--17}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {nlp-pedagogy;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t:1999a, author = {Thomas Eiter}, title = {Using the {DLV} System for {AI} Applications (Abstract)}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {disjunctive-logic-programming;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t:2002a, author = {Thomas Eiter}, title = {On Computing All Abductive Explanations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, editor = {Rina Dechter and Michael Kearns and Richard S. Sutton}, pages = {62--67}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {abduction;complexity-in-AI;Horn-clause-abduction;} } @article{ eiter_t-etal:1997a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Georg Gottlob and Nicola Leone}, title = {Semantics and Complexity of Abduction from Default Theories}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {90}, number = {1--2}, pages = {177--233}, topic = {abduction;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @incollection{ eiter_t-etal:1998a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Nicola Leone and Cristinel Mateis and Gerald Pfeifer and Francesco Scarcello}, title = {The {KR} System {\tt dlv}: Progress Report, Comparisons and Benchmarks}, booktitle = {{KR}'98: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1998}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Lenhart Schubert and Stuart C. Shapiro}, pages = {406--417}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;disjunctive-logic-programming;kr-course;} } @article{ eiter_t-etal:1999a, author = {Thomas Eiter and V.S. Subrahmanian and George Pick}, title = {Heterogeneous Active Agents, {I}: Semantics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {108}, number = {1--2}, pages = {179--255}, topic = {agent-architectures;agent-oriented-programming;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t-etal:1999b, author = {Thomas Eiter and W. Faber and G. Gottlob and C. Koch and C. Mateis and Nicola Leone and G. Pfeifer and F. Scarcello}, title = {The {DLV} System}, booktitle = {Workshop on Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence, Washington, DC, June 14--16, 1999}, year = {1999}, editor = {Jack Minker}, publisher = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, topic = {disjunctive-logic-programming;} } @article{ eiter_t-etal:1999c, author = {Thomas Eiter and Toshehide Ibaraki and Kazuhisa Makino}, title = {Computing Intersections of {H}orn Theories for Reasoning with Models}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {110}, number = {1}, pages = {57--101}, topic = {model-checking;} } @article{ eiter_t-etal:2000a, author = {Thomas Eiter and V.S. Subrahmanian and T.J. Rogers}, title = {Heterogeneous Active Agents, {III}: Polynomially Implementable Agents}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {117}, number = {1}, pages = {107--167}, acontentnote = {Abstract: In ``Heterogeneous active agents, I'' (Eiter et al., 1999), two of the authors have introduced techniques to build agents on top of arbitrary data structures, and to ``agentize'' new/existing programs. They provided a series of successively more sophisticated semantics for such agent systems, and showed that as these semantics become epistemically more desirable, a computational price may need to be paid. In this paper, we identify a class of agents that are called weakly regular---this is done by first identifying a fragment of agent programs (Eiter et al., 1999) called weakly regular agent programs (WRAPs for short). It is shown that WRAPs are definable via three parameters---checking for a property called ``safety'', checking for a property called ``conflict-freedom'' and checking for a ``deontic stratifiability'' property. Algorithms for each of these are developed. A weakly regular agent is then defined in terms of these concepts, and a regular agent is one that satisfies an additional boundedness property. We then describe a polynomial algorithm that computes (under suitable assumptions) the reasonable status set semantics of regular agents---this semantics was identified by Eiter et al. (1999) as being epistemically most desirable. Though this semantics is coNP-complete for arbitrary agent programs (Eiter and Subrahmanian, 1999), it is polynomially computable via our algorithm for regular agents. Finally, we describe our implementation architecture and provide details of how we have implemented RAPs, together with experimental results.}, topic = {deontic-logic;software-agents;kr;} } @incollection{ eiter_t-etal:2000b, author = {Thomas Eiter and Wolfgang Faber and Nicola Leone and Gerald Pfeifer}, title = {Declarative Problem-Solving in {DLV}}, booktitle = {Logic-Based Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2000}, editor = {Jack Minker}, pages = {79--103}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {logic-in-AI;kr;disjunctive-logic-programming; problem-solving-architectures;} } @incollection{ eiter_t-etal:2002a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Michael Fink and Giuliana Sabbatini and Hans Tompits}, title = {A Generic Approach to Knowledge-Based Information-Site Selection}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {459--469}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;AI-and-the-internet;} } @article{ eiter_t-etal:2003a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Wolfgang Faber and Nicola Leone and Gerald Pfeifer and Axel Polleres}, title = {A Logic-Programming Approach to Knowledge-State Planning {II}: The {\sc dlv}$^{\cal K}$ System}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {144}, number = {2}, pages = {157--211}, topic = {disjunctive-logic-programming;planning-algorithms;} } @incollection{ eiter_t-etal:2004a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz and Roman Schindlauer and Hans Tompits}, title = {Combining Answer Set Programming with Description Logics for the Semantic Web}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {141--151}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {semantic-web;answer-sets;logic-programming;description-logics;} } @incollection{ eiter_t-etal:2006a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Michael Fink and Hans Tompits and Patrick Traxler and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Replacements in Non-Ground Answer-Set Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {340--350}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {answer-sets;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ eiter_t-etal:2008a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Giovambattista Ianni and Thomas Lukasiewicz and Roman Schindlauer and Hans Tompits}, title = {Combining Answer Set Programming with Description Logics for the Semantic Web}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {12--13}, pages = {1495--1539}, topic = {default-logic;description-logics;answer-sets;semantic-web;} } @article{ eiter_t-etal:2010a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Esra Erdem and Michael Fink and J\"an Senko}, title = {Updating Action Domain Descriptions}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {15}, pages = {1172--1221}, topic = {reasonong-about-actions;belief-update;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t-etal:2010b, author = {Thomas Eiter and Michael Fink and Peter Sch\"uler and Antonius Weinzierl}, title = {Finding Explanations of Inconsistency in Multi-Context Systems}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {329--339}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We provide two approaches for explaining inconsistency in multi-context systems, where decentralized and heterogeneous system parts interact via nonmonotonic bridge rules. ... }, topic = {multicontext-systems;inconsistency;explainable-AI;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t-etal:2010c, author = {Thomas Eiter and Michael Fink and Joao Moura}, title = {Paracoherent Answer Set Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}2010: Proceedings of the Twelfth International Conference}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fangzhen Lin and Ulrike Sattler and Miroslaw Truszczynski}, pages = {486--496}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We study the problem of reasoning from incoherent answer set programs, i.e., from logic programs that do not have an answer set due to cyclic dependencies of an atom from its default negation. ... In addition to a model-theoretic and a transformational characterization of the alternative semantics, we prove precise complexity results for main reasoning tasks under both semantics.}, topic = {answer-sets;} } @book{ eiter_t-etal:2012a, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, title = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2012}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, isbn = {978-1-57735-451-2 Printed Proceedings, 978-1-57735-452-9 CR-ROM}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Craig Boutilier, "Preference Elicitation and Preference Learning in Social Choice: New Foundations for Group Recommendation (Abstract)", p. xvi 2. Maurizio Lenzerini, "Ontology-Based Data Management: Present and Future (Abstract)", pp. xvi--xvii 3. Vladimir Lifschitz, "Great Moments in {KR}: Logic Programming Solution to the Frame Problem (Abstract)", p. xvii 4. Moshe Y. Vardi, "The Rise and Fall of Linear Temporal Logic (Abstract)", p. xvii 5. Michael Bartholomew and Joohyung Lee, "Stable Models of Formulas with Intensional Functions", pp. 2--12 6. Nicola Leone, Marco Manna, Giorgio Terracina, and Pierfrancesco Veltri, "Efficiently Computable Datalog Programs", pp. 13--23 7. Vladimir Lifschitz, "Logic Programs with Intensional Functions", pp. 24--31 8. Guohua Liu, Tomi Janhunen, and Ilkka Niemel\"a, "Answer Set Programming via Mixed Integer Programming", pp. 32--42 9. Johannes Oetsch, Michael Prischink, J\"org P\"uhrer, Martin Schwengerer, and Hans Tompits, "On the Small-Scope Hypothesis for Testing Answer-Set Programs", pp. 43--53 10. Wolfgang Dvor\'ak, Matti J\"arvisalo, Johannes Peter Wallner, and Stefan Woltran, "Complexity-Sensitive Decision Procedures for Abstract Argumentation", pp. 54--64 11. Davide Grossi, "Fixpoints and Iterated Updates in Abstract Argumentation", pp. 65--74 12. Lucas Bordeaux, Mikol\'s Janota, Joao Marques-Silva, and Pierre Marquis, "On Unit-Refutation Complete Formulae with Existentially Quantified Variables", pp. 75--84 13. Martin Lackner and Andreas Pfandler, "Fixed-Parameter Algorithms for Finding Minimal Models", pp. 85--95 14. Micha\"el Thomazo, Jean-Fran\c{c}ois Baget, Marie-Laure Mugnier, and Sebastian Rudolph, "A Generic Querying Algorithm for Greedy Sets of Existential Rules", pp. 96--106 15. Kira Adaricheva, Robert H. Sloan, Bal\'azs Sz\"or'enyi, Gy\"orgy Tur'an, "Horn Belief Contraction: Remainders, Envelopes and Complexity", pp. 107--115 16. Richard Booth, Eduardo Ferm'e, S'ebastien Konieczny, and Ram'on Pino P'erez, "Credibility-Limited Revision Operators in Propositional Logic", pp. 116--125 17. Nadia Creignou, Odile Papini, Reinhard Pichler, and Stefan Woltran, "Belief Revision within Fragments of Propositional Logic", pp. 126-- 18. Bernardo Cuenca Grau, Ernesto Jimenez-Ruiz, Evgeny Kharlamov, and Dmitriy Zheleznyakov, "Ontology Evolution under Semantic Constraints", pp. 137--147 19. James P. Delgrande and Hector J. Levesque, "Belief Revision with Sensing and Fallible Actions", pp. 148--157 20. Martin Slota and Jo\~ao Leite, "Robust Equivalence Models for Semantic Updates of Answer-Set Programs", pp. 158--168 21. Zhiqiang Zhuang and Maurice Pagnucco, "Model Based {H}orn Contraction", pp. 169--178 22. Vincent Conitzer and Lirong Xia, "Paradoxes of Multiple Elections: An Approximation Approach", pp. 179--187 23. Wolfgang Faber, Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski, and Stefan Woltran, "Strong Equivalence of Qualitative Optimization Problems", pp. 188--198 24. Stefano Moretti and Alexis Tsouki\`as, "Ranking Sets of Possibly Interacting Objects Using Shapley Extensions", pp. 199--209 25. Nic Wilson and Radu Marinescu, "An Axiomatic Framework for Influence Diagram Computation with Partially Ordered Utilities", pp. 210--220 26. Meghyn Bienvenu, Carsten Lutz, and Frank Wolter, "Query Containment in Description Logics Reconsidered", pp. 221--231 27. Stefan Borgwardt and Rafael Pe\~naloza, "Undecidability of Fuzzy Description Logics", pp. 232--242 28. Bernardo Cuenca Grau, Ian Horrocks, Markus Kr\"otzsch, Clemens Kupke, Despoina Magka, Boris Motik, and Zhe Wang, "Acyclicity Conditions and Their Application to Query Answering in Description Logics", pp. 243--253 29. Georg Gottlob and Thomas Schwentick, "Rewriting Ontological Queries into Small Nonrecursive Datalog Programs", pp. 254--263 30. Yevgeny Kazakov, Markus Kr\"otzsch, Franti\v{c}ek Siman\v{c}ik, "Practical Reasoning with Nominals in the {EL} Family of Description Logics", pp. 264--274 31. Stanislav Kikot, Roman Kontchakov, and Michael Zakharyaschev, "Conjunctive Query Answering with {OWL} 2 {QL}", pp. 275--285 32. Carsten Lutz, Inan\c{c} Seylan, and Frank Wolter, "An Automata-Theoretic Approach to Uniform Interpolation and Approximation in the Description Logic {EL}", pp. 286--296 33. Carsten Lutz and Frank Wolter, "Non-Uniform Data Complexity of Query Answering in Description Logics", pp. 297--307 34. Mariano Rodr\'iguez-Muro and Diego Calvanese, "High Performance Query Answering over {DL}-{L}ite Ontologies", pp. 308--318 35. Francesco Belardinelli, Alessio Lomuscio, and Fabio Patrizi, "An Abstraction Technique for the Verification of Artifact-Centric Systems", pp. 319--328 36. Joseph Y. Halpern and Willemien Kets, "Ambiguous Language and Differences in Beliefs", pp. 329--338 37. Sebastian Haufe and Michael Thielscher, "Automated Verification of Epistemic Properties for General Game Playing", pp. 339--349 38. Gerhard Lakemeyer and Hector J. Levesque, "Only-Knowing Meets Nonmonotonic Modal Logic", pp. 350--357 39. Silvano Colombo Tosatto, Guido Boella, Leendert van der Torre, and Serena Villata, "Abstract Normative Systems: Semantics and Proof Theory", pp. 358--368 40. Hanne Vlaeminck, Joost Vennekens, Maurice Bruynooghe, and Marc Denecker, "Ordered Epistemic Logic: Semantics, Complexity and Applications", pp. 369--379 41. Zeinab Bahmani, Leopoldo Bertossi, Solmaz Kolahi, and Laks V. S. Lakshmanan, "Declarative Entity Resolution via Matching Dependencies and Answer Set Programs", pp. 380--390 42. Michael Fink, "Paraconsistent Hybrid Theories", pp. 391--401 43. Henri Prade and Gilles Richard, "Homogeneous Logical Proportions: Their Uniqueness and Their Role in Similarity-Based Prediction", pp. 402--412 44. Chitta Baral and Shanshan Liang, "From Knowledge Represented in Frame-Based Languages to Declarative Representation and Reasoning via ASP", pp. 413--423 45. Vinay K. Chaudhri and Tran Cao Son, "Specifying and Reasoning with Underspecified Knowledge Bases Using Answer Set Programming", pp. 424--434 46. Riccardo Rosati and Enrico Franconi, "Generalized Ontology-Based Production Systems", pp. 435--445 47. Christer B\"ackstr\"om and Peter Jonsson, "Abstracting Abstraction in Search with Applications to Planning", pp. 446--456 48. Giuseppe De Giacomo, Paolo Felli, and Alessio Lomuscio, "Synthesizing Agent Protocols from LTL Specifications against Multiple Partially-Observable Environments", pp. 457--466 49. Giuseppe De Giacomo, Yves Lesp'erance, and Fabio Patrizi, "Bounded Situation Calculus Action Theories and Decidable Verification", pp. 467--477 50. Patrick Doherty, Jonas Kvarnstr\"om, and Andrzej Sza{\l}as, "Temporal Composite Actions with Constraints", pp. 478--488 51. Alban Grastien, Patrik Haslum, Sylvie Thi'ebaux, "Conflict-Based Diagnosis of Discrete Event Systems: Theory and Practice", pp. 489--499 52. Jinbo Huang, "Compactness and Its Implications for Qualitative Spatial and Temporal Reasoning", pp. 500--508 53. Jochen Renz, "Implicit Constraints for Qualitative Spatial and Temporal Reasoning", pp. 509--518 54. Didier Dubois, Henri Prade, and Steven Schockaert, "Stable Models in Generalized Possibilistic Logic", pp. 519--529 55. Jonathan Lawry and Didier Dubois, "A Bipolar Framework for Combining Beliefs about Vague Propositions", pp. 530--540 56. Onofrio Febbraro, Giovanni Grasso, Nicola Leone, and Francesco Ricca, "{JASP}: A Framework for Integrating Answer Set Programming with {J}ava", pp. 541--551 57. Hector J. Levesque, Ernest Davis, and Leora Morgenstern, "The {W}inograd Schema Challenge", pp. 552--561 58. Marcelo Arenas, Elena Botoeva, Diego Calvanese, Vladislav Ryzhikov, and Evgeny Sherkhonov, "Exchanging Description Logic Knowledge Bases", pp. 563--567 59. Franz Baader, Stefan Borgwardt, and Barbara Morawska, "Extending Unification in {EL} towards General {TB}oxes", pp. 568--572 60. Chitta Baral and Juraj Dzifcak, "Solving Puzzles Described in {E}nglish by Automated Translation to Answer Set Programming and Learning How to Do that Translation", pp. 573--577 61. Maximiliano Celmo David Bud\'an, and Mauro G\'omez Lucero, Carlos Iv\'an Ches\~nevar, and Guillermo Ricardo Simari, "Modelling Time and Reliability in Structured Argumentation Frameworks", pp. 578--582 62. Diego Calvanese, Magdalena Ortiz, Mantas \v{S}imkus, and Giorgio Stefanoni, "The Complexity of Explaining Negative Query Answers in {DL}-{L}ite", pp. 583--587 63. Anthony G. Cohn, Jochen Renz, and Muralikrishna Sridhar, "Thinking Inside the Box: A Comprehensive Spatial Representation for Video Analysis", pp. 588--592 64. Sylvie Coste-Marquis, S\'ebastien Konieczny, Pierre Marquis, and Mohand Akli Ouali, "Weighted Attacks in Argumentation Frameworks", pp. 593--597 65. Robert Craven, Francesca Toni, Cristian Cadar, Adrian Hadad, and Matthew Williams, "Efficient Argumentation for Medical Decision-Making", pp. 598--602 66. Patricia Everaere, S\'ebastien Konieczny, and Pierre Marquis, "Compositional Belief Merging", pp. 603--607 67. Cristina Feier, "Worst-Case Optimal Reasoning with Forest Logic Programs", pp. 608--612 68. Martin Gebser, Torsten Grote, Roland Kaminski, Philipp Obermeier, Orkunt Sabuncu, and Torsten Schaub, "Stream Reasoning with Answer Set Programming: Preliminary Report", pp. 613--617 69. Laura Giordano, Alberto Martelli, and Daniele Theseider Dupr\'e, "Achieving Completeness in Bounded Model Checking of Action Theories in {ASP}", pp. 618--622 70. Matthew Horridge, Bijan Parsia, and Ulrike Sattler, "Justification Masking in Ontologies", pp. 623--627 71. Jinbo Huang, "Search Strategy Simulation in Constraint Booleanization", pp. 628--632 72. Jianbing Ma, Salem Benferhat, and Weiru Liu, "Revising Partial Pre-Orders with Partial Pre-Orders: A Unit-Based Revision Framework", pp. 633--637 73. Ilias Tachmazidis, Grigoris Antoniou, Giorgos Flouris, and Spyros Kotoulas, "Towards Parallel Nonmonotonic Reasoning with Billions of Facts", pp. 638--642 74. Yisong Wang, Yan Zhang, Yi Zhou, and Mingyi Zhang, "Forgetting in Logic Programs under Strong Equivalence", pp. 643--647 75. Jiewen Wu, Alexander Hudek, David Toman, and Grant Weddell, "Assertion Absorption in Object Queries over Knowledge Bases", pp. 648--652 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. CD in plastic CD Holder, \oc12\kr12}, topic = {kr;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t-etal:2016a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz and Livia Predoiu}, title = {Generalized Consistent Query Answering under Existential Rules}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {359--368}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... We define two different semantics, one where ontological axioms as a whole are ignored to resolve an inconsistency, and one where only some of their instances are ignored. We then give a precise picture of the complexity of consistent query answering under these two semantics when ontological axioms are encoded as different classes of existential rules. In the course of this, we also close two open complexity problems in standard consistent query answering under existential rules. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {query-answering;complexity-in-AI;existential-rules;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t-etal:2021a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Markus Hecher and Rafael Kiesel}, title = {Treewidth-Aware Cycle Breaking for Algebraic Answer Set Counting}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {269--279}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we introduce Tp-unfolding, which employs forward reasoning to break the cycles in the positive dependency graph of a program by unfolding them. ... We give sufficient conditions for the existence of good unfolding sequences based on the novel notion of component-boosted backdoor size, which measures the cyclicity of the positive dependencies in a program. The experimental evaluation of a prototype implementation, the AASC solver aspmc, shows promising results.}, topic = {answer-sets;AI-algorithms;} } @incollection{ eiter_t-etal:2022a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Tobias Geibinger and Nelson Higuera and Nysret Musliu and Johannes Oetsch and Daria Stepanova}, title = {{ALASPO}: An Adaptive Large-Neighbourhood ASP Optimiser}, booktitle = {{KR}2022: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Ninetenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2022}, editor = {Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Thomas Meyer}, pages = {565--569}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We present the system ALASPO which implements Adaptive Large-neighbourhood search for Answer Set Programming (ASP) Optimisation. ...}, url = {https://proceedings.kr.org/2022}, topic = {answer-sets;-programming;search;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t-etalo:2021b, author = {Thomas Eiter and Tobias Geibinger and Nysret Musliu and Johannes Oetsch and Peter Sko\c{c}ovsk\'y and Daria Stepanova}, title = {Answer-Set Programming for Lexicographical Makespan Optimisation in Parallel Machine Scheduling}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {280--290}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {We deal with a challenging scheduling problem on parallel-machines with sequence-dependent setup times and release dates from a real-world application of semiconductor work-shop production. ... We study the application of Answer-Set Programming (ASP) to solve this problem.}, topic = {answer-sets;scheduling;} } @article{ eiter_t-gottlob_g:1992a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Georg Gottlob}, title = {On the Complexity of Propositional Knowledge Base Revision, Updates, and Counterfactuals}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {57}, number = {2--3}, pages = {227--270}, topic = {kr;belief-revision;kr-complexity-analysis;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t-gottlob_g:1993a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Georg Gottlob}, title = {The Complexity of Nested Counterfactuals and Iterated Knowledge Base Revision}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {526--531}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {conditionals;belief-revision;kr-complexity-analysis;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t-gottlob_g:1995a, author = {Thomas Eiter and George Gottlob}, title = {Semantics and Complexity of Abduction From Default Theories}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {870--877}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, xref = {Journal Publication: eiter_t-etal:1997a.}, topic = {abduction;} } @article{ eiter_t-gottlob_g:1998a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Georg Gottlob}, title = {On the Expressiveness of Frame Satisfiability and Fragments of Second-Order Logic}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {63}, number = {1}, pages = {73--82}, topic = {higher-order-logic;} } @inproceedings{ eiter_t-lukasiewicz_t:2000a1, author = {Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz}, title = {Complexity Results for Default Reasoning from Conditional Knowledge Bases}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {62--73}, xref = {Journal version: eiter_t-lukasiewicz_t:2000a1.}, abstract = {Conditional knowledge bases have been proposed as belief bases that include defeasible rules (also called defaults) of the form `$\phi\rightarrow\psi$', which informally read as 'generally, if $\phi$ then $\psi$. ... we ... first draw a precise picture of the complexity of default reasoning from conditional knowledge bases: Given a conditional knowledge base KB and a default $\phi\rightarrow\psi$, does KB entail $\phi\rightarrow\psi$? We classify the complexity of this problem for a number of well-known approaches ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ eiter_t-lukasiewicz_t:2000a2, author = {Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz}, title = {Complexity Results for Default Reasoning from Conditional Knowledge Bases}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2000}, volume = {124}, number = {2}, pages = {169--241}, xref = {Conference version: eiter_t-lukasiewicz_t:2000a1.}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @incollection{ eiter_t-lukasiewicz_t:2002a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz}, title = {Complexity Results for Explanations in the Structural-Model Approach}, booktitle = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {49--60}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;complexity-in-AI;causal-explanations;abduction; structural-models;} } @article{ eiter_t-lukasiewicz_t:2002b, author = {Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz}, title = {Complexity Results for Structure-Based Causality}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {142}, number = {1}, pages = {53--89}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;abduction;structural-models;causality;} } @article{ eiter_t-lukasiewicz_t:2004a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz}, title = {Complexity Results for Explanations in the Structural-Model Approach}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {154}, number = {1--2}, pages = {145--198}, topic = {structural-models;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ eiter_t-lukasiewicz_t:2006a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz}, title = {Causes and Explanations in the Structural-Model Approach: Tractable Cases}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {170}, number = {6--7}, pages = {542--580}, topic = {structural-models;causality;explanation;} } @article{ eiter_t-subrahmanian_vs:1999a, author = {Thomas Eiter and V.S. Subrahmanian}, title = {Heterogeneous Active Agents, {II}: Algorithms and Complexity}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {108}, number = {1--2}, pages = {257--307}, topic = {agent-architectures;agent-oriented-programming; complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ eiter_t-wang_kw:2008a, author = {Thomas Eiter and Kewen Wang}, title = {Semantic Forgetting in Answer Set Programming}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {14}, pages = {1644--1672}, topic = {answer-sets;} } @inproceedings{ ekbia-maguitman:2001a, author = {Hamid R. Ekbia and Ana G. Maguitman}, title = {Context and Relevance: A Pragmatic Approach}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {156--169}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;relevance;} } @article{ eklund_e-leytonbrown_k:2010a, author = {Edith Eklund and Kevin Leyton-Brown}, title = {Special Issue Introduction: Algorithmic Game Theory}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2010}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {9--12}, topic = {algorithmic-game-theory;} } @article{ eklund_m:1996a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {On How Logic Became First-Order}, journal = {Nordic Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {147--167}, topic = {history-of-logic;lowenheim-skolem-theorem;} } @article{ eklund_m:2002a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Deep Inconsistency}, journal = {Australasian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2002}, volume = {80}, number = {3}, pages = {321--321}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;paraconsistency;} } @article{ eklund_m:2002b, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Inconsistenct Languages}, journal = {Philosophy and Phenomenological Research}, year = {2002}, volume = {64}, number = {2}, pages = {251--275}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;sorites-paradox;paraconsistency;} } @unpublished{ eklund_m:2003a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Vagueness as Second-Order Inteterminacy}, year = {2003}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Colorado at Boulder}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ eklund_m:2004a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Review of \emph{{S}aving the Differences: Essays on Themes from Truth and Objectivity}, by {C}rispin {W}right}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2004}, volume = {113}, number = {2}, pages = {288--291}, xref = {Review of: wright_c:2003a.}, topic = {philosophical-realism;truth;} } @unpublished{ eklund_m:2005a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {The Deflationary Conception of Ontology}, year = {2005}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Colorado}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, rtnote = {Apparently unpublished as of Feb 2020}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ eklund_m:2006a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Neo-{F}regean Ontology}, booktitle = {Metaphysics}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2006}, editor = {John Hawthorne}, pages = {95--121}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophical-ontology;philosophy-of-mathematics; philosophical-realism;} } @incollection{ eklund_m:2009a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Fictionalism}, booktitle = {The {S}tanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy}, editor = {Edward N. Zalta}, url = {http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2009/entries/fictionalism/}, year = {2009}, publisher = {Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University}, address = {Stanford, Dalifornia}, topic = {fictionalism;philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ eklund_m:2009b, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Vagueness and Second-Level Indeterminacy}, booktitle = {Cuts and Clouds: Vaguenesss, its Nature and its Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi}, pages = {63--76}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {vagueness;indeterminacy-of-translation;} } @article{ eklund_m:2011a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Recent Work on Vagueness}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2011}, volume = {71}, number = {2}, pages = {352--363}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ eklund_m:2012a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Theories of Truth}, booktitle = {The {R}outledge Companion to the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2012}, editor = {Gillian Russell and Delia Graff Fara}, pages = {199--208}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;truth;} } @article{ eklund_m:2013a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Carnap's Metaontology}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2013}, volume = {46}, number = {2}, pages = {229--249}, topic = {Carnap;philosophical-ontology;} } @incollection{ eklund_m:2014a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Replacing Truth?}, booktitle = {Metasemantics: New Essays on the Foundations of Meaning}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2014}, editor = {Alexis Burgess and Brett Sherman}, pages = {293--310}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;truth;} } @article{ eklund_m:2021a, author = {Matti Eklund}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}hin Objects}, by {\O}ystein {L}innebo}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2021}, volume = {130}, number = {2}, pages = {330--335}, xref = {Review of: linnebo_o:2018a}, topic = {metaphysics;philosophical-ontology;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @book{ eklund_p:1991a, author = {Peter Eklund}, title = {An Epistemic Approach to Interactive Design in Multiple Inheritance Hierarchies}, publisher = {Link\"oping University, Dept. of Computer and Information Science}, year = {1991}, address = {Link\"oping}, acontentnote = {Abstract: The thesis explores the advantages of a marriage between a 'mixed dialogue' interaction metaphor and belief logics and in particular how the two can be used for multiple inheritance hierarchy design. The result is a design aid which produces critiques of multiple inheritance hierarchies in terms of their logical consequences. The work draws on a number of theoretical issues in artificial intelligence, namely belief logics and multiple inheritance reasoning, applying 'belief sets' to dialogue and using multiple inheritance hierarchy design as a specific application. The work identifies three design modes for the interface which reflect the intuitions of multiple inheritance hierarchy design and conform to an existing user modeling framework. A major survey of multiple inheritance hierarchies leads to the allocation of a precise inheritance semantics for each of these design modes. The semantics enable a definitionof [sic] entailment in each, and are in turn used to determine the translation from inheritance networks to belief sets. The formal properties of belief sets imply that when an ambiguous inheritance network is encountered more than than [sic] one belief set must be created. Each belief set provides an alternative interpretation of the logical consequences of the inheritance heirarchy [sic]. A 'situations matrix' provides the basic referent data structure for the system we describe. Detailed examples of multiple inheritance construction demonstrate that a significant design aid results from an explicit representation of operator beliefs and their internalization using an epistemic logic.}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @incollection{ ekman_p:1979a, author = {Paul Ekman}, title = {About Brows: Emotional and Conversational Signals}, editor = {M. von Cranach and K. Foppa and W. Lepenies and D. Ploog}, booktitle = {Human Ethology: Claims and Limits of a New Discipline: Contributions to the Colloquium}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, address = {Cambridge}, year = {1979}, pages = {169--202}, topic = {emotion;facial-expression;} } @book{ ekman_p:1982a, editor = {Paul Ekman}, title = {Emotion in the Human Face}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1982}, address = {Cambridge}, ISBN = {0521239923}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF561 .E36 1982.}, topic = {emotion;facial-expression;} } @book{ ekman_p:1985a, author = {Paul Ekman}, title = {Telling Lies: Clues to Deceit in the Marketplace, Politics, and Marriage}, publisher = {Norton}, year = {1985}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0393018830}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF637.T77 E381 1985.}, topic = {deception;} } @article{ ekman_p:1990a, author = {Paul Ekman and Richard J. Davidson and Wallace V. Friesen}, title = {The Duchenne Smile: Emotional Expression and Brain Physiology {II}}, journal = {Journal of Personality and Social Psychology}, volume = {58}, number = {2}, pages = {342--353}, year = {1990}, topic = {emotion;facial-expression;} } @article{ ekman_p:1992a, author = {Paul Ekman}, title = {An Argument for Basic Emotions}, journal = {Cognition and Emotion}, volume = {6}, number = {3/4}, pages = {169--200}, year = {1992}, topic = {emotion;cognitive-psychology;} } @book{ ekman_p:1997a, author = {Paul Ekman}, title = {What the Face Reveals: Basic and Applied Studies of Spontaneous Expression Using the Facial Action Coding System ({FACS})}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0195104463}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Bf 592 .F33 W431 1997.}, topic = {facial-expression;} } @book{ ekman_p-etal:1985a, author = {Paul Ekman and Wallace V. Friesen and Phoebe Ellsworth}, title = {Emotion in the Human Face: Guide-Lines for Research and an Integration of Findings}, publisher = {Pergamon Press}, year = {1972}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0080166431}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library BF561 .E36}, topic = {emotion;facial-expression;} } @article{ ekman_p-friesen:1969a, author = {Paul Ekman and Wallace V. Friesen}, title = {The Repertoire of Nonverbal Behavior: Categories, Origins, Usage, and Coding}, journal = {Semiotica}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {49--98}, year = {1969}, topic = {nonverbal-behavior;cognitive-psychology;} } @book{ ekman_p-friesen:1975a, author = {Paul Ekman and Wallace V. Friesen}, title = {Unmasking the Face: A Guide To Recognizing Emotions From Facial Clues}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1975}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, ISBN = {013938183X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library BF637.C45 E37}, topic = {emotion;facial-expression;} } @book{ ekman_p-friesen:1978a, author = {Paul Ekman and Wallace V. Friesen}, title = {Facial Action Coding System}, publisher = {Consulting Psychologists Press}, address = {Palo Alto, CA}, year = {1978}, topic = {facial-expression;} } @article{ ekman_p-friesen:1982a, author = {Paul Ekman and Wallace V. Friesen}, title = {Felt, False, and Miserable Smiles}, journal = {Journal of Nonverbal Behavior}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {238--252}, year = {1982}, topic = {facial-expression;emotion;} } @inproceedings{ elborne:2001a, author = {Paul Elborne}, title = {When is Situation Semantics Allowed?}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2001}, editor = {Rachel Hastings and Brendan Jackson and Zsofia Zvolenszky}, pages = {152--171}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {situation-semantics;nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;} } @article{ elbourne_p:2001a, author = {Paul Elbourne}, title = {E-Type Anaphora as {NP}-Deletion}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2001}, volume = {9}, number = {3}, pages = {241--288}, topic = {donkey-anaphora;} } @book{ elbourne_p:2005a, author = {Paul D. Elbourne}, title = {Situations and Individuals}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-05080-3}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;definite-descriptions;proper-names;definiteness;} } @article{ elbourne_p:2008a, author = {Paul Elbourne}, title = {Demonstratives as Individual Concepts}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {409--466}, topic = {demonstratives;individual-concepts;} } @incollection{ elbourne_p:2008b, author = {Paul Elbourne}, title = {The Argument from Binding}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 22, 2008: Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2008}, editor = {John Hawthorne}, pages = {89--110}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {context;nl-semantics;LF;context-sensitivity; nl-quantifiers;} } @article{ elbourne_p:2010a, author = {Paul Elbourne}, title = {On Bishop Sentences}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2010}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {65--78}, topic = {donkey-anaphora;situation-semantics;} } @article{ elbourne_p:2010b, author = {Paul Elbourne}, title = {The Existence Entailments of Definite Descriptions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2010}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {1--10}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ elbourne_p:2010c, author = {Paul Elbourne}, title = {Why Propositions Might Be Sets of Truth-Supporting Circumstances}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {39}, number = {1}, pages = {101--111}, topic = {propositions;situation-semantics;} } @book{ elbourne_p:2011a, author = {Paul Elbourne}, title = {Meaning: A Slim Guide to Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {978-0199696628}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @book{ elbourne_p:2013a, author = {Paul Elbourne}, title = {Definite Descriptions}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2013}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {9780199660193}, abstract = {This book argues that definite descriptions ('the table', 'the King of France') refer to individuals, as Gottlob Frege claimed. This apparently simple conclusion flies in the face of philosophical orthodoxy, which incorporates Bertrand Russell's theory that definite descriptions are devices of quantification. Paul Elbourne presents the first fully-argued defence of the Fregean view. He builds an explicit fragment of English using a version of situation semantics. He uses intrinsic aspects of his system to account for the presupposition projection behaviour of definite descriptions, a range of modal properties, and the problem of incompleteness. At the same time, he draws on an unusually wide range of linguistic and philosophical literature, from early work by Frege, Peano, and Russell to the latest findings in linguistics, philosophy of language, and psycholinguistics. His penultimate chapter addresses the semantics of pronouns and offers a new and more radical version of his earlier thesis that they too are Fregean definite descriptions.}, topic = {definite-descriptions;} } @article{ elbourne_p:2018a, author = {Paul Elbourne}, title = {Vagueness, Contextualism, and Ellipsis}, journal = {Semantics and Pragmatics}, year = {2018}, volume = {12}, number = {22}, abstract = {Stanley (2003) has argued that contextualist theories of vagueness are inconsistent with a certain fact about the interpretation of indexicals in Verb Phrase ellipsis, namely that the semantic content of an indexical in an elided verb phrase must be the same as the semantic content of the corresponding indexical in the antecedent verb phrase. In this paper, some counterexamples are adduced to undermine confidence in this generalization and hence Stanley's argument as a whole. }, doi = {https://doi.org/10.3765/sp.12.22}, xref = {Criticism of: stanley_j:2003a}, topic = {vagueness;context;indexicals;sorites-paradox;contextualism;} } @article{ elbourne_p:2021a, author = {Paul Elbourne}, title = {Presupposition, Assertion, and Definite Descriptions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2021}, volume = {44}, number = {6}, pages = {1215--1253}, abstract = {... It is argued that the latter theories [that the presupposition of 'the' is uniqueness], since they have definite descriptions encode assertoric content to the effect that there is an F, have difficulty accounting for the felicity of 'The F is G' when it is already presupposed that there is an F.}, topic = {definite-descriptions;presupposition;} } @book{ elcock-michie_d:1977a, editor = {W.E. Elcock and Donald Michie}, title = {Machine Intelligence 8}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood}, year = {1977}, address = {Chichester and New York}, ISBN = {085224195X}, topic = {AI-general;} } @incollection{ elfattah_y-peot_ma:2000a, author = {Yousri El Fattah and Mark A. Peot}, title = {A Compositional Structured Query Approach to Automated Inference}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, pages = {213--224}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {... we propose a compositional structured query approach to automated inference based on a unifying database representation. ... We give examples to illustrate how the query composition graph can be reused and incrementally updated for performing reasoning tasks in probabilistic and deterministic networks as well as for performing optimization tasks. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {query-answering;probabilistic-databases;} } @article{ elga_a:2000a, author = {Adam Elga}, title = {Self-Locating Belief and the Sleeping Beauty Problem}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2000}, volume = {60}, number = {2}, pages = {143--147}, topic = {sleeping-beauty-problem;self-locating-constructions;} } @article{ elga_a:2001a, author = {Adam Elga}, title = {Statistical Mechanics and the Asymmetry of Counterfactual Dependence}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2001}, volume = {68}, number = {3}, pages = {313--324}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;} } @article{ elgardo-stainton_rj:2002a, author = {Reinaldo Elgardo and Robert J. Stainton}, title = {Review of \emph{{U}nshadowed Thought: Representations in Thought and Language}, by {C}harles {T}ravis}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2002}, volume = {111}, number = {3}, pages = {470--473}, xref = {Review of: travis_c:2000a}, topic = {truth;representation;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ elgesem:2014a, author = {Dag Elgesem}, title = {The Concept of a Routine in {K}rister {S}egerberg's Philosophy of Action}, booktitle = {{K}rister {S}egerberg on Logic of Actions}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2014}, editor = {Robert Trypuz}, pages = {25--39}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {action;philosophy-of-action;} } @incollection{ elgin_cz:2005a, author = {Catherine Z. Elgin}, title = {Non-Foundationalist Epistemology: Holism, Coherence, and Tenability}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {244--254}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;coherence;epistemology;} } @incollection{ elgin_cz:2005b, author = {Catherine Z. Elgin}, title = {Can Belief Be Justified Through Coherence Alone? Reply to {V}an {C}leve}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {267--268}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reply to: vancleve_j:2005a}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;} } @article{ elgin_cz:2014a, author = {Catherine Z. Elgin}, title = {Fiction as Thought Experiment}, journal = {Perspectives on Science}, year = {2014}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {221--241}, topic = {thought-exeriments;} } @article{ elgin_m-sober_e:2002a1, author = {Mehmet Elgin and Elliott Sober}, title = {Cartwright on Explanation and Idealization}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2002}, volume = {57}, number = {3}, pages = {441--450}, xref = {Republication: elgin_m-sober_e:2002a2}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;} } @incollection{ elgin_m-sober_e:2002a2, author = {Mehmet Elgin and Elliott Sober}, title = {Cartwright on Explanation and Idealization}, booktitle = {Ceteris Paribus Laws}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2003}, editor = {John Earman and Clark Glymour and Sandra Mitchell}, pages = {155--174}, address = {Berlin}, xref = {Commentary on: cartwright_n:1986a}, xref = {Republication of: elgin_m-sober_e:2002a1}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;} } @article{ elgin_m-sober_e:2002a, author = {Mehmet Elgin and Elliot Sober}, title = {Cartwright on Explanation and Idealization}, journal = {Erkenntnis}, year = {2003}, volume = {57}, number = {3}, pages = {441--450}, abstract = {... Cartwright extracts from her thesis about the inapplicability of fundamental laws the conclusion that they cannot figure in covering-law explanations. We construct a different argument for a related conclusion -- that forward-directed idealized dynamical laws cannot provide covering-law explanations that are causal. ...}, topic = {ceteris-paribus-generalizations;natural-laws;causality;explanation;} } @article{ elgin_sz:2021a, author = {Samuel Z. Elgin}, title = {Counterfactual Logic and the Necessity of Mathematics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {1}, pages = {97--115}, abstract = {This paper is concerned with counterfactual logic and its implications for the modal status of mathematical claims. It is most directly a response to an ambitious program by Yli-Vakkuri and Hawthorne (2018), who seek to establish that mathematics is committed to its own necessity. I demonstrate that their assumptions collapse the counterfactual conditional into the material conditional. ... I close by discussing the dispensability of counterfactual conditionals within the language of mathematics.}, topic = {conditionals;philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @techreport{ elgotdrapkin:1988a, author = {Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin}, title = {Step-Logic: Reasoning Situated in Time}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, University of Maryland}, number = {CS-TR-2156}, year = {1988}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;} } @techreport{ elgotdrapkin:1988b, author = {Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin}, title = {Reasoning Situated in Time: Basic Concepts}, institution = {Department of Computer Science, University of Maryland}, number = {CS-TR-2016}, year = {1988}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ elgotdrapkin:1991a, author = {Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin}, title = {Step-Logic and the Three-Wise-Men Problem}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {Thomas Dean and Kathleen McKeown}, pages = {412--417}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ elgotdrapkin-etal:1991a, author = {Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin and Michael Miller and and Donald Perlis}, title = {Memory, Reason, and Time: the Step-Logic Approach}, booktitle = {Philosophy and {AI}: Essays at the Interface}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Robert Cummins and John L. Pollock}, pages = {79--103}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;reasoning-in-time;} } @unpublished{ elgotdrapkin-etal:1996a, author = {Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin and Sarit Kraus and Michael Miller and Madhura Nirke and Donald Perlis}, title = {Active Logics: A Unified Formal Approach to Episodic Reasoning}, year = {1996}, rtnote = {In RHT collection, under "Perlis".}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Computer Science Department, University of Maryland.}, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;foundations-of-AI;active-logic;} } @unpublished{ elgotdrapkin-perlis:1988a, author = {Jennifer Elgot-Drapkin and Donald Perlis}, title = {Reasoning Situated in Time}, year = {1988}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Department of Computer Science, University of Maryland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Year is a guess.}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;reasoning-in-time;} } @phdthesis{ elhadad:1992a, author = {Michael Elhadad}, title = {Using Argumentation to Control Lexical Choice: A Functional Unification Implementation}, school = {Computer Science Department, Columbia University}, year = {1992}, topic = {lexical-choice;nl-generation;} } @article{ elhadad:1995a, author = {Michael Elhadad}, title = {Using Argumentation in Text Generation}, journal = {Journal of Pragmatics}, year = {1995}, volume = {24}, pages = {189--220}, missinginfo = {number}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr11}, topic = {argumentation;nl-generation;} } @article{ elhadad-etal:1997a, author = {Michael Elhadad and Kathy McKeown and Jacques Robin}, title = {Floating Constraints in Lexical Choice}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, volume = {23}, number = {2}, pages = {195--239}, contentnote = {Discusses how to use FUF/SURGE to do lexical choice.}, topic = {lexical-choice;nl-generation;unification-grammars;} } @incollection{ elhadad-robin:1992a, author = {Michael Elhadad and Jacques Robin}, title = {Controlling Content Realization with Functional Unification Grammars}, booktitle = {Aspects of Automated Natural Language Generation: 6th International Workshop on Natural Language Generation, {T}rento, {I}taly, April 5--7, 1992}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, editor = {Robert Dale and Eduard Hovy and Dietmar R\"ossner and Oliviero Stock}, pages = {89--104}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-generation;lexical-choice;functional-unification-grammar;} } @techreport{ elhalad:1991a, author = {Michael Elhadad}, year = {1991}, title = {{FUF}: the Universal Unifier User Manual Version 5.0}, institution = {Columbia University}, number = {CUCS-038-91}, topic = {nl-generation;nl-realization;unification-of-FSs;} } @techreport{ elhalad:1993a, author = {Michael Elhadad}, year = {1993}, title = {{FUF}: the Universal Unifier User Manual Version 5.2}, institution = {Ben Gurion University of the Negev}, note = {Available at http://www.cs.bgu.ac.il/research/projects/surge/index.html}, topic = {nl-generation;nl-realization;unification-of-FSs;} } @techreport{ elhalad:1993b, author = {Michael Elhadad and Jacques Robin}, year = {1993}, title = {An Overview of {SURGE}: A Reusable Comprehensive Syntactic Realization Component}, institution = {Ben Gurion University of the Negev}, note = {Available at http://www.cs.bgu.ac.il/research/projects/surge/index.html}, topic = {nl-generation;nl-realization;unification-of-FSs;} } @article{ eliasmith_c:1997a, author = {Chris Eliasmith}, title = {Computation and Dynamical Models of Mind}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1997}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {531--541}, abstract = {Van Gelder $\ldots$ relies on the Watt governor to fulfill the role of a dynamicist Turing machine and claims that the Motivational Oscillatory Theory (MOT) provides a sound empirical basis for dynamicism. $\ldots$ }, topic = {dynamic-systems;foundations-of-cogsci;} } @article{ eliasmith_c:2001a, author = {Chris Eliasmith}, title = {Attractive and In-discrete}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {417--426}, abstract = {I argue that dynamicism does not provide a convincing alternative to currently available cognitive theories. $\ldots$ }, topic = {philosophy-of-cogsci;dynamic-systems;} } @article{ eliasmith_c:2003a, author = {Chris Eliasmith}, title = {Moving Beyond Metaphors: Understanding the Mind for What It Is}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2003}, volume = {100}, number = {10}, pages = {493--520}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;connectionist-models;} } @book{ elio:2002a, editor = {Ren\'ee Elio}, title = {Common Sense, Reasoning, and Rationality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-19-514766-7}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Ren\'ee Elio, "Issues in Commonsense Reasoning and Rationality", pp. 3--36 2. Stuart Russell, "Rationality and Intelligence", pp. 37--59 3. John L. Pollock, "The Logical Foundations of Means-End Reasoning", pp. 60--77 4. Jenry E. Kyburg, Jr., "Induction and Consistency", pp. 78--92 5. Gilbert Harman, "The Logic of Ordinary Language", pp. 93--103 6. Paul Thagard and Chris Eliasmith and Paul Rusnock and Cameron Shelley, "Knowledge and Coherence", pp. 104--131 7. Denise Dellarosa Cummins, "The Evolutionary Roots of Intelligence and Rationality", pp. 132--147 8. Gerd Gigerenzer and Jean Czerlinski and Laura Martignon, "How Good Are Fast and Frugal Heuristics?", pp. 148--173 9. Mike Oaksford and Nick Chater, "Commonsense Reasoning, Logic, and Human Rationality", pp. 174--214 10. Lance J. Rips, "Reasoning Imperialism", pp. 215--235 11. Richard Samuels and Steven Stich and Michael Bishop, "Ending the Rationality Wars How to Make Disputes about Human Rationality Disappear", pp. 236--268 }, topic = {rational-action;} } @incollection{ elio:2002b, author = {Ren\'ee Elio}, title = {Issues in Commonsense Reasoning and Rationality}, booktitle = {Common Sense, Reasoning, and Rationality}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Ren\'ee Elio}, pages = {3--36}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {This chapter begins by discussing the issue of normative standards, in particular the role human performance plays in specifying these standards for common sense and rationality. It then discusses commonsense knowledge and commonsense reasoning, and rationality. An overview of the subsequent chapters is presented. }, topic = {common-sense-reasoning;rational-action;} } @unpublished{ elio-pelletier_fj:1995a, author = {Ren\'ee Elio and Francis Jeffry Pelletier}, title = {A Study of Belief Update Theories}, year = {1995}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Univesity of Alberta.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {Year is a guess.}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @book{ elithorn-jones_d:1973a, editor = {Alick Elithorn and David Jones}, title = {Artificial and Human Thinking}, publisher = {Jossey-Bass}, year = {1973}, address = {San Francisco}, ISBN = {087589156X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library BF455 N125 1971}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;} } @article{ elkan_c:1990a, author = {Charles Elkan}, title = {A Rational Reconstruction of Nonmonotonic Truth Maintenance Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, volume = {43}, number = {2}, pages = {219--234}, acontentnote = {The main contribution of this paper is a precise characterization of the inferences performed by nonmonotonic truth maintenance systems (TMSs), using two standard nonmonotonic formalisms: logic programming with the stable set semantics and autoepistemic logic. The paper also contains an analysis of the role of dependency-directed backtracking in dealing with contradictions, and a proof that implementing a nonmonotonic TMS is an NP-complete problem. }, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;truth-maintenance;backtracking;} } @inproceedings{ elkan_c:1991a, author = {Charles Elkan}, title = {Formalizing Causation in First-Order Logic}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Logical Formalizations of Commonsense Reasoning}, year = {1991}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {Get via www?}, missinginfo = {pages}, topic = {causality;} } @inproceedings{ elkan_c:1992b, author = {Charles Elkan}, title = {Reasoning about Action in First-Order Logic}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Conference of the {C}anadian {S}ociety for {C}omputational {S}tudies of {I}ntelligence ({CSCSI})}, year = {1992}, pages = {221--227}, organization = {Canadian Society for Computational Studies of Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufman}, address = {San Francisco}, editor = {Robert F. Hadley}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja23\elkan1.pdf}, topic = {planning-formalisms;action-formalisms;} } @inproceedings{ elkan_c:1993a, author = {Charles Elkan}, title = {The Paradoxical Success of Fuzzy Logic}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Richard E. Fikes and Wendy Lehnert}, pages = {698--703}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {uncertainty-in-AI;foundations-of-AI;fuzzy-logic;} } @inproceedings{ elkan_c:1995a, author = {Charles Elkan}, title = {On Solving the Qualification Problem}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Extending Theories of Action: Formal Theories and Applications}, year = {1995}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, editor = {Craig Boutilier and Moises Goldszmidt}, url = {https://aaai.org/Library/Symposia/Spring/ss95-07.php}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection.}, pages = {77--79}, abstract = {... This position paper argues that the qualification problem is intrinsically computational as opposed to representational. This ... [implies] that the qualification problem cannot be solved using currently available representation formalisms. For a future representation formalism to help in solving the qualification problem, it will be vital for it to possess a context mechanism.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de22}, topic = {kr;qualification-problem;context;} } @inproceedings{ elkan_c:1995b, author = {Charles Elkan}, title = {Formalizing Counterfactual and Nondeterministic Actions in First Order Logic}, booktitle = {Working Notes of the {AAAI} Spring Symposium on Extending Theories of Action: Formal Theories and Applications}, year = {1995}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection.}, missinginfo = {pages}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja23\elkan2.pdf}, topic = {actions;nondeterministic-action;counterfactuals;action-formalisms;} } @incollection{ elkins_a:2015a, author = {Aaron Elkins}, title = {Unobtrusive Deception Detection}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Affective Computing}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {Rafael A. Calvo and Sidney K. D'Mello and Jonathan Gratch and Arvid Kappas}, pages = {503--515}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;} } @article{ ellerman_d:2021a, author = {David Ellerman}, title = {On Abstraction in Mathematics and Indefiniteness in Quantum Mechanics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {4}, pages = {813--835}, abstract = {... This paper developments simple mathematical models of [two] types of abstraction and shows, for instance, how finite probability theory can be interpreted using abstracts as "superposition events" in addition to the ordinary events. The goal is to use the second notion of abstraction to shed some light on the notion of an indefinite superposition in quantum mechanics. }, topic = {abstraction;probability;quantum-mechanics;} } @incollection{ elliott_c:2002a, author = {Clark Elliott}, title = {The Role of Elegance in Emotion and Personality: Reasoning for Believable Agents}, booktitle = {Emotions in Humans and Artifacts}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Robert Trappl and Paolo Petta and Sabine Payr}, pages = {237--249}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {emotions;} } @article{ elliott_c-brzezinski:1998a, author = {Clark Elliott and Jacek Brzezinski}, title = {Autonomous Agents as Synthetic Characters}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1998}, volume = {19}, number = {2}, pages = {13--30}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. mm\resource}, topic = {AI-and-fiction;fictional-characters;autonomous-agents; synthesized-emotions;simulated-characters;} } @incollection{ elliott_c-etal:1999a, author = {Clark Elliott and Jeff Rickel and James Lester}, title = {Lifelike Pedagogical Agents and Affective Computing: An Exploratory Synthesis}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence Today}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Michael Wooldridge and Manuela Veloso}, pages = {195--212}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {intelligent-tutoring;synthesized-emotions;} } @article{ elliott_e:2017a, author = {Edward Elliott}, title = {A Representation Theorem for Frequently Irrational Agents}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2017}, volume = {46}, number = {5}, pages = {467--506}, topic = {limited-rationality;representation-theorems;} } @incollection{ elliott_j-etal:2000a, author = {John Elliott and Eric Antwell and Bill Whyte}, title = {Increasing our Ignorance of Language: Identifying Language Structure in an Unknown `Signal{'}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {25--30}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;communication-with-aliens;} } @article{ elliott_jr:2000a, author = {Jennifer R. Elliott}, title = {Realis and Irrealis: Forms and Concepts of the Grammaticalisation of Reality}, journal = {Linguistic Typology}, year = {2000}, volume = {4}, number = {1}, pages = {55--90}, topic = {subjunctive-mood;linguistic-typology;} } @article{ elliott_pd:2023a, author = {Patrick D. Elliott}, title = {A Flexible Scope Theory of Intensionality}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {2}, pages = {333--378}, abstract = {... building on Keshet (L&P), we aim to reconcile a scopal account of de re with the possibility of de re readings out of scope islands. By adapting compositional techniques for dealing with exceptionally scoping indefinites ...we develop an intensional grammar in which exceptional de re is achieved via cyclic scope. ... Type flexibility explains the possibility of apparently island-violating de re by predicting the possibility of cyclic scope-taking. ... }, topic = {intensionality;operator-scope;} } @book{ ellis_a-harper_ra:1961a, author = {Albert Ellis and Robert A. Harper}, title = {A Guide to Rational Living}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, year = {1961}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {decision-theory;} } @article{ ellis_b:1952a, author = {Brian Ellis}, title = {I Can, If {I} Choose}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1952}, volume = {12}, number = {6}, pages = {128--129}, topic = {ability;conditionals;freedom;} } @incollection{ ellis_b:1965a, author = {Brian Ellis}, title = {The Origin and Nature of {N}ewton's Laws of Motion}, booktitle = {Beyond the Edge of Certainty: Essays in Contemporary Science and Philosophy}, editor = {Robert G. Colodny}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall, Inc.}, year = {1965}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {philosophy-of-physics;} } @article{ ellis_b:1973a, author = {Brian Ellis}, title = {The Logic of Subjective Probability}, journal = {British Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year = {1979}, volume = {24}, pages = {125--152}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;probability-semantics;} } @article{ ellis_b:1976a, author = {Brian Ellis}, title = {Epistemic Foundations of Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1976}, volume = {5}, number = {2}, pages = {187--204}, topic = {probability-semantics;epistemic-semantics;} } @article{ ellis_b:1978a, author = {Brian Ellis}, title = {A Unified Theory of Conditionals}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1978}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {107--124}, content = {The idea is to provide epistemic foundations for conditional logic}, topic = {conditionals;} } @book{ ellis_b:1979a, author = {Brian Ellis}, title = {Rational Belief Systems}, publisher = {Rowman and Littlefield}, year = {1979}, address = {Totowa, New Jersey}, ISBN = {0-8476-6108-3}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {rationality;conditionals;belief-update; probability-semantics;epistemic-semantics;} } @article{ ellis_b:1982a, author = {Brian Ellis}, title = {Reply to {S}orensem}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1982}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {461--462}, topic = {epistemic-semantics;} } @book{ ellis_b:1991a, author = {Rod Ellis}, title = {Data Abstraction and Program Design}, publisher = {Pitman}, year = {1991}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0273032577 (pbk)}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.758 .E5511 1991.}, topic = {software-engineering;} } @book{ ellis_b:2001a, author = {Brian Ellis}, title = {Scientific Essentialism}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Review: clapp_l:2002a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;dispositionals;events;causality; essentialism;} } @article{ ellis_b-etal:1977a, author = {Brian Ellis and Frank Jackson and Robert Pargetter}, title = {An Objection to Possible-World Semantics for Counterfactual Logics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1977}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {355--357}, contentnote = {The objection is based on disjunctive antecedents.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @book{ ellis_c:1989a, author = {Charlie Ellis}, title = {Expert Knowledge and Explanation: The Knowledge-Language Interface}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood}, year = {1989}, address = {Chichester}, ISBN = {0745801668}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, QA 76.76 .E95 E9531 1989.}, topic = {expert-systems;HCI;} } @incollection{ ellis_d:1983a, author = {Donald G. Ellis}, title = {Language, Coherence, and Textuality}, booktitle = {Conversational Coherence: Form, Structure and Strategy}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1983}, editor = {Robert T. Craig and Karen Tracey}, pages = {222--240}, address = {London}, topic = {discourse-coherence;discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @book{ ellis_j:1989a, author = {John M. Ellis}, title = {Against Deconstruction}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Princeton, New Jersey}, contentnote = {Buy this? Attempts a rational arg against deconstruction. Recommended by Poser.}, topic = {deconstructionism;literary-criticism;postmodernism; poststructuralism;} } @article{ ellis_j:2004a, author = {Jonathan Ellis}, title = {Context, Indexicals and the Sorites}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2004}, volume = {64}, number = {4}, pages = {362--364}, xref = {Commentary on: stanley_j:2003a}, topic = {vagueness;context;sorites-paradox;} } @article{ ellis_s:2006a, author = {Stephen Ellis}, title = {Multiple Objectives: A Neglected Problem in the Theory of Human Action}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, volume = {153}, number = {2}, pages = {313--338}, year = {2006}, abstract = {The options that people face are rarely ideal: they are good in some ways and poor in others. People have problems choosing among such options because they don't know which ends to favor. Multiple objectives pose a problem not only for decision makers, but also for our account of decision making. People act to achieve their ends given their beliefs. In order to handle decisions with multiple objectives, however, this story must be supplemented by an account of which ends are implicated in which decisions (e.g., do individual goals guide particular choices? do different ends jointly pick out courses of action?). Unfortunately, such an account is lacking. As a result, there is a gap (at least) in our most basic account of human behavior. In this paper I explore that gap and examine some proposals for closing it.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my17}, topic = {conjunctive-goals;goal-formation;practical-reasoning;} } @phdthesis{ ellis_se:2001a, author = {Stephen E. Ellis}, title = {Multiple Objectives: Commensurability, Calibration, and Decision}, school = {Philosophy Department, Rutgers University}, year = {2001}, type = {Ph.D. Dissertation}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se14\ellis.pdf}, topic = {reasoning-about-goals;conflict-resolution;motives; multiattribute-utility;} } @article{ ellis_se:2006a, author = {Stephen E. Ellis}, title = {Multiple Objectives: A Neglected Problem in the Theory of Human Action}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2006}, volume = {153}, number = {2}, pages = {313--338}, abstract = {The options that people face are rarely ideal: they are good in some ways and poor in others. People have problems choosing among such options because they don't know which ends to favor. Multiple objectives pose a problem not only for decision makers, but also for our account of decision making. People act to achieve their ends given their beliefs. In order to handle decisions with multiple objectives, however, this story must be supplemented by an account of which ends are implicated in which decisions (e.g., do individual goals guide particular choices? do different ends jointly pick out courses of action?). Unfortunately, such an account is lacking. As a result, there is a gap (at least) in our most basic account of human behavior. In this paper I explore that gap and examine some proposals for closing it.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se14}, rtnote = {Rtrnote: Reading notes on file. Rnotes files "ellis"}, topic = {reasoning-about-goals;conflict-resolution;motives; multiattribute-utility;} } @article{ ellis_se:2008a, author = {Stephen E. Ellis}, title = {The Main Argument for Value Incommensurability (and Why It Fails)}, journal = {Southern Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2008}, volume = {46}, number = {1}, pages = {27--43}, topic = {incommensurability-in-ethics;incommensurability-in-preference;} } @book{ ellis_sr:1991a, editor = {Stephen R. Ellis}, title = {Pictorial Communication in Virtual and Real Environments}, publisher = {Taylor \& Francis}, year = {1991}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0748400087}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, TA 1632 .P62 1991.}, topic = {virtual-reality;HCI;} } @book{ ellison:1997a, editor = {T. Mark Ellison}, title = {{CoNLL97}: Computational Natural Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Amit Bagga and Joyce Yue Chai, "A Trainable Message Understanding System" 2. Mary Elaine Calif and Raymond J. Mooney, "Relational Learning of Pattern-Match Rules for Information Extraction" 3. Wide R. Hogenbout and Yuji Matsumoto, "A Preliminary Study of Word Clustering Based on Syntactic Behavior" 4. Ji Donghong and He Jun and Huang Changning, "Learning New Compositions from Given Ones" 5. Mehmet Kayaalp and Ted Pedersen and Rebecca Bruce, "A Statistical Decision Making Method: A Case Study on Prepositional Attachment" 6. Emin Erkan Korkmaz and G\"okt\"urk \"U\c{c}oluk, "A Method for Improving Automatic Word Categorization" 7. Montse Maritxalar and Arantza D\'iaz de Ilarraza and Maite Oronez, "From Psychologic Modeling of Interlanguage in Second Language Acquisition to a Computational Model" 8. Laura Mayfield Tomokiyo and Klaus Ries, "What Makes a Word: Learning Base Units in {J}apanese for Speech Recognition" 9. Ramin Charles Nakisa and Kim Plunkett, "Evolution of a Rapidly Learned Representation for Speech" 10. Miles Osborne and Ted Briscoe, "Learning Stochastic Categorial Grammars" 11. David M.W. Powers, "Learning and Application of Differential Grammars" 12. Jennifer Rodd, "Recurrent Neural-Network Learning of Phonological Regularities in {T}urkish" 13. Khalil Sima'an, "Recurrent Neural-Network Learning of Phonological Regularities in {T}urkish" 14. Christoph Tilman and Hermann Ney, "Explanation-Based Learning of Data-Oriented Parsing" 15. Werner Winiwarter and Yahiko Kambayashi, "A Comparative Study of the Application of Different Learning Techniques to Natural Language Interface" 16. Jakub Zavrel and Walter Daelemans and Jorn Veenstra, "Resolving PP Attachment Ambiguities with Memory-Based Learning" }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. ACL Shelves.}, topic = {machine-language-learning;word-acquisition;} } @article{ ellman-giunchiglia_f:2005a, author = {Thomas Ellman and Fausto Giunchiglia}, title = {Introduction to the Special Volume on Reformulation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {162}, number = {1--2}, pages = {3--5}, topic = {problem-reformulation;problem-solving;} } @incollection{ ellsberg:1988a, author = {Daniel Ellsberg}, title = {Risk, Ambiguity, and the {S}avage Axioms}, booktitle = {Decision, Probability, Utility: Selected Readings}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Peter G\"ardenfors and Nils-Eric Sahlin}, pages = {245--269}, address = {Cambridge, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {decision-theory;} } @incollection{ ellsworth:2005a, author = {Phoebe C. Ellsworth}, title = {Legal Reasoning}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Keith J. Holyoak and Robert G. Morrison}, pages = {685--703}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;legal-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ elmi:1998a, author = {Mohammad Ali Elmi and Martha Evens}, title = {Spelling Correction using Context}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {360--364}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {spelling-correction;context;} } @article{ elnashar_a-lotfallah_wb:2018a, author = {Amr Elnashar and Wafik Boulos Lotfallah}, title = {Minimal Complete Propositional Natural Deduction Systems}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2018}, volume = {47}, number = {5}, pages = {803--815}, topic = {proof-theory;completeness-theorems;} } @article{ elpidorou_a:2008a, author = {Andreas Elpidorou}, title = {Review of \emph{Out of Our Heads: Why You are Not Your Brain, and Other Lessons From the Biology of Consciousness}, by {A}lva {N}o\"e}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2008}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {155--159}, xref = {Review of: noe:2009a.}, topic = {consciousness;neurocognition;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ elpidorou_a:2011a, author = {Andreas Elpidorou}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}ognitive Systems and the Extended Mind}, by {R}obert {D}. {R}upert}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {107--113}, xref = {Review of:}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;embedded-cognition;} } @article{ elpidorou_a:2018a, author = {Andreas Elpidorou}, title = {Review of \emph{{M}eaning, Mind, and Knowledge}, by {C}hristopher {S}. {H}ill}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2018}, volume = {127}, number = {2}, pages = {264--268}, xref = {hill_cs:2014a}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;philosophy-of-mind;epistemology;} } @article{ elqayam-evans_sbt:2011a, author = {Shira Elqayam and Jonathan St. B.T. Evans}, title = {Subtracting `ought' from `is': Descriptivism versus Normativism in the Study of Human Thinking}, journal = {Behavioral and Brain Sciences}, year = {2011}, volume = {34}, number = {5}, pages = {233--290}, doi = {10.1017/S0140525X1100001X}, abstract = {We propose a critique of normativism, defined as the idea that human thinking reflects a normative system against which it should be measured and judged. $\ldots$ Drawing on linguistics as a model, we propose that a clear distinction between normative systems and competence theories is essential $\ldots$ Normativism triggers a host of research biases in the psychology of reasoning and decision making: $\ldots$ normativism can lead to a fallacious `ought-is' inference, in which normative responses are taken as diagnostic of analytic reasoning. We propose that little can be gained from normativism that cannot be achieved by descriptivist computational-level analysis $\ldots$ We conclude that theories of higher mental processing would be better off freed from normative considerations.}, topic = {normativity;philosophy-of-psychology;} } @incollection{ elson:2004a, author = {David K. Elson}, title = {Categorization of Narrative Semantics for Use in Generative Multidocument Summarization}, booktitle = {Natural Language Generation: Third International Conference, INLG 2004}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2004}, editor = {Anja Belz and Roger Evans and Paul Piwek}, pages = {192--197}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {text-summary;} } @book{ elster_j:1978a, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Logic and Society: Contradictions and Possible Worlds}, publisher = {Wiley}, year = {1978}, address = {New York}, ISBN-13 = {978-0471995494}, xref = {Discussion: lucas_s:1980a}, topic = {philosophy-of-sociology;modal-logic;} } @book{ elster_j:1985a, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Ulysses and the Sirens: Studies in Rationality and Irrationality}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {rationality;} } @book{ elster_j:1985b, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Sour Grapes}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, series = {Studies in Rationality and Social Change}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {rationality;} } @book{ elster_j:1985c, editor = {Jon Elster}, title = {The Multiple Self}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {9780521346832}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Jon Elster, "Introduction", pp. 1--34 2. George A. Quattrone and Amos Tversky, "Self-Decption and the Voter's Illusion", pp. 35--58 3. David Pears, "The Goals and Strategies of Self-Deception", pp. 59--78 4. Donald Davidson, "Deception and Division", pp. 79--92 5. Jon Elster, "Deception and Self-Deception in {S}tendhal", pp. 93--114 6. Am\'elie Oksenberg Rorty, "Self-Deceotion, \emph{akrasia} and Irrationality", pp. 115--132 7. George Ainslie, "Beyond Microeconomics: Conflict among Interests in a Multiple Self as a Determinant of Value", pp. 133--176 8. Thomas Schelling, "The Mind as a Consuming Organ", pp. 177--196 9. Ian Steedman and Ulrich Krause, "{G}oethe's Faust, {A}rrow's Possibility Theorem and the Individual Decision-Taker", pp. 197--232 10. Serge-Christophe Kolm, "The {B}uddhist Theory of `No-Self{'}", pp. 233--266 } , topic = {self-deception;practical-reasoning;society-of-mind;} } @incollection{ elster_j:1985d, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {The Multiple Self}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, editor = {Jon Elster}, pages = {1--34}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {self-deception;practical-reasoning;society-of-mind;} } @incollection{ elster_j:1985e, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Deception and Self-Deception in {S}tendhal}, booktitle = {The Multiple Self}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1985}, editor = {Jon Elster}, pages = {93--114}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {self-deception;} } @incollection{ elster_j:1985f, author = {John Elster}, title = {The Nature and Scope of Rational Choice Explanation}, booktitle = {Actions and Events: Perspectives on the Philosophy of {D}onald {D}avidson}, publisher = {Basil Blackwell Ltd.}, year = {1985}, editor = {Ernest LePore and Brian P. McLaughlin}, pages = {60--72}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {intention;rationality;practical-reasoning;} } @book{ elster_j:1987a, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {The Multiple Self}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1987}, series = {Studies in Rationality and Social Change}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {rationality;} } @book{ elster_j:1989a, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Solomonic Judgements: Studies in the Limitation of Rationality}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1989}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {rationality;} } @book{ elster_j:1999a, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Alchemies of the Mind: Rationality and the Emotions}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052164487-9 (Pbk)}, xref = {Reviews: solomon_r:2001a, beardman:2004a.}, topic = {emotion;rationality;} } @book{ elster_j:1999b, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Strong Feelings: Emotion, Addiction, and Human Behavior}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-05056-0}, xref = {Review: charland:2001a.}, topic = {emotion;addiction;} } @book{ elster_j:2000a, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Strong Feelings: Emotion, Addiction and Human Behavior}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0-262-55036-9}, xref = {Review: charland:2001a.}, topic = {emotion;addiction;} } @book{ elster_j:2000b, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Ulysses Unbound}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2000}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052166561-2 (pbk)}, topic = {rationality;limited-rationality;pr-course;} } @incollection{ elster_j:2004a, author = {Jon Elster}, title = {Moral Dilemmas of Transitional Justice}, booktitle = {Practical Conflicts: New Philosophical Essays}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Peter Baumann and Monika Betzler}, pages = {295--315}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {moral-conflict;philosophy-of-law;} } @book{ elster_j-hylland:1989a, author = {Jon Elster and Aanund Hylland}, title = {The Foundations of Social Choice Theory}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1989}, series = {Studies in Rationality and Social Change}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {rationality;social-choice-theory;} } @book{ elster_j-roemer:1993a, editor = {Jon Elster and John E. Roemer}, title = {Interpersonal Comparisons of Well-Being}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1993}, series = {Studies in Rationality and Social Change}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {rationality;} } @book{ elster_j-skog:1999a, editor = {Jon Elster and Ole-J{\o}rgen Skog}, title = {Getting Hooked}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {052164008-3}, topic = {rationality;addiction;} } @article{ elton:1994a, author = {Matthew Elton}, title = {Review of \emph{{C}onsciousness Explained}, by {D}aniel {D}ennett}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1994}, volume = {4}, number = {3}, pages = {357--362}, xref = {Review of dennett_dc:1991a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mind;consciousness;} } @article{ elton:1998a, author = {Matthew Elton}, title = {Dennett Explained?: A Critical Study of {D}ahlbom's {D}ennett and His Critics}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1998}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {395--413}, xref = {Review of: dahlbom:1993a.}, topic = {Daniel-Dennett;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ elton:2001a, author = {Matthew Elton}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Meme Machine.}, by {S}usan {B}lackmore}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {3}, pages = {437--442}, xref = {Review of: blackmore:1999a.}, topic = {evolutionary-psychology;} } @book{ elugardo-stainton_rj:2005a, editor = {Reinaldo Elugardo and Robert J. Stainton}, title = {Ellipsis and Non-sentential Speech}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2005}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;ellipsis;} } @article{ elworthy:1995a, author = {David A.H. Elworthy}, title = {A Theory of Semantic Information}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1995}, volume = {18}, number = {3}, pages = {297--332}, contentnote = {Develops a theory of shared information that is different from that of dynamic logic and DRT. There is also a theory of context. Read this.}, rtnote = {pragmatics-course;}, topic = {nl-semantics;anaphora;context;plural;donkey-anaphora; pragmatics;} } @inproceedings{ elzer-etal:2005a, author = {Stephanie Elzer and Sandra Carberry and Daniel Chester and and Seniz Demir and Nancy Green and Ingrid Zukerman and Keith Trnka}, title = {Exploring and Exploiting the Limited Utility of Captions in Recognizing Intention in Information Graphics}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL'05)}, month = {June}, year = {2005}, address = {Ann Arbor, Michigan}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, pages = {223--230}, url = {http://www.aclweb.org/anthology/P/P05/P05-1028}, topic = {multimedia-interpretation;} } @article{ elzer-etal:2011a, author = {Stephanie Elzer and Sandra Carberry and Ingrid Zukerman}, title = {The Automated Understanding of Simple Bar Charts}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {2}, pages = {526--555}, topic = {reasoning-with-diagrams;} } @article{ embik:2004a, author = {David Embik}, title = {On the Structure of Resultative Participles in {E}nglish}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {2004}, volume = {35}, number = {3}, pages = {355--392}, topic = {resultative-constructions;} } @article{ embleton:1991a, author = {Sheila Embleton}, title = {Names and Their Substitutes: Onomastic Observations on Ast\'erix and Its Translations}, journal = {Target}, year = {1991}, volume = {3}, number = {2}, pages = {175--206}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection}, topic = {humor;} } @article{ embry:2014a, author = {Brian Embry}, title = {Counterfactuals without Possible Worlds? A Difficulty for {F}ine's Exact Semantics for Counterfactuals}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2014}, volume = {111}, number = {5}, pages = {276--287}, xref = {Criticism of fine_k:2012a}, topic = {conditionals;} } @inproceedings{ emele-dorna:1998a, author = {Martin C. Emele and Michael Dorna}, title = {Ambiguity Preserving Machine Translation using Packed Representations}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {365--371}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {machine-translation;ambiguity;} } @incollection{ emerson:1990a, author = {{E. Allen} Emerson}, title = {Temporal and Modal Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Theoretical Computer Science. Volume B}, publisher = {North-Holland}, year = {1990}, editor = {Jan {van Leeuwen}}, address = {Amsterdam}, pages = {995--1072}, topic = {temporal-logic;modal-logic;tmix-project;} } @article{ emerson-clarke_em:1982a, author = {{E. Allen} Emerson and E.M. Clarke}, title = {Using Branching Time Temporal Logic to Synthesize Temporal Skeletons}, journal = {Science of Computer Programming}, year = {1982}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {241--266}, missinginfo = {Is this reference correct?}, topic = {branching-time;tmix-project;} } @techreport{ emerson-halpern_jy:1984a, author = {{E. Allen} Emerson and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {\,`Sometimes' and `Not Ever' Revisited: On Branching vs. Linear Time}, institution = {{IBM} Research Laboratory}, number = {RJ 4197}, year = {1984}, address = {San Jose, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {branching-time;} } @article{ emerson-halpern_jy:1985a, author = {{E. Allen} Emerson and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Decision Procedures and Expressiveness in the Temporal Logic of Branching Time}, journal = {Journal of Computer and System Sciences}, year = {1985}, volume = {30}, number = {1}, pages = {1--24}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {branching-time;} } @article{ emerson-halpern_jy:1985b, author = {{E. Allen} Emerson and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {\,`Sometimes' and `Not Never' Revisited: On Branching Versus Linear Time Temporal Logic}, journal = {Journal of the {ACM}}, year = {1985}, volume = {33}, number = {1}, pages = {151--178}, topic = {branching-time;} } @inproceedings{ emerson-sistla:1994a, author = {{E. Allen} Emerson and A.P. Sistla}, title = {Deciding Branching Time Logic}, booktitle = {Sixteenth Annual {ACM} Symposium on Theory of Computing}, year = {1984}, pages = {14--24}, organization = {ACM}, missinginfo = {publisher, address}, topic = {branching-time;} } @incollection{ emerson-srinivasan_j:1989a, author = {{E. Allen} Emerson and J. Srinivasan}, title = {Branching Time Temporal Logic}, booktitle = {Linear Time, Branching Time and Partial Order in Logics and Models for Concurrency}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1989}, editor = {J.W. de Bakker and W.P. de Roever and Grezegorz Rozenburg}, pages = {123--172}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {A's, E's 1st name.}, topic = {temporal-logic;modal-logic;branching-time;tmix-project; concurrency;} } @article{ emery_n:2017a, author = {Nina Emery}, title = {A Naturalist's Guide to Objective Chance}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2017}, volume = {84}, number = {3}, pages = {480--499}, topic = {chance;foundations-of-probability;} } @book{ emmorey_k-reilly_js:1995a, editor = {Karen Emmorey and Judy S. Reilly}, title = {Language, Gesture and Space}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1995}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, ISBN = {9781138979376}, topic = {American-sign-language;gestures;} } @book{ emmott:1999a, author = {Catherine Emmott}, title = {Narrative Comprehension: A Discourse Perspective}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1999}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-823868-1 (hardback), 0-19-923649-2 (paperback)}, topic = {narrative-understanding;discourse-analysis fictional-characters;narrative-genre;} } @incollection{ emms:1997a, author = {Martin Emms}, title = {Models for Polymorphic {L}ambek Calculus}, booktitle = {{LACL}'96: First International Conference on Logical Aspects of Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1997}, editor = {Christian Retor/'e}, pages = {168--187}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {logic-and-nl-processing;Lambek-calculus;} } @article{ emonds_b:2000a, author = {Bruce Emonds}, title = {The Constructability of Artificial Intelligence (As Defined by the {T}uring Test)}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {419--424}, topic = {foundations-of-AI;} } @incollection{ emonds_j:1972a, author = {Joseph Emonds}, title = {A Reformulation of Certain Syntactic Transformations}, booktitle = {Goals of Linguistic Theory}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall, Inc.}, year = {1972}, editor = {Stanley Peters}, pages = {21--61}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {transformational-grammar;} } @incollection{ emonds_j:1975a, author = {Joseph Emonds}, title = {Arguments for Assigning Tense Meanings after Certain Syntactic Transformations Apply}, booktitle = {Formal Semantics of Natural Language}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1975}, editor = {Edward L. Keenan}, pages = {351--372 }, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-tense;} } @book{ emonds_j:1976a, author = {Joseph Emonds}, title = {A Transformational Approach to {E}nglish Syntax}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1978}, address = {New York}, topic = {transformational-grammar;} } @book{ empiricus:1998a, author = {Sextus Empiricus}, title = {Against the Grammarians}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, note = {Translated by D.L. BLank. Introduction and commentary.}, xref = {Review: sakezles:2001a.}, topic = {Hellenistic-philosophy;skepticism;philosophy-of-linguistics;} } @article{ enayat:2004a, author = {Ali Enayat}, title = {Leibnizian Models of Set Theory}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2004}, volume = {69}, number = {3}, pages = {775--789}, topic = {model-theory;set-theory;} } @book{ enc_b:2003a, author = {Berent En\c{c}}, title = {How We Act: Causes, Reasons and Intentions}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-925602-0}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, xref = {Review: aguilar:2005a}, topic = {philosophy-of-action;volition;causality;intention;} } @article{ enc_m:1986a, author = {M\"urvet En\c{c}}, title = {Towards a Referential Analysis of Temporal Expressions}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1986}, volume = {9}, number = {4}, pages = {405--426}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-to-logic-mapping;nl-tense;} } @article{ enc_m:1991a, author = {M\"urvet En\c{c}}, title = {The Semantics of Specificity}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1991}, volume = {22}, number = {1}, pages = {1--26}, topic = {nl-semantics;specificity;indefiniteness;} } @incollection{ enc_m:1996a, author = {M\"urvet En\c{c}}, title = {Tense and Modality}, booktitle = {The Handbook of Contemporary Semantic Theory}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, editor = {Shalom Lappin}, pages = {345--358}, topic = {nl-tense;nl-modality;} } @article{ enc_m:2000a, author = {Murvet En\c{c}}, title = {Anchoring conditions for Tense}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {2000}, volume = {18}, number = {1--2}, pages = {633--657}, topic = {nl-tense;} } @article{ enderton_hb:1995a, author = {Herbert B. Enderton}, title = {In Memorium, {A}lonzo {C}hurch, 1903--1995}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1995}, volume = {1}, number = {4}, pages = {486--488}, topic = {Church;} } @article{ enderton_hb:1998a, author = {Herbert B. Enderton}, title = {Alonzo {C}hurch and the Reviews}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1998}, volume = {4}, number = {2}, pages = {172--180}, topic = {Church;history-of-logic;} } @book{ enderton_hb:2001a, author = {Herbert B. Enderton}, edition = {2}, title = {A Mathematical Introduction To Logic}, publisher = {Harcourt/Academic Press}, year = {2001}, address = {San Diego}, ISBN = {0122384520}, rtnote = {Umich Science, QA 9 .E57 2001.}, xref = {Review: dobrinen:2003a.}, topic = {logic-intro;} } @book{ enderton_hb:2011a, author = {Herbert B. Enderton}, title = {Computability Theory: An Introduction to Recursion Theory}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2011}, address = {Amsterdam}, ISBN = {978-0-12-384958-8}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Logic Shelves}, topic = {computability;} } @incollection{ endicott_t:2011a, author = {Timothy Endicott}, title = {Vagueness and Law}, booktitle = {Vagueness: A Guide}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2011}, editor = {Giuseppina Ronzitti}, pages = {171--192}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {vagueness;logic-and-law;} } @book{ endress:2009a, author = {Cornelia Endress}, title = {Quantificational Topics: A Scopal Treatment of Exceptional Wide Scope Phenomena}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2009}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-90-481-2302-5}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifier-scope;s-topic;information-structure;} } @inproceedings{ endriss_u-etal:2016a, author = {Ulle Endriss and Umberto Grandi and Ronald de Haan and Jerome Lang}, title = {Succinctness of Languages for Judgment Aggregation}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {176--185}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We review several different languages for collective decision making problems, in which agents express their judgments, opinions, or beliefs over elements of a logically structured domain. ... Our main finding is that the formula-based language of judgment aggregation is more succinct than the constraint-based language of binary aggregation. In many (but not all) practically relevant situations, this increase in succinctness does not entail an increase in complexity of the corresponding problem of computing the outcome of an aggregation rule. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {knowledge-integration;} } @book{ enfield_nj:2015a, author = {Nick J. Enfield}, title = {The Utility of Meaning: What Words Mean and Why}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-870983-1}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {lexical-semantics;sociolinguistics;} } @phdthesis{ engdahl:1980a, author = {Elizabet Engdahl}, title = {The Syntax and Semantics of Questions in {S}wedish}, school = {Linguistics Department, University of Massachusetts}, year = {1980}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Amherst, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Engdahl"}, topic = {interrgatives;nl-semantics;Swedish-language;} } @article{ engdahl:1982a, author = {Elizabet Engdahl}, title = {A Note on the Use of Lambda Conversion in Generalized Phrase Structure Grammars}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1982}, volume = {4}, number = {4}, pages = {505--515}, topic = {GPSG;nl-semantics;} } @article{ engdahl:1983a, author = {Elizabet Engdahl}, title = {Parasitic Gaps}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1983}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {5--34}, topic = {parasitic-gaps;anaphora;ellipsis;} } @book{ engdahl:1986a, author = {Elizabet Engdahl}, title = {Constituent Questions}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1986}, address = {Dordrecht}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {interrogatives;nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ engdahl:1988a, author = {Elizabet Engdahl}, title = {Relational Interpretation}, booktitle = {Mental Representations: The Interface Between Language and Reality}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Ruth Kempson}, pages = {63--82}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {situation-semantics;interrogatives;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @incollection{ engdahl:1990a, author = {Elizabet Engdahl}, title = {Argument Roles and Anaphora}, booktitle = {Situation Theory and Its Applications, Volume 1}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {1990}, editor = {Robin Cooper and Kuniaki Mukai and John Perry}, pages = {379--393}, address = {Standford, California}, note = {CSLI Lecture Notes, Number 22.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {thematic-roles;anaphora;} } @article{ engdahl:2000a, author = {Elizabet Engdahl}, title = {Editorial: Is {JoLLI} a Journal for Linguists?}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2000}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {141--142}, topic = {logic-and-linguistics;} } @incollection{ engdahl-vallduvi_e:1994a, author = {Elisabeth Engdahl and Enric Vallduv\'{\i}}, title = {Information Packaging and Grammar Architecture: A Constraint-Based Approach}, year = {1994}, editor = {Elisabeth Engdahl}, booktitle = {Integrating Information Structure into Constraint-Based and Categorial Approaches}, pages = {39--79}, publisher = {ILLC}, address = {Amsterdam}, note = {DYANA-2 Report R.1.3.B}, topic = {situation-semantics;information-structure;} } @incollection{ engel_p:1984a, author = {Pascal Engel}, title = {Functionalism, Belief, and Content}, booktitle = {The Mind and the Machine: Philosophical Aspects of Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood, Ltd.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Steve B. Torrance}, pages = {51--63}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {belief;propositional-attitudes;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ engel_p:2013a, author = {Pascal Engel}, title = {Is Epistemic Agency Possible?}, booktitle = {Epistemic Agency}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2013}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva and Baron Reed}, pages = {158--178}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {epistemology;agency;} } @incollection{ engelberg_kj:1979a, author = {Klaus-J\"urgen Engelberg}, title = {A New Approach to Formal Syntax}, booktitle = {Semantics from Different Points of View}, year = {1979}, editor = {Rainer B\"auerle and Urs Egli and Arnim {von Stechow}}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, pages = {226--265}, topic = {nl-syntax;} } @article{ engelberg_s:2002a, author = {Stefan Engelberg}, title = {Intransitive Accomplishments and the Lexicon: The Role of Implicit Arguments, Definiteness, and Reflexivity in Aspectual Composition}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2002}, volume = {19}, number = {4}, pages = {349--416}, abstract = {Theories of aspectual composition assume that accomplishments arise when a transitive verb has an incremental theme argument which is realized as a quantized NP -- foremost, an NP which is not a mass noun or a bare plural --foremost, an NP which is not a mass noun or a bare plural -- in direct object position. A problem confronting this assumption is the large number of intransitive, unergative verbs in German and English that occur in accomplishment expressions. The paper argues that this problem can be solved within a standard theory of aspectual composition if additional, independently motivated lexical assumptions about argument structure, the representation of implicit arguments and lexical presuppositions are made. It turns out that a distinction between lexically determined definiteness versus non-definiteness of implicit arguments in particular plays a crucial role, as well as one between implicitly reflexive and non-reflexive arguments in that implicitly definite and implicitly reflexive arguments allow for accomplishment expressions. This is explained by the semantics of definiteness and reflexivity, respectively. Apart from these verbs, there is another large group of unergatives which show that, in contrast to a common assumption in aspectual composition theory, verbs themselves and not only VPs can be quantized. This leads to a lexical distinction between mass and count verbs. }, topic = {nl-semantics;tense-aspect;} } @incollection{ engelberg_s:2011a, author = {Stefan Engelberg}, title = {Lexical Decomposition: Foundational Issues}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {124--143}, address = {The Hague}, abstract = {.. The article sketches the early theoretical development from noun-oriented semantic feature theories to verb-oriented complex decompositions. It also deals with a number of theoretical issues, including the controversy between decompositional and atomistic approaches to meaning, the search for semantic primitives, the function of decompositions as definitions, problems concerning the interpretability of decompositions, and the debate about the cognitive status of decompositions.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de20}, topic = {lexical-semantics;lexical-decomposition;} } @incollection{ engelberg_s:2011b, author = {Stefan Engelberg}, title = {Frameworks of Lexical Decomposition of Verbs}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {358--398}, address = {The Hague}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \my21}, abstract = {Starting from early approaches within Generative Grammar in the late 1960s, the article describes and discusses the development of different theoretical frameworks of lexical decomposition of verbs. It presents ... Dowty's approach to lexical decomposition within Montague Semantics, Jackendoff's Conceptual Semantics, the LCS decompositions emerging from the MIT Lexicon Project, Pustejovsky's Event Structure Theory, Wierzbicka's Natural Semantic Metalanguage, Wunderlich's Lexical Decompositional Grammar, Hale and Kayser's Lexical Relational Structures, and Distributed Morphology. ...}, topic = {nl-semantics;lexical-semantics;} } @incollection{ engelfriet-etal:1996a, author = {Joeri Engelfriet and V. Wiktor Marek and Jan Treur and Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski}, title = {Infinitary Default Logic for Specification of Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence: European Workshop, {Jelia}'96, Ivora, Portugal, September 30 - October 3, 1996.}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1996}, editor = {Jos\'e J\'ulio Alferes and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and Ewa Orlowska}, pages = {224--236}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {default-logic;infinitary-logic;} } @article{ engelfriet-etal:2002a, author = {Joel Engelfriet and Catholijn Jonker and Jan Treur}, title = {Compositional Verification of Multi-Agent in Temporal Multi-Epistemic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2002}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {195--225}, topic = {multiagent-systems;epistemic-logic;temporal-logic;} } @incollection{ engelfriet-treur:1994a, author = {Joeri Engelfriet and Jan Treur}, title = {Temporal Theories of Reasoning}, booktitle = {Logics in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1994}, editor = {Craig Mac{N}ish and Lu\'is Moniz Pereira and David Pearce}, pages = {279--299}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {temporal-reasoning;} } @article{ engelfriet-treur:1998a, author = {Joeri Engelfriet and Jan Treur}, title = {An Interpretation of Default Logic in Minimal Temporal Epistemic Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {1998}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {369--388}, topic = {modal-logic;default-logic;temporal-logic;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ engelfriet-treur:2002a, author = {Joeri Engelfriet and Jan Treur}, title = {Linear, Branching Time and Joint Closure Semantics for Temporal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2002}, volume = {11}, number = {4}, pages = {389--425}, topic = {temporal-logic;branching-time;tmix-project;} } @inproceedings{ engelfriet-venema_y:1998a, author = {Joeri Engelfriet and Yde Venema}, title = {A Modal Logic of Information Change}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Seventh Conference ({TARK} 1998)}, year = {1998}, editor = {Itzhak Gilboa}, pages = {125--131}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;communication-models;} } @inproceedings{ engelhardt-etal:1998a, author = {Kai Engelhardt and Ron {von Meyden} and Yoram Moses}, title = {Knowledge and the Logic of Distributed Propositions}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Seventh Conference ({TARK} 1998)}, year = {1998}, editor = {Itzhak Gilboa}, pages = {29--41}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;propositional-quantification; epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ engelmann_jm-tomasello_m:2017a, author = {Jan M. Engelmann and Michael Tomasello}, title = {The Middle Step: Joint Intentionality as a Human-Unique Form of Second-Personal Engagement}, booktitle = {The Routledge Handbook of Collective Intentionality}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2017}, editor = {Marija Jankovic and Kirk Ludwig}, pages = {433--450}, address = {New York}, topic = {group-attitudes;intention;reasoning-about-intentions;} } @inproceedings{ engelson-dagan:1996a, author = {Sean Engelson and Ido Dagan}, title = {Minimizing Manual Annotation Cost in Supervised Training from Corpora}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fourth Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, editor = {Arivind Joshi and Martha Palmer}, pages = {319--326}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {corpus-linguistics;} } @article{ engesser-gabbay_dm:2002a, author = {Kurt Engesser and Dov M. Gabbay}, title = {Quantum Logic, {H}ilbert Space, Revision Theory}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {136}, number = {1}, pages = {61--100}, topic = {quantum-logic;nonmonotonic-logic;belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ engesser_t-etal:2020a, author = {Thorsten Engesser and Robert Mattm\"uller and Bernhard Nebel and Felicitas Ritter}, title = {Token-based Execution Semantics for Multi-Agent Epistemic Planning}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {351--360}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {... we analyze the idea of using a single token that can be passed around between the agents and which is used as a prerequisite for acting. We show that introducing such a token to any planning task will prevent the existence of infinite executions. We furthermore analyze the conditions under which solutions to a planning task are preserved under our tokenization.}, topic = {multiagent-systems;epistemic-planning;} } @book{ englebretsen_g:1981a, author = {George Englebretsen}, title = {Three Logicians}, publisher = {Van Gorcum}, year = {1981}, address = {Assen}, ISBN = {90-232-1815-9}, contentnote = {The 3 are: Aristotle, Leibniz, Fred Sommers}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves}, topic = {syllogistic;} } @book{ englefield:1990a, author = {Ronald Englefield}, title = {Critique of Pure Verbiage: Essays on Abuses of Language in Literary, Religious and Philosophical Writings}, publisher = {Open Court}, note = {Edited by G.A. Wells and D.R. Oppenheimer.}, year = {1990}, address = {Peru, Illinois}, ISBN = {0-8126-9107-5}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {good-writing;} } @article{ enguehard_e-chemla_e:2021a, author = {\'Emile Enguehard and Emmanuel Chemla}, title = {Connectedness as a Constraint on Exhaustification}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2021}, volume = {44}, number = {1}, pages = {79--112}, abstract = {... The so-called grammatical theory argues that these inferences obtain from the application of a covert operator exh, which not only has the capability to negate alternative sentences, but also the capability to be embedded within sentences under other linguistic operators. ... Various approaches based on logical strength and monotonicity have been proposed to justify on principled grounds the limited distribution of exh; these approaches are mostly based on a comparison between possible parses, and considerations of monotonicity (e.g., the Strongest Meaning Hypothesis). We propose a new constraint based instead on "connectedness" ... }, topic = {scalar-implicature;} } @book{ enis-broome_cl:1971a, author = {Ben M. Enis and Charles L. Broome}, title = {Marketing decisions: a {B}ayesian approach}, publisher = {Intext Educational Publishers}, year = {1971}, address = {Scranton}, topic = {decision-analysis;} } @incollection{ ennals-briggs_j:1984a, author = {Richard Ennals and Jonathan Briggs}, title = {Logic and Programming}, booktitle = {The Mind and the Machine: Philosophical Aspects of Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Ellis Horwood, Ltd.}, year = {1984}, editor = {Steve B. Torrance}, pages = {133--144}, address = {Chichester}, topic = {logic=programming;problem-solving;} } @inproceedings{ ennis:1982a, author = {S.P. Ennis}, title = {Expert Systems, a User's Perspective to Some Current Tools}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the First National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1982}, pages = {319--321}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {expert-systems;} } @article{ enqvist:2009a, author = {Sebastian Enqvist}, title = {Interrogative Belief Revision in Modal Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2009}, volume = {38}, number = {5}, pages = {527--548}, topic = {belief-revision;interrogatives;modal-logic;} } @unpublished{ enqvist-olsson_ej:2011a, author = {Sebastian Enqvist and Erik J. Olsson}, title = {Segerberg on the Paradoxes of Introspective Belief Change}, year = {2011}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Lunds Universitet}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \oc11}, topic = {belief-revision;dynamic-epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ enqvist-olsson_ej:2014a, author = {Sebastian Enqvist and Erik J. Olsson}, title = {Segerberg on the Paradoxes of Introspective Belief Change}, booktitle = {{K}rister {S}egerberg on Logic of Actions}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2014}, editor = {Robert Trypuz}, pages = {153--178}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @incollection{ entwisle-powers_dmw:1998a, author = {Jim Entwisle and David M.W. Powers}, title = {The Present Use of Statistics in the Evaluation of {NLP} Parsers}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Joint Conference on New Methods in Language Processing and Computational Language Learning}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {David M.W. Powers}, pages = {215--224}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;nlp-evaluation;} } @inproceedings{ ephrati-etal:1995a, author = {Eithan Ephrati and Martha Pollack and Sigalit Ur}, title = {Deriving Multi-Agent Coordination Through Filtering Strategies}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {679--685}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {distributed-AI;filtering;} } @article{ ephrati-rosenschein_j:1996a, author = {Eithan Ephrati and Jeffrey S. Rosenschein}, title = {Deriving Consensus in Multiagent Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {87}, number = {1--2}, pages = {21--74}, topic = {distributed-AI;voting-procedures;welfare-economics;} } @inproceedings{ ephrati_e-rosenschein_js:1993a, author = {Eithan Ephrati and Jeffrey S. Rosenschein}, title = {Multi-Agent Planning as a Dynamic Search for Social Consensus}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, editor = {Ruzena Bajcsy}, pages = {423--429}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, abstract = {... Coordination of actions by a group of agents corresponds to a group planning process. We here introduce a new multi-agent planning technique, that makes use of a dynamic, iterative search procedure. Through a process of group constraint aggregation, agents incrementally construct a plan that brings the group to a state maximizing social welfare. ...}, topic = {group-planning;aggregation;} } @article{ epsen:2007a, author = {Edward Epsen}, title = {Games with Zero-Knowledge Signaling}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {86}, number = {2}, pages = {403--414}, topic = {game-theory;knowledge;epistemic-logic;communication-protocols;} } @article{ epstein_b:2012a, author = {Brian Epstein}, title = {Sortals and Criteria of Identity}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2012}, volume = {72}, number = {3}, pages = {474--478}, topic = {sortals;individuation;} } @book{ epstein_b:2015a, author = {Brian Epstein}, title = {The Ant Trap: Rebuilding the Foundations of Social Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2015}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Review: asta:2018a}, topic = {philosophy-and-social-science;social-philosophy;collectivism;} } @incollection{ epstein_b:2017a, author = {Brian Epstein}, title = {Social Construction and Social Facts}, booktitle = {The Routledge Handbook of Collective Intentionality}, publisher = {Routledge}, year = {2017}, editor = {Marija Jankovic and Kirk Ludwig}, pages = {265--276}, address = {New York}, topic = {social-institutions;group-action;group-attitudes;} } @article{ epstein_eg:2019a, author = {Eric Gordon Epstein}, title = {Review of \emph{{R}eflections on the {L}iar}, edited by {B}radley {A}rmour-{G}arb}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2019}, volume = {128}, number = {3}, pages = {356--362}, xref = {Review of: armourgarb_b:2017a}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;} } @article{ epstein_j:1958a, author = {Joseph Epstein}, title = {Quine's Gambit Accepted}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1958}, volume = {55}, number = {16}, pages = {673--683}, topic = {proper-names;definite-descriptions;} } @article{ epstein_r:1992a, author = {Robert Epstein}, title = {Can Machines Think?}, journal = {AI Magazine}, year = {1992}, volume = {13}, number = {2}, pages = {80--95}, rtnote = {An account of the first Loebner competition, held in 1991, by a friend of Loebner's.}, topic = {Turing-test;loebner-competition;} } @incollection{ epstein_r:2009a, author = {Robert Epstein}, title = {The Quest for the Thinking Computer}, booktitle = {Parsing the {T}uring Test: Philosophical and Methodological Issues in the Quest for the Thinking Computer}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, editor = {Robert Epstein and Gary Roberts and Grace Beber}, pages = {3--12}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de12}, topic = {Turing-test;loebner-competition;} } @book{ epstein_r-etal:2009a, editor = {Robert Epstein and Gary Roberts and Grace Beber}, title = {Parsing the {T}uring Test: Philosophical and Methodological Issues in the Quest for the Thinking Computer}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2009}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {978-1-4020-6710-5}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Robert Epstein, "The Quest for the Thinking Computer", pp. 3--12 2. Andrew Hodges, "Alan Turing and the Turing Test", pp. 13--22 3. Alan M. Turing, "Computing Machinery and Intelligence", pp. 23--65 4. John Lucas, "Commentary on Turing's `Computing Machinery and Intelligence'", pp. 67--70 5. Robert E. Horn, "The Turing Test: Mapping and Navigating the Debate", pp. 73--88 6. Selmer Bringsjord, "If I Were Judge", pp. 89--102 7. Noam Chomsky, "Turing on the `Imitation Game'", pp. 103--106 8. Paul M. Churchland, "On the Nature of Intelligence", pp. 107--117 9. Jack Copeland and Diane Proudfoot, "Turing's Test", pp. 119--138 10. John R. Searle, "The Turing Test: 55 Years Later", pp. 139--150 11. Jean Lass\`egue, "Doing Justice to the Imitation Game", pp. 151--169 12. Hugh Loebner, "How to Hold a Turing Test Contest", pp. 173-179 13. Richard S. Wallace, "The Anatomy of {A.L.I.C.E.}", pp. 181--210 14. Bruce Edmonds, "The Social Embedding of Intelligence", pp. 211--235 15. Mark Humphrys, "How My Program Passed the Turing Test", pp. 237--260 16. Douglas B. Lenat, "Building a Machine Smart Enough to Pass the Turing Test", pp. 261--282 17. Chris Mckinstry, "Mind as Space", pp. 283--299 18. Stuart Watt, "Can People Think? Or Machines?", pp. 301--318 19. Robby Garner, "The Turing Hub as a Standard for Turing Test Interfaces", pp. 319--324 20. Jason L. Hutchens, "Conversation Simulation and Sensible Surprises", pp. 325--342 21. Thomas E. Whalen, "A Computational Behaviorist Takes Turing's Test", pp. 343--357 22. Kevin L. Copple, "Bringing AI to Life", pp. 359--376 23. Giuseppe Longo, "Laplace, Turing and the `Imitation Game' Impossible Geometry", pp. 377--411 24. Michael L. Mauldin, "Going Under Cover: Passing as Human", pp. 413--429 25. Luke Pellen, "How not to Imitate a Human Being", pp. 431--446 26. Eugene Demchenko and Vladimir Veselov, "Who Fools Whom?", pp. 447--459 27. Ray Kurzweil and Mitchell Kapor, "A Wager on the Turing Test", pp. 463--477 28. Charles Platt, "The Gnirut Test", pp. 479--485 29. Hugo De Garis and Sam Halioris, "The Artilect Debate", pp. 487--509 }, topic = {Turing;Turing-test;} } @book{ epstein_rj:1987a, author = {R.J. Epstein}, title = {A History of Econometrics}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1987}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, topic = {history-of-economics;} } @book{ epstein_rl-carnielli_wa:1989a, author = {Richard L. Epstein and Walter A. Carnielli}, title = {Computable Functions, Logic, and the Foundations of Mathematics}, publisher = {Wadsworth \& Cole Advanced Books and Software}, year = {1989}, address = {Pacific Grove}, xref = {Review: dipriso:2002a.}, topic = {computability;goedels-first-theorem;goedels-second-theorem;} } @book{ epstein_rl-carnielli_wa:2000a, author = {Richard L. Epstein and Walter A. Carnielli}, title = {Computable Functions, Logic, and the Foundations of Mathematics}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Wadsworth \& Cole Advanced Books and Software}, year = {2000}, address = {Pacific Grove}, xref = {Review: dipriso:2002a.}, topic = {computability;goedels-first-theorem;goedels-second-theorem;} } @article{ epstein_sd:1998a, author = {Samuel David Epstein}, title = {Overt Scope Marking and Covert Verb-Second}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1998}, volume = {29}, number = {1}, pages = {181--227}, topic = {nl-syntax;} } @book{ epstein_sd-seeley:2002a, editor = {Samuel David Epstein and T. Daniel Seeley}, title = {Derivation and Explanation in the Minimalist Program}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishing}, year = {2002}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-631-22733-4 (pbk)}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Samuel David Epstein and T. Daniel Seeley, "Introduction: On the Quest for Explanation", pp. 1--18 2. Michael Brody, "On the Status of Representations and Derivations", pp. 19--41 3. Chris Collins, "Eliminating Labels", pp. 42--64 4. Samuel David Epstein and T. Daniel Seeley, "Rule Applications as Cycles in a Level-Free Syntax", pp. 65--89 5. John Frampton and Sam Gutmann, "Crash-Proof Syntax", pp. 90-- 104 6. Norbert Hornstein and Juan Uriagerika, "Reprojections", pp. 106--132 7. Richard S. Kayne, "Pronouns and Their Antecedents", pp. 133--166 8. Hisatsugu Kitahara, "Scrambling, Case, and Interpretability", pp. 167--183 9. James McCloskey, "Resumption, Successive Cyclicity, and the Locality of Operations", pp. 184--226 10. Norvin Richards, "Very Local $A'$ Movement in a Root-First Derivation", pp. 222--248 11. Esther Torrego, "Arguments for a Derivational Approach to Syntactic Relations Based on Clitics", pp. 249--268 12. Jan-Wouter Zwart, "Issues Relating to a Derivational Theory of Binding", pp. 269--304 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, topic = {minimalist-syntax;} } @article{ epstein_sl:1992a, author = {Susan L. Epstein}, title = {The Role of Memory and Concepts in Learning}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {1992}, volume = {2}, number = {3}, pages = {239--265}, topic = {memory;machine-learning;} } @article{ epstein_sl:1998a, author = {Susan L. Epstein}, title = {Pragmatic Navigation: Reactivity, Heuristics, and Search}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {100}, number = {1--2}, pages = {275--322}, topic = {search;machine-learning;} } @unpublished{ epstein_ss:1975a, author = {Samuel S. Epstein}, title = {A Study of {\em Even}}, year = {1975}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of California at San Diego.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {`even';} } @phdthesis{ epstein_ss:1975b, author = {Samuel S. Epstein}, title = {Investigations in Pragmatic Theory}, school = {Linguistics Department, University of San Diego}, year = {1975}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {La Jolla, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {pragmatics;discourse;presupposition;negation;} } @article{ erdelyiszabo-etal:2008a, author = {Mik'os Erd\'elyi-Szab\'o, L\'aszl\'o K\'alm\'an and Agi Kurucz}, title = {Towards a Natural Language Semantics without Functors and Operands}, journal = {Journal of Logic, Language, and Information}, year = {2008}, volume = {17}, number = {1}, pages = {1--17}, topic = {algebraic-semantics;lambda-calculus;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ erdem_e-etal:2016a, author = {Esra Erdem and Michael Gelfond and Nicola Leone}, title = {Applications of Answer Set Programming}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2016}, volume = {37}, number = {3}, pages = {53--68}, topic = {answer-sets;} } @article{ erden:2010a, author = {Yasemin J. Erden}, title = {Could a Created Being Ever be Creative? Some Philosophical Remarks on Creativity and AI Development}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {3}, pages = {349--362}, abstract = {Creativity has a special role in enabling humans to develop beyond the fulfilment of simple primary functions. This factor is significant for Artificial Intelligence (AI) developers who take replication to be the primary goal, since moves toward creating autonomous artificial-beings beg questions about their potential for creativity. Using Wittgenstein's remarks on rule-following and language-games, I argue that although some AI programs appear creative, to call these programmed acts creative in our terms is to misunderstand the use of this word in language. I conclude that replication is not the best way forward for AI development in matters of creativity. }, topic = {creativity;Wittgenstein;} } @incollection{ erdogan-lifschitz_v:2006a, author = {Selim T. Erdogan and Vladimir Lifschitz}, title = {Actions as Special Cases}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {377--387}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {knowledge-engineering;action-descriptions;} } @incollection{ erev-roth_ae:2002a, author = {Ido Erev and Alvin E. Roth}, title = {Simple Reinforcement Learning Models and Reciprocation in the Prisoner' Dilemma Game}, booktitle = {Bounded Rationality: The Adaptive Toolbox}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2002}, editor = {Gerd Gigerenzer and Reinhard Selten}, pages = {215--231}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {prisoner's-dilemma;behavioral-economics;} } @article{ erev-roth_ap:2007a, author = {Ido Erev and Alvin E. Roth}, title = {Multi-Agent Learning and the Descriptive Value of Simple Models}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {7}, pages = {423--428}, topic = {multiagent-learning;reinforcement-learning;} } @book{ ericsson-simon_ha:1984a, author = {Anders K. Ericsson and Herbert A. Simon}, title = {Protocol Analysis: Verbal Reports As Data}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1984}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262050293}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BF455 .E681 1984.}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;empirical-methods-in-cogsci; protocol-analysis;} } @article{ eriksson_h-etal:1995a, author = {Henrik Eriksson and Yuval Shahar and Samson W. Tu and Angel R. Puerta and Mark A. Musen}, title = {Task Modeling With Reusable Problem-Solving Methods}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {79}, number = {2}, pages = {293--326}, topic = {plan-reuse;} } @article{ eriksson_l-hajek_a:2007a, author = {Lina Eriksson and Alan H\'ajek}, title = {What Are Degrees of Belief?}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {86}, number = {2}, pages = {183--213}, topic = {belief;foundations-of-probability;qualitative-probability;} } @book{ eriksson_lh-etal:1992a, editor = {Lars-Henrik Eriksson and Lars Halln\"as and Peter Schroeder-Heister}, title = {Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Extensions of Logic Programming, {ELP}'91}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {354055498X}, rtnote = {UMich Medi Union QA 76.63 .E981 1992}, topic = {logic-programming;} } @article{ erion:2001a, author = {Gerald J. Erion}, title = {The {C}artesian Test for Automatism}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2001}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {29--39}, abstract = {In Part V of his Discourse on the Method, Descartes introduces a test for distinguishing people from machines that is similar to the one proposed much later by Alan Turing. The Cartesian test combines two distinct elements that Keith Gunderson has labeled the language test and the action test. $\ldots$ }, topic = {Turing-test;machine-intelligence;} } @article{ erman-etal:1980a1, author = {Lee Erman and Frederick Hayes-Roth and Victor Lesser and D. Raj Reddy}, title = {The Hearsay-{II} Speech-Understanding System: Integrating Knowledge to Resolve Uncertainty}, journal = {Computing Surveys}, year = {1980}, volume = {12}, number = {2}, pages = {213--253}, xref = {Republication: erman-etal:1980a2.}, topic = {speech-recognition;} } @incollection{ erman-etal:1980a2, author = {Lee Erman and Frederick Hayes-Roth and Victor Lesser and D. Raj Reddy}, title = {The Hearsay-{II} Speech-Understanding System: Integrating Knowledge to Resolve Uncertainty}, booktitle = {Readings in Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1981}, editor = {Bonnie Webber and Nils J. Nilsson}, pages = {349-389}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Journal Publication: erman-etal:1980a1.}, topic = {speech-recognition;} } @book{ ermann-etal:1990a, editor = {M. David Ermann and Mary B. Williams and Claudio Gutierrez}, title = {Computers, Ethics, and Society}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {019505850X (paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Qa 76.9 .C66 C65751 1990.}, topic = {social-impact-of-computation;} } @book{ ermann-etal:1997a, editor = {M. David Ermann and Mary B. Williams and Michele S. Shauf}, title = {Computers, Ethics, and Society}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, edition = {2}, year = {1997}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {019510756X (paper)}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Qa 76.9 .C66 C65751 1997.}, topic = {social-impact-of-computation;} } @article{ ernst-chant_r:2007a, author = {Zachary Ernst and Sara Rachel Chant}, title = {Collective Action as Individual Choice}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {86}, number = {2}, pages = {415--434}, topic = {group-action;game-theory;} } @inproceedings{ erol_k-etal:1992a, author = {K. Erol and D. Nau and V.S. Subramanian}, title = {On the Complexity of Domain Independent Planning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, editor = {Paul S. Rosenbloom and Peter Szolovits}, pages = {381--386}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {complexity-in-AI;planning;} } @article{ erol_k-etal:1995a, author = {Kutluhan Erol and Dana S. Nau and V.S. Subrahmanian}, title = {Complexity, Decidability and Undecidability Results for Domain-Independent Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {76}, number = {1--2}, pages = {75--88}, topic = {planning;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ erol_k-etal:1996a, author = {Kutluhan Erol and James Hendler and Dana Nau}, title = {Complexity Results for {HTN} Planning}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1996}, volume = {18}, number = {1}, pages = {69--93}, topic = {planning-algorithms;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ erteschikshir:1986a, author = {Nomi Erteschik-Shir}, title = {Wh-Questions and Focus}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1986}, volume = {9}, number = {2}, pages = {117--149}, topic = {interrogatives;sentence-focus;} } @book{ erteschikshir:2007a, author = {Nomi Erteschik-Shir}, title = {Information Structure: The Syntax-Discourse Interface}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {978-0-19-926259-5 (pbk)}, topic = {information-structure;} } @incollection{ ervin-tripp:1976b, author = {S. Ervin-Tripp}, title = {Children's Verbal Turn-Taking}, booktitle = {Developmental Pragmatics}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1979}, editor = {E. Ochs and B.B. Schieffelin}, pages = {391--414}, address = {New York}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, E's 1st name}, topic = {sociolinguistics;conversation-analysis;turn-taking;} } @incollection{ ervin-tripp:1981a, author = {S. Ervin-Tripp}, title = {How to Make and Understand a Request}, booktitle = {Possibilities and Limitations of Pragmatics: Proceedings of the Conference at Urbino, July 8--14, 1979}, publisher = {John Benjamins Publishing Company}, year = {1981}, editor = {H. Parret and M. Sbis\`a and J. Verschueren}, pages = {195--210}, address = {Amsterdam}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {sociolinguistics;speech-acts;pragmatics;} } @article{ ervintripp:1976a, author = {S. Ervin-Tripp}, title = {Is {S}ybil There? The Structure of American {E}nglish Directives}, journal = {Language in Society}, year = {1976}, volume = {5}, pages = {25--66}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {imperatives;speech-acts;pragmatics;sociolinguistics;} } @incollection{ erwin:1984a, author = {Edward Erwin}, title = {Establishing Causal Connections: Meta-Analysis and Psychotherapy}, booktitle = {Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. Uehling, Jr. and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {421--436}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {causality;psychotherapy;} } @book{ erwin_e:1970a, author = {Edward Erwin}, title = {The Concept of Meaningfulness}, publisher = {The Johns Hopkins Press}, year = {1970}, address = {Baltimore}, topic = {category-mistakes;sortal-incorrectness;} } @incollection{ esbjornssen-weilemann:2005a, author = {Mattias Esbj\"ornssen and Alexandra Weilemann}, title = {Mobile Phone Talk in Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: 5th International and Interdisciplinary Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2005}, editor = {Anind Dey and Boicho Kokinov and David Leake and Roy Turner}, pages = {140--154}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;mobile-computing;} } @article{ escaladaimaz-ghallab:1988a, author = {Gonzalo Escalada-Imaz and Malik Ghallab}, title = {A Practically Efficient and Almost Linear Unification Algorithm}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, volume = {36}, number = {2}, pages = {249--263}, topic = {unification-of-FSs;} } @article{ eschenbach:1993a, author = {Carola Eschenbach}, title = {Semantics of Number}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1993}, volume = {10}, number = {1}, pages = {1--31}, topic = {nl-semantics;plural;grammatical-number;common-nouns;} } @inproceedings{ eschenbach:1995a, author = {C. Eschenbach}, title = {An Algebraic Approach to Granularity in Qualitative Space and Time Representation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, editor = {Chris Mellish}, pages = {894--900}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {granularity;spatial-reasoning;temporal-reasoning;} } @incollection{ eschenbach:2004a, author = {Carol Eschenbach}, title = {How to Interleave Knowledge about Object Structure and Concepts}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {300--309}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {constraint-networks;spatial-representation;kr;} } @incollection{ escudero-etal:2000a, author = {Gerard Escudero and LLu\'is M\`arquez and German Rigau}, title = {A Comparison between Supervised Learning Algorithms for Word Sense Disambiguation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {31--36}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;disambiguation;} } @incollection{ escudero-etal:2000b, author = {Gerard Escudero and Llu\'is M\'arquez and German Rigau}, title = {An Empirical Study of the Domain Dependence of Supervised Word Sense Disambiguation Systems}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2000 Joint {SIGDAT} Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Hinrich Sch\"utze and Keh-Yih Su}, pages = {172--180}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {AI-system-evaluation;lexical-disambiguation;} } @inproceedings{ eshghi:1988a, author = {Kave Eshghi}, title = {Abductive Planning with Event Calculus}, booktitle = {Logic Programming: Proceedings of the Fifth International Conference and Symposium, Volume 1}, year = {1988}, editor = {Robert A. Kowalski and Kenneth A. Bowen}, pages = {562--579}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. FIle Drawers, "Eshgli"}, topic = {planning;abduction;} } @inproceedings{ eshghi-kowalski_ra:1989a, author = {Kave Eshghi and Robert A. Kowalski}, title = {Abduction Compared with Negation by Failure}, booktitle = {Logic Programming: Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference}, year = {1989}, pages = {234--254}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {editor}, topic = {negation-as-failure;abduction;} } @inproceedings{ eshgli:1991a, author = {Kave Eshgli}, title = {Computing Stable Models by Using the {ATMS}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, editor = {Thomas Dean and Kathy McKeown}, pages = {272--277}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {MIT Press}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. FIle Drawers, "Eshgli"}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {truth-maintenance;stable-models;} } @article{ esipova_m:2023a, author = {Maria Esipova}, title = {Reps and Representations: A Warm-Up to a Grammar of Lifting}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2023}, volume = {47}, number = {4}, pages = {871--904}, abstract = {In this paper, I outline a grammar of lifting (i.e., resistance training) and compare it to that of language. ... First, I show that both involve stable (idiomatized/lexicalized) pairings of regularized forms with regularized meanings. Second, I argue that in both lifting and language, meaning–form mapping is mediated by syntax, which, crucially, operates on non-linearized hierarchical structures of abstract objects that include both content morphemes and functional morphemes. ... }, topic = {semantics-of-movement;} } @book{ espinal_mt-etal:2019a, editor = {M. Teresa Espinal and Elena Castroviejo and Manuel Leonetti and Louise McNally and Cristina Real-Puigdollers}, title = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 23, vols I and II}, publisher = {University of Barcelona}, address = {Barcelona}, year = {2019}, organization = {Gesellschaft f\"ur Semantik}, url = {https://semanticsarchive.net/Archive/Tg3ZGI2M/Proceedings23.html}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ esposito-etal:2000a, author = {F. Esposito and S. Ferelli and N. Fanizzi and G. Semeraro}, title = {Learning from Parsed Sentences with {INTHELEX}}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning and of the Second Learning Language in Logic Workshop, {L}isbon, 2000}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {2000}, editor = {Claire Cardie and Walter Daelemans and Claire N\'edellec and Erik Tjong Kim Sang}, pages = {194--198}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {machine-language-learning;information-extraction; information-extraction;knowledge-representation;} } @article{ essa:1999a, author = {Irfan A. Essa}, title = {Computers Seeing People}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {1999}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {69--82}, topic = {people-recognition;facial-recognition;} } @article{ essler-trapp:1977a, author = {Wilhelm K. Essler and Rainer Trapp}, title = {Some Ways of Operationally Introducing Dispositional Predicates with Regard to Scientific and Ordinary Practice}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {1977}, volume = {34}, pages = {371--396}, topic = {dispositions;} } @book{ estes:1975a, editor = {W.K. Estes}, title = {Handbook of Learning and Cognitive Processes}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1975}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, topic = {learning;cognitive-psychology;} } @book{ estes:1997a, editor = {W.K. Estes}, title = {Classifation and Cognition}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0-19-510974-0 (paperback), 0-19-507335-5 (hardback)}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;} } @inproceedings{ estlin-mooney_rj:1996a, author = {Tara A. Estlin and Raymond J. Mooney}, title = {Multi-Strategy Learning of Search Control for Partial-Order Planning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Eighth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, Vol. 2}, year = {1996}, editor = {William J. Clancey and Dan Weld}, pages = {843--848}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {planning;machine-learning;search;} } @article{ estradagonzalez_l-tanuspimentel_cl:2021a, author = {Luis Estrada-Gonz\'alez and Claudia Luc\'ia Tan\'us-Pimentel}, title = {Variable Sharing in Connexive Logic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {6}, pages = {1377--1388}, abstract = {... In this paper we want to suggest that [strategies used in relevance logic] can be employed with connexive logics. To do so, we will suggest some properties that seem to be hinted at in Nelson's work. Following this strategy will ideally shed some light over the notion of content and will also help make a clear comparison between relevance and connexive logics.}, topic = {connexive-logics;relevance-logic;} } @incollection{ eszes_b:2009a, author = {Boldizs\'ar Eszes}, title = {Aspect and Adverb Interpretation the Case of Quickly}, booktitle = {Adverbs and Adverbial Adjuncts at the Interface}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2009}, editor = {Katalin \'E. Kiss}, pages = {269--294}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {adverbs;} } @article{ etchemendy_j:1983a, author = {John Etchemendy}, title = {The Doctrine of Logic as Form}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1983}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {319--334}, topic = {logical-form;philosophy-of-logic;} } @article{ etchemendy_j:1988a, author = {John Etchemendy}, title = {Models, Semantics and Logical Truth}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1988}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {91--106}, topic = {logical-consequence;} } @article{ etchemendy_j:1988b, author = {John Etchemendy}, title = {{T}arski on Truth and Logical Consequence}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1958}, volume = {53}, number = {1}, pages = {51--79}, topic = {Tarski;history-of-logic;logical-consequence;} } @book{ etchemendy_j:1990a, author = {John Etchemendy}, title = {The Concept of Logical Consequence}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: mcgee_v:2001a.}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {logical-consequence;Tarski;} } @incollection{ etchemendy_j:2008a, author = {John Etchemendy}, title = {Reflections on Consequence}, booktitle = {New Essays on {T}arski and Philosophy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Douglas Patterson}, pages = {263--299}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Tarski;history-of-logic;logical-consequence;} } @inproceedings{ etcheverry-dagorret:2001a, author = {Patrick Etcheverry and Phillipe Lopist\'eguy and Pantxika Dagorret}, title = {Specifying Contexts for Coordination Patterns}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {437--440}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;cooperation;problem-solving;} } @article{ etherington:1987a, author = {David Etherington}, title = {Formalizing Nonmonotonic Reasoning Systems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {31}, number = {1}, pages = {41--85}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-reasoning;kr-course;} } @unpublished{ etherington:1987b, author = {David Etherington}, title = {More on Inheritance Hierarchies with Exceptions}, year = {1987}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, AT\&T Bell Laboratories.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {inheritance-theory;} } @inproceedings{ etherington:1987c, author = {David W. Etherington}, title = {Relating Default Logic and Circumscription}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Tenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, editor = {John McDermott}, pages = {489--494}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr13\etherin1.pdf}, topic = {default-logic;circumscription;nonmonotonic-logic;} } @book{ etherington:1988a, author = {David W. Etherington}, title = {Reasoning with Incomplete Information}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, year = {1988}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Shelves.}, topic = {nonmonotonic-logic;inheritance-theory;} } @article{ etherington:1991a, author = {David Etherington and Sarit Kraus and David Perlis}, title = {Nonmonotonicity and the Scope of Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {52}, number = {3}, pages = {221--261}, contentnote = {Surveys a number of foundational problems with NM reasoning, eg the lottery paradox problems are typical of these. Suggests that the source of these is that the scope ie application of NM reasoning is generally limited, and formalizes this by introducing scope explicitly into a circumscriptive formalism. Proves various results about this formalism.}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-reasoning;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ etherington:1997a, author = {David Etherington}, title = {What Does Knowledge Representation Have to Say to Artificial Intelligence?}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Fourteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, editor = {Benjamin J. Kuipers and Bonnie Webber}, pages = {762}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {kr;AI-editorial;} } @inproceedings{ etherington-crawford_jm:1996a, author = {David W. Etherington and James M. Crawford}, title = {Toward Efficient Default Reasoning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirteenth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence and the Eighth Innovative Applications of Artificial Intelligence Conference, Vol. 2}, year = {1996}, editor = {William J. Clancey and Dan Weld}, pages = {627--632}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {default-logic;nonmonotonic-reasoning;AI-algorithms; consistency-checking;} } @article{ etherington-etal:1985a1, author = {David Etherington and R.E. Mercer and Raymond Reiter}, title = {On the Adequacy of Predicate Circumscription for Closed World Reasoning}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {1}, pages = {11--15}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, xref = {Republication: etherington-etal:1985a2.}, topic = {circumscription;closed-world-reasoning;} } @incollection{ etherington-etal:1985a2, author = {David W. Etherington and Robert E. Mercer and and Raymond Reiter}, title = {On the Adequacy of Predicate Circumscription for Closed-World Reasoning}, booktitle = {Readings in Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1987}, editor = {Matthew L. Ginsberg}, pages = {174--178}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Original Publication: etherington-etal:1985a1.}, topic = {circumscription;closed-world-reasoning;} } @article{ etherington-etal:1985b1, author = {David W. Etherington and Robert E. Mercer and and Raymond Reiter}, title = {On the Adequacy of Predicate Circumscription for Closed-World Reasoning}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {1}, number = {1}, pages = {11--15}, topic = {circumscription;closed-world-reasoning;} } @article{ etherington-etal:1985c, author = {David W. Etherington and Robert E. Mercer and and Raymond Reiter}, title = {On the Adequacy of Predicate Circumscription for Closed-World Reasoning}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1985}, volume = {1}, issue = {1}, pages = {11--15}, topic = {circumscription;closed-world-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ etherington-etal:1989a, author = {David W. Etherington and Alex Borgida and Ronald Brachman and Henry Kautz}, title = {Vivid Knowledge Bases and Tractable Reasoning: Preliminary Report}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eleventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, editor = {N.S. Sridharan}, pages = {1146--1158}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Mateo, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ja19}, url = {https://www.ijcai.org/Proceedings/89-2/Papers/048.pdf}, topic = {kr;vivid-reasoning;complexity-in-AI;description-logics; tractable-logics;kr-course;} } @incollection{ etherington-etal:1989b, author = {David W. Etherington and Kenneth D. Forbus and Matthew L. Ginsberg and David J. Israel and Vladimir Lifschitz}, title = {Critical Issues in Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {500--504}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;nonmonotonic-reasoning;kr-course;} } @inproceedings{ etherington-reiter_r:1983a1, author = {David Etherington and Raymond Reiter}, title = {On Inheritance Hierarchies with Exceptions}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Third National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1983}, pages = {104--108}, xref = {Republished in Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque; Readings in Knowledge Representation. See etherington-reiter_r:1983a2. Also see etherington-reiter_r:1983a2.}, topic = {kr;inheritance-theory;kr-course;} } @incollection{ etherington-reiter_r:1983a2, author = {David Etherington and Raymond Reiter}, title = {On Inheritance Hierarchies with Exceptions}, booktitle = {Readings in Knowledge Representation}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1995}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque}, address = {Los Altos, California}, pages = {329--334}, xref = {Originally published in AAAI-83. See etherington-reiter_r:1983a1.}, topic = {kr;inheritance-theory;kr-course;} } @incollection{ etherington-reiter_r:1983a3, author = {David Etherington and Raymond Reiter}, title = {On Inheritance Hierarchies with Exceptions}, booktitle = {Readings in Nonmonotonic Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1987}, editor = {Matthew L. Ginsberg}, pages = {101--105}, address = {Los Altos, California}, xref = {Originally published in AAAI-83. See etherington-reiter_r:1983a1.}, topic = {kr;inheritance-theory;kr-course;} } @incollection{ etherington_dw-crawford_jm:1999a, author = {David W. Etherington and James M. Crawford}, title = {Toward Efficient Default Reasoning}, booktitle = {Logical Foundations for Cognitive Agents: Contributions in Honor of {R}ay {R}eiter}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {1999}, editor = {Hector J. Levesque and Fiora Pirri}, pages = {137--150}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {default-logic;applied-nonmonotonic-reasoning;AI-algorithms;} } @article{ etlin:2009a, author = {David Etlin}, title = {The Problem of Noncounterfactual Conditionals}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2009}, volume = {76}, number = {5}, pages = {676--688}, rtnote = {{PSA}2008: Proceedings of the 2008 Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association, Part {I}}, topic = {conditionals;negation;Ramsey-test;indicative-conditionals;} } @book{ etxeberria_u-etal:2014a, editor = {Urtzi Etxeberria and Anamaria F\v{a}l\v{a}u\v{s} and Aritz Irurtzun and Bryan Leferman}, title = {Proceedings of {S}inn und {B}edeutung 18}, year = {2014}, publisher = {University of Konstanz}, address = {Konstanz}, url = {http://semanticsarchive.net/sub2013}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ etxeberria_u-giannakidou_a:2010a, author = {Urtzi Etxeberria and Anastasia Giannakidou}, title = {Contextual Domain Restriction and the Definite Determiner}, booktitle = {Context-Dependence, Perspective and Relativity}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {2010}, editor = {Fran\c{c}ois R\'ecanati and Isidora Stojanovic and Neftali Villanueva}, pages = {93--126}, address = {Berlin}, abstract = {The question of whether contextual restriction of quantificational determiners (Q-dets) is done explicitly (i.e. at LF ...), or purely pragmatically ...has been a matter of intense debate in formal semantics and philosophy of language. In this paper, we contribute to the debate and argue that the domain for quantifiers in certain languages is restricted overtly by a definite determiner (D). ...}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \jn16}, topic = {context;contextualism;domain-dynamics;} } @article{ etzioni_a:1986a, author = {Amitai Etzioni}, title = {The Case for a Multiple-Utility Conception}, journal = {Economics and Philosophy}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {159--183}, year = {1986}, topic = {society-of-mind;reasoning-with-conflict;utility;} } @incollection{ etzioni_o1:1991a, author = {Opher Etzion}, title = {Handling Active Databases with Partial Inconsistencies}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {171--175}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {databases;paraconsistency;} } @incollection{ etzioni_o2:1989a, author = {Oren Etzioni}, title = {Tractable Decision-Analytic Control}, booktitle = {{KR}'89: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1989}, editor = {Ronald J. Brachman and Hector J. Levesque and Raymond Reiter}, pages = {114--125}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;kr-course;plan-evaluation;planning;decision-analysis;} } @article{ etzioni_o2:1991a, author = {Oren Etzioni}, title = {Embedding Decision-Analytic Control in a Learning Architecture}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {49}, number = {1--3}, pages = {129--160}, topic = {decision-theoretic-planning;machine-learning;} } @article{ etzioni_o2:1993a, author = {Oren Etzioni}, title = {A Structural Theory of Explanation-Based Learning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {60}, number = {1}, pages = {93--139}, topic = {explanation-based learning;machine-learning;} } @article{ etzioni_o2:1993b, author = {Oren Etzioni}, title = {Acquiring Search-Control Knowledge Via Static Analysis}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {62}, number = {2}, pages = {255--301}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Explanation-based learning (EBL) is a widely-used technique for acquiring search-control knowledge. Prieditis, van Harmelen, and Bundy pointed to the similarity between partial evaluation (PE) and EBL. However, EBL utilizes training examples whereas PE does not. It is natural to inquire, therefore, whether PE can be used to acquire search-control knowledge and, if so, at what cost? This paper answers these questions by means of a case study comparing PRODIGY/EBL, a state-of-the-art EBL system, and STATIC, a PE-based analyzer of problem space definitions. When tested in PRODIGY/EBL's benchmark problem spaces, STATIC generated search-control knowledge that was up to three times as effective as the knowledge learned by PRODIGY/EBL, and did so from twenty-six to seventy-seven times faster. The paper describes STATIC's algorithms, compares its performance to PRODIGY/EBL's, noting when STATIC's superior performance will scale up and when it will not. The paper concludes with several lessons for the design of EBL systems, suggesting hybrid PE/EBL systems as a promising direction for future research. }, topic = {explanation-based-learning;procedural-control;} } @incollection{ etzioni_o2-etal:1992a, author = {Oren Etzioni and Steven Hanks and Denise Draper and Neal Lesh and Mike Williamson}, title = {An Approach to Planning with Incomplete Information}, booktitle = {{KR}'92. Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the Third International Conference}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Bernhard Nebel and Charles Rich and William Swartout}, pages = {115--125}, address = {San Mateo, California}, topic = {kr;planning;decision-making-under-uncertainty;kr-course;} } @incollection{ etzioni_o2-etal:1994a, author = {Oren Etzioni and Keith Golden and Daniel Weld}, title = {Tractable Closed World Reasoning with Updates}, booktitle = {{KR}'94: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1994}, editor = {Jon Doyle and Erik Sandewall and Pietro Torasso}, pages = {178--189}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {kr;closed-world-reasoning;belief-revision; tractable-logics;kr-course;} } @article{ etzioni_o2-etal:1997a, author = {Oren Etzioni and Keith Golden and Daniel S. Weld}, title = {Sound and Efficient Closed-World Reasoning for Planning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1997}, volume = {89}, number = {1--2}, pages = {113--148}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Closed-world inference-an essential component of many planning algorithms-is the process of determining that a logical sentence is false based on its absence from a knowledge base, or the inability to derive it. We describe a novel method for closed-world inference and update over the first-order theories of action used by planning algorithms such as NONLIN, TWEAK, and UCPOP. We show the method to be sound and efficient, but incomplete. In our experiments, closed-world inference consistently averaged about 2 milliseconds while updates averaged approximately 1.2 milliseconds. Furthermore, we demonstrate that incompleteness is nonproblematic in practice, since our mechanism makes over 99% of the desired inferences. We incorporated our method into the XII planner, which supports our Internet Softbot (software robot). The technique cut the number of actions executed by the Softbot by a factor of one hundred, and resulted in a corresponding speedup to XII.}, topic = {planning;circumscription;closed-world-reasoning;} } @article{ etzioni_o2-etal:2005a, author = {Oren Etzioni and Michael Cafarella and Doug Downey and Ana-Maria Popescu and Tal Shaked and Stephen Soderland and Daniel S. Weld and Alexander Yates}, title = {Unsupervised Named-Entity Extraction from the Web: An Experimental Study}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {165}, number = {1}, pages = {91--134}, topic = {named-entity-tagging;machine-learning;} } @book{ evans_da:1985a, author = {David A. Evans}, title = {Situations and Speech Acts: Toward a Formal Semantics of Discourse}, publisher = {Garland Pubishing}, year = {1985}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {Hillman P95.55 E93 1985}, topic = {speech-acts;discourse;} } @inproceedings{ evans_eg:1997a, author = {Edmund Grimley Evans}, title = {Approximating Context-Free Grammars with a Finite-State Calculus}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Fifth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Eighth Conference of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Philip R. Cohen and Wolfgang Wahlster}, pages = {452--459}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {context-free-grammars;finite-state-nlp;} } @article{ evans_g:1973a1, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {The Causal Theory of Names}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1973}, volume = {47}, note = {Supplementary Series.}, pages = {187--208}, xref = {Republication: evans_g:1973a2}, topic = {reference;modal-logic;philosophy-of-language;proper-names;} } @incollection{ evans_g:1973a2, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {The Causal Theory of Names}, booktitle = {Readings in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter Ludlow}, pages = {609--655}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of evans_g:1973a1.}, topic = {reference;modal-logic;philosophy-of-language;proper-names;} } @incollection{ evans_g:1976a1, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Semantic Structure and Logical Form}, booktitle = {Truth and Meaning: Essays in Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Gareth Evans and John Mc{D}owell}, pages = {199--221}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication: evans_g:1976a2.}, topic = {logical-form;foundations-of-semantics;} } @incollection{ evans_g:1976a2, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Semantic Structure and Logical Form}, booktitle = {Readings in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter Ludlow}, pages = {233--256}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of evans_g:1976a1.}, topic = {logical-form;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ evans_g:1977a, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Pronouns, Quantifiers, and Relative Clauses (I)}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {7}, number = {2}, pages = {467--536}, topic = {anaphora;donkey-anaphora;nl-quantification;} } @article{ evans_g:1977b, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Pronouns, Quantifiers and Relative Clauses {II}: Appendix}, journal = {Canadian Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1977}, volume = {7}, number = {4}, pages = {777--797}, xref = {Commentary on: geach_pt:1962a}, topic = {nl-quantification;anaphora;} } @article{ evans_g:1978a1, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Can There Be Vague Objects?}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1978}, volume = {38}, number = {4}, pages = {208}, xref = {Republication: evans_g:1978a2.}, xref = {Commentary: lewis_dk:1988a1, cook_m3:1986a}, topic = {vagueness;identity;} } @incollection{ evans_g:1978a2, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Can There be Vague Objects?}, booktitle = {Vagueness: A Reader}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, editor = {Rosanna Keefe and Peter Smith}, pages = {317}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication of: evans_g:1978a1.}, topic = {vagueness;identity;} } @article{ evans_g:1979a, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Reference and Contingency}, journal = {The Monist}, year = {1979}, volume = {62}, number = {2}, pages = {161--189}, abstract = {This paper is an attempt to follow Russell's advice by using a puzzle about the contingent a priori to test and explore certain theories of reference and modality. No one could claim that the puzzle is of any great philosophical importance by itself, but to understand it, one has to get clear about certain aspects of the theory of reference; and to solve it, one has to think a little more deeply than one is perhaps accustomed about what it means to say that a statement is contingent or necessary. }, topic = {contingent-a-priori;reference;two-dimensional-semantics;} } @article{ evans_g:1980a, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Pronouns}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1980}, volume = {11}, number = {2}, pages = {337--362}, topic = {anaphora;donkey-anaphora;} } @incollection{ evans_g:1981a1, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Understanding Demonstratives}, booktitle = {Meaning and Understanding}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1981}, editor = {Herman Parret and Jacques Bouveresse}, address = {Berlin}, missinginfo = {pages}, xref = {Republication: evans_g:1981a2, evans_g:1981a3.}, topic = {demonstratives;nl-semantics;indexicals;} } @incollection{ evans_g:1981a2, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Understanding Demonstratives}, booktitle = {Meaning and Understanding}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1981}, editor = {Herman Parett}, pages = {280--304}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Republication of: evans_g:1981a1.}, topic = {demonstratives;nl-semantics;indexicals;} } @incollection{ evans_g:1981a3, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Understanding Demonstratives}, booktitle = {Readings in the Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1996}, editor = {Peter Ludlow}, pages = {717--744}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Republication: evans_g:1981a2.}, topic = {demonstratives;nl-semantics;indexicals;} } @book{ evans_g:1983a, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {The Varieties of Reference}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1983}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {reference;} } @incollection{ evans_g:1985a, author = {Gareth Evans}, title = {Does Tense Logic Rest on a Mistake?}, booktitle = {Collected Papers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1985}, editor = {5}, pages = {343--363}, address = {Oxford}, contentnote = {Evans argues that propositions don't vary in truth-value over time. (But of course, then functions from times to propositions do.)}, topic = {foundations-of-temporal-logic;propositions;} } @book{ evans_g:1996a, author = {Gareth Evans}, note = {Edited by Antonia Phillips}, title = {Collected Papers}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780198236276}, topic = {philosophy-of-language;} } @book{ evans_g-mcdowell_jh:1976a, editor = {Gareth Evans and John Mc{D}owell}, title = {Truth and Meaning: Essays in Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1976}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198245173}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Gareth Evans and John Mc{D}owell, "Introduction", pp. vii--xxii 2. J.A. Foster, "Meaning and Truth Theory", pp. 1--32 3. Donald A. Davidson, "Reply to {F}oster", pp. 33--41 4. John Mc{D}owell, "Truth Conditions, Bivalence and Verificationalism", pp. 42--66 5. Michael Dummett, "What is a Theory of Meaning ({II})", pp. 67--137 6. Brian Loar, "Two Theories of Meaning", pp. 138--161 7. Christopher Peacocke, "Truth Definitions and Actual Languages", pp. 162--188 8. Peter F. Strawson, "On Understanding the Structure of One's Language", pp. 189---198 9. Gareth Evans, "Semantic Structure and Logical Form", pp. 199--221 10. Crispin Wright, "Language-Mastery and the Sorites Paradox", pp. 223--247 11. Michael Woods, "Existence and Tense", pp. 248--262 12. Barry Taylor, "States of Affairs", pp. 263--284 13. David Wiggins, "The {\em De Re} `Must': A Note on the Logical Form of Essentialist Claims", pp. 285--312 14. Christopher Peacocke, "An Appendix to {D}avid {W}iggins' `Note{'}", pp. 313--324 15. Saul Kripke, "Is There a Problem about Substitutional Quantification?", pp. 325--419 }, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP edited shelves.}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B105.M4 T781}, topic = {nl-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @incollection{ evans_g-mcdowell_jh:1976b, author = {Gareth Evans and John Mc{D}owell}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Truth and Meaning: Essays in Semantics}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1976}, editor = {Gareth Evans and John Mc{D}owell}, pages = {vii--xxii}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantics;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ evans_jbt-newstead_se:1980a, author = {Jonathan St. B.T. Evans and Stephen E. Newstead}, title = {A Study of Disjunctive Reasoning}, journal = {Psychological Research}, year = {1980}, volume = {41}, number = {4}, pages = {373--388}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;disjunction;} } @incollection{ evans_jsbt:2005a, author = {Jonathan St. B. T. Evans}, title = {Deductive Reasoning}, booktitle = {The {C}ambridge Handbook of Thinking and Reasoning}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Keith J. Holyoak and Robert G. Morrison}, pages = {169--184}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;deductive-reasoning;} } @book{ evans_jsbt:2007a, author = {Jonathan St. B.T. Evans}, title = {Hypothetical Thinking: Dual Processes in Reasoning and Judgement}, publisher = {Psychology Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Hove}, ISBN = {1841696609}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate BF 442 .E93 2007}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;decision-making;} } @incollection{ evans_jsbt-etal:2003a, author = {Jonathan St. B.T. Evans and David E. Over and Simon J. Handley}, title = {A Theory of Hypothetical Thinking}, booktitle = {Thinking: Psychological Perspectives on Reasoning and Decision Making}, publisher = {John Wiley \&\ Sons}, year = {2003}, editor = {David Hardman and Laura Macchi}, pages = {1--21}, address = {New York}, topic = {conditional-reasoning;reasoning;mental-models;} } @book{ evans_jsbt-over_de:1996a, author = {Jonathan St.B.T Evans and David E. Over}, title = {Rationality and Reasoning}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1996}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Rationality in reasoning 2. Personal goals, utility, and decision 3. Relevance, rationality, and tacit processing 4. Reasoning as decision making: the case of the selection task 5. Prior belief 6. Deductive competence 7. A dual process theory of thinking }, topic = {cognitive-psychology;decision-making; rationality-and-cognition;} } @book{ evans_jsbt-over_de:2004a, author = {Jonathan St. B.T. Evans and David E. Over}, title = {If}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0198525125 (hbk.), 0198525133 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Shapiro Undergraduate BC 199 .C56 E93 2004}, rtnote = {This is primarily a psychological study.}, topic = {conditionals;} } @article{ evans_jsht:2012a, author = {Jonathan St. B.T. Evans}, title = {Reflections on Rationality. Review of \emph{{R}ationality and the Reflective Mind}, by {K}eith {E}. {S}tanovich}, journal = {The American Journal of Psychology}, year = {2012}, volume = {125}, number = {1}, pages = {113--116}, xref = {Review of: stanovich_ke:2010a}, topic = {rationality;cognitive-psychology;limited-rationality;} } @incollection{ evans_m-shah_n:2012a, author = {Matthew Evans and Nishi Shah}, title = {Mental Agency and Metaethics}, booktitle = {Oxford Studies in Metaethics, Volume 7}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Russ Shafer-Landau}, pages = {80--109}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {;} } @incollection{ evans_n:1985a, author = {Nick Evans}, title = {A-{Q}uantifiers and Scope in {M}alayi}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {207--270}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;Australian-languages;} } @article{ evans_r-etal:2020a, author = {Richard Evans and Marek Sergot and Andrew Stephenson}, title = {Formalizing {K}ant's Rules}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2020}, volume = {49}, number = {4}, pages = {613--680}, abstract = {This paper formalizes part of the cognitive architecture that {K}ant develops in the {C}ritique of {P}ure {R}eason. The central {K}antian notion that we formalize is the rule. As we interpret {K}ant, a rule is not a declarative conditional stating what would be true if such and such conditions hold. Rather, a {K}antian rule is a general procedure, represented by a conditional imperative or permissive, indicating which acts must or may be performed, given certain acts that are already being performed. ... Our formalization is related to the input/ output logics, a family of logics designed to capture relations between elements that need not have truth-values. ... Our analysis sheds new light on the way in which normative notions play a fundamental role in the conception of logic at the heart of {K}ant's theoretical philosophy. }, topic = {Kant;input-output-logic;} } @inproceedings{ evans_r-gazdar_g:1989a, author = {Roger Evans and Gerald Gazdar}, title = {Inference in {DATR}}, booktitle = {Proceedings, Fourth Meeting of the {E}uropean Chapter of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, year = {1989}, pages = {66--71}, organization = {{A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics}, missinginfo = {editor, publisher, address}, topic = {computational-morphology;nm-ling;} } @techreport{ evans_r-gazdar_g:1990a, author = {Roger Evans and Gerald Gazdar}, title = {The {\sc datr} papers: February 1990}, institution = {School of Cognitive and Computing Science, University of Sussex}, number = {CSRP 139}, year = {1990}, address = {Brighton, England}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nm-ling;computational-morphology;} } @inproceedings{ evans_r-gazdar_g:1990b, author = {Roger Evans and Gerald Gazdar}, title = {The Semantics of {DATR}}, booktitle = {Seventh Conference of the {S}ociety for the {S}tudy of {A}rtificial {I}ntelligence and the {S}imulation of {B}ehaviour}, year = {1989}, editor = {A. Cohn}, pages = {79--87}, organization = {{S}ociety for the {S}tudy of {A}rtificial {I}ntelligence and the {S}imulation of {B}ehaviour}, missinginfo = {publisher, address }, topic = {computational-morphology;nm-ling;} } @inproceedings{ evans_r-gazdar_g:1995a, author = {Roger Evans and Gerald Gazdar and David Weir}, title = {Encoding Lexicalized Tree Adjoining Grammars with a Nonmonotonic Inheritance Hierarchy}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Third Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1995}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, editor = {Hans Uszkoreit}, pages = {77--84}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {computational-lexicography;nm-ling;inheritance;DATR;} } @article{ evans_r-gazdar_g:1996a, author = {Roger Evans and Gerald Gazdar}, title = {{DATR}: A Language for Lexical Knowledge Representation}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {1996}, volume = {22}, number = {2}, pages = {167--216}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {computational-morphology;nm-ling;DATR;} } @inproceedings{ evans_r-weir_d:1998a, author = {Roger Evans and David Weir}, title = {A Structure-Sharing Parser for Lexicalized Grammars}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {372--378}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {parsing-algorithms;TAG-grammar;finite-state-nlp;} } @incollection{ evans_v:2016a, author = {Vyvian Evans}, title = {Cognitive Linguistics}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Susan E.F. Chipman}, pages = {283--300}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se19}, topic = {cognitive-linguistics;} } @incollection{ everaere-etal:2004a, author = {Patricia Everaere and S\'ebastian Konieczny and Pierre Marquis}, title = {On Merging Strategy-Proofness}, booktitle = {{KR}2004: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2004}, editor = {Didier Dubois and Christopher A. Welty and Mary-Anne Williams}, pages = {357--367}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {group-attitudes;} } @incollection{ everaere-etal:2008a, author = {Patricia Everaere and Sbastien Konieczny and Pierre Marquis}, title = {Conflict-Based Merging Operators}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {348--357}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {This paper deals with propositional belief merging. The key problem in this setting is to define the beliefs/goals of a group of agents from a profile of bases, gathering the beliefs/goals of each member of the group. To this aim, a well-studied family of merging operators consists of distance-based ones: the models of the merged base are the closest interpretations to the given profile. Many operators from this family are based on the Hamming distance between interpretations, which can be viewed as a degree of conflict between them. In this paper, we introduce a more general family of merging operators, based on a more primitive concept, namely the conflict between interpretations itself. We show that this family of conflict-based merging operators includes many operators from the literature, both model-based ones and syntax-based ones. We present a number of comparison relations on conflict vectors characterizing operators from this family, and study the logical properties of conflict-based merging operators. }, topic = {knowledge-integration;inconsistency-management;} } @article{ everaere-etal:2010a, author = {Patricia Everaere and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Pierre Marquis}, title = {Disjunctive Merging: Quota and {G}min Merging Operators}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2010}, volume = {174}, number = {12--13}, pages = {824--849}, topic = {information-merging;} } @inproceedings{ everaere-etal:2014a, author = {Patricia Everaere and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Pierre Marquis}, title = {On Egalitarian Belief Merging}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {121--130}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Belief merging aims at defining the beliefs of a group of agents from the beliefs of each member of the group. It is related to more general notions of aggregation from economics ... we investigate possible translations in a belief merging framework of some egalitarian properties and concepts coming from social choice theory, such as Sen-Hammond equity, PigouDalton property, median, and Lorenz curves. We study how these properties interact with the standard rationality conditions considered in belief merging. Among other results, we show that the distance-based merging operators satisfying Sen-Hammond equity are mainly those for which leximax is used as the aggregation function. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {kr;knowledge-integration;aggregation;belief-knowledge-aggregation;} } @inproceedings{ everaere_p-etal:2012a, author = {Patricia Everaere and S\'ebastien Konieczny and Pierre Marquis}, title = {Compositional Belief Merging}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {603--607}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... we show how new merging operators, called compositional operators, can be defined from existing ones. Such operators aim at offering a higher discriminative power than the merging operators on which they are based, without leading to a complexity shift or losing rationality postulates. We identify some sufficient conditions for ensuring that rationality is fully preserved by composition. }, topic = {knowledge-integration;} } @book{ everaert-vanriemsdijk:2006a, editor = {Martin Everaert and Henk van Riemsdijk}, title = {The {B}lackwell Companion to Syntax, Volume 1}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2006}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {1405114851}, rtnote = {UMich Hatcher Graduate P 291 .B53 2006}, topic = {nl-syntax;} } @book{ everaet-etal:1995a, editor = {Martin Everaert and Erik-Jan {van der Linden} and Andr\'e Schenk and Rob Schreuder}, title = {Idioms: Structural and Psychological Perspectives}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1995}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;idioms;} } @book{ everett_a-roman:2011a, author = {Allen Everett and Thomas Roman}, title = {Time Travel and Warp Drives}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {2011}, address = {Chicago}, ISBN = {978-0-226-22498-5}, topic = {physics-speculative;} } @article{ everett_jo:1999a, author = {John Otis Everett}, title = {Topological Evidence of Teleology: Deriving Function from Structure via Evidential Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {113}, number = {1--2}, pages = {149--202}, topic = {qualitative-reasoning;thermodynamics;teleology;} } @article{ everett_jo-etal:2002a, author = {John O. Everett and Daniel G. Bobrow and Reinhard Stolle and Richard Crouch and Valeria de Paiva and Cleo Condoravdi and Martin van den Berg and Livia Polanyi}, title = {Ontology Applications and Design: Making Ontologies Work for Resolving Redundancies across Documents}, journal = {Communications of the {ACM}}, year = {2002}, volume = {45}, number = {2}, pages = {55--60}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {computational-ontology;} } @article{ everett_tj:2000a, author = {Theodore J. Everett}, title = {A Simple Logic for Comparisons and Vagueness}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2000}, volume = {123}, pages = {263--278}, topic = {comparative-constructions;vagueness;} } @techreport{ evett-etal:1990a, author = {M. Evett and James Hendler and Lee Spector}, title = {Parallel Knowledge Representation on the Connection Machine}, institution = {Computer Science Department, University of Maryland}, number = {CS--TR--2409}, year = {1990}, address = {College Park, Maryland}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {inheritance-theory;parallel-processing;} } @book{ evnine_s:1991a, author = {Simon Evnine}, title = {Donald Davidson}, publisher = {Stanford University Press}, year = {1991}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {0-8047-1852-0}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, topic = {Donald-Davidson;events;philosophy-of-mind;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ evnine_s:2010a, author = {Simon Evnine}, title = {Review of \emph{Our Knowledge of the Internal World}, by {R}obert {C}. {S}talnaker}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {2010}, volume = {70}, number = {2}, pages = {393--395}, xref = {Review of: stalnaker_rc:2008a}, topic = {belief;indexicals;epistemology;introspection;} } @inproceedings{ ewin_cj-etal:2014a, author = {Christopher James Ewin and Adrian R. Pearce and Stavros Vassos}, title = {Transforming Situation Calculus Action Theories for Optimised Reasoning}, booktitle = {{KR}2014: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference}, year = {2014}, editor = {Chitta Baral and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Thomas Eiter}, pages = {448--457}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... The main contribution of this work is a new technique which allows the length of the action sequences to be reduced by reordering independent actions and removing dominated actions; maintaining semantic equivalence with respect to the original action theory. This transformation allows for the removal of actions that are problematic with respect to progression, allowing for periodical update of the action theory to reflect the current state of affairs. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2014}, topic = {progression;reasoning-about-actions;} } @article{ ewing_ac:1937a, author = {Alfred C. Ewing}, title = {Meaninglessness}, journal = {Mind}, year = {1937}, volume = {46}, number = {183}, pages = {347--364}, topic = {category-mistakes;sortal-incorrectness;} } @article{ ewing_ac:1963a, author = {Alfred C. Ewing}, title = {May Can-Statements Be Analysed Deterministically}, journal = {Proceedings of the {A}ristotelian Society}, year = {1963--64}, volume = {64}, pages = {157--176}, topic = {ability;(in)determinism;freedom;} } @incollection{ eyerich-etal:2008a, author = {Patrick Eyerich and Michael Brenner and Bernhard Nebel}, title = {On the Complexity of Planning Operator Subsumption}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {518--527}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {planning;complexity-in-AI;} } @book{ eysenck:1990a, editor = {Michael W. Eysenck}, title = {The {B}lackwell Dictionary of Cognitive Psychology}, publisher = {Blackwell Reference}, year = {1990}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631156828}, rtnote = {UMich Undergraduate, Bf 311 .B5351 1990.}, topic = {cognitive-psychology;} } @inproceedings{ ezeiza-etal:1998a, author = {N. Ezeiza and I. Alegria and J.M. Arriola and R. Urizar and I. Aduriz}, title = {Combining Stochastic and Rule-Based Methods for Disambiguation in Agglutinative Languages}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Thirty-Sixth Annual Meeting of the {A}ssociation for {C}omputational {L}inguistics and Seventeenth International Conference on Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christian Boitet and Pete Whitelock}, pages = {379--384}, organization = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers}, address = {San Francisco, California}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;} } @incollection{ faber_w-etal:2008a, author = {Wolfgang Faber and Hans Tompits and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Notions of Strong Equivalence for Logic Programs with Ordered Disjunction}, booktitle = {{KR}2008: Proceedings of the Eleventh International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Gerhard Brewka and J\'er\^ome Lang}, pages = {433--443}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, note = {url: http://www.aaai.org/Library/KR/kr08contents.php}, abstract = {Ordered disjunctions have been introduced as a simple, yet expressive approach for representing preferential knowledge by means of logic programs. The semantics for the resulting language is based on the answer-set semantics, but comes in different variants, depending on the particular interpretation of preference aggregation associated to the ordered disjunction connective. While in standard answer-set programming the question of when a program is to be considered equivalent to another received increasing attention in recent years, this problem has not been addressed for programs with ordered disjunctions so far. In this paper, we discuss the concept of strong equivalence in this setting. We introduce different versions of strong equivalence for programs with ordered disjunctions and provide model-theoretic characterisations, extending well-known ones for strong equivalence between ordinary logic programs. Furthermore, we discuss the relationships between the proposed notions and study their computational complexity. }, topic = {answer-sets;ordered-disjunctions;} } @article{ faber_w-etal:2011a, author = {Wolfgang Faber and Gerald Pfeifer and Nicola Leone}, title = {Semantics and Complexity of Recursive Aggregates in Answer Set Programming}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {1}, pages = {278--298}, topic = {answer-sets;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ faber_w-etal:2012a, author = {Wolfgang Faber and Miroslaw Truszczynski and Stefan Woltran. }, title = {Strong Equivalence of Qualitative Optimization Problems}, journal = {Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research}, year = {2013}, volume = {47}, number = {1}, pages = {351--91}, abstract = {We introduce the framework of qualitative optimization problems (or, simply, optimization problems) to represent preference theories. ... We study strong equivalence of optimization problems, which guarantees their interchangeability within any larger context. ... Understanding strong equivalence is essential for modular representation of optimization problems and rewriting techniques to simplify them without changing their inherent properties.}, topic = {optimization;strong-equivalence;} } @inproceedings{ faber_w-etal:2012b, author = {Wolfgang Faber and Miros{\l}aw Truszczy\'nski and Stefan Woltran}, title = {Strong Equivalence of Qualitative Optimization Problems}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {188--198}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We introduce the framework of qualitative optimization problems (or, simply, optimization problems) to represent preference theories. The formalism uses separate modules to describe the space of outcomes to be compared (the generator) and the preferences on outcomes (the selector). We consider two types of optimization problems. They differ in the way the generator, which we model by a propositional theory, is interpreted: by the standard propositional logic semantics, and by the equilibrium-model (answer-set) semantics. ... Understanding strong equivalence is essential for modular representation of optimization problems and rewriting techniques to simplify them without changing their inherent properties. }, topic = {optimization;} } @article{ faber_w-konczak_k:2006a, author = {Wolfgang Faber and Kathrin Konczak}, title = {Strong Order Equivalence}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2006}, volume = {47}, number = {1--2}, pages = {43--78}, topic = {answer-sets;logic-programming;} } @book{ fabre-billot:1995a, author = {C\'{e}cile Fabre and Pascale S\'{e}billot}, title = {Calculability of the semantics of {E}nglish Nominal Compounds: Combining General Linguistic Rules and Corpus-Based Semantic Information}, publisher = {Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique (INRIA)}, year = {1995}, address = {Paris}, abstract = {Our project focuses on the calculability of the semantics of nominal compounds. Our goal is to design a general model, based on domain-free lexical information, in order to exhibit and implement the principles of nominal compound interpretation. This model is based upon a precise semantic characterization of nominal constituents, which relates nouns to the predicative information that must be identified to retrieve the underlying relation of the compound. The predicate is deduced from the morpho-syntactic and semantic features of the nouns and its argument structure is used to characterize the roles of each constituent. We describe our model of interpretation of English compounds and evaluate it from the results of a program that implements this general framework. We suggest solutions to enrich this model and to adapt it to the characteristics of the compounds of a specialized corpus through the extraction of specific semantic information.}, topic = {compound-nominals;} } @article{ fabriciushansen-saebo_kj:2004a, author = {Catherine Fabricius-Hansen and Kjell Jon S{\ae}b\o}, title = {In a Mediative Mood: The Semantics of the {G}erman Reportative Subjunctive}, journal = {Natural Language Semantics}, year = {2003}, volume = {12}, number = {3}, pages = {213--357}, topic = {subjunctive-mood;nl-semantics;indirect-discourse; German-language;} } @incollection{ fabriciushansen_c:1991a, author = {Cathrine Fabricius-Hansen}, title = {Verbklassifikation}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {692--708}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-semantics;Aktionsarten;} } @incollection{ fabriciushansen_c:1991b, author = {Cathrine Fabricius-Hansen}, title = {Tempus}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {722--747}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-tense;} } @article{ fabriciushansen_c:2021a, author = {Cathrine Fabricius-Hansen}, title = {Reflections on Counterfactuals}, journal = {Theoretical Linguistics}, year = {2021}, volume = {47}, number = {3--4}, pages = {227--232}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de21}, abstract = {(1) How do if and (subjunctive) mood interact? (2) What is (in) 'the topic situation'? (3) Against or not against the facts? (4) What is (in) a world -- and the context?}, xref = {Commentary on: klein_w:2021a}, topic = {conditionals;subjunctive-mood;} } @incollection{ fabriciushansen_c-saebo_kj:2011a, author = {Cathrine Fabricius-Hansen and Kjell Johan S{\ae}b\'o}, title = {Behabitive Reports}, booktitle = {Understanding Quotation}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Elke Brendel and J\"org Meibauer and Markus Steinbach}, pages = {85--106}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {direct-discourse;speech-acts;} } @book{ facione_pa-facione_mc:2007a, author = {Peter A. Facione and Noreen C. Facione}, title = {Thinking and Reasoning in Human Decision Making: The Method of Argument and Heuristic Analysis}, publisher = {The California Academic Press}, year = {2007}, address = {Millbrae, California}, ISBN = {1-891557--58-0}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Intro Philosophy/Logic Shelves.}, topic = {argumentation;} } @article{ fagin:1982a, author = {Ronald Fagin}, title = {Horn Clauses and Database Dependencies}, journal = {Journal of the {ACM}}, year = {1982}, volume = {4}, pages = {952--985}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {functional-dependencies;} } @book{ fagin:1994a, editor = {Ronald Fagin}, title = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fifth Conference ({TARK} 1994)}, year = {1994}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, rtnote = {Photocopy of Ch 1 in RHT collection. Files "Halpern".}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;} } @article{ fagin-etal:1983a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Jeffrey D. Ullman and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {On the Semantics of Updates in Databases}, journal = {Journal of the Association of Computing Machinery}, year = {1983}, volume = {30}, pages = {352--365}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {database-update;} } @techreport{ fagin-etal:1984a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {A Model-Theoretic Analysis of Knowledge: Preliminary Report}, institution = {{IBM} Research Laboratory}, year = {1984}, address = {San Jose, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, missinginfo = {number}, topic = {epistemic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ fagin-etal:1984b, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {A Model Theoretic Analysis of Knowledge}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-Fifth Annual Symposium on the Foundations of Computer Science}, year = {1984}, pages = {268--278}, missinginfo = {organization, publisher, address}, topic = {epistemic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ fagin-etal:1985a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Belief, Awareness, and Limited Reasoning: Preliminary Report}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Ninth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1985}, editor = {Arivind Joshi}, pages = {491--501}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {hyperintensionality;propositional-attitudes;} } @inproceedings{ fagin-etal:1990a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {A Nonstandard Approach to the Logical Omniscience Problem}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Third Conference ({TARK} 1990)}, year = {1990}, editor = {Rohit Parikh}, pages = {41--55}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {hyperintensionality;relevance-logic;} } @article{ fagin-etal:1991a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {A Model-Theoretic Analysis of Knowledge}, journal = {Journal of the Association for Computing Machinery}, year = {1991}, volume = {38}, number = {2}, pages = {382--428}, topic = {epistemic-logic;distributed-systems;} } @incollection{ fagin-etal:1992a, author = {Ronald Fagin and John Geanakanoplos and Joseph Y. Halpern and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {The Expressive Power of the Hierarchical Approach to Modeling Knowledge and Common Knowledge}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the Fourth Conference ({TARK} 1992)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1992}, editor = {Yoram Moses}, pages = {229--244}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {epistemic-logic;mutual-belief;} } @article{ fagin-etal:1992b, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {What Can Machines Know? On the Properties of Knowledge in Distributed Systems.}, journal = {Journal of the Association for Computing Machinery}, year = {1992}, volume = {39}, number = {2}, pages = {328--376}, topic = {epistemic-logic;distributed-systems;} } @article{ fagin-etal:1992c, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {What is an Inference Rule?}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1992}, volume = {57}, number = {3}, pages = {1018--1045}, topic = {inference-rules;} } @techreport{ fagin-etal:1994a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern and Yoram Moses and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {Knowledge-Based Programming}, institution = {{IBM} Research Laboratory}, number = {RJ 9711}, year = {1994}, address = {San Jose, California}, topic = {epistemic-logic;agent-oriented-programming;} } @article{ fagin-etal:1995a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {A Nonstandard Approach to the Logical Omniscience Problem}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1995}, volume = {79}, number = {2}, pages = {203--240}, contentnote = {Uses a relevance-like logic to address problem of logical omniscience. Has completeness proof.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;epistemic-logic;relevance-logic; hyperintensionality;} } @book{ fagin-etal:1995b, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern and Yoram Moses and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {Reasoning about Knowledge}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, rtnote = {Copy of Chapter 1 on file. File drawers. "Fagin"}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. CS General shelves. Office. (2 copies).}, xref = {Reviews: goranko_v:1999a,thomason_rh:1999d,kyburg:1997a.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;distributed-systems;communication-protocols; game-theory;} } @incollection{ fagin-etal:1996a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern and Yoram Moses and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {Common Knowledge Revisited}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge: Proceedings of the Sixth Conference ({TARK} 1996)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Yoav Shoham}, pages = {283--258}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {mutual-belief;rational-action;} } @article{ fagin-halpern_jy:1987a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Belief, Awareness, and Limited Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1987}, volume = {34}, number = {1}, pages = {39--76}, topic = {epistemic-logic;hyperintensionality;awareness;} } @article{ fagin-halpern_jy:1988a1, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {I'm {OK} if You're {OK}: On the notion of Trusting Communication}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1988}, volume = {17}, number = {4}, pages = {329--354}, xref = {Republication: fagin-halpern_jy:1988a2.}, topic = {distributed-systems;communication-protocols;epistemic-logic;} } @incollection{ fagin-halpern_jy:1988a2, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {I'm {OK} if You're {OK}: On the notion of Trusting Communication}, booktitle = {Philosophical Logic and Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1989}, editor = {Richmond H. Thomason}, pages = {9--34}, address = {Dordrecht}, xref = {Republication of: fagin-halpern_jy:1988a1.}, topic = {distributed-systems;communication-protocols;epistemic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ fagin-halpern_jy:1988b, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Reasoning about Knowledge and Probability}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Second Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge}, year = {1988}, editor = {Moshe Y. Vardi}, pages = {277--293}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @techreport{ fagin-halpern_jy:1988c, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {A Logic for Reasoning about Probability}, institution = {{IBM} Research Laboratory}, year = {1988}, address = {San Jose, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, number = {RJ 6190}, topic = {reasoning-about-knowledge;probabilistic-reasoning;} } @article{ fagin-halpern_jy:1989a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Uncertainty, Belief, and Probability}, journal = {Computational Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {7}, number = {3}, pages = {160--173}, topic = {probability-semantics;} } @article{ fagin-halpern_jy:1989b, author = {Ronald Fagin and Joseph Y. Halpern}, title = {Reasoning about Knowledge and Probability}, journal = {Journal of the {ACM}}, year = {1989}, volume = {41}, number = {2}, pages = {340--367}, topic = {epistemic-logic;reasoning-about-knowledge; probabilistic-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ fagin-vardi_my:1985a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {An Internal Semantics for Modal Logic: Preliminary Report}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 7th Annual {ACM} Symposium on Theory of Computing}, year = {1985}, pages = {305--315}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under "Fagin".}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @inproceedings{ fagin-vardi_my:1986a, author = {Ronald Fagin and Moshe Y. Vardi}, title = {Knowledge and Implicit Knowledge in a Distributed Environment: Preliminary Report}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge: Proceedings of the First Conference}, year = {1986}, editor = {Joseph Y. Halpern}, pages = {187--206}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, Inc.}, address = {Los Altos, California}, topic = {epistemic-logic;distributed-systems;} } @article{ fagiuoli-zaffalon:1998a, author = {Enrico Fagiuoli and Marco Zaffalon}, title = {{2U}: An Exact Interval Propagation Algorithm for Polytrees with Binary Variables}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1998}, volume = {106}, number = {1}, pages = {77--107}, topic = {bayesian-networks;} } @article{ fahlman:1974a, author = {Scott E. Fahlman}, title = {A Planning System for Robot Construction Tasks}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {1--49}, year = {1974}, topic = {planning;robotics;} } @book{ fahlman:1979a, author = {Scott E. Fahlman}, title = {{\sc netl:} A System for Representing and Using Real-World Knowledge.}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1979}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, xref = {Review: shapiro:1980a}, topic = {inheritance-theory;parallel-processing;} } @inproceedings{ fahlman-etal:1981a, author = {Scott E. Fahlman and David Touretzky and W. van Roggen}, title = {Cancellation in a Parallel Semantic Network}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1981}, editor = {Patrick J. Hayes}, pages = {257--263}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name}, topic = {inheritance-theory;parallel-processing;} } @unpublished{ fairchild_m:2018a, author = {Maegan Fairchild}, title = {The Barest Flutter of the Smallest Leaf: Understanding Material Plenitude}, year = {2018}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Michigan, 2018}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se18}, topic = {metaphysics;} } @incollection{ fairley_n-manktelow_k:2003a, author = {Neil Fairley and Ken Manktelow}, title = {Superordinate Principles, Conditions and Conditionals}, booktitle = {Thinking: Psychological Perspectives on Reasoning and Decision Making}, publisher = {John Wiley \&\ Sons}, year = {2003}, editor = {David Hardman and Laura Macchi}, pages = {763--78}, address = {New York}, topic = {conditional-reasoning;} } @incollection{ fairtlough-wainer_ss:1998a, author = {Matt Fairtlough and Stanley S. Wainer}, title = {Hierarchies of Provably Recursive Functions}, booktitle = {Handbook of Proof Theory}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Samuel R. Buss}, pages = {149--207}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Review: arai_t:1998d.}, topic = {proof-theory;recursion-theory;} } @article{ fais:2004a, author = {Laurel Fais}, title = {Inferable Centers, Centering Transitions, and the Notion of Coherence}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {2}, pages = {119--150}, topic = {coherence;discourse;centering;corpus-linguistics; Japanese-language;} } @article{ fait_p:2018a, author = {Paolo Fait}, title = {Review of \emph{{A}ristotle on Knowledge and Learning: The `Posterior Analytics{'}}, by {D}avid {B}ronstein}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2018}, volume = {127}, number = {4}, pages = {515--518}, xref = {Review of: bronstein_d:2016a}, topic = {Aristotle;history-of-logic;} } @article{ fajardochica:2010a, author = {David Fajardo-Chica}, title = {Review of \emph{{F}eeling Pain and Being in Pain}, by {G}rahek {N}ikola}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2010}, volume = {20}, number = {2}, pages = {317--320}, xref = {Review of: nikola:2010a.}, topic = {pain;philosophy-of-mind;} } @article{ falappa-etal:2002a, author = {Marcelo A. Falappa and Gabriele Kern-Iserner and Guillermo R. Simari}, title = {Explanations, Belief Revision, and Defeasible Reasoning}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {141}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--28}, topic = {belief-revision;explanation;nonmonotonic-reasoning;} } @article{ falappa-etal:2012a, author = {Marcelo A. Falappa and Gabriele Kern-Isberner and Maur\'icio D.L. Reis and Guillermo R. Simari}, title = {Prioritized and Non-prioritized Multiple Change on Belief Bases}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2012}, volume = {41}, number = {1}, pages = {77--113}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @article{ falappa-garc:2013a, author = {Marcelo Alejandro Falappa and Alejandro Javier Garc\'ia}, title = {Stratified Belief Bases Revision with Argumentative Inference}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2013}, volume = {42}, number = {1}, pages = {161--193}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @book{ falaus_a:2013a, editor = {Amanira F\v{a}l\v{a}u\c{s}}, title = {Alternatives in Semantics}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2013}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {978-0-230-31434-4}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Amanira F\v{a}l\v{a}u\c{s}, "Introduction: Alternatives in Semantics and Pragmatics", pp. 1--22 2. Luis Alonso-Ovalle and Paula Men\'endez-Benito, "A Note on the Derivation of the Epistemic Effect of Spanish", pp. 36--49 3. Gennaro Chierchia, "Free Choice Nominals and Free Choice Disjunction: the Identity Thesis", pp. 50--87 4. Veneeta Dayal, "A Viability Constraint on Alternatives for Free Choice", pp. 88--122 5. Clemens Mayr, "Consequences of an Alternative Semantics for the Analysis of Intervention Effects", pp. 123--149 6. Elizabeth Coppock and David Beaver, "\emph{Mere}-eology", pp. 150--173 7. Maribel Romero and Marc Novel, "Variable Binding and Sets of Alternatives", pp. 174--208 8. Daniele Panizza and Jacopo Romoli, "On the Processing of Alternatives, Exhaustification and Covert Negation: the Case of 'mai'", pp. 209--307 9. Alan Bale and Savid Barner, "Grammatical Alternatives and Pragmatic Development", pp. 238--266 }, topic = {nl-semantics;alternatives;} } @incollection{ falaus_a:2013b, author = {Amanira F\v{a}l\v{a}u\c{s}}, title = {Introduction: Alternatives in Semantics and Pragmatics}, booktitle = {Alternatives in Semantics}, publisher = {Palgrave Macmillan}, year = {2013}, editor = {Amanira F\v{a}l\v{a}u\c{s}}, pages = {1--22}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \se16.}, topic = {nl-semantics;alternatives;free-choice-'any/or';} } @article{ falaus_a:2014a, author = {Anamaria F\v{a}l\v{a}u\c{s}}, title = {(Partially) Free Choice of Alternatives}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2014}, volume = {37}, number = {2}, pages = {121--173}, abstract = {This paper contributes to the semantic typology of dependent indefinites, by accounting for the distribution and interpretation of the Romanian indefinite 'vreun'. It is shown that its occurrences are restricted to negative polarity and a subset of modal contexts. More specifically, the study of its behavior in intensional environments reveals that 'vreun; is systematically incompatible with non-epistemic operators, a restriction we capture by proposing a novel empirical generalization ("the epistemic constraint"). To account for the observed pattern, we adopt the unitary approach to polarity in Chierchia (2013a, 2013b, in Falaus (ed.)) and derive the properties of 'vreun' from its obligatory association with alternatives. $\ldots$}, topic = {free-choice-'any/or';alternatives;Romanian-language;} } @book{ falcone_r-castelfranchi_c:2010a, author = {Rino Falcone and Cristiano Castelfranchi}, title = {Trust Theory: A Socio-Cognitive and Computational Model}, publisher = {Wiley}, year = {2010}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0-470-02875-0}, topic = {trust;social-cognition;} } @incollection{ falcone_r-etal:2013a, author = {Rino Falcone and Cristiano Castelfranchi and Henrique Lopes Cardoso and Andrew Jones and Eug\'enio Oliveira}, title = {Norms and Trust}, booktitle = {Agreement Technologies}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2013}, editor = {Sascha Ossowski}, pages = {221--231}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {norms;social-agreement;trust;} } @incollection{ fales:1984a, author = {Ewan Fales}, title = {Causation and Induction}, booktitle = {Causation and Causal Theories}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, year = {1984}, editor = {Peter A. French and Theodore E. Uehling, Jr. and Howard K. Wettstein}, pages = {113--134}, address = {Minneapolis}, topic = {causality;induction;} } @article{ faliszewski-etal:2014a, author = {Piotr Faliszewski and Edith Hemaspaandra and Lane A. Hemaspaandra}, title = {The Complexity of Manipulative Attacks in Nearly Single-Peaked Electorates}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2014}, volume = {207}, pages = {69--99}, topic = {computational-social-choice;} } @article{ faliszewski-procaccia:2010a, author = {Piotr Faliszewski and Ariel D. Procaccia}, title = {{AI}'s War on Manipulation: Are We Winning?}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2010}, volume = {31}, number = {4}, pages = {53--64}, topic = {algorithmic-game-theory;algorithmic-complexity;strategic-voting;} } @incollection{ falk_a:2003a, author = {Arthur Falk}, title = {Times Plus the Whoosh and Whiz}, booktitle = {Time, Tense, and Reference}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Alexander Joki\'c and Quentin Smith}, pages = {211--250}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;} } @article{ falk_g:1972a, author = {Gilbert Falk}, title = {Interpretation of Imperfect Line Data as a Three-Dimensional Scene}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1972}, volume = {3}, number = {1--3}, pages = {101--144}, topic = {three-D-reconstruction;} } @article{ falkenberg:1994a, author = {Gabriel Falkenberg}, title = {Propositions, Attitudes, and {R}ussellian Annotation}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {1994}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {133--148}, xref = {Review of: richard:1990a.}, topic = {propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ falkenhainer-etal:1989a, author = {Brian Falkenhainer and Kenneth D. Forbus and Dedre Gentner}, title = {The Structure-Mapping Engine: Algorithm and Examples}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, volume = {41}, number = {1}, pages = {1--63}, acontentnote = {Abstract: This paper describes the structure-mapping engine (SME), a program for studying analogical processing. SME has been built to explore Gentner's structure-mapping theory of analogy, and provides a ``tool kit'' for constructing matching algorithms consistent with this theory. Its flexibility enhances cognitive simulation studies by simplifying experimentation. Furthermore, SME is very efficient, making it a useful component in machine learning systems as well. We review the structure-mapping theory and describe the design of the engine. We analyze the complexity of the algorithm, and demonstrate that most of the steps are polynomial, typically bounded by O(N2). Next we demonstrate some examples of its operation taken from our cognitive simulation studies and work in machine learning. Finally, we compare SME to other analogy programs and discuss several areas for future work.}, topic = {analogy;AI-algorithms-analysis;analogical-reasoning;} } @inproceedings{ falkenhainer-forbus_kd:1988a1, author = {Brian Falkenhainer and Kenneth D. Forbus}, title = {Setting Up Large Scale Qualitative Models}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventh National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1988}, editor = {Reid Smith and Tom Mitchell}, pages = {553--558}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, CA}, xref = {Republication: falkenhainer-forbus_kd:1988a2.}, topic = {qualitative-modeling;qualitative-reasoning;} } @incollection{ falkenhainer-forbus_kd:1988a2, author = {Brian Falkenhainer and Kenneth D. Forbus}, title = {Setting Up Large Scale Qualitative Models}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {553--558}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: falkenhainer-forbus_kd:1988a1.}, topic = {qualitative-modeling;qualitative-reasoning;} } @article{ falkenhainer-forbus_kd:1991a, author = {Brian Falkenhainer and Kenneth D. Forbus}, title = {Compositional Modeling: Finding the Right Model for the Job}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1991}, volume = {51}, number = {1--3}, pages = {95--143}, acontentnote = {Abstract: To represent an engineer's knowledge will require domain theories that are orders of magnitude larger than today's theories, describe phenomena at several levels of granularity, and incorporate multiple perspectives. To build and use such theories effectively requires strategies for organizing domain models and techniques for determining which subset of knowledge to apply for a given task. This paper describes compositional modeling, a technique that addresses these issues. Compositional modeling uses explicit modeling assumptions to decompose domain knowledge into semi-independent model fragments, each describing various aspects of objects and physical processes. We describe an implemented algorithm for model composition. That is, given a general domain theory, a structural description of a specific system, and a query about the system's behavior, the algorithm composes a model which suffices to answer the query while minimizing extraneous detail. We illustrate the utility of compositional modeling by outlining the organization of a large-scale, multi-grain, multi-perspective model we have built for engineering thermodynamics, and showing how the model composition algorithm can be used to automatically select the appropriate knowledge to answer questions in a tutorial setting. }, topic = {thermodynamics;domain-modeling; modular-domain-representations;} } @incollection{ faller_m:2002a, author = {Martina Faller}, title = {Remarks on Evidential Hierarchies}, booktitle = {The Construction of Meaning}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2002}, editor = {David I. Beaver and Luis D. Casillas Mart\'inez and Brady Z. Clark and Stefan Kaufmann}, pages = {89--112}, address = {Stanford, California}, topic = {nl-semantics;evidential-constructions;} } @unpublished{ faller_m:2006a, author = {Martina Faller}, title = {Evidentiality and Epistemic Modality at the Semantics/Pragmatics Interface}, year = {2006}, note = {Unpublished paper, University of Manchester}, rtnote = {Available at LPW 2006}, topic = {evidential-constructions;epistemic-modals;} } @inproceedings{ faller_m:2011a, author = {Martina Faller}, title = {A Possible Worlds Semantics for {C}uzco {Q}uechua Evidentials}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XX}}, year = {2011}, editor = {Nan Li and David Lutz}, pages = {660--683}, publisher = {CLC Publications}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {evidential-constructions;Quechua-language;} } @article{ faller_m:2012a, author = {Martina Faller}, title = {Evidential Scalar Implicatures}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2012}, volume = {35}, number = {4}, pages = {285--312}, abstract = {This paper develops an analysis of a scalar implicature that is induced by the use of reportative evidentials such as the Cuzco Quechua enclitic si and the German modal sollen. Reportatives, in addition to specifying the speaker's source of information for a statement as a report by someone else, also usually convey that the speaker does not have direct evidence for the proposition expressed. While this type of implicature can be calculated using the same kind of Gricean reasoning that underlies other scalar implicatures, it requires two departures from standard assumptions. $\ldots$}, topic = {evidentials;scalar-implicatures;} } @book{ faller_m-etal:2000a, editor = {Martina Faller and Stefan Kaufmann and Marc Pauly}, title = {Formalizing the Dynamics of Information }, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2000}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {9781575862408}, topic = {multiagent-systems;game-theory;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ fallis:2004a, author = {Don Fallis}, title = {Epistemic Value Theory and Information Ethics}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2004}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {101--117}, topic = {ethics;information;} } @article{ fallis:2007a, author = {Don Fallis}, title = {Attitudes Toward Epistemic Risk and the Value of Experiments}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2007}, volume = {86}, number = {2}, pages = {215--246}, topic = {belief;risk;epistemic-utility;} } @book{ fallside-woods_wa:1985a, editor = {Frank Fallside and William A. Woods}, title = {Computer Speech Processing}, publisher = {Prentice Hall}, year = {1985}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey}, topic = {speech-processing;nl-processing;} } @incollection{ faltings:1990a, author = {Boi Faltings}, title = {Qualitative Kinematics in Mechanisms}, booktitle = {Qualitative Reasoning about Physical Systems}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1990}, editor = {Daniel S. Weld and Johan de Kleer}, pages = {568--574}, address = {San Mateo, California}, xref = {Republication of: }, topic = {qualitative-physics;qualitative-reasoning;spatial-reasoning;} } @article{ faltings:1992a, author = {Boi Faltings}, title = {A Symbolic Approach to Qualitative Kinematics}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1992}, volume = {56}, number = {2--3}, pages = {139--170}, acontentnote = {Abstract: An important problem for mechanism design and analysis is reasoning about the relationship between object shapes and their kinematic function. Such reasoning is difficult because of the unstructured influence of the shapes' metric dimensions. In this paper, we show how a qualitative kinematic analysis can be based solely on symbolic reasoning and evaluation of predicates on metric dimensions. This allows symbolic reasoning about kinematics without explicit numerical representations of object dimensions, and automatic generation of operators relating kinematic goals to shape modifications which may achieve them.}, topic = {device-modeling;qualitative-physics;} } @article{ faltings:1994a, author = {Boi Faltings}, title = {Arc-Consistency for Continuous Variables}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1994}, volume = {65}, number = {2}, pages = {363--376}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Davis [1] has investigated the properties of the Waltz propagation algorithm with interval labels in continuous domains. He shows that in most cases the algorithm does not achieve arc-consistency and furthermore is subject to infinite iterations. In this paper, I show that the main reason for Davis' negative results lies in the way he formulates the propagation rule for the Waltz algorithm. For binary constraints, I propose a different propagation rule and show that it guarantees arc-consistency upon quiescence of the propagation. Generalizations to n-ary constraints are possible but involve more complex geometry. Arc-consistency guarantees a minimal network only when the constraint graph is a tree. I show that the new formulation of the propagation algorithm rules out the possibility of infinite iterations for all tree-structured constraint networks, and thus obtain a general and reliable algorithm for arc-consistency in continuous domains.}, topic = {arc-consistency;reasoning-about-continuous-quantities;} } @article{ faltings-machogonzalez:2005a, author = {Boi Faltings and Santiago Macho-Gonzalez}, title = {Open Constraint Programming}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {161}, number = {1--2}, pages = {181--208}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;distributed-processing;} } @book{ faltings-struss:1992a, editor = {Boi Faltings and Peter Struss}, title = {Recent Advances in Qualitative Physics}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1992}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262061422}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library Call No: Q 335.5 .R3331 1992}, topic = {qualitative-physics;} } @article{ faltings-yokoo_m:2005a, author = {Boi Faltings and Makoto Yokoo}, title = {Introduction: Special Issue on Distributed Constraint Satisfaction}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {161}, number = {1--2}, pages = {1--5}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;distributed-processing;} } @incollection{ faltz:1985a, author = {Leonard M. Faltz}, title = {Towards a Typology of Natural Logic}, booktitle = {Quantification in Natural Languages, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1995}, editor = {Emmon Bach and Eloise Jelinek and Angelika Kratzer and Barbara Partee}, pages = {271--319}, address = {Dordrecht}, contentnote = {Explores issue of whether a different logic might be appropriate for semantic representation of different languages.}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifiers;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ fan_j:2022a, author = {Jie Fan}, title = {A Unified Logic for Contingency and Accident}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2022}, volume = {51}, number = {4}, pages = {693--720}, abstract = {... there are some similarities/resemblances between contingency and accident. ... In this article, ... we turn our attention to the resemblances between the two operators. ... The main results include some model-theoretical ones, such as expressivity, frame definability, bisimulation, and some axiomatization ones.}, topic = {contingency;accidental-properties;} } @inproceedings{ fan_j1-etal:2003a, author = {James Fan and Ken Barker and Bruce W. Porter}, title = {The Knowledge Required to Interpret Noun Compounds}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, editor = {Georg Gottlob and Toby Walsh}, pages = {1483--1485}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers, "Fan"}, topic = {computational-ontology;computational-semantics;compound-nouns;} } @article{ fan_j1-etal:2009a, author = {James Fan and Ken Barker and Bruce Porter}, title = {Automatic Interpretation of Loosely Encoded Input}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {173}, number = {2}, pages = {197--220}, topic = {text-understanding;metonymy;} } @article{ fan_j2:2019a, author = {Jie Fan}, title = {Bimodal Logics with Contingency and Accident}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {2}, pages = {425--445}, topic = {modal-logic;} } @article{ fan_j2:2019b, author = {Jie Fan}, title = {Symmetric Contingency Logic with Unlimitedly Many Modalities}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2019}, volume = {48}, number = {5}, pages = {851--866}, abstract = {The completeness of the axiomatization of contingency logic over symmetric frames has been thought of as a nontrivial job, the unimodal case of which cannot be generalized to the finitely multimodal case, which in turn cannot be generalized to the infinitely multimodal case. This paper deals with the completeness of symmetric contingency logic with unlimitedly many modalities, no matter whether the set of modalities is finite or infinite. }, topic = {modal-logic;model-theory;} } @article{ fan_j2:2021a, author = {Jie Fan}, title = {A Logic for Disjunctive Ignorance}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {6}, pages = {1293--1312}, abstract = {In this paper, we introduce a notion of 'disjunctive ignorance', which is a weak combination of two forms of ignorance in the literature. We propose a logical language with 'disjunctive ignorance' as a sole modality, explore the logical properties of this notion and its related notions, and axiomatize it over various frame classes. By finding suitable reduction axioms, we extend the results to the case of public announcements and apply it to Moore-like sentences.}, topic = {epistemic-logic;public-announcements;Moore's-paradox;} } @article{ fan_j2-etal:2015a, author = {Jie Fan and Yanjing Wand and Hans van Ditmarsch}, title = {Contingency and Knowing Whether}, Journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2015}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {75--107}, topic = {completeness-theorems;modal-logic;epistemic-logic;} } @article{ fan_y-etal:2012a, author = {Yun Fan and Jing Shen and Ke Xu}, title = {A General Model and Thresholds for Random Constraint Satisfaction Problems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2012}, volume = {193}, pages = {1--17}, topic = {constraint-satisfaction;computational-phase-transitions;} } @article{ fan_y-shen_j:2011a, author = {Yun Fan and Jing Shen}, title = {On the Phase Transitions of Random K-Constraint Satisfaction Problems}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {3--4}, pages = {914--927}, topic = {computational-phase-transitions;} } @inproceedings{ fandinno_j-delcerro_f:2018a, author = {Jorge Fandinno and Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro}, title = {Constructive Logic Covers Argumentation and Logic Programming}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {128--137}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {In this work, we show that both logic programming and abstract argumentation frameworks can be interpreted in terms of Nelson's constructive logic N4. We do so by formalising, in this logic, two principles that we call non-contradictory inference and strengthened closed world assumption: the first states that no belief can be held based on contradictory evidence while the later forces both unknown and contradictory evidence to be regarded as false. ... }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \no22}, topic = {logic-programming;abstract-argumentation;constructive-falsity;} } @inproceedings{ fang_ln-etal:2018a, author = {Liangda Fang and Kewen Wang and Zhe Wang and Ximing Wen}, title = {Knowledge Compilation in the Multi-Agent Epistemic Logic Kn}, booktitle = {{KR}2018: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Conference}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2018}, editor = {Michael Thielscher and Francesca Toni and Frank Wolter}, pages = {637--638}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {... by employing logical separability, we propose an approach to knowledge compilation for the logic Kn by defining a normal form SDNF. We show that every epistemic formula can be equivalently compiled into a formula in SDNF, major reasoning tasks in SDNF are tractable, and formulas in SDNF enjoy the logical separability. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2018}, topic = {knowledge-compilation;multiagent-epistemic-logic;} } @article{ fang_xc-etal:2005a, author = {Xiacong Fan and John Yen and Richard A. Volz}, title = {A Theoretical Framework on Proactive Information Exchange in Agent Teamwork}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {169}, number = {1}, pages = {23--97}, topic = {agent-communication;communication-protocols;} } @book{ fann_kt:1969a, editor = {Kuang T. Fann}, title = {Symposium on J.L. Austin}, publisher = {Routledge and Kegan Paul}, year = {1969}, address = {London}, rtnote = {Hillman B1618 A84F36x}, missinginfo = {E's 1st name}, topic = {JL-Austin;ordinary-language-philosophy;} } @book{ fann_kt:1970a, author = {Kuang T. Fann}, title = {Peirce's Theory of Abduction}, publisher = {Martinus Nijhoff}, year = {1970}, address = {The Hague}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library B 945 .P44 F22}, topic = {Peirce;abduction;} } @incollection{ fanselow_g-staudacher_p:1991a, author = {Gisbert Fanselow and Peter Staudacher}, title = {Wortsemantik}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Contemporary Research}, publisher = {De Gruyter Mouton}, year = {1991}, editor = {Arnim von Stechow and Dieter Wunderlich}, pages = {53--70}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {lexical-semantics;} } @article{ fantl_j-mcgrath_m:2002a, author = {Jeremy Fantl and Matthew McGrath}, title = {Evidence, Pragmatics, and Justification}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2002}, volume = {111}, number = {1}, pages = {67--94}, topic = {belief;justification;} } @incollection{ fantl_j-mcgrath_m:2005a, author = {Jeremy Fantl and Matthew McGrath}, title = {Practical Matters Affect Whether You Know}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {84--94}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;context;practical-reasoning;} } @article{ fantl_j-mcgrath_m:2009a, author = {Jeremy Fantl and Matthew McGrath}, title = {Critical Study of {J}ohn {H}awthorne's \emph{{K}nowledge and Lotteries} and {J}ason {S}tanley's \emph{{K}nowledge and Practical Interest}}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2009}, volume = {43}, number = {1}, pages = {178--192}, xref = {Review of hawthorne_j2:2004a and stanley_j:2005a}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;context;epistemic-modals;} } @phdthesis{ fara_dg:1997a, author = {Delia Graff}, title = {The Phenomena of Vagueness}, school = {Massachusetts Institute of Technology}, year = {1997}, type = {Ph.{D}. Dissertation}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ fara_dg:2000a, author = {Delia Graff}, title = {Shifting Sands: An Interest-Relative Theory of Vagueness}, journal = {Philosophical Topics}, volume = {28}, year = {2000}, pages = {45--81}, number = {1}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \ap17.}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @unpublished{ fara_dg:2000b, author = {Delia Graff Fara}, title = {Comments on {M}arian {D}avid's `Truth and Identity{'}}, year = {2000}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Philosophy Department, Cornell University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {truth;metaphysics;} } @article{ fara_dg:2001a, author = {Delia Graff Fara}, title = {Phenomenal Continua and the Sorites}, journal = {Mind, New Series}, year = {2001}, volume = {110}, number = {440}, pages = {905--935}, topic = {vagueness;sorites-paradox;} } @article{ fara_dg:2001b, author = {Delia Graff Fara}, title = {Descriptions as Predicates}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {2001}, volume = {102}, missinginfo = {number}, pages = {1--42}, topic = {predicate-nominals;definite-descriptions;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ fara_dg:2003a, author = {Delia Graff Fara}, title = {Desires, Scope, and Tense}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 17: Language and Philosophical Linguistics, 2003}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2003}, editor = {John Hawthorne and Dean Zimmerman}, pages = {141--163}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {nl-semantics;definite-descriptions;} } @incollection{ fara_dg:2003b, author = {Delia Graff Fara}, title = {Gap Principles, Penumbral Consequence, and Infinitely Higher-Order Vagueness}, booktitle = {Liars and Heaps: New Essays on Paradox}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {J.C. Beall}, pages = {195--221}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {... There appears, however, to be widespread agreement that there is some sense in which vague predicates are gappy which may be expressed neutrally by saying that on any appropriately constructed sorites series for a given vague predicate there will be a gap between the objects of which the predicate is definitely true and those of which it is definitely false. ... Disagreements about the sense in which it is correct to say that vague predicates are gappy can then be recast as disagreements about how to understand the definitely operator.}, topic = {vagueness;} } @incollection{ fara_dg:2006a, author = {Delia Graff Fara}, title = {Descriptions with Adverbs of Quantification}, booktitle = {Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Blackwell Publishers}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Sosa and Enrique Villanueva}, pages = {65--87}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {adverbs-of-quantification;definite-descriptions;indefiniteness;} } @article{ fara_dg:2008a, author = {Delia Graff Fara}, title = {Relative-Sameness Counterpart Theory}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {167--189}, topic = {counterpart-theory;individuation;} } @incollection{ fara_dg:2009a, author = {Delia Graff Fara}, title = {Scope Confusions and Unsatisfiable Disjuncts: Two Problems for Supervaluationism}, booktitle = {Cuts and Clouds: Vaguenesss, its Nature and its Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2009}, editor = {Richard Dietz and Sebastiano Moruzzi}, pages = {373--382}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {vagueness;} } @article{ fara_dg:2013a, author = {Delia Graf Fara}, title = {Specifying Desires}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2013}, volume = {46}, number = {2}, pages = {250--273}, topic = {desires;propositional-attitudes;} } @article{ fara_dg:2015a, author = {Delia Graff Fara}, title = {Names Are Predicates}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2015}, volume = {122}, number = {1}, pages = {59--117}, topic = {proper-names;} } @unpublished{ fara_m:2001a, author = {Michael Fara}, title = {Knowable but Necessarily Unknown Truths}, year = {2001}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Cornell University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {knowability-paradox;} } @unpublished{ fara_m:2002a, author = {Michael Fara}, title = {Dispositions and Habituals}, year = {2002}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Cornell University}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ fara_m:2005a, author = {Michael Fara}, title = {Dispositions and Habituals}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2004}, volume = {39}, number = {1}, pages = {45--82}, topic = {dispositions;} } @article{ fara_m-williamson_t:2005a, author = {Michael Fara and Timothy Williamson}, title = {Counterparts and Actuality}, journal = {Mind}, year = {2005}, volume = {114}, number = {453}, pages = {1--30}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File drawers.}, topic = {counterpart-theory;} } @article{ faratin-etal:2002a, author = {P. Faratin and C. Sierra and Nicholas R. Jennings}, title = {Using Similarity Criteria to Make Issue Trade-Offs in Automated Negotiations}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2002}, volume = {142}, number = {2}, pages = {205--237}, topic = {multiagent-systems;automated-negotiation;} } @book{ farber:1940a, editor = {Marvin Farber}, title = {Philosophical Essays in Memory of {E}dmund {H}usserl}, publisher = {Harvard University Press}, year = {1940}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, B 29 .P54.}, topic = {phenomenology;} } @book{ farghaly:2003a, editor = {Ali Farghaly}, title = {Handbook for Language Engineers}, publisher = {{CSLI} Publications}, year = {2003}, address = {Stanford, California}, ISBN = {1-58586-395-2 (hardcover), 1-58586-376-0 (pbk)}, xref = {Reviews: mitkov:2004a, vossen:2005a.}, topic = {nlp;} } @inproceedings{ fargier-etal:2000a, author = {H\'el\`ene Fargier and J\'er\^ome Lang and Pierre Marquis}, title = {Propositional Logic and One-Stage Decision Making}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {445--456}, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2000}, topic = {qualitative-utility;implementations-of-decision-theory;decision-making;} } @inproceedings{ fargier-sabbadin:2003a, author = {H\`el\'ene Fargier and R\'egis Sabbadin}, title = {Qualitative Decision under Uncertainty: Back to Expected Utility}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, editor = {Georg Gottlob and Toby Walsh}, pages = {303--308}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {qualitative-utility;expected-utility;} } @article{ fargier-sabbadin:2005a, author = {H\'el\`ene Fargier and R\'egis Sabbadin}, title = {Qualitative Decision Under Uncertainty: Back to Expected Utility}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {164}, number = {1--2}, pages = {245--280}, topic = {qualitative-utility;} } @incollection{ farinasdelcerro-herzig_a:1991a, author = {Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig}, title = {A Modal Analysis of Possibility Theory}, booktitle = {Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches for Uncertainty: Proceedings of the {E}uropean Conference {ECSQAU}, Marseille, France, October 1991}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1991}, editor = {Rudolf Kruse and Pierre Siegel}, pages = {58--62}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {possibility-logic;modal-logic;qualitative-probability;} } @incollection{ farinasdelcerro-herzig_a:1996a, author = {Luis Fari\~nas del Cerro and Andreas Herzig}, title = {Belief Change and Dependence}, booktitle = {Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge: Proceedings of the Sixth Conference ({TARK} 1996)}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {1996}, editor = {Yoav Shoham}, pages = {147--161}, address = {San Francisco}, topic = {belief-revision;} } @inproceedings{ farkas_df:1981a, author = {Donka F. Farkas}, title = {Quantifier Scope and Syntactic Islands}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventeenth Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society}, year = {1981}, pages = {59--66}, publisher = {Chicago Linguistics Society}, address = {Chicago University, Chicago, Illinois}, missinginfo = {editor}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ farkas_df:1988b, author = {Donka F. Farkas}, title = {On Obligatory Control}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1988}, volume = {11}, number = {1}, pages = {27--58}, topic = {syntactic-control;} } @inproceedings{ farkas_df:1992a, author = {Donka F. Farkas}, title = {On the Semantics of Subjunctive Complements}, booktitle = {Romance Languages and Modern Linguistic Theory}, year = {1992}, editor = {Paul Hirschb\"uhler and E.F.K. Koerner}, pages = {69--104}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {subjunctive-mood;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ farkas_df:1997a, author = {Donka F. Farkas}, title = {Evaluation Indices and Scope}, booktitle = {Ways of Scope Taking}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1997}, editor = {Anna Szabolcsi}, pages = {183--215}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-quantifier-scope;nl-quantifiers;} } @inproceedings{ farkas_df:2002a, author = {Donka F. Farkas}, title = {Varieties of Indefinites}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {XII}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {2002}, editor = {Brendan Jackson}, pages = {59--83}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;indefiniteness;context;} } @article{ farkas_df:2002b, author = {Donka F. Farkas}, title = {Specificity Distinctions}, journal = {Journal of Semantics}, year = {2002}, volume = {19}, number = {3}, pages = {213--243}, topic = {nl-semantics;specificity;indefiniteness;} } @inproceedings{ farkas_df-giannakidou_a:1996a, author = {Donka F. Farkas and Anastasia Giannakidou}, title = {How Clause-bounded is the Scope of Universals?}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {VI}}, publisher = {Cornell University}, year = {1996}, editor = {Teresa Galloway and Justin Spence}, pages = {35--52}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, topic = {nl-semantics;nl-quantifier-scope;} } @article{ farkas_df-sugioka:1983a, author = {Donka F. Farkas and Yoko Sugioka}, title = {Restrictive If/When Clauses}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {1983}, volume = {6}, number = {2}, pages = {225--258}, contentnote = {They treat Gen as an adverb of quantifcation, basically, a vague binary quantifier. But they treat Bare Plurals as kind-denoting. --Delia Graff.}, topic = {nl-semantics;conditionals;sentence-focus;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ farkas_f:2006a, author = {Katalin Farkas}, title = {Semantic Internalism and Externalism}, booktitle = {The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Ernest Lepore and Barry C. Smith}, pages = {323--340}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {internalism/externalism;philosophy-of-language;} } @article{ farkas_k:2017a, author = {Katalin Farkas}, title = {Practical Know-Wh}, journal = {No\^us}, year = {2017}, volume = {51}, number = {4}, pages = {855--870}, topic = {knowing-how;} } @article{ farmer-guttman_jd:2000a, author = {William M. Farmer and Joshua D. Guttman}, title = {A Set Theory with Support for Partial Functions}, journal = {Studia Logica}, year = {2000}, volume = {66}, number = {1}, pages = {59--58}, topic = {set-theory;partial-logic;} } @article{ farnsworth_a-etal:2014a, author = {Andrew Farnsworth and Daniel Sheldon and Jeffrey Geevarghese and Jed Irvine and Benjamin Van Doren and Kevin Webb and Thomas G. Dietterich and Steve Kelling}, title = {Reconstructing Velocities of Migrating Birds from Weather Radar---A Case Study in Computational Sustainability}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2014}, volume = {35}, number = {2}, pages = {31--48}, topic = {computational-sustainability;bird-migration;} } @article{ faroldi:2011a, author = {Federico Faroldi}, title = {Review of \emph{{D}istributed Cognition and the Will}, edited by {D}on {R}oss and {D}avid {S}purrett and {H}arold {K}incaid and {G}. {L}ynn {S}tephens}, journal = {Minds and Machines}, year = {2011}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {115--118}, xref = {Review of: ross_d-etal:2007a.}, topic = {volition;agency;philosophy-of-mind;} } @incollection{ faroldi:2014a, author = {Federico L.G. Faroldi}, title = {Denial of Responsibility and Normative Negation}, booktitle = {Deontic Logic and Normative Systems: {DEON} 2014}, publisher = {Springer Verlag}, year = {2014}, editor = {Fabrizio Cariani and Davide Grossi and Joke Mehens and Xavier Parent}, pages = {81--94}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {deontic-logic;`ought';} } @unpublished{ farquhar-etal:1995a, author = {Adam Farquhar and Richard E. Fikes and Wanda Pratt and James Rice}, title = {Collaborative Ontology Construction for Information Integration}, year = {1995}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Knowledge Systems Laboratory, Stanford University.}, url = {ftp://ftp.ksl.stanford.edu/pub/KSL_Reports/KSL-95-63.ps.gz.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under "Fikes".}, topic = {computational-ontology;information-extraction;} } @unpublished{ farquhar-etal:1996a, author = {Adam Farquhar and Richard E. Fikes and James Rice}, title = {The {O}ntolingua Server: A Tool for Collaborative Ontology Construction}, year = {1996}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Stanford Knowledge Systems Laboratory. Available at http://ksi.cpsc.ucalgary.ca/KAW/KAW96/farquhar/farquhar.html}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Filed under "Fikes".}, topic = {computational-ontology;} } @techreport{ farquhar_a-etal:1995a, author = {Adam Farquhar and Angela Dappert and Richard Fikes and Wanda Pratt}, title = {Integrating Information Sources using *Context* Logic}, institution = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, number = {SS-95-08}, year = {1995}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {logic-of-context;information-integration;} } @article{ farr:2012a, author = {Matt Farr}, title = {On A- and B-Theoretic Elements of Branching Spacetimes}, journal = {Synth\'ese}, year = {2012}, volume = {188}, number = {1}, pages = {85--116}, topic = {branching-time;space-time;} } @article{ farrell_dm:1993a, author = {Daniel M. Farrell}, title = {Utility-Maximizing Intentions and the Theory of Rational Choice}, journal = {Philosophical Topics}, year = {1994}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {53--78}, topic = {foundations-of-utility;causal-decision-theory;toxin-puzzle;} } @inproceedings{ farrell_p:1993a, author = {Patrick Farrell}, title = {The Interplay of Syntax and Semantics in Complement Control}, booktitle = {Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory {III}}, year = {1993}, editor = {Utpal Lahiri and Zachary Wyner}, pages = {57--76}, publisher = {Cornell University}, address = {Ithaca, New York}, note = {Available from CLC Publications, Department of Linguistics, Morrill Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853-4701.}, topic = {complementation;syntactic-control;} } @article{ farrell_rg-etal:2016a, author = {Robert G. Farrell and Jonathan Lenchner and Jeffrey O. Kephjart and Alan M. Webb and MIchael J. Muller and Thomas D. Erikson and David O. Melville and Rachel K.E. Bellamy and Daniel M. Gruen and Jonathan H. Connell and Danny Soroker and Andy Aaron and Shari M. Trewin and Maryam Ashoori and Jason B. Ellis and Brian P. Gaucher and Dario Gil}, title = {Symbiotic Cognitive Computing}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2016}, volume = {37}, number = {3}, pages = {81--93}, topic = {symbiotic-computing;HCI;} } @incollection{ farrell_tb:1983a, author = {Thomas B. Farrell}, title = {Aspects of Coherence in Conversation and Rhetoric}, booktitle = {Conversational Coherence: Form, Structure and Strategy}, publisher = {Sage Publications}, year = {1983}, editor = {Robert T. Craig and Karen Tracey}, pages = {259--284}, address = {London}, topic = {discourse-coherence;discourse-analysis;pragmatics;} } @incollection{ farreres-etal:1998a, author = {Xavier Farreres and German Rigau and Horacio Rodr\'iguez}, title = {Using {W}ord{N}et for Building {W}ord{N}ets}, booktitle = {Use of {W}ord{N}et in Natural Language Processing Systems: Proceedings of the Conference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Sanda Harabagiu}, pages = {65--72}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-processing;WordNet;} } @article{ farreres-etal:2009a, author = {Javier Farreres and Karina Gibert and Horacio Rodrguez and Charnyote Pluempitiwiriyawej}, title = {Inference of Lexical Ontologies. The {LeOnI} Methodology}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2009}, volume = {174}, number = {1}, pages = {1--19}, topic = {computational-ontology;WordNet;} } @book{ farrington:1996a, author = {Jill M. Farrington}, title = {Analyzing for Authorship: A Guide to the Cusum Technique}, publisher = {University of Wales Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Cardiff}, topic = {authorship-attribution;} } @inproceedings{ fasciano:1995a, author = {Mark Fasciano}, title = {Building an Agent with Multiple Rationalities}, booktitle = {Working Papers of the {AAAI} Fall Symposium on Rational Agency: Concepts, Theories, Models, and Applications}, year = {1995}, editor = {Michael Fehling}, pages = {56--60}, organization = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, publisher = {American Association for Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {agent-architectures;qualitative-utility;planning;} } @inproceedings{ fasli:1999a, author = {Maria Fasli}, title = {Modeling Reasoning Agents}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the {IJCAI}-99 Workshop on Practical Reasoning and Rationality}, year = {1999}, editor = {John Bell}, pages = {8--15}, organization = {IJCAI}, publisher = {International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, address = {Murray Hill, New Jersey}, topic = {agent-modeling;agent-architectures;agent-attitudes;} } @book{ fasold:1990a, author = {Ralph Fasold}, title = {The Sociolinguistics of Language}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1990}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {0631133860, 0631138250 (pbk.)}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library Call No: P 40 .F3711 1990}, topic = {sociolinguistics;} } @book{ fass:1997a, author = {Dan Fass}, title = {Processing Metonymy and Metaphor}, publisher = {Ablex Publishing}, year = {1997}, address = {Greenwich, Connecticut}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name.}, xref = {Review: ferrari:1999a.}, topic = {discourse;psycholinguistics;metaphor;metonymy;} } @inproceedings{ fatah-peot_ma:2000a, author = {Yousri El Fatah and Mark Alan Peot}, title = {A Compositional Structured Query Approach to Automated Inference}, booktitle = {{KR}2000: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, year = {2000}, editor = {Anthony G. Cohn and Fausto Giunchiglia and Bart Selman}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, address = {San Francisco}, pages = {213--224}, topic = {reasoning-about-uncertainty;} } @article{ fatima-etal:2004a, author = {Shaheen S. Fatima and Michael J. Wooldridge and Nicholas R. Jennings}, title = {An Agenda-Based Framework for Multi-Issue Negotiation}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2004}, volume = {152}, number = {1}, pages = {1--45}, topic = {automated-negotiation;game-theory;} } @article{ fatima-etal:2008a, author = {Shaheen S. Fatima and Michael Wooldridge and Nicholas R. Jennings}, title = {A Linear Approximation Method for the {S}hapley Value}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2008}, volume = {172}, number = {14}, pages = {1673--1699}, topic = {coalitional-games;} } @article{ fauconnier_g:1975a, author = {Gilles Fauconnier}, title = {Pragmatic Scales and Logical Structure}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1975}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {353--375}, topic = {nl-semantics;polarity;pragmatic-scales;} } @book{ fauconnier_g:1975b, author = {Gilles Fauconnier}, title = {Theoretical Implications of Some Global Phenomena in Syntax}, publisher = {Indiana University Linguistics Club}, year = {1975}, address = {310 Lindley Hall, Bloomington, Indiana}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-syntax;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ fauconnier_g:1978a, author = {Gilles Fauconnier}, title = {Implication Reversal in a Natural Language}, booktitle = {Formal Semantics and Pragmatics for Natural Languages}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1978}, editor = {Franz Guenthner and S.J. Schmidt}, pages = {289--301}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {nl-semantics;polarity;pragmatic-scales;} } @article{ fauconnier_g:1978b, author = {Giles Fauconnier}, title = {Is There a Linguistic Level of Logical Representation}, journal = {Theoretical Linguistics}, year = {1978}, volume = {8}, number = {1}, pages = {31--49}, topic = {nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;} } @article{ fauconnier_g:1985a, author = {Giles Fauconnier}, title = {Do Quantifiers Branch?}, journal = {Linguistic Inquiry}, year = {1975}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {555--578}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;} } @book{ fauconnier_g:1985b, author = {Giles Fauconnier}, title = {Mental Spaces}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1985}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, rtnote = {In RHT Collection. LLP authored shelves.}, xref = {Review: cormack:1987a.}, topic = {nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;intensionality;anaphora;} } @inproceedings{ fauconnier_g:1990a, author = {Giles Fauconnier}, title = {Invisible Meaning}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 16th Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (BLS-16)}, address = {Berkeley, CA}, editor = {Kira Hall and Jean-Pierre Koenig and Michael Meacham and Sondra Reinman and Laurel A. Sutton}, publisher = {Berkeley Linguistics Society}, year = {1990}, pages = {390--404}, topic = {implicature;pragmatics;} } @book{ fauconnier_g:1997a, author = {Giles Fauconnier}, title = {Mappings in Thought and Language}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, England}, topic = {metaphor;pragmatics;common-sense-reasoning;} } @incollection{ fauconnier_g:2005a, author = {Gilles Fauconnier}, title = {Pragmatics and Cognitive Linguistics}, booktitle = {Handbook of Pragmatics}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Laurence R. Horn and Gregory Ward}, pages = {657--674}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {pragmatics;speech-acts;} } @book{ fauconnier_g-sweetser:1996a, editor = {Giles Fauconnier and Eve Sweetser}, title = {Spaces, Worlds and Grammar}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {1996}, address = {Chicago, Illinois}, topic = {nl-semantics;foundations-of-semantics;pragmatics;} } @book{ faulkner:1998a, author = {Christine Faulkner}, title = {The Essence of Human-Computer Interaction}, publisher = {Prentice Hall}, year = {1998}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0137519753}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.9 .H85 F381 1998.}, topic = {HCI;} } @article{ faulkner_p:2021a, author = {Paul Faulkner}, title = {Review of \emph{{T}he Exchange of Words}, by {R}ichard {M}oran}, journal = {The Philosophical Review}, year = {2021}, volume = {130}, number = {1}, pages = {167--171}, xref = {Review of: moran_r:2018a}, topic = {testimony;speech-acts;} } @incollection{ fawcett-davies_bl:1992a, author = {Robin P. Fawcett and Bethan L. Davies}, title = {Monologue as a Turn in Dialogue: Towards an Integration of Exchange Structure in Rhetorical Structure Theory}, booktitle = {Aspects of Automated Natural Language Generation: 6th International Workshop on Natural Language Generation, {T}rento, {I}taly, April 5--7, 1992}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {1992}, editor = {Robert Dale and Eduard Hovy and Dietmar R\"ossner and Oliviero Stock}, pages = {151--166}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {nl-generation;discourse-planning;discourse-structure;} } @inproceedings{ fayard-henderson_a:2001a, author = {Anne-Laure Fayard and Austin Henderson}, title = {Looking at `Situated' Technology: Differences in Pattern of Interaction Reflect Differences in Context}, booktitle = {Modeling and Using Context: Third International and Interdisciplinary Conference, Context 2001}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2001}, editor = {Varol Akman and Paolo Bouquet and Richmond Thomason and Roger A. Young}, pages = {441-444}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {context;psychology-of-technology;} } @incollection{ faye:2003a, author = {Jan Faye}, title = {Introduction to Part {II}: `The Metaphysics of Time'}, booktitle = {Time, Tense, and Reference}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2003}, editor = {Alexander Joki\'c and Quentin Smith}, pages = {253--267}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {philosophy-of-time;metaphysics;} } @article{ fayyad-etal:1996a, author = {Usama Fayyad and Gregory Piatetsky-Shapiro and Padhraic Smyth}, title = {From Data Mining to Knowledge Discovery in Databases}, journal = {{AI} Magazine}, year = {1996}, volume = {17}, number = {3}, pages = {37--54}, topic = {knowledge-retrieval;krcourse;} } @article{ fazio_d-baldi_mp:2021a, author = {D. Fazio and M. Pra Baldi}, title = {On a Logico-Algebraic Approach to {AGM} Belief Contraction Theory}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {2021}, volume = {50}, number = {5}, pages = {911--938}, abstract = {... we investigate AGM belief contraction operators by using the tools of algebraic logic. }, topic = {belief-revision;algebraic-logic;} } @inproceedings{ fazzinga_b-etal:2021a, author = {Bettina Fazzinga and Sergio Flesca and Filippo Furfaro}, title = {Borda, Cancellation and Belief Merging}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {291--300}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {In this work, we explore the links between the Borda voting rule and belief merging operators. More precisely, we define two families of merging operators inspired by the definition of the Borda voting rule. We also introduce a notion of cancellation in belief merging, inspired by the axiomatization of the Borda voting rule proposed by Young. This allows us to provide a characterization of the drastic merging operator.}, topic = {knowledge-integration;} } @inproceedings{ fazzinga_b-etal:2021b, author = {Bettina Fazzinga and Sergio Flesca and Filippo Furfaro}, title = {Reasoning over Attack-incomplete {AAF}s in the Presence of Correlations}, booktitle = {{KR}2021: Proceedings of the Eighteenth International Conference}, year = {2021}, editor = {Meghyn Bienvenu and Gerhard Lakemeyer and Esra Erdem}, pages = {301--311}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {Attack-Incomplete Abstract Argumentation Frameworks (attiAAFs) are a popular extension of AAFs where attacks are marked as uncertain when they are not unanimously perceived by different agents reasoning on the same arguments. We here extend att-iAAFs with the possibility of specifying correlations involving the uncertain attacks. ... we focus on the problem of verifying extensions under the possible perspective, and study the sensitivity of its computational complexity to the forms of correlations expressed and the semantics of the extensions.}, topic = {abstract-argumentation;complexity-in-AI;} } @inproceedings{ febbraro_o-etal:2012a, author = {Onofrio Febbraro and Nicola Leone and Giovanni Grasso and Francesco Ricca}, title = {{JASP}: A Framework for Integrating Answer Set Programming with {J}ava}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {541--551}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {answer-sets;} } @incollection{ federici-etal:1997a, author = {Stefano Federici and Simonetta Montemagni and Vito Pirelli}, title = {Inferring Semantic Similarity from Distributional Evidence: An Analogy-Based Approach to Word Sense Disambiguation}, booktitle = {Automatic Information Extraction and Building of Lexical Semantic Resources for {NLP} Applications}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1997}, editor = {Piek Vossen and Geert Adriaens and Nicoletta Calzolari and Antonio Sanfilippo and Yorick Wilks}, pages = {90--97}, address = {New Brunswick, New Jersey}, topic = {lexical-disambiguation;statistical-nlp;} } @incollection{ federico-demori:1998a, author = {Marcello Federico and Renato de Mori}, title = {Language Modeling}, booktitle = {Spoken Dialogues with Computers}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Renato de Mori}, pages = {199--230}, address = {New York}, topic = {speech-recognition;n-gram-models;} } @book{ fedorov_vv:1972a, author = {Valeri V. Fedorov}, title = {Theory of Optimal Experiments}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1972}, address = {New York}, note = {Translated and edited by W.J. Studden and E.M. Klimko}, topic = {statistics;experimental-design;} } @article{ feest:2014a, author = {Uliana Feest}, title = {Phenomenal Experiences, First-Person Methods, and the Artificiality of Experimental Data}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {2014}, volume = {81}, number = {5}, pages = {927--939}, topic = {philosophy-of-psychology;} } @book{ feferman_ab-feferman_s:2004a, author = {Anita Burdman Feferman and Solomon Feferman}, title = {Alfred {T}arski: Life and Logic}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2004}, address = {Cambridge, England}, ISBN = {0-521-80240-7}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. History of Logic Shelves.}, topic = {Tarski;history-of-logic;} } @article{ feferman_s:1960a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Arithmetization of Metamathematics in a General Setting}, journal = {Fundamenta Mathematicae}, year = {1960}, volume = {49}, number = {1}, pages = {35--91}, topic = {arithmetization;} } @article{ feferman_s:1962a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Transfinite Recursive Progressions of Axiomatic Theories}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1962}, volume = {27}, number = {3}, pages = {259--316}, topic = {arithmetization;formalizations-of-arithmetic;goedels-first-theorem; ordinal-logics;} } @article{ feferman_s:1984a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Toward Useful Type-Free Theories, {I}}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1984}, volume = {49}, pages = {75--111}, number = {1}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file.}, topic = {semantic-paradoxes;Russell-paradox;lambda-calculus; type-free-theories;} } @article{ feferman_s:1985a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Intensionality in Mathematics}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1985}, volume = {14}, number = {1}, pages = {41--55}, topic = {foundations-of-mathematics;intensionality; constructive-mathematics;} } @incollection{ feferman_s:1988a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Turing in the Land of {O}(z)}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {113--147}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {Turing;ordinal-logics;} } @incollection{ feferman_s:1991a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Proofs of Termination and the `91' Function}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Mathematical Theory of Computation}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Vladimir Lifschitz}, pages = {47--63}, address = {San Diego}, topic = {algorithms;program-verification;} } @article{ feferman_s:1991b, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Reflecting on Incompleteness}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1991}, volume = {56}, number = {1}, pages = {1--49}, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;arithmetization;ordinal-logics;} } @incollection{ feferman_s:1994a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Finitary Inductively Presented Logics}, booktitle = {What is a Logical System?}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1994}, editor = {Dov Gabbay}, pages = {297--328}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {finitary-logics;recursion-theory;inductive-definitions; metamathematics;} } @article{ feferman_s:1997a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Penrose's {G}\"odelian Argument}, journal = {Psyche}, year = {1997}, volume = {2}, note = {Electronic journal: http://psyche.cs.monash.edu.au.}, xref = {In RT collection. \ap15}, topic = {foundations-of-cognition;goedels-first-theorem; foundations-of-computation;goedels-second-theorem;} } @book{ feferman_s:1998a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {In the Light of Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Oxford}, xref = {Reviews: avigad_jd:1999a.}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;proof-theory;} } @article{ feferman_s:1999a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Logic, Logics, and Logicism}, journal = {Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic}, year = {1999}, volume = {40}, number = {1}, pages = {31--54}, abstract = {The paper starts with an examination and critique of Tarski's well known proposed explication of the notion of logical operation in the type structure over a given domain of individuals as one which is invariant with respect to arbitrary permutations of the domain. The class of such operations has been characterized by McGee as exactly those definable in the language L. Also characterized similarly is a natural generalization of Tarski's thesis, due to Sher, in terms of bijections between domains. My main objections are that on the one hand, the Tarski-Sher thesis thus assimilates logic to mathematics, and on the other hand fails to explain the notion of same logical operation across domains of different sizes. A new notion of homomorphism invariant operation over functional type structures ... is introduced to accomplish the latter. }, topic = {logicism;definability;logical-constants;} } @incollection{ feferman_s:2005a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Predicativity}, booktitle = {Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Mathematics and Logic}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Stewart Shapiro}, pages = {590--624}, address = {Oxford}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19}, topic = {(im)predicativity;foundations-of-mathematics;} } @article{ feferman_s:2006a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {The Impact of the Incompleteness Theorems on Mathematics}, journal = {Notices of the American Mathematical Society}, year = {2006}, volume = {53}, number = {4}, pages = {434--439}, topic = {Goedel;goedels-first-theorem;goedels-second-theorem;} } @article{ feferman_s:2006b, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Turing's Thesis}, journal = {Notices American Mathematical Society}, year = {2006}, volume = {53}, number = {10}, pages = {1200-1205}, contentnote = {This is an account of Turing's 2 years at Princeton and of the thesis he wrote Under Church's direction. } , rtnote = {In RHT collection. \de21}, topic = {Turing;history-of-logic;ordinal-logics;} } @article{ feferman_s:2008a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Axioms for Determinateness and Truth}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2008}, volume = {2}, number = {2}, pages = {204--217}, topic = {type-free-theories;truth;formalizations-of-arithmetic; semantic-paradoxes;truth-definitions;} } @incollection{ feferman_s:2008b, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Tarski's Conceptual Analysis of Semantical Notions}, booktitle = {New Essays on {T}arski and Philosophy}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2008}, editor = {Douglas Patterson}, pages = {72--93}, address = {Oxford}, abstract = {Tarski gave celebrated conceptual analyses of semantical notions. This chapter explores both why and how he did so. The latter question receives a clear answer: Tarski was above all influenced by his studies of set-theoretic topology in the environment of 1920s Warsaw. It is less clear why Tarski gave his analyses, though a number of psychological and programmatic reasons are explored. Extensive comparisons of the philosophical and mathematical aspects of Tarski's treatment of truth are undertaken.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \fe19\Feferman2.pdf}, topic = {Tarski;truth';history-of-logic;} } @article{ feferman_s:2009a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {G\"odel, {N}agel, Minds, and Machines}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2009}, volume = {106}, number = {4}, pages = {201--219}, topic = {Goedel;philosophy-of-computation;} } @incollection{ feferman_s:2012a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {G\"odel's Incompleteness Theorems, Free Will and Mathematical Thoughy}, booktitle = {Free Will and Modern Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2012}, editor = {Richard Swinburne}, pages = {102--122}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {goedels-first-theorem;freedom;colition;} } @incollection{ feferman_s:2013a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Turing's Thesis: Ordinal Logics and Oracle Computability}, booktitle = {Alan {T}uring: His Work and Impact}, publisher = {Elsevier}, year = {2013}, editor = {S. Barry Cooper and Jan van Leeuwen}, pages = {145--150}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {ordinal-logics;oracle-computability;} } @incollection{ feferman_s:2015a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {About and around Computing over the Reals}, booktitle = {Computability: {T}uring, {C}hurch, and Beyond}, publisher = {MIT Press}, year = {2015}, editor = {B. Jack Copeland and Carl J. Posy and Oron Shagrir}, pages = {55--76}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {analysis;computability;constructive-mathematics;} } @article{ feferman_s:2016a, author = {Solomon Feferman}, title = {Parsons and {I}: Sympathies and Differences}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2016}, volume = {113}, number = {5/6}, pages = {234--246}, topic = {philosophy-of-mathematics;} } @book{ feferman_s-etal:1995a, editor = {Solomon Feferman and John Dawson and Warren Goldfarb and Charles Parsons and Robert Solovay}, title = {Kurt G\"odel: Collected Works, Volume 3: Unpublished Essays and Lectures}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN = {9780195072556}, topic = {Goedel;} } @article{ feferman_s-etal:2000a, author = {Solomon Feferman and Harvey M. Friedman and Penelope Maddy and John R. Steel}, title = {Does Mathematics Need New Axioms?}, journal = {The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2000}, volume = {6}, number = {4}, pages = {401--446}, topic = {foundations-of-mathematics;foundations-of-set-theory; continuum-hypothesis;} } @book{ feferman_s-etal:2010a, editor = {Solomon Feferman and Charles Parsons and Stephen C. Simpson}, title = {Kurt {G}\"odel: Essays for His Centennial}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, year = {2010}, address = {Cambridge, England}, xref = {Reviews: wille:2011a, mancosu_p:2011a.}, topic = {Goedel;} } @article{ feferman_s-hellman_g:1975a, author = {Solomon Feferman and Geoffrey Hellman}, title = {Predicative Foundations of Arithmetic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1975}, volume = {24}, number = {1}, pages = {1--17}, topic = {(im)predicativity;foundations-of-mathematics;} } @article{ feferman_s-hellman_g:1996a, author = {Solomon Feferman and Geoffrey Hellman}, title = {Predicative Foundations of Arithmetic}, journal = {Journal of Philosophical Logic}, year = {1996}, volume = {24}, number = {1}, pages = {1--17}, topic = {foundations-of-mathematics;formalized-arithmetic;} } @article{ feferman_s-strahm:2010a, author = {Solomon Feferman and Thomas Strahm}, title = {Unfolding Finitist Arithmetic}, journal = {The Review of Symbolic Logic}, year = {2010}, volume = {3}, number = {4}, pages = {665--689}, topic = {formalizations-of-arithmetic;} } @article{ feferman_s-vaught_rl:1959a, author = {Solomon Feferman and Robert L. Vaught}, title = {The First Order Properties of Products of Algebraic Systems}, journal = {Fundamenta Mathematicae}, year = {1959}, volume = {47}, number = {1}, pages = {57--103}, topic = {model-theory;(un)decidability;} } @incollection{ fehige_c:1994a, author = {Christoph Fehige}, title = {The Limit Assumption in Deontic (and Prohairetic) Logic}, booktitle = {Analyomen 1}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1994}, editor = {Georg Meggle and Ulla Wessels}, pages = {42--56}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection, \mr19}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ fehige_c:2001a, author = {Christoph Fehige}, title = {Instrumentalism}, booktitle = {Varieties of Practical Reasoning}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2001}, editor = {Elijah Millgram}, pages = {49--76}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {practical-reasoning;pr-course;} } @book{ fehige_c-wessels:1998a, editor = {Christoph Fehige and Ulla Wessels}, title = {Preferences}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1998}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {This is not a very useful book.}, rtnote = {Rtrnote. Reading notes on file. "Preference".}, topic = {preferences;} } @incollection{ fehige_c-wessels:1998b, author = {Christoph Fehige and Ulla Wessels}, title = {Preferences---An Introduction}, booktitle = {Preferences}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christoph Fehige and Ulla Wessels}, pages = {xx--xliii}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr14}, topic = {preference;} } @incollection{ fehige_c-wessels:1998c, author = {Christoph Fehige and Ulla Wessels}, title = {Preferences---A Short Bibliography}, booktitle = {Preferences}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christoph Fehige and Ulla Wessels}, pages = {xliv--lxix}, address = {Berlin}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. \mr14}, topic = {preference;bibliography;} } @article{ fehling_mr:1993a, author = {Michael R. Fehling}, title = {Unified Theories of Cognition: Modeling Cognitive Competence}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {295--328}, xref = {Review of newell_a:1992a.}, topic = {SOAR;cognitive-architectures;} } @book{ fehling_mr-russell_s:1989a, editor = {Michael R. Fehling and Stuart Russell}, title = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Spring Symposium, {AI} and Limited Rationality}, publisher = {Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1989}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. CS Conferences (May be hard to find.)}, topic = {limited-rationality;} } @book{ fehling_mr-russell_s:2001a, editor = {Michael Fehling and Stuart Russell}, title = {Working Notes: {AAAI} Spring Symposium Series: {AI} and Limited Rationality}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2001}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. CS Conferences}, topic = {limited-rationality;} } @incollection{ fehrer_c:1998a, author = {D. Fehrer}, title = {Developing Deductive Systems: The Toolbox Style}, booktitle = {Automated Deduction: A Basis for Applications. Volume {II}, Systems and Implementation Techniques}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1998}, editor = {Wolfgang Bibel and Peter H. Schmidt}, address = {Dordrecht}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, pages}, topic = {theorem-proving;applied-logic;} } @inproceedings{ feier_c:2012a, author = {Cristina Feier}, title = {Worst-Case Optimal Reasoning with Forest Logic Programs}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {608--612}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {The paper introduces a worst-case optimal tableau algorithm for reasoning with Forest Logic Programs, a decidable fragment of Open Answer Set Programming. FoLPs are a useful device for tight integration of the Description Logic and the Logic Programming worlds: reasoning with the DL SHOQ can be simulated within the fragment. The algorithm reuses a knowledge compilation technique previously introduced, but improves on previous results by decreasing the worst-case running time with one exponential level. The decrease in complexity is due to the usage in conjunction of a new redundancy and of a new caching rule. }, topic = {sets-programming;complexity-in-AI;} } @incollection{ feigenbaum:1963a, author = {Edward A. Feigenbaum}, title = {The Simulation of Verbal Learning Behavior}, booktitle = {Computers and Thought}, publisher = {McGraw-Hill}, year = {1963}, editor = {Edward A. Feigenbaum and Julian Feldman}, pages = {297--309}, address = {New York}, topic = {automated-language-acquisition;L1-acquisition;} } @article{ feigenbaum:2012a, author = {Edward Feigenbaum}, title = {McCarthy as Scientist and Engineer, with Personal Recollections}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2012}, volume = {33}, number = {4}, pages = {17--18}, topic = {history-AI;} } @article{ feigenbaum-buchanan_bg:1993a, author = {Edward A. Feigenbaum and Bruce G. Buchanan}, title = {{DENDRAL} and {Meta-DENDRAL:} Roots of Knowledge Systems and Expert Systems Applications}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1993}, volume = {59}, number = {1--2}, pages = {233--240}, topic = {expert-systems;knowledge-engineering;} } @book{ feigenbaum-feldman_j:1963a1, editor = {Edward A. Feigenbaum and Julian Feldman}, title = {Computers and Thought}, publisher = {McGraw-Hill}, year = {1963}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {0070203709}, xref = {Republication: feigenbaum-feldman_j:1963a2}, topic = {AI-general;} } @book{ feigenbaum-feldman_j:1963a2, editor = {Edward A. Feigenbaum and Julian Feldman}, title = {Computers and Thought}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {1995}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, ISBN = {ISBN:0-262-56092-5 }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. AI Shelves.}, xref = {Review: geller:1991a.}, xref = {Republication of: feigenbaum-feldman_j:1963a1}, topic = {AI-general;} } @book{ feigenbaum-mccorduck:1983a, author = {Edward A. Feigenbaum and Pamela McCorduck}, title = {The Fifth Generation: Artificial Intelligence and {J}apan's Computer Challenge to the World}, publisher = {Addison-Wesley}, year = {1983}, address = {Reading, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0201115190}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, HD9696.C63J3 F28.}, xref = {Review: stefik:1984a, dekleer:1984a}, topic = {popular-computer-science;cs-journalism;} } @article{ feigl_h:1934a1, author = {Herbert Feigl}, title = {The Logical Character of the Principle of Induction}, journal = {Philosophy of Science}, year = {1934}, volume = {1}, number = {2}, pages = {20--29}, xref = {Republication: feigl_h:1934a2}, topic = {foundations-of-induction;} } @incollection{ feigl_h:1943a1, author = {Herbert Feigl}, title = {Logical Empiricism}, booktitle = {Twentieth Century Philosophy}, publisher = {D., Philosophical Library}, year = {1943}, editor = {Dagobert Runes}, pages = {371--416}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication: feigl_h:1943a2}, topic = {empiricism;logical-positivism;} } @incollection{ feigl_h:1943a2, author = {Herbert Feigl}, title = {Logical Empiricism}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {3--26}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: feigl_h:1943a1}, topic = {empiricism;logical-positivism;} } @incollection{ feigl_h:1949a, author = {Herbert Feigl}, title = {The Logical Character of the Principle of Induction}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {297--304}, address = {New York}, xref = {Republication of: feigl_h:1934a1}, topic = {foundations-of-induction;} } @incollection{ feigl_h:1949b, author = {Herbert Feigl}, title = {Some Remarks on the Meaning of Scientific Explanation}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {510--514}, address = {New York}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;explanation;} } @incollection{ feigl_h:1949c, author = {Herbert Feigl}, title = {Operationalism and the Scientific Method}, booktitle = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, pages = {498--509}, address = {New York}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;operationalism;} } @article{ feigl_h:1950a, author = {Herbert Feigl}, title = {Review of ``A Note on Natural Laws and So-Called `Contrary-to-Fact' Conditionals'', by {K}arl {R}. {P}opper}, journal = {Journal of Symbolic Logic}, year = {1950}, volume = {15}, number = {2}, pages = {144--145}, contentnote = {Popper argues you can account for natural laws using material implication. Popper uses "strict" universals; Feigl points ont that this introduces intensionality.}, xref = {Review of: popper:1949a.}, topic = {natural-laws;conditionals;} } @book{ feigl_h-brodbeck_m:1953a, editor = {Herbert Feigl and may Brodbeck}, title = {Readings in the Philosophy of Science}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts, Inc}, year = {1953}, address = {New York}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;} } @book{ feigl_h-etal:1958a, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Michael Scriven and Grover Maxwell}, title = {Concepts, Theories, and the Mind-Body Problem: {M}innesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Volume {II}}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, address = {Minneapolis}, year = {1958}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Philsci Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;} } @book{ feigl_h-etal:1972a, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars and Keith Lehrer}, title = {New Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1972}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {Graduate Library: B 808.5 F32}, topic = {analytic-philosophy;} } @book{ feigl_h-maxwell_g:1961a, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Grover Maxwell}, title = {Current Issues in the Philosophy of Science}, publisher = {Holt Rinehart and Winston}, year = {1961}, address = {New York}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;} } @book{ feigl_h-maxwell_g:1962a, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Grover Maxwell}, title = {Scientific Explanation, Space, and Time: {M}innesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Volume {III}}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, address = {Minneapolis}, year = {1962}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Philsci Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;explanation;philosophy-of-physics;} } @book{ feigl_h-scriven_m:1956a, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Michael Scriven}, title = {The Foundations of Science and the Concepts of Psychology and Psychoanalysis: {M}innesota Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Volume {I}}, publisher = {University of Minnesota Press}, address = {Minneapolis}, year = {1962}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Philsci Shelves.}, topic = {philosophy-of-science;philosophy-of-mind; philosophy-of-psychology;} } @book{ feigl_h-sellars_wp:1949a, editor = {Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid Sellars}, title = {Readings in Philosophical Analysis}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, year = {1949}, address = {New York}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. History of Philosophy Shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Herbert Feigl, "Logical Empiricism", pp. 3--26 2. William C. Kneale, "Is Existence a Predicate?", pp. 29--43 3. Willard V.O. Quine, "Designation and Existence", pp. 44--51 4. Alfred Tarski, "The Semantic Conception of Truth and the Foundations of Semantics", pp. 52--84 5. Gottlob Frege, "On Sense and Denotation", pp. 85-102- 6. Bertrand Russell, "On Denoting", pp. 103--115 7. Rudolf Carnap, "Truth and Confirmation", pp. 119--127 8. Clarence I. Lewis, "Esperience and Meaning", pp. 128--145 9. Moritz Schlick, "Meaning and Verification", pp. 146--170 10. Virgil C. Aldrich, "Messrs. {S}chlick and {A}yer on Immortality", pp. 171--174 11. Virgil C. Aldrich, "Pictorial Meaning and Picture Thinking", pp. 175--181 12. Kasimir Ajdukiewicz, "The Scientific World Perspective", pp. 181--188 13. Ernest Nagel, "Logic without Ontology", pp. 191--210 14. Friedrich Waismann, "The Relevance of Psychology to Logic", pp. 211--221 15. Carl G. Hempel, "On the Nature of Mathematical Truth", pp. 222--237 16. Carl G. Hempel, "Geometry and Empirical Science", pp. 238--249 17. Willard V.O. Quine, "Truth by Convention", pp. 250--273 18. Moritz Schlick, "Is There a Factual \emph{a Priori}?", pp. 277--285 19. Clarence I. Lewis, "The Pragmatic Conception of the \emph{a Priori}?", pp. 286--294 20. Herbert Feigl, "The Logical Character of the Principle of Induction", pp. 297--304 21. Hans Reichenbach, "The Logical Foundations of the Concept of Probability", pp. 305--323 22. Hans Reichenbach, "On the Justification of Induction", pp. 314--329 23. Rudolf Carnap, "The Two Concepts of Probability", pp. 330--348 24. George E. Moore, "Hume's Philosophy", pp. 351--363 25. Walter T. Stace, "The Refutation of Realism", pp. 364--372 26. Carl G. Hempel, "The Logical Analysis of Psychology", pp. 373--384 27. Clarence I. Lewis, "Some Logical Considerations Concerning the Mental", pp. 385--392 28. Moritz Schlick, "On the Relation between Psychological and Physical Concepts", pp. 393--407 29. Rudolf Carnap, "Logical Foundations of the Unity of Science", pp. 408--423 30. Wilfrid S. Sellars, "Realism and the New Way of Words", pp. 424--456 31. Carl G. Hempel, "The Function of General Laws in History", pp. 459--471 32. Charles D. Broad, "The `Nature' of a Continuant", pp. 472--481 33. Roderick M. Chisholm, "The Contrary-to-Fact Conditional", pp. 482--497 34. Herbert Feigl, "Operationalism and the Scientific Method", pp. 498--509 35. Herbert Feigl, "Some Remarks on the Meaning of Scientific Explanation", pp. 510--514 36. Moritz Schlick, "Causality in Everyday Life and in Recent Science", pp. 515--533 37. Cecil A. Mace, "Mechanical and Teleological Causation", pp. 534--539 38. Curt J. Ducasse, "Explanation, Nechanism, and Teleology", pp. 540--544 39. Charles D. Broad, "Some of the Main Problems of Ethics", pp. 547--564 40. Charles D. Broad, "Review of {J}ulian {S}. {H}uxley's \emph{Evolutionary Ethics}," pp. 564--586 41. Charles L. Stevenson, "The Nature of Ethical Disagreement", pp. 587--593 42. The University of California Associates, "The Freedom of the Will", pp. 594--615 }, topic = {analytic-philosophy;analytic-philosophy-collection;} } @article{ feinberg_j:1968a, author = {Joel Feinberg}, title = {Collective Responsibility}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, volume = {65}, year = {1968}, pages = {674--688}, topic = {ethics;blameworthiness;} } @book{ feinberg_j-shaferlandau_r:2005a, editor = {Joel Feinberg and Russ Shafer-Landau}, title = {Reason and Responsibility, 12th Edition}, publisher = {Wadsworth}, year = {2005}, address = {Belmont, California}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. LLP Edited Shelves}, topic = {philosophy-intro;} } @inproceedings{ feiner-mckeown:1990a, author = {Steven K. Feiner and Kathleen R. McKeown}, title = {Coordinating Text and Graphics in Explanation Generation}, booktitle = {Proceedings of AAAI90, Eighth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1990}, pages = {442--449}, topic = {nl-generation;multimedia-generation;explanation;} } @article{ feinmann_d:2022a, author = {Diego Feinmann}, title = {Domain restriction: The Problem of the Variable Location Revisited}, journal = {Linguistics and Philosophy}, year = {2022}, volume = {45}, number = {5}, pages = {1197--1226}, abstract = {...In this article, I do three things. First, I assess the arguments that have been given for and against these two accounts and show that none of them is conclusive. Second, I advance a novel empirical argument based on the observed pragmatic behaviour of bare nouns, an argument that falsifies Stanley's theory while providing clear evidence in support of von Fintel's (1994). Finally, I discuss the relevance of the bare noun data in the context of another important debate -- namely, whether domain restriction is a local mechanism only, or whether it can also be achieved by global means.}, topic = {nl-quantifiers;domain-restriction;bare-plural;} } @book{ feiwel:1985a, editor = {George R. Feiwel}, title = {Issues in Contemporary Microeconomics and Welfare}, publisher = {Macmillan}, year = {1985}, address = {London}, ISBN = {0333354826}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, HB172 .I771 1985a.}, topic = {foundations-of-economics;welfare-economics;} } @book{ feiwel:1987a, editor = {George R. Feiwel}, title = {Arrow and the Foundations of the Theory of Economic Policy}, publisher = {New York University Press}, year = {1987}, address = {New York}, ISBN = {081472583X}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, HB119.A75 A781 1987.}, topic = {foundations-of-economics;welfare-economics;} } @article{ felappi_g:2021a, author = {Giulia Felappi}, title = {Empty Names, Presupposition Failure, and Metalinguistic Negation}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {2021}, volume = {118}, number = {5}, pages = {279--287}, topic = {reference-gaps;proper-names;presupposition;negation;} } @book{ feldman_a:1980a, author = {Allan M. Feldman}, title = {Welfare Economics and Social Choice Theory}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {1980}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {social-choice;} } @article{ feldman_f:1971a, author = {Fred Feldman}, title = {Counterparts}, journal = {The Journal of Philosophy}, year = {1971}, volume = {68}, number = {13}, pages = {406--409}, topic = {counterpart-theory;individuation;} } @unpublished{ feldman_f:1979a, author = {Fred Feldman}, title = {Iffy Oughts}, year = {1979}, note = {Unpublished manuscript.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {deontic-logic;conditional-obligation;`ought';} } @article{ feldman_f:1980a, author = {Fred Feldman}, title = {The Principle of Moral Harmony}, journal = {Journal of Philosophy}, volume = {77}, year = {1980}, pages = {166--179}, xref = {Published as a chapter of feldman:1986a}, topic = {ethics;} } @book{ feldman_f:1986a, author = {Fred Feldman}, title = {Doing the Best We Can: An Essay in Informal Deontic Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Company}, address = {Dordrecht}, year = {1986}, ISBN = {9027721645}, rtnote = {UMich Graduate Library, BJ1012 .F431 1986.}, topic = {deontic-logic;conditional-obligation;} } @incollection{ feldman_f:1990a, author = {Fred Feldman}, title = {A Simpler Solution to the Paradoxes of Deontic Logic}, booktitle = {Philosophical Perspectives 4: Action Theory and Philosophy of Mind}, publisher = {Ridgeview Publishing Company}, year = {1989}, editor = {James E. Tomberlin}, address = {Atasacadero, California}, missinginfo = {pages}, note = {Also available at http://www.jstor.org/journals/.}, topic = {deontic-logic;} } @incollection{ feldman_ja:1991a, author = {Jerome A. Feldman}, title = {Robots with Common Sense?}, booktitle = {Artificial Intelligence and Mathematical Theory of Computation}, publisher = {Academic Press}, year = {1991}, editor = {Vladimir Lifschitz}, pages = {65--72}, address = {San Diego}, topic = {AI-editorial;robotics;} } @article{ feldman_ja:2005a, author = {Jerome A. Feldman}, title = {Review of \emph{On Intelligence}, by {J}eff {H}awkins and {S}andra {B}lakeslee}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2005}, volume = {169}, number = {2}, pages = {181--183}, xref = {Review of: hawkins_j-blakeslee:2004a}, topic = {neurocognition;foundations-of-AI;} } @book{ feldman_ja:2006a, author = {Jerone A. Feldman}, title = {From Molecule to Metaphor: A Neural Theory of Language}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {2006}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262062534}, xref = {Reviews: idsardi:2006a.}, topic = {foundations-of-grammar;neural-computation;} } @article{ feldman_ja:2007a, author = {Jerry Feldman}, title = {Her Story of Cognitive Science}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2007}, volume = {171}, number = {18}, pages = {1094--1103}, xref = {Review of: boden_ma:2006a}, topic = {cognitive-science;} } @article{ feldman_ja-yakimovsky:1974a, author = {Jerome A. Feldman and Yoram Yakimovsky}, title = {Decision Theory and Artificial Intelligence: {I}. A Semantics-Based Region Analyzer}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1974}, volume = {5}, number = {4}, pages = {349--371}, acontentnote = {Abstract: Mathematical decision theory can be combined with heuristic techniques to attack Artificial Intelligence problems. As a first example, the problem of breaking an image into meaningful regions is considered. Bayesian decision theory is seen to provide a mechanism for including problem dependent (semantic) information in a general system. Some results are presented which make the computation feasible. A programming system based on these ideas and its application to road scenes is described. }, topic = {decision-theory;problem-solving-architectures;} } @book{ feldman_l:1997a, editor = {Laurie Beth Feldman}, title = {Morphological Aspects of Language Processing}, publisher = {Lawrence Erlbaum Associates}, year = {1997}, address = {Mahwah, New Jersey}, topic = {psycholinguistics;morphology;parsing-psychology;} } @article{ feldman_r:1970a, author = {Richard Feldman}, title = {Saying Different Things}, journal = {Philosophical Studies}, year = {1970}, volume = {38}, number = {1}, pages = {79--84}, rtnote = {Why not say 2 different people say the same thing when each says `I am tall' although this is true for one and false for the other?}, topic = {propositions;indexicals;context-sensitivity;} } @incollection{ feldman_r:2005a, author = {Richard Feldman}, title = {Justification Is Internal}, booktitle = {Contemporary Debates in Epistemology}, publisher = {Blackwell}, year = {2005}, editor = {Matthias Steup and John Turri and Ernest Sosa}, pages = {337--351}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {knowledge;epistemology;justification;} } @article{ feldman_r1:1995a, author = {R. Feldman}, title = {In Defence of Closure}, journal = {Philosophical Quarterly}, year = {1995}, volume = {45}, pages = {487--494}, missinginfo = {A's 1st name, number}, topic = {hyperintensionality;propositional-attitudes;} } @incollection{ feldman_r2-etal:2006a, author = {Robert Feldman and Gerhard Brewka and Sandro Wenzel}, title = {Planning with Prioritized Goals}, booktitle = {{KR}2006: Proceedings, Tenth International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, year = {2006}, editor = {Patrick Doherty and John Mylopoulos and Christopher A. Welty}, pages = {503--513}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, topic = {planning-algorithms;qualitative-utility;preferences;} } @article{ feldman_rh-wierenga:1979a, author = {Richard H. Feldman and Edward Wierenga}, title = {Thalberg on the Irreducibility of Events}, journal = {Analysis}, year = {1978}, volume = {38}, number = {1}, pages = {12--16}, xref = {Comment on thalberg_i:1978a.}, topic = {events;} } @article{ feldman_ya-friedman_da:1999a, author = {Yishai A. Feldman and Doron A. Friedman}, title = {Portability by Automatic Translation: A Large-Scale Case Study}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {1999}, volume = {107}, number = {1}, pages = {1--28}, topic = {software-engineering;abstraction;} } @article{ felix-etal:2003a, author = {P. F\'elix and S. Barro and R. Marin}, title = {Fuzzy Constraint Networks for Signal Pattern Recognition}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2003}, volume = {148}, number = {1--2}, pages = {103--145}, topic = {possibility-theory;fuzzy-set-theory;constraint-networks; pattern-matching;} } @book{ fellbaum_c:1998a, editor = {Christaine Fellbaum}, title = {Word{N}et: An Electronic Lexical Database}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Christaine Fellbaum, "Introduction", pp. 1--19 2. George A. Miller, "Nouns in {W}ord{N}et", pp. 23--46 3. Katherine J. Miller, "Modifiers in {W}ord{N}et", pp. 47--67 4. Christaine Fellbaum, "A Semantic Network of {E}nglish Verbs", pp. 69--104 5. Randee I. Tengi, "Design and Implemetation of the {W}ord{N}et Database and Searching Software", pp. 105--127 6. Marti A. Hearst, "Automated Discovery of {W}ord{N}et Relations", pp. 131--151 7. Karen T. Kohl and Douglas A. Jones and Robert C. Berwick and Naoyuki Nomura, "Representing Verb Alternations in {W}ord{N}et", pp. 153--178 8. Uta E. Priss, "The Formalization of {W}ord{N}et by Methods of Relational Concept Analysis", pp. 179--196 9. Shari Landes and Claudia Leacock and Randee I. Tengi, "Building Semantic Concordances", pp. 199--216 10. Christiane Fellbaum and Joachim Grabowski and Shari Landes, "Performance and Confidence in a Semantic Annotation Task", pp. 217--237 11. Philip Resnik, "{W}ord{N}et and Class-Based Probabilities", pp. 239--263 12. Claudia Leacock and Martin Chodorow, "Combining Local Context and {W}ord{N}et Similarity for Word Sense Identification", pp. 265--283 13. Ellen M. Voorhees, "Using {W}ord{N}et for Text Retrieval", pp. 285--303 14. Graeme Hirst and David St-Onge, "Lexical Chains as Representations of Context for Detection and Correction of Malapropisms", pp. 305--332 15. Reem Al Halimi and Rick Kazman, "Temporal Indexing through Lexical Chaining", pp. 333--351 16. J.F.M. Burg and R.P. van de Riet, "{COLOR_X}: Using Knowledge from {W}ord{N}et for Conceptual Modeling", pp. 353--377 17. Sandra M. Harabagiu and Dan I. Moldovan, "Knowledge Processing on an Extended {W}ord{N}et", pp. 379--405 }, topic = {wordnet;nlp-lexicons;} } @software{ fellbaum_c:1998b, author = {Christiane Fellbaum}, title = {Word{N}et 1.6 CD-Rom}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, version = {1.6}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, media = {CD-Rom}, platform = {Windows 3.1, Windows 95, Windows NT, Power Mac, MacIntosh 68K.}, topic = {wordnet;nlp-lexicons;} } @incollection{ fellbaum_c:1998c, author = {Christiane Fellbaum}, title = {Towards a Representation of Idioms in {W}ord{N}et}, booktitle = {Use of {W}ord{N}et in Natural Language Processing Systems: Proceedings of the Conference}, publisher = {Association for Computational Linguistics}, year = {1998}, editor = {Sanda Harabagiu}, pages = {52--57}, address = {Somerset, New Jersey}, topic = {nl-processing;WordNet;idioms;} } @incollection{ fellbaum_c:1998d, author = {Christaine Fellbaum}, title = {Introduction}, booktitle = {Word{N}et: An Electronic Lexical Database}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christaine Fellbaum}, pages = {1--19}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {wordnet;nlp-lexicons;computational-lexical-semantics; computational-lexicography;} } @incollection{ fellbaum_c:1998e, author = {Christaine Fellbaum}, title = {A Semantic Network of {E}nglish Verbs}, booktitle = {Word{N}et: An Electronic Lexical Database}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christaine Fellbaum}, pages = {69--104}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {wordnet;nlp-lexicons;computational-lexical-semantics; computational-lexicography;} } @incollection{ fellbaum_c:2011a, author = {Christiane Fellbaum}, title = {Idioms and Collocations}, booktitle = {Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning, Vol. 1}, publisher = {Mouton de Gruyter}, year = {2011}, editor = {Claudia Maienborn and Klaus von Heusinger and Paul Portner}, pages = {441--455}, address = {The Hague}, topic = {nl-semantics;idioms;collocations;} } @incollection{ fellbaum_c:2016a, author = {Christiane Fellbaum}, title = {Word{N}et: An Electronic Lexical Resource}, booktitle = {The {O}xford Handbook of Cognitive Science}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2016}, editor = {Susan E.F. Chipman}, pages = {301--314}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {WordNet;} } @incollection{ fellbaum_c-etal:1998a, author = {Christiane Fellbaum and Joachim Grabowski and Shari Landes}, title = {Performance and Confidence in a Semantic Annotation Task}, booktitle = {Word{N}et: An Electronic Lexical Database}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1998}, editor = {Christaine Fellbaum}, pages = {217--237}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, topic = {wordnet;computational-lexical-semantics;} } @inproceedings{ felli_p-etal:2012a, author = {Paolo Felli andGiuseppe De Giacomo and Alessio Lomuscio}, title = {Synthesizing Agent Protocols from {LTL} Specifications against Multiple Partially-Observable Environments}, booktitle = {{KR}2012: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference}, year = {2012}, editor = {Tomas Eiter and Sheila A. McIlraith and Gerhard Brewka}, pages = {457--466}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {We consider the problem of synthesizing an agent protocol satisfying LTL specifications for multiple, partially-observable environments. We present a sound and complete procedure for solving the synthesis problem in this setting and show it is computationally optimal from a theoretical complexity standpoint. While this produces perfect-recall, hence unbounded, strategies we show how to transform these into agent protocols with bounded number of states.}, topic = {agent-protocols;} } @book{ fellous-arbib_ma:2005a, editor = {Jean-Marc Fellous and Michael A. Arbib}, title = {Who Needs Emotions? The Brain Meets the Robot}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, address = {Oxford}, ISBN-13 = {978-0-19-516619-4}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Cogsci Shelves.}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Jean-Marc Fellous and Michael A. Arbib, "{`}{E}dison' and `{R}ussell: Definitions Versus Inventions in the Analysis of Emotions", pp. 3--7 2. Ralph Adolphs, "Could a Robot Have Emotions? Theoretical Perspectives from Social Cognitive Neuroscience", pp. 9--25 3. Ann E. Kelley, "Neurochemical Networks Encoding Emotion and Motivation: An Evolutionary Perspective", pp. 29--77 4. Jean-Marc Fellous and Joseph E. Ledoux, "Toward Basic Principles for Emotional Processing: What the Fearful Brain Tells the Robot", pp. 79--115 5. Edmond T. Rolls, "What Are Emotions, Why Do We Have Emotions, and What is Their Computational Basis in the Brain?", pp. 117--146 6. Marc Jeannerod, "How Do We Decipher Others' Minds?", pp. 147--169 7. Andrew Ortony and Donald A. Norman and William Revelle, "Affect and Proto-Affect in Effective Functioning", pp. 173--202 8. Aaron Sloman and Ron Chrisley and Matthias Scheutz, "The Architectural Basis of Affective States and Processes", pp. 203--244 9. Ronald C. Arkin, "Moving up the Food Chain":, pp. 245--269 10. Cynthia Breazeal and Rodney Brooks, "Robot Emotion: A Functional Perspective", pp. 271--310 11. Ranjit Nair and Miland Tambe and Stacy Marsella, "The Role of Emotions in Multiagent Teamwork", pp. 311--329 12. Michael A. Arbib, "Beware the Passionate Robot", pp. 333--383 }, topic = {emotion;synthesized-emotions;} } @incollection{ fellous-arbib_ma:2005b, author = {Jean-Marc Fellous and Michael A. Arbib}, title = {{`}{E}dison' and `{R}ussell}, booktitle = {Who Needs Emotions? The Brain Meets the Robot}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Jean-Marc Fellous and Michael A. Arbib}, pages = {3--7}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {synthesized-emotions;} } @incollection{ fellous-ledoux:2005a, author = {Jean-Marc Fellous and Joseph E. Ledoux}, title = {Toward Basic Principles for Emotional Processing: What the Fearful Brain Tells the Robot}, booktitle = {Who Needs Emotions? The Brain Meets the Robot}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {2005}, editor = {Jean-Marc Fellous and Michael A. Arbib}, pages = {79--115}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {emotion;cognitive-neuroscience;fear;} } @article{ felner-etal:2011a, author = {Ariel Felner and Uzi Zahavi and Robert Holte and Jonathan Schaeffer and Nathan Sturtevant and Zhifu Zhang}, title = {Inconsistent Heuristics in Theory and Practice}, journal = {Artificial Intelligence}, year = {2011}, volume = {175}, number = {9--10}, pages = {1570--1603}, topic = {search;heuristics;inconsistency;} } @incollection{ felscher:1986a, author = {Walter Felscher}, title = {Dialogues as a Foundation for Intuitionistic Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {III}: Alternatives in Classical Logic}, publisher = {D. Reidel Publishing Co.}, year = {1986}, editor = {Dov Gabbay and Franz Guenther}, pages = {341--372}, address = {Dordrecht}, topic = {dialogue-logic;intuitionistic-logic;} } @incollection{ felscher:2002a, author = {Walter Felscher}, title = {Dialogs as a Foundation for Intuitionistic Logic}, booktitle = {Handbook of Philosophical Logic, Volume {V}}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, year = {2002}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and Franz Guenthner}, pages = {115--146}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {intuitionistic-logic;dialogue-logic;} } @article{ felton_mk:2005a, author = {Mark K. Felton}, title = {The Development of Discourse Strategies in Adolescent Argumentation}, journal = {Cognitive Development}, year = {2005}, volume = {19}, number = {1}, pages = {35--52}, topic = {argumentation;cognitive-psychology;critical-thinking; developmental-psychology;logical-reasoning;} } @article{ felton_mk-kuhn_d:2001a, author = {Mark K. Felton and Deanna Kuhn}, title = {The Development of Argumentative Discourse Skills}, journal = {Discourse Processes}, year = {2001}, volume = {32}, number = {2--3}, pages = {135--153}, topic = {developmental-psychology;logical-reasoning;} } @book{ feltovich-etal:1997a, editor = {Paul J. Feltovich and Kenneth M. Ford and Robert R. Hoffman}, title = {Expertise In Context: Human and Machine}, publisher = {The {MIT} Press}, year = {1997}, address = {Cambridge, Massachusetts}, ISBN = {0262561107}, rtnote = {UMich Media Union Library, QA 76.76 .E95 E98931 1997}, topic = {expertise;} } @article{ feng_hd-etal:2004a, author = {Haodi Feng and Kang Chen and Xiaotie Deng and Weimin Zheng}, title = {Accessor Variety Criteria for {C}hinese Word Extraction}, journal = {Computational Linguistics}, year = {2004}, volume = {30}, number = {3}, pages = {75--93}, topic = {Chinese-language;word-acquisition;} } @inproceedings{ feng_j-etal:2016a, author = {Jun Feng and Minlie Huang and Mingdong Wang and Mantong Zhou and Yu Hao and Xiaoyan Zhu}, title = {Knowledge Graph Embedding by Flexible Translation}, booktitle = {{KR}2016: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Conference}, year = {2016}, editor = {Chitta Baral and James Delgrande and Frank Wolter}, publisher = {AAAI Press}, pages = {557--560}, address = {Menlo Park, California}, abstract = {Knowledge graph embedding refers to projecting entities and relations in knowledge graph into continuous vector spaces. Current state-of-the-art models are translation-based model, which build embeddings by treating relation as translation from head entity to tail entity. ... we propose a new principle to allow flexible translation between entity and relation vectors. ... Experimental results show that the principle can remarkably improve the performance compared with several state-of-the-art baselines. }, url = {https://dblp.org/db/conf/kr/kr2016}, topic = {kr;knowledge-graphs;} } @inproceedings{ feng_ry-etal:2020a, author = {Renyan Feng and Erman Acar and Stefan Schlobach and Yisong Wang and Wanwei Liu}, title = {On Sufficient and Necessary Conditions in Bounded {CTL}: A Forgetting Approach}, booktitle = {{KR}2020: Proceedings of the Seventeenth International Conference}, year = {2020}, editor = {Diego Calvanese and Esra Erdem and Michael Thielscher}, pages = {361--370}, publisher = {IJCAI Organization}, address = {Vienna}, abstract = {Computation Tree Logic (CTL) is one of the central formalisms in formal verification. ... we introduce a forgetting-based approach in CTL and show that it can be used to compute SNC and WSC of a property under a given model and over a given signature. We study its theoretical properties and also show that our notion of forgetting satisfies existing essential postulates of knowledge forgetting. Furthermore, we analyse the computational complexity of some basic reasoning tasks for the fragment CTLAF in particular.}, topic = {program-verification;forgetting;complexity-in-AI;} } @article{ fensel-etal:2000a, author = {Dieter Fensel and Craig Knoblock and Nicholas Kushmerick and Marie-Christine Rousset}, title = {Workshop on Intelligent Information Integration {III'99}}, journal = {The {AI} Magazine}, year = {2000}, volume = {21}, number = {1}, pages = {91--94}, topic = {information-integration;} } @book{ fensel-etal:2002a, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Fausto Giunchiglia and Deborah L. McGuinness and Mary-Anne Williams}, title = {{KR}2002: Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning}, publisher = {Morgan Kaufmann}, year = {2002}, address = {San Francisco, California}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Murray Shanahan, "A Logical Account of Perception Incorporating Feedback and Expectation", pp. 1--13 2. Shyamanta H Hazarika and Anthony G. Cohn, "Adducing Qualitative Spatio-Temporal Histories from Partial Observations", pp. 14--25 3. David Randell and Mark Witkowski, "Building Large Composition Tables Via Axiomatic Theories", pp. 26--35 4. Florence Le Ber and Amedeo Napoli, "Design and Comparison of Lattices of Topological Relations Based on {G}alois Lattice Theory", pp. 37--46 5. Thomas Eiter and Thomas Lukasiewicz, "Complexity Results for Explanations in the Structural-Model Approach", pp. 49--60 6. Sylvie Coste-Marquis and Pierre Marquis, "Complexity Results for Paraconsistent Inference Relations", pp. 61--72 7. Gerhard Lakemeyer and Hector J. Levesque, "Evaluation-Based Reasoning with Disjunctive Information in First-Order Knowledge Bases", pp. 73--81 8. Chitta Baral and Yan Zhung, "The Complexity of Model Checking for Knowledge Update", pp. 82--93 9. S\'ebastien Konieczny and J\'er\^ome Lang and Pierre Marquis, "Distance-Based Merging: A General Framework and Some Complexity Results", pp. 97--108 10. S\'ebastien Konieczny and Ram\'on Pino Pirez, "On the Frontier between Arbitration and Majority", pp. 109--118 11. Carmel Domschlak and Ronen I. Brafman, "{CP}-Nets---Reasoning and Consistency Checking", pp. 121--132 12. Didier Dubois and H\'el\`ene Fargier and Patrice Perny, "On the Limitations of Ordinal Approaches to Decision-Making", pp. 133--144 13. Gabriele Kern-Iserner, "A Structural Approach to Default Reasoning", pp. 147--157 14. Gerhard Brewka and Salem Benferhat and Daniel Le Berre, "Qualitative Choice Logic", pp. 158--169 15. Fangzhen Lin, "Reducing Strong Equivalence to Entailment in Classical Propositional Logic", pp. 170--176 16. Marc Denecker and Victor W. Marek and Miroslaw Truszczy\'nski, "Ultimate Approximations in Nonmonotonic Knowledge Representation Systems", pp. 177--188 17. Carsten Lutz, "Adding Numbers to the {SHIQ} Description Logic---First Results", pp. 191--202 18. Sebastian Brandt and Ralf K\"usters and Anni-Yasmin Turhan, "Approximation and Difference in Description Logics", pp. 203--214 19. Oliver Kutz and Frank Wolter and Michael Zakharyaschev, "Connecting Abstract Description Systems", pp. 215--226 20. Sergio Tessaris and Ian Horrocks and Graham Gough, "Evaluating a Modular {A}box Algorithm", pp. 227--235 21. J\'er\^ome Lang and Pierre Marquis, "Resolving Inconsistencies by Variable Forgetting", pp. 239--250 22. Luciano Serafini and Antonia Don\'a, "Updating Contexts", pp. 251--262 23. Matteo Cristiani, "Many-Sorted Preference Relations", pp. 265--276 24. J\'er\^ome Lang, "From Preference Representation to Combinatorial Vote", pp. 277--288 25. Chitta Baral and Tran Cao Son and Le-Chi Tuan, "A Transition Function Based Characterization of Actions with Delayed and Continuous Effects", pp. 291--302 26. Ronald P.A. Petrick and Hector J. Levesque, "Knowledge Equivalence in Combined Action Theories", pp. 303--314 27. Eyal Amir, "Projection in Decomposed Situation Calculus", pp. 315--326 28. Paulo Mateus and Ant\'onio Pacheco and Javier Pinto, "Observations and the Probabilistic Situation Calculus", pp. 327--338 29. Gregory Provan, "A Model-Based Diagnosis Framework for Distributed Embedded Systems", pp. 341--352 30. Randy Batsell and Lyle Brenner and Daniel Osherson and Moshe Y. Vardi and Spyros Tsavachidis, "Eliminating Incoherence from Subjective Estimates of Chance", pp. 353--364 31. Helena Sofia Pinto and Jo\~ao P. Martins, "Evolving Ontologies in Distributed and Dynamic Settings", pp. 365--374 32. Richard Booth, "Social Contraction and Belief Negotiation", pp. 375--384 33. Stefan Schultz and Udo Hahn, "Necessary Parts and Wholes in Bio-Ontologies", pp. 387--394 34. Brandon Bennett, "Physical Objects, Identity and Vagueness", pp. 395--406 35. Adnan Darwiche, "A Logical Approach to Factoring Belief Networks", pp. 409--420 36. Salem Benferhat and Didier Dubois and Souhila Kaci and Henri Prade, "Bipolar Representation and Fusion of Preferences in the Possibilistic Logic Framework", pp. 421--432 37. Michael Thielscher, "Programming of Reasoning and Planning Agents with {FLUX}", pp. 435--448 38. Martine de Calm\'es and Didier Dubois and Eyke H\"ullermeier and Henri Prade and Florecne S\'edes, "A Fuzzy Set Approach to Flexible Case-Based Querying: Methodology and Experimentation", pp. 449--458 39. Thomas Eiter and Michael Fink and Giuliana Sabbatini and Hans Tompits, "A Generic Approach to Knowledge-Based Information-Site Selection", pp. 459--469 40. Michael Winikoff and Lin Padgham and James Harland and John Thangarajah, "Declarative and Procedural Goals in Intelligent Agent Systems", pp. 470--481 41. Sheila A. McIlraith and Tran Cao San, "Adapting {G}olog for Composition of Semantic Web Services", pp. 482--493 42. Florence Dupin de Saint-Cyr and J\'er\^ome Lang, "Belief Extrapolaion (or How to Reason about Observations and Unpredicted Change)", pp. 497--508 43. Matthias Broxvall, "Constraint Satisfaction on Infinite Domains: Composing Domains and Decomposing Constraints", pp. 509--520 44. Thomas Bittner, "Judgments about Spatio-Temporal Relations", pp. 521--532 45. Ullrich Hustadt and Renate A. Schmidt, "Scientific Benchmarking with Temporal Logic Decision Procedures", pp. 533--544 46. Thom Fr\"uhwirth, "As Time Goes by: Automatic Complexity Analysis of Simplification Rules", pp. 547--557 47. Alina Beygelzimer and Irina Rish, "Inference Complexity as a Model-Selection Criterion for Learning {B}ayesian Networks", pp. 558--567 48. Balder ten Cate, "On the Logic of D-Separation", pp. 568--577 49. Francesco M. Donini and Paolo Liberatore and Fabio Massacci and Marco Scaerf, "Solving {QBF} with {SMV}", pp. 578--589 50. Diego Calvanese and Giuseppe De Giacomo and Moshe Y. Vardi, "Reasoning about Action and Planning in {LTL} Action Theories", pp. 593--602 51. Giuseppe De Giacomo and Yves Lesp\'erance and Hector J. Levesque and Sebastian Sardi\~na, "On the Semantics of Deliberation in {I}ndi{G}olog--from Theory to Implementation", pp. 603--614 52. John McCarthy, "Actions and Other Events in Situation Calculus", pp. 615--626 53. Peter G\"ardenfors, "The Role of Higher-Order Similarity in Induction and Concept-Formation", p. 629 54. Jim Hendler, "The Semantic Web: {KR}'s Worst Nightmare?", p. 630 55. Bernhard Nebel, "The Philosophical Soccer Player", p. 631 56. Christopher A. Welty, "Panel: Are Upper-Level Ontologies worth the Effort?", p. 632 }, ISBN = {1-55860-847-8}, topic = {kr;} } @book{ fensel-etal:2003a, editor = {Dieter Fensel and Katia Sycara and John Mylopoulos}, title = {The Semantic Web---{ISWC} 2003: Second International Semantic Web Conference}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, year = {2003}, address = {Berlin}, ISBN = {3-540-20362-1}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Vipul Kashyap and Alex Borgida, "Representing the {UMLS} Semantic Network Using {OWL} (Or `What's in a Semantic Web Link?')", pp. 1--16 2. Ian Horrocks and Peter F. Patel-Schneider, "Reducing {OWL} Entailment to Description Logic Satisfiability", pp. 17--29 3. Jeff Z. Pan and Ian Horrocks, "{RDFS(FA)} and {RDF MT}: Two Semantics for {RDFS}.", pp. 30--46 4. Jeff Z. Pan and Ian Horrocks, "Web Ontology Reasoning with Datatype Groups", pp. 47--63 5. Richard Widhalm and Thomas A. M\"uck, "Merging Topics in Well-Formed {XML} Topic Maps", pp. 64--79 6. Kunal Patel and Gopal Gupta, "Semantic Processing of the Semantic Web", pp. 80--95 7. Aimilia Magkanaraki and Val Tannen and Vassilis Christophides and Dimitris Plexousakis, "Viewing the Semantic Web through {RVL} Lenses", pp. 96--112 8. Deborah L. McGuinness and Paulo Pinheiro da Silva, "Infrastructure for Web Explanations", pp. 113--129 9. Paolo Bouquet and Luciano Serani and Stefano Zanobini, "Ontological Reasoning Semantic Coordination: A New Approach and an Application", pp. 130--145 10. Laks V.S. Lakshmanan and Fereidoon Sadri, "Interoperability on {XML} Data", pp. 146--163 11. Paolo Bouquet and Fausto Giunchiglia and Frank van Harmelen and Luciano Serani and Heiner Stuckenschmidt, "{C-OWL}: Contextualizing Ontologies", pp. 164--179 12. Christine Golbreich and Olivier Dameron and Bernard Gibaud and Anita Burgun, "Web Ontology Language Requirements w.r.t Expressiveness of Taxonomy and Axioms in Medicine", pp. 180--194 13. Dan Wu and Bijan Parsia and Evren Sirin and James Hendler and Dana S. Nau, "Automating {DAML-S} Web Services Composition Using {SHOP2}", pp. 195--210 14. Sudhir Agarwal and Siegfried Handschuh and Steen Staab, "Surfing the Service Web", pp. 211--226 15. Daniel J. Mandell and Sheila A. McIlraith, "Adapting {BPEL4WS} for the Semantic Web: The Bottom-Up Approach to Web Service Interoperation", pp. 227--241 16. Boualem Benatallah and Mohand-Said Hacid and Christophe Rey and Farouk Toumani, "Request Rewriting-Based Web Service Discovery", pp. 242--257 17. Andreas He and Nicholas Kushmerick, "Learning to Attach Semantic Metadata to Web Services", pp. 258--273 18. Debbie Richards and Marta Sabou, "Semantic Markup for Semantic Web Tools: A {DAML-S} Description of an {RDF}-Store", pp. 274--289 19. Massimo Paolucci and Anupriya Ankolekar and Naveen Srinivasan and Katia P. Sycara, "The {DAML-S} Virtual Machine", pp. 290--305 20. Enrico Motta and John Domingue and Liliana Cabral and Mauro Gaspari, "{IRS-II}: A Framework and Infrastructure for Semantic Web Services", pp. 306--318 21. Liming Chen and Nigel R. Shadbolt and Carole Goble and Feng Tao and Simon J. Cox and Colin Puleston and P.R. Smart, "Towards a Knowledge-Based Approach to Semantic Service Composition", pp. 319--334 22. Grit Denker and Lalana Kagal and Tim Finin and Massimo Paolucci and Katia Sycara, "Security, Trust, and Privacy Security for {DAML} Web Services: Annotation and Matchmaking", pp. 335--350 23. Matthew Richardson and Rakesh Agrawal and Pedro Domingos, "Trust Management for the Semantic Web", pp. 351--368 24. Jeremy J. Carroll, "Signing {RDF} Graphs", pp. 369--384 25. Fabien L. Gandon and Norman M. Sadeh, "A Semantic E-Wallet to Reconcile Privacy and Context Awareness", pp. 385--401 26. Lalana Kagal and Tim Finin and Anupam Joshi, "A Policy Based Approach to Security for the Semantic Web", pp. 402--418 27. Gianluca Tonti and Jeffrey M. Bradshaw and Renia Jeffers and Rebecca Montanari and Niranjan Suri and Andrzej Uszok, "Semantic Web Languages for Policy Representation and Reasoning: A Comparison of {KAoS}, {Rei}, and {P}onder", pp. 419--437 28. Koji Kamei and Sen Yoshida and Kazuhiro Kuwabara and Jun-ichi Akahani and Tetsuji Satoh, "An Agent Framework for Inter-personal Information Sharing with an {RDF}-Based Repository", pp. 438--452 29. Eiichi Sunagawa and Kouji Kozaki and Yoshinobu Kitamura and Riichiro Mizoguchi, "An Environment for Distributed Ontology Development Based on Dependency Management", pp. 453--468 30. Yang Li and Simon Thompson and Zhu Tan and Nick Giles and Hamid Gharib, "Beyond Ontology Construction; Ontology Services as Online Knowledge Sharing Communities", pp. 469--483 31. Atanas Kiryakov and Borislav Popov and Damyan Ognyanoff and Dimitar Manov and Angel Kirilov and Miroslav Goranov, "Semantic Annotation, Indexing, and Retrieval", pp. 484--499 32. Nenad Stojanovic and Rudi Studer and Ljiljana Stojanovic, "An Approach for the Ranking of Query Results in the Semantic Web", pp. 500--516 33. Zolt\'an Mikl\'os and Gustaf Neumann and Uwe Zdun and Michael Sintek, "Querying Semantic Web Resources Using {TRIPLE} Views", pp. 517--532 34. Saikat Mukherjee and Guizhen Yang and I.V. Ramakrishnan, "Automatic Annotation of Content-Rich {HTML} Documents: "Structural and Semantic Analysis", pp. 533--549 35. Oge Marques and Nitish Barman, "Semi-Automatic Semantic Annotation of Images Using Machine Learning Techniques.", pp. 550--556 36. Raphael Troncy, "Integrating Structure and Semantics into Audio-Visual Documents", pp. 566--581 37. Matthew Addis and Mike Boniface and Simon Goodall and Paul Grimwood and Sanghee Kim and Paul Lewis and Kirk Martinez and Alison Stevenson, "{SCULPTEUR}: Towards a New Paradigm for Multimedia Museum Information Handling", pp. 582--596 38. Joost Geurts and Stefano Bocconi and Jacco van Ossenbruggen and Lynda Hardman, "Towards Ontology-Driven Discourse: From Semantic Graphs to Multimedia Presentations", pp. 597--612 39. Yuanbo Guo and JeRapha Hein and Zhengxiang Pan, "Benchmarking {DAML+OIL} Repositories", pp. 613--627 40. Joseph B. Kopena and William C. Regli, "{DAMLJessKB}: A Tool for Reasoning with the Semantic Web", pp. 628--643 41. Jan Wielemaker and Guus Schreiber and Bob Wielinga, "Prolog-Based Infrastructure for {RDF}: Scalability and Performance", pp. 644--658 42. Sean Bechhofer and Raphael Volz and Phillip W. Lord, "Cooking the Semantic Web with the {OWL} {API}", pp. 659--675 43. Baoshi Yan and Martin Frank and Pedro Szekely and Robert Neches and Juan Lopez, "WebScripter: Grass-Roots Ontology Alignment via End-User Report Creation", pp. 676--689 44. Martin Dzbor and John Domingue and Enrico Motta, "Magpie: Towards a Semantic Web Browser", pp. 690--705 45. Hongsuda Tangmunarunkit and Stefan Decker and Carl Kesselman, "Ontology-Based Resource Matching in the Grid: The Grid Meets the Semantic Web", pp. 706--721 46. Zhen-jie Wang and Huan-ye Sheng and Peng Ding, "A {Q}-Based Architecture for Semantic Information Interoperability on Semantic Web", pp. 722--737 47. Dennis Quan and David Huynh and David R. Karger, "Haystack: A Platform for Authoring End User Semantic Web Applications", pp. 738--753 48. Luke McDowell and Oren Etzioni and Steven D. Gribble and Alon Y. Halevy and Henry M. Levy and William Pentney and Deepak Verma and Stani Vlasseva: "Mangrove: Enticing Ordinary People onto the Semantic Web via Instant Gratification", pp. 754--770 49. Srini Narayanan and Collin F. Baker and Charles J. Fillmore and Miriam R. L. Petruck, "FrameNet Meets the Semantic Web: Lexical Semantics for the Web", pp. 771--787 50. Thomas Dreyer and David Leal and Andrea Schr\"oder and Michael Schwan, "{ScadaOnWeb}: Web Based Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition", pp. 788--801 51. Oscar Corcho and Asunci\'on G\'omez-P\'erez and Angel L\'opez-Cima and V. L\'opez-Garc\'ia and Mara del Carmen Surez-Figueroa, "{ODESeW}: Automatic Generation of Knowledge Portals for Intranets and Extranets", pp. 802--817 52. Zavisa Bjelogrlic and Dirk-Willem van Gulik and Alberto Reggiori, "Making Business Sense of the Semantic Web", pp. 818--833 53. Borislav Popov and Atanas Kiryakov and Angel Kirilov and Dimitar Manov and Damyan Ognyanoff and Miroslav Goranov, "{KIM}: Semantic Annotation Platform", pp. 834--849 54. Neil M. Goldman, "Ontology-Oriented Programming: Static Typing for the Inconsistent Programmer", pp. 850--865 55. Ryusuke Masuoka and Bijan Parsia and Yannis Labrou, "Task Computing: The Semantic Web Meets Pervasive Computing", pp. 866--881 56. Michael Uschold and Peter Clark and Fred Dickey and Casey Fung and Sonia Smith and Stephen A. Uczekaj and Michael Wilke and Sean Bechhofer and Ian Horrocks, "A Semantic Infosphere", pp. 882--896 57. Andreas Maier and Hans-Peter Schnurr and York Sure, "Ontology-Based Information Integration in the Automotive Industry", pp. 897--912 58. J\"urgen Angele and Eddie Moench and Henrik Oppermann and Steffen Staab and Dirk Wenke, "Ontology-Based Query and Answering in Chemistry: OntoNova @ Project Halo", pp. 913--928 }, topic = {semantic-web;} } @article{ fenstad_je:1980a, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad}, title = {Nonstandand Methods in Stochastic Analysis and Mathematical Physics}, journal = {Jber. d. {D}t. {M}ath. {V}erein.}, year = {1980}, volume = {82}, pages = {167--180}, missinginfo = {Number, full journal name}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers, "Fenstad"}, topic = {nonstandard-analysis;} } @incollection{ fenstad_je:1980b, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad}, title = {Structures of Probabilities Defined on First-Order Languages}, booktitle = {Studies in Inductive Logic and Probability, Vol. 2}, publisher = {University of California Press}, year = {1980}, editor = {Richard C. Jeffrey}, pages = {251--262}, address = {Berkeley, California}, topic = {foundations-of-probability;} } @inproceedings{ fenstad_je:1987a, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad}, title = {Natural Language Systems}, booktitle = {Advanced Topics in Artificial Intelligence, 2nd Advanced Course, {ACAI} '87, Oslo, Norway, July 28--August 7, 1987}, year = {1988}, isbn = {3-540-50676-4}, pages = {189--231}, url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=647426.723546}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {London}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. File Drawers.}, topic = {nl-semantics;computational-semantics;} } @incollection{ fenstad_je:1988a, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad}, title = {Language and Computations}, booktitle = {The Universal {T}uring Machine: A Half-Century Survey}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, year = {1988}, editor = {Rolf Herkin}, pages = {327--347}, address = {Oxford}, topic = {situation-semantics;} } @techreport{ fenstad_je:1989a, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad}, title = {Representations and Interpretations}, institution = {Department of Mathematics, University of Oslo}, year = {1990}, number = {Cosmos Report No. 9}, address = {Oslo, Norway}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {logic-and-linguistics;feature-structure-logic;nl-semantics;} } @incollection{ fenstad_je:1996a1, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad}, title = {Partiality}, booktitle = {Handbook of Logic and Language}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {1996}, editor = {Johan {van Benthem} and Alice {ter Meulen}}, pages = {649--682}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Republication: fenstad_je:1996a2}, topic = {nl-semantics;truth-value-gaps;partial-logic;} } @incollection{ fenstad_je:1996a2, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad}, title = {Partiality}, booktitle = {Handbook of Logic and Language}, edition = {2}, publisher = {Elsevier Science Publishers}, year = {2011}, editor = {Johan {van Benthem} and Alice {ter Meulen}}, pages = {691--724}, address = {Amsterdam}, xref = {Republication of: fenstad_je:1996a1}, topic = {nl-semantics;truth-value-gaps;partial-logic;} } @book{ fenstad_je:2010a, author = {Jens Erick Fenstad}, title = {Grammar, Geometry, and the Brain}, publisher = {CSLI Publications}, year = {2010}, address = {Palo Alto, California}, ISBN = {9781575865935}, xref = {Review: rast_e:2014a}, topic = {foundations-of-semantics;} } @unpublished{ fenstad_je-etal:1983a, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad}, title = {Situation Schemata and Systems of Logic Related to Situation Semantics}, year = {1983}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, University of Oslo.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Year is a guess.}, topic = {situation-semantics;} } @techreport{ fenstad_je-etal:1984a, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad and Jan Tore Langholm and Jan Tore L{\o}nning and Helle Frisak Sem}, title = {Report of an {O}slo Seminar in Logic and Linguistics}, institution = {Institute of Mathematics, University of Oslo}, number = {9}, year = {1984}, address = {Oslo}, contentnote = {TC: 1. Jens Erik Fenstad, "Introduction" 2. Jan Tore Langholm, "Some Tentative Systems Relating to Situation Semantics" 3. Jan Tore L{\o}nning, "Mass Terms and Quantification" 4. Helle Frisak Sem, "Quantifier Scope and Coreferentiality" }, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Shelf. LL-collections, "Fenstad".}, topic = {nl-semantics;} } @unpublished{ fenstad_je-etal:1986a, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad and Per-Kristian Halvorsen and Tore Langholm and Johan {van Benthem}}, title = {Equations, Schemata and Situations: A Framework for Linguistic Semantics}, year = {1986}, note = {Unpublished manuscript, Stanford University.}, rtnote = {In RHT collection. Year is a guess.}, topic = {situation-semantics;} } @incollection{ fenstad_je-lonning_jt:1987a, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad and Jan Tore L{\o}nning}, title = {Computational Semantics: Steps toward ``Intelligent'' Text Processing}, booktitle = {Natural Language and Logic}, year = {1987}, editor = {Rudi Studer}, pages = {70--93}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag}, address = {Berlin}, topic = {situation-semantics;nl-semantics;plural;} } @techreport{ fenstad_je-lonning_jt:1990a, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad and Jan Tore L{\o}nning}, title = {Computational Semantics: Steps towards `Intelligent' Text Processing}, institution = {Department of Mathematics, University of Oslo}, year = {1990}, number = {15}, address = {Oslo, Norway}, rtnote = {In RHT collection.}, topic = {nl-processing;computational-semantics;} } @incollection{ fenstad_je-wang_h:2009a, author = {Jens Erik Fenstad and Hao Wang}, title = {Thoralf Albert Skolem}, booktitle = {Handbook of the History of Logic. Volume 5: Logic from {R}ussell to {C}hurch}, publisher = {Elsevier Publishing Co.}, year = {2009}, editor = {Dov M. Gabbay and John Woods}, pages = {127--194}, address = {Amsterdam}, topic = {history-of-logic;Skol