Syntax of default logic
A default theory is a pair . is a set of logical formulas, called ''the background theory'', that formalize the facts that are known for sure. is a set of ''default rules'', each one being of the form: : According to this default, if we believe that is true, and each for is consistent with our current beliefs, we are led to believe that is true. The logical formulae in and all formulae in a default were originally assumed to be first-order logic formulae, but they can potentially be formulae in an arbitrary formal logic. The case in which they are formulae inExamples
The default rule “birds typically fly” is formalized by the following default: : This rule means that, "if is a bird, and it can be assumed that it flies, then we can conclude that it flies". A background theory containing some facts about birds is the following one: :. According to this default rule, a condor flies because the precondition is true and the justification is not inconsistent with what is currently known. On the contrary, does not allow concluding : even if the precondition of the default is true, the justification is inconsistent with what is known. From this background theory and this default, cannot be concluded because the default rule only allows deriving from , but not vice versa. Deriving the antecedents of an inference rule from the consequences is a form of explanation of the consequences, and is the aim ofRestrictions
A default is categorical or prerequisite-free if it has no prerequisite (or, equivalently, its prerequisite is tautological). A default is normal if it has a single justification that is equivalent to its conclusion. A default is supernormal if it is both categorical and normal. A default is seminormal if all its justifications entail its conclusion. A default theory is called categorical, normal, supernormal, or seminormal if all defaults it contains are categorical, normal, supernormal, or seminormal, respectively.Semantics of default logic
A default rule can be applied to a theory if its precondition is entailed by the theory and its justifications are all ''consistent with'' the theory. The application of a default rule leads to the addition of its consequence to the theory. Other default rules may then be applied to the resulting theory. When the theory is such that no other default can be applied, the theory is called an extension of the default theory. The default rules may be applied in different order, and this may lead to different extensions. The Nixon diamond example is a default theory with two extensions: : Since Nixon is both a Republican and a Quaker, both defaults can be applied. However, applying the first default leads to the conclusion that Nixon is not a pacifist, which makes the second default not applicable. In the same way, applying the second default we obtain that Nixon is a pacifist, thus making the first default not applicable. This particular default theory has therefore two extensions, one in which is true, and one in which is false. The original semantics of default logic was based on the fixed point of a function. The following is an equivalent algorithmic definition. If a default contains formulae with free variables, it is considered to represent the set of all defaults obtained by giving a value to all these variables. A default is applicable to a propositional theory if and all theories are consistent. The application of this default to leads to the theory . An extension can be generated by applying the following algorithm: T = W /* current theory */ A = 0 /* set of defaults applied so far */ /* apply a sequence of defaults */ while there is a default d that is not in A and is applicable to T add the consequence of d to T add d to A /* final consistency check */ if for every default d in A T is consistent with all justifications of d then output T This algorithm is non-deterministic, as several defaults can alternatively be applied to a given theory . In the Nixon diamond example, the application of the first default leads to a theory to which the second default cannot be applied and vice versa. As a result, two extensions are generated: one in which Nixon is a pacifist and one in which Nixon is not a pacifist. The final check of consistency of the justifications of all defaults that have been applied implies that some theories do not have any extensions. In particular, this happens whenever this check fails for every possible sequence of applicable defaults. The following default theory has no extension: : Since is consistent with the background theory, the default can be applied, thus leading to the conclusion that is false. This result however undermines the assumption that has been made for applying the first default. Consequently, this theory has no extensions. In a normal default theory, all defaults are normal: each default has the form . A normal default theory is guaranteed to have at least one extension. Furthermore, the extensions of a normal default theory are mutually inconsistent, i.e., inconsistent with each other.Entailment
A default theory can have zero, one, or more extensions. Entailment of a formula from a default theory can be defined in two ways: ; Skeptical : a formula is entailed by a default theory if it is entailed by all its extensions; ; Credulous : a formula is entailed by a default theory if it is entailed by at least one of its extensions. Thus, the Nixon diamond example theory has two extensions, one in which Nixon is a pacifist and one in which he is not a pacifist. Consequently, neither nor are skeptically entailed, while both of them are credulously entailed. As this example shows, the credulous consequences of a default theory may be inconsistent with each other.Alternative default inference rules
The following alternative inference rules for default logic are all based on the same syntax as the original system. ; Justified: differs from the original one in that a default is not applied if thereby the set becomes inconsistent with a justification of an applied default; ; Concise: a default is applied only if its consequence is not already entailed by (the exact definition is more complicated than this one; this is only the main idea behind it); ; Constrained: a default is applied only if the set composed of the background theory, the justifications of all applied defaults, and the consequences of all applied defaults (including this one) is consistent; ; Rational: similar to constrained default logic, but the consequence of the default to add is not considered in the consistency check; ; Cautious: defaults that can be applied but are conflicting with each other (like the ones of the Nixon diamond example) are not applied. The justified and constrained versions of the inference rule assign at least an extension to every default theory.Variants of default logic
The following variants of default logic differ from the original one on both syntax and semantics. ; Assertional variants : An assertion is a pair composed of a formula and a set of formulae. Such a pair indicates that is true while the formulae have been assumed consistent to prove that is true. An assertional default theory is composed of an assertional theory (a set of assertional formulae) called the background theory and a set of defaults defined as in the original syntax. Whenever a default is applied to an assertional theory, the pair composed of its consequence and its set of justifications is added to the theory. The following semantics use assertional theories: * Cumulative default logic * Commitment to assumptions default logic * Quasi-default logic ; Weak extensions : rather than checking whether the preconditions are valid in the theory composed of the background theory and the consequences of the applied defaults, the preconditions are checked for validity in the extension that will be generated; in other words, the algorithm for generating extensions starts by guessing a theory and using it in place of the background theory; what results from the process of extension generation is actually an extension only if it is equivalent to the theory guessed at the beginning. This variant of default logic is related in principle to autoepistemic logic, where a theory has the model in which is true just because, assuming true, the formula supports the initial assumption. ; Disjunctive default logic : the consequence of a default is a set of formulae instead of a single formula. Whenever the default is applied, at least one of its consequences is nondeterministically chosen and made true. ; Priorities on defaults : the relative priority of defaults can be explicitly specified; among the defaults that are applicable to a theory, only one of the most preferred ones can be applied. Some semantics of default logic do not require priorities to be explicitly specified; rather, more specific defaults (those that are applicable in fewer cases) are preferred over less specific ones. ; Statistical variant : a statistical default is a default with an attached upper bound on its frequency of error; in other words, the default is assumed to be an incorrect inference rule in at most that fraction of times it is applied.Translations
Default theories can be translated into theories in other logics and vice versa. The following conditions on translations have been considered: ; Consequence-Preserving : the original and the translated theories have the same (propositional) consequences; ; Faithful : this condition only makes sense when translating between two variants of default logic or between default logic and a logic in which a concept similar to extension exists, e.g., models inComplexity
The computational complexity of the following problems about default logic is known: ; Existence of extensions : deciding whether a propositional default theory has at least one extension is -complete; ; Skeptical entailment : deciding whether a propositional default theory skeptically entails a propositional formula is -complete; ; Credulous entailment : deciding whether a propositional default theory credulously entails a propositional formula is -complete; ; Extension checking : deciding whether a propositional formula is equivalent to an extension of a propositional default theory is -complete; ; Model checking : deciding whether a propositional interpretation is a model of an extension of a propositional default theory is -complete.Implementations
Four systems implementing default logics are tp://www.cs.engr.uky.edu/cs/manuscripts/deres.ps DeReSbr>XRaySee also
* Answer set programming * Defeasible logic * Non-monotonic logic * Logic programmingReferences
* G. Antoniou (1999). A tutorial on default logics. ''ACM Computing Surveys'', 31(4):337-359. * M. Cadoli, F. M. Donini, P. Liberatore, and M. Schaerf (2000)External links
* Schmidt, Charles F