peter-1999.bib
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@inproceedings{Baumgartner:Kuehn:AbductiveCoreference:ICOS:99,
author = {Peter Baumgartner and Michael K{\"u}hn},
title = {Abductive Coreference by Model Construction},
booktitle = {ICoS-1 Inference in Computational Semantics},
optcrossref = {},
optkey = {},
optpages = {},
year = {1999},
opteditor = {},
optvolume = {},
optnumber = {},
optseries = {},
address = {Institute for Logic, Language and Computation, University
of Amsterdam},
month = {August},
optorganization = {},
optpublisher = {},
optnote = {},
url = {http://www.uni-koblenz.de/fb4/publikationen/gelbereihe/RR-6-99.ps.gz},
abstract = {In this paper, we argue that the resolution of anaphoric
expressions in an utterance is essentially an {\em
abductive\/} task following [HSAM93] who use a weighted
abduction scheme on horn clauses to deal with reference. We
give a semantic representation for utterances containing
anaphora that enables us to compute possible antecedents by
abductive inference. We extend the disjunctive model
construction procedure of {\em hyper tableaux\/} [BFN96,
K{\"u}h97] with a clause transformation turning the
abductive task into a model generation problem and show the
completeness of this transformation with respect to the
computation of abuctive explanations. This abductive
inference is applied to the resolution of anaphoric
expressions in our general model constructing framework for
incremental discourse representation [K{\"u}h99] which we
argue to be useful for computing information updates from
natural language utterances [Vel96].}
}
@inproceedings{Baumgartner:Eisinger:Furbach:CCC:CADE:99,
author = {Peter Baumgartner and Norbert Eisinger and Ulrich
Furbach},
title = {A Confluent Connection Calculus},
crossref = {CADE:99},
era = {A},
pages = {329--343},
url = {http://www.uni-koblenz.de/fb4/publikationen/gelbereihe/RR-23-98.ps.gz},
abstract = {This work is concerned with basic issues of the design of
calculi and proof procedures for first-order connection
methods and tableaux calculi. Proof procedures for these
type of calculi developed so far suffer from not exploiting
proof confluence, and very often unnecessarily rely on a
heavily backtrack oriented control regime. \par As a new
result, we present a variant of a connection calculus and
prove its {\em strong\/} completeness. This enables the
design of backtrack-free control regimes. To demonstrate
that the underlying fairness condition is reasonably
implementable we define an effective search strategy.}
}
@inproceedings{Baumgartner:Horton:Spencer:MergePathHyperTableaux:Tableaux:99,
author = {Peter Baumgartner and J.D. Horton and Bruce Spencer},
title = {Merge Path Improvements for Minimal Model Hyper Tableaux},
optbooktitle = {},
crossref = {TABLEAUX:99},
optkey = {},
optpages = {},
optyear = {},
opteditor = {},
optvolume = {},
optnumber = {},
optseries = {},
optaddress = {},
era = {A},
optmonth = {},
optorganization = {},
optpublisher = {},
optnote = {},
optannote = {},
abstract = {We combine techniques originally developed for
refutational first-order theorem proving within the clause
tree framework with techniques for minimal model
computation developed within the hyper tableau framework.
This combination generalizes well-known tableaux techniques
like complement splitting and folding-up/down. We argue
that this combination allows for efficiency improvements
over previous, related methods. It is motivated by
application to diagnosis tasks; in particular the problem
of avoiding redundancies in the diagnoses of electrical
circuits with reconvergent fanouts is addressed by the new
technique. In the paper we develop as our main contribution
in a more general way a sound and complete calculus for
propositional circumscriptive reasoning in the presence of
minimized and varying predicates. },
url = {http://www.uni-koblenz.de/fb4/publikationen/gelbereihe/RR-1-99.ps.gz}
}
@inproceedings{Baumgartner:Schaefer:CouplingKIVPROTEIN:TOOLS98:99,
author = {Peter Baumgartner and Dorothea Sch{\"a}fer},
title = {Model Elimination with Simplification and its Application
to Software Verification},
booktitle = {Tool Support for System Specification, Development, and
Verification},
optcrossref = {},
optkey = {},
optpages = {},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag Wien NewYork},
year = {1999},
editor = {Rudolf Berghammer and Yassine Lakhnech},
series = {Advances in Computer Science},
optnumber = {},
opttype = {},
optchapter = {},
optaddress = {},
optedition = {},
optmonth = {},
optannote = {},
abstract = {This paper describes our approach of coupling the
interactive software verification system KIV with the Model
Elimination based, complete automated theorem prover
PROTEIN. In order to make this combination work in
practice, we propose to incorporate domain knowledge
readily given from the KIV domain into PROTEIN. More
specifically, we extend Model Elimination by a concept of
simplification based on conditional rewrite rules. The
extension is defined in such a way that rewrite rules as
given from the KIV system can easily be accommodated. This
yields better performance for proof automatization and thus
relieves the system engineer from more interactions. In the
paper, we describe the new simplification technique, show
completeness, and demonstrate the benefits with practical
experiments from the KIV domain.},
url = {tools98-final-conform.pdf}
}
@incollection{Baumgartner:Eisinger:Furbach:CCC:WB60:99,
author = {Peter Baumgartner and Norbert Eisinger and Ulrich
Furbach},
title = {A Confluent Connection Calculus},
booktitle = {Intellectics and Computational Logic -- Papers in Honor of
Wolfgang Bibel},
optpages = {},
publisher = {Kluwer},
year = {1999},
editor = {Steffen H{\"o}lldobler},
url = {http://www.uni-koblenz.de/fb4/publikationen/gelbereihe/RR-23-98.ps.gz},
optchapter = {},
optaddress = {},
optmonth = {},
optnote = {},
optannote = {},
abstract = {This work is concerned with basic issues of the design of
calculi and proof procedures for first-order connection
methods and tableaux calculi. Proof procedures for these
type of calculi developed so far suffer from not exploiting
proof confluence, and very often unnecessarily rely on a
heavily backtrack oriented control regime. \par As a new
result, we present a variant of a connection calculus and
prove its {\em strong\/} completeness. This enables the
design of backtrack-free control regimes. To demonstrate
that the underlying fairness condition is reasonably
implementable we define an effective search strategy. We
show that with the new approach the search space can be
exponentially smaller than those of current,
backtracking-oriented proof procedures based on {\em
weak\/} completeness results.}
}
@proceedings{TABLEAUX:99,
booktitle = {Automated Reasoning with Analytic Tableaux and Related
Methods},
title = {Automated Reasoning with Analytic Tableaux and Related
Methods},
year = {1999},
editor = {Neil Murray},
publisher = {Springer},
volume = {1617},
series = {Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence}
}
@proceedings{CADE:99,
booktitle = {CADE-16 -- The 16th International Conference on Automated
Deduction},
editor = {Harald Ganzinger},
year = {1999},
volume = {1632},
series = {Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence},
publisher = {Springer},
title = {Automated Deduction -- CADE-16},
address = {Trento, Italy}
}