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SPATIAL LOGIC+TEMPORAL LOGIC=?

by Roman Kontchakov, Agi Kurucz, Frank Wolter, Michael Zakharyaschev - HANDBOOK OF SPATIAL LOGICS , 2007
"... ..."
Abstract - Cited by 8 (3 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract not found

Temporal and modal logic

by E. Allen Emerson - HANDBOOK OF THEORETICAL COMPUTER SCIENCE , 1995
"... We give a comprehensive and unifying survey of the theoretical aspects of Temporal and modal logic. ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1310 (17 self) - Add to MetaCart
We give a comprehensive and unifying survey of the theoretical aspects of Temporal and modal logic.

Alternating-time Temporal Logic

by Rajeev Alur, Thomas Henzinger, Orna Kupferman - Journal of the ACM , 1997
"... Temporal logic comes in two varieties: linear-time temporal logic assumes implicit universal quantification over all paths that are generated by system moves; branching-time temporal logic allows explicit existential and universal quantification over all paths. We introduce a third, more general var ..."
Abstract - Cited by 620 (53 self) - Add to MetaCart
Temporal logic comes in two varieties: linear-time temporal logic assumes implicit universal quantification over all paths that are generated by system moves; branching-time temporal logic allows explicit existential and universal quantification over all paths. We introduce a third, more general

The Temporal Logic of Actions

by Leslie Lamport , 1993
"... ..."
Abstract - Cited by 931 (28 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract not found

A Spatial Logic based on Regions and Connection

by David A. Randell, Zhan Cui, Anthony G. Cohn - PROCEEDINGS 3RD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON KNOWLEDGE REPRESENTATION AND REASONING , 1992
"... We describe an interval logic for reasoning about space. The logic simplifies an earlier theory developed by Randell and Cohn, and that of Clarke upon which the former was based. The theory supports a simpler ontology, has fewer defined functions and relations, yet does not suffer in terms of its us ..."
Abstract - Cited by 745 (32 self) - Add to MetaCart
We describe an interval logic for reasoning about space. The logic simplifies an earlier theory developed by Randell and Cohn, and that of Clarke upon which the former was based. The theory supports a simpler ontology, has fewer defined functions and relations, yet does not suffer in terms of its

Design and Synthesis of Synchronization Skeletons Using Branching Time Temporal Logic

by Edmund M. Clarke, E. Allen Emerson - In: Kozen, D., Ed., Logics of Programs , 1982
"... We propose a method of constructing concurrent programs in which the synchroni-zation skeleton of the program ~s automatically synthesized from a high-level (branching time) Temporal Logic specification. The synchronization skeleton is an abstraction of the actual program where detail irrelevant to ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1020 (56 self) - Add to MetaCart
We propose a method of constructing concurrent programs in which the synchroni-zation skeleton of the program ~s automatically synthesized from a high-level (branching time) Temporal Logic specification. The synchronization skeleton is an abstraction of the actual program where detail irrelevant

Automatic verification of finite-state concurrent systems using temporal logic specifications

by E. M. Clarke, E. A. Emerson, A. P. Sistla - ACM Transactions on Programming Languages and Systems , 1986
"... We give an efficient procedure for verifying that a finite-state concurrent system meets a specification expressed in a (propositional, branching-time) temporal logic. Our algorithm has complexity linear in both the size of the specification and the size of the global state graph for the concurrent ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1388 (62 self) - Add to MetaCart
We give an efficient procedure for verifying that a finite-state concurrent system meets a specification expressed in a (propositional, branching-time) temporal logic. Our algorithm has complexity linear in both the size of the specification and the size of the global state graph for the concurrent

Maintaining knowledge about temporal intervals

by James F. Allen - COMMUNICATION OF ACM , 1983
"... The problem of representing temporal knowledge arises in many areas of computer science. In applications in which such knowledge is imprecise or relative, current representations based on date lines or time instants are inadequate. An interval-based temporal logic is introduced, together WiUl a comp ..."
Abstract - Cited by 2942 (13 self) - Add to MetaCart
The problem of representing temporal knowledge arises in many areas of computer science. In applications in which such knowledge is imprecise or relative, current representations based on date lines or time instants are inadequate. An interval-based temporal logic is introduced, together WiUl a

Representing Action and Change by Logic Programs

by Michael Gelfond, Vladimir Lifschitz - Journal of Logic Programming , 1993
"... We represent properties of actions in a logic programming language that uses both classical negation and negation as failure. The method is applicable to temporal projection problems with incomplete information, as well as to reasoning about the past. It is proved to be sound relative to a semantics ..."
Abstract - Cited by 414 (25 self) - Add to MetaCart
We represent properties of actions in a logic programming language that uses both classical negation and negation as failure. The method is applicable to temporal projection problems with incomplete information, as well as to reasoning about the past. It is proved to be sound relative to a

Bayesian Description Logics. In:

by Franz Baader , Ralf Küsters , Frank Wolter - Proc. of DL’14. CEUR Workshop Proceedings, , 2014
"... Abstract This chapter considers, on the one hand, extensions of Description Logics by features not available in the basic framework, but considered important for using Description Logics as a modeling language. In particular, it addresses the extensions concerning: concrete domain constraints; moda ..."
Abstract - Cited by 394 (49 self) - Add to MetaCart
; modal, epistemic, and temporal operators; probabilities and fuzzy logic; and defaults. On the other hand, it considers non-standard inference problems for Description Logics, i.e., inference problems that-unlike subsumption or instance checking-are not available in all systems, but have turned out
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