Making decisions through preference-based argumentation
Ημερομηνία
2008ISBN
978-1-57735-384-3Source
Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: Proceedings of the 11th International Conference, KR 200811th International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning, KR 2008
Pages
113-123Google Scholar check
Keyword(s):
Metadata
Εμφάνιση πλήρους εγγραφήςΕπιτομή
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 argumentationbased 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. Copyright © 2008, Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence.
Collections
Cite as
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Article
Exploitation of medical crisp database for fuzzy diagnostic decision support systems
Papaioannou, Maria; Schizas, Christos N. (2015)There are several types of Diagnostic Decision Support Systems (DDSS) but all move towards a common direction: provide assistance to the doctors/clinicians to make the right diagnosis for a specific patient, minimizing as ...
-
Article
Extending argumentation to make good decisions
Dimopoulos, Yannis; Moraïtis, Pavlos; Amgoud, L. (2009)Argumentation has been acknowledged as a powerful mechanism for automated decision making. In this context several recent works have studied the problem of accommodating preference information in argumentation. The majority ...
-
Article
A Review of Decision Support Systems in Telecare
Falas, Tasos; Papadopoulos, George Angelos; Stafylopatis, Andreas N. (2003)This paper presents an overview of the state-of-the-art on decision support systems (DSS) in telecare. The main aspect examined is the use of smaller subsystems -components in an integrated DSS, with emphasis on two ...