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A Guided Tour of Artificial Intelligence ResearchCompact Representation of Preferences

A Guided Tour of Artificial Intelligence Research: Compact Representation of Preferences [This chapter presents the main families of representation languages for preferences on combinatorial domains (composed by several attributes or variables with discrete value domains). In the first part of the chapter, we present the problem in its full generality. A large part of these languages are said to be graphical, because they work by expressing elementary preferences in a local way, using structural independence properties that are represented under the form of a graph. In the second (respectively, third) part of the chapter we review graphical languages for expressing ordinal (respectively, cardinal) preferences. Another class of preference representation languages makes use of (propositional) logic; they will be reviewed in the fourth part of the chapter, together with proper ‘preference logics’.] http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

A Guided Tour of Artificial Intelligence ResearchCompact Representation of Preferences

Editors: Marquis, Pierre; Papini, Odile; Prade, Henri

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Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Copyright
© Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020
ISBN
978-3-030-06163-0
Pages
217 –252
DOI
10.1007/978-3-030-06164-7_7
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

[This chapter presents the main families of representation languages for preferences on combinatorial domains (composed by several attributes or variables with discrete value domains). In the first part of the chapter, we present the problem in its full generality. A large part of these languages are said to be graphical, because they work by expressing elementary preferences in a local way, using structural independence properties that are represented under the form of a graph. In the second (respectively, third) part of the chapter we review graphical languages for expressing ordinal (respectively, cardinal) preferences. Another class of preference representation languages makes use of (propositional) logic; they will be reviewed in the fourth part of the chapter, together with proper ‘preference logics’.]

Published: May 8, 2020

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