Measuring Inconsistency in a General Information Space

Author(s):  
John Grant ◽  
Francesco Parisi
Author(s):  
Yuliya Sokolova

The results of the Second Museum Assembly held within the framework of the International Professional Forum “The Book. Culture. Education. Innovations” “Crimea-2016” (June 6-10, 2016, Sudak, Republic of Crimea, Russian Federation) are discussed. The plenary and themed sessions are covered, including “Libraries and museums in the general information space. Libraries in museums and museums in libraries”, “Museum projects for informatization and digitization, virtual museums”, and the master class “Designing virtual museum: the conclusions and recommendations for the future are surveyed”.


Author(s):  
John Grant ◽  
Francesco Parisi

AbstractAI systems often need to deal with inconsistent information. For this reason, since the early 2000s, some AI researchers have developed ways to measure the amount of inconsistency in a knowledge base. By now there is a substantial amount of research about various aspects of inconsistency measuring. The problem is that most of this work applies only to knowledge bases formulated as sets of formulas in propositional logic. Hence this work is not really applicable to the way that information is actually stored. The purpose of this paper is to extend inconsistency measuring to real world information. We first define the concept ofgeneral information spacewhich encompasses various types of databases and scenarios in AI systems. Then, we show how to transform any general information space to aninconsistency equivalentpropositional knowledge base, and finally apply propositional inconsistency measures to find the inconsistency of the general information space. Our method allows for the direct comparison of the inconsistency of different information spaces, even though the data is presented in different ways. We demonstrate the transformation on four general information spaces: a relational database, a graph database, a spatio-temporal database, and a Blocks world scenario, where we apply several inconsistency measures after performing the transformation. Then we review so-called rationality postulates that have been developed for propositional knowledge bases as a way to judge the intuitive properties of these measures. We show that although general information spaces may be nonmonotonic, there is a way to transform the postulates so they can be applied to general information spaces and we show which of the measures satisfy which of the postulates. Finally, we discuss the complexity of inconsistency measures for general information spaces.


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