J. McCarthy.
Circumscription-a form of non-monotonic reasoning.
Artificial Intelligence,
13(1-2):27--39,
1980.
Note: Netherlands.
Keywords:
honours reading,
situation calculus,
modal logic,
model theory,
generalisation,
nonmonotonic reasoning.
Abstract: |
"Humans and intelligent computer programs must often jump to the conclusion that the objects they can determine to have certain properties or relations are the only objects that do. Circumscription formalizes such conjectural reasoning. (12 References)." |
@Article{McCarthy1980,
author = "J. McCarthy",
title = "Circumscription-a form of non-monotonic reasoning",
journal = "Artificial Intelligence",
volume = "13",
number = "1-2",
pages = "27--39",
note = "Netherlands.",
abstract = "Humans and intelligent computer programs must often jump to the conclusion that the objects they can determine to have certain properties or relations are the only objects that do. Circumscription formalizes such conjectural reasoning. (12 References).",
keywords = "honours reading, situation calculus, modal logic, model theory, generalisation, nonmonotonic reasoning",
year = "1980",
}
Reid G. Smith.
The Contract Net Protocol: High-Level Communication and Control in a Distributed Problem Solver.
IEEE Transactions on Computers,
C-29(12):1104--1113,
1980.
Keywords:
coordination,
honours reading.
@Article{Smith1980,
author = "Reid G. Smith",
title = "The Contract Net Protocol: High-Level Communication and Control in a Distributed Problem Solver",
journal = "IEEE Transactions on Computers",
volume = "C-29",
number = "12",
pages = "1104--1113",
keywords = "coordination, honours reading",
year = "1980",
}