2015
DOI: 10.1007/s11225-015-9626-z
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Progression and Verification of Situation Calculus Agents with Bounded Beliefs

Abstract: Abstract.We investigate agents that have incomplete information and make decisions based on their beliefs expressed as situation calculus bounded action theories. Such theories have an infinite object domain, but the number of objects that belong to fluents at each time point is bounded by a given constant. Recently, it has been shown that verifying temporal properties over such theories is decidable. We take a first-person view and use the theory to capture what the agent believes about the domain of interest… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…The form of boundedness studied in that case requires that the number of object tuples that the agent thinks may belong to any given fluent be bounded. In [30,29], instead, it is only required that number of distinct tuples entelied to belong to a fluent is bounded, while the number of tuples that are in the extension of a fluent in some model of the theory need not be bounded. More work is needed to fully reconcile these meta-theoretic and language-theoretic approaches.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…The form of boundedness studied in that case requires that the number of object tuples that the agent thinks may belong to any given fluent be bounded. In [30,29], instead, it is only required that number of distinct tuples entelied to belong to a fluent is bounded, while the number of tuples that are in the extension of a fluent in some model of the theory need not be bounded. More work is needed to fully reconcile these meta-theoretic and language-theoretic approaches.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Example 1. Consider a warehouse where items are moved around by a robot (a similar example is formalized in [30]). There are k storage locations where items can be stored.…”
Section: Bounded Action Theoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The least we can require for a fragment of Golog to be acceptable for building knowledge-based programs on it is that it is decidable, so that branching conditions can be evaluated and a knowledge-based program can always be executed. A few attempts to identify decidable classes of epistemic situation calculus theories have been made [36,30,31,74], but without addressing knowledge-based programming.…”
Section: Golog and The Situation Calculusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, in [3] the authors discuss the possibility to employ a new approach to deriving new knowledge in multi-agent systems to eventually let an agent act with available data only, instead of inquiring knowledge from all agents. In paper [4] they describe the approach to verify temporal properties of agents possessing incomplete knowledge on the world and using situation calculus bounded action theories. Besides, in [5] the researchers proposed to employ situation calculus and event calculus in the general theory of steady models and answer set programming.…”
Section: State Of Artmentioning
confidence: 99%