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Academic report: Making Belnap's "Useful 4-Valued Logic" Useful

报告3

报告题目:Making Belnap's "Useful 4-Valued Logic" Useful (让Belnap的“有用的4值逻辑”真正有用)

报告时间:2018年6月5日(星期二)15:00-16:00

报告地点:九里校区信息楼01020

报告内容简介:

In 1977 Nuel Belnap published two articles, "How a Computer Should Think" and "A Useful Four-Valued Logic", in which he defined a four-valued logic called FDE (First Degree Entailment). However, FDE does not allow entailments within statements, and no conditional connective is defined. As such, it is not really computationally "useful". This work proposes conditional connectives to add to FDE, and describes the implementation of a reasoning tool for FDE with a conditional connective, with experimental results. With the addition of a conditional connective FDE starts to become truly computationally useful.


Introduction of speaker

Geoff Sutcliffe is a Professor and the Chair of the Department of Computer Science at the University of Miami. He received a BSc(Hons) and MSc from the University of Natal, and a PhD in Computer Science from the University of Western Australia. His research is in the area of Automated Reasoning, particularly in the evaluation and effective use of automated reasoning systems. His most prominent achievements are: the first ever development of a heterogeneous parallel deduction system, leading to the development of the SSCPA automated reasoning system; the development and ongoing maintenance of the TPTP problem library, which is now the de facto standard for testing classical logic automated reasoning systems; the development and ongoing organization of the CADE ATP System Competition - the world championship for classical logic automated reasoning systems; and the specification of the TPTP language standards for automated reasoning tools. The research has been supported by grants from the National Science Foundation, the German Ministry for Research, the Australian Research Council, the European Union, and internal university grants from Edith Cowan University, James Cook University, and the University of Miami. The research has produced over 125 refereed journal, conference, and workshop papers.


 

He is an editor of Acta Informatica and the Formalised Mathematics journal, and has been guest editor of several special journal issues on topics in automated reasoning. He has contributed to the automated reasoning and artificial intelligence communities as a conference or program chair of (several instances of) the International Conference on Automated Deduction (CADE), the International Conference on Logic for Programming Artificial Intelligence and Reasoning (LPAR), and the International Florida Artificial Intelligence Research Society (FLAIRS). He was co-founder and organizer of the "ES*" series of workshops on Empirically Successful Automated Reasoning. He regularly serves as a program committee member and reviewer for automated reasoning and artificial intelligence journals and conferences. He has served three terms as a CADE trustee, is on the LPAR steering committee, is on the Linking Research Globally (LRG) steering committee, and is currently the president of FLAIRS. As a faculty member at the University of Miami he is currently chair of the College of Arts and Sciences curriculum committee.