Institutional Repository
Technical University of Crete
EN  |  EL

Search

Browse

My Space

Towards multipolicy argumentation

Bassiliades, Nick, Spanoudakis Nikolaos, Kakas, Antonis C

Simple record


URIhttp://purl.tuc.gr/dl/dias/5DCF0A41-F41F-473F-A804-763F5C02691F-
Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.1145/3200947.3201032-
Identifierhttps://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=3201032-
Languageen-
Extent10 pagesen
TitleTowards multipolicy argumentationen
CreatorBassiliades, Nicken
CreatorSpanoudakis Nikolaosen
CreatorΣπανουδακης Νικολαοςel
CreatorKakas, Antonis Cen
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machineryen
Content SummaryIn this paper, we develop a novel computational argumentation framework for resolving conflicts that arise in a community of multiple stakeholders where each one of them bears a private policy/strategy for shared and inter-related decisions. Decisions taken individually by stakeholders can be contradicting, so there is a need for an arbitration service that will resolve the conflict and conclude on a single decision. Centralized mediation approaches gather all relevant context information and decide on the prevailing decision option as suggested individually by multiple stakeholders. There is high complexity on resolving all possible competing option conflicts among all competing stakeholders, thus, usually centralized solutions do not scale. Our approach avoids this complexity because it is based on defining an arbitration meta-policy for deciding on the priorities among stakeholders, which are few, and not among competing decisions of stakeholders. Then, this meta-policy is automatically rewritten into a full meta-policy about conflicting options, but without user intervention. Thus, human arbitrators can seamlessly define their arbitration meta-policies without a heavy cognitive load.en
Type of ItemΠλήρης Δημοσίευση σε Συνέδριοel
Type of ItemConference Full Paperen
Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/en
Date of Item2019-08-29-
Date of Publication2018-
SubjectComputer applicationsen
SubjectComputer programmingen
SubjectProblem solvingen
SubjectArgumentation frameworksen
SubjectCognitive loadsen
Bibliographic CitationN. Bassiliades, N. I. Spanoudakis and A.C. Kakas, "Towards multipolicy argumentation," in 10th Hellenic Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2018. doi: 10.1145/3200947.3201032en

Services

Statistics