Combining dynamic deontic logic and temporal logic for the specification of deadlines

F. Dignum, R. Kuiper

Research output: Chapter in Book / Report / Conference proceedingConference contributionAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Intelligent agents have an agenda that is monitored continuously to decide what action is to be performed. Formally, an agenda is a set of deontic temporal constraints. Deontic, since the agenda specifies what the agent should do. Temporal, since the obligation is usually to be performed before a certain deadline, or as soon as possible. In this paper, we investigate the concepts necessary to describe deadlines. We describe a temporal deontic logic that facilitates reasoning about obligations and deadlines. The logic is a combination of temporal logic and deontic dynamic logic. We describe extensively which choices have to be made in combining temporal and dynamic aspects into one system. In the new logic, we can uniformally specify that an obligation starts at a certain time or event, that it must be done immediately, as soon as possible, before a deadline, or periodically.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAdvanced Technology
PublisherIEEE Comp Soc
Pages336-346
Publication statusPublished - 1997
Externally publishedYes
EventProceedings of the 1997 30th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Part 1 (of 6) -
Duration: 7 Jan 199710 Jan 1997

Publication series

NameProceedings of the Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences

Conference

ConferenceProceedings of the 1997 30th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Part 1 (of 6)
Period7/01/9710/01/97

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