A Practical Nonmonotonic Theory for Reasoning About Speech Acts

Abstract

A prerequisite to a theory of the way agents understand speech acts is a theory of how their beliefs and intentions are revised as a consequence of events. This process of attitude revision is an interesting domain for the application of non-monotonic reasoning because speech acts have a conventional aspect that is readily represented by defaults, but that interacts with an agent's beliefs and intentions in many complex ways that may override the defaults. Perrault has developed a theory of speech acts, based on Rieter's default logic, that captures the conventional aspect; it does not, however, adequately account for certain easily observed facts about attitude revision resulting from speech acts. A natural theory of attitude revision seems to require a method of stating preferences among competing defaults. We present here a speech act theory, formalized in hierarchic autoepistemic logic (a refinement of Moore's autoepistemic logic), in which revision of both the speaker's and hearer's attitudes can be adequately described. As a collateral benefit, efficient automatic reasoning methods for the formalism exist The theory has been implemented and is now being employed by an utterance-planning system.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Apr 06, 1988
Accession Number
ADA458634

Entities

People

  • Douglas Appelt
  • Kurt Konolige

Organizations

  • SRI International

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Abstracts
  • Automatic
  • Availability
  • Classification
  • Computational Linguistics
  • Contracts
  • Information Operations
  • Instructions
  • Linguistics
  • Monitoring
  • Reasoning
  • Security
  • Standards

Readers

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Organizational Psychology.
  • Speech Processing/Speech Recognition.