Basic Argumentation
Objective
To provide sufficient fundamentals on Computational Argumentation (or Argumentation in short). Argumentation has provided a basis for understanding non-monotonic and defeasible reasoning, a promising platform for investigating decision making, negotiation, legal reasoning, learning, dispute resolution, dialogues, multi-agents and sensor networks.
Information
Date: April 19 (Wednesday), April 21 (Friday)
Time:
April 19: 16:00 - 18:00 Japan time (Lecture: 90 mins, Q/A: 30 mins)
April 21: 14:00 - 16:00 13:30 - 15:30 Japan time (Lecture: 90 mins, Q/A: 30 mins)
Place: Seminar room on the 7th floor (I-75)
Material: Whiteboard mainly plus some examples provided in this slide.
References
On the acceptability of arguments and its fundamental role in non-monotonic reasoning, logic programming and n-person games (Link to the paper)
Assumption-based argumentation (Link to the paper)
On Explanation of Propositional Logic-based Argumentation System (Link to the paper)
On the Relationship with Toulmin Method to Logic-Based Argumentation (Link to the paper)