How complex is the strong admissibility semantics for abstract dialectical frameworks?

Atefeh Keshavarzi Zafarghandi, Wolfgang Dvořák, Rineke Verbrugge, Bart Verheij

Abstract dialectical frameworks (ADFs) have been introduced as a formalism for modeling and evaluating argumentation allowing general logical satisfaction conditions. Different criteria used to settle the acceptance of arguments are called semantics. Semantics of ADFs have so far mainly been defined based on the concept of admissibility. Recently, the notion of strong admissibility has been introduced for ADFs. In the current work we study the computational complexity of the following reasoning tasks under strong admissibility semantics. We address 1. the credulous/skeptical decision problem; 2. the verification problem; 3. the strong justification problem; and 4. the problem of finding a smallest witness of strong justification of a queried argument.

Manuscript (in PDF-format)

Reference:
Keshavarzi Zafarghandi, A., Dvořák, W. , Verbrugge, R., & Verheij, B. (2022). How complex is the strong admissibility semantics for abstract dialectical frameworks? Computational Models of Argument. Proceedings of COMMA 2022 (eds. Toni, F., Polberg, S., Booth, R., Caminada, M., & Kido, H.), 200-211. Amsterdam: IOS Press. https://doi.org/10.3233/FAIA220153.


Bart Verheij's home page - research - publications