English

A Note on the Complexity of the Satisfiability Problem for Graded Modal Logics

Logic in Computer Science 2024-04-24 v1 Artificial Intelligence Computational Complexity

Abstract

Graded modal logic is the formal language obtained from ordinary (propositional) modal logic by endowing its modal operators with cardinality constraints. Under the familiar possible-worlds semantics, these augmented modal operators receive interpretations such as "It is true at no fewer than 15 accessible worlds that...", or "It is true at no more than 2 accessible worlds that...". We investigate the complexity of satisfiability for this language over some familiar classes of frames. This problem is more challenging than its ordinary modal logic counterpart--especially in the case of transitive frames, where graded modal logic lacks the tree-model property. We obtain tight complexity bounds for the problem of determining the satisfiability of a given graded modal logic formula over the classes of frames characterized by any combination of reflexivity, seriality, symmetry, transitivity and the Euclidean property.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0905.3108,
  title  = {A Note on the Complexity of the Satisfiability Problem for Graded Modal Logics},
  author = {Yevgeny Kazakov and Ian Pratt-Hartmann},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0905.3108},
  year   = {2024}
}

Comments

Full proofs for paper presented at the IEEE Conference on Logic in Computer Science, 2009

R2 v1 2026-06-21T13:03:51.184Z