English

Contextual Abductive Reasoning with Side-Effects

Artificial Intelligence 2020-02-19 v2

Abstract

The belief bias effect is a phenomenon which occurs when we think that we judge an argument based on our reasoning, but are actually influenced by our beliefs and prior knowledge. Evans, Barston and Pollard carried out a psychological syllogistic reasoning task to prove this effect. Participants were asked whether they would accept or reject a given syllogism. We discuss one specific case which is commonly assumed to be believable but which is actually not logically valid. By introducing abnormalities, abduction and background knowledge, we adequately model this case under the weak completion semantics. Our formalization reveals new questions about possible extensions in abductive reasoning. For instance, observations and their explanations might include some relevant prior abductive contextual information concerning some side-effect or leading to a contestable or refutable side-effect. A weaker notion indicates the support of some relevant consequences by a prior abductive context. Yet another definition describes jointly supported relevant consequences, which captures the idea of two observations containing mutually supportive side-effects. Though motivated with and exemplified by the running psychology application, the various new general abductive context definitions are introduced here and given a declarative semantics for the first time, and have a much wider scope of application. Inspection points, a concept introduced by Pereira and Pinto, allows us to express these definitions syntactically and intertwine them into an operational semantics.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1405.3713,
  title  = {Contextual Abductive Reasoning with Side-Effects},
  author = {Luís Moniz Pereira and Emmanuelle-Anna Dietz and Steffen Hölldobler},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1405.3713},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

14 pages, no figures, 1 table

R2 v1 2026-06-22T04:14:36.683Z