Knowledge Distribution in Large Organizations Using Defeasible Logic Programming

Author

Chesñevar, Carlos Iván

Brena, Ramón F.

Aguirre, José Luis

Publication date

2016-07-13T08:51:09Z

2025-01-01

2005



Abstract

Distributing pieces of knowledge in large, usually distributed organizations is a central problem in Knowledge and Organization Management. Policies for distributing knowledge and information are very often incomplete, or conflict with each other. As a consequence, decision processes for information distribution may be difficult to formalize on the basis of a rationally justified procedure. This paper presents an argumentative approach to cope with the above problem based on Defeasible Logic Programming, a logic programming formalism for defeasible argumentation. Conflicts among policies are solved on the basis of a dialectical analysis whose outcome determines to which specific users different pieces of knowledge are to be delivered.


This work was supported by the Monterrey Tech CAT-011 research chair, by Projects TIC2001-1577-C03-01 and TIC2003-00950, by Ram´on y Cajal Program (MCyT, Spain) and by CONICET (Argentina).

Document Type

article
publishedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Defeasible Argumentation; Logic Programming; Knowledge management

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Related items

MICYT/PN2000-2003/TIC2001-1577-C03-01

MICYT/PN2000-2003/TIC2003-00950

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1007/11424918_26

Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2005, vol. 3501, p. 244-256

Rights

(c) Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, 2005

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