• Documents
  • Authors
  • Tables
  • Log in
  • Sign up
  • MetaCart
  • DMCA
  • Donate

CiteSeerX logo

Advanced Search Include Citations
Advanced Search Include Citations | Disambiguate

DMCA

A Theory of Diagnosis from First Principles (1987)

Cached

  • Download as a PDF

Download Links

  • [www.cs.kun.nl]
  • [www.cs.ru.nl]
  • [www.cs.ru.nl]
  • [www.cs.kun.nl]
  • [www.win.tue.nl]
  • [www.cse.sc.edu]
  • [www.cse.sc.edu]
  • [www.cs.ru.nl]
  • [www.cs.ru.nl]
  • [www.cse.sc.edu]
  • [www.cse.sc.edu]
  • [www.cse.sc.edu]
  • [www.win.tue.nl]
  • [www.cs.ru.nl]

  • Save to List
  • Add to Collection
  • Correct Errors
  • Monitor Changes
by Raymond Reiter
Venue:ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Citations:1120 - 5 self
  • Summary
  • Citations
  • Active Bibliography
  • Co-citation
  • Clustered Documents
  • Version History

BibTeX

@MISC{Reiter87atheory,
    author = {Raymond Reiter},
    title = { A Theory of Diagnosis from First Principles},
    year = {1987}
}

Share

Facebook Twitter Reddit Bibsonomy

OpenURL

 

Abstract

Suppose one is given a description of a system, together with an observation of the system's behaviour which conflicts with the way the system is meant to behave. The diagnostic problem is to determine those components of the system which, when assumed to be functioning abnormally, will explain the discrepancy between the observed and correct system behaviour. We propose a general theory for this problem. The theory requires only that the system be described in a suitable logic. Moreover, there are many such suitable logics, e.g. first-order, temporal, dynamic, etc. As a result, the theory accommodates diagnostic reasoning in a wide variety of practical settings, including digital and analogue circuits, medicine, and database updates. The theory leads to an algorithm for computing all diagnoses, and to various results concerning principles of measurement for discriminating among competing diagnoses. Finally, the theory reveals close connections between diagnostic reasoning and nonmonotonic reasoning.

Keyphrases

first principle    diagnostic reasoning    general theory    correct system behaviour    theory reveals close connection    practical setting    diagnostic problem    wide variety    analogue circuit    various result    many suitable logic    suitable logic    database update    nonmonotonic reasoning   

Powered by: Apache Solr
  • About CiteSeerX
  • Submit and Index Documents
  • Privacy Policy
  • Help
  • Data
  • Source
  • Contact Us

Developed at and hosted by The College of Information Sciences and Technology

© 2007-2019 The Pennsylvania State University