Title :
Representing partial ignorance
Author :
Dubois, Didier ; Prade, Henri ; Smets, Philippe
Author_Institution :
Inst. de Recherche en Inf., Univ. Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France
fDate :
5/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper advocates the use of nonpurely probabilistic approaches to higher-order uncertainty. One of the major arguments of Bayesian probability proponents is that representing uncertainty is always decision-driven and as a consequence, uncertainty should be represented by probability. Here we argue that representing partial ignorance is not always decision-driven. Other reasoning tasks such as belief revision for instance are more naturally carried out at the purely cognitive level. Conceiving knowledge representation and decision-making as separate concerns opens the way to nonpurely probabilistic representations of incomplete knowledge. It is pointed out that within a numerical framework, two numbers are needed to account for partial ignorance about events, because on top of truth and falsity, the state of total ignorance must be encoded independently of the number of underlying alternatives. The paper also points out that it is consistent to accept a Bayesian view of decision-making and a non-Bayesian view of knowledge representation because it is possible to map nonprobabilistic degrees of belief to betting probabilities when needed. Conditioning rules in non-Bayesian settings are reviewed, and the difference between focusing on a reference class and revising due to the arrival of new information is pointed out. A comparison of Bayesian and non-Bayesian revision modes is discussed on a classical example
Keywords :
decision theory; knowledge representation; probability; uncertainty handling; Bayesian probability; belief revision; conditioning rules; decision-making; higher-order uncertainty; incomplete knowledge; knowledge representation; nonBayesian view; nonpurely probabilistic representations; partial ignorance representation; Artificial intelligence; Bayesian methods; Computer languages; Decision making; Diagnostic expert systems; Knowledge representation; Logic; Medical expert systems; Prototypes; Uncertainty;
Journal_Title :
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/3468.487961