Complexity Study of Knowledge and Public Observation
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Date
2024-12-12
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ISI
Abstract
Automated planning has been a steady branch of research in the field of Artificial Intelligence.
A very interesting branch of such planning studies is epistemic planning. Epistemic plans are
such plans where the attained goal revolves around knowledge of some intelligent agents.
One of the more popular modeling techniques and underlying language to handle knowledge
of intelligent agents is provided by dynamic epistemic logic (DEL). It uses Kripke models
that have possible states of truth and relations to model knowledge. It also uses a similar
technique to model actions or events that update the knowledge state. Since DEL deals with
how actions updating knowledge, it provides a natural way to deal with epistemic planning.
Besides DEL, there are several other logical frameworks as well dealing with change in
knowledge. One of them is epistemic temporal logic LTL𝑘 . Deciding plan-existence problem
using such logical frameworks are quite complicated and lie in the higher complexity classes.
Epistemic planning has been proven to be undecidable. This is because in order to find a
finite sequence of actions from a finite set, the updated knowledge models become arbitrarily
large. The main motivation behind this thesis is this: Coming up with a decidable and much
easier fragment of epistemic planning.
In order to do that, we have taken the help of the modeling techniques and language of
the logical framework called public observation logic (POL). POL deals with how public
observations change knowledge of intelligent agents. This framework uses a similar modelling
technique as DEL that uses Kripke models. However, in POL, each possible state of the
model has a regular expression assigned to it. This expression expresses the set of expected
observations in that particular possible state. The formulas also use operators with regular
expressions to denote change in knowledge after some public observation. This thesis majorly
deals with two problems:
The first problem is the model-checking problem of POL. Here this thesis investigates the
decidability of the problem. Moreover it also gives a tight complexity result. In addition to
that, it also deals with fragments whose model-checking lie in much easier complexity classes.
This problem finds application in epistemic planning. Considering the atomic observations
as actions, using the Kleene star operator in regular expressions, one can decide whether
there is a finite sequence of actions or a plan to achieve some change in knowledge.
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Keywords
Epistemic Logic, Epistemic Planning, Complexity
Citation
ISI Kolkata
