Dynamic Term-Modal Logics for First-Order Epistemic Planning
Many classical planning frameworks are built on first-order languages. The first-order expressive power is desirable for compactly representing actions via schemas, and for specifying quantified conditions such as \(\neg\exists x\mathsf{blocks\_door}(x)\). In contrast, several recent epistemic plann...
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Veröffentlicht in: | arXiv.org 2020-06 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Many classical planning frameworks are built on first-order languages. The first-order expressive power is desirable for compactly representing actions via schemas, and for specifying quantified conditions such as \(\neg\exists x\mathsf{blocks\_door}(x)\). In contrast, several recent epistemic planning frameworks are built on propositional epistemic logic. The epistemic language is useful to describe planning problems involving higher-order reasoning or epistemic goals such as \(K_{a}\neg\mathsf{problem}\). This paper develops a first-order version of Dynamic Epistemic Logic (DEL). In this framework, for example, \(\exists xK_{x}\exists y\mathsf{blocks\_door}(y)\) is a formula. The formalism combines the strengths of DEL (higher-order reasoning) with those of first-order logic (lifted representation) to model multi-agent epistemic planning. The paper introduces an epistemic language with a possible-worlds semantics, followed by novel dynamics given by first-order action models and their execution via product updates. Taking advantage of the first-order machinery, epistemic action schemas are defined to provide compact, problem-independent domain descriptions, in the spirit of PDDL. Concerning metatheory, the paper defines axiomatic normal term-modal logics, shows a Canonical Model Theorem-like result which allows establishing completeness through frame characterization formulas, shows decidability for the finite agent case, and shows a general completeness result for the dynamic extension by reduction axioms. |
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ISSN: | 2331-8422 |
DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1906.06047 |