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ICAIL
2007
ACM

Strategic argumentation: a game theoretical investigation

14 years 4 months ago
Strategic argumentation: a game theoretical investigation
Argumentation is modelled as a game where the payoffs are measured in terms of the probability that the claimed conclusion is, or is not, defeasibly provable, given a history of arguments that have actually been exchanged, and given the probability of the factual premises. The probability of a conclusion is calculated using a standard variant of Defeasible Logic, in combination with standard probability calculus. It is a new element of the present approach that the exchange of arguments is analysed with game theoretical tools, yielding a prescriptive and to some extent even predictive account of the actual course of play. A brief comparison with existing argument-based dialogue approaches confirms that such a prescriptive account of the actual argumentation has been almost lacking in the approaches proposed so far. Keywords Argumentation, game theory, predictive force
Bram Roth, Régis Riveret, Antonino Rotolo,
Added 16 Aug 2010
Updated 16 Aug 2010
Type Conference
Year 2007
Where ICAIL
Authors Bram Roth, Régis Riveret, Antonino Rotolo, Guido Governatori
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