IJCAI'09 IJCAI'09 Workshop on
Abductive & Inductive Knowledge Development
Pasadena, California, USA
12th July, 2009

IJCAI'09
 ABSTRACT

This Workshop will explore new ways of using logic-based methods to support the evolution of knowledge in real-world problems. In particular, it will focus on the integration and application of abductive and inductive inference to tasks where theories must evolve incrementally, in response to continued feedback from the user or domain being modelled. Drawing on analogies with methodology of science, we aim to explore and build upon recent work in the mechanisation of theory revision, hypothesis evaluation, and the design of experiments. In this way, we will provide an inter-disciplinary forum for researchers seeking to formalise and automate such knowledge development cycles in various disciplines (scientific, applied, cognitive or philosophical).

 PROGRAMME

08.45
OPEN
09.00
Toward an abductive foundation of semantic science
David Poole
09.30
Towards a model of collective knowledge discovery
Gauvain Bourgne and Katsumi Inoue
10.00
COFFEE
10.30
Invited Talk: Four insights about mechanisms for abductive processing.
John Josephson
11.15
Higher-Order Logic Learning and Lambda-Progol
Niels Pahlavi and Stephen Muggleton
11.45
Multimodal Abduction in Knowledge Development
Lorenzo Magnani
12.15
LUNCH
14.00
Towards the Automation of Scientific Method
Oliver Ray, Amanda Clare, Maria Liakata, Larisa Soldatova, Ken Whelan and Ross King
14.30
Explaining Effects of Host Gene Knockouts on Brome Mosaic Virus Replication
Deborah Chasman, Brandi Gancarz, Paul Ahlquist and Mark Craven
15.00
COFFEE
15.30
Invited Talk: The Role of Openness in Scientific Automation: a case for Open Notebook Science
Jean-Claude Bradley
16.15
Knowledge Evolution in Geologic Mapping
Boyan Brodaric
16.45
The Reasoning Processes underlying Claude Bernard's Scientific Discoveries
Bassel Habib and Jean-Gabriel Ganascia
17.15
Panel Discussion: Cycles of Knowledge Discovery
Randy Goebel (discussion chair)
18.15
CLOSE
 OVERVIEW

Background: Abduction and induction are forms of logical inference with many applications in AI. Abduction is a type of explanatory-based reasoning appropriate for tasks such as planning and diagnosis. Induction is a type of generality-based reasoning appropriate for tasks like classification and learning. The nature and relation of abduction and induction has been explored from logical and philosophical perspectives in a recent book Abduction and Induction: Essays on their Relation and Integration. More advanced aspects were investigated in a series of three subsequent workshops AIAI'05, AIAI'06, and AIAI'07, which have shown that abduction and induction can be usefully combined and cooperatively deployed in a number of expressive knowledge representation and reasoning frameworks.

Motivation: Many studies have now confirmed the utility of integrating abduction and induction. But recent experience in applying such approaches to real-world problems is beginning to suggest that even greater benefits might be achieved by incorporating these techniques into a more refined cycle of knowledge development where domain theories evolve incrementally in response to continued feedback from the user or domain being modelled. This has resulted in several (as yet independent) attempts to formalise and, in some cases, automate such knowledge development cycles in various target applications. For example:

  • in micro-biology, abductive inference and laboratory automation have been combined in a "Robot Scientist" platform which is able to execute and analyse a certain type of microbial growth experiments;

  • in ethnography, a general "Iterative Recursive Abductive Logic" has been used to characterise the development of social and cultural theories of phenomena such as narcotics abuse;

  • in decision support, an efficient "Tractable Rapid Abductive Inference Logic" has been proposed to help solve problems like identifying military threats in dynamic environments;

  • in requirements engineering, a nonmonotonic "Hybrid Abductive Inductive Learning" methodology has been applied to the acquisition and revision of user goals and behavioural models.

These tasks go beyond classical applications of abduction and induction by interleaving theory revision with user or domain interaction. In common with the methodology of scientific knowledge development, they actively seek feedback to validate and improve their world model. By contrast, most related works on hypothetical inference do not attempt to close the cycle of knowledge revision. Instead, given a theory T and examples E, they simply compute a set of candidate hypotheses H that entail E with respect to T. But, while hypothesis generation is a key part of the process, this workshop is based on the premise that real applications also demand some practical way of narrowing down the set of candidate hypotheses H, and of using them to actually adopt a revised theory T' while also guiding the search for new examples E'. This requires some form of interaction with the domain or user.

Aims: The Workshop aims to better understand how abduction and induction can be used within a continuous cycle of knowledge development. It also aims to examine possible application areas and to investigate how the revision cycle can be better supported by computational tools. We are especially keen to explore analogies between knowledge development and scientific discovery, drawing particular attention to the complementary roles of theories, hypotheses and experiments. We would also like to exploit possible links with belief updates in multi-agent systems and knowledge assimilation frameworks. A important goal of the Workshop is to stimulate the transfer of ideas between different target domains and to establish a cross-disciplinary research agenda in this area to advance the application of logical modelling and inference to problems situated in the real world.

Focus: The Workshop will focus on issues associated with the use of abduction and/or induction to support multiple iterations of the knowledge development cycle. Key topics of interest include (but are not limited to)

  • Theory Revision: Repeated applications of abduction and induction in a continuous knowledge development process necessitate methods for theory revision as opposed to mere theory completion (i.e., for removing previous axioms as well as adding new axioms). Such techniques are also much needed to enable the logical modelling of dynamically evolving or nonmonotonic domains. To achieve full generality, it is also necessary to consider the task of inventing new predicates to describe useful features of the domain.

  • Hypothesis Evaluation: The use of abductive and inductive inference in an iterative cycle of knowledge development requires methods for hypothesis evaluation in addition to mere hypothesis generation (i.e., for finding plausible hypotheses among the possible hypotheses). Such methods have close links to statistical and probabilistic reasoning. It would be interesting to consider how this might be achieved when different hypotheses are expressed in different languages and possibly model the domain at different levels of abstraction.

  • Experiment Design: The accuracy of any domain model is highly dependent upon the availability of relevant observational data. Such data must ultimately be obtained by controlled interactions with the user or domain being modelled. These interactions correspond to the experimental phase of the scientific method. At present, very little work has been aimed at developing practical tools for selecting and designing experimental interventions likely to discriminate between competing hypotheses and generate useful data.

  • Knowledge Representation and Reasoning: The choice of knowledge representation and inference methods is clearly of fundamental importance in any learning task. This raises the question of how semantic information can be incorporated into and integrated across such models. We welcome discussion on any work that has begun to tackle these issues by exploring, for example, the use of structured data formalisms and ontologies for enhancing the scientific lifecycle.

While these topics necessarily include some non-logical considerations, they also pose some very interesting problems which can be stated in purely logical terms. For example, how can nonmonotonic inference be used as practical basis for belief revision? How can we efficiently identify testable predictions that differ between two theories? How can we formalise theoretical and observational aspects of a domain so that experiments can be automatically designed in order to test such predictions? Is there any rational way of extracting useful information from (or in some way combining) the multitude of hypotheses typically returned in real applications. We believe these questions must be addressed in order to substantially advance the successful application of logic-based methods to problems in AI.

Possible areas of application include, but are not limited to, modelling in systems biology, social science, natural language processing, and software engineering. The Workshop will also aim to examine the links to other approaches (philosophical or cognitive) for modelling scientific and other domains.

Audience: The Workshop is likely to be of interest to researchers in AI, machine learning, logic programming, consequence finding, active learning, belief revision, model based reasoning, cognitive modelling, scientific discovery, hypothesis testing, process modelling, ethnography, linguistics, ontologies, bioinformatics, and the philosophy of science. We anticipate the Workshop will also be relevant to real-world applications of these fields. We welcome contributions from any other disciplines that might advance the aims of our Workshop.

 PRE-PROCEEDINGS

A printed proceedings of accepted papers and invited talk abstracts will be distributed to all registered participants at the workshop. An electronic version of the proceedings is now available for download via the following pdf:

pdf

 POST-PROCEEDINGS

Participants are invited to submit revised and extended versions of their papers to a special issue in the Journal of Logic and Computation.

 REGISTRATION

The Workshop is subject to regular IJCAI'09 workshop registration procedures and fees.

 IMPORTANT DATES
Nov 24th, 2008Initial call for papers
Mar 06th, 2009Original paper submission deadline
Apr 06th, 2009Extended paper submission deadline
Apr 17th, 2009Paper notifications
May 08th, 2009Camera ready deadline
May 15th, 2009Early registration deadline
Jun 12th, 2009Late registration deadline
Jul 12th, 2009Workshop
 ORGANISING COMMITTEE
Oliver Ray (Workshop Chair)
Department of Computer Science, University of Bristol, UK
e-mail: oray@cs.bris.ac.uk
Antonis Kakas
Department of Computer Science, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
e-mail: antonis@cs.ucy.ac.cy
Peter Flach
Department of Computer Science, University of Bristol, UK
e-mail: Peter.Flach@cs.bris.ac.uk
 PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
Michael Agar (The University of Maryland and Ethknoworks LLC, USA)
Atocha Aliseda-Llera (Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Mexico)
Chitta Baral (Arizona State University, USA)
Peter Flach (University of Bristol, UK)
Jerry Hobbs (University of Southern California, USA)
Katsumi Inoue (National Institute of Informatics, Japan)
John Josephson (The Ohio State University and Aetion Technologies LLC, USA)
Antonis Kakas (University of Cyprus, Cyprus)
Ross King (University of Aberystwyth, UK)
Oliver Ray (University of Bristol, UK)

(c) Oliver Ray, last updated 24/01/2010