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Chapter and Conference Paper
Argument Strength in Probabilistic Argumentation Using Confirmation Theory
It is common for people to remark that a particular argument is a strong (or weak) argument. Having a handle on the relative strengths of arguments can help in deciding on which arguments to consider, and on w...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Addressing Popular Concerns Regarding COVID-19 Vaccination with Natural Language Argumentation Dialogues
Chatbots have the potential of being used as dialogical argumentation systems for behaviour change applications. They thereby offer a cost-effective and scalable alternative to in-person consultations with hea...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Towards Computational Persuasion via Natural Language Argumentation Dialogues
Computational persuasion aims to capture the human ability to persuade through argumentation for applications such as behaviour change in healthcare (e.g. persuading people to take more exercise or eat more he...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Invited Talk: Computational Persuasion with Applications in Behaviour Change
Persuasion is an activity that involves one party trying to induce another party to believe something or to do something. It is an important and multifaceted human facility. Obviously, sales and marketing is h...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Strategic Dialogical Argumentation Using Multi-criteria Decision Making with Application to Epistemic and Emotional Aspects of Arguments
Participants in dialogical argumentation often make strategic choices of move, for example to maximize the probability that they will persuade the other opponents. Multiple dimensions of information about the ...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Updating Probabilistic Epistemic States in Persuasion Dialogues
In persuasion dialogues, the ability of the persuader to model the persuadee allows the persuader to make better choices of move. The epistemic approach to probabilistic argumentation is a promising way of mod...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Belief in Attacks in Epistemic Probabilistic Argumentation
The epistemic approach to probabilistic argumentation assigns belief to arguments. This is valuable in dialogical argumentation where one agent can model the beliefs another agent has in the arguments and this...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Persuasion Dialogues via Restricted Interfaces Using Probabilistic Argumentation
For persuasion dialogues between a software system and user, a user should be able to present arguments. Unfortunately, this would involve natural language processing which is not viable for this task in the s...
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Chapter
Supporting Physicians and Patients Through Recommendation: Guidelines and Beyond
The recommendation task, intended as the task of supporting physicians in their activity (and, in particular, in decision making) by providing them indications of the most appropriate way of treating patients,...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Representing and Reasoning About Arguments Mined from Texts and Dialogues
This paper presents a target language for representing arguments mined from natural language. The key features are the connection between possible reasons and possible claims and recursive embedding of such co...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Using Shapley Inconsistency Values for Distributed Information Systems with Uncertainty
We study the problem of analyzing inconsistency in a distributed information system where the reliability of the sources is taken into account. We model uncertainty by assigning a probability to each source. T...
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Chapter
Aggregation of Clinical Evidence Using Argumentation: A Tutorial Introduction
In this tutorial, we describe a new framework for representing and synthesizing knowledge from clinical trials involving multiple outcome indicators. The framework offers a formal approach to aggregating clini...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Opportunities for Argument-Centric Persuasion in Behaviour Change
The aim of behaviour change is to help people overcome specific behavioural problems in their everyday life (e.g. hel** people to decrease their calorie intake). In current persuasion technology for behaviou...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Distance-Based Measures of Inconsistency
There have been a number of proposals for measuring inconsistency in a knowledgebase (i.e. a set of logical formulae). These include measures that consider the minimally inconsistent subsets of the knowledgeba...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Structural Properties for Deductive Argument Systems
There have been a number of proposals for using deductive arguments for instantiating abstract argumentation. These take a set of formulae as a knowledgebase, and generate a graph where each node is a logical ...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Measuring Consistency Gain and Information Loss in Stepwise Inconsistency Resolution
Inconsistency is a usually undesirable feature of many kinds of data and knowledge. But altering the information in order to make it less inconsistent may result in the loss of information. In this paper we an...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
An Algorithm for Generating Arguments in Classical Predicate Logic
There are a number of frameworks for modelling argumentation in logic. They incorporate a formal representation of individual arguments and techniques for comparing conflicting arguments. A common assumption f...
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Chapter
Argumentation Based on Classical Logic
Argumentation is an important cognitive process for dealing with conflicting information by generating and/or comparing arguments. Often it is based on constructing and comparing deductive arguments. These are...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
Knowledge Base Stratification and Merging Based on Degree of Support
Most operators for merging multiple knowledge bases (where each is a set of formulae) aim to produce a knowledge base as output that best reflects the information available in the input. Whilst these operators...
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Chapter and Conference Paper
An Argument-Based Approach to Using Multiple Ontologies
Logic-based argumentation offers an approach to querying and revising multiple ontologies that are inconsistent or incoherent. A common assumption for logic-based argumentation is that an argument is a pair 〈Φ,α〉...