AAAI '94 Proceedings of the twelfth national conference on Artificial intelligence (vol. 1)
An abstract, argumentation-theoretic approach to default reasoning
Artificial Intelligence
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Default Reasoning: Causal and Conditional Theories
Default Reasoning: Causal and Conditional Theories
Artificial Intelligence - Special issue on logical formalizations and commonsense reasoning
A causal approach to nonmonotonic reasoning
Artificial Intelligence
IJCAI'03 Proceedings of the 18th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence
Causal theories of action and change
AAAI'97/IAAI'97 Proceedings of the fourteenth national conference on artificial intelligence and ninth conference on Innovative applications of artificial intelligence
Preference-based argumentation: Arguments supporting multiple values
International Journal of Approximate Reasoning
On the Acceptability of Incompatible Arguments
ECSQARU '07 Proceedings of the 9th European Conference on Symbolic and Quantitative Approaches to Reasoning with Uncertainty
Acyclic Argumentation: Attack = Conflict + Preference
Proceedings of the 2006 conference on ECAI 2006: 17th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence August 29 -- September 1, 2006, Riva del Garda, Italy
Argumentation and rules with exceptions
Proceedings of the 2010 conference on Computational Models of Argument: Proceedings of COMMA 2010
Artificial intelligence arrives to the 21st century
MICAI'06 Proceedings of the 5th Mexican international conference on Artificial Intelligence
A logic of abstract argumentation
ArgMAS'05 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Argumentation in Multi-Agent Systems
A logic of argumentation for specification and verification of abstract argumentation frameworks
Annals of Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence
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The paper introduces a number of propositional argumentation systems obtained by gradually extending the underlying language and associated monotonic logics. An assumption-based argumentation framework [Bondarenko et al., 1997] will constitute a special case of this construction. In addition, a stronger argumentation system in a full classical language will be shown to be equivalent to a system of causal reasoning [Giunchiglia et al., 2004]. The implications of this correspondence for the respective nonmonotonic theories of argumentation and causal reasoning are discussed.