Impediments to Universal preference-based default theories
Proceedings of the first international conference on Principles of knowledge representation and reasoning
Propositional knowledge base revision and minimal change
Artificial Intelligence
Belief Revision
Normative, Subjunctive and Autoepistemic Defaults
Foundation of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning [the book grew out of an ECAI-92 workshop]
Revisions of Knowledge Systems Using Epistemic Entrenchment
Proceedings of the 2nd Conference on Theoretical Aspects of Reasoning about Knowledge
A practical nonmonotonic theory for reasoning about speech acts
ACL '88 Proceedings of the 26th annual meeting on Association for Computational Linguistics
A Framework for Multi-Agent Belief Revision, Part I: The Role of Ontology
AI '99 Proceedings of the 12th Australian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence: Advanced Topics in Artificial Intelligence
Reputation systems: an axiomatic approach
UAI '04 Proceedings of the 20th conference on Uncertainty in artificial intelligence
A Fixed-Point Property of Logic-Based Bargaining Solution
AI '08 Proceedings of the 21st Australasian Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence: Advances in Artificial Intelligence
Negotiation as mutual belief revision
AAAI'04 Proceedings of the 19th national conference on Artifical intelligence
Axiomatic foundations for ranking systems
Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research
On the axiomatic foundations of ranking systems
IJCAI'05 Proceedings of the 19th international joint conference on Artificial intelligence
How to choose the optimal policy in multi-agent belief revision?
RSFDGrC'03 Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Rough sets, fuzzy sets, data mining, and granular computing
A change model for credibility partial order
SUM'11 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Scalable uncertainty management
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We introduce a basic framework for multi-agent belief revision in heterogenous societies where agents are required to be consistent in their beliefs on shared variables. We identify several properties one may require a general multi-agent belief revision operator to satisfy, and show several basic implications of these requirements. Our work reveals the connection between multi-agent belief revision and the theory of social choice, and attempts to provide some initial understanding of the multi-agent belief revision process.