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Beth Definability in Expressive Description Logics
Author(s) -
Balder ten Cate,
Enrico Franconi,
İnanç Seylan
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of artificial intelligence research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.79
H-Index - 123
eISSN - 1943-5037
pISSN - 1076-9757
DOI - 10.1613/jair.4057
Subject(s) - transitive relation , property (philosophy) , signature (topology) , mathematics , context (archaeology) , description logic , theoretical computer science , computer science , discrete mathematics , classical logic , algebra over a field , exponential function , algorithm , pure mathematics , combinatorics , epistemology , paleontology , mathematical analysis , philosophy , geometry , biology
The Beth definability property, a well-known property from classical logic, is investigated in the context of description logics: if a general L-TBox implicitly defines an L-concept in terms of a given signature, where L is a description logic, then does there always exist over this signature an explicit definition in L for the concept? This property has been studied before and used to optimize reasoning in description logics. In this paper a complete classification of Beth definability is provided for extensions of the basic description logic ALC with transitive roles, inverse roles, role hierarchies, and/or functionality restrictions, both on arbitrary and on finite structures. Moreover, we present a tableau-based algorithm which computes explicit definitions of at most double exponential size. This algorithm is optimal because it is also shown that the smallest explicit definition of an implicitly defined concept may be double exponentially long in the size of the input TBox. Finally, if explicit definitions are allowed to be expressed in first-order logic, then we show how to compute them in single exponential time.

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