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Representing and Reasoning About the Rules of General Games With Imperfect Information
Author(s) -
Stephan Schiffel,
Michael Thielscher
Publication year - 2014
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.4115
Subject(s) - computer science , combinatorial game theory , complete information , randomness , perfect information , formalism (music) , game mechanics , sequential game , extensive form game , theoretical computer science , turns, rounds and time keeping systems in games , game theory , artificial intelligence , mathematical economics , video game design , mathematics , art , musical , statistics , visual arts
A general game player is a system that can play previously unknown games just by being given their rules. For this purpose, the Game Description Language (GDL) has been developed as a high-level knowledge representation formalism to communicate game rules to players. In this paper, we address a fundamental limitation of state-of-the-art methods and systems for General Game Playing, namely, their being confined to deterministic games with complete information about the game state. We develop a simple yet expressive extension of standard GDL that allows for formalising the rules of arbitrary finite, n-player games with randomness and incomplete state knowledge. In the second part of the paper, we address the intricate reasoning challenge for general game-playing systems that comes with the new description language. We develop a full embedding of extended GDL into the Situation Calculus augmented by Scherl and Levesque's knowledge fluent. We formally prove that this provides a sound and complete reasoning method for players' knowledge about game states as well as about the knowledge of the other players.

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