The phenomenon of spurious preferences in argumentation can be described as an unjustified unequal treatment of some arguments emerging in a context where equal treatment would be expected. Using the ASPIC+ formalism as a basis, we provide an emblematic example of spurious preference and introduce a basic requirement of spurious preference avoidance for a suitable family of argumentation theories. We then show that a variant of ASPIC+, introduced to deal with problems concerning multiple contradictories, satisfies this requirement.
Spurious preferences in structured argumentation: a preliminary analysis
Baroni P.;Cerutti F.;Giacomin M.
2024-01-01
Abstract
The phenomenon of spurious preferences in argumentation can be described as an unjustified unequal treatment of some arguments emerging in a context where equal treatment would be expected. Using the ASPIC+ formalism as a basis, we provide an emblematic example of spurious preference and introduce a basic requirement of spurious preference avoidance for a suitable family of argumentation theories. We then show that a variant of ASPIC+, introduced to deal with problems concerning multiple contradictories, satisfies this requirement.File in questo prodotto:
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