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Representation of procedures and practices in contextual graphs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2003

P BRÉZILLON
Affiliation:
LIP6, Case 169, University Paris 6, 8 rue du Capitaine Scott, 75015 Paris, France; e-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Over the last ten years a community that is interested in context has emerged. Brézillon (1999) gave a survey of the literature on context in artificial intelligence. There is now a series of conferences on context, a website and a mailing list. The number of web pages with the word “context” has increased tenfold in the last five years. Being among the instigators of the use of context in real-world applications, I present in this paper the evolution of my thoughts over the last years and the results that have been obtained, including a representation formalism based on contextual graphs and the use of this formalism in a real-world application called SART. I present how procedures, practices and context are intertwined, as identified in the SART application and in different domains. I root my view of context in the artificial intelligence area and give a general presentation of my view of context under the three aspects – external knowledge, contextual knowledge and proceduralised context – with the implementation of this view in contextual graphs. I discuss how reasoning is carried out, based on procedure and practices, in the formalism of contextual graphs and show how incremental acquisition of practices is integrated in this formalism.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2003 Cambridge University Press

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