1 / 40

Modal logic and databases

Modal logic and databases. Terms. Object terms Concept terms ↓t: object denoted by concept t in some context Type designations: o (object) and c (concept). Syntax. Semantics. Valuation. Truth and modal models. Relational databases. Record: basic unit of information in rdb

burt
Télécharger la présentation

Modal logic and databases

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Modal logic and databases

  2. Terms • Object terms • Concept terms • ↓t: object denoted by concept t in some context • Type designations: o (object) and c (concept)

  3. Syntax

  4. Semantics

  5. Valuation

  6. Truth and modal models

  7. Relational databases • Record: basic unit of information in rdb • Can’t return it directly as answer to query • Each one is a possible world • Accessibility (i.e. “proximity” of possible worlds): the S5 logic • db field attributes: individual concepts • db field entries: individual objects

  8. Sample database

  9. Axioms

  10. The worlds and mappings Validity: true in every world

  11. Rigidity • t is rigid if it always designates the same object, no matter which world • FWIW: in linguistics, proper names are rigid • Rigidity can be relative w/rt subsets of all possible worlds • Databases: functional dependencies (e.g. between attributes)

  12. Designation • Designation is only possible when interpretation is grounded.

  13. A query returns: 2 and 5

  14. Another query returns: t

  15. Additional relation(ship)s now add...

  16. Higher-order relations relation of type <>:PERSON relation of type <>:LOCATION

  17. The new (relational) constraint axioms

  18. The new instance axioms

  19. A sample derivation Prove: Strategy: Prove X Prove ¬X is false

  20. A shorthand derivation

  21. The overall derivation

  22. The strategy Prove ¬X is false

  23. Reduce query’ to disjuncts

  24. Introduce Axiom 5

  25. Apply the shorthand derivation Φ

  26. Instantiate with query objects

  27. λ-reduce

  28. Apply and reduce Axiom 7

  29. Apply shorthand rule to 11

  30. Apply disjunction rule

  31. Instantiate

  32. Contradiction! (lhs)

  33. Instantiate

  34. Contradiction!

  35. Another example

  36. Attributes and relations

  37. Sample query 1 Which items have 2 cylinders?

  38. Checking query 1 (for instance 3) check the relevant world(s) with appropriate mappings: and resolve each conjunct...

  39. Sample query (2) • What choices does a customer have when purchasing a 4-cylinder car?

  40. Sample query (3) • What features can a customer choose that are available for more than one product?

More Related