Joint ICAPS-KR Speaker
Ronen Brafman Ben Gurion University (joint ICAPS-KR speaker)
Title: Preferences, Planning, and Control
Abstract
Preference handling is a problem of much theoretical and practical
interest.
In planning this issue arises naturally when one considers richer
notions of
goals, as well as over-subscribed planning problems. In knowledge
representation it is a core issue with much recent work on preference
languages and algorithms. In system design, preferences can be used to
control choices and provide a personalized experience or adapt to
varying
context.
In this talk I will discuss some of my work, together with many
colleagues,
in these areas. I will consider some of the challenges we face when
designing a preference specification formalism and describe a simple
graphical input language CP-nets - which attempts to address some of
these
challenges. Surprisingly, CP-nets are closely related to an important
analysis tool in planning - the causal graph, and the problem of
inference
in these networks has important links to the question of the
complexity of
plan generation. Moreover, the problem of finding a preferred plan
given a
rich goal specification can be solved by using techniques developed
for
constrained optimization in CP-nets. But CP-network are inherently a
propositional specification language, whereas many control
applications
require a relational language. Time permitting, I will explain why
this
problem arises naturally in intelligent control applications. I will
show
how some recent and richer relational languages can be used to address
this
problem, and how closely they are related to relational preference
models.