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Inference in First-Order Logic

1) Forward chaining and backward chaining are two common techniques for performing inference in first-order logic. 2) Forward chaining works by applying rules to deduce new facts, while backward chaining works by working backwards from a goal to find rules that support it. 3) Both techniques can be sound and complete for definite clauses, but backward chaining is incomplete in general due to potential infinite loops in the search.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
77 views43 pages

Inference in First-Order Logic

1) Forward chaining and backward chaining are two common techniques for performing inference in first-order logic. 2) Forward chaining works by applying rules to deduce new facts, while backward chaining works by working backwards from a goal to find rules that support it. 3) Both techniques can be sound and complete for definite clauses, but backward chaining is incomplete in general due to potential infinite loops in the search.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Inference in first-order logic

Chapter 9
Outline
• Reducing first-order inference to
propositional inference
• Unification
• Generalized Modus Ponens
• Forward chaining
• Backward chaining
• Resolution
Universal instantiation (UI)
• Every instantiation of a universally quantified sentence is entailed by
it:
v α
Subst({v/g}, α)
for any variable v and ground term g

• E.g., x King(x)  Greedy(x)  Evil(x) yields:


King(John)  Greedy(John)  Evil(John)
King(Richard)  Greedy(Richard)  Evil(Richard)
King(Father(John))  Greedy(Father(John))  Evil(Father(John))
.
.
.
Existential instantiation (EI)
• For any sentence α, variable v, and constant
symbol k that does not appear elsewhere in the
knowledge base:
v α
Subst({v/k}, α)

• E.g., x Crown(x)  OnHead(x,John) yields:

Crown(C1)  OnHead(C1,John)

provided C1 is a new constant symbol, called a


Skolem constant
»
»
Reduction to propositional
inference
Suppose the KB contains just the following:
x King(x)  Greedy(x)  Evil(x)
King(John)
Greedy(John)
Brother(Richard,John)

• Instantiating the universal sentence in all possible ways, we have:


King(John)  Greedy(John)  Evil(John)
King(Richard)  Greedy(Richard)  Evil(Richard)
King(John)
Greedy(John)
Brother(Richard,John)

• The new KB is propositionalized: proposition symbols are


King(John), Greedy(John), Evil(John), King(Richard), etc.

»

Reduction contd.
• Every FOL KB can be propositionalized so as to
preserve entailment

• (A ground sentence is entailed by new KB iff entailed by


original KB)

• Idea: propositionalize KB and query, apply resolution,


return result

• Problem: with function symbols, there are infinitely many


ground terms,
– e.g., Father(Father(Father(John)))


Reduction contd.
Theorem: Herbrand (1930). If a sentence α is entailed by an FOL KB, it is
entailed by a finite subset of the propositionalized KB

Idea: For n = 0 to ∞ do
create a propositional KB by instantiating with depth-$n$ terms
see if α is entailed by this KB

Problem: works if α is entailed, loops if α is not entailed

Theorem: Turing (1936), Church (1936) Entailment for FOL is


semidecidable (algorithms exist that say yes
to every entailed sentence, but no algorithm
exists that also says no to every
nonentailed sentence.)
Problems with propositionalization
• Propositionalization seems to generate lots of irrelevant sentences.

• E.g., from:
x King(x)  Greedy(x)  Evil(x)
King(John)
y Greedy(y)
Brother(Richard,John)

• it seems obvious that Evil(John), but propositionalization produces


lots of facts such as Greedy(Richard) that are irrelevant

• With p k-ary predicates and n constants, there are p·nk


instantiations.


Unification
• We can get the inference immediately if we can find a substitution θ
such that King(x) and Greedy(x) match King(John) and Greedy(y)

θ = {x/John,y/John} works

• Unify(α,β) = θ if αθ = βθ
p q θ
Knows(John,x) Knows(John,Jane)
Knows(John,x) Knows(y,OJ)
Knows(John,x) Knows(y,Mother(y))
Knows(John,x) Knows(x,OJ)

• Standardizing apart eliminates overlap of variables, e.g., Knows(z 17,OJ)


»
Unification
• We can get the inference immediately if we can find a substitution θ
such that King(x) and Greedy(x) match King(John) and Greedy(y)

θ = {x/John,y/John} works

• Unify(α,β) = θ if αθ = βθ
p q θ
Knows(John,x) Knows(John,Jane) {x/Jane}}
Knows(John,x) Knows(y,OJ)
Knows(John,x) Knows(y,Mother(y))
Knows(John,x) Knows(x,OJ)

• Standardizing apart eliminates overlap of variables, e.g., Knows(z 17,OJ)


»
Unification
• We can get the inference immediately if we can find a substitution θ
such that King(x) and Greedy(x) match King(John) and Greedy(y)

θ = {x/John,y/John} works

• Unify(α,β) = θ if αθ = βθ
p q θ
Knows(John,x) Knows(John,Jane) {x/Jane}}
Knows(John,x) Knows(y,OJ) {x/OJ,y/John}}
Knows(John,x) Knows(y,Mother(y))
Knows(John,x) Knows(x,OJ)

• Standardizing apart eliminates overlap of variables, e.g., Knows(z 17,OJ)


»
»
»
Unification
• We can get the inference immediately if we can find a substitution θ
such that King(x) and Greedy(x) match King(John) and Greedy(y)

θ = {x/John,y/John} works

• Unify(α,β) = θ if αθ = βθ
p q θ
Knows(John,x) Knows(John,Jane) {x/Jane}}
Knows(John,x) Knows(y,OJ) {x/OJ,y/John}}
Knows(John,x) Knows(y,Mother(y)) {y/John,x/Mother(John)}}
Knows(John,x) Knows(x,OJ)

• Standardizing apart eliminates overlap of variables, e.g., Knows(z 17,OJ)


»
»
»
Unification
• We can get the inference immediately if we can find a substitution θ
such that King(x) and Greedy(x) match King(John) and Greedy(y)

θ = {x/John,y/John} works

• Unify(α,β) = θ if αθ = βθ
p q θ
Knows(John,x) Knows(John,Jane) {x/Jane}}
Knows(John,x) Knows(y,OJ) {x/OJ,y/John}}
Knows(John,x) Knows(y,Mother(y)) {y/John,x/Mother(John)}}
Knows(John,x) Knows(x,OJ) {fail}

• Standardizing apart eliminates overlap of variables, e.g., Knows(z 17,OJ)


»
Unification
• To unify Knows(John,x) and Knows(y,z),
θ = {y/John, x/z } or θ = {y/John, x/John, z/John}

• The first unifier is more general than the second.

• There is a single most general unifier (MGU) that


is unique up to renaming of variables.
MGU = { y/John, x/z }

»
»


The unification algorithm
The unification algorithm
Generalized Modus Ponens
(GMP)
p1', p2', … , pn', ( p1  p2  …  pn q) where p 'θ = p θ for all i
i i

p1' is King(John) p1 is King(x)
p2' is Greedy(y) p2 is Greedy(x)
θ is {x/John,y/John} q is Evil(x)
q θ is Evil(John)

• GMP used with KB of definite clauses (exactly one positive literal)

• All variables assumed universally quantified



Soundness of GMP
• Need to show that
p1', …, pn', (p1  …  pn  q) ╞ qθ
provided that pi'θ = piθ for all I

• Lemma: For any sentence p, we have p ╞ pθ by UI

• (p1  …  pn  q) ╞ (p1  …  pn  q)θ = (p1θ  …  pnθ  qθ)


• p1', \; …, \;pn' ╞ p1'  …  pn' ╞ p1'θ  …  pn'θ
• From 1 and 2, qθ follows by ordinary Modus Ponens


Example knowledge base
• The law says that it is a crime for an American to sell
weapons to hostile nations. The country Nono, an
enemy of America, has some missiles, and all of its
missiles were sold to it by Colonel West, who is
American.

• Prove that Col. West is a criminal


»


Example knowledge base
contd.
... it is a crime for an American to sell weapons to hostile nations:
American(x)  Weapon(y)  Sells(x,y,z)  Hostile(z)  Criminal(x)
Nono … has some missiles, i.e., x Owns(Nono,x)  Missile(x):
Owns(Nono,M1) and Missile(M1)
… all of its missiles were sold to it by Colonel West
Missile(x)  Owns(Nono,x)  Sells(West,x,Nono)
Missiles are weapons:
Missile(x)  Weapon(x)
An enemy of America counts as "hostile“:
Enemy(x,America)  Hostile(x)
West, who is American …
American(West)
The country Nono, an enemy of America …
Enemy(Nono,America)


»
Forward chaining algorithm
Forward chaining proof
Forward chaining proof
Forward chaining proof
Properties of forward chaining
• Sound and complete for first-order definite clauses

• Datalog = first-order definite clauses + no functions


• FC terminates for Datalog in finite number of iterations

• May not terminate in general if α is not entailed

• This is unavoidable: entailment with definite clauses is


semidecidable
»
»



Efficiency of forward chaining
Incremental forward chaining: no need to match a rule on
iteration k if a premise wasn't added on iteration k-1
 match each rule whose premise contains a newly added positive
literal

Matching itself can be expensive:


Database indexing allows O(1) retrieval of known facts
– e.g., query Missile(x) retrieves Missile(M1)

Forward chaining is widely used in deductive databases



Hard matching example
Diff(wa,nt)  Diff(wa,sa)  Diff(nt,q) 
Diff(nt,sa)  Diff(q,nsw)  Diff(q,sa) 
Diff(nsw,v)  Diff(nsw,sa)  Diff(v,sa) 
Colorable()

Diff(Red,Blue) Diff (Red,Green)


Diff(Green,Red) Diff(Green,Blue)
Diff(Blue,Red) Diff(Blue,Green)

• Colorable() is inferred iff the CSP has a solution


• CSPs include 3SAT as a special case, hence
matching is NP-hard

Backward chaining algorithm

SUBST(COMPOSE(θ1, θ2), p) = SUBST(θ2,


SUBST(θ1, p))
Backward chaining example
Backward chaining example
Backward chaining example
Backward chaining example
Backward chaining example
Backward chaining example
Backward chaining example
Backward chaining example
Properties of backward chaining
• Depth-first recursive proof search: space is
linear in size of proof
• Incomplete due to infinite loops
  fix by checking current goal against every goal on
stack
• Inefficient due to repeated subgoals (both
success and failure)
  fix using caching of previous results (extra space)
• Widely used for logic programming


Logic programming: Prolog
• Algorithm = Logic + Control

• Basis: backward chaining with Horn clauses + bells & whistles


Widely used in Europe, Japan (basis of 5th Generation project)
Compilation techniques  60 million LIPS

• Program = set of clauses = head :- literal1, … literaln.


criminal(X) :- american(X), weapon(Y), sells(X,Y,Z), hostile(Z).

• Depth-first, left-to-right backward chaining


• Built-in predicates for arithmetic etc., e.g., X is Y*Z+3
• Built-in predicates that have side effects (e.g., input and output
• predicates, assert/retract predicates)
• Closed-world assumption ("negation as failure")
– e.g., given alive(X) :- not dead(X).
– alive(joe) succeeds if dead(joe) fails



Prolog
• Appending two lists to produce a third:
append([],Y,Y).
append([X|L],Y,[X|Z]) :- append(L,Y,Z).

• query: append(A,B,[1,2]) ?

• answers: A=[] B=[1,2]


A=[1] B=[2]
A=[1,2] B=[]



Resolution: brief summary
• Full first-order version:
l1  ···  lk, m1  ···  mn
(l1  ···  li-1  li+1  ···  lk  m1  ···  mj-1  mj+1  ···  mn)θ
where Unify(li, mj) = θ.

• The two clauses are assumed to be standardized apart so that they


share no variables.
• For example,
Rich(x)  Unhappy(x)
Rich(Ken)
Unhappy(Ken)
with θ = {x/Ken}

• Apply resolution steps to CNF(KB  α); complete for FOL



Conversion to CNF
• Everyone who loves all animals is loved by
someone:
x [y Animal(y)  Loves(x,y)]  [y Loves(y,x)]

• 1. Eliminate biconditionals and implications


x [y Animal(y)  Loves(x,y)]  [y Loves(y,x)]

• 2. Move  inwards: x p ≡ x p,  x p ≡ x


p
x [y (Animal(y)  Loves(x,y))]  [y Loves(y,x)]
x [y Animal(y)  Loves(x,y)]  [y Loves(y,x)]
x [y Animal(y)  Loves(x,y)]  [y Loves(y,x)]

»
Conversion to CNF contd.
3. Standardize variables: each quantifier should use a different one
x [y Animal(y)  Loves(x,y)]  [z Loves(z,x)]

4. Skolemize: a more general form of existential instantiation.


Each existential variable is replaced by a Skolem function of the enclosing
universally quantified variables:
x [Animal(F(x))  Loves(x,F(x))]  Loves(G(x),x)

5. Drop universal quantifiers:


[Animal(F(x))  Loves(x,F(x))]  Loves(G(x),x)

6. Distribute  over  :
[Animal(F(x))  Loves(G(x),x)]  [Loves(x,F(x))  Loves(G(x),x)]


»
»
»
Resolution proof: definite clauses

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