基于情境理论的认同框架

Janelle C. Mason, K. Kyei, Darrion Long, Hannah Foster, William Nick, James Mayes, A. Esterline
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文提出了一个基于Barwise情境理论的身份计算框架(最初是关于犯罪现场的罪犯)。情景支持信息,并且可以携带关于其他情景的信息。由于自然语言的约束,话语情景承载着所描述情景的信息。我们关注的是话语情境(我们称之为id-situation或id-case),在这种情境中,人们对犯罪现场的罪犯做出身份判断,这是相应的描述情境。犯罪现场和犯罪现场以及各种资源情况构成了法律意义上的案件。资源情况包括指纹被归档的位置,以及用于训练分类器的面部图像的位置。在调查中,可能会有几个协调的身份案件,使用不同的手段来寻求相同的判决。我们利用语义Web标准来表达框架中的用例。我们已经开发了Web本体语言(Web Ontology Language, OWL)本体,为在资源描述框架(Resource Description Framework, RDF)中对我们的场景进行编码提供了概念和有原则的词汇表,并给出了一个SPARQL协议和RDF查询语言(SPARQL)对我们的一种跨场景编码进行查询的示例。为了遵循证据如何支持犯罪现场罪犯身份的假设,我们使用了Dempster-Shafer理论,该理论为人们应该对自己的身份拥有的基于证据的信心提供了数值。我们将它与我们的本体紧密地结合在一起,通过每个本体的案例表示呈现一个包含情境的网络,并由对象拼接在一起;证据沿着这个网络“流动”,减少和结合。我们回顾了Dempster-Shafer理论的修改,当一个人从一个封闭的世界假设,其中嫌疑人或候选人的数量是有限的,到一个开放的世界假设,其中有一个无界的嫌疑人或候选人的数量。我们回顾了关于基于id-case中建立的身份的等式推理的计划,并回顾了关于通用资源标识符(uri)含义的相关问题。URI是语义Web上的基本表示表达式(“名称”),使用语义Web资源的身份说明必须清楚URI表示某些东西所需的条件。在前语义Web上,URI仅标识其协议访问的Web页面,但在语义Web上,URI用于标识所有资源,这导致了事物和关于它的页面之间的混淆。我们回顾了表示表达式含义的三种位置,并注意它们适用于场景编码中使用的uri。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A framework for identity based on situation theory
This paper presents a computational framework for identity (initially about the culprit in a crime scene) based on Barwise's situation theory. Situations support information and can carry information about other situations. An utterance situation carries information about a described situation thanks to the constraints imposed by natural language. We are concerned with utterance situations (which we call an id-situation or id-case) in which identity judgments are made about the culprit in a crime scene, which is the corresponding described situation. The id-situation and crime scene along with various resource situations make up a case in the legal sense. Resource situations include such things as where a fingerprint was filed and where one took a facial image used to train a classifier. In an investigation, there may be several coordinated id-cases that use different means in search of the same judgment. We utilize Semantic Web standards to express cases in our framework. We have developed Web Ontology Language (OWL) ontologies to provide concepts and principled vocabularies for encoding our scenarios in Resource Description Framework (RDF), and we present an example of a SPARQL Protocol and RDF Query Language (SPARQL) query of one of our encodings that spans situations. To follow how evidence supports hypotheses on the identity of the culprit in a crime scene, we use Dempster-Shafer theory, which provides numerical values for evidence-based confidence one should have in our identities. We tightly integrate it with our ontologies by having the representation of a case per our ontologies present a network containing situations and stitched together by objects; evidence "flows" along this network, diminishing and combining. We review the modifications of Dempster-Shafer theory required when one goes from a closed world assumption, where the number of suspects or candidates is bounded, to an open world assumption, where there is an unbounded number of suspects or candidates. We review our plans regarding equational reasoning based on identities established in our id-cases, and we review the related issues regarding the meanings of Universal Resource Identifiers (URIs). URIs are the fundamental denoting expressions ("names") on the Semantic Web, and an account of identity using Semantic-Web resources must be clear on what is required for a URI to denote something. On the pre-Semantic Web, a URI just identifies the web-page its protocol accesses, but on the Semantic Web, URIs are used to identify all resources, causing confusion between a thing and a page about it. We review three positions on the meanings of denoting expression and note that they apply to URIs as used in our encodings of scenarios.
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