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Computational models of argument; proceedings of COMMA 2008.


9781586038595

Computational models
For another meaning, see Model of computation
Computational model is a mathematical model in computational science that requires extensive computational resources to study the behavior of a complex system by computer simulation.
 of argument; proceedings of COMMA comma: see punctuation.


In programming, the comma (,) is used to separate values in a function call. For example, in the C statement printf ("The result is %s\n", amount); the comma separates the display string from the name of the variable.
 2008.

COMMA (2008: Toulouse, France) Ed. by Philippe Besnard et al.

IOS (1) (Internetwork Operating System) An operating system from Cisco that is the primary control program used in its routers. IOS is widely used and robust system software that supports the common functions of all products under Cisco's CiscoFusion architecture.  Press

2008

429 pages

$210.00

Hardcover

Frontiers in artificial intelligence and applications; v.172

Q334

This proceedings for the May 2008 conference includes a range of papers that provide a snap shot a quick offhand shot, without deliberately taking aim.

See also: Snap
 of leading research questions about computational models of argument. The papers primarily draw on philosophical issues about argumentation and the reasoning necessary to consider rhetorical issues arising in argumentation. Topics include algorithmic solutions associated with generating and judging consolation arguments, exchange of information associated with argumentation differences, tools for computational argumentation, arguments in programming, measures for persuasion dialogs in preliminary investigations, ontological on·to·log·i·cal  
adj.
1. Of or relating to ontology.

2. Of or relating to essence or the nature of being.

3.
 foundations for scholarly debate mapping technology, formal dialogue games, the computational complexity computational complexity

Inherent cost of solving a problem in large-scale scientific computation, measured by the number of operations required as well as the amount of memory used and the order in which it is used.
 of ideal semantics, requirements for reflective argument visualization tools, hybrid argumentation and its properties, preferences dialogs, critical questions for decision making processes, argument theory change in revisions, argument interchange formats, arguments from experience, and models of judicial context in argumentation frameworks.

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Publication:SciTech Book News
Article Type:Book review
Date:Dec 1, 2008
Words:175
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