Back to Search Start Over

A comparative study of six formal models of causal ascription

Authors :
Benferhat, S
Bonnefon, JF
Chassy, P
Da Silva Neves, R
Dubois, D
Dupin De Saint-Cyr, F
Kayser, D
Nouioua, F
Nouioua-Boutouhami, S
Prade, H
Smaoui, S
Benferhat, S
Bonnefon, JF
Chassy, P
Da Silva Neves, R
Dubois, D
Dupin De Saint-Cyr, F
Kayser, D
Nouioua, F
Nouioua-Boutouhami, S
Prade, H
Smaoui, S
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Ascribing causality amounts to determining what elements in a sequence of reported facts can be related in a causal way, on the basis of some knowledge about the course of the world. The paper offers a comparison of a large span of formal models (based on structural equations, non-monotonic consequence relations, trajectory preference relations, identification of violated norms, graphical representations, or connectionism), using a running example taken from a corpus of car accident reports. Interestingly enough, the compared approaches focus on different aspects of the problem by either identifying all the potential causes, or selecting a smaller subset by taking advantages of contextually abnormal facts, or by modeling interventions to get rid of simple correlations. The paper concludes by a general discussion based on a battery of criteria (several of them being proper to AI approaches to causality). © 2008 Springer-Verlag.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1197415250
Document Type :
Electronic Resource