Gilberto Pérez

AI
h-index21
5papers
2citations
Novelty32%
AI Score26

5 Papers

AIJul 24, 2025
Comparing Non-minimal Semantics for Disjunction in Answer Set Programming

Felicidad Aguado, Pedro Cabalar, Brais Muñiz et al.

In this paper, we compare four different semantics for disjunction in Answer Set Programming that, unlike stable models, do not adhere to the principle of model minimality. Two of these approaches, Cabalar and Muñiz' \emph{Justified Models} and Doherty and Szalas' \emph{Strongly Supported Models}, directly provide an alternative non-minimal semantics for disjunction. The other two, Aguado et al's \emph{Forks} and Shen and Eiter's \emph{Determining Inference} (DI) semantics, actually introduce a new disjunction connective, but are compared here as if they constituted new semantics for the standard disjunction operator. We are able to prove that three of these approaches (Forks, Justified Models and a reasonable relaxation of the DI semantics) actually coincide, constituting a common single approach under different definitions. Moreover, this common semantics always provides a superset of the stable models of a program (in fact, modulo any context) and is strictly stronger than the fourth approach (Strongly Supported Models), that actually treats disjunctions as in classical logic.

AISep 28, 2021
Explainable Machine Larning for liver transplantation

Pedro Cabalar, Brais Muñiz, Gilberto Pérez et al.

In this work, we present a flexible method for explaining, in human readable terms, the predictions made by decision trees used as decision support in liver transplantation. The decision trees have been obtained through machine learning applied on a dataset collected at the liver transplantation unit at the Coruña University Hospital Center and are used to predict long term (five years) survival after transplantation. The method we propose is based on the representation of the decision tree as a set of rules in a logic program (LP) that is further annotated with text messages. This logic program is then processed using the tool xclingo (based on Answer Set Programming) that allows building compound explanations depending on the annotation text and the rules effectively fired when a given input is provided. We explore two alternative LP encodings: one in which rules respect the tree structure (more convenient to reflect the learning process) and one where each rule corresponds to a (previously simplified) tree path (more readable for decision making).

LOSep 18, 2019
A Rule-Based System for Explainable Donor-Patient Matching in Liver Transplantation

Felicidad Aguado, Pedro Cabalar, Jorge Fandinno et al.

In this paper we present web-liver, a rule-based system for decision support in the medical domain, focusing on its application in a liver transplantation unit for implementing policies for donor-patient matching. The rule-based system is built on top of an interpreter for logic programs with partial functions, called lppf, that extends the paradigm of Answer Set Programming (ASP) adding two main features: (1) the inclusion of partial functions and (2) the computation of causal explanations for the obtained solutions. The final goal of web-liver is assisting the medical experts in the design of new donor-patient matching policies that take into account not only the patient severity but also the transplantation utility. As an example, we illustrate the tool behaviour with a set of rules that implement the utility index called SOFT.

AISep 19, 2016
Temporal Logic Programs with Variables

Felicidad Aguado, Pedro Cabalar, Martín Diéguez et al.

In this note we consider the problem of introducing variables in temporal logic programs under the formalism of "Temporal Equilibrium Logic" (TEL), an extension of Answer Set Programming (ASP) for dealing with linear-time modal operators. To this aim, we provide a definition of a first-order version of TEL that shares the syntax of first-order Linear-time Temporal Logic (LTL) but has a different semantics, selecting some LTL models we call "temporal stable models". Then, we consider a subclass of theories (called "splittable temporal logic programs") that are close to usual logic programs but allowing a restricted use of temporal operators. In this setting, we provide a syntactic definition of "safe variables" that suffices to show the property of "domain independence" -- that is, addition of arbitrary elements in the universe does not vary the set of temporal stable models. Finally, we present a method for computing the derivable facts by constructing a non-temporal logic program with variables that is fed to a standard ASP grounder. The information provided by the grounder is then used to generate a subset of ground temporal rules which is equivalent to (and generally smaller than) the full program instantiation.

AISep 7, 2016
Equilibrium Graphs

Pedro Cabalar, Carlos Pérez, Gilberto Pérez

In this paper we present an extension of Peirce's existential graphs to provide a diagrammatic representation of expressions in Quantified Equilibrium Logic (QEL). Using this formalisation, logical connectives are replaced by encircled regions (circles and squares) and quantified variables are represented as "identity" lines. Although the expressive power is equivalent to that of QEL, the new representation can be useful for illustrative or educational purposes.