Intensional Inheritance Between Concepts: An Information-Theoretic Interpretation
This work addresses a foundational issue in formal concept analysis and AI semantics, but it appears incremental as it builds on existing information-theoretic frameworks.
The paper tackles the problem of formalizing and quantifying intensional inheritance between concepts by proposing an information-theoretic interpretation, deriving formulas using Shannon and algorithmic information theory, and showing that extensional inheritance is a special case.
This paper addresses the problem of formalizing and quantifying the concept of "intensional inheritance" between two concepts. We begin by conceiving the intensional inheritance of $W$ from $F$ as the amount of information the proposition "x is $F$ " provides about the proposition "x is $W$. To flesh this out, we consider concepts $F$ and $W$ defined by sets of properties $\left\{F_{1}, F_{2}, \ldots, F_{n}\right\}$ and $\left\{W_{1}, W_{2}, \ldots, W_{m}\right\}$ with associated degrees $\left\{d_{1}, d_{2}, \ldots, d_{n}\right\}$ and $\left\{e_{1}, e_{2}, \ldots, e_{m}\right\}$, respectively, where the properties may overlap. We then derive formulas for the intensional inheritance using both Shannon information theory and algorithmic information theory, incorporating interaction information among properties. We examine a special case where all properties are mutually exclusive and calculate the intensional inheritance in this case in both frameworks. We also derive expressions for $P(W \mid F)$ based on the mutual information formula. Finally we consider the relationship between intensional inheritance and conventional set-theoretic "extensional" inheritance, concluding that in our information-theoretic framework, extensional inheritance emerges as a special case of intensional inheritance.