Inconsistency arises in many areas in advanced computing. Often
inconsistency is unwanted, for example in the specification for a
plan or in sensor fusion in robotics; however, sometimes
inconsistency is useful. Whether inconsistency is unwanted or
useful, there is a need to develop tolerance to inconsistency in
application technologies such as databases, knowledge bases, and
software systems. To address this situation, inconsistency
tolerance is being built on foundational technologies for
identifying and analyzing inconsistency in information, for
representing and reasoning with inconsistent information, for
resolving inconsistent information, and for merging inconsistent
information.
The idea for this book arose out of a Dagstuhl Seminar on the
topic held in summer 2003. The nine chapters in this first book
devoted to the subject of inconsistency tolerance were carefully
invited and anonymously reviewed. The book provides an exciting
introduction to this new field.
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