Semipositive LTL with an uninterpreted past operator
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Slaney, John K
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British Academy and Oxford University Press
Abstract
$LTL is a version of linear temporal logic in which eventualities are not expressible, but in which there is a sentential constant $ intended to be true just at the end of some behaviour of interest - that is, to mark the end of the accepted (finite) words of some language. There is an effectively recognisable class of $LTL formulae which express behaviours, but in a sense different from the standard one of temporal logics like LTL or CTL. This representation is useful for solving a class of decision processes with temporally extended goals, which in turn are useful for representing an important class of AI planning problems.
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Logic Journal of the IGPL
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2037-12-31
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