An Axiomatic Framework for Belief Updates

03/27/2013
by   David Heckerman, et al.
0

In the 1940's, a physicist named Cox provided the first formal justification for the axioms of probability based on the subjective or Bayesian interpretation. He showed that if a measure of belief satisfies several fundamental properties, then the measure must be some monotonic transformation of a probability. In this paper, measures of change in belief or belief updates are examined. In the spirit of Cox, properties for a measure of change in belief are enumerated. It is shown that if a measure satisfies these properties, it must satisfy other restrictive conditions. For example, it is shown that belief updates in a probabilistic context must be equal to some monotonic transformation of a likelihood ratio. It is hoped that this formal explication of the belief update paradigm will facilitate critical discussion and useful extensions of the approach.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

page 5

research
07/27/2014

Modular Belief Updates and Confusion about Measures of Certainty in Artificial Intelligence Research

Over the last decade, there has been growing interest in the use or meas...
research
03/20/2013

Non-monotonic Reasoning and the Reversibility of Belief Change

Traditional approaches to non-monotonic reasoning fail to satisfy a numb...
research
02/27/2013

Properties of Bayesian Belief Network Learning Algorithms

Bayesian belief network learning algorithms have three basic components:...
research
07/16/2019

A Subjective Interestingness measure for Business Intelligence explorations

This paper addresses the problem of defining a subjective interestingnes...
research
03/27/2013

Updating Probabilities in Multiply-Connected Belief Networks

This paper focuses on probability updates in multiply-connected belief n...
research
02/27/2013

General Belief Measures

Probability measures by themselves, are known to be inappropriate for mo...
research
05/02/2017

Imagining Probabilistic Belief Change as Imaging (Technical Report)

Imaging is a form of probabilistic belief change which could be employed...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset