Domain-specific languages in Prolog for declarative expert knowledge in rules and ontologies
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Elsevier
Abstract
Declarative if–then rules have proven very useful in many applications of expert sys- tems. They can be managed in deductive databases and evaluated using the well-known forward-chaining approach. For domain-experts, however, the syntax of rules becomes complicated quickly, and already many different knowledge representation formalisms ex- ist. Expert knowledge is often acquired in story form using interviews. In this paper, we discuss its representation by defining domain-specific languages (Dsls) for declarative ex- pert rules. They can be embedded in Prolog systems in internal Dsls using term expan- sion and as external Dsls using definite clause grammars and quasi-quotations – for more sophisticated syntaxes.
Based on the declarative rules and the integration with the Prolog-based deductive database system DDbase, multiple rules acquired in practical case studies can be combined, compared, graphically analysed by domain-experts, and evaluated, resulting in an extensi- ble system for expert knowledge. As a result, the actual modeling Dsl becomes executable; the declarative forward-chaining evaluation of deductive databases can be understood by the domain experts. Our Dsl for rules can be further improved by integrating ontologies and rule annotations.