Representing and Reasoning About Change in Geologic Interpretation

Item

Title
en_US Representing and Reasoning About Change in Geologic Interpretation
Creator
en_US Simmons, Reid Gordon
Date
2004-10-20T20:03:31Z
Date Available
2004-10-20T20:03:31Z
Date Issued
en_US 1983-12-01
Identifier
en_US AITR-749
Abstract
en_US Geologic interpretation is the task of inferring a sequence of events to explain how a given geologic region could have been formed. This report describes the design and implementation of one part of a geologic interpretation problem solver -- a system which uses a simulation technique called imagining to check the validity of a candidate sequence of events. Imagining uses a combination of qualitative and quantitative simulations to reason about the changes which occured to the geologic region. The spatial changes which occur are simulated by constructing a sequence of diagrams. The quantitative simulation needs numeric parameters which are determined by using the qualitative simulation to establish the cumulative changes to an object and by using a description of the current geologic region to make quantitative measurements. The diversity of reasoning skills used in imagining has necessitated the development of multiple representations, each specialized for a different task. Representations to facilitate doing temporal, spatial and numeric reasoning are described in detail. We have also found it useful to explicitly represent processes. Both the qualitative and quantitative simulations use a discrete 'layer cake' model of geologic processes, but each uses a separate representation, specialized to support the type of simulation. These multiple representations have enabled us to develop a powerful, yet modular, system for reasoning about change.
Extent
en_US 131 p.
9959178 bytes
7037797 bytes
Format
application/postscript
application/pdf
Language
en_US
Relation
en_US AITR-749