Federico Gobbo, Marco Benini, and Jean Wagemans have published Complex arguments in Adpositional Argumentation, the paper related to the talk with the same title.
Reference
Gobbo, F., Benini, M., & Wagemans, J.H.M. (2021). Complex arguments in Adpositional Argumentation. In M. D’Agostino, F.A. D’Asaro & C. Larese (Eds.), Proceedings of the Workshop on Advances in Argumentation in Artificial Intelligence (AI^3 2021), co-located with the 19th International Conference of the Italian Association for Artificial Intelligence (AIxIA 2021), Milan, November 29, 2021.
Abstract
Adpositional Argumentation (AdArg) is a new method for annotating argumentative discourse that represents linguistic and pragmatic information in argumentative adpositional trees. In this paper, we explain how the representation of claims and individual arguments provide the building blocks for more complex argumentation structures. We illustrate the abstract trees representing the systematic possibilities of a claim (one statement), minimal argument (one conclusion, one premise), convergent argumentation (one conclusion, multiple premises), as well as serial argumentation, when the same linguistic material plays the double role of the premise of a given argument and the conclusion of a subargument.
