The Impact of Active Domain Predicates on Guarded Existential Rules

We claim it is realistic to assume that a database management system provides access to the active domain via built-in relations. Therefore, product databases, i.e., databases that include designated predicates that hold the active domain, form a natural notion that deserves our attention. An import...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inWeb Reasoning and Rule Systems Vol. 9898; pp. 94 - 110
Main Authors Gottlob, Georg, Pieris, Andreas, Šimkus, Mantas
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Springer International Publishing AG 01.01.2016
Springer International Publishing
SeriesLecture Notes in Computer Science
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ISBN9783319452753
3319452754
ISSN0302-9743
1611-3349
DOI10.1007/978-3-319-45276-0_8

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Summary:We claim it is realistic to assume that a database management system provides access to the active domain via built-in relations. Therefore, product databases, i.e., databases that include designated predicates that hold the active domain, form a natural notion that deserves our attention. An important issue then is to look at the consequences of product databases for the expressiveness and complexity of central existential rule languages. We focus on guarded existential rules, and we investigate the impact of product databases on their expressive power and complexity. We show that the queries expressed via (frontier-)guarded rules gain in expressiveness, and in fact, they have the same expressive power as Datalog. On the other hand, there is no impact on the expressiveness of the queries specified via weakly-(frontier-)guarded rules since they are powerful enough to explicitly compute the predicates needed to access the active domain. We also observe that there is no impact on the complexity of the languages in question.
ISBN:9783319452753
3319452754
ISSN:0302-9743
1611-3349
DOI:10.1007/978-3-319-45276-0_8