Allen's interval algebra

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Allen's interval algebra is a calculus for temporal reasoning that was introduced by James F. Allen in 1983.

The calculus defines possible relations between time intervals and provides a composition table that can be used as a basis for reasoning about temporal descriptions of events.

Formal description

Relations

The following 13 base relations capture the possible relations between two intervals.

Relation Illustration Interpretation
 

 

  X precedes Y

Y is preceded by X

 

 

  X meets Y

Y is met by X (i stands for inverse)

 

 

  X overlaps with Y

Y is overlapped by X

 

 

  X starts Y

Y is started by X

 

 

  X during Y

Y contains X

 

 

  X finishes Y

Y is finished by X

    X is equal to Y

Using this calculus, given facts can be formalized and then used for automatic reasoning. Relations between intervals are formalized as sets of base relations.

The sentences

During dinner, Peter reads the newspaper. Afterwards, he goes to bed.

are formalized in Allen's Interval Algebra as follows:

 

 

In general, the number of different relations between n intervals, starting with n = 0, is 1, 1, 13, 409, 23917, 2244361... OEIS A055203. The special case shown above is for n = 2.

Composition of relations between intervals

For reasoning about the relations between temporal intervals, Allen's interval algebra provides a composition table. Given the relation between   and   and the relation between   and  , the composition table allows for concluding about the relation between   and  . Together with a converse operation, this turns Allen's interval algebra into a relation algebra.

For the example, one can infer  .

Extensions

Allen's interval algebra can be used for the description of both temporal intervals and spatial configurations. For the latter use, the relations are interpreted as describing the relative position of spatial objects. This also works for three-dimensional objects by listing the relation for each coordinate separately.

The study of overlapping markup uses a similar algebra (see [1]). Its models have more variations depending on whether endpoints of document structures are permitted to be truly co-located, or merely [tangent].

Temporal statements in the field of cultural heritage

In the cultural heritage ontology CIDOC CRM, Allen relations are replaced by so-called temporal primitives, which facilitate the formulation of attestable statements as well as reasoning about these statements.[2] Temporal primitives split up the Allen relations into individual statements about the start or end of the intervals. For example, X overlaps with Y ( ) can be split as follows:

  •  starts before the start of ( , ) ∧ ends after the start of ( , ) ∧ ends before the end of ( , )

In addition, the equal to of the Allen relations is replaced by before or with and after or with. A simple example:

  • The reign of King Harold II starts before the start of the Battle of Hastings
  • The reign/life of Harold II ends after or with the start of the Battle of Hastings
  • The reign/life of Harold II ends before or with the end of the Battle of Hastings

In the example, it is not necessary to specify whether Harold II was killed at the beginning or during or at the end of the battle, i.e. whether  ,   or   applies. If it is relevant for a specific historical question, it can be specified later.

Another difference is that for temporal, spatial and spatiotemporal statements in CIDOC CRM, the edges (i.e. for temporal statements the start and end) are interpreted as fuzzy. Especially statements about exact simultaneity are otherwise extremely rare and notoriously difficult to attest.

Implementations

See also

References

  1. ^ Steven DeRose. Markup Overlap: A Review and a Horse. In Proceedings of Extreme Markup Languages 2004, Montréal, Québec, August 2-6, 2004. http://xml.coverpages.org/DeRoseEML2004.pdf
  2. ^ CIDOC CRM Version 7.3: https://cidoc-crm.org/versions-of-the-cidoc-crm, section Temporal Relation Primitives based on fuzzy boundaries

Sources

  • Allen, James F. (26 November 1983). "Maintaining knowledge about temporal intervals" (PDF). Communications of the ACM. 26 (11): 832–843. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.472.5244. doi:10.1145/182.358434. hdl:1802/10574. ISSN 0001-0782. S2CID 16729000.
  • Nebel, Bernhard; Bürckert, Hans-Jürgen (1995). "Reasoning about Temporal Relations: A Maximal Tractable Subclass of Allen's Interval Algebra" (PDF). Journal of the ACM. 42: 43–66. doi:10.1145/200836.200848. S2CID 6586759.
  • van Beek, Peter; Manchak, Dennis W. (1996). "The design and experimental analysis of algorithms for temporal reasoning" (PDF). Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research. 4 (1996): 1–18. arXiv:cs/9601101. Bibcode:1996cs........1101V. doi:10.1613/jair.232. S2CID 3204600. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2017. Retrieved 6 May 2017.