
In this paper, we propose a model for building natural language explanations for Bayesian Network Reasoning in terms of factor arguments, which are argumentation graphs of flowing evidence, relating the observed evidence to a target variable we want to learn about. We introduce the notion of factor argument independence to address the outstanding question of defining when arguments should be presented jointly or separately and present an algorithm that, starting from the evidence nodes and a target node, produces a list of all independent factor arguments ordered by their strength. Finally, we implemented a scheme to build natural language explanations of Bayesian Reasoning using this approach. Our proposal has been validated in the medical domain through a human-driven evaluation study where we compare the Bayesian Network Reasoning explanations obtained using factor arguments with an alternative explanation method. Evaluation results indicate that our proposed explanation approach is deemed by users as significantly more useful for understanding Bayesian Network Reasoning than another existing explanation method it is compared to.
First Workshop on Explainable Artificial Intelligence for the medical domain - EXPLIMED. THE 27TH EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Computer Science - Logic in Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence (cs.AI), Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence, Logic in Computer Science (cs.LO)
FOS: Computer and information sciences, Computer Science - Logic in Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence (cs.AI), Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence, Logic in Computer Science (cs.LO)
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