KR2025Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and ReasoningProceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Principles of Knowledge Representation and Reasoning

Melbourne, Australia. November 11-17, 2025.

Edited by

ISSN: 2334-1033
ISBN: 978-1-956792-08-9

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Copyright © 2025 International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence Organization

An Information-Flow Perspective on Explainability Requirements: Specification and Verification

  1. Bernd Finkbeiner(CISPA Helmholtz Center for Information Security)
  2. Hadar Frenkel(Bar-Ilan University)
  3. Julian Siber(CISPA Helmholtz Center for Information Security)

Keywords

  1. Epistemic Logic
  2. Model Checking
  3. Counterfactual Reasoning
  4. Temporal Logic
  5. Multi-Agent Systems

Abstract

Explainable systems expose information about why certain observed effects are happening to the agents interacting with them. We argue that this constitutes a positive flow of information that needs to be specified, verified, and balanced against negative information flow that may, e.g., violate privacy guarantees. Since both explainability and privacy require reasoning about knowledge, we tackle these tasks with epistemic temporal logic extended with quantification over counterfactual causes. This allows us to specify that a multi-agent system exposes enough information such that agents acquire knowledge on why some effect occurred. We show how this principle can be used to specify explainability as a system-level requirement and provide an algorithm for checking finite-state models against such specifications. We present a prototype implementation of the algorithm and evaluate it on several benchmarks, illustrating how our approach distinguishes between explainable and unexplainable systems, and how it allows to pose additional privacy requirements.