Incomplete information and dependencies in relational databases

Abstract
An incomplete information relational database combines two types of information about the real world modeled by the database: (a) the information represented by tables with null values ("value not known") allowed as entries, and (b) the data dependencies, which are known to be satisfied in the real world. We view the well known chase procedure as a process which transforms type (b) information into an "equivalent" type (a) form. Assuming that the data dependencies are arbitrary implicational dependencies, we show that this transformation is not quite equivalent, but the corruption of information introduced cannot be discovered if the query language uses the operations of projection, positive selection (i.e. no negation in selection condition), union, natural join and renaming of attributes. This result can be interpreted also as the new important property of chase.The influence of so-called view dependencies on the table with null values is also examined.