login
Hints
(Greetings from The On-Line Encyclopedia of Bongard Problems!)
Search: -ex:BP331
Displaying 1-4 of 4 results found.     page 1
     Sort: id      Format: long      Filter: (all | no meta | meta)      Mode: (words | no words)
BP550 Experimental Bongard Problems vs. traditional-style Bongard Problems.
BP195
BP200
BP300
BP359
BP538
BP544
BP545
BP548
BP555
BP570
BP793
BP795
BP797
BP801
BP812
BP813
BP844
BP854
BP859
BP862
BP868
BP902
BP911
BP915
BP920
BP939
BP941
BP942
BP953
BP955
BP957
BP959
BP1008
BP1056
BP1073

. . .

BP1
BP2
BP3
BP4
BP5
BP6
BP7
BP8
BP9
BP10
BP11
BP12
BP13
BP14
BP15
BP16
BP17
BP18
BP19
BP20
BP21
BP22
BP23
BP24
BP25
BP26
BP27
BP28
BP29
BP30
BP31
BP32
BP33
BP34
BP35

. . .

(edit; present; nest [left/right]; search; history)
COMMENTS

Left examples have the keyword "experimental" on the OEBP.

Right examples have the keyword "traditional" on the OEBP.


Experimental BPs push the boundaries of what makes Bongard Problems Bongard Problems.


Traditional BPs show some simple property of black and white pictures. The OEBP is a place with many wild and absurd Bongard Problems, so it is useful to have an easy way to just find the regular old Bongard Problems.

CROSSREFS

Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP545 BP546 BP547 BP548 BP549  *  BP551 BP552 BP553 BP554 BP555

KEYWORD

subjective, meta (see left/right), links, keyword, left-it

WORLD

bp [smaller | same | bigger]

AUTHOR

Aaron David Fairbanks

BP565 Bongard Problems that are hard for humans to solve but easier for computers to solve vs. Bongard Problems that are hard for computers to solve but easier for humans to solve.
BP112
BP558
BP941
BP1008
BP1055
BP100
BP170
BP190
BP193
BP197
BP199
BP235
BP237
BP252
BP331
BP349
BP373
BP382
BP524
BP551
BP565
BP812
BP839
BP844
BP862
BP869
BP882
BP930
BP939
BP1002
BP1004
BP1092
BP1110
(edit; present; nest [left/right]; search; history)
COMMENTS

Left examples have the keyword "antihuman" on the OEBP.

Right examples have the keyword "anticomputer" on the OEBP.


Easy abstract Bongard Problems are typically anticomputer Bongard Problems.

CROSSREFS

See keyword help for Bongard Problems that can be made easier for humans to solve by the selection of helpful examples.

Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP560 BP561 BP562 BP563 BP564  *  BP566 BP567 BP568 BP569 BP570

KEYWORD

spectrum, anticomputer, meta (see left/right), links, keyword, right-self, viceversa

WORLD

bp [smaller | same | bigger]

AUTHOR

Leo Crabbe

BP1112 "Stretch-dependent" Bongard Problems vs. Bongard Problems in which examples can be stretched (or compressed) along any axis without being sorted differently.
BP7
BP11
BP12
BP13
BP33
BP50
BP62
BP76
BP77
BP80
BP103
BP152
BP250
BP289
BP328
BP329
BP333
BP335
BP336
BP523
BP525
BP536
BP557
BP559
BP812
BP813
BP816
BP860
BP920
BP924
BP942
BP949
BP1011
BP1086
BP1133

. . .

BP1
BP5
BP15
BP31
BP45
BP98
BP157
BP240
BP322
BP327
BP330
BP331
BP332
BP348
BP363
BP367
BP368
BP369
BP389
BP809
BP810
BP851
BP853
BP911
BP966
BP977
BP992
BP1022
BP1094
BP1131
BP1135
BP1136
(edit; present; nest [left/right]; search; history)
COMMENTS

Left-sorted Bongard Problems have the keyword "stretch" on the OEBP.


If applying a scaling along one particular axis to the whole of any example can change its sorting the BP fits on the left side here. (For BPs with bounding boxes this means scaling and cropping, but without cutting out any detail.)

CROSSREFS

Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP1107 BP1108 BP1109 BP1110 BP1111  *  BP1113 BP1114 BP1115 BP1116 BP1117

KEYWORD

meta (see left/right), links, keyword, invariance

WORLD

[smaller | same | bigger]

AUTHOR

Leo Crabbe

BP1162 Bongard Problem with solution that can be naturally phrased as "___ vs. vice versa" vs. not so.
BP28
BP29
BP36
BP37
BP38
BP43
BP45
BP46
BP47
BP48
BP49
BP53
BP63
BP65
BP67
BP68
BP76
BP79
BP196
BP211
BP565
BP830
BP971
BP972
BP1124
BP1159
BP1254
BP1
BP170
BP331
BP1004
BP1044
BP1046
BP1162
(edit; present; nest [left/right]; search; history)
COMMENTS

Bongard Problems sorted left obtain the keyword "viceversa" on the OEBP.

CROSSREFS

Contrast the keyword notso.


"Viceversa" BPs are often dual.


The solution to a less-than/greater-than quantity comparison Bongard Problem (keyword spectrum) where the two sides divide the spectrum in half can be phrased as "closer to left end of spectrum than right end vs. vice versa." Whether this is a natural way to phrase the solution depends on the kind of quantity being compared.

Here are some examples of spectra for which the "vice versa" phrasing tends to seem natural: left vs. right, up vs. down, black vs. white, higher quantity of [thing type 1] vs. higher quantity of [thing type 2].

Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP1157 BP1158 BP1159 BP1160 BP1161  *  BP1163 BP1164 BP1165 BP1166 BP1167

KEYWORD

notso, meta (see left/right), links, keyword, right-self

AUTHOR

Aaron David Fairbanks

    page 1

Welcome | Solve | Browse | Lookup | Recent | Links | Register | Contact
Contribute | Keywords | Concepts | Worlds | Ambiguities | Transformations | Invalid Problems | Style Guide | Goals | Glossary