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BP1139 Bongard Problems where, given any example, there is a way to add details to it (without erasing) such that it is sorted on the other side vs. BPs where this is not the case.
BP35
BP50
BP62
BP72
BP322
BP335
BP388
BP391
BP533
BP935
BP937
BP969
BP977
BP986
BP1016
BP1099
BP1100
BP1101
BP1109
BP1
BP2
BP22
BP23
BP70
BP788
BP892
BP920
BP932
BP933
BP949
BP971
BP972
BP1102
BP1136
?
BP966
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COMMENTS

This classification is specifically concerned with changes to examples that leave them sortable, as there are almost always ways of adding details to a BP's examples that make them unsortable.


Right-sorted BPs in this Bongard Problem are often Bongard Problems where there is always a way of adding to left-sorted examples to make them right-sorted, but not the other way around, or vice versa.


Another version of this Bongard Problem could be made about adding white (erasure of detail) instead of black (addition of detail).

Another version could be made about adding either white or black, but not both.


Where appropriate, you can assume all images will have some room in a lip of white background around the border (ignoring https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sorites_paradox ).


You can't expand the boundary of an image as you add detail to it. If image boundaries could be expanded, then any shape could be shrunken to a point in relation to the surrounding whiteness, which could then be filled in to make any other shape.



How should this treat cases in which just a few examples can't be added to at all (like an all-black box)? E.g. BP966. Should this be sorted right (should the one special case of a black box spoil it) or should it be sorted left (should examples that can't at all be further added be discounted)? Maybe we should only sort BPs in which all examples can be further added to. (See BP1143left.) - Aaron David Fairbanks, Nov 12 2021


Is "addition of detail" context-dependent, or does it just mean any addition of blackness to the image? Say you have a points-and-lines Bongard Problem like BP1100, and you're trying to decide whether to sort it left or right here. You would just want to think about adding more points and lines to the picture. You don't want to get bogged down in thinking about whether black could be added to the image in a weird way so that a point gets turned into a line, or something. - Aaron David Fairbanks, Nov 13 2021

CROSSREFS

See BP1139 for Bongard Problems in which no example can be added to, period.

Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP1134 BP1135 BP1136 BP1137 BP1138  *  BP1140 BP1141 BP1142 BP1143 BP1144

KEYWORD

meta (see left/right), links, sideless

AUTHOR

Leo Crabbe

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