Search: +meta:BP867
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BP1162 |
| Bongard Problem with solution that can be naturally phrased as "___ vs. vice versa" vs. not so. |
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COMMENTS
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Bongard Problems sorted left obtain the keyword "viceversa" on the OEBP. |
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CROSSREFS
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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
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KEYWORD
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notso, meta (see left/right), links, keyword, right-self
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP1164 |
| Visual Bongard Problems where stretching (or compressing) any sorted example renders the example unsortable vs. visual Bongard Problems where some example can be stretched along some axis and remain sorted. |
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BP1165 |
| Visual Bongard Problems where all possible sorted examples share a specific black region vs. not so. |
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BP1167 |
| Visual Bongard Problems whose sorted examples all have the same amount of black and white in them vs. other visual Bongard Problems. |
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BP1169 |
| Visual Bongard Problems where flipping over the horizontal axis (up/down) renders any example unsortable vs. visual Bongard Problems where some example can be flipped over the horizontal axis and remain sorted. |
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BP1170 |
| Meta Bongard Problems of the form "[transformation] applied to any example renders it unsortable vs. some example can remain sorted after [transformation]" vs. other meta Bongard Problems. |
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COMMENTS
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Left-sorted Bongard Problems have the keyword "problemkiller" on the OEBP.
An example could be unsortable because it does not conform to the format of all the examples in the Bongard Problem, or it could be formatted like the other examples but be treated ambiguously by the solution. It seems the Bongard Problems currently labeled "problemkiller" mostly deal with examples becoming unsortable because they no longer conform to the format. (The examples become unsortable because they leave the "world" of the Bongard Problem. See https://www.oebp.org/world.php .) - Aaron David Fairbanks, Jun 15 2023 |
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CROSSREFS
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"Problemkiller" Bongard Problems are notso Bongard Problems.
See keyword invariance, which is about transformations making some example switch sides rather than transformations making all examples unsortable.
Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP1165 BP1166 BP1167 BP1168 BP1169  *  BP1171 BP1172 BP1173 BP1174 BP1175
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KEYWORD
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notso, meta (see left/right), links, keyword
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WORLD
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linksbp [smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Leo Crabbe
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BP1172 |
| Visual Bongard Problems where flipping over the vertical axis (left/right) renders any example unsortable vs. visual Bongard Problems where some example can be flipped over the vertical axis and remain sorted. |
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