Search: +meta:BP919
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BP533 |
| Contains smaller copy of itself vs. doesn't. |
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BP805 |
| Bongard Problem sorts example below on the left versus Bongard Problem sorts example below on the right. |
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BP827 |
| Image of noisy Bongard Problem vs. image of Bongard Problem with minimal noise. |
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BP830 |
| Image of a Bongard Problem with left side a "positive" property and right side the "negative" property versus vice versa. |
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COMMENTS
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Left: the left hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the left pattern can be seen without the counterexamples on the right.
Right: the right hand side is enough to communicate the answer; the right pattern can be seen without counterexamples on the left.
Flipping a BP will switch its sorting.
The following is taken from the comments on page BP513 (keyword left-narrow):
Call a pattern "narrow" if it is likely to be noticed in a collection of examples, without any counterexamples provided.
A collection of triangles will be recognized as such; "triangles" is a narrow pattern. A collection of non-triangular shapes will just be seen as "shapes"; "not triangles" is not narrow.
Narrow patterns tend to be phrased positively ("is [property]"), while non-narrow patterns opposite narrow patterns tend to be phrased negatively ("is not [property]"). |
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CROSSREFS
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See keywords left-narrow and right-narrow.
Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP825 BP826 BP827 BP828 BP829  *  BP831 BP832 BP833 BP834 BP835
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KEYWORD
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dual, handed, leftright, meta (see left/right), miniproblems, contributepairs, viceversa, presentationinvariant
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WORLD
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boxes_bpimage_three_per_side [smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP831 |
| Image of a Bongard Problem with left side having two rules and right side narrowing it down vs. image of Bongard Problem whose right hand side adds no information. |
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BP842 |
| Any permutation of positions that sends one string of symbols to another sends each string of symbols to some other versus not so. |
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BP845 |
| "Noisy" properties changing independent of the consistently increasing quantity vs. not so. |
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BP846 |
| A quantity increases by fixed constant amount each step vs. not so. |
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