Search: keyword:anticomputer
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BP349 |
| One object does not belong to the pattern of the rest vs. all objects form one pattern. |
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COMMENTS
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The left examples are the right examples with one object altered, which makes the solution easier to see.
"Odd one out." |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP344 BP345 BP346 BP347 BP348  *  BP350 BP351 BP352 BP353 BP354
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KEYWORD
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anticomputer, help, contributepairs, traditional, rules, collection
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CONCEPT
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categorization (info | search), existence (info | search), feature_cluster (info | search), number_cluster (info | search), shape_cluster (info | search), cluster_of_one (info | search), cluster (info | search), one (info | search)
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP373 |
| Intersection (logical conjunction) vs. union (logical disjunction). |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP368 BP369 BP370 BP371 BP372  *  BP374 BP375 BP376 BP377 BP378
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KEYWORD
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abstract, anticomputer, concept, creativeexamples, left-narrow, right-narrow, contributepairs, traditional, miniworlds, dithering
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CONCEPT
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set_intersection (info | search), set_union (info | search)
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP382 |
| No knot (unknot) vs. knot. |
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BP524 |
| Same objects are shown lined up in both "universes" vs. the two "universes" are not aligned. |
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COMMENTS
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All examples are black and white images, partitioned by lines such that crossing a line switches the background color and the foreground color. (Sometimes it is not clear which is "background" and which is "foreground".) In the space between two dividing lines, there is a black and white scene; the outlines of the shapes are curves dividing black from white. Images sorted left are such that each outline-curve present in a scene that comes in contact non-tangentially with a dividing line continues across the dividing line, across which the black and white sides of it switch.
Examples (especially right) usually have ambiguity to some degree; depending on how a person reads the images, dividing lines may be confused for curves within a scene. |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP519 BP520 BP521 BP522 BP523  *  BP525 BP526 BP527 BP528 BP529
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KEYWORD
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fuzzy, unwordable, anticomputer, traditional, blackwhiteinvariant
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP551 |
| Unstable balance vs. not |
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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. |
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BP812 |
| Aesthetically pleasing vs. not so. |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP807 BP808 BP809 BP810 BP811  *  BP813 BP814 BP815 BP816 BP817
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KEYWORD
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easy, fuzzy, abstract, notso, stretch, anticomputer, subjective, invalid, experimental, funny, dithering
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP839 |
| Opposite (inverse) transformations have been applied to the same specific small square on opposite sides of the dividing line versus not so. |
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