Search: +ex:BP801
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BP512 |
| Abstract Bongard Problems vs. concrete visual Bongard Problems. |
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BP520 |
| Bongard Problems whose sorting of examples depends on subjective opinion vs. not so. |
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BP550 |
| Experimental Bongard Problems vs. traditional-style Bongard Problems. |
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COMMENTS
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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. |
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CROSSREFS
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Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP545 BP546 BP547 BP548 BP549 * BP551 BP552 BP553 BP554 BP555
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KEYWORD
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subjective, meta (see left/right), links, keyword, left-it
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WORLD
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bp [smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP571 |
| Bongard Problems that require mathematical understanding to solve vs. other Bongard Problems. |
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BP837 |
| Bongard Problems in which individual examples may be unclearly sorted (it may be arguable which side they should go on) but many examples together are still able to communicate the solution vs. other Bongard Problems. |
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COMMENTS
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Left examples have the keyword "collective" on the OEBP.
Some Bongard Problems are "collective" in a more extreme way than others. Perhaps there are absolutely no individual examples that anyone would confidently sort on either side, and the solver can only be expected to get a vague gist by seeing them all together. Or perhaps in practice most people agree about where most examples should fit, even though a stretch of an argument could conceivably be made for each one fitting on the other side.
In some collective Bongard Problems, each example admits a number of possible interpretations, and the correct choice of interpretation is only clear once the solution is known. The group of examples together improve the solver's confidence about having understood each individual one right. This is common in rules Bongard Problems), where each example communicates its own rule.
Collective Bongard Problems are borderline invalid Bongard Problems (see https://www.oebp.org/invalid.php ). There is no one rule dividing the sides; the solution is not a method to determine whether an arbitrary example fits left or right. It is a less strict kind of Bongard Problem. |
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CROSSREFS
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Collective implies fuzzy.
Collective Bongard Problems are often abstract".
Subjective Bongard Problems are often collective.
In some Bongard Problems, each example has a corresponding slightly different twin example on the other side (keyword contributepairs), and it is necessary to see both examples together in order to be able to sort either of them. This is related to "collective" but not quite the same. It becomes unambiguous where an example fits once its twin is seen.
Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP832 BP833 BP834 BP835 BP836 * BP838 BP839 BP840 BP841 BP842
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KEYWORD
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meta (see left/right), links, keyword
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WORLD
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bp [smaller | same | bigger]
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AUTHOR
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Aaron David Fairbanks
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BP1142 |
| Bongard Problems where there is no way to turn an example into any other sorted example by adding black OR white (not both) vs. Bongard Problems where some example can be altered in this way and remain sorted. |
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COMMENTS
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Left-sorted problems have the keyword "finishedexamples" on the OEBP.
The addition does not have to be slight.
Left-sorted Problems usually have a very specific collection of examples, where the only images sorted all show the same type of object.
Any Bongard Problem where all examples are one shape outline will be sorted left, and (almost) any Bongard Problem where all examples are one fill shape will be sorted right. |
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CROSSREFS
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See BP1144 for the version about both additions and erasures, and only slight changes are considered.
See BP1167 for a stricter version, the condition that all examples have the same amount of black and white.
Adjacent-numbered pages:
BP1137 BP1138 BP1139 BP1140 BP1141 * BP1143 BP1144 BP1145 BP1146 BP1147
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KEYWORD
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unwordable, notso, meta (see left/right), links, keyword, sideless, problemkiller
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AUTHOR
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Leo Crabbe
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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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