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Cross-Domain Concept formation using HR (1999)  (Make Corrections)  (3 citations)
Graham Steel



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Abstract: Many interesting and valuable concepts in mathematics are essentially `cross-domain' in nature, i.e. they relate objects, ideas and theories from more than one area of mathematics. Examples include prime order groups and graph nodes of maximal degree. These concepts are often involved in vital steps in the formation of a mathematical theory. (Update)

Context of citations to this paper:   More

.... and number theory testing, and further details of the graph theory testing including the complete output from a run, can be found in (Steel, 1999). 3.1 Generating standard interesting concepts To measure the ability to re invent standard cross domain concepts, we compiled a...

Cited by:   More
Automated Theory Formation for Tutoring Tasks in Pure.. - Colton, McCasland..   (Correct)
ILP for Mathematical Discovery - Colton, Muggleton (2003)   (Correct)
Cross-domain Mathematical Concept Formation - Colton, Bundy, Walsh (2000)   (Correct)

Active bibliography (related documents):   More   All
1.3:   On the Notion of Interestingness in Automated Mathematical.. - Colton, Bundy, Walsh (2000)   (Correct)
0.8:   Cross-Domain Mathematical Concept Formation - Steel (1999)   (Correct)
0.7:   Agent Based Cooperative Theory Formation in Pure Mathematics - Colton, Bundy, Walsh (2000)   (Correct)

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0.0:   Unknown -   (Correct)

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3:   Automated Theory Formation in Pure Mathematics (context) - Colton - 2000
2:   Automatic identication of mathematical concepts (context) - Colton, Bundy et al. - 2000
2:   Making conjectures about Maple functions - Colton - 2002

BibTeX entry:   (Update)

G. Steel. Cross-domain concept formation using HR. Master's thesis, University of Edinburgh, 1999. http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/article/steel99crossdomain.html   More

@misc{ steel99crossdomain,
  author = "G. Steel",
  title = "Cross-domain concept formation using HR",
  text = "G. Steel. Cross-domain concept formation using HR. Master's thesis, University
    of Edinburgh, 1999.",
  year = "1999",
  url = "citeseer.ist.psu.edu/article/steel99crossdomain.html" }
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http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/~simonco/research/hr

Documents on the same site (http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/gsteel/papers/index.html):   More
Attacking Group Protocols - Steel, BUndy (2005)   (Correct)
Artificial Intelligence and Scientific Creativity - Colton, Steel (1999)   (Correct)
Visualising First-Order Proof Search - Steel (2005)   (Correct)

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