inductive reasoning

Terms from Artificial Intelligence: humans at the heart of algorithms

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Inductive reasoning uses one or more specific examples to create more general rules. For example, if you have only seen three model-T Ford cars and they are all black, you might infer that all model-T Fords are black. Note that next day you might see a bright yellow model-T Ford, so induction is both an uncertain, defeasible and non-monotonic form of reasoning. Induction is often compared deduction and abduction as different forms of reasoning.

Used on Chap. 3: page 38; Chap. 5: page 91

Also known as induction, inductive