Etymology: [ hyu-'ris-tik ] (adjective.) 1821. German heuristisch, from New Latin heuristicus, from Greek heuriskein to discover; akin to Old Irish fo-fúair he found.
in a heuristic manner, in a heuristic manner, by means of heuristic processes (investigative approach to problem solving), Relating to general strategies or methods for solving problems, A heuristic method, Of a method that is not certain to arrive at an optimal solution, The art of applying heuristic methods, -An approach to systems or problem-solving using rules based on business practice, experience, or expert intuition rather than quantitative optimization, Relating to or using a problem-solving technique in which the most appropriate solution of several found by alternative methods is selected at successive stages of a program for use in the next step of the program, Heuristic is here used in the sense of stimulating interest as a means of further investigation, learning through trial and error, rather than the formal computational sense sometimes used in mathematics and computer programming The term is applied here to the World Builders Paradigm in its technical definition, a systematized trial and error process that finds satisfactory, but not optimal, solutions for large, complex, poorly defined problems, referring to manual methods; generally accepted practice sometimes referring to a trial and error process (see deterministic), a commonsense rule (or set of rules) intended to increase the probability of solving some problem, An unproved rule of thumb lacking a formal proof but based on experience and sometimes useful in solving a problem, A rule of thumb or guideline used in situations where no hard and fast rules apply An empirical rule, or educated guess based upon past experiences, Serving to discover or find out, especially, of a method that is not certain to arrive at an optimal solution, Problem analysis based on informal judgment or experience versus data manipulation, a commonsense rule (or set of rules) intended to increase the probability of solving some problem of or relating to or using a general formulation that serves to guide investigation, serving to discover, investigative, of or relating to or using a general formulation that serves to guide investigation, A method for discovery, a procedure for solving a problem, a technique that operates as a vehicle for creative formulation, A rule of thumb or guideline (as opposed to an invariant procedure) Heuristics may not always achieve the desired outcome, but are extremely valuable to problem-solving processes, A guideline or rule of thumb that is normally effective in dealing with a given situation, A method based on empirical information that has no explicit rationalization, A rule of thumb that describes how things are commonly understood, without resorting to deeper or more formal knowledge See also: Model-based reasoning, In mathematical programming, this usually means a procedure that seeks a solution but does not guarantee it will find one It is often used in contrast to an algorithm, so branch and bound would not be considered a heuristic in this sense In AI, however, a heuristic is an algorithm (with some guarantees) that uses a heuristic function to estimate the "cost" of branching from a given node to a leaf of the search tree, A rule of thumb or guideline (as opposed to an invariant procedure) Heuristics may not always achieve the desired outcome, but they are extremely valuable to problem-solving processes (Wilson), heuristic method, investigative approach to problem solving, A heuristic method of learning involves discovery and problem-solving, using reasoning and past experience, A heuristic computer program uses rules based on previous experience in order to solve a problem, rather than using a mathematical procedure. see also algorithm, (see also textbook glossary) A simple procedure that may provide a solution to a problem with less effort than using an algorithm, Having to do with a rule of thumb, providing aid or direction in the solution of a problem but otherwise unjustified or incapable of justification, "Any principle or device that contributes to a reduction in the average search for a solution " (Newell, Shaw, and Simon, 1962) A method for attempting the solution of a problem or a rule or item of information used in such a process (The Compact Oxford English Dictionary, 1999), This is an algorithm that uses a short-cut or educated guess in order to reduce the amount of time necessary to execute an algorithm or method, A self learning or adaptive process that may help in the solution of a problem, but that does not guarantee the best solution, or any solution [DEC], Pertaining to experimental, especially trial-and-error, methods of problem solving Note: The resulting solution may not be the most desirable solution to the problem, The first meaning is any discovery process based on experience, An algorithm which takes as input certain information about a domain and calculates which action an agent can perform that is of greatest benefit to it Determining the overall benefit of an action depends on a comparison of the effects of the candidate actions on the state of the game world, Pertaining to exploratory methods of problem solving in which solutions are arrived at by an interactive, self-learning method,
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in a heuristic manner
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in a heuristic manner, by means of heuristic processes (investigative approach to problem solving)
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heuristic
Relating to general strategies or methods for solving problems
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heuristic
A heuristic method
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heuristic
Of a method that is not certain to arrive at an optimal solution
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heuristic
The art of applying heuristic methods
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heuristic
-An approach to systems or problem-solving using rules based on business practice, experience, or expert intuition rather than quantitative optimization
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heuristic
Relating to or using a problem-solving technique in which the most appropriate solution of several found by alternative methods is selected at successive stages of a program for use in the next step of the program
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heuristic
Heuristic is here used in the sense of stimulating interest as a means of further investigation, learning through trial and error, rather than the formal computational sense sometimes used in mathematics and computer programming The term is applied here to the World Builders Paradigm in its technical definition
ts
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heuristic
a systematized trial and error process that finds satisfactory, but not optimal, solutions for large, complex, poorly defined problems
ts
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heuristic
referring to manual methods; generally accepted practice sometimes referring to a trial and error process (see deterministic)
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heuristic
a commonsense rule (or set of rules) intended to increase the probability of solving some problem
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heuristic
An unproved rule of thumb lacking a formal proof but based on experience and sometimes useful in solving a problem
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heuristic
A rule of thumb or guideline used in situations where no hard and fast rules apply An empirical rule, or educated guess based upon past experiences
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heuristic
Serving to discover or find out
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heuristic
especially, of a method that is not certain to arrive at an optimal solution
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heuristic
Problem analysis based on informal judgment or experience versus data manipulation Ticaret
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heuristic
a commonsense rule (or set of rules) intended to increase the probability of solving some problem of or relating to or using a general formulation that serves to guide investigation
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heuristic
serving to discover, investigative sıfat
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heuristic
of or relating to or using a general formulation that serves to guide investigation
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heuristic
A method for discovery, a procedure for solving a problem, a technique that operates as a vehicle for creative formulation
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heuristic
A rule of thumb or guideline (as opposed to an invariant procedure) Heuristics may not always achieve the desired outcome, but are extremely valuable to problem-solving processes
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heuristic
A guideline or rule of thumb that is normally effective in dealing with a given situation
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heuristic
A method based on empirical information that has no explicit rationalization
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heuristic
A rule of thumb that describes how things are commonly understood, without resorting to deeper or more formal knowledge See also: Model-based reasoning
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heuristic
In mathematical programming, this usually means a procedure that seeks a solution but does not guarantee it will find one It is often used in contrast to an algorithm, so branch and bound would not be considered a heuristic in this sense In AI, however, a heuristic is an algorithm (with some guarantees) that uses a heuristic function to estimate the "cost" of branching from a given node to a leaf of the search tree
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heuristic
A rule of thumb or guideline (as opposed to an invariant procedure) Heuristics may not always achieve the desired outcome, but they are extremely valuable to problem-solving processes (Wilson)
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heuristic
heuristic method, investigative approach to problem solving isim
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heuristic
A heuristic method of learning involves discovery and problem-solving, using reasoning and past experience
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heuristic
A heuristic computer program uses rules based on previous experience in order to solve a problem, rather than using a mathematical procedure. see also algorithm
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heuristic
(see also textbook glossary) A simple procedure that may provide a solution to a problem with less effort than using an algorithm
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heuristic
Having to do with a rule of thumb
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heuristic
providing aid or direction in the solution of a problem but otherwise unjustified or incapable of justification
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heuristic
"Any principle or device that contributes to a reduction in the average search for a solution " (Newell, Shaw, and Simon, 1962) A method for attempting the solution of a problem or a rule or item of information used in such a process (The Compact Oxford English Dictionary, 1999)
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heuristic
This is an algorithm that uses a short-cut or educated guess in order to reduce the amount of time necessary to execute an algorithm or method
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heuristic
A self learning or adaptive process that may help in the solution of a problem, but that does not guarantee the best solution, or any solution [DEC]
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heuristic
Pertaining to experimental, especially trial-and-error, methods of problem solving Note: The resulting solution may not be the most desirable solution to the problem
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heuristic
The first meaning is any discovery process based on experience
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heuristic
An algorithm which takes as input certain information about a domain and calculates which action an agent can perform that is of greatest benefit to it Determining the overall benefit of an action depends on a comparison of the effects of the candidate actions on the state of the game world
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heuristic
Pertaining to exploratory methods of problem solving in which solutions are arrived at by an interactive, self-learning method
Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada heuristically kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. heuristically kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan heuristically kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.