- Tue May 15, 2018 4:35 pm
#45688
Setup and Rule Diagram Explanation
This is a Grouping Game: Defined-Fixed, Unbalanced: Overloaded, Numerical Distribution.
Aside from the first rule that serves to better establish the distribution, all of the rules are conditional. In games that rely solely on conditional rules, you are generally not able to make definitive inferences about where variables must be placed, but rather you must understand the relationships between certain variables and how they may or may not be grouped with one another. That means that a traditional diagram where definitive inferences are represented on the base is not going to occur. Instead, we must set the base of five slots, diagram the rules and make conditional inferences, and then proceed to attack the questions based on that information.
With exactly one student selected, there are only two possible parent-teacher distributions, namely fixed 2-2 and 1-3 distributions (3-1 is impossible because F and G cannot be selected together, and 0-4 is impossible because U and W cannot be selected together). Thus, there are only two possible distributions in the game:
However, these distributions only play a role in the last two questions.
This is a Grouping Game: Defined-Fixed, Unbalanced: Overloaded, Numerical Distribution.
Aside from the first rule that serves to better establish the distribution, all of the rules are conditional. In games that rely solely on conditional rules, you are generally not able to make definitive inferences about where variables must be placed, but rather you must understand the relationships between certain variables and how they may or may not be grouped with one another. That means that a traditional diagram where definitive inferences are represented on the base is not going to occur. Instead, we must set the base of five slots, diagram the rules and make conditional inferences, and then proceed to attack the questions based on that information.
With exactly one student selected, there are only two possible parent-teacher distributions, namely fixed 2-2 and 1-3 distributions (3-1 is impossible because F and G cannot be selected together, and 0-4 is impossible because U and W cannot be selected together). Thus, there are only two possible distributions in the game:
However, these distributions only play a role in the last two questions.
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