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Suppose, as a rough estimate, we say that there are 20 distinct geons used for object recognition; and each geon can come in 5 classifiable qualitative sizes (tiny, small, moderate, large, huge); and a pair of geons can be placed in 10 distinct qualitative relations (geon A on top of geon B; geon A to upper left of geon B; geon A to the left of geon B; and so forth).How many distinct two-geon objects do we have in the space described above?

User Kalanidhi
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1 Answer

3 votes

Answer:

49500

Explanation:

According to the Question,

  • Given That, Suppose, as a rough estimate, we say that there are 20 distinct geons used for object recognition, and each geon can come in 5 classifiable qualitative sizes (tiny, small, moderate, large, huge). and a pair of geons can be placed in 10 distinct qualitative relations.

We have, District geons = 20 , District Size = 5

  • So, The Number Of Ways A geon can be selected 20 x 5 = 100

Now, We choose 2 geons From 100 Geons and arrange them in 10 district relations.

  • So, The number of district two-geon object

=
\left[\begin{array}{ccc}100\\2\end{array}\right] * 10

= (100 × 99)/2 × 10

= 49.5×100×10 ⇒ 49500

User Jermin Bazazian
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