Admissibility
Encyclopedia
Admissibility may refer to:
- Admissible evidenceAdmissible evidenceAdmissible evidence, in a court of law, is any testimonial, documentary, or tangible evidence that may be introduced to a factfinder—usually a judge or jury—in order to establish or to bolster a point put forth by a party to the proceeding...
, evidence which may be introduced in a court of law. - Admissible decision ruleAdmissible decision ruleIn statistical decision theory, an admissible decision rule is a rule for making a decision such that there isn't any other rule that is always "better" than it, in a specific sense defined below....
, in statistical decision theory, a rule which is never dominated. - Admissible ruleAdmissible ruleIn logic, a rule of inference is admissible in a formal system if the set of theorems of the system does not change when that rule is added to the existing rules of the system. In other words, every formula that can be derived using that rule is already derivable without that rule, so, in a sense,...
, in logic, a type of rule of inferenceRule of inferenceIn logic, a rule of inference, inference rule, or transformation rule is the act of drawing a conclusion based on the form of premises interpreted as a function which takes premises, analyses their syntax, and returns a conclusion...
. - Admissible heuristicAdmissible heuristicIn computer science, specifically in algorithms related to Pathfinding, a heuristic function is said to be admissible if it is no more than the lowest-cost path to the goal. In other words, a heuristic is admissible if it never overestimates the cost of reaching the goal...
, in computer science, is a heuristic which is no more than the lowest-cost path to the goal.