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{{Short description|Form of pattern recognition}}
'''Syntactic pattern recognition''' or '''structural pattern recognition''' is a form of [[pattern recognition]], in which each object can be represented by a variable-[[cardinality]] set of symbolic, [[nominal data|nominal]] features. This allows for representing pattern structures, taking into account more complex interrelationships between attributes than is possible in the case of flat, numerical [[feature vector]]s of fixed dimensionality, that are used in [[statistical classification]].▼
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▲'''Syntactic pattern recognition''', or '''structural pattern recognition''', is a form of [[pattern recognition]]
Syntactic pattern recognition can be used instead of statistical pattern recognition if
An example of this would be
A second way to represent relations are [[Graph (discrete mathematics)|graphs]], where nodes are
Typically, patterns are constructed from simpler sub
Structural methods provide descriptions of items, which may be useful in their own right. For example, syntactic pattern recognition can be used to
== See also==
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{{cite book | last= Bunke | first = Horst | title = Structural and syntactic pattern recognition, Chen, Pau & Wang (Eds.) Handbook of pattern recognition & computer vision | publisher = World Scientific | pages = 163–209 | year = 1993 | ISBN = 981-02-1136-8 }}
{{cite book | last= Flasinski| first = Mariusz | title = Syntactic pattern recognition | publisher = World Scientific | year = 2019 | ISBN = 978-981-3278-46-2 }}
[[Category:Classification algorithms]]
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