Induction
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Induction may refer to:
- Induction (play), an opening scene in a play, notably used in early English plays
- Rite of passage
- Orientation week, an induction program for new students at Universities
- Teacher induction, the support and guidance provided to novice educators in the early stages of their careers
- Induction (teachers), the period of one year following qualification as a teacher in the United Kingdom
In science and physics:
- Inductive reasoning, used in science and the scientific method
- Mathematical induction, a method of proof in the field of mathematics
- Electromagnetic induction in physics and engineering
- Forced induction, with combustion engines, is the use of a gas compressor added to the air intake
In mathematics:
- Mathematical induction, a method of proof in the field of mathematics
- Strong induction, or Complete induction, a variant of mathematical induction
- Transfinite induction, a kind of mathematical induction
- ∈-induction, a kind of transfinite induction
- Structural induction, a generalization of mathematical induction
- 'Statistical induction', also known as inferential statistics
- Induction in representation theory (see induced representation), an operation for obtaining a representation of an object from one of a subobject
In biology and chemistry:
- Inductive effect is the redistribution of electron density through molecular sigma bonds.
- Induction (biology) is the initiation or cause of a change or process in developmental biology
- Induction period - the time interval between the initial cause and the appearance of the first measurable effect
- Enzyme induction and inhibition is a process in which a molecule (e.g. a drug) induces (i.e. initiates or enhances) or inhibits the expression of an enzyme
- Induction (birth), induction of childbirth
- asymmetric induction is the formation of one specific stereoisomer in the presence of a nearby chiral center
- Inductive reasoning aptitude, an aptitude or personality characteristic
- Cancer induction
In philosophy, logic, and computer science:
- Inductive reasoning, used in science and the scientific method
- Backward induction in game theory and economics
- Concept learning is the induction of a concept (category) from observations
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