Schema

The word schema comes from the Greek word "σχήμα" (skhēma), which means shape or more generally plan. While a scheme refers to a loosely described plan, a schema usually refers to specific, well documented, and consistent plans.

The Greek plural is "σχήματα" (skhēmata). In English literature, both schemas and schemata are used as the plural form of "schema".

The word schema can represent any of several different things:

See also scheme, schematic.
 * In psychology or the theory of cognitive development, a schema is a mental set or representation. The mental representation of a concept can be assimilated to match an existing schema (representing the concept according to a preexisting schema), or accommodation (modifying an existing schema to adapt to the environment).
 * In formal logic, a rule (usually recursively definable) describing a set (usually infinite) of statements. For example, the axiom schema of replacement is a schema of axioms in axiomatic set theory.
 * A minimal and specialized ontology, i.e., a list of questions, answers to which describe what exists in the world. This includes only what is required for some narrow range of actions; e.g., a library card catalogue schema asks librarians only to provide enough information about the book to help library users decide if they want to browse through it, and if so, how to find it. By contrast, an ontology enables a much broader range of actions, e.g., all of those normally associated with a working trade or profession.
 * Prior knowledge.
 * In Kant's Philosophy, a schema is the referencing of a category to a sense impression through time.
 * In computer science, a schema is a model
 * An XML schema provides a means for defining the structure, content and, to some extent, the semantics of XML documents.
 * A description of the structure of a database or a directory; or: a defined part of a database. See software architecture, conceptual schema, Sowa's conceptual graph, semantic network, Berners-Lee's semantic web, Active Directory, data model
 * Part of a formal specification written in the Z specification language.
 * In genetic algorithms or genetic programming A set of programs or bit strings that have some genotypic similarity. Usually the set is specified by defining a similarity template which members of the set must match. The template specifies the fixed part, which the programs must match, and the variable part. Don't-care symbols are used to define the variable part. In tree schemata, both the content and the shape of the tree must be considered. See also : Defining Length, Disruption, Effective fitness, Length of a schema, Wild-card symbol


 * The Schema and the Great Schema (Μεγαλοσχήμος) are part of the monastic attire of advanced monks and nuns in the Eastern Orthodox Church.

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