The most commonly used example refers to the famous mathematician Paul Erdős. If you are Paul Erdős, then your Erdős number is 0. If you've collaborated on a paper with Paul Erdős, then your Erdős number is 1. If you've collaborated on a paper with someone whose Erdős number is X, then your Erdős number is X+1. You get the idea.
Based on the search results, I discovered that my Erdős number is 5:
- Vidali, G., Pirronello, V., Biham, O., Liu, C., & Roser, J. 1997, in 191st AAS Meeting, #32.04, Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 29, 1258
- Biham, O., Mukamel, D., & Shtrikman, S. 1988, in Introduction to Quasicrystals, Ed. M. Jarìc (Boston, Academic Press), 171
- Godrèche, C., Luck, J. M., Evans, M. R., Mukamel, D., Sandow, S., & Speer, E. R. 1995, J. Phys. A., 28, 6039
- Hell, P. & Speer, E. R. 1984, North-Holland Math. Stud., 87, 165
- Erdős, P., Hell, P., & Winkler, P. 1989, Ann. Discrete Math., 41, 117
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