Inductive bias refers to your suspicion that if the sun has risen for the last billion days in a row, then it may rise tomorrow as well. Since it is logically possible that the laws of physics will arbitrarily cease to work and that the sun will not rise tomorrow, coming to this conclusion requires an inductively biased prior.
K. Lavangnananda. 2004 International Conference on Computational
Intelligence for Modelling, Control and Automation -
Cimca'2004, page 279--290. Gold Coast, Australia, (12-14 July 2004)
L. Hamel. GECCO 2002: Proceedings of the Genetic and
Evolutionary Computation Conference, page 748--755. New York, Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, (9-13 July 2002)
G. Kokai. 7th WSEAS International Multiconference on Circuits,
Systems, Communications and Computers (WSEAS CSCC), Rethymno, Crete Island, Greece, (July 2002)
E. Kitzelmann, U. Schmid, M. Mühlpfordt, and F. Wysotzki. AISC '02/Calculemus '02: Proceedings of the Joint International Conferences on Artificial Intelligence, Automated Reasoning, and Symbolic Computation, volume 2385 of LNCS, page 337--354. Springer-Verlag, (2002)
P. Reiser, and P. Riddle. Proceedings of the Congress on Evolutionary
Computation, 2, page 1338--1346. Mayflower Hotel, Washington D.C., USA, IEEE Press, (6-9 July 1999)