Abbreviation: Nfld
A \emph{neofield} is a structure $\mathbf{F}=\langle F,+,\backslash,/,0,\cdot,1,^{-1}\rangle $ of type $\langle 2,2,2,0,2,0,1\rangle $ such that
$\langle F,+,\backslash,/,0\rangle $ is a loop
$\langle F-\{0\},\cdot,1,^{-1}\rangle$ is a group
$\cdot$ distributes over $+$: $x\cdot(y+z)=x\cdot y+x\cdot z$ and $(x+y)\cdot z=x\cdot z+y\cdot z$
Let $\mathbf{F}$ and $\mathbf{K}$ be neofields. A morphism from $\mathbf{F}$ to $\mathbf{K}$ is a function $h:F\to K$ that is a homomorphism:
$h(x+y)=h(x)+h(y)$, $h(x\backslash y)=h(x)\backslash h(y)$, $h(x/y)=h(x)/h(y)$, $h(0)=0$, $h(x\cdot y)=h(x)\cdot h(y)$, $h(1)=1$
Example 1:
$\begin{array}{lr}
f(1)= &1
f(2)= &
f(3)= &
f(4)= &
f(5)= &
f(6)= &
\end{array}$
Paige L.J., Neofields, Duke Math. J. 16 (1949), 39–60.