<p><P>This book presents the scientific outcome of a joint effort of the computer science departments of the universities of Berne, Fribourg and NeuchΓ’tel.<BR>Within an initiative devoted to "Information and Knowledge", these research groups collaborated over several years on issues of logic, probab
Formal Theories of Information: From Shannon to Semantic Information Theory and General Concepts of Information
β Scribed by Giovanni Sommaruga (auth.), Giovanni Sommaruga (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 274
- Series
- Lecture Notes in Computer Science 5363 : Theoretical Computer Science and General Issues
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Subjects
Coding and Information Theory; Mathematical Logic and Formal Languages; Discrete Mathematics in Computer Science; Theory of Computation; Mathematical Logic and Foundations
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><P>This book presents the scientific outcome of a joint effort of the computer science departments of the universities of Berne, Fribourg and NeuchΓ’tel.<BR>Within an initiative devoted to "Information and Knowledge", these research groups collaborated over several years on issues of logic, probab
<p><P>This book presents the scientific outcome of a joint effort of the computer science departments of the universities of Berne, Fribourg and NeuchΓ’tel.<BR>Within an initiative devoted to "Information and Knowledge", these research groups collaborated over several years on issues of logic, probab
<p><span>Starting with the Shannon-Wiener approach to mathematical information theory, allowing a mathematical "measurement" of an amount of information, the book begins by defining the terms message and information and axiomatically assigning an amount of information to a probability. The second pa
<p><span>Starting with the Shannon-Wiener approach to mathematical information theory, allowing a mathematical "measurement" of an amount of information, the book begins by defining the terms message and information and axiomatically assigning an amount of information to a probability. The second pa
The principle aim of this book is to provide readers with a comprehensive and in-depth overview of GIT research to create a unified framework of the technology's diverse uncertainty theories. Through the use of examples and exercises, the author discusses probability theory, fuzzy set theory, eviden