Difference between revisions of "Information Theory"
From LNTwww
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | Since the early beginnings of communications as an engineering discipline, many engineers and mathematicians have sought | + | Since the early beginnings of communications as an engineering discipline, many engineers and mathematicians have sought |
− | *to find a quantitative measure of the $\rm | + | *to find a quantitative measure of the $\rm information$ $($in general: "the knowledge of something"$)$ |
− | *contained in a $\rm message$ (here we understand "a collection of symbols and/or states"). | + | |
+ | *contained in a $\rm message$ $($here we understand "a collection of symbols and/or states"$)$. | ||
The (abstract) information is communicated by the (concrete) message and can be seen as an interpretation of a message. | The (abstract) information is communicated by the (concrete) message and can be seen as an interpretation of a message. | ||
− | [https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_Shannon Claude Elwood Shannon] succeeded in 1948 in establishing a consistent theory of the information content of messages, which was revolutionary in its time and created a new, still highly topical field of science: | + | :[https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claude_Shannon '''Claude Elwood Shannon'''] succeeded in 1948 in establishing a consistent theory of the information content of messages, <br>which was revolutionary in its time and created a new, still highly topical field of science: <br>The theory named after him: $\text{Shannon's Information Theory}$. |
− | + | ||
− | + | Here first a '''content overview''' on the basis of the '''four main chapters''' with a total of '''13 individual chapters''': | |
− | |||
− | |||
Revision as of 16:54, 31 December 2022
Since the early beginnings of communications as an engineering discipline, many engineers and mathematicians have sought
- to find a quantitative measure of the $\rm information$ $($in general: "the knowledge of something"$)$
- contained in a $\rm message$ $($here we understand "a collection of symbols and/or states"$)$.
The (abstract) information is communicated by the (concrete) message and can be seen as an interpretation of a message.
- Claude Elwood Shannon succeeded in 1948 in establishing a consistent theory of the information content of messages,
which was revolutionary in its time and created a new, still highly topical field of science:
The theory named after him: $\text{Shannon's Information Theory}$.
Here first a content overview on the basis of the four main chapters with a total of 13 individual chapters:
Contents
In addition to these theory pages, we also offer exercises and multimedia modules that could help to clarify the teaching material:
$\text{Other links:}$
$(1)$ $\text{Bibliography to the book}$
$(2)$ $\text{General notes about the book}$ (authors, other participants, materials as a starting point for the book, list of sources)