Since the early beginnings of communications as an engineering discipline, many engineers and mathematicians have sought to find a quantitative measure of
- the Information (in general: "the knowledge of something") contained in a 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 Shannon's Information Theory.
The subject matter corresponds to a lecture with two semester hours per week (SWS) and one additional SWS exercise.
Here is a table of contents based on 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:
More links:
Other Links:
(1) Bibliography to the book
(2) Notes on the authors and materials used in the preparation of the book
(1) Recommended literature for the book
(2) General notes about the book (Authors, other participants, materials as a starting point for the book, list of sources)