Brief summary
From the earliest beginnings of message transmission as an engineering discipline, it has been the endeavour of many engineers and mathematicians to find a quantitative measure for the
- contained $\rm information$ $($quite generally: "the knowledge about something"$)$
- in a $\rm message$ $($here we mean "a collection of symbols and/or states"$)$.
The $($abstract$)$ information is communicated by the $($concrete$)$ message and can be conceived as the interpretation of a message.
Claude Elwood Shannon succeeded in 1948, in establishing a consistent theory about the information content of messages, which was revolutionary in its time and created a new, still highly topical field of science: »Shannon's information theory« named after him.»
This is what the fourth book in the $\rm LNTww$ series deals with, in particular:
- Entropy of discrete-value sources with and withott memory, as well as natural message sources: Definition, meaning and computational possibilities.
- Source coding and data compression, especially the "Lempel–Ziv–Welch method" and "Huffman's entropy encoding".
- Various entropies of two-dimensional discrete-value random quantities. Mutual information and channel capacity. Application to digital signal transmission.
- Discrete-value information theory. Differential entropy. AWGN channel capacity with continuous-valued as well as discrete-valued input.
⇒ First a »content overview« on the basis of the »four main chapters« with a total of »13 individual chapters« and »106 sections«:
Content
Exercises and multimedia
In addition to these theory pages, we also offer exercises and multimedia modules on this topic, which could help to clarify the teaching material:
$(1)$ $\text{Exercises}$
$(2)$ $\text{Learning videos}$
$(3)$ $\text{Applets}$
Further links
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)