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  1. Procuraremos demonstrar que von Neumann teve contribuições importantes nas áreas de arquitetura de computadores, princípios de programação, análise de algoritmos, análise numérica, computação científica, teoria dos autômatos, redes neurais, tolerância a falhas, sendo o verdadeiro fundador de algumas delas.

    • Tomasz Kowaltowski
    • 1996
  2. 1 de mar. de 2019 · Abstract. In this chapter fundamental problems of collaborative computational intelligence are discussed. The problems are distilled from the seminal research of Alan Turing and John von Neumann. For Turing the creation of machines with human-like intelligence was only a question of programming time.

    • Heinz Mühlenbein
    • 2009
  3. 9 de mar. de 2023 · This article provides a detailed analysis of the transfer of a key cluster of ideas from mathematical logic to computing. We demonstrate the impact of certain of Turing’s logico-philosophical ...

  4. capitals mostly, Claude Elwood Shannon figures alongside other luminaries such as John von Neumann or Alan Turing. As the “father” of information theory, the math-ematician and engineer Shannon, who spent most of his career at Bell Labs, has become lionized and consecrated for both computer scientists and communications engineers.

  5. 10.1 Shannon for Dummies Before we can understand Von Neumann entropy and its relevance to quantum infor-mation, we should discuss Shannon entropy and its relevance to classical information. Claude Shannon established the two core results of classical information theory in his landmark 1948 paper. The two central problems that he solved were: 1.

    • 635KB
    • 96
  6. Claude Shannon was a contemporary of the originators of computers such as John von Neumann, Howard Aiken, and Alan Turing, working in the field of communications at the Bell Telephone Laboratories during World War II.

  7. The first is von Neumann's formal letter of reference dated June 1, 1937, supporting Turing's application for a Procter Fellowship at Princeton for the year 1937-38. The application was successful. The point of interest is that von Neumann made no reference at all to Turing's On computable numbers , which had been published some six months earlier.