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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 · 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.

    • Heinz Mühlenbein
    • 2009
  3. 9 de mar. de 2023 · We explain why both Turing and von Neumann saw the problem of developing the electronic computer as a problem in logic, and we describe their joint journey from logic to electronic computation.

  4. 31 de out. de 2022 · Introduction. This article concerns the history of philosophy and of logic, in particular the penetration of certain logico-philosophical ideas into computing. We demonstrate the profound impact that those migrating ideas had on the development of the modern computer—and so, ultimately, upon philosophy itself.

  5. 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.

  6. 14 de mar. de 2024 · Introduction. In the annals of mathematical and technological progress, some names stand out particularly. John von Neumann is one of them. His contributions have not only shaped the foundations of contemporary artificial intelligence (AI) but also the way we think about computations, algorithms, and the digital world.

  7. von Neumann articulates his model of computation and goes on to define the essential equivalence of the human brain and a computer. He acknowledges the apparently deep structural di√erences, but by applying Turing’s princi-ple of the equivalence of all computation, von Neumann envisions a strategy to understand the brain’s methods as