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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. 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 ...

  3. 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
  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. mental contribution to a fourth. Claude Shannon solved the fundamental problem of making information reliable. Alan Turing demonstrated and defined the universality of com-putation and was influenced by an early lecture by von Neumann. Building on Turing and Shannon, von Neumann created the von Neumann machine, which became—and

  6. 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.

  7. 14 de jun. de 2014 · Claude Shannon 1. In late 1945, as World War II was drawing to a close, John von Neumann began assembling a small group of engineers at the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) at Princeton to design, build, and program an electronic digital computer.