Storing and Transmitting Data von Rudolf Ahlswede | Rudolf Ahlswede’s Lectures on Information Theory 1 | ISBN 9783319352381

Storing and Transmitting Data

Rudolf Ahlswede’s Lectures on Information Theory 1

von Rudolf Ahlswede, herausgegeben von Alexander Ahlswede, Ingo Althöfer, Christian Deppe und Ulrich Tamm
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinRudolf Ahlswede
Herausgegeben vonAlexander Ahlswede
Herausgegeben vonIngo Althöfer
Herausgegeben vonChristian Deppe
Herausgegeben vonUlrich Tamm
Buchcover Storing and Transmitting Data | Rudolf Ahlswede | EAN 9783319352381 | ISBN 3-319-35238-5 | ISBN 978-3-319-35238-1

Storing and Transmitting Data

Rudolf Ahlswede’s Lectures on Information Theory 1

von Rudolf Ahlswede, herausgegeben von Alexander Ahlswede, Ingo Althöfer, Christian Deppe und Ulrich Tamm
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinRudolf Ahlswede
Herausgegeben vonAlexander Ahlswede
Herausgegeben vonIngo Althöfer
Herausgegeben vonChristian Deppe
Herausgegeben vonUlrich Tamm
The volume “Storing and Transmitting Data” is based on Rudolf Ahlswede's introductory course on „Information Theory I“ and presents an introduction to Shannon Theory. Readers, familiar or unfamiliar with the technical intricacies of Information Theory, will benefit considerably from working through the book; especially Chapter VI with its lively comments and uncensored insider views from the world of science and research offers informative and revealing insights. This is the first of several volumes that will serve as a collected research documentation of Rudolf Ahlswede’s lectures on information theory. Each volume includes comments from an invited well-known expert. Holger Boche contributed his insights in the supplement of the present volume. Classical information processing concerns the main tasks of gaining knowledge, storage, transmitting and hiding data. The first task is the prime goal of Statistics. For the two next, Shannon presented an impressive mathematical theorycalled Information Theory, which he based on probabilistic models. The theory largely involves the concept of codes with small error probabilities in spite of noise in the transmission, which is modeled by channels. The lectures presented in this work are suitable for graduate students in Mathematics, and also in Theoretical Computer Science, Physics, and Electrical Engineering with background in basic Mathematics. The lectures can be used as the basis for courses or to supplement courses in many ways. Ph. D. students will also find research problems, often with conjectures, that offer potential subjects for a thesis. More advanced researchers may find the basis of entire research programs.