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  • × subject_ss:"Information theory"
  1. ¬The mathematical theory of information (2002) 0.01
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    Series
    Kluwer international series in engineering and computer science ; SECS 684
  2. Völz, H.: Information verstehen : Facetten eines neuen Zugangs zur Welt (1994) 0.01
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    Series
    Informatik & Computer
  3. Fuchs, W.R.: Denkmaschinen : mit einem Geleitwort von Professor Dr. Yehoshua Bar-Hillel (1968) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Ein Buch aus der Anfangszeit der Computer mit vielen Passagen einer semantischen Informationstheorie
  4. Beierle, C.; Kern-Isberner, G.: Methoden wissensbasierter Systeme : Grundlagen, Algorithmen, Anwendungen (2008) 0.01
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    LCSH
    Computer science
    Subject
    Computer science
  5. Badia, A.: ¬The information manifold : why computers cannot solve algorithmic bias and fake news (2019) 0.00
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    Abstract
    An argument that information exists at different levels of analysis-syntactic, semantic, and pragmatic-and an exploration of the implications. Although this is the Information Age, there is no universal agreement about what information really is. Different disciplines view information differently; engineers, computer scientists, economists, linguists, and philosophers all take varying and apparently disconnected approaches. In this book, Antonio Badia distinguishes four levels of analysis brought to bear on information: syntactic, semantic, pragmatic, and network-based. Badia explains each of these theoretical approaches in turn, discussing, among other topics, theories of Claude Shannon and Andrey Kolomogorov, Fred Dretske's description of information flow, and ideas on receiver impact and informational interactions. Badia argues that all these theories describe the same phenomena from different perspectives, each one narrower than the previous one. The syntactic approach is the more general one, but it fails to specify when information is meaningful to an agent, which is the focus of the semantic and pragmatic approaches. The network-based approach, meanwhile, provides a framework to understand information use among agents. Badia then explores the consequences of understanding information as existing at several levels. Humans live at the semantic and pragmatic level (and at the network level as a society), computers at the syntactic level. This sheds light on some recent issues, including "fake news" (computers cannot tell whether a statement is true or not, because truth is a semantic notion) and "algorithmic bias" (a pragmatic, not syntactic concern). Humans, not computers, the book argues, have the ability to solve these issues.

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