Shannon

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Definition
  1. Proper noun:
    • Claude Elwood Shannon: An American electrical engineer and mathematician, widely recognized as the founder of information theory. His groundbreaking work established the mathematical foundations for digital communication and data compression.
Usage Examples
  • Proper noun:
    • Claude Shannon's 1948 paper, "A Mathematical Theory of Communication," is a foundational text for the digital age.
    • The Shannon entropy formula is a key concept in information theory.
Advanced Usage
  • "Shannon capacity": In information theory, the maximum rate at which information can be reliably transmitted over a communication channel.
    • The engineer calculated the Shannon capacity of the noisy channel.
  • "Shannon entropy": A measure of the uncertainty or randomness in a set of data, central to information theory.
    • The algorithm uses Shannon entropy to determine the optimal encoding scheme.
Variants and Related Words
  • Shannon-Weaver model: A linear model of communication that identifies key components like information source, transmitter, channel, receiver, and destination.
    • The Shannon-Weaver model is often introduced in basic communication courses.
  • Shannon-Fano coding: An early method for lossless data compression.
    • Shannon-Fano coding was a precursor to more efficient algorithms like Huffman coding.
Synonyms
  • Father of Information Theory: A common epithet for Claude Shannon.
  • Claude E. Shannon: The full name.
Related Phrases
  • "Shannon's theorem": Also known as the noisy-channel coding theorem, it defines the maximum possible efficiency of error-correcting methods.
    • Shannon's theorem proves that error-free transmission is possible up to a certain rate.
Related Idioms

(This term, as a proper noun referring to a person, does not have associated idioms in common usage.)

Noun
  1. United States electrical engineer who pioneered mathematical communication theory (1916-2001)