DocumentCode
769117
Title
Systems and Information
Author
Ashby, W.Ross
Author_Institution
University of Illinois, Urbaiia, Ill.
fYear
1963
Firstpage
94
Lastpage
97
Abstract
Information theory is essentially a method for retaining some knowledge of cause-effect relations when the causes, and their effects, become so many that detailed knowledge of each pair is abandoned, while an over-all check is retained that at least the number of causes is sufficient to account for the number of effects. Communication theory has been severely restricted by its original concentration on the ergodic and stationary. Adaptive systems, however, by leaving bad ways of behaving and changing permanently to other (and better) ways of behaving are necessarily nonergodic and nonstationary. The methods of uncertainty analysis (McGill and Garner) seem appropriate here. These methods give a new precision to such questions as: What is a ´system´?-a question that must be answered with precision if a proper theory and dynamics of systems in general is to be built. When systems become complex, their theory is practically that of how to simplify them.
Keywords
Adaptive systems; Computer industry; Costs; Information processing; Logic; Military aircraft; Military computing; Organisms; Proteins; Uncertainty;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Military Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0536-1559
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TME.1963.4323056
Filename
4323056
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