04240nam 22007335 450 99650856990331620230522105133.03-662-65875-510.1007/978-3-662-65875-8(CKB)5580000000496805(DE-He213)978-3-662-65875-8(PPN)267807546(MiAaPQ)EBC31005839(Au-PeEL)EBL31005839(EXLCZ)99558000000049680520230102d2022 u| 0engurnn#008mamaatxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierNovelty, Information and Surprise[electronic resource] /by Günther Palm2nd ed. 2022.Berlin, Heidelberg :Springer Berlin Heidelberg :Imprint: Springer,2022.1 online resource (XX, 293 p. 1 illus.)Information Science and Statistics,2197-41283-662-65874-7 Surprise and Information of Descriptions: Prerequisites -- Improbability and Novelty of Descriptions -- Conditional Novelty and Information -- Coding and Information Transmission: On Guessing and Coding -- Information Transmission -- Information Rate and Channel Capacity: Stationary Processes and Information Rate -- Channel Capacity -- Shannon's Theorem -- Repertoires and Covers: Repertoires and Descriptions -- Novelty, Information and Surprise of Repertoires -- Conditioning, Mutual Information and Information Gain -- Information, Novelty and Surprise in Science: Information, Novelty and Surprise in Brain Theory -- Surprise from Repetitions and Combination of Surprises -- Entropy in Physics -- Generalized Information Theory: Order- and Lattice-Structures -- Three Orderings on Repertoires -- Information Theory on Lattices of Covers -- Bibliography -- Index.This revised edition offers an approach to information theory that is more general than the classical approach of Shannon. Classically, information is defined for an alphabet of symbols or for a set of mutually exclusive propositions (a partition of the probability space Ω) with corresponding probabilities adding up to 1. The new definition is given for an arbitrary cover of Ω, i.e. for a set of possibly overlapping propositions. The generalized information concept is called novelty and it is accompanied by two concepts derived from it, designated as information and surprise, which describe "opposite" versions of novelty, information being related more to classical information theory and surprise being related more to the classical concept of statistical significance. In the discussion of these three concepts and their interrelations several properties or classes of covers are defined, which turn out to be lattices. The book also presents applications of these concepts, mostly in statistics and in neuroscience.Information Science and Statistics,2197-4128StatisticsBiomathematicsBiometryPattern recognition systemsStatistical Theory and MethodsMathematical and Computational BiologyBiostatisticsAutomated Pattern RecognitionTeoria de la informacióthubBiomatemàticathubBiometriathubReconeixement de formes (Informàtica)thubLlibres electrònicsthubStatistics.Biomathematics.Biometry.Pattern recognition systems.Statistical Theory and Methods.Mathematical and Computational Biology.Biostatistics.Automated Pattern Recognition.Teoria de la informacióBiomatemàticaBiometriaReconeixement de formes (Informàtica)519.5Palm Güntherauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut347025MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK996508569903316Novelty, Information and Surprise3091296UNISA