John von Neumann, (December 28, 1903 – February 8, 1957)
a Hungarian-born American mathematician. Beside his contributions in a vast range of fields, he was a pioneer in game-theory and computer science and specially noted for the computer architecture with a single storage for instructions and data.
Alexander Reinefeld (2005). Die Entwicklung der Spielprogrammierung: Von John von Neumann bis zu den hochparallelen Schachmaschinen. slides as pdf, Themen der Informatik im historischen Kontext Ringvorlesung an der HU Berlin, 02.06.2005 (English paper, German title)
^Alexander Reinefeld (2005). Die Entwicklung der Spielprogrammierung: Von John von Neumann bis zu den hochparallelen Schachmaschinen. slides as pdf, Themen der Informatik im historischen Kontext Ringvorlesung an der HU Berlin, 02.06.2005 (English paper, German title)
a Hungarian-born American mathematician. Beside his contributions in a vast range of fields, he was a pioneer in game-theory and computer science and specially noted for the computer architecture with a single storage for instructions and data.
John von Neumann classified chess as two-player zero-sum game with perfect information and proved the minimax theorem in 1928. Since 1943 von Neumann was member of the Manhattan Project at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. In the early fifties von Neumann developed the MANIAC I computer. A group around Stanislaw Ulam, Paul Stein, Mark Wells and John Pasta developed the MANIAC I chess program, which could play Los Alamos chess [1] [2].
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See also
Selected Publications
1920 ...
1930 ...
1940 ...
1950 ...
Harold W. Kuhn, Albert W. Tucker (eds) (1950). Contributions to the Theory of Games I. Princeton University Press
Harold W. Kuhn, Albert W. Tucker (eds) (1953). Contributions to the Theory of Games II. Princeton University Press
Harold W. Kuhn, Albert W. Tucker (eds) (1953). Contributions to the Theory of Games II. Princeton University Press
1955 ...
Claude Shannon, John McCarthy (eds.) (1956). Automata Studies. Annals of Mathematics Studies, No. 34, pp. 43–98, pdf
1960 ...
2000 ...
2010 ...
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