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Elements of Information Theory (Wiley Series in Telecommunications)

Elements of Information Theory (Wiley Series in Telecommunications) Cover

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

The latest edition of this classic is updated with new problem sets and material

The Second Edition of this fundamental textbook maintains the book's tradition of clear, thought-provoking instruction. Readers are provided once again with an instructive mix of mathematics, physics, statistics, and information theory.

All the essential topics in information theory are covered in detail, including entropy, data compression, channel capacity, rate distortion, network information theory, and hypothesis testing. The authors provide readers with a solid understanding of the underlying theory and applications. Problem sets and a telegraphic summary at the end of each chapter further assist readers. The historical notes that follow each chapter recap the main points.

The Second Edition features:

  • Chapters reorganized to improve teaching
  • 200 new problems
  • New material on source coding, portfolio theory, and feedback capacity
  • Updated references

Now current and enhanced, the Second Edition of Elements of Information Theoryremains the ideal textbook for upper-level undergraduate and graduate courses in electrical engineering, statistics, and telecommunications.

Book News Annotation:

The authors introduce the basic quantities of entropy, relative entropy, and mutual information and show how they arise as natural answers to questions of data compression, channel capacity, rate distortion, hypothesis testing, information flow in networks, and gambling. Accessible to students of communication theory, computer science, and statistics.
Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Review:

'\"This book is recommended reading, both as a textbook and as a reference.\" (Computing Reviews.com, December 28, 2006) '

Review:

"As expected, the quality of exposition continues to be a high point of the book. Clear explanations, nice graphical illustrations, and illuminating mathematical derivations make the book particularly useful as a textbook on information theory." (Journal of the American Statistical Association, March 2008)

"This book is recommended reading, both as a textbook and as a reference." (Computing Reviews.com, December 28, 2006)

Description:

Includes bibliographical references (p. 510-525) and index.

About the Author

'THOMAS M. COVER, PHD, is Professor in the departments of electrical engineering and statistics, Stanford University. A recipient of the 1991 IEEE Claude E. Shannon Award, Dr. Cover is a past president of the IEEE Information Theory Society, a Fellow of the IEEE and the Institute of Mathematical Statistics, and a member of the National Academy of Engineering and the American Academy of Arts and Science. He has authored more than 100 technical papers and is coeditor of Open Problems in Communication and Computation.

JOY A. THOMAS, PHD, is the Chief Scientist at Stratify, Inc., a Silicon Valley start-up specializing in organizing unstructured information. After receiving his PhD at Stanford, Dr. Thomas spent more than nine years at the IBM T. J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York. Dr. Thomas is a recipient of the IEEE Charles LeGeyt Fortescue Fellowship. '

Table of Contents

Preface to the Second Edition.

Preface to the First Edition.

Acknowledgments for the Second Edition.

Acknowledgments for the First Edition.

1. Introduction and Preview.

1.1 Preview of the Book.

2. Entropy, Relative Entropy, and Mutual Information.

2.1 Entropy.

2.2 Joint Entropy and Conditional Entropy.

2.3 Relative Entropy and Mutual Information.

2.4 Relationship Between Entropy and Mutual Information.

2.5 Chain Rules for Entropy, Relative Entropy, and Mutual Information.

2.6 Jensen’s Inequality and Its Consequences.

2.7 Log Sum Inequality and Its Applications.

2.8 Data-Processing Inequality.

2.9 Sufficient Statistics.

2.10 Fano’s Inequality.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

3. Asymptotic Equipartition Property.

3.1 Asymptotic Equipartition Property Theorem.

3.2 Consequences of the AEP: Data Compression.

3.3 High-Probability Sets and the Typical Set.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

4. Entropy Rates of a Stochastic Process.

4.1 Markov Chains.

4.2 Entropy Rate.

4.3 Example: Entropy Rate of a Random Walk on a Weighted Graph.

4.4 Second Law of Thermodynamics.

4.5 Functions of Markov Chains.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

5. Data Compression.

5.1 Examples of Codes.

5.2 Kraft Inequality.

5.3 Optimal Codes.

5.4 Bounds on the Optimal Code Length.

5.5 Kraft Inequality for Uniquely Decodable Codes.

5.6 Huffman Codes.

5.7 Some Comments on Huffman Codes.

5.8 Optimality of Huffman Codes.

5.9 Shannon–Fano–Elias Coding.

5.10 Competitive Optimality of the Shannon Code.

5.11 Generation of Discrete Distributions from Fair Coins.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

6. Gambling and Data Compression.

6.1 The Horse Race.

6.2 Gambling and Side Information.

6.3 Dependent Horse Races and Entropy Rate.

6.4 The Entropy of English.

6.5 Data Compression and Gambling.

6.6 Gambling Estimate of the Entropy of English.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

7. Channel Capacity.

7.1 Examples of Channel Capacity.

7.2 Symmetric Channels.

7.3 Properties of Channel Capacity.

7.4 Preview of the Channel Coding Theorem.

7.5 Definitions.

7.6 Jointly Typical Sequences.

7.7 Channel Coding Theorem.

7.8 Zero-Error Codes.

7.9 Fano’s Inequality and the Converse to the Coding Theorem.

7.10 Equality in the Converse to the Channel Coding Theorem.

7.11 Hamming Codes.

7.12 Feedback Capacity.

7.13 Source–Channel Separation Theorem.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

8. Differential Entropy.

8.1 Definitions.

8.2 AEP for Continuous Random Variables.

8.3 Relation of Differential Entropy to Discrete Entropy.

8.4 Joint and Conditional Differential Entropy.

8.5 Relative Entropy and Mutual Information.

8.6 Properties of Differential Entropy, Relative Entropy, and Mutual Information.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

9. Gaussian Channel.

9.1 Gaussian Channel: Definitions.

9.2 Converse to the Coding Theorem for Gaussian Channels.

9.3 Bandlimited Channels.

9.4 Parallel Gaussian Channels.

9.5 Channels with Colored Gaussian Noise.

9.6 Gaussian Channels with Feedback.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

10. Rate Distortion Theory.

10.1 Quantization.

10.2 Definitions.

10.3 Calculation of the Rate Distortion Function.

10.4 Converse to the Rate Distortion Theorem.

10.5 Achievability of the Rate Distortion Function.

10.6 Strongly Typical Sequences and Rate Distortion.

10.7 Characterization of the Rate Distortion Function.

10.8 Computation of Channel Capacity and the Rate Distortion Function.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

11. Information Theory and Statistics.

11.1 Method of Types.

11.2 Law of Large Numbers.

11.3 Universal Source Coding.

11.4 Large Deviation Theory.

11.5 Examples of Sanov’s Theorem.

11.6 Conditional Limit Theorem.

11.7 Hypothesis Testing.

11.8 Chernoff–Stein Lemma.

11.9 Chernoff Information.

11.10 Fisher Information and the Cram´er–Rao Inequality.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

12. Maximum Entropy.

12.1 Maximum Entropy Distributions.

12.2 Examples.

12.3 Anomalous Maximum Entropy Problem.

12.4 Spectrum Estimation.

12.5 Entropy Rates of a Gaussian Process.

12.6 Burg’s Maximum Entropy Theorem.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

13. Universal Source Coding.

13.1 Universal Codes and Channel Capacity.

13.2 Universal Coding for Binary Sequences.

13.3 Arithmetic Coding.

13.4 Lempel–Ziv Coding.

13.5 Optimality of Lempel–Ziv Algorithms.

Compression.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

14. Kolmogorov Complexity.

14.1 Models of Computation.

14.2 Kolmogorov Complexity: Definitions and Examples.

14.3 Kolmogorov Complexity and Entropy.

14.4 Kolmogorov Complexity of Integers.

14.5 Algorithmically Random and Incompressible Sequences.

14.6 Universal Probability.

14.7 Kolmogorov complexity.

14.9 Universal Gambling.

14.10 Occam’s Razor.

14.11 Kolmogorov Complexity and Universal Probability.

14.12 Kolmogorov Sufficient Statistic.

14.13 Minimum Description Length Principle.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

15. Network Information Theory.

15.1 Gaussian Multiple-User Channels.

15.2 Jointly Typical Sequences.

15.3 Multiple-Access Channel.

15.4 Encoding of Correlated Sources.

15.5 Duality Between Slepian–Wolf Encoding and Multiple-Access Channels.

15.6 Broadcast Channel.

15.7 Relay Channel.

15.8 Source Coding with Side Information.

15.9 Rate Distortion with Side Information.

15.10 General Multiterminal Networks.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

16. Information Theory and Portfolio Theory.

16.1 The Stock Market: Some Definitions.

16.2 Kuhn–Tucker Characterization of the Log-Optimal Portfolio.

16.3 Asymptotic Optimality of the Log-Optimal Portfolio.

16.4 Side Information and the Growth Rate.

16.5 Investment in Stationary Markets.

16.6 Competitive Optimality of the Log-Optimal Portfolio.

16.7 Universal Portfolios.

16.8 Shannon–McMillan–Breiman Theorem (General AEP).

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

17. Inequalities in Information Theory.

17.1 Basic Inequalities of Information Theory.

17.2 Differential Entropy.

17.3 Bounds on Entropy and Relative Entropy.

17.4 Inequalities for Types.

17.5 Combinatorial Bounds on Entropy.

17.6 Entropy Rates of Subsets.

17.7 Entropy and Fisher Information.

17.8 Entropy Power Inequality and Brunn–Minkowski Inequality.

17.9 Inequalities for Determinants.

17.10 Inequalities for Ratios of Determinants.

Summary.

Problems.

Historical Notes.

Bibliography.

List of Symbols.

Index.

Product Details

ISBN:
9780471062592
Author:
Cover, Thomas M.
Author:
Thomas, Joy A.
Author:
Cover, T. M.
Publisher:
Wiley-Interscience
Location:
New York :
Subject:
Engineering - Electrical & Electronic
Subject:
Telecommunications
Subject:
Information Theory
Subject:
Engineering / Electrical
Copyright:
Edition Number:
99
Series:
Wiley Series in Telecommunications
Series Volume:
9335
Publication Date:
20060718
Binding:
Hardback
Grade Level:
Professional and scholarly
Language:
English
Illustrations:
Yes
Pages:
776
Dimensions:
9.58x6.42x1.27 in. 2.14 lbs.

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