Yahoo Malaysia Web Search

Search results

  1. Bernard Widrow (born December 24, 1929) is a U.S. professor of electrical engineering at Stanford University. He is the co-inventor of the Widrow–Hoff least mean squares filter (LMS) adaptive algorithm with his then doctoral student Ted Hoff.

  2. Bernard Widrow is a pioneer in adaptive signal processing, neural networks, and human memory. He has received many awards and honors, including the IEEE Neural Network Pioneer Medal and the Alexander Graham Bell Medal.

  3. Bernard Widrow is a renowned electrical engineer and inventor of the adaptive filter and the backpropagation algorithm. He has received numerous awards and honors, including the IEEE Neural Network Pioneer Medal and the Alexander Graham Bell Medal.

  4. Bernard Widrow is a pioneer in adaptive signal processing, neural networks, and human memory. He teaches courses on adaptive signal processing and quantization noise at Stanford University.

  5. Bernard (Bernie) Widrow was born on 24 December 1929 in Norwich, Connecticut. As a graduate student, Bernie was a research assistant in the MIT Digital Computer Lab which ultimately became a founding division of Lincoln Lab.

  6. Bernard Widrow's 93 research works with 4,949 citations and 21,539 reads, including: The Odyssey to Next-generation Computers: Cognitive Computers (κC) Inspired by the Brain and Powered by ...

  7. Dr. Widrow is a pioneer in adaptive signal processing, neural networks, and human memory. He is affiliated with Bio-X and the Information Systems Laboratory at Stanford University.