Hagen Soltau, Lidia Mangu, et al.
ASRU 2011
A new definition of program-size complexity is made. H(A,B/C,D) is defined to be the size in bits of the shortest self-delimiting program for calculating strings A and B if one is given a minimal-size self-delimiting program for calculating strings C and D. This differs from previous definitions: (1) programs are required to be self-delimiting, i.e. no program is a prefix of another, and (2) instead of being given C and D directly, one is given a program for calculating them that is minimal in size. Unlike previous definitions, this one has precisely the formal properties of the entropy concept of information theory. For example, H(A,B) = H(A) + H(B/A) -0(1). Also, if a program of length k is assigned measure 2 -k, then H(A) = -log2 (the probability that the standard universal computer will calculate A) -{- 0(1). © 1975, ACM. All rights reserved.
Hagen Soltau, Lidia Mangu, et al.
ASRU 2011
Junchen Jiang, Yue Zhu
OSSNA 2025
Arthur Nádas
IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks
Daniel Karl I. Weidele, Hendrik Strobelt, et al.
SysML 2019