Английская Википедия:Ingo Althöfer

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Файл:Althöfer,Ingo 2008.jpeg
Althöfer in 2008

Ingo Althöfer (born 1961)Шаблон:R is a German mathematician at the University of Jena, where he holds the chair of operations research.Шаблон:R

Althöfer earned his PhD in 1986 at Bielefeld University. His dissertation, Asymptotic Properties of Certain Competition Systems in Artificial Intelligence and Ecology, was supervised by Rudolf Ahlswede.Шаблон:R

Contributions

Topics in Althöfer's professional research include the realization of finite metric spaces by shortest path metrics in graphs and their approximation by greedy spanners,Шаблон:R algorithmic game theory and combinatorial game theory,Шаблон:R and heuristic search algorithms for optimization problems.

Althöfer is also known for his inventions of games and puzzles, including dice game EinStein würfelt nicht!,Шаблон:R for his experiments with self-assembly of Lego building blocks by running them through a washing machine,Шаблон:R and for his innovations in computer-human chess playing. In the 1990s he tested his "drei hirn" ["3-brains"] system, in which a human decides between the choices of two computer chess players, against strong human players including grandmaster David Bronstein and woman grandmaster Sofia Polgar.Шаблон:R In 2004 he and Timo Klaustermeyer introduced freestyle chess, a style of human chess playing allowing arbitrary consultation with computers or other people.Шаблон:R

Books

He has also self-published other books through his personal publishing company, 3-Hirn Verlag, and is one of the editors of the multi-volume book series Rudolf Ahlswede’s Lectures on Information Theory.

Selected Papers

Selected Board Games

References

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External links

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