entity

Bernard Widrow

Facts (10)

Sources
Cybernetics 2.0 - Springer Nature link.springer.com Springer 10 facts
claimBernard Widrow received a Doctor of Science degree from MIT in 1956 and was appointed as a professor at MIT.
claimBernard Widrow and his student Ted Hoff invented the Least Mean Square (LMS) algorithm in 1959.
claimBernard Widrow was awarded the IEEE Alexander Graham Bell Medal in 1986 and the Benjamin Franklin Medal for Electrical Engineering in 2001.
claimBernard Widrow is a Life Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineering (IEEE).
claimBernard Widrow's research focuses on adaptive signal processing, adaptive control systems, adaptive neural networks, human memory, cybernetics, and human-like memory for computers.
claimSince 2010, Bernard Widrow has expanded his research interests to include living neural networks and biological adaptivity.
claimBernard Widrow moved to Stanford University in 1959.
claimBernard Widrow was inducted into the US National Academy of Engineering in 1995 and the Silicon Valley Engineering Hall of Fame in 1999.
claimBernard Widrow is a Professor Emeritus in the Electrical Engineering Department at Stanford University.
claimBernard Widrow has been active in the field of artificial neural networks since 1957.