Bernard Widrow
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. The LMS algorithm led to the ADALINE and MADALINE artificial neural networks and to the backpropagation technique. He made other fundamental contributions to the development of signal processing in the fields of geophysics, adaptive antennas, and adaptive filtering. A summary of his work is.He is the namesake of "Uncle Bernie's Rule": the training sample size should be 10 times the number of weights in a network. Provided by Wikipedia
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1by Hyatt Moore, Eileen Leary, Seo-Young Lee, Oscar Carrillo, Robin Stubbs, Paul Peppard, Terry Young, Bernard Widrow, Emmanuel MignotGet full text
Published 2014-01-01
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2by Hyatt Moore, Eileen Leary, Seo-Young Lee, Oscar Carrillo, Robin Stubbs, Paul Peppard, Terry Young, Bernard Widrow, Emmanuel MignotGet full text
Published 2015-01-01
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3by Jaffe, Richard CharlesOther Authors: “...Bernard Widrow....”
Published 2005
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