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47 results for "Grover's algorithm" — page 2 of 3
ZC_3_19 — Digital Divide and Information Inequality
The digital divide — the gap between populations with effective access to digital and information technologies and those without — has evolved from a simple binary (connected vs. unconnected) into a multi-dimensional fra
ZC_3_18 — Surveillance Capitalism and the Digital Economy
Surveillance capitalism — a term coined by Shoshana Zuboff (Harvard Business School, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, 2019) — describes an economic system in which human experience is unilaterally claimed as free raw
ZC_5_20 — Post-Truth & Misinformation
"Post-truth" — named Oxford Dictionaries' Word of the Year in 2016 and defined as "relating to circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal be
ZC_5_16 — Computational Social Science: Big Data, Agent-Based Models, and Digital Behavioral Analysis
Computational social science (CSS) is the interdisciplinary field that applies computational methods — machine learning, natural language processing, network analysis, agent-based modeling, and large-scale data mining —
ZC_5_01 — Digital Anthropology and Online Communities
Digital anthropology — the study of human social life as it is mediated, shaped, and transformed by digital technologies — has emerged as one of the most rapidly growing subfields in the social sciences as online life ha
G_3_11 — Information Theory and Biological Complexity
Information theory, founded by Claude Shannon (1948, A Mathematical Theory of Communication), provides a rigorous mathematical framework for quantifying information content, communication capacity, and complexity — conce
ZD_1_15 — Quantum Information Theory: Entanglement, Quantum Computing, and Information Bounds
Quantum information theory — the study of how information is encoded, processed, communicated, and protected using quantum mechanical systems — represents one of the most transformative intellectual developments at the i
ZD_1_11 — Turing Machine, Computability, and the Limits of Computation
The Turing machine — a mathematical model of computation defined by Alan Turing in his 1936 paper "On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem" — is the foundational formalism of theoretical co
ZD_1_05 — Computational Complexity: P vs NP and the Limits of Efficient Computation
Computational complexity theory classifies problems not by whether they can be solved, but by how efficiently they can be solved — and its central open question, P vs NP, is one of the seven Clay Millennium Prize Problem
ZD_5_17 — Quantum Computing: Qubits, Gates & Quantum Information Processing
Quantum computing harnesses quantum mechanical phenomena — superposition, entanglement, and interference — to perform computations fundamentally impossible for classical machines. First proposed by Richard Feynman in 198
ZD_2_09 — Recommender Systems: Collaborative Filtering, Content-Based, and Hybrid Approaches
Recommender systems (RecSys) are algorithms and architectures that predict user preferences and suggest relevant items — products, movies, music, news articles, social media posts, job listings, potential partners — from
H_4_01 — Propaganda, Information Control, and the Manufacture of Consent
The systematic manipulation of public belief is as old as civilization itself. Egyptian pharaohs chiseled out predecessors' names (damnatio memoriae), Roman emperors staged bread and circuses, and Chinese imperial histor
P_1_15 — Philosophy of Information: Floridi, Digital Ethics, and the Infosphere
The philosophy of information (PI) is a relatively young branch of philosophy that investigates the conceptual nature and basic principles of information, including its dynamics (computation, information flow), its utili
ZE_3_09 — Ethics of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Consciousness
AI ethics examines the moral dimensions of creating systems that can reason, learn, and act autonomously. The field emerged from theoretical foundations (Turing's "Computing Machinery and Intelligence," 1950) but became
ZE_3_04 — Ethics of Technology and Surveillance
Surveillance ethics addresses the moral implications of monitoring individuals and populations through technological means and the tension between security and privacy. The field draws on a long philosophical lineage — J
ZB_1_03 — Artificial Life, Emergence, and Digital Evolution
Artificial life (ALife) is an interdisciplinary field studying life-as-it-could-be through computational, chemical, and robotic systems that exhibit lifelike behaviors — self-replication, evolution, emergence, and adapta
S_1_09 — Quantum Cryptography and Post-Quantum Security
Quantum cryptography and post-quantum cryptography address the existential threat that quantum computers pose to current encryption. The threat: large-scale quantum computers running Shor's algorithm (Peter Shor, 1994) c
S_1_04 — Quantum Computing and Information Processing Frontiers
Quantum computing exploits the principles of quantum mechanics — superposition (a qubit existing in multiple states simultaneously), entanglement (correlated states across distance), and interference (constructive/destru
ZA_5_21 — Quantum Computing: Architectures and Milestones
Quantum computing exploits the quantum mechanical phenomena of superposition, entanglement, and interference to perform calculations that are intractable for classical computers. The concept was proposed by Richard Feynm
V_1_14 — Mathematical Constants: e, φ, √2, and Beyond
Mathematical constants are fixed numerical values that arise naturally from mathematical structures — appearing independently across diverse areas from geometry and analysis to probability and physics. The most famous, $
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