Difference between revisions of "Charles Niessen"

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(Created page with "'''Home * People * Charles Niessen''' '''Charles W. (Chuck) Niessen''',<br/> an American electrical engineer, computer scientist and retired researcher and...")
 
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=Selected Publications=
 
=Selected Publications=
<ref>[https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/author/37430323100 IEEE Xlopre - C. W. Niessen]</ref>
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<ref>[https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/author/37430323100 IEEE Xplore - C. W. Niessen]</ref>
 
* [[Charles Niessen|Charles W. Niessen]]  ('''1967'''). ''[https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1447574 Automatic channel equalization algorithm]''.  [[IEEE#Proceedings|Proceedings of the IEEE]], Vol. 55, No. 5
 
* [[Charles Niessen|Charles W. Niessen]]  ('''1967'''). ''[https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1447574 Automatic channel equalization algorithm]''.  [[IEEE#Proceedings|Proceedings of the IEEE]], Vol. 55, No. 5
 
* [[Charles Niessen|Charles W. Niessen]], [https://www.semanticscholar.org/author/Donald-K.-Willim/70024808 Donald K. Willim] ('''1970'''). ''[https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1090375 Adaptive Equalizer for Pulse Transmission]''.  [[IEEE#TOCOM|IEEE Transactions on Communication Technology]], Vol. 18, No. 4
 
* [[Charles Niessen|Charles W. Niessen]], [https://www.semanticscholar.org/author/Donald-K.-Willim/70024808 Donald K. Willim] ('''1970'''). ''[https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/1090375 Adaptive Equalizer for Pulse Transmission]''.  [[IEEE#TOCOM|IEEE Transactions on Communication Technology]], Vol. 18, No. 4

Revision as of 23:16, 8 July 2019

Home * People * Charles Niessen

Charles W. (Chuck) Niessen,
an American electrical engineer, computer scientist and retired researcher and associate head, Communications and Information Technology Division at Lincoln Laboratory [1] at Massachusetts Institute of Technology [2] . In the early 60s, already at MIT, Charles Niessen was member of the "the chess group" supervised by John McCarthy, along with Alan Kotok, Elwyn Berlekamp (1960), Michael Lieberman and Robert A. Wagner. They wrote the chess program for the IBM 7090 [3] [4], which later evolved to the Kotok-McCarthy-Chess Program.

Selected Publications

[5]

References

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