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  1. Disciplinary Matrices in Cybernetics and Systems Science; Wiener and McCulloch awards; The American Society for Cybernetics was founded in 1964 in Washington, DC to encourage new developments in cybernetics as an interdisciplinary field with Warren McCulloch as first elected president of the ASC.

  2. Margaret Mead Prize. Warren McCulloch Award. Heinz von Foerster Award. The ASC awards were restructured in 2024 and now comprise: Norbert Wiener Medal is awarded for high achievement in transdisciplinary research in cybernetics and systems.

  3. American: Citizenship: United States: Alma mater: Yale University Columbia University: Known for: Heterarchy: Awards: Wiener Gold Medal (1968) Scientific career: Fields: Cybernetics Artificial neural network Neuropsychology Biophysics Computer Science: Institutions: Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Yale University ...

  4. The Wiener Medal will be awarded to people who have made a major and prolonged contribution to cybernetics, in any number of ways: for instance, through original work; and through extensive support. The Wiener medal acknowledges achievement. ASC Award: Warren McCulloch Award.

  5. Norbert Wiener. Norbert Wiener (November 26, 1894 – March 18, 1964) was an American computer scientist, mathematician and philosopher. He became a professor of mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ( MIT ). A child prodigy, Wiener later became an early researcher in stochastic and mathematical noise processes, contributing ...

  6. First edition. Cybernetics: Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine is a book written by Norbert Wiener and published in 1948. [1] It is the first public usage of the term "cybernetics" to refer to self-regulating mechanisms. The book laid the theoretical foundation for servomechanisms (whether electrical, mechanical or ...

  7. 12 de may. de 2020 · Wiener first reported these plans in 1955, in a lecture on ‘Time and Organization’ that he gave at the University of Southampton, and then again in 1961, in one of the two chapters he appended to the second edition of Cybernetics, ‘Brain Waves and Self-Organizing Systems’.