His mentors in mathematics were Warren Weaver and Edward Van Vleck.
The term Statistical Semantics was first used by Warren Weaver in his well-known paper on machine translation.
While molecular biology was established in the 1930s, the term was coined by Warren Weaver in 1938.
Warren Weaver pointed out that, the word information in communication theory is not related to what you do say, but to what you could say.
The field of "machine translation" appeared in Warren Weaver's Memorandum on Translation (1949).
Warren Weaver wrote an important memorandum "Translation" in 1949.
The first proposals for machine translation using computers were put forward by Warren Weaver, a researcher at the Rockefeller Foundation, in his July, 1949 memorandum.
Warren Weaver, in his famous 1949 memorandum on translation, first introduced the problem in a computational context.
While true for telegraphy, Claude Shannon and Warren Weaver used it as a nomenclature referring to any set of alternative states, behaviors, etc.
Social scientists Claude Shannon and Warren Weaver structured this model based on the following elements: