J. M. R. Parrondo, also Juan Manuel Rodríguez Parrondo, is a Spanish physicist best known for the strikingly counterintuitive Parrondo's paradox, where switching between losing strategies can in some cases win. In 1996, he developed games of chance, now called Parrondo's games, that exhibited this apparently paradoxical phenomenon.
| Property | Value |
| dbpedia-owl:Person/almaMater
| |
| dbpedia-owl:Person/birthDate
| |
| dbpedia-owl:Person/birthPlace
| |
| dbpedia-owl:Person/influenced
| |
| dbpedia-owl:Person/influencedBy
| |
| dbpedia-owl:Person/knownFor
| |
| dbpedia-owl:Scientist/academicAdvisor
| |
| dbpedia-owl:Scientist/doctoralAdvisor
| |
| dbpedia-owl:academicAdvisor
| |
| dbpedia-owl:almaMater
| |
| dbpedia-owl:birthDate
| |
| dbpedia-owl:birthPlace
| |
| dbpedia-owl:doctoralAdvisor
| |
| dbpedia-owl:influenced
| |
| dbpedia-owl:influencedBy
| |
| dbpedia-owl:knownFor
| |
| dbpedia-owl:thumbnail
| |
| dbpprop:abstract
|
- J. M. R. Parrondo, also Juan Manuel Rodríguez Parrondo, is a Spanish physicist best known for the strikingly counterintuitive Parrondo's paradox, where switching between losing strategies can in some cases win. In 1996, he developed games of chance, now called Parrondo's games, that exhibited this apparently paradoxical phenomenon. Much of his work touches on thermodynamics and information, and he is known for contributions to the theory of noised induced phase transitions, Brownian ratchets, physics of information, and statistical mechanics.
- J. M. R. Parrondo, también conocido como Juan Manuel Rodríguez Parrondo, es un físico español, conocido por la notablemente contraintuitiva paradoja de Parrondo, en la que la elección de estrategias perdedoras puede conducir a una victoria. En 1996, desarrolló los juegos de oportunidad, que exhibieron este fenómeno aparentemente paradójico. Gran parte de su trabajo afecta a la termodinámica y la información y es conocido por contribuciones a la teoría los cambios de estado inducidos por ruido, al trinquete browniano, a la física de la información y a la mecánica estadística.
|
| dbpprop:academicAdvisors
| |
| dbpprop:almaMater
| |
| dbpprop:birthDate
| |
| dbpprop:birthPlace
| |
| dbpprop:boxWidth
| |
| dbpprop:caption
|
- Juan M. R. Parrondo, photographed in 2003 by Derek Abbott.
|
| dbpprop:doctoralStudents
|
- Javier BucetaBorja JiménezLuis Dinis
|
| dbpprop:fields
| |
| dbpprop:hasPhotoCollection
| |
| dbpprop:imageSize
| |
| dbpprop:influenced
| |
| dbpprop:influences
| |
| dbpprop:knownFor
| |
| dbpprop:name
| |
| dbpprop:nationality
| |
| dbpprop:reference
| |
| dbpprop:residence
| |
| dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
| dbpprop:wordnet_type
| |
| dbpprop:workplaces
| |
| rdf:type
| |
| rdfs:comment
|
- J. M. R. Parrondo, also Juan Manuel Rodríguez Parrondo, is a Spanish physicist best known for the strikingly counterintuitive Parrondo's paradox, where switching between losing strategies can in some cases win. In 1996, he developed games of chance, now called Parrondo's games, that exhibited this apparently paradoxical phenomenon.
- J. M. R. Parrondo, también conocido como Juan Manuel Rodríguez Parrondo, es un físico español, conocido por la notablemente contraintuitiva paradoja de Parrondo, en la que la elección de estrategias perdedoras puede conducir a una victoria. En 1996, desarrolló los juegos de oportunidad, que exhibieron este fenómeno aparentemente paradójico.
|
| rdfs:label
|
- J. M. R. Parrondo
- J. M. R. Parrondo
|
| owl:sameAs
| |
| skos:subject
| |
| foaf:depiction
| |
| foaf:name
| |
| foaf:page
| |
| is dbpprop:redirect
of | |
| is owl:sameAs
of | |