During and after WWII digital technology became a key subject for research e.g. for radar, missile and gun fire control and encryption. In the 1950s scientists were trying various methods around the world to reduce errors in transmissions using code and to synchronise the received data. The problem being transmission noise, time delay and accuracy of received data. In 1948 the mathematician
Claude Shannon published an article '"A Mathematical Theory of Communication"' which laid out the basic elements of
communication. In it he discusses the problems of
noise. Shannon realised that "communication signals must be treated in isolation from the meaning of the messages that they transmit" and laid down the theoretical foundations for
digital circuits. “The problem of communication was primarily viewed as a deterministic signal-reconstruction problem: how to transform a received signal, distorted by the physical medium, to reconstruct the original as accurately as possible” or see original. In 1948 electronics was advancing fast but the problem of receiving accurate data had not. This is demonstrated in an article on Frequency Shift Keying published by Wireless World. In 1953 R. H. Barker published a paper demonstrating how this problem to synchronise the data in transmissions could be overcome. The process is described in "Group Synchronisation of Binary Digital Systems". When used in data transmissions the receiver can read and if necessary correct the data to be error free by autocorrelation and
cross correlation by achieving zero autocorrelation except at the incidence position using specific codes. The Barker sequence process at the time produced great interest, particularly in the United States as his method solved the problem, initiating a huge leap forward in
telecommunications. The process has remained at the forefront of radar,
data transmission and telemetry and is now a very well known industry standard, still being researched in many technology fields. "In a pioneering examination of group synchronization of binary digital systems, Barker reasoned it would be desirable to start with an autocorrelation function having very low sidelobes. The governing code pattern, he insisted, could be unambiguously recognized by the
detector. To assure this premise, Barker contended the selected pattern should be sufficiently unlikely to occur by chance, in a random series of noise generated bits." ==Definition==