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Articles 1321 - 1350 of 3840
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Ceg 402/602-01: Introduction To Computer Communication, Bin Wang
Ceg 402/602-01: Introduction To Computer Communication, Bin Wang
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course provides an introduction to basic concepts of communication networks, different types of networks, protocols over different layers, and network applications through lectures, labs, homework, and reading on relevant materials. You will
•Understand networking principles, protocols, and technologies.
•Understand some design and performance issues involved in providing a network service.
•Acquire background for supporting e-commerce, e-government, and e-education.
•Gain hands-on experience with programming techniques for network protocols.
•Obtain background for original research in computer networks.
Ceg 433/633-01: Operating Systems, Thomas Wischgoll
Ceg 433/633-01: Operating Systems, Thomas Wischgoll
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
By the end of this quarter, you should be able to apply the learned concepts to the following:
• Develop, test and debug programs in Unix.
• Improve the performance of programs by tuning virtual memory usage, and file io.
• Design and construct device drivers for Unix.
• Design and build newer file systems for any OS.
During the course we will discuss topics from the following areas:
• Operating system structures
• Operating system Interfaces
• Process management and scheduling
• Interprocess communication
• File systems
• Memory management
Ceg 453/653-01: Embedded Systems, Jack Jean
Ceg 453/653-01: Embedded Systems, Jack Jean
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
No abstract provided.
Ceg 724-01: Computer Vision I, Arthur A. Goshtasby
Ceg 724-01: Computer Vision I, Arthur A. Goshtasby
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course covers basic algorithms for low-level and mid-level vision. The algorithm; deal with edge detection and image segmentation, feature detection and matching, and image alignment. Also covered in the course are structure from motion, dense motion estimation, and stereo depth percepti011
Ceg 702-01: Advanced Communication Networks, Bin Wang
Ceg 702-01: Advanced Communication Networks, Bin Wang
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This is a graduate level course on advanced computer communication and networking technologies. The course involves both a reading/lecture/discussion component and a project component. We will read papers on various aspects of advanced computer networking: LAN/WAN technologies, congestion/flow control, self-similar traffic analysis, queuing theory, link scheduling, routing, internetworking, multicast, wireless technologies, quality of services, and peer-to-peer networks. Various technical and research issues involved will be studied in depth.
Ceg 476/676-01: Computer Graphics I, Thomas Wischgoll
Ceg 476/676-01: Computer Graphics I, Thomas Wischgoll
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
By the end of this quarter, you will have learnt techniques for constructing 2-D and 3-D objects as well as manipulating and rendering the objects using OpenGL.
Ceg 770-01: Computer Engineering Mathematics, Jack Jean
Ceg 770-01: Computer Engineering Mathematics, Jack Jean
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
No abstract provided.
Ceg 2350: Os Concepts And Usage, Prabhaker Mateti
Ceg 2350: Os Concepts And Usage, Prabhaker Mateti
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Introduction to Linux and Windows systems. GUT and Windowing Systems. Files and Directories. Ownership and Sharing. Programs and Processes. System calls, Libraries. Loading. Dynamic linking. Command Line Shells. Scripting languages. Regular expressions. Clients and Servers. Web browser clients and servers. Secure shell, sftp. SSL/TSL. HTTPS. System Administration. 4 credit hours. 3 hours lectures, 2 hours labs. Prerequisites: CS 240 or CS 220 or equivalent.
Sempush: Privacy-Aware And Scalable Broadcasting For Semantic Microblogging, Pavan Kapanipathi, Julia Anaya, Alexandre Passant
Sempush: Privacy-Aware And Scalable Broadcasting For Semantic Microblogging, Pavan Kapanipathi, Julia Anaya, Alexandre Passant
Kno.e.sis Publications
Users of traditional microblogging platforms such as Twitter face drawbacks in terms of (1) Privacy of status updates as a followee - reaching undesired people (2) Information overload as a follower - receiving uninteresting microposts from followees. In this paper we demonstrate distributed and user-controlled dissemination of microposts using SMOB (semantic microblogging framework) and Semantic Hub (privacy-aware implementation of PuSH3 protocol) . The approach leverages users' Social Graph to dynamically create group of followers who are eligible to receive micropost. The restrictions to create the groups are provided by the followee based on the hastags in the micropost. Both SMOB …
Semantic Annotation And Search For Resources In The Next Generation Web With Sa-Rest, Ajith H. Ranabahu, Amit P. Sheth, Maryam Panahiazar, Sanjaya Wijeratne
Semantic Annotation And Search For Resources In The Next Generation Web With Sa-Rest, Ajith H. Ranabahu, Amit P. Sheth, Maryam Panahiazar, Sanjaya Wijeratne
Kno.e.sis Publications
SA-REST, the W3C member submission, can be used for supporting a wide variety of Plain Old Semantic HTML (POSH) annotation capabilities on any type of Web resource. Kino framework and tools provide support of capabilities to realize SA-RESTs promised value. These tools include (a) a browser-plugin to support annotation of a Web resource (including services) with respect to an ontology, domain model or vocabulary, (b) an annotation aware indexing engine and (c) faceted search and selection of the Web resources. At one end of the spectrum, we present KinoE (aka Kino for Enterprise) which uses NCBO formal ontologies and …
Cs 784: Programming Languages, Prabhaker Mateti
Cs 784: Programming Languages, Prabhaker Mateti
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Programming paradigms and concepts for high level programming languages. Techniques for formal specification. 4.000 Credit hours. Prerequisites: CS 480/680
Cs 705: Introduction To Data Mining, Guozhu Dong
Cs 705: Introduction To Data Mining, Guozhu Dong
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Data mining is concerned with the extraction of novel and useful knowledge from large amounts of data. This course introduces and studies the fundamental concepts, issues, tasks and techniques of data mining. Topics include data preparation and feature selection, association rules, classification, clustering,
evaluation and validation, scalability, mining of spatial/text/sequence/graph/time-series etc data, privacy, data mining applications, and other topics of interest. 3 hours lecture, 2 hours lab.
Cs 480/680: Comparative Languages, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan
Cs 480/680: Comparative Languages, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course will introduce fundamental concepts and paradigms underlying the design of modern programming languages. For concreteness, we study the details of an object-oriented language (e.g. Java), and a functional language (e.g., Scheme). The overall goal is to enable comparison and evaluation of existing languages. The programming assignments will be coded in Java and in Scheme.
Cs 405/605: Introduction To Database Management Systems, Soon M. Chung
Cs 405/605: Introduction To Database Management Systems, Soon M. Chung
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Survey of logical and physical aspects of database management systems. Entity Relationship, relational, object-oriented models for databases are presented. Physical implementation methods are discussed.
Cs 141: Computer Programming I, Vanessa Starkey
Cs 141: Computer Programming I, Vanessa Starkey
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Introduction to use of computers as a problem-solving tool. Examples from and applications to a broad range of problems. Methodology for algorithm design and for structured modular implementation is stressed. Three hours lecture, two hours lab.
Ceg 760-01: Advanced Software Computer Engineering, Thomas C. Hartrum
Ceg 760-01: Advanced Software Computer Engineering, Thomas C. Hartrum
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course covers advanced topics in software engineering. Aspects of problem specification, design, verification, and evaluation are discussed. We will focus on design methods, including software patterns and software architecture, plus
some advanced topics involving forma] methods of software specification or evaluation using software metrics. Students will participate in team projects to apply the methods discussed.
Ceg 498-01: Team Projects I And Ii, John C. Gallagher
Ceg 498-01: Team Projects I And Ii, John C. Gallagher
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
CEG 498 (Team Projects I and II) is a summative computer engineering design project course that builds upon previous engineering, science, mathematics and communications course work. CEG 498 projects are a minimum of two quarters in length and must be completed in groups of at least three students. Projects are selected under the guidance of the course instructor and are tailored to both student interest and formal classroom preparation. Students are evaluated both on their individual contributions as recorded in a graded engineering journals and on the quality of their collective efforts as reflected in group generated products.
Ceg 460/660-01: Introduction To Software Computer Engineering, Thomas C. Hartrum
Ceg 460/660-01: Introduction To Software Computer Engineering, Thomas C. Hartrum
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course is concerned with the techniques of designing and constructing large programs. Some of the required basic concepts necessarily have to be developed using small programs as examples. To this extent, we also study
programming-in-the-small. The overall objectives are to present an overview of issues in the development of software, to discuss terminology, to illustrate via examp le case studies, and to give sufficiently detailed advice on how to develop quality software. Hands-on experience is emphasized through the use of homework and a class project.
Ceg 436-01: Mobile Computing, Prabhaker Mateti
Ceg 436-01: Mobile Computing, Prabhaker Mateti
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Study networking protocol and system design in mobile computing. Focus on concepts, architecture, design, and performance evaluation of mobile computing principles, protocol; and applications, including: wireless TCP, Mobile IP, ad hoc routing, agent techniques, etc.
Ceg 420/620-01: Computer Architecture, Jack Jean
Ceg 420/620-01: Computer Architecture, Jack Jean
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
No abstract provided.
Ceg 361/561-01: Introduction To Software Testing, John A. Reisner
Ceg 361/561-01: Introduction To Software Testing, John A. Reisner
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course covers software testing strategies, along with established best practices, so students team how to test their software in a complete and systematic (vice ad-hoc) manner. Particular attention is paid to planning, writing, and executing software tests, along with associated documentation, (i.e., a software test plan), which includes documented results. Various projects are assigned, designed to illustrate various challenges associated with software testing, and to reinforce the strategies and techniques used to overcome these challenges.
Ceg 233: Linux And Windows, Prabhaker Mateti
Ceg 233: Linux And Windows, Prabhaker Mateti
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Introduction to Linux and Windows systems. GUI and Windowing Systems. Files and Directories. Ownership and Sharing. Programs and Processes. System calls, Libraries. Loading. Dynamic linking. Command Line Shells. Scripting languages. Regular expressions. Clients and Servers. Web browser clients and servers. Secure shell, sftp. SSL/TSL. HTTPS. System Administration. 4 credit hours. 3 hours lectures, 2 hours labs.
A Domain Specific Language For Enterprise Grade Cloud-Mobile Hybrid Applications, Ajith H. Ranabahu, E. Michael Maximilien, Amit P. Sheth, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan
A Domain Specific Language For Enterprise Grade Cloud-Mobile Hybrid Applications, Ajith H. Ranabahu, E. Michael Maximilien, Amit P. Sheth, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan
Kno.e.sis Publications
Cloud computing has changed the technology landscape by offering flexible and economical computing resources to the masses. However, vendor lock-in makes the migration of applications and data across clouds an expensive proposition. The lock-in is especially serious when considering the new technology trend of combining cloud with mobile devices.
In this paper, we present a domain specific language (DSL) that is purposely created for generating hybrid applications spanning across mobile devices as well as computing clouds. We propose a model-driven development process that makes use of a DSL to provide sufficient programming abstractions over both cloud and mobile features. We …
Personalized Filtering Of The Twitter Stream, Pavan Kapanipathi, Fabrizio Orlandi, Amit P. Sheth, Alexandre Passant
Personalized Filtering Of The Twitter Stream, Pavan Kapanipathi, Fabrizio Orlandi, Amit P. Sheth, Alexandre Passant
Kno.e.sis Publications
With the rapid growth in users on social networks, there is a corresponding increase in user-generated content, in turn resulting in information overload. On Twitter, for example, users tend to receive uninterested information due to their non-overlapping interests from the people whom they follow. In this paper we present a Semantic Web approach to filter public tweets matching interests from personalized user profiles. Our approach includes automatic generation of multi-domain and personalized user profiles, filtering Twitter stream based on the generated profiles and delivering them in real-time. Given that users interests and personalization needs change with time, we also discuss …
Semantic Computing In Real-World: Vertical And Horizontal Application Within Enterprise And On The Web, Amit P. Sheth
Semantic Computing In Real-World: Vertical And Horizontal Application Within Enterprise And On The Web, Amit P. Sheth
Kno.e.sis Publications
No abstract provided.
The Constructions Of Almost Binary Sequence Pairs And Binary Sequence Pairs With Three-Level Autocorrelation, Xiuping Peng, Chengqian Xu, Guang Li, Krishnasamy T. Arasu
The Constructions Of Almost Binary Sequence Pairs And Binary Sequence Pairs With Three-Level Autocorrelation, Xiuping Peng, Chengqian Xu, Guang Li, Krishnasamy T. Arasu
Mathematics and Statistics Faculty Publications
In this letter, a new class of almost binary sequence pairs with a single zero element and three autocorrelation values is presented. The new almost binary sequence pairs are based on cyclic difference sets and difference set pairs. By applying the method to the binary sequence pairs, new binary sequence pairs with three-level autocorrelation are constructed. It is shown that new sequence pairs from our constructions are balanced or almost balanced and have optimal three-level autocorrelation when the characteristic sequences or sequence pairs of difference sets or difference set pairs are balanced or almost balanced and have optimal autocorrelations.
Self-Compensation In Semiconductors: The Zn Vacancy In Ga-Doped Zno, David C. Look, K. D. Leedy, L. Vines, B. G. Svensson, A. Zubiaga, F. Tuomisto, Daniel R. Doutt, L. J. Brillson
Self-Compensation In Semiconductors: The Zn Vacancy In Ga-Doped Zno, David C. Look, K. D. Leedy, L. Vines, B. G. Svensson, A. Zubiaga, F. Tuomisto, Daniel R. Doutt, L. J. Brillson
Physics Faculty Publications
Self-compensation, the tendency of a crystal to lower its energy by forming point defects to counter the effects of a dopant, is here quantitatively proven. Based on a new theoretical formalism and several different experimental techniques, we demonstrate that the addition of 1.4 × 1021-cm−3 Ga donors in ZnO causes the lattice to form 1.7 × 1020-cm−3 Zn-vacancy acceptors. The calculated VZn formation energy of 0.2 eV is consistent with predictions from density functional theory. Our formalism is of general validity and can be used to investigate self-compensation in any degenerate semiconductor material.
Kino: A Generic Document Management System For Biologists Using Sa-Rest And Faceted Search, Ajith Harshana Ranabahu, Priti Parikh, Maryam Panahiazar, Amit P. Sheth
Kino: A Generic Document Management System For Biologists Using Sa-Rest And Faceted Search, Ajith Harshana Ranabahu, Priti Parikh, Maryam Panahiazar, Amit P. Sheth
Kno.e.sis Publications
Document management has become an important consideration for the scientific community over the last decade. Human knowledge is central to many scientific domains, thus it is not possible to completely automate the document management process. Managing scientific documents require a semi-automatic approach to overcome issues of large volume, yet support the human participation in the process. In this paper we present Kino, a set of tools that streamline the document management process in life science domains. Kino is integrated with National Center for Biomedical Ontology (NCBO), providing scientists access to quality domain models. Annotated documents are indexed using a faceted …
Changes In Geologic Time Understanding In A Class For Preservice Teachers, Rebecca Teed, William Slattery
Changes In Geologic Time Understanding In A Class For Preservice Teachers, Rebecca Teed, William Slattery
Earth and Environmental Sciences Faculty Publications
The paradigm of geologic time is built on complex concepts, and students master it in multiple steps. Concepts in Geology is an inquiry-based geology class for preservice teachers at Wright State University. The instructors used the Geoscience Concept Inventory (GCI) to determine if students' understanding of key ideas about geologic time and Earth history changed between the first and last day of the course. For three of the four GCI questions analyzed in this study, the number of correct student responses increased significantly between the pretest and the post-test, indicating that many of the students were learning the concepts being …
Owl And Rules, Adila Krisnadhi, Frederick Maier, Pascal Hitzler
Owl And Rules, Adila Krisnadhi, Frederick Maier, Pascal Hitzler
Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications
The relationship between the Web Ontology Language OWL and rule-based formalisms has been the subject of many discussions and research investigations, some of them controversial. From the many attempts to reconcile the two paradigms, we present some of the newest developments. More precisely, we show which kind of rules can be modeled in the current version of OWL, and we show how OWL can be extended to incorporate rules. We finally give references to a large body of work on rules and OWL.