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Articles 2971 - 3000 of 3840
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Ceg 499-01: Www Autonomous Robotics, John C. Gallagher, Richard Drushel
Ceg 499-01: Www Autonomous Robotics, John C. Gallagher, Richard Drushel
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
WWW Autonomous Robotics is a computer engineering practicum offered entirely via the Internet. The course adopts a low threshold, no ceiling philosophy. This means that the course is designed to be inclusive of students with limited formal training while still providing significant challenges for those with greater preparation and/or motivation. Students will be required to create control programs for a mobile autonomous robot. In each course unit, the problems posed will become increasingly more challenging. Coaching, advise, and instruction are done online via chat interfaces. Student code is tested first in a simulator that we provide and then on a …
Ceg 720-01: Computer Architecture I, Soon M. Chung
Ceg 720-01: Computer Architecture I, Soon M. Chung
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Review of sequential computer architecture and study of parallel computers. Topics include memory hierarchy, reduced instruction set computer, pipeline processing, multiprocessing, various parallel computers, interconnection networks, and fault-tolerant computing. 3 hours lecture and 2 hours lab.
Ceg 453/653-01: Design Of Computing Systems, Jack Jean
Ceg 453/653-01: Design Of Computing Systems, Jack Jean
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
No abstract provided.
Ceg 702-01: Advanced Computer Communications, Bin Wang
Ceg 702-01: Advanced Computer Communications, 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 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 formal methods of software specification or evaluation using software metrics. Students will participate in team projects to apply the methods discussed.
Ceg 210-01: Pc Networking I, Karen Meyer
Ceg 210-01: Pc Networking I, Karen Meyer
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Introduction to PC networking hardware, concepts, and technologies. Focus is on LAN administration, and hardware and software configuration.
Ceg 255-01: Introduction To The Design Of Information Technology Systems, Eric Maston
Ceg 255-01: Introduction To The Design Of Information Technology Systems, Eric Maston
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Information systems consist of modern elements such as database systems, networks, multi-platform distributed computing, web infrastructure and multimedia computing. In this course we will address these areas individually and also where they intersect to gain a basic understanding of how information technology can be used to solve real problems.
Cs 240: Introduction To Computer Science I, L. Jane Lin
Cs 240: Introduction To Computer Science I, L. Jane Lin
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course is the first in the three course sequence "Introduction to Computer Science" offered by the Computer Science department at WSU. This course presents a general introduction to C++ programming language. It introduces the fundamental capabilities of C++ language as a problem solving tool. Topics include data representation, debugging and program verification.
Cs 206: Computer Software Productivity Tools, Greg Coffey
Cs 206: Computer Software Productivity Tools, Greg Coffey
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course introduces advanced computer applications using MS Word, MS Excel, MS Access, and MS PowerPoint.
Cs 141: Computer Programming - I, Ronald F. Taylor
Cs 141: Computer Programming - I, Ronald F. Taylor
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course provides a general introduction to the fundamentals of computer programming. Examples from and applications to a broad range of problems are given. No prior knowledge of programming is assumed. The concepts covered will be applied to the Java programming language. Students must register for both lecture and one laboratory section. 4 credit hours. Prerequisite: MTH 127 (College Algebra) or equivalent.
Cs 480/680: Comparative Programming Languages, Michael L. Raymer
Cs 480/680: Comparative Programming Languages, Michael L. Raymer
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
No abstract provided.
Ceg 210-02: Pc Networking I, Chris P. Fickert
Ceg 210-02: Pc Networking I, Chris P. Fickert
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
The objective of the course is to provide an introduction to PC networking hardware, concepts, and technologies with a focus on hardware configuration and LAN administration using in-class, hands-on exercises with Novell NetWare.
Ceg 751-01: Microprocessors Ii, Jack Jean
Ceg 751-01: Microprocessors Ii, Jack Jean
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
No abstract provided.
Ceg 724-01: Computer Vision I, Maite Trujillo
Ceg 724-01: Computer Vision I, Maite Trujillo
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course covers basic techniques for low-level and some mid-level vision processes. The techniques include: linear filtering, edge detection, image segmentation and classification, stereo vision, motion, texture analysis and image matching.
Ceg 498-01: Design Experience, Thomas C. Hartrum
Ceg 498-01: Design Experience, Thomas C. Hartrum
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
CEG 498 (Design Experience) 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 434/634-01: Concurrent Software Design, Yong Pei
Ceg 434/634-01: Concurrent Software Design, Yong Pei
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
This course provides an introduction to concurrent program design in the UNIX environment. Classical problems of synchronization, concurrency, and their solutions are examined through course projects and through readings on operating system design.
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 360/560-01: Digital System Design, Travis E. Doom
Ceg 360/560-01: Digital System Design, Travis E. Doom
Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi
Design of digital systems. Topics include flip-flops, registers, counters, programmable logic devices, memory devices, register-level design, and microcomputer system organization. Students must show competency in the design of digital systems. 3 hours lecture, 2 hours lab. Prerequisite: CEG 260.
Web Service Semantics - Wsdl-S, Rama Akkiraju, Joel Farrell, John A. Miller, Meenakshi Nagarajan, Amit P. Sheth, Kunal Verma
Web Service Semantics - Wsdl-S, Rama Akkiraju, Joel Farrell, John A. Miller, Meenakshi Nagarajan, Amit P. Sheth, Kunal Verma
Kno.e.sis Publications
The current WSDL standard operates at the syntactic level and lacks the semantic expressivity needed to represent the requirements and capabilities of Web Services. Semantics can improve software reuse and discovery, significantly facilitate composition of Web services and enable integrating legacy applications as part of business process integration. The Web Service Semantic s technical note defines a mechanism to associate semantic annotations with Web services that are described using Web Service Description Language (WSDL). It is conceptually based on, but a significant refinement in details of, the original WSDL-S proposal [WSDL-S] from the LSDIS laboratory at the University of Georgia. …
Study Of The Photoluminescence Of Phosphorus-Doped P-Type Zno Thin Films Grown By Radio-Frequency Magnetron Sputtering, Dae-Kue Hwang, Hyun-Sik Kim, Jae-Hong Lim, Jin-Yong Y. Oh, Jin-Ho Yang, Seong-Ju Park, Kyong-Kook Kim, David C. Look, Y. S. Park
Study Of The Photoluminescence Of Phosphorus-Doped P-Type Zno Thin Films Grown By Radio-Frequency Magnetron Sputtering, Dae-Kue Hwang, Hyun-Sik Kim, Jae-Hong Lim, Jin-Yong Y. Oh, Jin-Ho Yang, Seong-Ju Park, Kyong-Kook Kim, David C. Look, Y. S. Park
Physics Faculty Publications
Phosphorus-doped p-type ZnO thin films were grown on sapphire by radio-frequency magnetron sputtering. The photoluminescence (PL) spectra revealed an acceptor bound exciton peak at 3.355 eV and a conduction band to the acceptor transition caused by a phosphorus related level at 3.310 eV. A study of the dependence of the excitation laser power density and temperature on the characteristics of the PL spectra suggests that the emission lines at 3.310 and 3.241 eV can be attributed to a conduction band to the phosphorus-related acceptor transition and a donor to the acceptor pair transition, respectively. The acceptor energy level of the …
Wright State University College Of Engineering And Computer Science Bits And Pcs Newsletter, Volume 21, Number 6, March 2005, College Of Engineering And Computer Science, Wright State University
Wright State University College Of Engineering And Computer Science Bits And Pcs Newsletter, Volume 21, Number 6, March 2005, College Of Engineering And Computer Science, Wright State University
BITs and PCs Newsletter
An eight page newsletter created by the Wright State University College of Engineering and Computer Science that addresses the current affairs of the college.
An Information Extraction Approach To Reorganizing And Summarizing Specifications, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan, Aaron Berkovich, Dan Z. Sokol
An Information Extraction Approach To Reorganizing And Summarizing Specifications, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan, Aaron Berkovich, Dan Z. Sokol
Kno.e.sis Publications
Materials and Process Specifications are complex semi-structured documents containing numeric data, text, and images. This article describes a coarse-grain extraction technique to automatically reorganize and summarize spec content. Specifically, a strategy for semantic-markup, to capture content within a semantic ontology, relevant to semi-automatic extraction, has been developed and experimented with. The working prototypes were built in the context of Cohesia's existing software infrastructure, and use techniques from Information Extraction, XML technology, etc.
Divide-And-Approximate: A Novel Constraint Push Strategy For Iceberg Cube Mining, Ke Wang, Yuelong Jiang, Jeffrey Xu Yu, Guozhu Dong, Jiawei Han
Divide-And-Approximate: A Novel Constraint Push Strategy For Iceberg Cube Mining, Ke Wang, Yuelong Jiang, Jeffrey Xu Yu, Guozhu Dong, Jiawei Han
Kno.e.sis Publications
The iceberg cube mining computes all cells v, corresponding to GROUP BY partitions, that satisfy a given constraint on aggregated behaviors of the tuples in a GROUP BY partition. The number of cells often is so large that the result cannot be realistically searched without pushing the constraint into the search. Previous works have pushed antimonotone and monotone constraints. However, many useful constraints are neither antimonotone nor monotone. We consider a general class of aggregate constraints of the form f(v)θσ, where f is an arithmetic function of SQL-like aggregates and θ is one of <, ≤, ≥, > . We propose a …,>
Specification Of A Common Framework For Characterizing Alignment, Paolo Bouquet, Marc Ehrig, Jerome Euzenat, Enrico Franconi, Pascal Hitzler, Markus Krotzsch, Luciano Serafini, Giorgos Stamu, York Sure, Sergio Tessaris
Specification Of A Common Framework For Characterizing Alignment, Paolo Bouquet, Marc Ehrig, Jerome Euzenat, Enrico Franconi, Pascal Hitzler, Markus Krotzsch, Luciano Serafini, Giorgos Stamu, York Sure, Sergio Tessaris
Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications
Definition of a common framework for characterizing alignment of heterogeneous information. This report describes various approaches towards this goal and shows the relations between them. It also provides a description of the alignment sructure and process.
Wright State University College Of Engineering And Computer Science Bits And Pcs Newsletter, Volume 21, Number 5, February 2005, College Of Engineering And Computer Science, Wright State University
Wright State University College Of Engineering And Computer Science Bits And Pcs Newsletter, Volume 21, Number 5, February 2005, College Of Engineering And Computer Science, Wright State University
BITs and PCs Newsletter
A six page newsletter created by the Wright State University College of Engineering and Computer Science that addresses the current affairs of the college.
The Equation, Winter 2005, College Of Science And Mathematics, Wright State University
The Equation, Winter 2005, College Of Science And Mathematics, Wright State University
College of Science and Mathematics Newsletters
This 14 page newsletter discusses various happenings within the College of Science and Mathematics. It begins with a letter from the dean, and continues on with news, events, alumni news, and other community news.
Wright State University College Of Engineering And Computer Science Bits And Pcs Newsletter, Volume 21, Number 4, January 2005, College Of Engineering And Computer Science, Wright State University
Wright State University College Of Engineering And Computer Science Bits And Pcs Newsletter, Volume 21, Number 4, January 2005, College Of Engineering And Computer Science, Wright State University
BITs and PCs Newsletter
An eight page newsletter created by the Wright State University College of Engineering and Computer Science that addresses the current affairs of the college.
A Student-Centered Project For Earth System History, Rebecca Teed
A Student-Centered Project For Earth System History, Rebecca Teed
Earth and Environmental Sciences Faculty Publications
This project is intended to replace some of the lectures that would ordinarily be necessary in a survey of Earth history over geologic time. The students will be taking the lecturer's place in front of the class, presenting some of the material to their colleagues. Students will work in groups on a single era or period. Each student role-plays an expert (such as an oceanographer) and works with teammates playing other sorts of experts (a biologist, a geologist, an atmospheric scientist). Their presentation will require them to do research. They will be constructing resource lists to keep track of how …
Erratum: “Uniqueness Theorems In Bioluminescence Tomography” [Med. Phys. 31, 2289–2299 (2004)], Ge Wang, Yi Li, Ming Jiang
Erratum: “Uniqueness Theorems In Bioluminescence Tomography” [Med. Phys. 31, 2289–2299 (2004)], Ge Wang, Yi Li, Ming Jiang
Yi Li
In this Erratum, we present a correction to our proof of Theorem D.4 in Ref. 1.
A Uniform Approach To Logic Programming Semantics, Pascal Hitzler, Matthias Wendt
A Uniform Approach To Logic Programming Semantics, Pascal Hitzler, Matthias Wendt
Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications
Part of the theory of programming and nonymonotonic reasoning concerns the study of fixed-point semantics for these paradigms. Several different semantics have been proposed during the last two decades, and some have been more successful and acknowledged than others. The rationales behind those various semantics have been manifold, depending on one's point of view, which may be that of a programmer or inspired by commonsense reasoning, and consequently the constructions which lead to these semantics are technically very diverse, and the exact relationships between them have not yet been fully understood. In this paper, we present a conceptually new method, …