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Articles 3031 - 3060 of 3840

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Ceg 210-01: Pc Networking I, Karen Meyer Jan 2005

Ceg 210-01: Pc Networking I, Karen Meyer

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Ceg 221-01: Advanced C Programming For Engineers, Robert Helt Jan 2005

Ceg 221-01: Advanced C Programming For Engineers, Robert Helt

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course introduces advanced constructs, algorithms, and data structures in the C programming language. Emphasis is on problem solving and techniques useful to engineers. Topics include functions, array, pointers, structures as well as sorting algorithms, linked lists, complex numbers, stacks, queues, hashtables, and binary trees. 4 credit hours.


Ceg 402/602-01: Introduction To Computer Communication, Bin Wang Jan 2005

Ceg 402/602-01: Introduction To Computer Communication, Bin Wang

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Ceg 260-01: Digital Computer Hardware/Switching Circuits, Eric Maston Jan 2005

Ceg 260-01: Digital Computer Hardware/Switching Circuits, Eric Maston

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

We will discuss and cover basic number and logic systems. Labs will be used to gain valuable "hand's on" experience in implementing elementary circuits and logic designs.


Ceg 333: Introduction To Unix, Maite Trujillo Jan 2005

Ceg 333: Introduction To Unix, Maite Trujillo

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Introduction to the use of UNIX and UNIX tools as a problem-solving environment. Emphasis on the shell, files and directories, editing files, user process management, compiling, and debugging.


Ceg 411/611-01: Introduction To Software Computer Engineering, Jack Jean Jan 2005

Ceg 411/611-01: Introduction To Software Computer Engineering, Jack Jean

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Ceg 433/633-01: Operating Systems, Prabhaker Mateti Jan 2005

Ceg 433/633-01: Operating Systems, Prabhaker Mateti

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

The management of resources in multi-user systems. Emphasis is on problems of file-system design, process scheduling, memory allocation, protection, and tools needed for solutions. Course projects use the C/C++ language and include the design of portions of an operating system. 4 credit hours.


Ceg 460/660-01: Introduction To Software Computer Engineering, Robert J. Weber Jan 2005

Ceg 460/660-01: Introduction To Software Computer Engineering, Robert J. Weber

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 example 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 498-01: Design Experience, John C. Gallagher Jan 2005

Ceg 498-01: Design Experience, John C. Gallagher

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, Thomas C. Hartrum Jan 2005

Ceg 434/634-01: Concurrent Software Design, Thomas C. Hartrum

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 498-02: Design Experience, Thomas C. Hartrum Jan 2005

Ceg 498-02: 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 730-01: Distributed Computing Principles, Prabhaker Mateti Jan 2005

Ceg 730-01: Distributed Computing Principles, Prabhaker Mateti

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Communicating sequential processes, clients and servers, remote procedure calls, stub generation, weak and strong semaphores, split-binary-semaphores, and distributed termination. Example languages: SR, Linda.


Ceg 750-01: Microprocessor, Jack Jean Jan 2005

Ceg 750-01: Microprocessor, Jack Jean

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Ceg 777-01: Computer Aided Geometric Design, Arthur A. Goshtasby Jan 2005

Ceg 777-01: Computer Aided Geometric Design, Arthur A. Goshtasby

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

To cover the fundamental of geometric modeling, including design of curves and surfaces, composite curves and surfaces, and subdivision techniques for creation of free-form shapes.


Ceg 790-01: Emerging Networks, Bin Wang Jan 2005

Ceg 790-01: Emerging Networks, Bin Wang

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

No abstract provided.


Ceg 820-01: Computer Architecture Ii, Soon M. Chung Jan 2005

Ceg 820-01: Computer Architecture Ii, Soon M. Chung

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Continuation of CEG 720 with more details on multiprocessor systems, parallel processing, and performance analysis.


Ceg 220-01: Introduction To C Programming For Engineers, Robert Helt Jan 2005

Ceg 220-01: Introduction To C Programming For Engineers, Robert Helt

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course provides a general introduction to computers as a problem-solving tool using the C programming language. Emphasis is on algorithms and techniques useful to engineers. Topics include data representation, debugging, and program verification. 4 credit hours. Prerequisite: MTH 229 (Calculus I) or EGR 101 (Engineering Mathematics).


Ceg 221-01: Advanced C Programming For Engineers, Robert Helt Jan 2005

Ceg 221-01: Advanced C Programming For Engineers, Robert Helt

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

This course introduces advanced constructs, algorithms, and data structures in the C programming language. emphasis is on problem solving and techniques useful to engineers. Topics include functions, array, pointers, structures as well as sorting algorithms, linked lists, complex numbers, stacks, queues, hash tables, and binary trees. 4 credit hours. Prerequisite: CEG 220 (Introduction to C Programming for Engineers).


Ceg 210-01: Pc Networking I, Karen Meyer Jan 2005

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 320/520-01: Computer Organization And Assembly Language Programming, Travis E. Doom Jan 2005

Ceg 320/520-01: Computer Organization And Assembly Language Programming, Travis E. Doom

Computer Science & Engineering Syllabi

Terminology and understanding of functional organizations and sequential operatio of a digital computer. Program structure, and machine and assembly language topics including addressing, stacks, argument pasing, arithmetic operations, traps, and input/output. Macros, modularization, linkers, and debuggers are used. Three hours lecture, two hours lab. Prerequisite: CS 242, CEG 260.


Methods For Approximate Reasoning, Perry Groot, Pascal Hitzler, Ian Horrocks, Boris Motik, Jeff Z. Pan, Heiner Stuckenschmidt, Daniele Turi, Holger Wache Jan 2005

Methods For Approximate Reasoning, Perry Groot, Pascal Hitzler, Ian Horrocks, Boris Motik, Jeff Z. Pan, Heiner Stuckenschmidt, Daniele Turi, Holger Wache

Computer Science and Engineering Faculty Publications

This deliverable shows examples about approximating symbolic inference engines in a Semantic Web environment. Approaches of language weakening, knowledge compilation, and approximated deduction are presented. The last one is evaluated in practical applications with mixed results.


Ion Cyclotron Waves In The Saturnian Magnetosphere Associated With Cassini's Engine Exhaust, C. T. Russell, J. S. Leisner, K. K. Khurana, M. K. Dougherty, X. Blanco-Cano, Jane L. Fox Jan 2005

Ion Cyclotron Waves In The Saturnian Magnetosphere Associated With Cassini's Engine Exhaust, C. T. Russell, J. S. Leisner, K. K. Khurana, M. K. Dougherty, X. Blanco-Cano, Jane L. Fox

Physics Faculty Publications

Five hours after the orbit insertion maneuver that placed Cassini into orbit about Saturn, a long (90 minute) burst of ion cyclotron waves were seen, very different than any waves on the inbound leg of the orbit or on succeeding orbits. The ion cyclotron waves were left-hand elliptically polarized and propagating at a moderately large angle to the local magnetic field. The waves had a noticeable compressional component consistent with their off angle propagation. The frequency band of the signals was moderately broad and consistent with the singly ionized components of the engine exhaust gases: CO2, N2 …


Frequency Scanned Interferometer Demonstration System, Jason A. Deibel, Sven Nyberg, Keith Riles, Haijun Yang Jan 2005

Frequency Scanned Interferometer Demonstration System, Jason A. Deibel, Sven Nyberg, Keith Riles, Haijun Yang

Physics Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Thermospheric Distribution Of Fast O(D-1) Atoms, V. Kharchenko, A. Dalgarno, Jane L. Fox Jan 2005

Thermospheric Distribution Of Fast O(D-1) Atoms, V. Kharchenko, A. Dalgarno, Jane L. Fox

Physics Faculty Publications

Detailed calculations are carried out of the sources of energetic metastable O(1D) atoms in the atmosphere at altitudes between 80 km and 200 km, and the corresponding energy distribution functions are derived, taking account of energy transfer and quenching in collisions of the metastable atoms with the ambient atmospheric gas constituents. The energy relaxation of metastable oxygen atoms produced by O2 and O3 photolysis and O2 + dissociative recombination is determined by solving the time-dependent Boltzmann equation. The O(1D) thermalization and quenching times are obtained as functions of the altitude. The steady state …


A Random Rotation Perturbation Approach To Privacy Preserving Data Classification, Keke Chen, Ling Liu Jan 2005

A Random Rotation Perturbation Approach To Privacy Preserving Data Classification, Keke Chen, Ling Liu

Kno.e.sis Publications

This paper presents a random rotation perturbation approach for privacy preserving data classification. Concretely, we identify the importance of classification-specific information with respect to the loss of information factor, and present a random rotation perturbation framework for privacy preserving data classification. Our approach has two unique characteristics. First, we identify that many classification models utilize the geometric properties of datasets, which can be preserved by geometric rotation. We prove that the three types of classifiers will deliver the same performance over the rotation perturbed dataset as over the original dataset. Second, we propose a multi-column privacy model to address the …


Variational Bayesian Image Modelling, Li Chen, Feng Jiao, Dale Schuurmans, Shaojun Wang Jan 2005

Variational Bayesian Image Modelling, Li Chen, Feng Jiao, Dale Schuurmans, Shaojun Wang

Kno.e.sis Publications

We present a variational Bayesian framework for performing inference, density estimation and model selection in a special class of graphical models—Hidden Markov Random Fields (HMRFs). HMRFs are particularly well suited to image modelling and in this paper, we apply them to the problem of image segmentation. Unfortunately, HMRFs are notoriously hard to train and use because the exact inference problems they create are intractable. Our main contribution is to introduce an efficient variational approach for performing approximate inference of the Bayesian formulation of HMRFs, which we can then apply to the density estimation and model selection problems that arise when …


Meteor-S Wsdi: A Scalable P2p Infrastructure Of Registries For Semantic Publication And Discovery Of Web Services, Kunal Verma, Kaarthik Sivashanmugam, Amit P. Sheth, Abhijit Patil, Swapna Oundhakar, John Miller Jan 2005

Meteor-S Wsdi: A Scalable P2p Infrastructure Of Registries For Semantic Publication And Discovery Of Web Services, Kunal Verma, Kaarthik Sivashanmugam, Amit P. Sheth, Abhijit Patil, Swapna Oundhakar, John Miller

Kno.e.sis Publications

Web services are the new paradigm for distributed computing. They have much to offer towards interoperability of applications and integration of large scale distributed systems. To make Web services accessible to users, service providers use Web service registries to publish them. Current infrastructure of registries requires replication of all Web service publications in all Universal Business Registries. Large growth in number of Web services as well as the growth in the number of registries would make this replication impractical. In addition, the current Web service discovery mechanism is inefficient, as it does not support discovery based on the capabilities of …


From Semantic Search & Integration To Analytics, Amit P. Sheth Jan 2005

From Semantic Search & Integration To Analytics, Amit P. Sheth

Kno.e.sis Publications

Semantics is seen as the key ingredient in the next phase of the Web infrastructure as well as the next generation of enterprise content management. Ontology is the centerpiece of the most prevalent semantic technologies and provides the basis of representing, acquiring, and utilizing knowledge. With the availability of several commercial products and many research tools, specifications and increasing adoption of Semantic Web standards such as RDF for metadata and OWL for ontology representation, ontology-driven techniques and systems have already enabled a new generation of industry strength semantic applications. In particular, Semagix's Freedom has powered applications in leading verticals such …


Discovering Informative Subgraphs In Rdf Graphs, William H. Milnor, Cartic Ramakrishnan, Matthew Perry, Amit P. Sheth, John A. Miller, Krzysztof Kochut Jan 2005

Discovering Informative Subgraphs In Rdf Graphs, William H. Milnor, Cartic Ramakrishnan, Matthew Perry, Amit P. Sheth, John A. Miller, Krzysztof Kochut

Kno.e.sis Publications

Discovering patterns in graphs has long been an area of interest. In most contemporary approaches to such pattern discovery either quantitative anomalies or frequency of substructure is used to measure the interestingness of a pattern. In this paper we address the issue of discovering informative sub-graphs within RDF graphs. We motivate our work with an example related to Semantic Search. A user might pose a question of the form: ' What are the most relevant ways in which entity X is related to entity Y?' the response to which is a subgraph connecting X to Y. Relevance of the …


Framework For Semantic Web Process Composition, Kaarthik Sivashanmugam, John A. Miller, Amit P. Sheth, Kunal Verma Jan 2005

Framework For Semantic Web Process Composition, Kaarthik Sivashanmugam, John A. Miller, Amit P. Sheth, Kunal Verma

Kno.e.sis Publications

Web services have the potential to revolutionize e-commerce by enabling businesses to interact with each other on the fly. To date, however, Web processes using Web services have been created mostly at the syntactic level. Current composition standards focus on building processes based on the interface description of the participating services. This rigid approach, with its strong coupling between the process and the interface of the participating services, does not allow businesses to dynamically change partners and services. As shown in this article, Web process composition techniques can be enhanced by using semantic process templates to capture the semantic requirements …