ANTH 952 01 (10295) HTBA Fall 2009 By arrangement with faculty.
Score: 5.648836 Details | Listing | Web page
ANTH 953 01 (10296) HTBA Fall 2009 By arrangement with faculty.
Score: 5.648836 Details | Listing | Web page
ANTH 954 01 (10297) HTBA Fall 2009 By arrangement with faculty.
Score: 5.648836 Details | Listing | Web page
MWF 1.30-2.20 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 36) 12/14/2009 M 2.00 Skills QR Methods of quantitative inference and modeling are introduced via applications from a variety of different fields. Possible topics include data encryption, codes, scaling phenomena, traffic flow, warfare, and population growth. Some use of computing software such as Mathematica or MATLAB.
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MWF 10.30-11.20 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 69) 12/16/2009 W 9.00 Matrix representation of linear equations. Gauss elimination. Vector spaces. Linear independence, basis, and dimension. Orthogonality, projection, least squares approximation; orthogonalization and orthogonal bases. Extension to function spaces. Determinants. Eigenvalues and eigenvectors. Diagonalization. Difference equation and matrix differential equations. Symmetric and Hermitian matrices. Orthogonal and unitary transformations; similarity transformations.
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TTh 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 26) 12/15/2009 T 2.00 Skills QR Resource allocation problems solved by linear programming and its generalizations: the simplex method, duality, the Karush-Kuhn-Tucker conditions for nonlinear programs, economic equilibria, and selected applications.
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TTh 11.35-12.50 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 24) 12/15/2009 T 9.00 Skills QR Basic concepts and results in discrete mathematics: graphs, trees, connectivity, Ramsey theorem, enumeration, binomial coefficients, Stirling numbers. Properties of finite set systems.
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MW 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 36) 12/14/2009 M 2.00 Skills QR Permission of instructor required Introduction to finite-dimensional, continuous, and discrete-time linear dynamical systems. Exploration of the basic properties and mathematical structure of the linear systems used for modeling dynamical processes in robotics, signal and image processing, economics, statistics, environmental and biomedical engineering, and control theory.
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MW 2.30-3.45 Fall 2009 No regular final examination Skills QR Through analysis of data sets using the R statistical computing language, study of a selection of statistical topics such as linear and nonlinear models, maximum likelihood, resampling methods, curve estimation, model selection, classification, and clustering. Weekly sessions in the Statistical Computing laboratory.
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MW 2.30-3.45 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 37) 12/18/2009 F 2.00 Skills QR Permission of instructor required Fundamental theory and algorithms of optimization, emphasizing convex optimization. The geometry of convex sets, basic convex analysis, the principle of optimality, duality. Numerical algorithms: steepest descent, Newton's method, interior point methods, dynamic programming, unimodal search. Applications from engineering and the sciences.
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1 HTBA Fall 2009 No regular final examination Permission of instructor required Individual study for qualified students who wish to investigate an area of applied mathematics not covered in regular courses. A student must be sponsored by a faculty member who sets the requirements and meets regularly with the student. Requires a written plan of study approved by the faculty adviser and the director of undergraduate studies.
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W 3.30-5.20 Fall 2009 No regular final examination Permission of instructor required Under the supervision of a member of the faculty, each student works on an independent project. Students participate in seminar meetings at which they speak on the progress of their projects. Some meetings may be devoted to talks by visiting faculty members or applied mathematicians.
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1 HTBA Fall 2009 No regular final examination Permission of instructor required Individual research. Requires a faculty supervisor and the permission of the director of undergraduate studies. The student must submit a written report about the results of the project.
Score: 5.648836 Details | Listing | Web page
AMTH 561 01 (10241) /CPSC662 WF 2.30-3.45 Fall 2009 An applied approach to spectral graph theory. The combinatorial meaning of the eigenvalues and eigenvectors of matrices associated with graphs. Applications to optimization, numerical linear algebra, error-correcting codes, and testing graph isomorphism.
Score: 5.648836 Details | Listing | Web page
AMTH 605 01 (10242) /ENAS503/STAT667 TTh 1.00-2.15 Fall 2009 This course examines probabilistic and computational methods for the statistical modeling of complex data. The emphasis is on the unifying framework provided by graph models: Markov random fields, Bayesian networks, and factor graphs. Algorithms: filtering, smoothing, belief-propagation, sum-product, and junction tree. Variational techniques: mean-field and convex relaxations. Markov processes on graphs: MCMC, factored HMMs, and Glauber dynamics. Some statistical physics techniques: cavity and replica methods. Applications to error-correcting codes, computer vision, bio-informatics, and combinatorial optimization.
Score: 5.648836 Details | Listing | Web page
AMTH 664 01 (10245) HTBA Fall 2009 An overview of basic topics in computational biology, spanning scales from molecules to cells to networks. How cells process information (cell biology); how neurons sense the world and make decisions (neurobiology); and how genes control form (evolutionary biology). Prerequisite: MATH 120a or b or equivalent.
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AMTH 666 01 (10246) /ASTR666/G&G666 TTh 2.30-3.45 Fall 2009 Classical thermodynamics is derived from statistical thermodynamics. We then develop kinetics, transport theory, and reciprocity from the linear thermodynamics of irreversible processes. Emphasis is placed on phase transitions, including novel states of matter, nucleation theory, and the thermodynamics of atmospheres. We explore phenomena that are of direct relevance to problems in astrophysical settings, atmospheres, oceans, and the Earth's interior. No quantum mechanics is necessary as a prerequisite.
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Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 24) 12/15/2009 T 9.00 Areas Hu, So The archaeology of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Indus Valley from early agriculture to class formation and the early cities and empires. How did these societies develop and why did they collapse? Earliest epics and contemporary ideologies, including the Bushes in Baghdad, examined in literature and film.
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MW 11.35-12.50 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 34) 12/17/2009 Th 9.00 Areas So Examination of selected archaeological hoaxes, cult theories, and fantasies; demonstration of how archaeology can be manipulated to authenticate nationalistic ideologies, religious causes, and modern stereotypes. Examples of hoaxes and fantasies include the lost continent of Atlantis, Piltdown man, ancient giants roaming the earth, and alien encounters. Evaluation of how, as a social science, archaeology is capable of rejecting such interpretations about the past.
Score: 5.648836 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 9.00-10.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 22) 12/12/2009 S 2.00 Areas Sc The nature and classification of sedimentary rock bodies; principles in determining their ages by fossils and other means; interpretation of depositional environments; the historical record of the dynamic response of sediments to mountain building, to changes in sea level and climate, and to the evolution of Earth's biota. Laboratory sessions include one overnight weekend field trip and one Saturday field trip.
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MW 2.30-3.45 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 37) 12/18/2009 F 2.00 Areas Hu Study of three ancient cities buried by volcanic eruptions - Thera in c. 1530 B.C. and Pompeii and Herculaneum in A.D. 79 - with emphasis on their architecture, wall paintings, and small finds in cultural and historical context.
Score: 5.648836 Details | Listing | Web page
MW 11.35-12.50 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 34) 12/17/2009 Th 9.00 Areas Hu
Score: 5.648836 Details | Listing | Web page
TTh 9.00-10.15 Fall 2009 No regular final examination Areas Hu The great buildings and engineering marvels of Rome and its empire. Study of city planning and individual monuments and their decoration, including mural painting. Emphasis on developments in Rome, Pompeii, and central Italy; survey of architecture in the provinces.
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MW 9.00-10.15 Fall 2009 Final exam scheduled (Group 32) 12/12/2009 S 9.00 Survey of the archaeological evidence for the original contributions of the African continent to the human condition. The unresolved issues of African pre-history, from the time of the first hominids, through the development of food production and metallurgy, to the rise of states and cities.
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MW 4.00-5.15 Fall 2009 No regular final examination Areas So Permission of instructor required An introduction to the practice and techniques of modern archaeology, including methods of excavation, recording, mapping, dating, and ecological analysis.
Score: 5.648836 Details | Listing | Web page
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