Project

For your project, you can choose any problem that requires some of the algorithms and methods we are studying in class or, more in general, that requires some intelligence.

Requirements

  1. The project can be done alone or in a group of two.
  2. Your project should include:
  3. A one or two-page proposal is due March 11. I will accept the proposal up to April 1 without any late penalty. The proposal should include You can submit the proposal in hard copy or using the Submit Tool.
  4. The project report is due Friday May 8 . [As always this means you can turn it in up to 9:00 am on Saturday, No late submissions. No extensions after the deadline.] On line submission using submit is REQUIRED if you submit on Friday or by Saturday morning. I will be on travel and hence unable to pick up your project report if you turn in a hard copy.
    The report should include:
  5. Graduate students who want to use their project for their Plan C should contact me to arrange for a presentation of their project.
  6. Each student is expected to spend at least 50 hours on the project, including the initial research, programming and evaluation, and writing the report. The scope of the project should reflect this level of effort.

Grading

Ideas for Project

Here are some ideas for your project. These are only suggestions and that you are free to propose any other project of your own choice.

Help for Literature Search

Avoiding Plagiarism

There is a very good web site http://plagiarismtest.org/student.html that will help you understanding if you are plagiarizing others work in your report. Take a look at it. The page for students has some very clear definitions.

Typesetting your papers: Where to find information on LaTeX.

Copyright: © 2009 by the Regents of the University of Minnesota
Department of Computer Science and Engineering. All rights reserved.
Comments to: Maria Gini
Changes and corrections are in red.