Course Workload
The course consists of lectures, readings, homework assignments, and a final project. Computers generate vast amounts of data from a wide variety of sources (experiments, simulatyions, ...). The purpose of this course is to teach some of the best and most general approaches to the broad problem of how to get the most out of data. The course will explore both theoretical foundations and practical applications. Students will be analyzing several kinds of data, including the ones they syntesize, simulate, or process as images.
Textbook
No textbook is seletced which fits the material in this course. Instead, students will be asked to take attend the lectures, take notes, and work on the lectures which will be posted on the course website. Additional papers and book chapters will also be provided:
Numerical Recipes 3rd edition Chapters 7, 10, 14, 15
Very useful site for probablity theory
Computer age statistical inference
The Jackknife, the Bootstrap and Other Resampling Plans
Homework assignments
Four HW assignments are planned approximately every two weeks; these will be a mix of written exercises and programming. PHYS 239 Graduate problems will be more complex and difficult. Homeworks count for 45% of your grade. There will be a short Midterm project with 20% and a Final project with 35%.Late days
All assignments are due at Midnight on the due date. Each student will be allotted five free days which can be usedto turn in homework assignments late without penalty. When free days are used up, late homeworks will be penalized 15% per day. Homeworks will not be accepted more than seven days past the deadline. Exceptions might be made for serious illness or other emergency.Grade policy:
Lecture attendance required, HW Assignments (45%), Midterm (20%), Final project (35%).