CS 463 Project Proposals

The choice of "projects" for CS 463G is the following.

Each student must choose two different types of larger assignments. The proposal for the first is due by September 20th, and the assignment itself is due by October 19th. In the case of an in-class presentation, the proposal should include a (pre-negotiated) date for the presentation, which will occur by October 19th.

The proposal for the second is due November 8th, and the final talk or demo must be done before classes end; papers, reviews, and stories may be submitted by the time of the scheduled exam (December 11th, 1pm).

Please make sure to look at the discussion of co-operation on projects and plagiarism.

Programming Projects

Your proposal should include a reference to your source of the algorithm you are going to program, its pseudocode, the language you intend to use, and how you will demonstrate the success of your program.

In-Class Presentations

Your proposal should include a reference to the paper(s) you will be presenting, an outline of your presentation (in true outline form, not sentences/paragraphs, but with more detail that "introduction; technical details; conclusion"!), and a suggested date for a practice presentation with Dr. Goldsmith. Note that you may end up doing more than one practice presentation, and Dr. Goldsmith may ask for revisions of the outline before confirming a presentation date. Plan accordingly.

Sources of technical information

Your material should come from a reputable and refereed source, preferably a refereed journal or conference proceedings. Tech reports and random papers found on the web are not acceptable.

Reviews

You will list the book/movie that you will be reviewing, cite its dominant AI theme(s), and outline the review.

AI-Related Novels

Software Reviews

You will list the software that you will be reviewing, cite its dominant AI theme(s), and outline the review.

Surveys

Your proposal for a written survey will list the technical papers you will be surveying and their commonalities, and outline the survey. Dr. Goldsmith may ask for revisions of the outline.

If you are doing an in-class presentation, your proposal should also include a suggested date for a practice talk with Dr. Goldsmith. Leave time for additional practices, if Dr. Goldsmith believes they are necessary.

See Sources

Short Stories

Your proposal should be a story synopsis that makes clear (a) what the AI theme will be and (b) that you can write readable fiction.

Cooperation

Group programming or survey projects are possible with the consent of the instructor. Students may be encouraged to submit particularly good programming project write-ups or surveys for publication.

The usual applies: plagiarism, copying, or working together without crediting each other will be punished to the fullest extent of university regulations; homeworks due in class will not be accepted after class begins. If this is a problem, they may be submitted before class. Late homeworks accepted only with the usual documentation for illness or family crisis, or in the case of documented hardware failures.
Always back up your work, if possible to another machine or system.

All students must read these:
Proofs and Plagiarism and Interacting with your professor