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-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-4961.html b/courses/WRIT-4961.html
index 8eadaf1f7..ecc2d0b1a 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-4961.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-4961.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-4962.html b/courses/WRIT-4962.html
index 61080b943..adcef04b0 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-4962.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-4962.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-4963.html b/courses/WRIT-4963.html
index 64af7acb3..a366c0603 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-4963.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-4963.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-6160.html b/courses/WRIT-6160.html
index 85ddf9942..63842673f 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-6160.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-6160.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-6380.html b/courses/WRIT-6380.html
index d4c9fcf81..f29285b8f 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-6380.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-6380.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-6410.html b/courses/WRIT-6410.html
index 3978b5dc5..2c2a4d84c 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-6410.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-6410.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-6550.html b/courses/WRIT-6550.html
index 6142eef38..018a23e76 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-6550.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-6550.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-6940.html b/courses/WRIT-6940.html
index fa5527592..ab1b34bef 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-6940.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-6940.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-6960.html b/courses/WRIT-6960.html
index 47062659a..ffe312981 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-6960.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-6960.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-6961.html b/courses/WRIT-6961.html
index 9c6d46abf..2dbf07340 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-6961.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-6961.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-6962.html b/courses/WRIT-6962.html
index 798b64127..4ecd44b8f 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-6962.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-6962.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-6963.html b/courses/WRIT-6963.html
index ffd704779..5df945e94 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-6963.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-6963.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/courses/WRIT-6965.html b/courses/WRIT-6965.html
index ceebe23cc..015d53f37 100644
--- a/courses/WRIT-6965.html
+++ b/courses/WRIT-6965.html
@@ -8,12 +8,12 @@
-
-
-
-
-
-
+
+
+
+
+
+
diff --git a/json/courses_list.json b/json/courses_list.json
index d88ffa3ea..8a2713bf6 100644
--- a/json/courses_list.json
+++ b/json/courses_list.json
@@ -504,6 +504,7 @@
"COMM-2962",
"COMM-2620",
"COMM-2610",
+ "COMM-2510",
"GSAS-2510",
"PHIL-4220",
"GSAS-1600",
@@ -761,6 +762,8 @@
"CSCI-6980",
"BIOL-4100",
"CSCI-6960",
+ "EMBA-6966",
+ "GSAS-2560",
"CSCI-6840",
"COGS-4600",
"ARTS-1020",
@@ -1030,7 +1033,6 @@
"BIOL-4200",
"ECON-6360",
"PHYS-6900",
- "CIVL-4010",
"CHME-6940",
"STSO-4310",
"ITEC-4300",
@@ -1528,6 +1530,7 @@
"ARTS-1962",
"CIVL-6350",
"CIVL-2630",
+ "CIVL-4010",
"ECON-1200",
"LGHT-6940",
"CHME-4960",
@@ -1641,9 +1644,6 @@
"ADMN-6300",
"COGS-4965",
"BMED-4460",
- "COMM-4250",
- "BIOL-4980",
- "LITR-6940",
"CIVL-6490",
"EMBA-6963",
"COGS-6200",
@@ -2039,8 +2039,6 @@
"CSCI-6510",
"CIVL-2940",
"MANE-6450",
- "EMBA-6966",
- "GSAS-2560",
"COMM-6963",
"ECSE-6200",
"ISYE-1100",
@@ -2297,6 +2295,9 @@
"LITR-4410",
"LITR-4960",
"BIOL-4420",
+ "LITR-6940",
+ "COMM-4250",
+ "BIOL-4980",
"ARCH-4330",
"LITR-6960",
"MANE-1960",
@@ -3027,6 +3028,7 @@
"PHYS-2960",
"BIOL-1008",
"COMM-2310",
+ "BIOL-1016",
"ITWS-1100",
"BIOL-1940",
"BIOL-1960",
@@ -3165,6 +3167,5 @@
"IHSS-1410",
"COMM-2210",
"COMM-2110",
- "COMM-2330",
- "COMM-2510"
+ "COMM-2330"
]
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/json/searchable_catalog.json b/json/searchable_catalog.json
index 464fb07ba..5e1d67849 100644
--- a/json/searchable_catalog.json
+++ b/json/searchable_catalog.json
@@ -1,19010 +1,15847 @@
[
{
"code" : "WRIT-6963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-6160",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Writing About Science"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-4170",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Writing For Promotion & Marketing"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-4160",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Writing About Science"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-2510",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Writing To The Www"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-2008",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Tech & Prof Writing (at Sccc)"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-0060",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Drill/laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-0040",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Drill/laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-0020",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Drill/laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-2940",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Advanced Leadership Evaluation"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Readings In Usaf"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-0070",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Leadership Lab"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-0060",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Leadership Lab"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-0050",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Leadership Lab"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-0040",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Leadership Lab"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-0030",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Leadership Lab"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-0020",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Leadership Lab"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6967",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4971",
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"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4840",
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"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Professional Development II"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4540",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Inequality In America"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4460",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Body:self, Symbol & Politics"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4360",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Contemp Political Thght"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4270",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Sustainability Problems"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Medicine And Society"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2006",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Europe To 1500 (at St Rose)"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-1962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-1620",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Design Innovation And Society - Restricted To Pdi Majors Only"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-1520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Sociology"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-1330",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "International Relations"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-1310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "American Government"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-1001",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Interp Amer History I(at Hvcc)"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4963",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4800",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Public Svc & Social Justice"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4120",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "How To Read The Ny Times"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4003",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Late Antiquity (at Siena Coll)"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4002",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Politics Of Se Asia @ Sunya"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2530",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "World War II"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2510",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "American History"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2320",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Environment And Law"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2002",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "History Of France 1815 (sunya)"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-1961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4969",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4968",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4941",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Psychology And Law"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4770",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Psychopharm & Beh Toxico"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4750",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Forensic Psychology"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4740",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Psychology And The Law"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4620",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cognitive Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Game Development"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4340",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Human Sexuality"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2968",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2950",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Urp Hypermedia"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2940",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Human Factors In Design"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2600",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Moral Development"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Game Design"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Human Factors In Design"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-1960",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-1940",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Perception/ Action Research"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-1001",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Developmental Psyc (at Hvcc)"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6210",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Mathematical Methods In Physic"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6002",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Qualitative Res Meth (at Sunya"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4963",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4940",
- "credits" : "0-8",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Readings In Phys"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4370",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Research Participation"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2963",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2110",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Modern Physics"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro Theoretical Physics"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-1961",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-0960",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-6002",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Philos Of Happiness (at Sunya)"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHIL"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHIL"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-1962",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4740",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Philosophy Of Law"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4570",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Buddhism"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Existentialism"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-2963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHIL"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-2962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHIL"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-2300",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Asian Philosophies"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-2150",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Inspired Lives Moral Exemplars"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-2130",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro To Phil Of Science"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-2120",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Introduction To Cognitive Science"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MTLE"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6962",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MTLE"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6670",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biology In Materials Science"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MTLE"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2003",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Europe To 1500 @ Siena"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MTLE"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Readings In Mtse"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4450",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Mtls Synthesis & Process II"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4420",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Matls Under Extreme Conditions"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7040",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Strategy, Tech & Compet II"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7003",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Sustainable Business Developmt"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6990",
- "credits" : "1-16",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Management Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHIL"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6980",
- "credits" : "1-16",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Practicum In Managemnt"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6975",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6974",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6973",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6971",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6969",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6966",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6920",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Strategic Mgmt Theory Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6900",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Doctoral Research Mthds I"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6850",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Organizational Behavior Theory And Research Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6790",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Business Analytics Capstone"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6440",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Financial Simulation"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Emerging Markets"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6180",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Strategic Info Systems Mgmt"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6130",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Research Smr In Mgmt Info Syst"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6050",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Creating & Managing An Enterprise II"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4968",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4967",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4961",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4941",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Research Analyst Project"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4440",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Financial Simulation"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4350",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Financial Markets And Institutions"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4300",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Emerging Markets"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-2003",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Taxation I (at Siena College)"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-2001",
- "credits" : "3-4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Event Management (at Hvcc)"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-6970",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATP"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-6961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATP"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-4620",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Mathematical Statistics"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6791",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biomechanical Image Soft Tissu"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6740",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Financial Mathematics And Sim."
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6300",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Complex Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6240",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Functional Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4962",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4941",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Math Neuroscience Modeling"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4210",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Mathematical Analysis II"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-2961",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-2800",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro To Discrete Structures"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-2012",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Matrix Algebra"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-2011",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Multivariable Calculus"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-1960",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6968",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6966",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6976",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6942",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Nuclear Reactor Analysis II"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6670",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Nonlinear Finite Element Meth."
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6390",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Atom & Nuclear Phy Appl"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2120",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Introduction To Cognitive Science"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6270",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Envir Rad Safety Controls"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4966",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4941",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Mech Char: Burned Porcine"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2330",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intermediate Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4860",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro. To Helicopter Design"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4850",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Space Vehicle Design"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4720",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Design & Analy. Of Energy Sys."
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4710",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Heat Transfer"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4020",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Thermal & Fluids Eng Lab"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4010",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Thermal And Fluids Engr II"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-4160",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "The Human Mind In Fiction"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-4006",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Liter Crit Theory(at St Rose)"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LITR"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2450",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Utopian Literature"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2420",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Art Of The Film"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2360",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "The Novel"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2009",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Spanish Novel (at Sage Coll)"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2003",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Contemp British Lit (at Siena)"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-6966",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LGHT"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-6962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LGHT"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LANG"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LANG"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2964",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LANG"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2430",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Chinese Iv"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2420",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Chinese III"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2120",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "French Iv"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2110",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "French III"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2001",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Spanish III (at Hvcc)"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-1520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Spanish II"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-1420",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Chinese II"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-1220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Japanese II"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-1120",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "French II"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-1110",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "French I"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-1003",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Elem Amer Sign Lang (at Siena)"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITWS"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITWS"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITWS"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITWS"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4967",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITWS"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITWS"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITWS"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITWS"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4940",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Information Architecture"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Rdgs In Information Technology"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITEC"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITEC"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2210",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Japanese III"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-6940",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Application Of Semantic Web"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-6800",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "It and Decision Syst Capstone"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Business Issues For Engr & Sci"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITEC"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Managing It Resources"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITEC"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Rdgs In Information Technology"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-2110",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Web Systems Development"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-4400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Business French I"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-1961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITEC"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-1220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "It And Society - Restricted To Itec Majors"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-1150",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Introduction To Uml"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-1100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Introduction To It"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ISYE"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ISYE"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7250",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Professional Development Workshop III"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4941",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Da For Criminal Interdictions"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4770",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Math Models Of Operations"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6966",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-1960",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ISYE"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ISCI"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-6940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Virtual Exper In Sci Educ"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-6240",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biomolecular Science"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-6002",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Science For Children (atsunya)"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-4964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-4940",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Lost Manuscript"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-2610",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Design & Innovation Studio II"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1987",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Behind The Tv Screen"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHIL"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1983",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Acting With Computers"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4110",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Motivation & Performance"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1981",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Race, Class, Gender & Tech"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1980",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Sociolgy Of Inequal In U.s.soc"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1978",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1977",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1976",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1975",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1972",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1971",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1969",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1968",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1740",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Western Music Appreciation"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1710",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Popular Music & Society"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cultures Of Sci Revolution"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1290",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "American Politics In Crisis"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1080",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "History Of Jazz & Improv Music"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1008",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Healthcare Ethics (at Sccc)"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1001",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Russian Lang& Cult I (at Hvcc)"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6880",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Management Research Workshop"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-6963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in GSAS"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in GSAS"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in GSAS"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in GSAS"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-2962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in GSAS"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Japanese Iv"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in GSAS"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ERTH"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ERTH"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4002",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Gis @ Ua"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-2940",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Field Methods In Earth Science"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-1961",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ERTH"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-9990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-6990",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EPOW"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-6890",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Computer Methods In Epe"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-6870",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Mechanical Aspects In Epe"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-6860",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Surge Phenomena Epe"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-6820",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Power Quality"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-6090",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Adv Power Electronic Lab"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-4980",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Senior Project"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4440",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Knowledge And Rationality"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Elect Power Engr Project"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-4080",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Semiconductor Power Electr"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-4030",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Epe Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-4020",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Electromechanics"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-2950",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Undergraduate Research Proj"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENVE"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-2962",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENVE"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-6960",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENGR"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-4962",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENGR"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-4700",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Manufacturing Planning"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-4300",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Electronic Instrumentation"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-2964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENGR"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-2961",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENGR"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-2950",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Undergraduate Research Project"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-1962",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENGR"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-1310",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro Engr Electronics"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6969",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EMBA"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6967",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EMBA"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6965",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EMBA"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6962",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EMBA"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6820",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Communicating In Organiz"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6700",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Organizational Behavior"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4968",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6490",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Operations Strategy & Comp Adv"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6360",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Financial Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6340",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Financial Management I"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Econ Mgrl Decision Makin"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6200",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Corporate Vent & Entrepre"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6180",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Managerial Accounting"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6170",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Financial Reporting"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6966",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6780",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Software Engineering II"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6770",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Software Engineering I"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6750",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Finite State Machine Theory"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6730",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Fault Tolerant Systems"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6340",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Plasma Diagnostics"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4969",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4968",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4966",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MTLE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4520",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Communication Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2960",
- "credits" : "1-2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2941",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Open Pmu Data Acquisition"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2800",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Sensing And Imaging"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6966",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6920",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Adv. Quantitative Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4290",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Sustainability By Design"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6570",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Advanced Econometrics"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6560",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Introduction To Econometrics"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6250",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Adv Ecological Economics"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6230",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Adv Environmental Economics"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6020",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Adv Data Analytics & Pol Eval"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6002",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Econometrics II (at Sunya)"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-6990",
- "credits" : "3-6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Masters Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4900",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Seminar In Economics"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6990",
- "credits" : "1-9",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6970",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in DSES"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in DSES"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6900",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Seminar In Dses Research"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6780",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Nonlinear Programming"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6770",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Linear Programming"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6760",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Combin Optim & Integ Progr"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6610",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Systems Modeling In Dses"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6530",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Decision Support&exp Sys"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6520",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Enterprise Database Systems"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6480",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Service Operations Mgt"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6470",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Global Strat Mgt Of Tech"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6210",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Theory Of Prod Schedule"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4200",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Web Science"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6070",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Stat Meth Rel Engr"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6010",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Applied Regression Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6002",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Soc/org Networks (at Sunya)"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in DSES"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4810",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Computational Intelligence"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4780",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Computational Optimization"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4760",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Math Statistics"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4750",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Prob Theory & Applications"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4620",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Oper Research Methods II"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4610",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Oper Research Methods I"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4290",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Discrete Event Sim, Modeling"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4280",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Decision Focused Systems Engr"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2006",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Literary Criticism Theory"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4270",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Indust&mgt Engr Design"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4260",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Industrial Safety & Hygiene"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4240",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Engr Proj Management"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4230",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Quality Control"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4140",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Statistical Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-2210",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Pom And Cost Acctg"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6976",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6975",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6971",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6968",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6967",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6941",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Computability & Complexity"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6490",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Robotics II"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6430",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Programming Languages"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6240",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cryptography And Network Security II"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6210",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Analysis Of Algorithms"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6130",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Natural Language Processing"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6050",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Computability & Complexity"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6002",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Database Systems I @ Ua"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4978",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4975",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHIL"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4969",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4968",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6969",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ERTH"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4941",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Campus Facilities Scheduler"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4680",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Advanced Network Practicum"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4670",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Networking Security Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4660",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Networking Laboratory II"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2770",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Women Writers"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4650",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Networking Laboratory I"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Game Development I"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4490",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Robotics II"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4240",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cryptography And Network Security II"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4130",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Natural Language Processing"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4050",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Comput. & Complexity"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-2964",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-2963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6974",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-2961",
- "credits" : "3-4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-2941",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Rcos-soul Engine"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4976",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-2400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Models Of Computation"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-1960",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "COOP-4010",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Co-op Education Assignment-contact The Cdc To Register"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6969",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6968",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-0960",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6972",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6943",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Proposing And Persuading"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6942",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cop Applications Prototype"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6941",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Perl Usability And The Web"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6810",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Studio Design In Human-computer Interaction"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6790",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Media Studies"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6760",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Electronic Coaching Sys."
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6750",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Comm Design For Www"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6660",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Visual Literacy"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4970",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6570",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Typography"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6480",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Theory & Research In Hci"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6430",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Design For Global Society"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6410",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Ethnography And Cultural Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6400",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cross-cultural Media: Analysis And Applications"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6870",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro To Neural Networks"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6390",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Semiotics And Fieldwork"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6280",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Rhetorical Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6270",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Digital Rhetoric"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4969",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4967",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4830",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Organizational Commun"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4790",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Social Impact Of Electr. Media"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4770",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "User-experience Design"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4710",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Communication Design For The Www"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4670",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Advanced Typography"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4660",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Visual Literacy"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4620",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Language And Culture"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4570",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Typography"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4560",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Media And Popular Culture"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Information Architecture"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-2965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in GSAS"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4340",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Creative Seminar I"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4210",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Designing Interactive Characte"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4180",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Studio Design In Hci"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6960",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EMBA"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4170",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Electronic Coaching Sys."
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6971",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EMBA"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2620",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Color Theory"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2610",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro To Visual Communication"
},
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2510",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Cultural Anthropology"
+ },
{
"code" : "GSAS-2510",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course looks at the mathematics of game theory from a psychological perspective and serves as a primer in video game design. The psychology of players and designers are discussed, as well as the cognitive processes that people use when solving game-related puzzles. Additional topics include logic, human frailty, role playing, artificial intelligence, kinesics, theater, and human-computer interaction.",
"name" : "Introduction to Game Design"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Social & Political Philosophy"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-1600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course surveys 5000 years of game history, from ancient Sumer/Sumerian to the latest next-generation consoles and MMOGs.\u00c2 In parallel with this historical tour, several major theories will be examined about the nature of play and the nature of games.\u00c2 Along the way, it will also look at how games and play influence the cultures they are found in, and how culture in turn influences how people structure their leisure time will also be considered. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course surveys 5000 years of game history, from ancient Sumer/Sumerian to the latest next-generation consoles and MMOGs. In parallel with this historical tour, several major theories will be examined about the nature of play and the nature of games. Along the way, it will also look at how games and play influence the cultures they are found in, and how culture in turn influences how people structure their leisure time will also be considered.",
"name" : "History and Culture of Games"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-1040",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course combines an introduction to traditional visual arts and digital media and serves as a foundation for work in game design and interactive art. Using studio projects that incorporate physical media, digital imaging and computer code, students develop their formal vocabulary, observational skills, and their understanding of issues in visual and interactive arts.",
"name" : "Art for Interactive Media"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITWS"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in ERTH"
},
{
"code" : "ESCI-6990",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presentend, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6970",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ERTH"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ERTH"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6690",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Fundamentals of aqueous geochemistry as applied to the evolution of natural waters. Principles of chemical equilibrium, activity models for solutes, acid-base chemistry, redox chemistry, mineral solubility, aqueous complexes, ion exchange, and stable isotopes will be covered. The carbonate system, weathering reactions, and redox chemistry are examined in detail. Students learn theory, the basics of analytical techniques, computation methods, and the use of computer programs for speciation, mass balance, and reaction path calculations.",
"name" : "Aqueous Geochemistry"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2460",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Human Evolution"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6350",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught. This course meets with ERTH 4350 \u00c2 / CSCI 4350 \u00c2 / ITWS 4350 \u00c2 and CSCI 6350 \u00c2 / ITWS 6350 .",
+ "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught. This course meets with ERTH 4350 / CSCI 4350 / ITWS 4350 and CSCI 6350 / ITWS 6350 .",
"name" : "Data Science"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6210",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Aerodynamics and dynamics of lifting rotors. Design concepts by which rotor weight and stress are minimized and vehicle control is provided. Weight and engine power trends for configuration definition. Center of gravity and aerodynamic lift and moment for equilibrium and desired aircraft attitude. Methods for determining size weight, and cost for a given payload, useful volume, and specified performance. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "VTOL Aircraft Design"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-1050",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A survey of visual arts from Paleolithic Era to today. Materials are presented in a form accessible to students without previous knowledge of Art History.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "A survey of visual arts from Paleolithic Era to today. Materials are presented in a form accessible to students without previous knowledge of Art History.",
"name" : "Art History"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4750",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to analysis and interpretation of spatial data and their presentation on maps. In this computationally intensive course, students will obtain practical skills and hands-on experience with state-of-the-art GIS applications. Concepts covered include map projections, geoprocessing, cartography, raster algebra, terrain modeling, multi-spectral image analysis, georeferencing, interpolation, web mapping, and GPS. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Introduction to analysis and interpretation of spatial data and their presentation on maps. In this computationally intensive course, students will obtain practical skills and hands-on experience with state-of-the-art GIS applications. Concepts covered include map projections, geoprocessing, cartography, raster algebra, terrain modeling, multi-spectral image analysis, georeferencing, interpolation, web mapping, and GPS.",
"name" : "Geographic Information Systems in the Sciences"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4650",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Introduction to the causes, consequences, and uses of vibrations in the Earth. Topics include elastic wave propagation, earthquake source mechanics, seismic risk analysis, exploration seismology, and tomographic imaging.",
"name" : "Seismology"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4570",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The course covers the physics of the Earth's interior, including a survey of its evolution, rotation, gravity and tides, seismicity, internal heat, magnetism, and tectonics.",
"name" : "Solid Earth Geophysics"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6420",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will consider methods for gathering users' requirements for product functions and information, ways to test products and information for usability and suitability, and procedures for incorporating the results learned through testing.\u00c2 Students will design and conduct usability tests on products, documents, and interfaces of interest.",
+ "description" : "This course will consider methods for gathering users' requirements for product functions and information, ways to test products and information for usability and suitability, and procedures for incorporating the results learned through testing. Students will design and conduct usability tests on products, documents, and interfaces of interest.",
"name" : "Foundations of Human-Computer Interaction Usability"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4160",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Free and forced linear vibrations of damped and undamped mechanical and electrical systems of n degrees of freedom. Continuous system vibration. Manual and computer methods of finding natural frequencies, mode shapes, and final solutions. Self-and nonself-adjoint problems. Eigenfunction expansion. Integral transforms. Methods of approximating natural frequencies: Rayleigh quotient, Rayleigh Energy, Rayleigh-Ritz, Ritz-Galerkin, Holzer, Matrix iteration. Perturbation techniques. Stability criteria.",
"name" : "Vibrations"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4560",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Fundamentals of isotope geochemistry as applied to biogeochemical systems in modern and ancient environments. This course covers the principles of both radiogenic and stable isotope distribution, decay, and transfer through Earth's exchangeable reservoirs. This course will emphasize stable isotopes, equilibrium and kinetic isotope fractionation, distribution, isotope mass balance, and using these systems to track global biogeochemical cycles in the modern environment and in deep time.",
"name" : "Isotope Geochemistry"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-2010",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course combines demand, derived from consumer preferences, and supply, based on firms' production functions, to establish market prices for goods and services. Calculus-based techniques are used to minimize costs and maximize utility and profits across differing industry structures. Product pricing strategies are examined. The course also provides an introduction to topics such as\u00c2 the pricing of stocks and bonds, game theory, positive and negative externalities, asymmetric information, and behavioral economics. Applies the microeconomic theory of the firm to price, cost, and output decisions of business enterprises under different market structures. Regression analysis of demand and cost, linear programming of production and simulation analysis of risk, and capital budgeting are also presented.",
+ "description" : "This course combines demand, derived from consumer preferences, and supply, based on firms' production functions, to establish market prices for goods and services. Calculus-based techniques are used to minimize costs and maximize utility and profits across differing industry structures. Product pricing strategies are examined. The course also provides an introduction to topics such as the pricing of stocks and bonds, game theory, positive and negative externalities, asymmetric information, and behavioral economics. Applies the microeconomic theory of the firm to price, cost, and output decisions of business enterprises under different market structures. Regression analysis of demand and cost, linear programming of production and simulation analysis of risk, and capital budgeting are also presented.",
"name" : "Intermediate Microeconomic Theory"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-6360",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course examines relationships between microorganisms and Earth processes.\u00c2 Topics include the origins of life on Earth, surface metabolism theory, biological and biochemical benchmarks. Earth is considered as a microbial habitat with emphasis on the lithosphere and hydrosphere, including soils, seawater, lakes, rivers, and groundwater. Geomicrobial processes, including microbial conversion of inorganics and metals and mineralization of organics, are discussed.\u00c2 Molecular and non-molecular methods for detection, isolation, and identification of geo-microbially active organisms are introduced.",
+ "description" : "This course examines relationships between microorganisms and Earth processes. Topics include the origins of life on Earth, surface metabolism theory, biological and biochemical benchmarks. Earth is considered as a microbial habitat with emphasis on the lithosphere and hydrosphere, including soils, seawater, lakes, rivers, and groundwater. Geomicrobial processes, including microbial conversion of inorganics and metals and mineralization of organics, are discussed. Molecular and non-molecular methods for detection, isolation, and identification of geo-microbially active organisms are introduced.",
"name" : "Geomicrobiology"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6110",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Statistics & Oper Mgmt II"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4190",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Modern methods used in analysis of environmental samples for monitoring and research purposes. Standard and advanced techniques of air, water, sediment, and soil analysis are covered including spectrometric and chromatographic methods.",
"name" : "Environmental Measurements"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6400",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course uses empirical methodologies, both cross-sectional and time series, to examine various issues in finance. Students will gain practical experience in analyzing, various asset pricing models, efficiency of financial markets, various volatility models, and forecasting evaluations. Computers are used extensively both in and out of class.",
"name" : "Financial Econometrics Modeling"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4180",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A consideration of technical and scientific aspects of key geo-societal issues.\u00c2 Case studies and analysis of current and historic data bases will be used to illustrate topics including, but not limited to, climate modification, energy resources, future energy, water resources, water pollution, and health risks posed by lead, mercury, and emerging pollutants.",
+ "description" : "A consideration of technical and scientific aspects of key geo-societal issues. Case studies and analysis of current and historic data bases will be used to illustrate topics including, but not limited to, climate modification, energy resources, future energy, water resources, water pollution, and health risks posed by lead, mercury, and emerging pollutants.",
"name" : "Environmental Geology"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-6540",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Responsible Conduct Of Research"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6820",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Numerical methods and analysis for ODEs with applications from mechanics, optics, and chaotic dynamics. Numerical methods for dynamic systems include Runge-Kutta, multistep and extrapolation techniques, methods for conservative and Hamiltonian systems, methods for stiff differential equations and for differential-algebraic systems. Methods for boundary value problems include shooting and orthogonalization, finite difference and collocation techniques, and special methods for problems with boundary or shock layers.",
"name" : "Numerical Solution of Ordinary Differential Equations"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6710",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An intensive study of hydrologic, geologic, and other factors controlling groundwater flow, occurrence, development, chemistry, and contamination. Groundwater flow theory and aquifer test methods are introduced. Interaction between surface and subsurface hydrologic systems are covered. Some field trips are possible.",
"name" : "Advanced Groundwater Hydrology"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-1250",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "The lab provides an introduction to analytical approaches, measurements, and observations used by geoscientists to advance understanding of natural surface earth, hydrologic, and atmospheric processes and the influence of human activities.",
"name" : "Geology ll: Earth's Surface Lab"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4560",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biomaterial Applications In Medicine"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-4962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITEC"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-6990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6820",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A course on fundamentals of stochastic processes and queuing theory emphasizing applications. Poisson processes, renewal processes, Markov chains, general methods in the study of Markovian and non-Markovian systems, tandem queues, networks of queues, priority and bulk queues, computational methods, and simulation. Focus of the course is the application of these tools in the performance evaluation and design of computer systems, communication networks, manufacturing systems, and service systems.",
"name" : "Queuing Systems and Applications"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-7020",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Computer control and estimation algorithms including deterministic and stochastic models. Markov sequence and Bayes decision rules, linear Kalman filtering, predicting, and smoothing. Parameter identification, combined state and parameter estimation. Adaptive filters and on-line rapid estimation schemes, extended and nonlinear filters. Optimal digital control of deterministic and stochastic systems. Separation theorems.",
"name" : "Digital Control and Estimation"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4810",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The second semester of the Sonics Research Lab includes advanced acoustical measurement techniques. Another important part of the semester curriculum concerns noise sources, noise control, and vibration measurements. State-of-the-art, commercial software and the school's research-based software will be used for simulation/analysis/measurement of room acoustics in order to show the students how such technical tools assist in acoustics research and consulting practice for the design of performance and public spaces. The course will also give students a deeper theoretical understanding of architectural acoustics in order to assist them in room acoustics research. There will also be labs to reflect typical measurement procedures and (if time permits) site visits to acoustics research labs and different types of acoustical spaces. The Sonics Research Lab 2 emphasizes more training on independent hands-on and problem-solving skills (than the Sonics Research Lab 1). B.S. and B.Arch., and other school students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S. in Architecture students must register only for the 6000 level of this course. This course is required of all graduate students in the M.S. in Architectural Sciences with Concentration in Acoustics, and in co-term. Other undergraduate students from Architecture and Engineering can take it as a minor course at the 4000 level. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "The second semester of the Sonics Research Lab includes advanced acoustical measurement techniques. Another important part of the semester curriculum concerns noise sources, noise control, and vibration measurements. State-of-the-art, commercial software and the school's research-based software will be used for simulation/analysis/measurement of room acoustics in order to show the students how such technical tools assist in acoustics research and consulting practice for the design of performance and public spaces. The course will also give students a deeper theoretical understanding of architectural acoustics in order to assist them in room acoustics research. There will also be labs to reflect typical measurement procedures and (if time permits) site visits to acoustics research labs and different types of acoustical spaces. The Sonics Research Lab 2 emphasizes more training on independent hands-on and problem-solving skills (than the Sonics Research Lab 1). B.S. and B.Arch., and other school students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S. in Architecture students must register only for the 6000 level of this course. This course is required of all graduate students in the M.S. in Architectural Sciences with Concentration in Acoustics, and in co-term. Other undergraduate students from Architecture and Engineering can take it as a minor course at the 4000 level.",
"name" : "Sonics Research Lab 2"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4070",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Architecture and painting are two of the oldest forms of societal expression and have been historically linked in complex and dynamic ways. In the 20th century, the movements of Cubism, Futurism, Neo-Plasticism, Constructivism, Purism, Surrealism, and Dadaism consisted of dynamic dialogs between architecture and painting. These exchanges allowed each to have a profound and deep impact upon the other. By contrast, in early 21st century, there seems to be all but a mute relationship between the two. This course intends to help break that silence. This course will begin to bridge the divide by establishing new connections between the current preoccupations with materials, procedures, and affects that are emerging in both contemporary painting and architecture. Twisted Siblings seeks to explore and discover new relationships between the most cutting-edge digital technologies and how painting may influence the expressive capacities of these technologies. As contemporary painting and architecture seek to establish future directions, a new dialog and exchange of ideas should be emerging, to ensure a dynamic and radical future for both. The course will consist of a series of lectures, discussions, and presentations. Students will be expected to research a number of individual architects, painters, and writers who are producing work of related interest. Students will be responsible for completing a research project, which synthesizes the content of the course.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Architecture and painting are two of the oldest forms of societal expression and have been historically linked in complex and dynamic ways. In the 20th century, the movements of Cubism, Futurism, Neo-Plasticism, Constructivism, Purism, Surrealism, and Dadaism consisted of dynamic dialogs between architecture and painting. These exchanges allowed each to have a profound and deep impact upon the other. By contrast, in early 21st century, there seems to be all but a mute relationship between the two. This course intends to help break that silence. This course will begin to bridge the divide by establishing new connections between the current preoccupations with materials, procedures, and affects that are emerging in both contemporary painting and architecture. Twisted Siblings seeks to explore and discover new relationships between the most cutting-edge digital technologies and how painting may influence the expressive capacities of these technologies. As contemporary painting and architecture seek to establish future directions, a new dialog and exchange of ideas should be emerging, to ensure a dynamic and radical future for both. The course will consist of a series of lectures, discussions, and presentations. Students will be expected to research a number of individual architects, painters, and writers who are producing work of related interest. Students will be responsible for completing a research project, which synthesizes the content of the course.",
"name" : "Twisted Siblings: Relationships Between Contemporary Painting and Digital Architecture"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
"description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-4070",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Analysis and design of metal structures. Structural materials and loads. Design of beams, columns, bolted and welded connections. Composite construction.",
"name" : "Steel Design"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4968",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6320",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An exploration of models of decision-making under alternative assumptions, expanding on \"rational\" models of introductory economics. The course will discuss the assumptions of these standard models and their shortcomings. The shortcomings will be addressed through exploration of limited attention and considerations of fairness, uncertainty, and strategic interaction. Applications in areas such as consumer and household finance, marketing, and public policy will be emphasized throughout.",
"name" : "Economic Models of Decision-Making"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4530",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Information Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4340",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Physical and chemical processes governing water quality in natural and engineered systems with applications to potable water treatment. Topics include reactor dynamics, coagulation and flocculation, sedimentation, filtration, gas transfer, adsorption and ion exchange, and membrane processes. A design project for which students develop a computer model of an environmental process is required. Includes laboratory experiments to measure physicochemical process parameters, emphasizing experimental design, data evaluation, and report writing. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Physical and chemical processes governing water quality in natural and engineered systems with applications to potable water treatment. Topics include reactor dynamics, coagulation and flocculation, sedimentation, filtration, gas transfer, adsorption and ion exchange, and membrane processes. A design project for which students develop a computer model of an environmental process is required. Includes laboratory experiments to measure physicochemical process parameters, emphasizing experimental design, data evaluation, and report writing.",
"name" : "Physicochemical Processes in Environmental Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4720",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "The techniques of gel electrophoresis, restriction enzyme mapping, PCR, and use of a molecular biology software program are applied to the study of bacterial plasmids and mammalian genes. The course includes extensive hands-on laboratory work, as well as the writing of in-depth reports.\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "description" : "The techniques of gel electrophoresis, restriction enzyme mapping, PCR, and use of a molecular biology software program are applied to the study of bacterial plasmids and mammalian genes. The course includes extensive hands-on laboratory work, as well as the writing of in-depth reports. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Molecular Biology Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4330",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Quantitative introduction to the engineering methods for the study of air quality. Topics include but are not limited to: estimation procedures for air pollution emissions; indoor air quality problems, impacts and control strategies; sources, impacts and control strategies for greenhouse gases; dispersion modeling for point sources; pollutant acidification of lakes; chemistry of stoichiometric and non-stoichiometric combustion; assessment methods for human exposure to air pollutants.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Quantitative introduction to the engineering methods for the study of air quality. Topics include but are not limited to: estimation procedures for air pollution emissions; indoor air quality problems, impacts and control strategies; sources, impacts and control strategies for greenhouse gases; dispersion modeling for point sources; pollutant acidification of lakes; chemistry of stoichiometric and non-stoichiometric combustion; assessment methods for human exposure to air pollutants.",
"name" : "Introduction to Air Quality"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4320",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The movement of chemicals in air, water, and soil is presented to demonstrate the relation of physiochemical principles in the behavior of chemicals in the environment. Topics include chemical and thermal equilibrium at environmental interfaces, transport fundamentals, and the fate and transport of chemicals in various environmental compartments. Includes experimental analysis of natural and engineered chemical and thermodynamic processes, emphasizing experimental design, data evaluation, and report writing. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "The movement of chemicals in air, water, and soil is presented to demonstrate the relation of physiochemical principles in the behavior of chemicals in the environment. Topics include chemical and thermal equilibrium at environmental interfaces, transport fundamentals, and the fate and transport of chemicals in various environmental compartments. Includes experimental analysis of natural and engineered chemical and thermodynamic processes, emphasizing experimental design, data evaluation, and report writing.",
"name" : "Environmental Chemodynamics"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Environmental Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4140",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is a continuation of PHIL 2140 , covering basic metatheory of logic (including formal syntax and semantics, model theory, and soundness and completeness of proof systems), applications of logic (including automated theorem proving, deductive problem solving, and the axiomatization of various branches of mathematics), and alternative systems of logic (including sequent systems, diagrammatic logic, and modal logic).",
"name" : "Intermediate Logic"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6280",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The fundamentals of dynamic equilibrium with applications to planning and real-time operations in transportation systems. A network optimization approach to dynamic models including time dependent shortest path algorithms, analytical and simulation models for dynamic traffic assignment. Applications of these approaches to network wide real-time control. Emphasis on implementation of algorithms using programming languages.",
"name" : "Dynamic Traffic Models"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-6230",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Learn the fundamentals of lean and six sigma philosophies and gain experience with a toolkit to improve existing processes by applying them to relevant workplace process. The Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, and Control (DMAIC) improvement cycle is used, in which students learn and gain experience using multiple tools for each step of the improvement cycle, including voice of customer (VOC), quality functional deployment (QFD), 5S, Kaizens, and plan-do-check-act (PDCA).",
"name" : "Lean Six Sigma I"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ERTH"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-6221",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Students develop predictive models that lead to the least likelihood of unintended variance and build natural language and recommendation engines for common applications such as enhancement engines. Students observe results and tune recommendation models to achieve more accurate predictions and recommendations.",
"name" : "Machine Learning Frameworks"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-1963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-6220",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Students design and deploy analytical systems that serve as the basis for the analysis, processing, storage, and interface of the machine learing process. Students choose learning models appropriate to the result desired using decision tree, Bayesian, neural net, and vector machine approaches. Students use multiple statistical approaches to evaluate results that lead to best results.",
"name" : "Data Architecture"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-6216",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Working with a faculty member, students develop a big data inquiry model for a complex business issue, question, or problem of their choosing. Over the semester, the student frames the question to be analyzed, collects and prepares business data for analysis, performs the analysis, and presents actionable results and recommendations back to the organization. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6206 \u00c2 or ENGR 6211 .",
+ "description" : "Working with a faculty member, students develop a big data inquiry model for a complex business issue, question, or problem of their choosing. Over the semester, the student frames the question to be analyzed, collects and prepares business data for analysis, performs the analysis, and presents actionable results and recommendations back to the organization. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6206 or ENGR 6211 .",
"name" : "Modeling Business Decisions"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-6205",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Students use visualization and cluster analysis tools to gain deeper insights into production and logistic relationships. Students apply data analytic process to real-world production problems and questions, including evaluating production throughput, factor isolation and output risk analysis, modeling production changes, forecasting environmental control factor changes, and minimization of defects and shortages. Students tune models to represent current-state and adjust models as underlying assumptions change. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6210 \u00c2 or ENGR 6215 .",
+ "description" : "Students use visualization and cluster analysis tools to gain deeper insights into production and logistic relationships. Students apply data analytic process to real-world production problems and questions, including evaluating production throughput, factor isolation and output risk analysis, modeling production changes, forecasting environmental control factor changes, and minimization of defects and shortages. Students tune models to represent current-state and adjust models as underlying assumptions change. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6210 or ENGR 6215 .",
"name" : "Production and Logistic Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-6100",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Investigates business-related considerations in successfully commercializing new technology in a new venture or within an existing enterprise: market and customer analysis, beating the competition, planning and managing for profitability, high-tech marketing and sales, and business partnerships and acquisitions. Not a general management course; focuses explicitly on what is relevant for engineers and scientists working in a commercial environment. For junior/senior undergraduate or graduate students.",
"name" : "Business Issues for Engineers and Scientists"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-4750",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course deals with cost analysis in engineering decision making and the management and control of complex projects. Engineering economics topics include interest formulas and equivalence calculations, inflation, measures of investment worth, after tax analysis, depreciation accounting and replacement analyses, life-cycle costing and design economics, risk analysis and cost-benefit analysis. Engineering project management topics include methods for planning, evaluation, organization, budgeting, cost estimating, scheduling, expediting, reporting, monitoring, and implementation of projects. Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either ENGR 4760 \u00c2 or ISYE 4240 .",
+ "description" : "This course deals with cost analysis in engineering decision making and the management and control of complex projects. Engineering economics topics include interest formulas and equivalence calculations, inflation, measures of investment worth, after tax analysis, depreciation accounting and replacement analyses, life-cycle costing and design economics, risk analysis and cost-benefit analysis. Engineering project management topics include methods for planning, evaluation, organization, budgeting, cost estimating, scheduling, expediting, reporting, monitoring, and implementation of projects. Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either ENGR 4760 or ISYE 4240 .",
"name" : "Engineering Economics and Project Management"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4380",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Phil Of Mathematics"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-4830",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A comprehensive overview of the physics of light and its applications for lighting. The course uses a variety of instructional methodologies, including lectures, laboratory sessions, hands-on experimentation, and individual student projects and presentations to cover various areas of lighting study. Topics include geometric optics, physical optics, lighting calculations and measures, spectroradiometry, measurement techniques for advanced light sources, radiometry, and photometry.",
"name" : "Physics of Light"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4370",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A laboratory course covering topics in instrumentation, radiation detection and dosimetry associated with X-ray, gamma-ray, electron and neutron sources, applied physics,\u00c2 fluid dynamics, spectroscopy, neutron time of flight, and a project on shielding design using the MCNP code. Statistics of random events, error propagation, end error analyses are emphasized. Lab attendance is required along with formal written lab reports, which include data error analysis.",
+ "description" : "A laboratory course covering topics in instrumentation, radiation detection and dosimetry associated with X-ray, gamma-ray, electron and neutron sources, applied physics, fluid dynamics, spectroscopy, neutron time of flight, and a project on shielding design using the MCNP code. Statistics of random events, error propagation, end error analyses are emphasized. Lab attendance is required along with formal written lab reports, which include data error analysis.",
"name" : "Nuclear Engineering Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-4200",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This course provides a practical introduction to computer programming in Classical\u00c2 Fortran, emphasizing selected language features that are useful in performing numerical calculations. It is intended mainly for graduate students in engineering and science who need to use Fortran in research projects and in courses that assume a knowledge of the language or of programming. Grading is based primarily on the student's use of Fortran in a significant project, which may be for thesis research or for another course. Required reading (about 17 pages per week) is assigned from the textbook \"Classical Fortran Second Edition\" and there might be short in-class quizzes on the reading.",
+ "description" : "This course provides a practical introduction to computer programming in Classical Fortran, emphasizing selected language features that are useful in performing numerical calculations. It is intended mainly for graduate students in engineering and science who need to use Fortran in research projects and in courses that assume a knowledge of the language or of programming. Grading is based primarily on the student's use of Fortran in a significant project, which may be for thesis research or for another course. Required reading (about 17 pages per week) is assigned from the textbook \"Classical Fortran Second Edition\" and there might be short in-class quizzes on the reading.",
"name" : "Fortran Programming"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-4010",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Students will study issues associated with working in teams in a modern work environment. Various styles of leadership, the definitions of power and empowerment and their applications in industry and team settings will be studied. Additionally, other topics to be explored include vision, values and attitudes, and organizational culture. The course format will include small and large group discussions, case studies, experiential exercises, and participation from industry guests.",
"name" : "Professional Development: Leadership Competencies"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4690",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Fundamentals of aqueous geochemistry as applied to the evolution of natural waters. Principles of chemical equilibrium, activity models for solutes, acid-base chemistry, redox chemistry, mineral solubility, aqueous complexes, ion exchange, and stable isotopes will be covered. The carbonate system, weathering reactions, and redox chemistry are examined in detail. Students learn theory, the basics of analytical techniques, computation methods, and the use of computer programs for speciation, mass balance, and reaction path calculations.",
"name" : "Aqueous Geochemistry"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4200",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Classification and characteristics of solid and hazardous wastes; appropriate waste management systems; design of collection and transfer systems; methods of destruction and disposal, including landfills; recycle methods; and salvage and conversion operations for resource recovery.",
"name" : "Solid and Hazardous Waste Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-6960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATP"
},
{
"code" : "ESCI-6970",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ESCI"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-2530",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Concept of stress and strain, generalized Hooke's law, axial load, torsion, pure bending, transverse loading, transformation of stress and strain components in 2D, design of beams and shafts for strength, deflection of beams, work and energy, columns.",
"name" : "Strength of Materials"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6110",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Analytical and geometrical theories of function, path, and motion generation of four bar linkages. Consists of 3, 4, and 5 accuracy points. Review of recent developments and use of computer graphic methods.",
"name" : "Kinematic Synthesis"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4250",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Facilit Dsn & Indus Log"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6110",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "The diffusion process in metals and alloys. Solution to Fick's law. Self-diffusion. Effect of temperature upon diffusion. Grain boundary and surface diffusion. Solution and diffusion of gases in metals. Diffusion in carburizing, the austenite transformation, powder metallurgy, and the scaling of metals and alloys.",
"name" : "Diffusion in Solids"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-2250",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Application of control volume balances of mass, momentum, energy, and entropy in systems of practical importance to all engineers. Identification of control volumes, properties of pure materials, mass and energy conservation for closed and open systems, second law of thermodynamics, Bernoulli equation, fluid statics, forces and heat transfer in external and internal flows, conduction, and radiative heat transfer.",
"name" : "Thermal and Fluids Engineering I"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-0040",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course continues to explore the dimensions of creative and innovative tactical leadership strategies and styles by examining team dynamics and two historical leadership theories that form the basis of the army leadership framework. Aspects of personal motivation and team building are practice planning, executing, and assessing team exercises. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 2020 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
"name" : "Applied Leadership Lab II"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-2090",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An integrated development of modeling-and problem-solving techniques for particles and rigid bodies emphasizing the use of free-body diagrams, vector algebra, and computer simulation. Topics covered include the kinematics and kinetics of translational, rotational, and general plane motion, energy and momentum methods.",
"name" : "Engineering Dynamics"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Studies in Environmental Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-6400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A seminar course that focuses on the history and theory of alternative and socially-engaged design for interactive media. Students will read and discuss design history, art history, conceptual artistic practice, and new and emerging theories about digital, critical, and speculative design and the digital humanities. The course is designed to advance students' understanding of bodies of academic literature and theory that explore the hybridization of hermeneutic analysis and design and making practice. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "A seminar course that focuses on the history and theory of alternative and socially-engaged design for interactive media. Students will read and discuss design history, art history, conceptual artistic practice, and new and emerging theories about digital, critical, and speculative design and the digital humanities. The course is designed to advance students' understanding of bodies of academic literature and theory that explore the hybridization of hermeneutic analysis and design and making practice.",
"name" : "Critical Game Design: History/Theory/Futures"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4969",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-1100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An integrated development of linear algebra and statics emphasizing engineering applications and also incorporating computer exercises involving matrix techniques and calculations using available software packages.",
"name" : "Introduction to Engineering Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-6210",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Students use visualization and cluster analysis tools to gain deeper insight into health industry relationships. Students apply data analytic process to real-world health care problems and questions, including resources scheduling optimization, therapeutic effectiveness analysis, population intervention studies, demographically-related health trends, and benchmark setting for standard of care dashboard development. Students tune models to represent current-state and adjust models as underlying assumptions change. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6205 \u00c2 or ENGR 6215 .",
+ "description" : "Students use visualization and cluster analysis tools to gain deeper insight into health industry relationships. Students apply data analytic process to real-world health care problems and questions, including resources scheduling optimization, therapeutic effectiveness analysis, population intervention studies, demographically-related health trends, and benchmark setting for standard of care dashboard development. Students tune models to represent current-state and adjust models as underlying assumptions change. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6205 or ENGR 6215 .",
"name" : "Health Industry Analytics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4530",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Application of linear feedback theory to the design of large-scale, integrated control systems. Derivation of complex mathematical models of physical systems. Synthesis of appropriate control laws to provide stability. Simulation of complex systems on digital computers.",
"name" : "Control Systems Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4880",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Mane Laboratory Safety Program"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-1010",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "An introduction to the issues related to working in team settings. Topics explored include: communications in teams, public speaking and professional responsibility, stages of group development, building a team, group decision making, and conflict resolution. The course format will include small and large group discussions, case studies, experiential exercises, and participation from industry guests.",
"name" : "Professional Development: Group Dynamics"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4360",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores human motivation and behavior across different settings and experimental paradigms. The course familiarizes students with previous work in selected topics in behavioral and experimental economics such as charitable giving, individual decision making and preferences, health, scarcity, and worker motivation. It also prepares students to design, implement and analyze their own economics experiments.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course explores human motivation and behavior across different settings and experimental paradigms. The course familiarizes students with previous work in selected topics in behavioral and experimental economics such as charitable giving, individual decision making and preferences, health, scarcity, and worker motivation. It also prepares students to design, implement and analyze their own economics experiments.",
"name" : "Experimental Economics"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6900",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "to be arranged",
"name" : "Seminar in Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-2941",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Methods In Astrobiology"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6800",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course will cover 3D graphical application programmer interfaces (APIs) and advanced rendering techniques, visulation pipelines, creating simulations, and visualization packages. Also covered will be algorithms for extracting visual information from data sets, such as determining iso-surfaces, contours, and cut planes. A programming emphasis will be on object-oriented design and systems. Term project required.",
"name" : "Advanced 3D Computer Graphics and Visualization"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6100",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Time Series Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-1010",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Functions, limits, continuity, derivatives, implicit differentiation, related rates, maxima and minima, elementary transcendental functions, introduction to definite integral with applications to area and volumes of revolution.\u00c2 Students cannot get credit for both MATH 1010 and MATH 1500 . \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Functions, limits, continuity, derivatives, implicit differentiation, related rates, maxima and minima, elementary transcendental functions, introduction to definite integral with applications to area and volumes of revolution. Students cannot get credit for both MATH 1010 and MATH 1500 .",
"name" : "Calculus I"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-2110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Classes of pollutants and standards that define water, air and soil quality. Risk concepts and regulations to protect public health and ecosystems. Application of physics, chemistry and biology to describe and assess\u00c2 environmental systems. Application of mass and energy balances to design and analyze processes that purify water, air and land. Selected topics in water resources and management of solid and hazardous wastes.",
+ "description" : "Classes of pollutants and standards that define water, air and soil quality. Risk concepts and regulations to protect public health and ecosystems. Application of physics, chemistry and biology to describe and assess environmental systems. Application of mass and energy balances to design and analyze processes that purify water, air and land. Selected topics in water resources and management of solid and hazardous wastes.",
"name" : "Introduction to Environmental Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENVE"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4620",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will introduce synthetic and kinetic aspects of various polymerization reactions that have been employed to produce commodity and specialty plastic materials.\u00c2 Control and prediction of the molecular weight distribution for different polymerization mechanisms will be discussed along with various characterization techniques of molecular weight distribution and its relation to properties. Thermal/solution properties, chemical/physical properties, and uses of polymers also will be discussed. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 6620 . \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course will introduce synthetic and kinetic aspects of various polymerization reactions that have been employed to produce commodity and specialty plastic materials. Control and prediction of the molecular weight distribution for different polymerization mechanisms will be discussed along with various characterization techniques of molecular weight distribution and its relation to properties. Thermal/solution properties, chemical/physical properties, and uses of polymers also will be discussed. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 6620 .",
"name" : "Introduction to Polymer Chemistry"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-5060",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "One-dimensional isentropic compressible flow. Normal stationary and moving shock waves. Design on inlet and ducted diffusers, steady flow wind tunnels and shock tubes. Flow in ducts with friction and heat transfer.",
"name" : "Introduction to Compressible Flow"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6540",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro Comm Research II"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4951",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Contemporary Ceramics"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6620",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course describes the computer vision problems that underlie modern visual effects in movies, in which original video footage is transformed or augmented to create fantastic, yet plausible environments. The course provides a critical overview of the important literature for several problem categories, describing \"under-the-hood\" concepts and algorithms in mathematical detail. In many cases, the relevant academic research is only a few years old and has only recently been applied to movies, TV shows, and commercials.",
"name" : "Computer Vision for Visual Effects"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6610",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Structure of pattern classification problems. Mathematics of statistical decision theory: random vectors, multivariate probability functions, discriminants, parametric and nonparametric techniques, Bayesian and maximum likelihood estimation, feature selection, dimensionality reduction, whitening transformations. Adaptive methods and clustering. Five programming assignments and a term paper.",
"name" : "Pattern Recognition"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6970",
- "credits" : "0-6",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6600",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course will cover concepts and protocols which enable heterogeneous computer networks to work with each other, including transport (TCP, UDP), network (IP, IPng), routing (RIP, OSPF), network management (SNMP, SNMPv2, RMON), and other important protocols like ARP, ICMP, DNS, BOOTP, DHCP, and HTTP. Advanced topics like Mobile IP, Real-time and reservation protocols (RTP, RSVP), IP multicast (IGMP, MBONE) and network security will also be examined. Emphasis will be on breadth of coverage, as well as hands-on programming experiences.",
"name" : "Internet Protocols"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LITR"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4460",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Materials selection for nuclear applications in current and next generation nuclear systems.\u00c2 specific topics include: crystal structure; atomic bonds; defects in solids; thermodynamics; phase diagrams; kinetic processes in materials diffusion; phase transformation; mechanical properties of materials; thermal transport behavior of nuclear materials; corrosion in nuclear systems; radiation interaction of materials with neutron and charged particles; microstructural evolution of materials; properties of fuel clad; fuel chemistry; high burn-up and accident tolerant fuels; and nuclear waste management.",
+ "description" : "Materials selection for nuclear applications in current and next generation nuclear systems. specific topics include: crystal structure; atomic bonds; defects in solids; thermodynamics; phase diagrams; kinetic processes in materials diffusion; phase transformation; mechanical properties of materials; thermal transport behavior of nuclear materials; corrosion in nuclear systems; radiation interaction of materials with neutron and charged particles; microstructural evolution of materials; properties of fuel clad; fuel chemistry; high burn-up and accident tolerant fuels; and nuclear waste management.",
"name" : "Engineering Materials for Nuclear Application"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6550",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Review of measure and integration theory, elements of probability, random variables, conditional probability, and expectations. Stochastic processes, stationarity, and ergodicity. Gaussian processes and Brownian motion, the Poisson process. Markov processes, wide-sense stationary processes, spectral representations, linear prediction and filtering. Stochastic integrals and differential equations, white noise and the stochastic calculus, the Fokker-Planck equation, diffusion processes, recursive filtering and estimation, evaluation of likelihood ratios. Applications in communication, information processing, and control.",
"name" : "Stochastic Processes in Communication and Control"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6410",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An in-depth and comprehensive treatment of membrane technology. Membrane preparation and morphology. Models for transport through membranes. Fluid-dynamic phenomena across membrane systems. Particle dynamics, membrane fouling, and concentration polarization. Applications to chemical and biochemical separations. Critical reviews of the current literature.",
"name" : "Advanced Membrane Concepts"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6400",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Experimental Game Design is an upper level studio arts course focusing on the creation of innovative, workable game prototypes using a variety of interactive media.\u00c2 Games are considered as a new genre and are analyzed as cultural artifacts.\u00c2 The aesthetics of game design including character development, level design, game play experience, and delivery systems are covered.\u00c2 Flow, game theory, and game play gestalt are considered.\u00c2 Alternate gaming paradigms and emerging forms are encouraged.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Experimental Game Design is an upper level studio arts course focusing on the creation of innovative, workable game prototypes using a variety of interactive media. Games are considered as a new genre and are analyzed as cultural artifacts. The aesthetics of game design including character development, level design, game play experience, and delivery systems are covered. Flow, game theory, and game play gestalt are considered. Alternate gaming paradigms and emerging forms are encouraged.",
"name" : "Experimental Game Design"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4940",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Selected readings in the biochemistry and biophysics literature to supplement the scientific background of undergraduate students. May be used as a BCBP elective with approval of the BCBP Curriculum Committee.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Selected readings in the biochemistry and biophysics literature to supplement the scientific background of undergraduate students. May be used as a BCBP elective with approval of the BCBP Curriculum Committee.",
"name" : "Readings in Biochemistry and Biophysics"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6520",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A course in the principles of analytical chemistry emphasizing the role of equilibrium chemistry in chemical analysis and the statistical design of experiments. Topics covered include equilibrium chemistry, electrochemistry, chromatographic separations, thermal methods, and chemometrics/experimental design.",
"name" : "Advanced Analytical Chemistry"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-6110",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An intensive study of hydrologic, geologic, and other factors controlling groundwater flow, occurrence, development, chemistry, and contamination. Groundwater flow theory and aquifer test methods are introduced. Interaction between surface and subsurface hydrologic systems are covered. Some field trips are possible.",
"name" : "Advanced Groundwater Hydrology"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6480",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course contains the fundamental theory required to design adaptive systems. Topics include parameter identification, ARMA modeling, model reference systems, self-tuning systems, adaptive filtering, and reinforcement learning. Applications to engineered systems are introduced.",
"name" : "Adaptive Systems and Reinforcement Learning"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6440",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The concepts, techniques, and tools related to optimal control for dynamical systems. Major topics include calculus of variation, minimum principle, dynamic programming, optimal estimation, and differential games. Both discrete time systems and continuous times are addressed. Particular consideration is given to linear time invariant systems in terms of linear quadratic regulator and Kalman filter.",
"name" : "Optimal Control Theory"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Difference equations; matrix operation, linear systems, matrix eigenvalue problems, multi-group diffusion, and transport theory methods. Sn calculations, Monte Carlo methods. Application to nuclear engineering calculations, such as flux and power distributions, heat conduction, programming reactor problems for digital computers, codes, etc.",
"name" : "Numerical Methods in Reactor Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Theory and practice of IC fabrication in a research laboratory environment. Test chips are fabricated and the resulting devices and circuits evaluated. Processes and fabrication equipment studied and used include oxidation/diffusion, CVD reactors, photolithography, plasma etching, vacuum evaporator, ion implantation, etc. Instruments used in process monitoring and final testing include thin film profilometer, ellipsometer, resistivity probe, scanning electron microscope, capacitance-voltage system, etc. The fundamentals of hazardous material handling and clean room procedures are studied.",
"name" : "Integrated Circuit Fabrication Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-4640",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to the analysis and planning of transportation systems. Study of the basic interaction between transportation supply and demand. Role of transportation systems analysis in the social, environmental, and policy making. Trip generation. Trip distribution. Mode split. Traffic Assignment. Computer applications (meets with CIVL 6250 \u00c2 Transportation System Planning). Students cannot obtain credit for this course and CIVL 6250 .",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the analysis and planning of transportation systems. Study of the basic interaction between transportation supply and demand. Role of transportation systems analysis in the social, environmental, and policy making. Trip generation. Trip distribution. Mode split. Traffic Assignment. Computer applications (meets with CIVL 6250 Transportation System Planning). Students cannot obtain credit for this course and CIVL 6250 .",
"name" : "Transportation System Planning"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6966",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4943",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Motivation & Performance"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6270",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A brief review of interaction of light with matter. Operating principles, basic designs, and applications of optoelectronic devices such as Light Emitting Diodes, Laser Diodes, Photodetectors, and Solar Cells. Electro-optic, Acousto-optic and Non-linear optic based optical components such as Modulators, Switches, Couplers, Multiplexers, and Amplifiers. Optical Waveguides and Fibers. Optoelectronic Applications such as Fiber Optic and Free Space Optical Communication, Photovoltaics, Thermophotovoltaics, and Solid-State Lighting.",
"name" : "Optoelectronics"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6230",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The physical operation of basic modern semiconductor devices and the determination of their internal parameters are discussed in detail. A review of semiconductor physics, including incomplete ionization, carrier lifetimes, and carrier transport, and solutions of continuity equation are presented. Devices include pn junction diodes, metal-oxide-semiconductor capacitors and field-effect transistors. Emphasis is placed on the fundamental mechanisms that contribute to device performance. The interrelationship between device parameters and circuit performance is also discussed.",
"name" : "Semiconductor Devices and Models I"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6210",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introduction to emerging electronic and optoelectronics technology. Topics cover cutting edge technologies and novel device concepts, such as quantum devices, silicon-on-insulators (SOI), compound semiconductor devices and technologies, thin film transistors (TFTs), wide band gap semiconductor devices and technologies, Si-Ge devices, solar cells, photodetectors, semiconductor lasers, opto-electronic ICs, optical interconnects, and display technologies.",
"name" : "Advanced Device Concepts"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4250",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course focuses on the principles of managerial accounting, in three major areas: 1) how managerial behavior influences costs; 2) how managers use accounting information to make strategic decisions; and 3) how to evaluate and control managerial actions. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
"name" : "Managerial Accounting"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6170",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Modeling and simulation of cyber-physical systems through object-oriented equation-based computer languages and software tools. Describes formalisms for continuous, discrete, timed-clocked synchronous systems and finite state machines; and applies simulation methods through numerical solution of differential-and-algebraic higher-and-varying index systems of equations with time and state event event handling. Composing reusable model architectures, templates, interfaces and data management for model variants. Applies model deployment in heterogeneous environments using model exchange, co-simulation and real-time simulation techniques.",
"name" : "Modeling and Simulation for Cyber-Physical Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-5310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An exploration of the fundamental principles of human physiology, thermal and luminous comfort, and indoor quality. Emphasis is on bioclimatic and psychrometric climate analysis and its relationship to architectural design, understanding the energy exchange between body in space, the natural meaning of enclosures, and nonstructural materials and systems. The focus is on passive heating, cooling, and daylighting systems and their design. Exercises include vital sign analysis of existing spaces (thermal, air, luminous), forming hypotheses of building performance, using scientific instrumentation, tenant survey techniques, and physical modeling and simulation techniques related to daylighting and shading techniques. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
"name" : "Environmental and Ecological Systems"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4880",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course will concentrate on the knowledge-based modeling of intelligent agents, with a special emphasis on semantically-oriented language processing. Theoretical and conceptual discussions will be balanced by practical work within the implemented OntoAgent cognitive architecture. It will discuss the modeling of decision-making, the various aspects of natural-language processing, and the art of knowledge engineering.",
"name" : "Language-Endowed Intelligent Agents"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6545",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Origin, transformation, and fate of organic matter on Earth. This course is chemistry-focused and incorporates concepts from biology, geology, and ecology. This course emphasizes reactivity, transport, and storage mechanisms that control the distribution of organic matter in terrestrial and marine systems. Analytical techniques for characterizing organic matter and applications to carbon cycling in natural and perturbed environments are also discussed.",
"name" : "Organic Geochemistry"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-6230",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Basic modeling approaches and techniques for the simulation of environmental engineering systems. Model development, system conceptualization and analysis, mathematical representation, solution and simulation, as well as model calibration and verification, are discussed. Problems such as simulation of biochemical reactors and behavior of toxic chemicals in groundwater are drawn from the literature. Ongoing research projects are discussed.",
"name" : "Mathematical Modeling of Environmental Engineering Systems"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4730",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Comprehensive treatment of conduction, convection (including boiling and condensation), and radiation heat transfer. Thermal system design and performance (including heat exchangers). Emphasis is on physical and mathematical modeling of engineering systems for application of modern analytical and computational solution methods.",
"name" : "Heat Transfer"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7830",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The objective of this class is to develop skills necessary to understand and assess applications that use panel data techniques. Standard linear regression models are used as a benchmark. Basic knowledge of time series analysis is introduced, followed by panel data settings involving 'fixed' and 'random' effects. Recently developed GMM and instrumental variables methods are introduced and nonlinear panel data with binary outcomes is covered. Students will work through practical examples using\u00c2 Stata\u00c2 and Matlab.",
+ "description" : "The objective of this class is to develop skills necessary to understand and assess applications that use panel data techniques. Standard linear regression models are used as a benchmark. Basic knowledge of time series analysis is introduced, followed by panel data settings involving 'fixed' and 'random' effects. Recently developed GMM and instrumental variables methods are introduced and nonlinear panel data with binary outcomes is covered. Students will work through practical examples using Stata and Matlab.",
"name" : "Doctoral Level Data Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4850",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Deep learning fundamentals and applications in artificial intelligence. Topics include machine learning foundation, linear regression and classification, deep neural networks, convolutional neural networks, recurrent neural networks, generative adversary neural networks, Bayesian neural networks, deep Boltzmann machine, deep Bayesian networks, and deep reinforcement learning.",
"name" : "Introduction to Deep Learning"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6620",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The concepts, techniques, and tools related to optimal control for dynamical systems. Major topics include calculus of variation, minimum principle, dynamic programming, optimal estimation, and differential games. Both discrete time systems and continuous times are addressed. Particular consideration is given to linear time invariant systems in terms of linear quadratic regulator and Kalman filter.",
"name" : "Optimal Control Theory"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-2720",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course will introduce students to the basic concepts associated with computer numerical controlled (CNC) machining. Specifically, the student will be introduced to the processes and operations associated with CNC milling, drilling, and turning. All of these processes will be controlled by code written by the students. Students are expected to apply their knowledge of computer-aided engineering as well as manufacturing processes to class exercises, homework assignments, tests, and a final project.",
"name" : "Computer Aided Machining"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6900",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course provides a forum for interdisciplinary graduate discourse and community at Rensselaer. Students will curate a series of presentations by guest speakers, faculty, and graduate students.\u00c2 Related readings and writing assignments will be based on colloquium presentations. Arts Ph.D. students are required to take the colloquium each semester until the semester they take their qualifying examination and enroll\u00c2 for dissertation credits.",
+ "description" : "This course provides a forum for interdisciplinary graduate discourse and community at Rensselaer. Students will curate a series of presentations by guest speakers, faculty, and graduate students. Related readings and writing assignments will be based on colloquium presentations. Arts Ph.D. students are required to take the colloquium each semester until the semester they take their qualifying examination and enroll for dissertation credits.",
"name" : "Arts Graduate Colloquium"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6200",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Technical communication today has a remarkably broad scope, including almost every area of life that involves technology, such as health, business, government, and scientific communication. This course addresses an essential part of communication studies and human-computer interaction: the authorship of the signifying level of interface design. Technical communication has grown way beyond people sitting in front of beige boxes writing manuals on how to operate other beige boxes. Instead, it has emerged as a central collection of skills aimed at how to get the right information to the right people at the right time, in a usable form. It has as much to do with information architecture, knowledge management, and information design as with writing reports and instructions. In addition, RPI has a long-standing heritage in technical communication, as the first academic degree in the field was offered here. In technical communication, RPI still maintains a high level of respect and market value for students and faculty at other institutions. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Technical communication today has a remarkably broad scope, including almost every area of life that involves technology, such as health, business, government, and scientific communication. This course addresses an essential part of communication studies and human-computer interaction: the authorship of the signifying level of interface design. Technical communication has grown way beyond people sitting in front of beige boxes writing manuals on how to operate other beige boxes. Instead, it has emerged as a central collection of skills aimed at how to get the right information to the right people at the right time, in a usable form. It has as much to do with information architecture, knowledge management, and information design as with writing reports and instructions. In addition, RPI has a long-standing heritage in technical communication, as the first academic degree in the field was offered here. In technical communication, RPI still maintains a high level of respect and market value for students and faculty at other institutions.",
"name" : "Foundations of Technical Communication"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-2110",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This studio/learning laboratory course introduces techniques of numerical computing as a problem-solving method. Problems are drawn from the basic sciences (e.g., physics and chemistry) and the engineering sciences (e.g., statics). The numerical methods will be implemented through computer programming as both a way of thinking (algorithms) and a language to translate mathematics into computer instructions. Precision and accuracy, complexity, modularity, dimensionality, and discrete versus stochastic methods are covered.",
"name" : "Numerical Methods and Programming for Engineers"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4640",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Phenomena, materials, and devices for optical communications and computing. Topics include: guided wave and fiber optics, integrated optics, electro-optic and nonlinear optical switching, pulse and soliton propagation, sources, and detectors.",
"name" : "Optical Communications and Integrated Optics"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6260",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to enable students to understand how an organism functions at the cellular and molecular level, and further, how this functioning is regulated so that cells can adapt to changes in their environment. Students will learn the fundamental components of the cell (from protein to organelle), their characteristics, and how these components function in both normal and diseased cells. Students will also learn biochemical, structural, and mechanical aspects of cell functioning and regulation in normal and diseased cells. In addition, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature.\u00c2 By reading current literature, students will gain knowledge of the practice and presentation of science, as well as learn about new techniques and findings. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and BIOL 4260 .",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to enable students to understand how an organism functions at the cellular and molecular level, and further, how this functioning is regulated so that cells can adapt to changes in their environment. Students will learn the fundamental components of the cell (from protein to organelle), their characteristics, and how these components function in both normal and diseased cells. Students will also learn biochemical, structural, and mechanical aspects of cell functioning and regulation in normal and diseased cells. In addition, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature. By reading current literature, students will gain knowledge of the practice and presentation of science, as well as learn about new techniques and findings. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and BIOL 4260 .",
"name" : "Advanced Cell Biology"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4560",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A broad introduction to modern communication systems, with applications to emerging wireless communication technologies. Fundamental principles of wireless channel modeling; performance limits of communication systems; analog and digital modulation techniques; source and channel coding; multi-antenna communication systems; multi-carrier modulation; multi-user communication systems. Emerging wireless technologies such as MIMO and OFDM, with applications to cellular and wireless LAN communication standards. Complemented with computational exercises.",
"name" : "Modern Communication Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6120",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Mathematical techniques applied to theoretical models in economics. Reviews and introduces core mathematical topics at the graduate economics level, applied to topics such as optimal behaviors of economics agents, equilibria among multiple interacting agents, economics growth processes and inter-temporal decision making, decision making in stochastic environments, and techniques to develop and work with economic models. Assumes thorough knowledge of calculus and some familiarity with linear algebra and probability theory.",
"name" : "Advanced Mathematical Methods in Economics"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Century Environmental Thought"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4530",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course provides a comprehensive treatment of the theory, design, and implementation of digital signal processing algorithms. The first half of the course emphasizes frequency-domain and Z-transform analysis. The second half of the course investigates advanced topics in signal processing, including FFT algorithms, multi-rate signal processing, filter design, adaptive filtering, and quantizer design. The course provides a strong theoretical foundation for future study in communications, control, or image processing.",
"name" : "Digital Signal Processing"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4500",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Recent developments in systems, sensors, communications, and networking technologies enable the development of large-scale distributed systems incorporating many individual nodes. This course takes an algorithmic approach to distributed systems for sensor fusion, localization and tracking, distributed robotics and sensor-based control. It also presents the basic principles of sensor node architectures and wireless sensor networks. Applications include environmental monitoring, biomedical systems, and security-related tracking problems.",
"name" : "Distributed Systems and Sensor Networks"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6948",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "This design studio is the second required course of the two-semester, 3rd-year Graduate Final Project course sequence in the graduate M.Arch. program. The Graduate Final Project Design Studio provides a forum for the design and development of a comprehensive architectural proposal pertinent to the Final Project course sequence. This course is required of all third-year architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
"name" : "Graduate Final Project"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4310",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Study of transmission lines, impedance matching, passive and active microwave systems.\u00c2 Work with S-parameters and experiment with the use of Smith chart.\u00c2 Introduction to microwave CAD tools for 2D electromagnetic (EM) simulations and microwave testing.\u00c2 Emphasis on physical understanding, quantitative performance evaluation using both hand calculations and EM simulations.",
+ "description" : "Study of transmission lines, impedance matching, passive and active microwave systems. Work with S-parameters and experiment with the use of Smith chart. Introduction to microwave CAD tools for 2D electromagnetic (EM) simulations and microwave testing. Emphasis on physical understanding, quantitative performance evaluation using both hand calculations and EM simulations.",
"name" : "Fundamentals of RF/Microwave Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4250",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The theoretical and practical aspects of techniques utilized in the fabrication of silicon-based microcircuits. Imperfections in semiconductors, crystal growth, solid solubility, alloying and diffusion, ion implantation, oxide masking, epitaxy, metallization, etching, and photolithography. Fabrication techniques for bipolar and MOS-microcircuits, and the electrical performance of devices based on these techniques. Microcircuit design and layout. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and MTLE 4160 .",
"name" : "Integrated Circuit Processes and Design"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4180",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Industrial power system design considerations: planning (safety, reliability, simplicity, maintenance, flexibility, cost), voltages (control, selection, effects of variation), protection (devices, limitations, requirements, coordination, testing), fault calculations, grounding (static and lightning protection, earth connections), power factor control and effects, switching and voltage transformation, instruments and meters, cable construction and installation, busways.",
"name" : "Industrial Power System Design"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Personality"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4130",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A laboratory based examination of static and rotating energy conversion equipment. Topics include the experimental study of the physical phenomena and characteristics of magnetic circuits, transformers, electric machines, rectifiers, DC/DC converters, and inverters. The interaction between static power converters and electric machines is emphasized.",
"name" : "EPE Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6670",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Review of fundamental concepts and protocols of broadband and optical networking. Convergence of telephone, Internet, and cable networks lead to new architectural and protocol concepts. Concepts and architectures covered in this course include: high-speed switching and router-design, traffic engineering, fiber optical communications, optical networking concepts, protection/restoration/survivability, optical link layers, quality of service, and broadband last-mile technologies.",
"name" : "Broadband and Optical Networking"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4120",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course studies electromechanical interactions in lumped-parameter systems. These interactions describe the operation of electric machines, electromechanical actuators, and transducers. The fundamental laws of Faraday, Ampere, and Gauss are considered to develop physical models of magnetic circuits, including those which use permanent magnets. These models are then expanded to include equations of motion and the thermodynamics of electromechanical coupling. Applications include transformers, induction machines, synchronous machines, DC machines, and reluctance machines.",
"name" : "Electromechanics"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-5330",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course addresses the range of economic issues related to the practice of architecture. Topics will include economic cycles and building construction, globalization of architectural practice, case studies of models of practice, setting and negotiation of fees for services, economic relationships of architects and consultants, cost estimation.",
"name" : "Entrepreneurship and Architecture"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-1200",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "An introduction to the techniques for creating solid models of engineering designs. Topics include three-dimensional modeling of parts and assemblies, visualization, orthographic and isometric free-hand sketching, and computer-generated design documentation.",
"name" : "Engineering Graphics and CAD"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4240",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A critical examination of traditional and contemporary works in ethical theory by considering what these theories have to say about how people should live, what rights and obligations they have, what things are intrinsically valuable. Typically, this includes such topics as ethical and cultural relativism, egoism, freedom, and responsibility. Often the focus will be on contemporary issues such as war, abortion, equality, or punishment.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "A critical examination of traditional and contemporary works in ethical theory by considering what these theories have to say about how people should live, what rights and obligations they have, what things are intrinsically valuable. Typically, this includes such topics as ethical and cultural relativism, egoism, freedom, and responsibility. Often the focus will be on contemporary issues such as war, abortion, equality, or punishment.",
"name" : "Ethics"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4040",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Analysis and design of switching-mode circuits: NMOS, CMOS, RTL, DTL, TTL, and ECL digital-logic families. Topics include: basic logic gates (voltage-transfer characteristics, noise margin, fan out, propagation delay, power dissipation), flip flops, Schmitt triggers, oscillators, timers, memories, A/D and D/A converters, and optional advanced topics.",
"name" : "Digital Electronics"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This class is a practical primer for anyone interested in a career in the rapidly evolving industry of video gaming. It is an intense, team-based, project-based course in which students will closely follow the actual game development cycle, with each team producing a complete PC game.",
"name" : "Game Development I"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4967",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2610",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Design-oriented introduction to computer components and operations. Standard codes, number systems, base conversions, and computer arithmetic. Boolean algebra, minimization and synthesis techniques for combinational and sequential logic. Races, hazards, and asynchronous behavior. Registers, arithmetic logic units, memory structure, buses, and control units. Machine language programming, instruction fetch and execution, input-output devices, interrupts, and microprogram sequencers. Software and hardware tools.",
"name" : "Computer Components and Operations"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-2050",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "AS 300, Leading People and Effective Communication, teaches cadets advanced skills and knowledge in management and leadership. Special emphasis is placed on enhancing leadership skills and communication. Cadets have an opportunity to try out these leadership and management techniques in a supervised environment as juniors and seniors. Laboratory ( USAF 0080 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
"name" : "Air and Space Studies 300A (Leading People and Effective Communication)"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6700",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An advanced design and laboratory course. Design methodologies include register transfer modules and firmware microprogrammed design. Advanced microprocessor topics. \"Bit-slice\" philosophy of design. LSI microprocessors as design elements in larger digital systems such as high-speed channels and special purpose computers. Detailed discussion of the structure of several computers at the chip and board level. Emphasis on high-speed ECL and Schottky circuits. Specification of custom IC digital systems. FPGA based design implementation using VHDL. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ECSE 4780 .",
"name" : "Computer Architecture Prototyping with FPGA's"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2500",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Axioms of probability, joint and conditional probability, random variables, probability density, mass, and distribution functions, functions of one and two random variables, characteristic functions, sequences of independent random variables, central limit theorem, and laws of large numbers. Applications to electrical and computer engineering problems.",
"name" : "Engineering Probability"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4500",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Applications of control theory and systems techniques to physiology. Emphasis is on entire systems and their interactions rather than isolated phenomena. Areas covered include cardiac, respiratory, renal, and gastrointestinal systems. Includes laboratory on the application of engineering techniques in the study of physiological systems. This course is taught at Albany Medical Center and enrollment is limited to BME students.",
"name" : "Advanced Systems Physiology"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4440",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction into thin film deposition technologies that are essential in industry.\u00c2 Practical technical aspects and fundamental growth processes are discussed. The course covers: evaporation techniques, sputter deposition, plasma and ion-beam processing, chemical vapor deposition, molecular beam epitaxy, surface science, nucleation and growth, epitaxy, texture evolution, nanostructure formation, stress. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Introduction into thin film deposition technologies that are essential in industry. Practical technical aspects and fundamental growth processes are discussed. The course covers: evaporation techniques, sputter deposition, plasma and ion-beam processing, chemical vapor deposition, molecular beam epitaxy, surface science, nucleation and growth, epitaxy, texture evolution, nanostructure formation, stress.",
"name" : "Thin Films"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2410",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Time and frequency-domain representation of continuous- and discrete-time signals and systems. \u00c2 Response of linear, time-invariant systems. Convolution, Fourier series, Fourier transform, Laplace transform, and z-transform. Applications in communication, feedback control, and filtering.",
+ "description" : "Time and frequency-domain representation of continuous- and discrete-time signals and systems. Response of linear, time-invariant systems. Convolution, Fourier series, Fourier transform, Laplace transform, and z-transform. Applications in communication, feedback control, and filtering.",
"name" : "Signals and Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2210",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introductory survey of microelectronics technology emphasizing physical properties of semiconductors, device and circuit fabrication, semiconductor device operation. Topics include semiconductor crystals; energy bands; electrons and holes; dopant impurities; fabrication and operation of diodes, bipolar junction transistors, and field-effect transistors.",
"name" : "Microelectronics Technology"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4320",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Key design principles and techniques of modern computer hardware, including instruction-level, data-level, and thread-level parallelism in CPU and GPU, cache and memory hierarchy, DRAM and non-volatile memory technologies and solid-state drive, and heterogeneous and disaggregated computing architecture. Advanced infrastructure software design techniques and algorithms, including indexing data structure, transaction, storage model, and consistency and consensus. Course projects to gain advanced programming skills and deepen the understanding of modern computer hardware and software.",
"name" : "Advanced Computer Systems"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-4550",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Make things happen: start a business, raise funds, solicit work, support research, win a place on a conference program, take initiative, change the way things are done around here. This course will teach students how to write proposals that persuade. Students will learn to turn situations into occasions for proposing, write a variety of proposals, locate Request for Proposals, develop a work plan for feasible projects that come in on-time and on-budget, use networks to strengthen proposals, detail a budget, and edit for clarity and grace.",
"name" : "Proposing and Persuading"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2010",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Techniques for the analysis and simulation of linear electric circuits and measurements of their properties. Topics include resistive and energy-storage elements, controlled sources and operational amplifiers, systematic analysis methods, AC steady state, power and three-phase systems, magnetic coupling and transformers, transients, s-plane representation and analysis, frequency response, and Laplace transform and computer-aided methods.",
"name" : "Electric Circuits"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-1090",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "A laboratory introduction to simulation and hardware programming with MATLAB and Simulink. Course covers: fundamental theory and programming tools for common sensors and actuators: gyroscopes, accelerometers, magnetometers, encoders, analog sensors, DC Motors, and motor drivers. Including: \u00c2 discretization, sampling, integration, differentiation, delays, saturation, and control. Material covered in a hands on, observable, and application specific way. Weekly one-hour lab/lectures introduce basic topics. Labs reinforce covered topics and are performed at home with provided hardware kits.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "A laboratory introduction to simulation and hardware programming with MATLAB and Simulink. Course covers: fundamental theory and programming tools for common sensors and actuators: gyroscopes, accelerometers, magnetometers, encoders, analog sensors, DC Motors, and motor drivers. Including: discretization, sampling, integration, differentiation, delays, saturation, and control. Material covered in a hands on, observable, and application specific way. Weekly one-hour lab/lectures introduce basic topics. Labs reinforce covered topics and are performed at home with provided hardware kits.",
"name" : "Introduction to Mechatronics Hardware and Software"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-1010",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An experiment-centric development of the basic analysis tools of Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering, emphasizing the concepts and mathematics of analog and digital circuits and electronics, programming, data generation and analysis, and system model development using paper and pencil analysis, simulation, and experiment. Problems, applications, and projects are chosen to lay a solid foundation for core EE and CSE courses.",
"name" : "Introduction to Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4690",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course covers theory, research, and practice in interactive, multimedia interface design. Topics include visual perception, information architecture, rapid prototyping, usability testing, cross-cultural design, interactive data visualization, augmented reality, and intellectual property.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course covers theory, research, and practice in interactive, multimedia interface design. Topics include visual perception, information architecture, rapid prototyping, usability testing, cross-cultural design, interactive data visualization, augmented reality, and intellectual property.",
"name" : "Interface Design: Hypermedia Theory and Application"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6920",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "The student will perform hands-on research in the lab of a Biology faculty member to learn basic research methods and techniques, accomplish a small research project and determine whether the lab is a good fit for thesis research.",
"name" : "Research Rotation ll"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4720",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to theoretical and experimental solid-state physics. Wave mechanics in the perfect crystal. X-rays, electrons, and phonons. Electrical properties of metals and semiconductors. Qualitative treatment of lattice defects.",
"name" : "Solid-State Physics"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6700",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Recording Historic Structures"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-1962",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6600",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics is an entire methodology rather than individual analyses or analysis steps. \u00c2 When Offered:Fall term annually.\u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics is an entire methodology rather than individual analyses or analysis steps. When Offered:Fall term annually.",
"name" : "Data Analytics"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6560",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Fundamentals of isotope geochemistry as applied to biogeochemical systems in modern and ancient environments. This course covers the principles of both radiogenic and stable isotope distribution, decay, and transfer through Earth's exchangeable reservoirs. This course will emphasize stable isotopes, equilibrium and kinetic isotope fractionation, distribution, isotope mass balance, and using these systems to track global biogeochemical cycles in the modern environment and in deep time.",
"name" : "Isotope Geochemistry"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4970",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6990",
- "credits" : "1-9",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6350",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Design, analysis, and confirmation of radiation shields. Point kernel, removal-diffusion, P-N, discrete ordinates, and Monte Carlo computation method. Photon, neutron, and charged particle transport data, applications, and tests. Shield materials and behavior. Dosimetry in shield confirmation.",
"name" : "Radiation Shielding"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6870",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Study environmental economics and its relation to energy systems. Analyzes environmental externalities and regulatory solutions through theoretical models and empirical evidence. Study government responses related to regulations, taxes, and subsidies to address problems of market failure, and tools to evaluate the costs and benefits of environmental policies. Examine optimal environmental regulations and the trade-offs between market and regulatory imperfections. Methods are developed with applications to topics including health and climate impacts of emissions and their regulatory policies.",
"name" : "Energy and Environmental Economics II"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4540",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introduction to the field of image processing, covering both analytical and implementation aspects. Topics include the human visual system, cameras and image formation, image sampling and quantization, spatial- and frequency-domain image enhancement, filter design, image restoration, image coding and compression, morphological image processing, color image processing, image segmentation, and image reconstruction. Real-world examples and assignments drawn from consumer digital imaging, security and surveillance, and medical image processing.",
"name" : "Introduction to Image Processing"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6860",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Covers the economics of conventional and alternative energy sources. Topics in energy economics such as the demand for energy, supply of energy, evolving alternative energy sources, consumption, efficiency, adoption, and diffusion of new energy technologies, externalities, and the economics of climate change. The course will examine environmental impacts and their analysis, and introduce models and methods of analysis including cost-benefit analysis, discounting, the value of a statistical life, and health as human capital.",
"name" : "Energy and Environmental Economics I"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6820",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Study the economic theory of health and health care, and its applications. Topics include the measurement and determinants of health; economics of uncertainty, adverse selection, and moral hazard; economic models of demand for healthcare and demand for insurance; key markets in the healthcare sector such as physicians, hospitals, and insurance companies; policy effects on the matching between health care demand and supply; and political economy and organizational reform in medical care.",
"name" : "Health Economics and Policy I"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6800",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Study economic behavior as it departs from perfectly rational, complete-information models. This course presents the main theories and findings from the behavioral economics literature as they relate to individuals' choices over time, risk, and uncertainty. Additional topics include individuals' use of decision heuristics and models of social preferences, such as altruism, fairness, reciprocity, and inequality aversion. Experimental methods are developed.",
"name" : "Behavioral and Experimental Economics I"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6780",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Analyzes theories and findings on how regional and national economic growth relates to innovation. Contrasting theories and empirical evidence regarding agglomeration impacts on innovation, local effects of universities and government laboratories, employment, and trade flows. Regional impacts of corporations, entrepreneurship, labor force, education, and policy.",
"name" : "Economics of Innovation II"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6550",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The central propositions of contemporary economic analysis are discussed. Topics include individual decision-making, consumption, production, the interaction of firms and households, competitive equilibrium, general equilibrium theory, welfare theorems, externalities, uncertainty, and the implications for economic policy.",
"name" : "Microeconomics I"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4700",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Environmental Law"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-1250",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "The course is the second in a two-part series of Professional Development Workshops that teach practical skills to enhance business students' readiness to enter the professional world and achieve workplace success and a high degree of professionalism. The course emphasizes the following themes: professional oral and written presentation, professional goal setting, feedback giving and receiving, conflict and business ethics, networking, and meeting management.",
"name" : "Management Professional Development 2"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-6190",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Occurrence and control of communicable diseases; principles of epidemiology and biostatistics and their application, emphasizing the relationship with environmental factors; food infections and food poisoning; use and impact of pesticides and other methods of pest control; air pollution sources and health effects. Organization of government health agencies.",
"name" : "Public Health"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-4961",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in USAR"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6220",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Game theory has been emerging as a branch of mathematical economics and applied to analyze situations where each decision-maker needs to think strategically about others' perspectives and actions in order to determine ones' own optimal choice. This course provides an introduction and presents selected topics in game theory. Students will look into basic definitions and equilibrium concepts and develop a wide range of applications in Economics, Biology, sports, health care, and various fields. The goal of the lecture is to improve understanding of strategic interaction in economic, business, and social situations.",
"name" : "Applied Game Theory"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6190",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course investigates the significance of economic globalization, covering the following topics: international trade and financial flows, technological innovation and intellectual property, technology transfer, national governments and transnational corporations, natural resources, health and the environment, impacts on selected industries and countries, and roles of the World Trade Organization and International Monetary Fund.\u00c2 The major controversies surrounding globalization are identified, and alternative arguments are evaluated based on available evidence.",
+ "description" : "This course investigates the significance of economic globalization, covering the following topics: international trade and financial flows, technological innovation and intellectual property, technology transfer, national governments and transnational corporations, natural resources, health and the environment, impacts on selected industries and countries, and roles of the World Trade Organization and International Monetary Fund. The major controversies surrounding globalization are identified, and alternative arguments are evaluated based on available evidence.",
"name" : "Advanced International Economics and Globalization"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6170",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Examine various facets of the healthcare industry. Application of microeconomic theory and tools will be used to: analyze healthcare demand and supply; examine the impact of public policies; study market segments such as health insurance and pharmaceuticals; explore economic choices of healthcare professionals; identify potential socioeconomic and demographic determinants of health status and healthcare; and gain insights into issues related to the ongoing healthcare policy reform. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Examine various facets of the healthcare industry. Application of microeconomic theory and tools will be used to: analyze healthcare demand and supply; examine the impact of public policies; study market segments such as health insurance and pharmaceuticals; explore economic choices of healthcare professionals; identify potential socioeconomic and demographic determinants of health status and healthcare; and gain insights into issues related to the ongoing healthcare policy reform.",
"name" : "Health Economics and Policy"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4540",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Game Development II"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4200",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course is an introduction to open economy macroeconomics and international finance. The core objective of the course is to teach students macroeconomic models and enable them to analyze international economic phenomena. Topics covered include theories of intertemporal trade, sources of global imbalances and their adjustment mechanisms, the determination of exchange rates, the effect of fiscal and monetary policies under different exchange rate regimes, balance of payment crisis, consequences of financial globalization. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course is an introduction to open economy macroeconomics and international finance. The core objective of the course is to teach students macroeconomic models and enable them to analyze international economic phenomena. Topics covered include theories of intertemporal trade, sources of global imbalances and their adjustment mechanisms, the determination of exchange rates, the effect of fiscal and monetary policies under different exchange rate regimes, balance of payment crisis, consequences of financial globalization.",
"name" : "Open Economy Macroeconomics"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6970",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6010",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "We study foundational theory for a diverse set of topics including models of consumer choice and decision-making, decisions under uncertainty and risk, firm strategy, market structure, information asymmetries, market failure, and intellectual property rights. Using this theory, we examine real world policy applications in areas such as innovation policy, environmental policy, international trade regulations, contract design, and insurance markets. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "We study foundational theory for a diverse set of topics including models of consumer choice and decision-making, decisions under uncertainty and risk, firm strategy, market structure, information asymmetries, market failure, and intellectual property rights. Using this theory, we examine real world policy applications in areas such as innovation policy, environmental policy, international trade regulations, contract design, and insurance markets.",
"name" : "Applied Microeconomics and Public Policy"
},
{
"code" : "BUSN-6320",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "In this course, students evaluate the formal and informal hierarchical arrangement and culture of the organization relative to its mission and vision and given its geographic dispersion.\u00c2 Students use evaluative tools to make recommendations that improve the arrangement of the organization and to influence culture.\u00c2 Students model the desired culture and develop plans and policies that value the human element of the organization as a key catalyst to attaining desired organizational direction.\u00c2 Students learn to coach and mentor those they lead as a model to develop accountability, recognition, and respect.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "In this course, students evaluate the formal and informal hierarchical arrangement and culture of the organization relative to its mission and vision and given its geographic dispersion. Students use evaluative tools to make recommendations that improve the arrangement of the organization and to influence culture. Students model the desired culture and develop plans and policies that value the human element of the organization as a key catalyst to attaining desired organizational direction. Students learn to coach and mentor those they lead as a model to develop accountability, recognition, and respect.",
"name" : "Leaders Leading People"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4240",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The design and operation of different laboratory experiments to provide experience for the environmental engineer in the practical application of chemical and biological theory. Design parameters are developed via bench scale testing. Topics can include biological treatment, phytoremediation, composting of solid waste and soil columns, and microbial respirometry.",
"name" : "Bench Scale Design"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6250",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This advanced course in database applications and database systems provides students with a strong\u00c2 foundation in modern database design, data modeling, data normalization, SQL, NoSQL, query optimization,\u00c2 database security, and how databases fit into larger software architectures. \u00c2 Substantial programming and\u00c2 design projects are required.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This advanced course in database applications and database systems provides students with a strong foundation in modern database design, data modeling, data normalization, SQL, NoSQL, query optimization, database security, and how databases fit into larger software architectures. Substantial programming and design projects are required.",
"name" : "Database Applications and Systems (DBAS)"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will offer an introduction to network science and a review of current research in this area. Classes will interchangeably present chapters from the textbook and\u00c2 related current research. The emphasis will be on the mathematical background of network science: graphs and networks; random networks and various types of scale-free networks; network properties such as assortativity, mobility, robustness, social networks, and communities; and dynamics of spreading in networks.",
+ "description" : "This course will offer an introduction to network science and a review of current research in this area. Classes will interchangeably present chapters from the textbook and related current research. The emphasis will be on the mathematical background of network science: graphs and networks; random networks and various types of scale-free networks; network properties such as assortativity, mobility, robustness, social networks, and communities; and dynamics of spreading in networks.",
"name" : "Frontiers of Network Science"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6910",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Seminar in Electric Power Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4110",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Students will be exposed to real time investigative biomedical research projects that are\u00c2 currently in development, taught the principles of research project development and\u00c2 exposed to clinical experiences at a level typically found in college graduates/post\u00c2 graduates who are entering medical school.",
+ "description" : "Students will be exposed to real time investigative biomedical research projects that are currently in development, taught the principles of research project development and exposed to clinical experiences at a level typically found in college graduates/post graduates who are entering medical school.",
"name" : "Investigative Medicine I"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-2260",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A continuation of CHEM 2250 , which is a prerequisite.",
"name" : "Organic Chemistry II"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6470",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course provides in-depth coverage of the quality management field by covering many of the qualitative, management aspects of quality, as well as some of the traditional quantitative measurement and control techniques. The emphasis is on the application of the quality principles to develop an understanding of concepts in quality and apply these concepts in problem solving situations. Six-Sigma methodology is highlighted. Some coverage of international considerations, via ISO-9000, and reliability topics is given. The aim will be to show students how companies have found solutions to problems and improved their processes, products, and services using quality management concepts.",
"name" : "Management of Quality, Processes, and Reliability"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2310",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Readings, rehearsals, and performances of works from the standard choral repertoire, from the Renaissance through the 20th century. Attendance is mandatory and preparation expected.",
"name" : "Rensselaer Concert Choir"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MTLE"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Market-based economies depend upon legal systems that establish and protect property rights. In this and many other instances the law is designed to encourage and support economic activity; in others it is designed to restrain certain types of otherwise rational economic behavior. This course will apply fundamental economic concepts, such as supply and demand, competition, monopoly, externalities, and Pareto efficiency to a range of legal topics, including contracts, torts, criminal, and intellectual property law to explain the economic motivation and consequences of the legal framework. For those students considering law school, this course offers an exposure to many of the legal concepts found in the first year law school curriculum. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Market-based economies depend upon legal systems that establish and protect property rights. In this and many other instances the law is designed to encourage and support economic activity; in others it is designed to restrain certain types of otherwise rational economic behavior. This course will apply fundamental economic concepts, such as supply and demand, competition, monopoly, externalities, and Pareto efficiency to a range of legal topics, including contracts, torts, criminal, and intellectual property law to explain the economic motivation and consequences of the legal framework. For those students considering law school, this course offers an exposure to many of the legal concepts found in the first year law school curriculum.",
"name" : "Law and Economics"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6640",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Digital Picture Proc"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4990",
- "credits" : "2-6",
- "description" : "Students conduct original scholarly projects: original research, theoretical or analytical reviews of the literature, or computer simulations. Students prepare written reports relating to this project, under the supervision of a faculty member.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Students conduct original scholarly projects: original research, theoretical or analytical reviews of the literature, or computer simulations. Students prepare written reports relating to this project, under the supervision of a faculty member.",
"name" : "Undergraduate Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4240",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Addresses the allocation of natural resources through applied study of fisheries, forestry, oil, minerals, water, and biodiversity resources. Mathematical analysis will be done using Microsoft Excel with Solver. Social and policy dynamics of allocation decisions will be explored through case studies. Field trips will address ecological and physical aspects of resource management. The intent is to develop a balanced perspective and tools to address resource management decisions across their diverse economic, social, and environmental dimensions.",
"name" : "Natural Resource Economics"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Chemical Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1958",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Tech & The Top Ten"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4230",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Develops a critical understanding of environmental issues and policy from an interdisciplinary economics perspective. Covers the economics of environmental quality including the links between the economy and the environment, the causes of environmental problems, evaluation of environmental projects and policies, and policies to address environmental issues with an emphasis on efficiency, equity, and sustainability, and the international dimensions of environmental issues.",
"name" : "Environmental Economics"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4150",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Topics and techniques of artificial intelligence using the language LISP. Topics include search, knowledge representation, expert systems, theorem proving, natural language interfaces, learning, game playing, and computer vision. Techniques include pattern matching, data-driven programming, substitution rules, frames, heuristic search, transition networks, neural networks, and evolutionary computation. Development of programming proficiency in LISP is emphasized.",
"name" : "Introduction to Artificial Intelligence"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4350",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This course will examine alternative models of economic and non-economic decision-making. The course will cover models of rational decision-making under certainty and uncertainty, bounded rationality, preference-based approaches (e.g., loss aversion, ambiguity aversion, disappointment aversion), and heuristic decision-making. The emphasis throughout will be on the proper interpretation of more general models of decision-making as well as real-world applications.",
"name" : "Microeconomics of Decision-Making"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6550",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Marketing strategy decisions are developed in the framework of many case studies. Marketing research techniques, including questionnaire development and data analysis, are introduced and utilized in a team project.",
"name" : "Marketing Research"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4370",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course introduces elements of applied hydrology including climate data analysis, hydrologic processes (rainfall, abstraction, evaporation, excess runoff), and catchment modelling. Applications include design of stormwater management infrastructure to promote infiltration, control peak discharge, and control receiving stream flow distribution.",
"name" : "Applied Hydrology and Design"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The techniques necessary to appraise the economic desirability and private-sector impact of various public projects and policies are studied. Concepts such as discounting, capital rationing, project selection, shadow pricing, risk assessment, unpriced goods, and economic surplus are developed. Among the topics from which illustrative case studies are drawn are urban and transport planning, energy, water resources, government regulation, and the environment. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "The techniques necessary to appraise the economic desirability and private-sector impact of various public projects and policies are studied. Concepts such as discounting, capital rationing, project selection, shadow pricing, risk assessment, unpriced goods, and economic surplus are developed. Among the topics from which illustrative case studies are drawn are urban and transport planning, energy, water resources, government regulation, and the environment.",
"name" : "Cost-Benefit Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4940",
- "credits" : "0-6",
"description" : "Individual projects and readings adapted to the needs of individual students at the advanced level.",
"name" : "Advanced Individual Projects in Architecture and Environmental Design"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4190",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course investigates the significance of economic globalization, covering the following topics: international trade and financial flows, technological innovation and intellectual property, technology transfer, national government and transnational corporations, natural resources, health and the environment, impacts on selected industries and countries, and roles of the world trade organization and international monetary fund. The major controversies surrounding globalization are identified, and alternative arguments are evaluated based on available evidence.",
"name" : "International Economics and Globalization"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4390",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course presents the concepts, techniques, and tools for managing global projects. The role of the project manager is examined, together with techniques for controlling cost, schedules, and performance parameters. Course deliverables are designed to develop fundamental skills needed by project managers in today's global competitive business environment. Topics include project leadership, project lifecycle methodology, business process development, benchmarking, project planning, execution and control, procurement, communications, organizational change, customer acceptance, performance metrics and project closure. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "International Project Management"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4360",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Data and Society provides a broad overview of how society is leveraging and responding to the social, organizational, policy, and technical opportunities and challenges of a data-driven world. Course themes focus on various aspects of the data ecosystem, data and innovation, and data and the broader community. Assignments build writing, presentation, and critical thinking, and assessment skills, all of which are important for professional success.\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "description" : "Data and Society provides a broad overview of how society is leveraging and responding to the social, organizational, policy, and technical opportunities and challenges of a data-driven world. Course themes focus on various aspects of the data ecosystem, data and innovation, and data and the broader community. Assignments build writing, presentation, and critical thinking, and assessment skills, all of which are important for professional success. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Data and Society"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6420",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Phenomena peculiar to nonlinear systems. Linearization, iteration, and perturbation procedures. Describing function stability analysis. Phase plane methods. Relaxation oscillations and limit cycles. Stability analysis by Lyapunov's method. Popov's theorem. Adaptive control systems. Sensitivity analysis.",
"name" : "Nonlinear Control Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4110",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "An Architectural Genealogy 2"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4971",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4160",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Emphasis is placed on the analysis of efficient resource use in the public sector at the federal level. Expenditure theory, tax incidence, and income distribution policies are discussed. The effects of personal income, corporation, sales, payroll, and property taxes on resource allocation, equity, and growth are considered.",
"name" : "Public Finance"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4150",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Examine regulations related to the environment, intellectual property rights, healthcare, and antitrust. Examine the interaction between regulatory policies and how businesses respond to them with respect to innovation, production, and pricing. Some of the industries and markets examined to highlight the regulatory policy issues include automobiles, information technology, telecommunications and media, healthcare services, pharmaceuticals, medical devices, retail sector, high-speed rail, and taxi and ridesharing. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Examine regulations related to the environment, intellectual property rights, healthcare, and antitrust. Examine the interaction between regulatory policies and how businesses respond to them with respect to innovation, production, and pricing. Some of the industries and markets examined to highlight the regulatory policy issues include automobiles, information technology, telecommunications and media, healthcare services, pharmaceuticals, medical devices, retail sector, high-speed rail, and taxi and ridesharing.",
"name" : "Economics of Government Regulation and Firm Strategy"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4050",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Linear and non-linear applications of operational amplifiers, with an emphasis on circuit design. Non-ideal operational amplifier behavior, including both static and dynamic characteristics.\u00c2 Amplifier stability and frequency compensation techniques.\u00c2 Operational amplifier-based oscillators. Circuit noise.",
+ "description" : "Linear and non-linear applications of operational amplifiers, with an emphasis on circuit design. Non-ideal operational amplifier behavior, including both static and dynamic characteristics. Amplifier stability and frequency compensation techniques. Operational amplifier-based oscillators. Circuit noise.",
"name" : "Advanced Electronic Circuits"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4720",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The definition, history, major schools of thought, and models of the normal and abnormal personality are presented. Disorders are examined within the framework of D.S.M. and competing schools of thought. The description, etiology, treatment, including pharmacologic, and prevention of each of the disorders are considered. Illustrative cases are presented. Students write a paper on a topic, approved by the instructor, that focuses upon the impact of public policies on psychopathology.",
"name" : "Abnormal Psychology"
},
{
"code" : "IENV-4940",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Environmental Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4140",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Acquaints students with the structural characteristics and philosophical foundations of enterprise and industry. Several important industries are considered from the viewpoint of market structure, conduct, and performance. Such concepts as the corporation, entrepreneurial outcomes, technological innovation, private property, and\u00c2 public policy toward business are examined to orient the student to contemporary\u00c2 industrial activity.",
+ "description" : "Acquaints students with the structural characteristics and philosophical foundations of enterprise and industry. Several important industries are considered from the viewpoint of market structure, conduct, and performance. Such concepts as the corporation, entrepreneurial outcomes, technological innovation, private property, and public policy toward business are examined to orient the student to contemporary industrial activity.",
"name" : "Structure of Industry: Competition, Innovation, Entrepreneurship, Policy"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6190",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course introduces the fundamental circulatory bio-fluid mechanics, blood rheology, and governing laws of physiological blood flows. The course involves theoretical and numerical modeling of simple study cases and research in clinical applications. The main topics will cover fundamentals of fluid mechanics and physical principles of circulation, blood rheology: properties of flowing blood, blood flows in vessels, veins, coronary arteries, microcirculation, models of biofluids, computational biofluid mechanics, and fluid in the lung.",
"name" : "Bio-Fluid Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Technological innovation is responsible for most economic growth and is crucial to deal with major societal concerns. This course examines the economics of innovation and new technologies. It shows how technologies are created and put to use, from basic science through invention and development to diffusion and practical use. Additional topics include R&D determinants, sources of innovation, product improvement, cost reduction, incentivizing and stimulating innovation, patents, evolution of innovation and technology, innovative competition in industry, and the national innovation environment. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Technological innovation is responsible for most economic growth and is crucial to deal with major societal concerns. This course examines the economics of innovation and new technologies. It shows how technologies are created and put to use, from basic science through invention and development to diffusion and practical use. Additional topics include R&D determinants, sources of innovation, product improvement, cost reduction, incentivizing and stimulating innovation, patents, evolution of innovation and technology, innovative competition in industry, and the national innovation environment.",
"name" : "Economics of Innovation and New Technologies"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4700",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Solar Dev. & Energy Renew."
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6340",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course describes how individuals and firms make financial decisions, and how those decisions might deviate from those predicted by traditional financial or economic theory. The course examines how the insights of behavioral economics complement the traditional finance paradigm by introducing some of the main psychological biases in financial decision-making and examining the impacts of these biases in financial markets and other financial settings. It will also introduce students to behavioral and experimental methodologies in finance, economics, and other disciplines.",
"name" : "Behavioral Financial Economics"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-6120",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Advanced Manufacturing Processes and Systems (AMP) is a project-based lecture/laboratory course that teaches graduate engineering students how to develop new manufacturing processes and systems.",
"name" : "Advanced Manufacturing Processes and Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4010",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "We study foundational theory for a diverse set of topics including models of consumer choice and decision-making, decisions under uncertainty and risk, firm strategy, market structure, information asymmetries, market failure, and intellectual property rights. Using this theory, we examine real world policy applications in areas such as innovation policy, environmental policy, international trade regulations, contract design, and insurance markets. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "We study foundational theory for a diverse set of topics including models of consumer choice and decision-making, decisions under uncertainty and risk, firm strategy, market structure, information asymmetries, market failure, and intellectual property rights. Using this theory, we examine real world policy applications in areas such as innovation policy, environmental policy, international trade regulations, contract design, and insurance markets.",
"name" : "Applied Microeconomics and Public Policy"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4850",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is for senior EMAC and EART majors.\u00c2 The goal of the Creative Seminar II is to develop and formulate ideas from Creative Seminar I into a unique project for the artists/communicator that will demonstrate his/her independent ideas, research, writing, and design skills. Students will develop a written thesis, creative project (e.g., art, graphic design, interaction design, music, performance), prepare and present their project in a public exhibition, and design the publicity for the show.",
+ "description" : "This course is for senior EMAC and EART majors. The goal of the Creative Seminar II is to develop and formulate ideas from Creative Seminar I into a unique project for the artists/communicator that will demonstrate his/her independent ideas, research, writing, and design skills. Students will develop a written thesis, creative project (e.g., art, graphic design, interaction design, music, performance), prepare and present their project in a public exhibition, and design the publicity for the show.",
"name" : "Creative Seminar II"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6460",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Tools and methods for the analysis and design of linear multivariable feedback systems. Topics include the connection between frequency domain and state space models and methods, model identification, model reduction, model uncertainty and closed loop performance, convex analysis and design methods, optimal controller synthesis using H2, H-infinity, and structured singular value criteria.",
"name" : "Multivariable Control Systems"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6260",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The overall objective of this course is to understand how entrepreneurs and investors create value, noting that their interests do not always coincide. This involves learning about topics which trace out the \"venture capital cycle\"; opportunity recognition; valuation and evaluation; negotiation; structuring financing contract; managing investment; exit strategy. This course is structured into three modules: valuation, private equity market, and harvesting entrepreneurial value. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
"name" : "Entrepreneurial Finance"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6190",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Applies the student's knowledge of power engineering to the solution of large problems by computer methods. Treats matrix techniques, load-flow analysis, network building, short circuit studies, numerical integration, and finite element analysis as it applies to power systems and power apparatus.",
"name" : "Computer Methods in Electric Power Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-2940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Economics"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-2020",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Attention is directed primarily to variations in the aggregate volume of output, income, and employment. Cyclical fluctuations and long-term economic trends are examined and the interrelations of business and government policies are analyzed. The applicability of economic theory to the problems of business forecasting is discussed.",
"name" : "Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-1961",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENGR"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester.\u00c2 If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A detailed survey of important topics in the neurosciences. Some of the topics to be covered in this class are: basic mechanisms of neural signaling (neurophysiology, synaptic transmission, and molecular signaling); understanding of sensation/movement and in particular how it relates to neuroanatomy; neurodevelopment and how the mature brain can change (plasticity);\u00c2 complex brainfunctions and neurological disease. Taught together with BIOL 6100 .\u00c2",
+ "description" : "A detailed survey of important topics in the neurosciences. Some of the topics to be covered in this class are: basic mechanisms of neural signaling (neurophysiology, synaptic transmission, and molecular signaling); understanding of sensation/movement and in particular how it relates to neuroanatomy; neurodevelopment and how the mature brain can change (plasticity); complex brainfunctions and neurological disease. Taught together with BIOL 6100 .",
"name" : "From Neuron to Behavior"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6960",
- "credits" : "0-6",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6840",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Numerical methods and analysis for linear and nonlinear PDEs with applications from heat conduction, wave propagation, solid and fluid mechanics, and other areas. Basic concepts of stability and convergence (Lax equivalence theorem, CFL condition, energy methods). Methods for parabolic problems (finite differences, method of lines, ADI, operator splitting), methods for hyperbolic problems (vector systems and characteristics, dissipation and dispersion, shocks capturing and tracking schemes), methods for elliptic problems (finite difference and finite volume methods).\u00c2",
- "name" : "Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Perception and thought are considered in terms of processes represented in the brain. The localization and lateralization of function are examined, drawing upon research on the behavioral effects of brain damage as well as brain-imaging studies and other approaches. Examples of topics include object recognition, memory, language, emotion, spatial ability, and motor processes.",
- "name" : "Cognition and the Brain"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-1020",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces students to digital photography, Web design, and interactive multimedia in making art. Students broaden their understanding of such topics as composition, effective use of images, color theory, typography, and narrative flow. Inquiry and experimentation are encouraged, leading towards the development of the skill and techniques needed to create visual art with electronic media.",
- "name" : "Digital Imaging"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6500",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will enable students to understand and apply theoretical foundations of programming concurrent, distributed, and mobile computing systems, namely process calculi, actors, join calculus, and mobile ambients. In the practical part, students will compare communication and synchronization aspects in concurrent programming languages following these theoretical models. Students will also review current research on distributed computing over the Internet, on topics including but not limited to coordination, mobility, heterogeneity, security, fault tolerance, scalability, programmability, and verification.",
- "name" : "Distributed Computing Over The Internet"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4630",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The course introduces students to the art of writing and directing short videos, with an emphasis on generating ideas, and realizing them in a well-developed final project. Major theories and principles are studied through a comparative analysis of scripts and films. Students learn to work with actors, write their own scripts, and direct videos. Two final projects \u00e2\u0080\u0093 a script and a video \u00e2\u0080\u0093 will integrate all of the elements covered in class. Lecture/Practicum.",
- "name" : "Writing and Directing for Video"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6540",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Basics of dynamic response of soil and soil-foundation systems, including applications to earthquake engineering and machine foundations. Systems studies include shallow and deep foundations, buried structures, earth structures, slopes, and earthquake site response.",
- "name" : "Dynamics of Soil and Soil-Foundation Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4240",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Circadian Biology. Students will read and critique recent primary literature, present current research articles, and lead discussions on new findings in the field.",
- "name" : "Topics in Circadian Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-4962",
- "credits" : "1-2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PHYS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6450",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The goal of this course is to introduce students to program analysis and its many applications in software engineering, particularly in improving software quality and software productivity. Concretely, students who successfully complete this course should be able to: (1) understand and apply program analysis techniques, such as dataflow analysis and type-based analysis; (2) implement program analysis; (3) understand and apply software testing techniques, such as black-box testing and white-box testing; and (4) understand and apply refactoring techniques.",
- "name" : "Principles of Program Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MTLE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6340",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course provides an introduction to ontologies, their uses, and an overview of their application in semantically enabled systems. Ontologies encode term meanings and are used to improve communication and enable computer programs to function more effectively. Class participants learn how to use ontologies in web-based applications and evaluate ontologies for reuse. Participants read relevant papers, learn how to critically review ontology papers and ontologies, and participate in group project(s) designing, using, and evaluating ontologies.",
- "name" : "Ontologies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6270",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The goal of this course is to introduce students to the problems, challenges, and applications of computer vision from a computational perspective.\u00c2 Topics include camera modeling and image formation, feature extraction, object and face recognition, image mosaic construction, stereo and three-dimensional imaging, motion, and tracking.\u00c2 Machine learning methods, including deep convolutional neural networks, will be studied and applied throughout the course.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Computational Vision"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2001",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "English Composition @ Hvcc"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6660",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "In-depth hands-on study of the technologies and protocols involved in building the Internet-of-Things (IoT), with specific focus on networking at the edge of the Internet. Topics include wireless communication and link layer technologies, multi-access and scheduling mechanisms, mobility models, routing in disconnected networks, energy-efficient edge networking, loss tolerant transport protocols, IoT security, data aggregation, and their applications to emerging areas such as vehicular networks, RFID systems and smart buildings.",
- "name" : "Internetworking of Things"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6450",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Selected topics beyond the scope of CHME 6430 . Particular emphasis on the current literature and the applications of computers and graphics. Extensive coverage is given to purification and separation technology, kinetic analysis, design of bioreactors, exploitation of genetic engineering, and bioprocess development. An individual project is required.",
- "name" : "Advanced Biochemical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6530",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Navier-Stokes equations, linear stability, vorticity and its origin, transition in wall-bounded and free-shear flows, statistics and Reynolds averaging, homogeneous turbulence, coherent structures, laboratory methods for study of turbulence, including turbulence measurements and turbulence modeling.",
- "name" : "Turbulence"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6007",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Public Health Policy@ Alblaw"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ITWS-4969",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ITWS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ECON"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4080",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The application of power semiconductor devices to the efficient conversion of electrical energy. Circuit analysis, signal analysis, and energy concepts are integrated to develop steady-state and dynamic models of generic power converters. Specific topics include AC/DC conversion, DC/DC conversion, DC/AC conversion, and AC/AC conversion. These generic converters are applied as controlled rectifiers, switching power supplies, motor drives, HVDC transmission, induction heating, and others. Ancillary circuits needed for the proper operation and control of power semiconductor devices are also discussed.",
- "name" : "Semiconductor Power Electronics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4770",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The second semester of the molecular biochemistry sequence. Topics include lipids and lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism and the coenzymes involved in this metabolism, nucleic acid synthesis and chemistry, protein synthesis and degradation, integration of metabolism, photobiology, and photosynthesis. This course is taught in studio mode. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either BIOL 4770 \u00c2 or CHEM 4770 .)",
- "name" : "Molecular Biochemistry II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6010",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course provides an introduction to the \"heart and soul\" of managerial leadership, teamwork, and innovation by focusing on the behavior and characteristics of those exceptional individuals whose impact extends far beyond their own persona\u00e2\u0080\u0094inside and outside of business. Leaders/innovators are those whose vision, creativity, and charisma allow them to transform their organizations and to change the lives of large numbers of people. Using a combination of case studies and simulations, the course offers a week-long immersion experience into the mindset, actions, and concerns of true business innovators.",
- "name" : "Heroes, Leaders, and Innovators"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4965",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CIVL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the theory, algorithms, and applications of machine learning (supervised, reinforcement, and unsupervised) from data: What is learning? Is learning feasible? How can it be done? How can it be done well? The course offers a mix of theory, technique, and application with additional selected topics chosen from Pattern Recognition,\u00c2 Decision Trees, Neural Networks, RBF's, Bayesian Learning, PAC Learning, Support Vector Machines, Gaussian processes, and Hidden Markov Models.",
- "name" : "Machine Learning from Data"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4470",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A foundational course on the principles of radiation and radiation protection (health physics).\u00c2 Provides a fundamental understanding of natural and anthropogenic sources of radiation, radiation interactions in matter, the biological effects of radiation, internal and external dosimetry, and radiation shielding.\u00c2 The use of computational and simulation techniques is emphasized throughout the course.\u00c2 Studio-style case studies examine the medical, socio-political, and regulatory aspects of radiation utilization and protection.",
- "name" : "Radiological Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Readings in Computer Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-2410",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Century Of The Gene"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6990",
- "credits" : "1-16",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presentend, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6900",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
- "name" : "Graduate Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAF-0080",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "The leadership laboratory courses (LLABs) include a study of Air Force customs and courtesies, drill and ceremonies, and military commands. LLAB also includes studying the environment of an Air Force officer and learning about opportunities available to commissioned officers. The AS 300 and AS 400 LLABs consist of activities classified as leadership and management experiences. They involve the planning and controlling of military activities of the cadet wing, and the preparation and presentation of briefings and other oral and written communications. LLABs also include interviews, guidance, and information which will increase the understanding, motivation, and performance of other cadets.",
- "name" : "Air Force Leadership Laboratory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4820",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Derivation, analysis, and use of computational procedures for solving differential equations. Topics covered include ordinary differential equations (both initial value and boundary value problems) and partial differential equations. Runge-Kutta and multistep methods for initial value problems. Finite difference methods for partial differential equations including techniques for heat conduction, wave propagation, and potential problems. Basic convergence and stability theory.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Numerical Methods for Differential Equations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4700",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The course is intended to provide a computational perspective on one or more topics chosen from theory and algorithms; systems and software; artificial intelligence and data; or vision, graphics, robotics, and games.\u00c2 Students will read classic and recent research results in the field, write critical reviews of these publications, engage in in-class presentations and discussions, and/or write a publication-quality report on an innovative final project of their choice.",
- "name" : "Technical Writing and Communication in Computer Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHIL-2600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Moral Development"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-6970",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ASTR"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6740",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Statistical methods are developed for classic linear and non-linear regression analysis. Econometric tools such as instrumental variables, regression discontinuity, and difference-in-differences are emphasized for causal identification. Extensions are made to new topics such as simulation-based methods including bootstrap, nonparametric and semiparametricestimators, and quantileregression methods.",
- "name" : "Econometrics II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-4610",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "DIS Studio C focuses on the co-production of products, organizations, and problem-solving strategies. Students will explore how to facilitate communication across multiple disciplinary and audience modalities, including stakeholders, designers, and users. Projects and course discussions will train students to translate social scientific and engineering problem-solving judgments and to evaluate how complex problems come to be defined. This course is required for DIS students who are dual-majoring with the School of Engineering.",
- "name" : "Design and Innovation Studio C"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4510",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Mechanical regulation of biological systems.\u00c2 Topics include principles and concepts of mechanobiology; evolution, embryogenesis, and histogenesis of tissues with particular references to skeletal system; mechanical regulation of cellular behavior, tissue growth and organ development; concept and application of strain energy regulation in biology; application of mechanobiology to tissue regeneration; limits of mechanical regulation.",
- "name" : "Mechanobiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4600",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics is an entire methodology rather than individual analyses or analysis steps.",
- "name" : "Data Analytics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6370",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Data and Society provides a broad overview of how society is leveraging and responding to the social, organizational, policy, and technical opportunities and challenges of a data-driven world. Course themes focus on various aspects of the data ecosystem, data and innovation, and data and the broader community. Assignments build writing, presentation, and critical thinking and assessment skills, all of which are important for professional success.\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Data and Society"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6800",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Biophysics addresses the physical principles of biological function, which requires the application of physical methods. The focus of this course is on methods used to study the interactions and dynamics of biomolecules in vitro, primarily proteins and nucleic acids. It will cover both the theoretical and methodological aspects of molecular biophysical methods. This course is designed as an interdisciplinary introduction to the field and is open to students in biology, chemistry, physics, or engineering.",
- "name" : "Methods in Biophysics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4120",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Civil Engr & Instrum & Sensors"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-1600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the scientific principles that dictate the structure and properties of engineering materials, including metals, ceramics, semiconductors, and polymers. Physical properties of materials (mechanical, electrical, thermal, optical) are discussed in terms of the underlying structure, spanning multiple length scales from atomic packing to micron scale defects, in practical engineering materials. Throughout the course, the material behaviors are understood from the viewpoint of thermodynamics and kinetics. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Materials Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4965",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4800",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A survey of numerical methods for scientific and engineering problems. Topics include numerical solution of linear and nonlinear algebraic equations, interpolation and least squares approximations, numerical integration and differentiation, eigenvalue problems, and an introduction to the numerical solution of ordinary differential equations. Emphasis is placed on efficient computational procedures including the use of library and student written procedures using high-level software such as MATLAB.",
- "name" : "Numerical Computing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATP-6600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Coverage of several areas of interest in optimization, with proofs of some major results. Convex sets and functions. Optimality conditions in nonlinear optimization. Lagrangian duality. Linear, quadratic, and conic optimization. Convex relaxations of integer optimization problems. Stochastic optimization.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Optimization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6250",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The design and operation of different laboratory experiments to provide experience for the environmental engineer in the practical application of chemical and biological theory. Design parameters are developed via bench scale testing. Topics include biological treatment, ion exchange, test for total carbon in a solid waste and PARR bomb calorimeter, soil columns, and microbial respirometry.",
- "name" : "Bench Scale Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4969",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BCBP"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4941",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Deep Learning Radar Imaging"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6141",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Generation of electric power from renewable sources and its integration into the power grid. Topics include fundamentals of photovoltaic and wind energy; power converters and their control for renewable energy conversion and grid integration; solar power plants, solar inverters, and their control; wind turbines based on synchronous generators, wind turbines based on doubly-fed induction generators (DFIG), wind power plants, and offshore wind; operation and control of power systems with renewables.",
- "name" : "Renewable Power Generation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4450",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The goal of this course is to introduce students to program analysis and its many applications in software engineering, particularly in improving software quality and software productivity. Concretely, students who successfully complete this course should be able to: (1) understand and apply program analysis techniques, such as dataflow analysis and type-based analysis; (2) implement program analysis; (3) understand and apply software testing techniques, such as black-box testing and white-box testing; and (4) understand and apply refactoring techniques.",
- "name" : "Principles of Program Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-4560",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Fundamentals of Isotope geochemistry as applied to biogeochemical systems in modern and ancient environments. This course covers the principles of both radiogenic and stable isotope distribution, decay, and transfer through Earth's exchangeable reservoirs. The course will emphasize stable isotopes, equilibrium and kinetic isotope fractionation, distribution, isotope mass balance, and using these systems to track global biogeochemical cycles in the modern environment and in deep time. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Isotope Geochemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6760",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Covers advanced topics in the theory and application of econometrics and data modeling. Topics emphasized include causal identification, advanced instrumental variable models, dynamic models, panel data models, model selection, simulation-based inference methods, survival analysis models, censoring, quantile regression, non-linear models, and discrete choice models.",
- "name" : "Economic Data Analytics and Modeling II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-2130",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Intro To Phil Of Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4390",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will provide an introductory survey of the main topics in data mining and knowledge discovery in databases (KDD), including: classification, clustering, association rules, sequence mining, similarity search, deviation detection, and so on. Emphasis will be on the algorithmic and system issues in KDD, as well as on applications such as Web mining, multimedia mining, bioinformatics, geographical information systems, etc.",
- "name" : "Data Mining"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in STSO"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4340",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course provides an introduction to ontologies, their uses, and an overview of their application in semantically enabled systems. Ontologies encode term meanings and are used to improve communication and enable computer programs to function more effectively. Class participants learn how to use ontologies in Web-based applications and evaluate ontologies for reuse. Participants read relevant papers, learn how to critically review ontology papers and ontologies, and participate in group project(s) designing, using, and evaluating ontologies.",
- "name" : "Ontologies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4650",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The principles and practice of tissue engineering are taught in this course.\u00c2 The principles underlying strategies for employing selected cells, biomaterial scaffolds, soluble regulators or their genes, and biomechanical loading and culture conditions, for the regeneration of tissues and organs in vitro and in vivo are addressed.\u00c2 Bioreactors, enabling technology and biomimetic approach for fabricating tissue-engineered products and devices for implantation are taught.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Intro to Cell and Tissue Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-6002",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Politics Of Se Asia (at Sunya)"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-4030",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Glasses are used in optical communications (optical fibers), electronics (insulator), and nuclear waste processing in addition to conventional use as windows, light bulbs, and containers. Subjects covered include: Formation and structure of inorganic glasses. The relationship between properties and cooling rate. Viscosity and structural relaxation. Phase separation and crystallization. Ionic diffusion and electrical properties. Mechanical strength and fatigue. Glass surface and chemical durability. Optical properties.",
- "name" : "Glass Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-2002",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Intructional Theory @ Suny Alb"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-4450",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The first half of this course is devoted to presentation of traditional theories of learning. Classical and operant conditioning and single-subject methodology are studied in depth. During the second half of the course, students apply their knowledge of operant conditioning principles in the context of a group-based field study.",
- "name" : "Learning"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4320",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Techniques and methods for parallel programming: models of parallel machines and programs, efficiency and complexity of parallel algorithms. Paradigms of parallel programming and corresponding extensions to sequential programming languages. Overview of parallel languages and coordination languages and models; programming on networks of workstations. Basic parallel algorithms: elementary computation, matrix multiplication, sorting; sample scientific application.",
- "name" : "Parallel Programming"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7890",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This doctoral seminar examines the major streams of theory and research in information management and information systems. The course will explore the major issues, theories, and research methods in information systems, research through classic readings, information management, and reference disciplines. Key areas in information systems research will be covered, such as strategic and economic perspectives of information management, adoption and diffusion theory, information technology and organizational design, and how research methods are employed in information systems research. Students will gain an understanding of what theory is and how to develop and evaluate theory in the area of information management and information systems.",
- "name" : "Research Seminar in Management Information Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ENVE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-2020",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This design studio introduces students to the first semester-long design project. We introduce students to more formal engineering design methods. This includes problem formulation, structured ideation, rapid prototyping, evaluation, functional modeling, and iteration. Studio III will also continue to draw on social science methods of ethnographic observation, background research, stakeholder analysis, and also a critical deconstruction of engineering design methods in a way that builds agility in ways more appropriate for those in DIS. Development of individual skills in design development, presentation, and portfolio building are also emphasized.",
- "name" : "Design and Innovation Studio III"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-4350",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The study of biochemical and biological processes common to environmental engineering. Introductory physiology, biochemistry and ecology of bacteria, yeasts, fungi. Laboratory work in microbial techniques. Development of reaction rate and mass balances on biological processes for pollution control. Includes experimental analysis of natural and engineered biological processes, emphasizing experimental design, data evaluation, and report writing. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Biological Processes in Environmental Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-4990",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Senior capstone project course for GSAS majors. Students work individually or in teams, supervised by a faculty member, to complete a self-directed project in games that is innovative, experimental, or artistically engaged. The course emphasizes the complete development cycle, through continual iteration and critique towards completion and public release. \u00c2",
- "name" : "GSAS Capstone"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6660",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Graduate-level course on the fundamental concepts and technologies underlying finite element methods for the numerical solution of continuum problems. The course emphasizes the construction of integral weak forms for elliptic partial differential equations and the construction of the elemental level matrices using multi-dimensional shape functions, element level mappings, and numerical integration. The basic convergence properties of the finite element method will be given. This course serves as preparation for students working on finite element methods.",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of Finite Elements"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4230",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A self-contained course that includes topics from number theory, basic cryptography, and protocol security.\u00c2 This is a hybrid course with sufficient depth in both theory and hands-on experience with network protocols. Topics include: Classical Cryptography, Block Ciphers (DES, AES), Information Theoretical Cryptography, Randomness, RNG and Stream Ciphers, Hash and MAC Algorithms, Public-Key Cryptography, Elliptic Curve Cryptography, Digital Signatures and Identification, Internet Attacks, Web Security, SSL and PGP.\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Cryptography and Network Security I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4550",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "At a time when the resurgence of religious identities, public expression, and action is driving national politics, this course explores, through a media frame, \"the return of religion\" within the secular consensus of modernity.\u00c2 We examine how various religious groups use media to strategically articulate and institutionalize their political messages, and how media portray religion in relation to the secular world. A central problem is the logic of fundamentalism in relation to mainstream or liberal religion.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Religion, Politics, & Media"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6560",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "We will study theoretical and practical solutions to computational geometry problems found in computer graphics, visualization, vision, robotics, engineering, manufacturing, and geographic information systems. \u00c2 Topics include convex hulls, half-planes, Voronoi diagrams, Delaunay triangulations, binary space partitions, motion planning, visibility, and meshes. Course activities include programming assignments, written homework with proofs of computational complexity, and a term project with presentation. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Computational Geometry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-4270",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A\u00c2 capstone design experience that engages students from biomedical, computer systems, electrical, industrial, materials, and mechanical engineering on teams in an open-ended engineering design problem in preparation for professional practice. With the guidance of a multidisciplinary team of faculty members and instructional support staff, students apply knowledge and skills from prior coursework. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Multidisciplinary Capstone Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Programming with an overview of the principles of computer networks, including a detailed look at the OSI reference model and various popular network protocol suites. Concentration on Unix interprocess communication (IPC), network programming using TCP and UDP, as well as client-side and mobile programming. Programming projects are required.",
- "name" : "Network Programming"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the theory, algorithms, and applications of machine learning (supervised, reinforcement, and unsupervised) from data: What is learning? Is learning feasible? How can we do it? How can we do it well? The course offers a mix of theory, technique, and application with additional selected topics chosen from Pattern Recognition,\u00c2 Decision Trees, Neural Networks, RBF's, Bayesian Learning, PAC Learning, Support Vector Machines, Gaussian processes, and Hidden Markov Models.",
- "name" : "Machine Learning from Data"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6960",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BMED"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4030",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "State-of-the-art in contemporary algorithm design, randomized algorithms are algorithms that use randomness as part of their functioning. They are typically simple, often easy to analyze, and work well in practice. They have numerous applications in many fields of computer science and mathematics. Randomized algorithms represent an active and vibrant research area with many exciting new results contributed every year.",
- "name" : "Randomized Algorithms"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1959",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Writing And Society"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4120",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Application of mathematical techniques to economic modeling and analysis. Construction of models to describe aspects of the economy and to analyze potential policies. Solution methods for issues including optimal choice with and without constraints, equilibria among multiple actors, marginal effects of policies, and dynamic economic models. Some mathematical maturity is assumed, and mathematical skills are taught throughout the course.",
- "name" : "Mathematical Methods in Economics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-2600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A study of important concepts in software design, implementation, and testing. Topics include specification, abstraction with classes, design principles and patterns, testing, refactoring, the software development process, GUI and event-driven programming, and cloud-based programming. The course also introduces implementation and testing tools, including IDEs, revision control systems, and other frameworks. The overarching goal of the course is for students to learn how to write correct and maintainable software.",
- "name" : "Principles of Software"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-9990",
- "credits" : "1-16",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Research In Astronomy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-2500",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to computer organization, assembler language, and operating systems. Computer systems organization: processors, memory, I/O. Digital logic: gates, Boolean algebra, digital logic circuits, memory, buses. Microprogramming. Machine level: instruction formats, addressing modes, instruction types, flow of control. Operating systems: virtual memory, virtual I/O instructions, processes, interprocess communication. Numeric representation. Assembler language: the assembly process, macros, linking, loading. Advanced architectures: RISC architectures, parallel architectures.",
- "name" : "Computer Organization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4900",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A capstone design experience that engages students from biomedical, computer and systems, electrical, industrial, materials, and mechanical engineering on teams in an open-ended engineering design problem in preparation for professional practice. With the guidance of a multidisciplinary team of faculty members and instructional support staff, students apply knowledge and skills from prior coursework. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Multidisciplinary Capstone Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-2200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Modeling Of Biomedical Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-2200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces important mathematical and theoretical tools for computer science, including topics from set theory, combinatorics, and probability theory, and then proceeds to automata theory, the Turing Machine model of computation, and notions of computational complexity. The course will emphasize formal reasoning and proof techniques.",
- "name" : "Foundations of Computer Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-1520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Functions of several variables, introductory linear algebra, and other analytical techniques needed for further study in probability, statistics, and operations research. Topics covered include improper integrals, probability density functions, partial derivatives and optimization techniques for functions of several variables, matrix algebra, linear systems, lines and planes in 3-space, linear inequalities, introductory linear programming, introductory combinatorics, and some probability.",
- "name" : "Mathematical Methods in Management and Economics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-1190",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This course teaches elementary programming concepts using the MATLAB environment for engineering students with little or no prior programming experience. Concepts include variables, looping, and function calls. Students cannot get credit for CSCI 1190 after earning credit for CSCI 1100 \u00c2 or any higher-level CSCI course.",
- "name" : "Beginning Programming for Engineers"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-2940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Study and experimental work in various fields of chemistry to develop an interest in and ability for independent study and investigation.",
- "name" : "Special Projects in Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-4967",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Master's Project In Comm"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-1100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to computer programming algorithm design and analysis. Additional topics include basic computer organization; internal representation of scalar and array data; use of top-down design and subprograms to tackle complex problems; abstract data types. Enrichment material as time allows. Interdisciplinary case studies, numerical and nonnumerical applications. Students who have passed CSCI 1200 \u00c2 cannot register for this course.",
- "name" : "Computer Science I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7961",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4810",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Chemical processes important in the environment from naturally occurring and man-induced systems. Thermodynamic and chemical considerations of fuels; the thermodynamics of the atmosphere; atmospheric photochemistry; chemistry of natural water systems; chemistry of pesticides, fertilizers, and other important environmental contaminants; aspects of the carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur cycles.",
- "name" : "Chemistry of the Environment"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6430",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "A fundamental course in nonlinear vibrations and stability. Basic concepts about linear and nonlinear systems; Routh-Hurwitz and Liapunov's stability criteria; systems with periodic coefficients and Floquet theory; effects of nonlinearities; limit cycles, jump, saturation, nonlinear resonances, modal energy exchange, etc.; perturbation methods: straightforward perturbations, Lindstedt-Poincare, harmonic balancing, multiple time scales; steady-state and transient responses of nonlinear systems. Applications to discrete and structural systems. Use of symbolic manipulation to analyze problems.",
- "name" : "Nonlinear Vibrations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6990",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6760",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course covers finite element-based approaches to solve problems in fluid mechanics including the Navier-Stokes equations and its variants.\u00c2 Emphasis is placed on variational multiscale and stabilized methods.\u00c2 Experience in numerical methods and programming is assumed.\u00c2 Different transport equations are considered starting from an advection-diffusion equation.\u00c2 Issues concerning implementation are also discussed pertaining to the numerical formulation, stabilizaton parameter, time integrator, nonlinear equation iterator, finite element assembly, boundary conditions, and linear solver.",
- "name" : "Finite Element Methods for Fluid Dynamics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6880",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course covers interactive, multimedia interface design (for Web sites and apps) for data visualization or other forms of interactive information design. Innovative designs that explore new directions in interactive data design are highlighted. Topics include multisensory information design using graphics, sound, touch, and large-scale data projection. Interface design topics include user-centered design, information architecture, rapid prototyping, cross-cultural design, and intellectual property. Students may choose the applications they want to design for the class project.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Interactive Data Visualization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-2941",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Limnological Monitoring"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6730",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A brand is more than just a cool logo design. \"A brand is a perception or set of associations consumers have of a business.\" -(Felicia C. Sullivan)\u00c2 These perceptions originate from a consistent verbal and visual story communicated through a multitude of media platforms. In this class, we'll define the brand story, create messaging, and design the logo, stationery, signage, packaging, advertising, schwag, motion graphics, etc. The course culminates with the design of an identity standards manual defining the rules and principles to effectively communicate a consistent brand image. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Brand Identity Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6220",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "To provide the students with a broad understanding of cutting edge methodologies in transportation modeling and economics not thoroughly covered in other courses\u00c2 and emerging issues pertaining to transportation research and practice.",
- "name" : "Critical Issues in Transportation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7760",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Overview of\u00c2 risk management, concepts and measurement of risk; types of risks (market, credit, liquidity, operational, business, strategic). Clustering, classification and optimization tools applied to risk management. Frameworks and instruments available for\u00c2 risk management. Specific issues related with managing specific risk types\u00c2 \u00e2\u0080\u0094 credit, liquidity and operational risk, with emphasis on current challenges. Securitization, asset-liability management, and role of insurance for\u00c2 risk management.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Risk Analytics and Management"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6560",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces students to the theoretical and practical use of graphics as a form of visual communication. Discussions include such topics as visual perception, design theory, formatted text, and graphics. Students have an opportunity to put theory into practice using computer graphics software.",
- "name" : "Visual Design: Theory and Application"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6900",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This seminar-based graduate level course provides a broad exposure to the chemical and biological engineering discipline. Attending and participating in seminars from recognized experts will form the core of the course. Topics include energy and the environment, nano and biotechnologies, computational molecular science, polymers and advanced materials, synthetic biology, metabolic engineering, and the future of our discipline. The course is required for chemical engineering Ph.D. students. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Chemical and Biological Engineering Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4380",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course examines the economics of statistical and taste-based discrimination associated with national origin, disability status, race, gender, and sexual orientation, focusing mainly on differences that arise in the labor market and their potential policy solutions. We will also consider disparities occurring in healthcare, crime, education, housing, and financial settings. In each case, we will apply economic theory and study how econometrics can be used to address empirical questions relating to discrimination. This course will help students to develop the ability to discuss controversial topics in a respectful, informed, and inclusive manner.",
- "name" : "Economics of Discrimination"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6540",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "General principles and applications of equilibrium thermodynamics. Second law analysis of energy systems. Thermodynamic relations, equations of state, properties of single and multiphase systems. Elementary statistical thermodynamics. Fundamentals of nonequilibrium thermodynamics.",
- "name" : "Advanced Thermodynamics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4370",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The nature of optics, physics, and operation principles of optoelectronic devices and systems for communication, display, lighting, and computing. Topics include optics fundamentals, waveguide and fibers, LEDs, laser diode, photodetectors, solar cells, liquid crystal devices, modulators, optical display, and light detection and ranging (LiDAR) systems.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Optoelectronics Technology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4980",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Senior Design Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6730",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Theoretical treatment of economic statistics. Topics include a rigorous treatment of set theory and fundamentals of probability theory, statistical estimation and hypothesis testing, analysis of variance, and regression. Also includes advanced topics such as maximum likelihood, generalized method of moments, empirical likelihood, and bootstrap, as well as finite-sample analysis and large-sample asymptotics.",
- "name" : "Econometrics I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6530",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course considers the sociopolitical and ethical dimensions of post-factual media content, including the staged actuality of reality television. Topics include: fake news; disinformation; science denial; cognitive bias; political spin; reality TV performance and celebrity.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Post-Factual Media"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6180",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course continues the practice and study of Deep Listening beyond the foundational course \"Deep Listening.\" Topics include a wide range of investigations, research, and creativity in Deep Listening.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Topics in Deep Listening"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6570",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This is a graduate level course. It aims to provide students with the familiarity of traditional and modern flow control techniques. It also introduces the students to the subject of laminar-to-turbulent transition and flow separation using hydrodynamic stability analysis, which is a crucial component in design and implementation of intelligent flow control strategies.",
- "name" : "Aerodynamic Flow Control"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6510",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Provides students an opportunity to enact communication practice from a strong foundation of textual and visual communication theory. Focuses on theories of text-making and distribution across media, qualitative and quantitative approaches to communication research, and applied rhetoric. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Communication Theory and Practice"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4188",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The purpose of this course is to introduce the basics of strategic communication in digital and social media platforms, with a specific interest in the applications of digital and social media for communication professionals. In this course, students will learn key principles and techniques for digital content creation and promotion. Students will brainstorm, conceptualize, and develop an online presence and apply writing, research, and critical thinking to the practice of strategic communication.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Social Media & Strategic Communication"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4260",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduces students to the basic analytical approaches to environmental issues and natural resource use. Emphasis is on economic valuation and public policy. Covers traditional approaches based on assumptions of economic rationality and market efficiency as well as current approaches from the fields of environmental science behavioral economics. Emphasis is on active student participation and examination of current environmental controversies.",
- "name" : "Environmental and Resource Economics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-1090",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "A laboratory introduction to simulation and hardware programming with MATLAB and Simulink. Course covers: fundamental theory and programming tools for common sensors and actuators: gyroscopes, accelerometers, magnetometers, encoders, analog sensors, DC Motors, and motor drivers. Including: discretization, sampling, integration, differentiation, delays, saturation, and control. Material covered in a hands-on, observable, and application specific way. Weekly one-hour lab/lectures introduce basic topics. Labs reinforce covered topics and are performed at home with provided hardware kits. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Introduction to Mechatronics Hardware and Software"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6680",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to VLSI architecture design approaches and methodologies for digital signal processing systems, digital memory circuits and architectures, and computer VLSI arithmetic. Topics include: pipelining, parallel processing, timing and clocking, systolic architectures, digital filter architectures, Viterbi decoder architectures, SRAM, DRAM, flash memory, high-speed adder and multiplier architectures. Laboratory experiments involve the use of commercial EDA tools with hardware description language (HDL).",
- "name" : "Advanced VLSI Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6070",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Aerodynamic analysis of multi-rotor aerial vehicles. Multi-rotor coordinates and controls for multicopters. Multicopter failure and recovery. Comparison of rotor speed and pitch control. Trim and performance analysis of different multirotor archetypes.",
- "name" : "Multirotor Aerial Vehicles"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2941",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Closed Worlds Book Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COMM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4530",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "his course considers the sociopolitical and ethical dimensions of post-factual media content, including the staged actuality of reality television. Topics include: fake news; disinformation; science denial; cognitive bias; political spin; reality TV performance and celebrity.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Post-Factual Media"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4060",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "A continuation of CHME 4050 \u00c2 . Topics include chemical plant design including full economic analysis, implementation of safety protocols, plant layout design, and complete feasibility study. Projects can be chosen from a wide variety of chemical and bioprocesses to study different aspects of chemical industry.",
- "name" : "Chemical Process Design: Applications"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6310",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Study of transmission lines, impedance matching, passive and active microwave systems.\u00c2 Work with S-parameters and experiment with the use of Smith chart.\u00c2 Introduction to microwave CAD tools for 2D electromagnetic (EM) simulations and microwave testing.\u00c2 Emphasis on physical understanding, quantitative performance evaluation using both hand calculations and EM simulations.",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of RF/Microwave Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4470",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course examines the design of technical information systems and their output in useful and well-designed documents and interfaces. The course includes the history of data visualization, visual rhetoric, and information systems such as DITA. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Information Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4961",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ECSE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4460",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces students to the theoretical and practical use of graphics as a form of visual communication. Discussions include topics such as the psychology of visual perception, design theory, creative process, formatted text, and graphics. Students have an opportunity to put theory into practice using computer graphics.",
- "name" : "Visual Design: Theory and Application"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6380",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Writing And Response"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-6990",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4320",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This studio course explores new directions in art and design that include visual poetry (visual expression in which they shape an arrangement of text, images, symbols to convey the message) and interactive narrative. Visual poetics and narrative appear in advertisement, music videos, and other forms of communication. Students will experiment with these forms of communication and learn how these concepts apply in artistic and commercial contexts. The class format includes lectures, discussions, and studio work.",
- "name" : "Visual Poetics and Narrative"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester.\u00c2 If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COMM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-2964",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1002",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Element Russian I (at Sunya)"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4380",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The second in a two-course sequence combining music theory, aural skills, and engaged listening practices applicable to a broad range of musical styles, with an emphasis on creative practice. This course covers chromatic, extended, and contemporary tonal harmony and its interrelationship with form. Musicianship exercises include advanced chord identification, rhythm exercises, dictation, and improvisation. Engaged listening practices include responsive listening, reading, and written exercises as well as in-class discussion. Weekly assignments include composition, analysis, and performance. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Music and Sound II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-4200",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "A course exploring methods for 3D computer lighting, rendering, and camera authoring.\u00c2 We will discuss strong foundational theory from film in regards to lighting and cinematography.\u00c2 The course will focus on producing high fidelity rendered images and video for animation, games, and digital art. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Lighting, Rendering, & Cinematography"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-1150",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introductory physics for students seeking a more intensive experience. Newton's laws are introduced using differential calculus,\u00c2 with solutions based on integral calculus. Material on fluids and\u00c2 thermodynamics\u00c2 is\u00c2 included. Laboratory exercises are carried out emphasizing measurement uncertainty and clear, concise reporting. Recommended for students intending to major in physics.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Introductory Classical Dynamics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4936",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Res Investigations: Projbuilt"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2750",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course engages students in a critical examination of television and its historical and present status as a dominant popular culture medium. Television in this context is broadly understood as an evolving medium for motion pictures in the age of technological convergence. Using a variety of analytical and theoretical approaches, we'll consider the significant influence television has on individual, social, and cultural experiences\u00e2\u0080\u0094addressing questions of representation, identity, economics, and ideology. The class uses a collaborative learning process, allowing students to influence the content and emphasis of the class and thereby reflecting the democratic nature of popular culture media.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Critical Television"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6490",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces methods to develop numerical and\u00c2 algorithmic techniques needed to endow robots with the \"intelligence\" to devise strategies to solve problems they will\u00c2 encounter. Once these abilities are sufficiently well developed,\u00c2 robots will become safe and autonomous, thus paving the way for\u00c2 pervasive personal robots. Topics include: configuration space\u00c2 representation, cell decomposition, roadmap methods, rapidly-exploring random trees, simultaneous localization and mapping,\u00c2 contact modeling, grasping, and dexterous manipulation.",
- "name" : "Robotics II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In this course, students will consider methods of gathering users' requirements for product functions and information, ways to test products and information for usability and suitability, and procedures for incorporating the results learned through testing. Students will design and conduct usability tests on products, documents, and interfaces of interest.",
- "name" : "Foundations of HCI Usability"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2660",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces students to the practice of graphic design with a variety of hands-on projects. Studies include the principles and theories of 2D design and the integration of form, color, type, image, and content. Students will develop a heightened visual awareness and an understanding of how design influences meaning. The course emphasizes strategic and critical thinking in the solving of graphic design problems for the purposes of professional communication across a range of media platforms.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Introduction to Graphic Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2616",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course engages students with the transmedial genre of superheroes, which has become one the most influential genres in film, television, video games, toys, and of course comics\u00e2\u0080\u0094not to mention the cultural artifacts that are associated with its iconography. Through an examination of the genre's origins and history, its economic and aesthetic aspects, and the ideological issues that surround its narratives\u00e2\u0080\u0094including representational dynamics of race, class, gender, sexuality and other vectors of identity\u00e2\u0080\u0094students in this course will become more critically aware consumers of popular culture media. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Superheroes in the Classroom"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2570",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Typography studies the form and function of alphabetic and pictographic systems in English-speaking society. The course aims to imbue in students a critical perspective on the role typography plays in the history and sustenance of civilization and the propagation of ideas throughout society. Students will read historical, theoretical, and evidence-based literature to glean principles for designing communicatively effective type. Verbal and visual assignments will enforce understanding of typographic principles and grammar for use in print and digital interfaces.",
- "name" : "Typography"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-1300",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "The use of basic machine tools such as lathes, milling machines, drill presses, band saws, and grinders, including micrometers, vernier calipers, and other devices of use in a machine shop or laboratory. Welding techniques and tool making are also considered.",
- "name" : "Engineering Processes"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presentend, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "An individually arranged independent study course under the supervision of a member of the Cognitive Science Department. The topic is selected by consultation between student and faculty member.",
- "name" : "Readings in Cognitive Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4240",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Circadian Biology. Students will read and critique recent primary literature, present current research articles, and lead discussions on new findings in the field.",
- "name" : "Topics in Circadian Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ERTH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4580",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "For students who are interested in empirical research in economic- and finance-oriented institutions, this course provides a wide range of econometric tools for the specification, estimation, prediction, and evaluation of economic and financial models. Methods to identify causal effects are emphasized. Mathematical methods of econometrics are developed for tools such as instrumental variables, regression discontinuity, and difference-in-differences. Advanced topics including time series, panel data, and quantile regression will also be addressed. In particular, we examine how the quantile regression can potentially improve the predictability of the stock market and relate it to the current development in this area. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Data Analysis in Economics and Finance"
- },
- {
- "code" : "DSES-4200",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Desgn & Analys Work Sys"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-1510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Communication Theory And Practice"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6880",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will concentrate on the knowledge-based modeling of intelligent agents, with a special emphasis on semantically-oriented language processing. Theoretical and conceptual discussions will be balanced by practical work within the implemented OntoAgent cognitive architecture. The course will cover the modeling of decision-making, the various aspects of natural-language processing, and the art of knowledge engineering.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Language-Endowed Intelligent Agents"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4920",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This design studio is the second required course of the two-semester, 5 th -year Final Project course sequence in the undergraduate program. The Final Project Design Studio provides a forum for the design and development of a comprehensive architectural proposal pertinent to the Final Project course sequence. This course is required of all fifth-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Final Project Design Studio"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course covers basic concepts and results in mathematical logic and computability theory, including decision procedures, automated theorem proving techniques for truth-functional and first-order logic, axiomatizations of set theory and arithmetic, Turing Machines, Abacus Machines, recursive functions, the Church-Turing Thesis, the halting problem, undecidability of first-order logic, undecidability of arithmetic, and Godel's incompleteness results.",
- "name" : "Computability and Logic"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6540",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "A review of basic concepts of mass, momentum, and energy conservation as related to convective heat transfer. The analysis of laminar and turbulent forces and free convection problems in both internal and external flows. Also a study of the current state of the art in boiling and condensation heat transfer.",
- "name" : "Convective Heat Transfer"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6690",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "An in-depth study of quasi-experimental and experimental design of behavioral research. Topics include test construction and development, factor analysis, meta-analysis, repeated measures, and MANOVA.",
- "name" : "Seminar in Research Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6640",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces various computational approaches for creating intelligent conversational agents. This course will take the form of a combination of lectures, presentations by students, class discussions, and independent study.",
- "name" : "Intelligent Virtual Agent"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5380",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course covers topics that are essential to developing an effective professional architectural practice. The course will address professional obligations and ethics, contracts, registration, office organization, and management. The course will emphasize effective communication, negotiating, public speaking, and team development. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Professional Practice 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6030",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "For students who are interested in empirical research in economic- and finance-oriented institutions, this course provides a wide range of econometric tools for the specification, estimation, prediction, and evaluation of economic and financial models. Methods to identify causal effects are emphasized. Mathematical methods of econometrics are developed for tools such as instrumental variables, regression discontinuity, and difference-in-differences. Advanced topics including time series, panel data, and quantile regression will also be addressed. In particular, we examine how the quantile regression can potentially improve the predictability of the stock market and relate it to the current development in this area. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Data Analysis in Economics and Finance"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7430",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Many of the tried and true\u00c2 investment strategies have failed of late to protect the wealth and capital of individuals and organizations. This course provides substantial background into how investment decisions are made in personal, business, and government settings, under the requirement that risk management and wealth preservation are governing factors. Short and long term investment strategies and instruments are examined, focusing on retirement and workplace benefits.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Investments II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-2500",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Introduction to some experimental methods used to fabricate and measure the structure and properties of materials. Thermal and mechanical processing and properties are emphasized. Specimen preparation, examination by light optical microscopy, report writing, and measurement systems analysis are covered.",
- "name" : "Materials Laboratory Skills"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-4010",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Groups, rings, polynomial rings, fields, integral domains, with emphasis on group theory; homomorphisms and isomorphisms; normal subgroups, cosets, ideals, modules; quotient groups and quotient rings; other topics chosen from number theory, polynomials, and Galois Theory.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Abstract Algebra"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-4360",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course examines relationships between microorganisms and Earth processes.\u00c2 Topics include the origins of life on earth, surface metabolism theory, biological and biochemical benchmarks. Earth is considered as a microbial habitat with emphasis on the lithosphere and hydrosphere, including soils, seawater, lakes, rivers, and groundwater. Geomicrobial processes, including microbial conversion of inorganics and metals and mineralization of organics, are discussed.\u00c2 Molecular and non-molecular methods for detection, isolation, and identification of geo-microbially active organisms are introduced.",
- "name" : "Geomicrobiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4170",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a hands-on course where students will learn a mix of theoretical and practical tools. Using these tools, they will solve a variety of supply chain problems, both analytically and numerically. Students will examine data and use this to understand supply, demand, and inventory levels using R to model many of these problems. The course will also review the data and assess its suitability for modelling. Time series, Markov chain, optimal control, linear programming, statistical analysis, and other mathematical tools will be used to reveal the data's secrets. The bottom line is these insights will be used to make recommendations to firms and other decision makers. Students will also look at qualitative problems through the examination and discussions of cases in class. Not everything can be distilled to a number and so a holistic view of business problems will be taken to make more strategic recommendations. Teams of students will then solve and present these case results",
- "name" : "Data Resource Management"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LITR-2150",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Students explore the philosophical, political, and artistic grounds from which modern and contemporary literature arises and develop their own creative capacities in a project related to the course readings.",
- "name" : "Modern and Contemporary Literature"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6430",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Digital gaming is one of the most rapidly developing fields. The effort required for developing games is not trivial. To make a game fun to play, the design of the game levels and/or the AI-driven opponents need to be intelligent and adaptive to the players' strategies and skills. In this course, students will learn and explore using machine learning techniques to automate the design process of digital games. The course will cover basic and advanced topics in Artificial Intelligence and Learning, such as Decision Trees, Neural Networks, Genetic Algorithms, and Reinforcement Learning. Students will gain hands-on experience in applying these techniques in computer games. The course will also introduce psychological theories and studies about people's decision-making and emotional processes and how they are related to the players' experience in games. This course will take the form of a combination of lectures, presentations by students, class discussions, and independent study.",
- "name" : "Learning and Advanced Game AI"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6410",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is a graduate course that teaches Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence concepts by enabling the student to develop and understand computer programs that implement them. It covers data collection and analysis, task environments, natural language, cognitive architectures, and learning. Some previous programming experience is very beneficial but not required.",
- "name" : "Programming for Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISCI-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ERTH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6720",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Topics include market power, adverse selection, moral hazard, signaling, screening, mechanism design, externalities, public goods, information economics, and principal-agent problems. Implications for economic policy are also considered.",
- "name" : "Microeconomics II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6240",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course is about the connection between logic and artificial intelligence (AI). It may be partitioned into three general sections: 1) the straightforward application of first order logic (FOL) in AI; 2) the broadening of FOL to enable a robot to reason in a commonsense way (nonmonotonic reasoning, induction, etc.) and to formalize a robot agent's belief and knowledge system (modal logics, etc.); and 3) using a logical approach to the Frame Problem and to building a planner.",
- "name" : "Logic and Artificial Intelligence"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4090",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Seminal Developments In Biomedical Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-6410",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Electrostatics and magnetostatics. Relativistic kinematics. Relativistic dynamics. Relativistic theory of classical fields. Electromagnetic waves. Linear and nonlinear materials. EM waves in linear, dispersive media. EM waves in nonlinear materials. Diffraction. Radiation by relativistic particles.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Electrodynamics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Integrated cognitive systems comprise human cognitive, perception, and motor subsystems in coordinated action with interactive devices. Examples may be as simple as a human using a VCR or as complex as the behavior exhibited by Air Force pilots. This course will introduce students to the cognitive theory behind integrated cognitive systems, the techniques for collecting and analyzing data such as eye movements and action protocols, as well as the software tools available for the representation of interactive behavior.",
- "name" : "Seminar in Cognitive Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4070",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Sedimentology /stratigraphy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-7010",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Review of the state of the art in optical fibers, light sources, and photodetectors. Topics include: propagation, coupling, dispersion, loss and cut-off characteristics of guided wave models in optical fibers, structural and operating parameters of various types of heterostructure lasers and light-emitting diodes and quantum efficiency, response time and noise characteristics of silicon PAD and PIN diodes. Also includes applications of optical fibers in optical communications, in data processing, and in control systems.",
- "name" : "Optical Fiber Communications"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2080",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This ensemble explores a variety of contemporary non-idiomatic group improvisational practices. Non-idiomatic improvisation is spontaneous music that does not attempt to replicate or realize a particular historical style (such as swing or bebop jazz), but rather emphasizes the unique creative input of the performers to create original music. Among the techniques explored will be conduction, musical games, graphic and text scores, and cell-structure improvisation. Students will also be coached in techniques to expand and develop musical ideas individually and as a framework for group improvisation. No prior experience with improvisation is required, and participants from any musical background, including electronic and computer music, are encouraged to join. Repertoire and practices will be tailored to the make-up of the group. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Contemporary Improvisation Ensemble"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4620",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Covers cognitive theory from an applied perspective to understand and predict the interactions among human cognition, artifact (i.e., tools), and task. Cognitive task analysis techniques will be taught and used throughout the course, as will techniques for collecting and analyzing fine-grained behavioral data. Topics covered may include visual search and visual attention, cognitive skill and its acquisition, hard and soft constraints on interactive behavior, human error, soft constraints on judgment and decision-making, and experts and expertise.",
- "name" : "Cognitive Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6540",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Advanced study of the promotion management process including market situation analysis, media selection, spending plans, copy strategy, and advertising research methods. The focus is on integrating promotion strategies with buyer needs in terms of unifying brand strategies. Other brand elements include product conceptualization, distribution strategies, and new communication technologies.",
- "name" : "Marketing Communication and Branding Strategies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4610",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This seminar course is a detailed examination of the mind-brain relationship, through study of the stress response. Stress is simply defined as any challenge to an individual's homeostasis\u00c2 or balance. This course will explore the neurobiological underpinnings of the stress response, with particular focus on how stressors can alter perception, affective and cognitive processing in the individual, which can in turn feedback to alter the general health of the individual (body and mind/brain).\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Stress and the Brain"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ITWS-4350",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Data Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-1960",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ENGR"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6640",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Proteomics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6420",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is a graduate level introduction to the topic of perception and action, and will focus on the significance of perception, motor control, and perceptual-motor learning as they relate to the performance of routine and skilled tasks. It will explore perception and action from information processing, computational, dynamical systems, and ecological perspectives, review current empirical and computational research, and consider some applications, including training, rehabilitation, human-machine interaction, and robotics.",
- "name" : "Perception and Action"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4410",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Research in Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence (AI) is driven by data. Researchers in these fields collect, manipulate, model and analyze data generated by real-world processes. \u00c2 Since the amount of data available has grown exponentially, the ability to automate these tasks through computer programs is essential. Specifically, probabilistic and statistical computing are needed to learn from the data. The objectives of this course are for the student to perform exploratory data analysis and to acquire the basics of statistical and machine learning in order to model real-world datasets. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Programming for Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4450",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Environmental Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USNA-2040",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A familiarization course in naval engineering. Study of types, structure, and purpose of naval ships. Elements of ship design to achieve safe operations and ship stability characteristics are examined. Ship compartmentation, propulsion systems, auxiliary power systems, ship control systems, and elements of damage control are included.",
- "name" : "Naval Ships Systems I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4530",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will survey classic papers and current research in computer graphics. Topics include: advanced ray tracing, global illumination, photon mapping, subsurface scattering, mesh generation and simplification, subdivision surfaces, volumetric modeling, procedural modeling and texturing, weathering, physical simulation, appearance models. Course activities include programming assignments, oral presentations, and a term project.",
- "name" : "Advanced Computer Graphics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6570",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An accelerated course covering important behavioral statistical concepts including probability, sampling distributions, hypothesis resting, ANOVA, and multiple regression. Course requires usage of statistical software package and is taught using the general linear model framework.",
- "name" : "Advanced Behavioral Statistics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4360",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is an introduction to the role of physiological mechanisms in behavioral processes. There will be detailed examination and discussion of the involvement of biological systems in feeding and drinking, sexual behavior, sleep and arousal, learning and memory, psychopathology and psychopharmacology.",
- "name" : "Behavioral Neuroscience"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6080",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Theory and Application of VTOL vehicle dynamics, simulation, and control system design. Coordinate systems, nonlinear dynamics, inflow dynamics, eigenanalysis and linear control design. Control system design using model following and dynamic inverson.",
- "name" : "VTOL Aircraft Flight Mechanics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4030",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The modeling, analysis, and design of analog integrated circuits using CMOS technology. Topics include basic integrated circuit components, basic amplifier stages, operational amplifiers, frequency compensation and stability, and bandgap references. Emphasis is placed on the design of the fundamental circuits required for analog signal processing. Students undertake several design projects, including a sizeable project that comprises a significant percentage of the final grade.",
- "name" : "Analog IC Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4340",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will explore how linguistics, the scientific study of the properties of human language and languages, can be applied to the development of intelligent agents that can fluently and meaningfully communicate with people in natural language. It will focus on linguistic phenomena that have so far been particularly resistant to effective machine processing, such as lexical ambiguity resolution, reference resolution, ellipsis, indirect speech acts, implicature, and non-literal language (e.g., metaphor and irony).\u00c2",
- "name" : "The Linguistics of Computational Linguistics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4965",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4330",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This survey course is intended as an introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience. The topics covered will focus on exploring the neural underpinnings for cognitive processes, such as sensation, language, attention, motor control, executive functions, social communication, emotions, consciousness, and learning/memory. Basic aspects of nervous system function and neuroanatomy, brain development/evolution, structural and functional imaging techniques, and other research methods used in Cognitive Neuroscience will be discussed. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Recent advances in Cognitive Science, Computer Science and Mathematics, have resulted in the ability to develop computer programs that implement Probabilistic Cognitive Models (PCMs). The cognitive models that this course covers are based on approximate Bayesian Inference implemented by Markov Chain Monte Carlo and Variational techniques that have made this approach tractable. The objective of this course is to enable the student to develop models of cognition in a Bayesian framework. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Cognitive Modeling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4670",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to the basic concepts of computer and communication networks, like flow control, congestion control, end-to-end reliability, routing,\u00c2 framing, error-recovery, multiple access, and statistical multiplexing.\u00c2 In-depth presentation of the different networking layers, with emphasis on the Internet reference model. Protocols and architectures such as TCP, IP, Ethernet, wireless networks, etc. are described in order to illustrate important networking concepts. Introduction to quantitative analysis and modeling of networks.",
- "name" : "Computer Communication Networks"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-2120",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is an introduction to the new and quickly growing field of cognitive science. Cognitive Science is a highly interdisciplinary field of study of mind at the intersection of philosophy, psychology, computer science, neuroscience, linguistics, and anthropology.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Introduction to Cognitive Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-4510",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "To understand the origin of life is a fundamental goal of science. Discussions include evidence for important prebiotic molecules in the clouds from which new planetary systems are born, and compare cosmic and terrestrial sources of such molecules on the primitive Earth. The course is multidisciplinary, covering topics in physics, astronomy, chemistry, earth sciences, and biology.",
- "name" : "Origin of Life: A Cosmic Perspective"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6964",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHME"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1979",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6970",
- "credits" : "0-12",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CIVL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6990",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CIVL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Readings in Civil Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ECSE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4170",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Modeling and simulation of cyber-physical systems through object-oriented equation-based computer languages and software tools. Describes formalisms for continuous, discrete, timed-clocked synchronous systems and finite state machines; and applies simulation methods through numerical solution of differential-and-algebraic higher-and-varying index systems of equations with time and state event event handling. Composing reusable model architectures, templates, interfaces and data management for model variants. Applies model deployment in heterogeneous environments using model exchange, co-simulation and real-time simulation techniques.",
- "name" : "Modeling and Simulation for Cyber-Physical Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4962",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHME"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6910",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "Seminars by distinguished guest speakers. All undergraduates and graduates are strongly encouraged to attend as many lectures as possible.",
- "name" : "Colloquium Series"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-2350",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Engineering laboratory introduction to the microprocessor as an embedded element of engineering systems. Students simultaneously develop the hardware and software of one or more target systems during the semester. Topics include concepts and practices of microcontroller hardware and software for command, sensing, control, and display. Specifically, this includes control of dynamic systems and sensor interfaces; analog-digital conversion; parallel input/output; driver circuits, modular programming, and subsystem integration.",
- "name" : "Embedded Control"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2964",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6030",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course, built on Economic and Financial Analysis I, provides a conceptual framework whereby accounting, corporate finance, and investment decisions can be viewed and understood in a unified context of risk and return as it is applicable to all types of businesses and organizations. The course prepares students for future specialized courses in advanced accounting, corporate finance, financial institutions and markets, investment theory, and entrepreneurial finance. The contemporary issues covered in this course include risk and diversification; asset pricing models; capital structure and financing alternatives; dividend and stock repurchases; corporate governance; mergers, acquisitions, and takeovers; financial distress and reorganization; and different international financial topics.",
- "name" : "Financial Management II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6900",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Civil and environmental engineering graduate students present seminars about their research to an audience composed of students and faculty, and participate in discussions about the research of others. The course consists of one-hour weekly meetings. The faculty member in charge of the course helps the students develop their presentation and communication skills. M.S. and Ph.D. students are required to take this course once before completion of their terminal degree. This course is not required for M. Eng. students not doing a thesis or project.",
- "name" : "Civil and Environmental Engineering Graduate Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "DSES-2940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Readings In Isye"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6780",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "State-of-the-art in computational modeling of failure processes in materials. Topics include numerical modeling of discrete defects, distributed damage, and multiscale computational techniques including multiple scale perturbation techniques, boundary layer techniques, and various global-local approaches.",
- "name" : "Numerical Modeling of Failure Processes in Materials"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Readings in Economics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6130",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Treatment efficiency and design parameters for different methods of treatment of wastewaters by land application. Methods considered include irrigation, rapid infiltration, overland flow, septic-tank leach field systems, and deep well injection. Soil geology and groundwater flow maintenance, monitoring of systems, and public health considerations. Evaluation of sludge disposal.",
- "name" : "Land Applications of Wastewater"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6150",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Can government intervention improve the performance of private markets and if so, when and how? How is regulatory policy actually made, and what effects has it had? These questions are applied to the experience in the U.S. and elsewhere with telecommunications, electricity, transportation, financial services, job safety, health, and environmental regulation.",
- "name" : "Advanced Economics of Government Regulation and Firm Strategy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6680",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Examines the implementation of finite element methods. Consideration is first given to the techniques used in classic finite element programs. Attention then focuses on development of a general geometry-based code which effectively supports higher order adaptive technique. Technical areas covered include: effective construction of element matrices for p-version finite elements, ordering of unknowns, automatic mesh generation, adaptive mesh improvement, program and database structures. Implementation of automated adaptive techniques on parallel computers is also covered.",
- "name" : "Finite Element Programming"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6550",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An intensive study of the application of geotechnical engineering to the environmental area. Deals with waste disposal, waste containment systems, waste stabilization, and landfills. Emphasis on design of such facilities. Includes related topics necessary for design, e.g., geosynthetics, groundwater, contaminant transport, and slurry walls. Some field trips are possible. This course meets concurrently with CIVL 4140 . CIVL 6550 students are required to do a term paper and/or project, read additional professional papers and publications, and do additional laboratory experiments. (Students cannot receive credit for both this course and CIVL 4140 .)",
- "name" : "Advanced Geoenvironmental Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Discussion of various aspects of computer operating systems design and implementation. Topics include I/O programming, concurrent processes and synchronization problems, process management and scheduling of processes, virtual memory management, device management, file systems, deadlock problems, system calls, and interprocess communication. Programming projects are required.",
- "name" : "Operating Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6160",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Emphasis is placed on the analysis of efficient resource use in the public sector at the federal level. Expenditure theory and tax incidence are discussed. The effects of personal income, corporation, sales, payroll, and property taxes on resource allocation, equity, growth, and technological change are considered.",
- "name" : "Advanced Public Finance"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6240",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The major approaches to air pollution control are discussed from three viewpoints: equipment for particle and gaseous emissions control, control of specific processes and pollutants, control strategies. Emphasis is on control devices for particles, sulfur oxides, and nitrogen oxides; absorption with chemical reaction; wet scrubber technology. Combination with other approaches to develop control strategies.",
- "name" : "Air Pollution Control"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6560",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A broad introduction to modern communication systems, with applications to emerging wireless communication technologies. Fundamental principles of wireless channel modeling; performance limits of communication systems; analog and digital modulation techniques; source and channel coding;\u00c2 multi-antenna communication systems; multi-carrier modulation; multi-user communication systems. Emerging wireless technologies such as MIMO and OFDM, with applications to cellular and wireless LAN communication standards. Complemented with computational exercises.\u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Modern Communication Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4380",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The design and operation of Solid State Lighting Systems including basic design and fabrication methods of light emitting diode (LED), LED thermal management, optical characterization of lighting, LED drivers, lighting sensors/control systems and selected emerging applications.",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of Solid State Lighting Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4350",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will provide an exploration of the essential aspects of virology. Introductory examination of viral structure, entry, and replication for each of the major classes of viruses serve as a foundation. Case studies will examine virus host interactions and strategies for prevention and intervention of viral infection. Additional topics include: emerging viruses, viral detection, viral extinction, beneficial use of viruses, modified viruses as research tools.",
- "name" : "Virology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6240",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The course discusses Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) technologies and their\u00c2 application areas. ITS technologies. ITS Architecture. ITS applications. A number of outside speakers will complement the lectures. The students are expected to give at least two technical presentations and write a final paper on an ITS topic of their choosing.",
- "name" : "Intelligent Transportation Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-4910",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Independent study to accompany designated capstone courses in Physics and Astronomy. Designated courses are: ASTR 4220 \u00c2 Astrophysics; ASTR 4240 \u00c2 Gravitation and Cosmology; ASTR 4510 \u00c2 Origins of Life: a Cosmic Perspective; PHYS 4810 \u00c2 Computational Physics; PHYS 4620 \u00c2 Elementary Particle Physics; PHYS 4240 \u00c2 General Relativity; ASTR 4120 \u00c2 Observational Astronomy; PHYS 4630 \u00c2 Lasers and Optical Systems; PHYS 4640 \u00c2 Optical Communications and Integrated Optics; PHYS 4720 \u00c2 Solid State Physics.",
- "name" : "Culminating Experience Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4430",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is a study of the important concepts found in current programming languages. Topics include language processing (lexical analysis, parsing, type-checking, interpretation and compilation, run-time environment), the role of abstraction (data abstraction and control abstraction), programming paradigms (procedural, functional, object-oriented, logic-oriented, generic), and formal language definition.",
- "name" : "Programming Languages"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6210",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Concepts of stability pertaining to structural and mechanical systems. Static and dynamic theories of stability. Configurations include bars, plates, shells, and structural complexes.",
- "name" : "Structural Stability"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6800",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This is a seminar based graduate level course that provides (a) a broad exposure to contemporary topics of research in biomedical engineering by recognized experts in the field and; (b) hands-on exposure on various aspects of professional development to Ph.D. students including conference/thesis presentations, writing scientific manuscripts and pre-doctoral and post-doctoral fellowship grant applications. Students are required to attend and participate in the departmental seminar and present their own research and grant proposals. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Discussions in Graduate Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1010",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Exploring Music @ Rensselaer"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6770",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Core issues in the economics of technology and innovation are covered along with policy ramifications. Topics include models of strategic R&D and patenting, quality and price measures, drivers of innovation in firms and fields of knowledge, technology adoption and diffusion, and regional innovation.",
- "name" : "Economics of Innovation I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4450",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Sources of nuclear fuel. Mining, milling, and purification. Principles of isotope enrichment; specific methods with emphasis on gaseous diffusion. Fuel fabrication. Transport and reprocessing of spent fuel. In-core fuel management. Linear reactivity, batch, nodal, and pincell methods. Power shape and control management. Partial core reloading. Fuel depletion. Poison management and Haling strategy. Breeding and fast reactors. Economics of the fuel cycle. Computation of fuel cycle costs.",
- "name" : "Nuclear Fuel Management"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6660",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Graduate-level course on the fundamental concepts and technologies underlying finite element methods for the numerical solution of continuum problems. The course emphasizes the construction of integral weak forms for elliptic partial differential equations and the construction of the elemental level matrices using multi-dimensional shape functions, element level mappings, and numerical integration. The basic convergence properties of the finite element method will be given. This course serves as preparation for students working on finite element methods.",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of Finite Elements"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6170",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course provides an introduction to the mechanics of solids from a continuum perspective. Topics covered in this course include: vector and tensor analysis, coordinate systems and calculus in curvilinear coordinate systems, kinematics (motion, deformation and strain), stress and momentum balance, energy principles and balance laws, linear isotropic and anisotropic elasticity, thermoelasticity, method of solutions for 2-D and 3-D linear elastic boundary value problems, applications to simple structures.",
- "name" : "Mechanics of Solids"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4260",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Fundamental concepts and methods of graph theory and its applications to computing and the social and natural sciences. Topics include graphs as models, representation of graphs, trees, distances, matchings, connectivity, flows in networks, graph colorings, Hamiltonian cycles, traveling salesman problem, planarity. All concepts, methods, and applications are presented through a sequence of exercises and problems, many of which are done with the help of novel software systems for combinatorial computing.",
- "name" : "Graph Theory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Readings in Civil Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introductory course for initiating a new business venture and developing it into a self-sustaining and profitable enterprise. Provides understanding of the process whereby a person decides to become an entrepreneur, screens opportunities, selects an appropriate product/market target, and obtains the necessary resources. Also, provides the theoretical and practical knowledge for the preparation of formal business plans for the development of new products, processes, and services and for the financing of new enterprises. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Technological Entrepreneurship"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ITWS-6600",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics is an entire methodology rather then individual analyses or analysis steps.",
- "name" : "Data Analytics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-4961",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ENVE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4110",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "AC steady-state analysis, three-phase networks, and complex power (brief review). Per-unit system. Practical transformer equivalent circuits. AC power transmission-lines: parameters; equivalent circuits; and steady-state operation. Power flow with transfer limits in balanced three-phase systems. Network power flow problem with solution by numerical methods. Symmetrical components: analysis including sequence networks for three-phase systems. Fault analysis.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Power Engineering Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-6580",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "General topics in advanced geophysics vary each time the seminar is offered. Previous subjects covered include crustal deformation, inverse theory, global positioning system, and seismic wave propagation.",
- "name" : "Seminar in Geophysics: Selected Topics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4920",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Open-ended design project in which students work in teams. Oral presentations and written reports cover alternates considered, design assumptions, cost, safety, and feasibility. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Civil Engineering Capstone Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-6410",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course focuses on methods, theories, and perspectives of ethnography, and on their applications to the various disciplines in which graduate students are working. Students will undertake original field research. Emphasis is given to foundational activities: defining a problem, research design, proposal writing, field methods, qualitative data analysis, writing ethnography, and protection of human subjects.",
- "name" : "Ethnography"
- },
- {
- "code" : "WRIT-2340",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course focuses on developing public speaking skills and critical listening abilities. Guided by rhetorical theory, theories of persuasion, and argumentation theory, students prepare several oral presentations, engage in extemporaneous speaking exercises, and criticize other performances.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Speech Communication"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4480",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A survey of the fundamental issues necessary for the design, analysis, control, and implementation of robotic systems. The mathematical description of robot manipulators in terms of kinematics and dynamics. Hardware components of a typical robot arm. Path following, control, and sensing. Examples of several currently available manipulators.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Robotics I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4670",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Principles of geometric design of highways, intersections, interchanges, and terminals. Practical issues of vertical and horizontal curvature, highway evaluation, driver and vehicle dynamics, and traffic safety are also addressed. Computer-aided design and modeling.",
- "name" : "Highway Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4660",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Basic characteristics of traffic flow, including driver, vehicle, volume, speed, delay, capacity, and accidents; traffic regulation and control, signs, markings, signals, and signal systems; basic traffic flow theory; study methods and analysis procedures to solve traffic engineering and control problems.",
- "name" : "Traffic Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores the principles of distributed systems, emphasizing fundamental issues underlying the design of such systems: communication, coordination, synchronization, and fault-tolerance. Key algorithms and theoretical results will be studied and students will explore how these foundations play out in modern systems and applications.",
- "name" : "Distributed Systems and Algorithms"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-2965",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2006",
- "credits" : "0-6",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Communication Acoustics Strose"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4620",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The basic concepts of planning, design, and operation of urban mass transit systems. Topics include travel demand, network configurations, communication and control systems, power systems, vehicle technology, guideway and vehicle support, and guidance technology, routing, and scheduling, operating practice, marketing and financing of transit service, interface design, and implementation. These topics are discussed with relation to bus transit systems, guided transit systems, and several new systems. Several case studies examined.",
- "name" : "Mass Transit Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-9990",
- "credits" : "1-16",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6380",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Mechanics of concrete failure under uniaxial and multiaxial stress states.\u00c2 Strain-softening behavior and damage localization in tension and compression. Nonlinear strain-hardening behavior under triaxial compression. Tensile fracture and size-effect. Constitutive modeling of concrete mechanical behavior. Cohesive crack model. Plasticity models, damage models, microplane models, and discrete models. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Advanced Concrete Mechanics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4570",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is an applications-oriented course covering basic analytical tools for modeling and optimization of large-scale civil and environmental engineering systems. Application domains that\u00c2 will be discussed include: scheduling in large systems, construction management, multi-purpose reservoir operation, transportation and logistics planning, as well as other civil and environmental engineering systems. An overview of different optimization techniques, with a particular focus on network flow problems and introductory stochastic analysis will be provided. Software to solve these problems will be used throughout the course.\u00c2",
- "name" : "System Modeling for Civil and Environmental Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6964",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4968",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4450",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course covers concepts of structural systems. The course is aimed at understanding behavior of different structural systems and how they respond to various loading conditions. The concept of load transfer, shaping, and form finding is of particular interest. This concept is reinforced through analytical, digital, and physical modeling intended to foster intuitive thinking. The course includes the following: approximate analyses of statically indeterminate beams, rigid frames, and vierendeel frames; cable suspended structures, arch supported structures; masonry structures, space frame, and folded plate structures; spherical, cylindrical, and hyperbolic shells; net and tent structures; air-supported and air-inflated structures, and hybrid structural systems. The course includes guest lectures, project, computer simulation, and testing physical models.",
- "name" : "Conceptual Structural Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2150",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Music And Sound II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4080",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Analysis and design of reinforced concrete structures using ultimate strength methods. Design of beams, columns, slabs, and footings. Development and anchorage of reinforcing bars. Laboratory testing of hardened concrete mechanical properties.",
- "name" : "Concrete Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to the concepts and techniques of modern statistics. Computer-based, in-class sessions will emphasize hands-on application of statistical techniques using data and examples drawn from the biological and medical sciences. Pre-class, online exercises will prepare students for in-depth classroom explorations. Topics covered will include sampling, regression, analysis of variance, and factor analysis, MANOVA, maximum likelihood methods, discriminant analysis, time series analysis, and forecasting.\u00c2 The final project requires analysis of a major research-related data set and write-up of results in\u00c2 the format of a scientific paper.",
- "name" : "Biostatistics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6360",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course explores human motivation and behavior across different settings and experimental paradigms. The course familiarizes students with previous work in selected topics in behavioral and experimental economics such as charitable giving, individual decision making and preferences, health, scarcity, and worker motivation. It also prepares students to design, implement and analyze their own economics experiments.",
- "name" : "Experimental Economics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-6900",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Selected topics.",
- "name" : "Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4010",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Subsurface investigation. The application of the principles of soil mechanics to the design of footings, retaining walls, pile foundations, bulkheads, cofferdams, bridge piers and abutments, and underpinnings.",
- "name" : "Foundation Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6940",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Readings in Chemical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Energy Politics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ITEC-4300",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Business Issues For Engr"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-4750",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Prob Theory & Applications"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-1100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Principles of chemistry, with particular focus on atomic and molecular structure and bonding, periodicity, basic thermodynamic principles, introduction to acid-base chemistry and elementary chemical equilibrium, and introduction to organic chemistry. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 1110 . \u00c2",
- "name" : "Chemistry I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6110",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This seminar will provide a historical context for understanding and analyzing practices and theories of contemporary electronic art. The curriculum is a mix of field surveys, readings of primary sources in aesthetic, media and critical theory, and examination of contemporary topics and controversies. The seminar is also intended to support the development and articulation of the student's creative practice. Open to graduate students across the Institute. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Electronic Arts Overview"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4440",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course examines how music and sound is heard, experienced, and circulated on screens across diverse media formats in contemporary society. This interdisciplinary course introduces students to a variety of analytical, historical, and theoretical approaches to the understanding of music, sound and interactive and non-interactive narrative screen media, including film, television, music video, video games, apps and mobile media, Internet audiovisual & social media, VR/AR, and other screen formats of sound production, distribution, and consumption. This course is open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors only.",
- "name" : "Music, Sound & Screen Media"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6680",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Works of architecture embody knowledge, ideas, and imagination that express formally, spatially, and materially the ways of living and values of the civilizations in which they occur. A select number of modern and contemporary buildings that represent a high degree of sophistication in the way their architects have approached the breadth of design issues both within and external to the programs of those works will be analyzed critically in order to ascertain the significance and relationships of the multiple systems of order inherent to a work of architecture. Reflecting on the knowledge and understandings acquired in all the previous courses in the history, theory, and criticism sequence, this course is a critical inquiry into the principal ideologies and premises of the most substantive architectural practices in the contemporary world. As such, the content of the course must necessarily evolve as the intellectual and cultural parameters of both theory and practice in the contemporary world change. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "History, Theory, Criticism 3"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4660",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to be a first course in the study of \"systems biology\", to introduce students to the field, the experimental and computational methods that are used within it, and the type of insights that the field can provide to biology. To fully appreciate the complexity of living systems, researchers gather systematic, quantitative measurements of a system's components using cutting-edge omics techniques. In addition, researchers also leverage computing power to describe, model, and predict dynamic behaviors that could otherwise not be perceived in such large-scale omics data. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature. A student cannot get credit for both BCBP 4660 / BIOL 4660 \u00c2 and BCBP 6650 \u00c2 / BIOL 6650 .",
- "name" : "The Biology of Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4170",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Examine various facets of the healthcare industry. Application of microeconomic theory and tools will be used to: analyze healthcare demand and supply; examine the impact of public policies; study market segments such as health insurance and pharmaceuticals; explore economic choices of healthcare professionals; identify potential socioeconomic and demographic determinants of health status and healthcare; and gain insights into issues related to the ongoing healthcare policy reform. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Health Economics and Policy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4040",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The application of the fundamentals of chemistry, thermodynamics, mathematics, and transport phenomena to the design and evaluation of stage-wise and continuous contacting apparatus and systems for separating and purifying chemical materials. Steady-state and transient processes are studied.",
- "name" : "Chemical Engineering Separations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-6965",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PHYS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Students work in teams to continue innovation, design, and development work on approved projects that started in other courses such as Introduction to Engineering Design or Inventors Studio 1 or equivalent.\u00c2 New projects can also be proposed by students. Emphasis will be on innovating, completing the design, building an improved prototype, applying for patent protection, and licensing the design. Open to undergraduate and graduate students. Oral and written concept, midterm and final presentations are required. This is a communication-intensive course. This course meets with ENGR 4010 \u00c2 Professional Development III.",
- "name" : "Inventors Studio 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-6250",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Thermal structure and dynamics of the interstellar medium. Topics include diffuse nebulae, composition of interstellar dust and relation to extinction and polarization, molecules and interstellar chemistry, physics of star-forming regions.",
- "name" : "Interstellar Medium"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ITWS-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Investigates business-related considerations in successfully commercializing new technology in a new venture or within an existing enterprise: market and customer analysis, beating the competition, planning and managing for profitability, high-tech marketing and sales, and business partnerships and acquisitions. Not a general management course; focuses explicitly on what is relevant for engineers and scientists working in a commercial environment. For junior/senior undergraduate or graduate students.",
- "name" : "Business Issues for Engineers and Scientists"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6140",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Computer Operating Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6980",
- "credits" : "1-16",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-2610",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Ocean basins and margins; origin, distribution, chemistry, and history of sediments; physical and chemical properties of seawater; global atmospheric and oceanic circulations and climatic interactions.",
- "name" : "Oceanography"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Intermediate Drawing focuses on the exploration of the possibilities of visual translation using a variety of media and techniques. Over the term, each successive project will provide the student the opportunity to develop and control a particular set of media, technique, and perspective, which reveals a unique and personal approach to image making. Participation in critiques, discussions, and lectures will enable the student to become fluent with the vocabulary and language of drawing, and focus their preferred methods and developed skill-sets into appropriate and actionable processes.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Intermediate Drawing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-4040",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Topics include general topological spaces, connectedness, compactness, continuity, and product spaces. Additional topics may be chosen from identification spaces, homotopy, the fundamental group, covering maps, lifts, classification of surfaces, Baire category, dimension, and the Jordan curve theorem.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Topology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LITR-2963",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in LITR"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In this course, students will deepen their understanding of research principles and experimental practices in cognitive and behavioral science, and they will gain experience in applying concepts often discussed in human-oriented contexts (e.g., learning, theory of mind) to the animal world. In addition, they will be prepared to participate in revolutionizing our treatment of both the animals and the people with whom we share our lives. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Animal Cognition and Interaction with Humans"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4660",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to be a first course in the study of \"systems biology\", to introduce students to the field, the experimental and computational methods that are used within it, and the type of insights that the field can provide to biology. To fully appreciate the complexity of living systems, researchers gather systematic, quantitative measurements of a system's components using cutting-edge omics techniques. In addition, researchers also leverage computing power to describe, model, and predict dynamic behaviors that could otherwise not be perceived in such large scale omics data. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature.",
- "name" : "The Biology of Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This multidisciplinary course provides theoretical and methodological orientation to critical games research, and seeks to address both the broad and pragmatic implications of the question, \"What does it mean to conduct research via games?\" Through a hybrid lecture-workshop class format, students will engage with methodological research techniques in the various disciplines that game design draws upon--Visual Arts, Humanities and Media Studies, Social Science, and Computer Science--as well as experiment with independent research design and proposal writing.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Research Methods in Critical Game Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-1900",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "A seminar for first-year math majors. The weekly student-faculty discussions will vary but examples of topics are: unsolved math problems, countability and the arithmetic of the infinite, topology and the concept of dimension, geometry and one-sided surfaces, and the theory underlying topics currently covered in calculus.",
- "name" : "Art and Science of Mathematics I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2550",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This topics-based course examines popular music in society, considering the ways it may express identities, motivate political movements, and function within various economic, mediated, and technological environments. This course explores popular music representing diverse genres (country, hip hop, EDM, Top 40) as it relates to social life, the intersections of race, gender, class, and sexuality, and media and technology. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Popular Music and Society"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6510",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Deterministic signal representations and analysis, introduction to random processes and spectral analysis, correlation function and power spectral density of stationary processes, noise mechanisms, the Gaussian and Poisson processes. Markov processes, the analysis of linear and nonlinear systems with random inputs, stochastic signal representations, orthogonal expansions, the Karhunen-Loeve series, channel characterization, introduction to signal detection, linear mean-square filtering, the orthogonality principle, optimum Wiener and Kalman filtering, modulation theory, and systems analysis.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Stochastic Signals and Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4966",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6967",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2610",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Students will explore the artistic role of music and sound in gaming by building their own interactive sound and music-rich games and 2D/3D rendered environments. Within the context of their own creative game projects, students will learn the basics of designing sound and composing music for interactive game spaces. Using workflow programming languages and software tools, students will program basic gaming interactions, link them to interactive audio software, and create musical gaming experiences. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Designing Musical Games"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4969",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in STSO"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4180",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "A critical examination in which comparisons are made and contrasts emphasized between different schools of economic thinking such as classicism, marginalism, socialism, institutionalism, neoclassicism, and Keynesianism. Special attention is given to historical theories and attitudes of economists toward technological change and its impact on human welfare.",
- "name" : "Development of Economic Thought"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6210",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An introduction to the organic chemical literature. A consideration of reactions of synthetic importance to the organic chemist with emphasis on the influence of structure on the behavior of organic molecules.",
- "name" : "Advanced Organic Chemistry I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4440",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Biophotonics, or biomedical optics, is a newly developing field, dealing with the application of optical science and technology to biomedical problems, including clinical applications. The course introduces students to the fundamentals in modern and classical optics, light-matter interaction and provides them with a broad overview of current topics and contemporary research in the area of optics and lasers in medicine and biology.",
- "name" : "Biophotonics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6968",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ECSE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Individual and collaborative projects and assignments\u00c2 adapted to the needs of individual students at the graduate level.",
- "name" : "Studies in Electronic Arts"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6480",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Civil Engineering applications of geosynthetics including geotextiles, geogrids, geonets, geomembranes, geosynthetic clay liners, geopipe, and geocomposites. Designing by function, including separation, reinforcement, filtration, drainage, liquid barrier, and combined functions. Applications in the areas of landfills, groundwater drains, geotextile reinforced walls and slopes, roadways, and other civil engineered type structures.",
- "name" : "Designing with Geosynthetics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "EMBA-6968",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in EMBA"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4860",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course provides an overview of human resources principles and practices in business organizations. Students are given tools for understanding how people are managed on a day-to-day basis. Topics include: the recruiting and hiring process; self, peer, and managerial evaluations; training and development; and legal issues related to the work setting and the job-search process. Students come away with an understanding of the difficulties and challenges associated with workforce management. This course utilizes a combination of lecture, discussion, and experiential exercises. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Human Resources in High Performance Organizations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4952",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Systems Prototyping"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-1940",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Design & Prototyping For Engr"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Readings in Chemical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-5080",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Representation of performance of turbomachines; mechanism of energy transfer; factors limiting design and performance including surge, choking, and cavitation; two-and three-dimensional flow phenomena; performance analysis including multistage effects and off-design performance.",
- "name" : "Turbomachinery"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6640",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Science Fictions is an advanced narrative video production and theory course. The class looks at thematic areas of science fiction, utopia and dystopia, paranormal, and speculative fiction. 'Speculative fiction' is a genre that looks at the real world and extends what we know about it, building on the 'real.' The class has two threads: to study narrative structure and create a series of sci-fi videos; to discuss and analyze mainstream and avant-garde science fictions film\u00c2 and themes from the early 1900s to the\u00c2 present.",
- "name" : "Science Fictions"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4780",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Design methodologies include register transfer modules and firmware microprogrammed design. \"Bit-slice\" philosophy of design. LSI microprocessors as design elements in larger digital systems such as high-speed channels and special purpose computers. Detailed discussion of the structure of several computers at the chip and board level. Specification of custom IC digital systems. FPGA based design implementation using VHDL. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ECSE 6700 .",
- "name" : "Advanced Computer Hardware Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-1960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6620",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Modern solution techniques including semi-analytical, approximation, and numerical methods are introduced and applied to linear and nonlinear transport phenomena problems and chemical engineering systems. Similarity theory and integral methods, perturbation techniques, and orthogonal collocation, indispensable to chemical engineering, are discussed.",
- "name" : "Mathematical Methods in Chemical Engineering II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4870",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The Sonics Research Lab is completely research based . The first part (the Fall semester) will be focused on hands-on research tools and techniques. First, students will learn the basics of digital signal processing, develop an understanding of measurement equipment and analysis methods for sound. The course will examine the ISO standards of room-acoustic measurements, develop students' research goals and a specific set of data to gather for their research. The course will also prepare the students with the fundamental knowledge on CATT Acoustic and/or EASE in geometrical modeling. Then the students and professors will visit a number of performance venues (e.g. EMPAC Concert Hall, and/ or other venues) and perform the room-acoustic measurements. Students will then work on analyzing and interpreting the research results. Practice measurements will be scheduled in the gallery or somewhere on campus before trips to performance halls. MATLAB will play a central role throughout all the classes (SRL I & II) and the thesis research projects. It will be used during the class exercises . Within one week from the semester start, every student is required to INSTALL a functioning MATLAB Software package onto her/his laptop computer. B.S. and B. ARCH, and other school students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S. in ARCS students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
- "name" : "Sonics Research Lab 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4450",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Technology is a vital link in how modern corporations identify, acquire, transact with, and keep their customers. This course provides an introduction to both the technology infrastructure most relevant to the customer relationship as well marketing issues that result from the application of computers and communication networks. Topics include issues related to social media, search, online advertising, blogging, customer relationship management, online market segmentation, and marketing of IT products. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
- "name" : "Internet Marketing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BUSN-6300",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "In this course, students develop their capacity as leaders in a dynamic world, planning and executing strategy to achieve organizational objectives. Students develop frameworks for making decisions that enhance the value creation of their organization while demonstrating full commitment to ethical decisions and outcomes.\u00c2 Students learn to plan and execute to achieve goals fully and effectively.\u00c2 Students develop their mentorship capacities to manage and lead the human elements of their organizations.\u00c2 NOTE:\u00c2 Students must attend a Rensselaer Leadership Experience (RLE) as part of this course",
- "name" : "Leaders and Strategy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ITWS-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ITWS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6520",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The applications of the principles of soil mechanics to the design of foundations, at the graduate level. Subsurface investigation. Design of footings, retaining walls, pile foundations, flexible retaining structures, anchor tie-backs, bridge piers, abutments, embankments, and natural slopes. Slope stability analysis and landslide prevention. Earthquake effects. Case studies.",
- "name" : "Advanced Foundations and Earth Structures"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6040",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Algorithms with provable guarantees on the quality of their solutions are a powerful way of dealing with intractable problems. This course covers fundamental techniques for designing approximation algorithms. Possible topics include: semi-definite and linear programming, inapproximability and the PCP theorem, randomized rounding, metrics and cuts, primal-dual methods, and online algorithms.",
- "name" : "Approximation Algorithms"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6340",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will explore how linguistics, the scientific study of the properties of human language and languages, can be applied to the development of intelligent agents that can fluently and meaningfully communicate with people in natural language. It will focus on linguistic phenomena that have so far been particularly resistant to effective machine processing, such as lexical ambiguity resolution, reference resolution, ellipsis, indirect speech acts, implicature, and non-literal language (e.g., metaphor and irony).\u00c2",
- "name" : "The Linguistics of Computational Linguistics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "WRIT-2320",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a workshop course in which novice and more experienced student writers produce creative nonfiction-prose that aims to be both factually accurate and compelling literature; students must have a good command of written English and grammar. Focus may vary by semester among memoir, lyric and personal essays, plotted narrative, oral history, and nature writing. For models, students study classic and contemporary accomplished writers who connect the self to the larger world. Class work centers on drafting and revising essays with regular peer workshops.",
- "name" : "Creative Nonfiction Writing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-1200",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "\u00c2 The geological environment of humankind: the atmosphere, oceans, groundwater, rivers, glaciers, deserts, and soils. The course explores the processes by which these and other features develop and change, both naturally and as a result of human activity.",
- "name" : "Geology II: Earth's Surface"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6240",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Eco Chic: Living Art is an upper level production and theory class about art, biology, and the study of life covering topics such as environmentalism, land art, food art, sustainable practices with art, body art, bio-art.\u00c2 Part lecture, part hands-on workshop, Eco Chic encourages students to redefine and experimentally express their relationships with the varied aspects of everyday living systems and manipulating life.",
- "name" : "Eco Chic: Living Art"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Study and research in various fields of astronomy to demonstrate interest in and ability for independent work.",
- "name" : "Special Projects in Astronomy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4700",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Freshwater ecology is the quantitative examination of major biological fresh water communities. Course discussions will delineate the physical and chemical regimes under which aquatic organisms exist.\u00c2 Basic limnological processes are studied to define aquatic systems of differing physical characteristics.\u00c2 Nutrient chemistry analyses of waters of varying acidity, alkalinity, and chemical loadings are related to their trophic status.\u00c2 Lecture and Laboratory are taught at the Darrin Fresh Water Institute at Lake George with field activities at various locations in the Adironacks. The course includes extensive hands-on laboratory work, as well as the writing of in-depth reports. This is a communication-intensive course. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Freshwater Ecology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4120",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Students will be exposed to several clinical experiences at a level typically found in college\u00c2 graduates/post graduates who are entering medical school.",
- "name" : "Investigative Medicine II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores the ethical issues that engineers encounter in their professional practice. It also examines social values and law and policy issues that shape engineering and technological decision making. Using case studies, professional codes of conduct, and scholarly literature, the course examines the responsibilities of engineers in relation to their employers, clients, co-professionals, and their responsibility for public safety and welfare. Topics include the history of engineering, professionalism vs. the demands of business, engineering vs. management decision making, whistle-blowing, proprietary rights and trade secrecy, and conflicts of interest.",
- "name" : "Engineering Ethics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-9990",
- "credits" : "1-18",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This graduate level course will introduce a number of econometric models to analyze transportation data, ranging from count of crash occurrence to household trip frequency. Students will learn to specify, estimate, and interpret models to study various transportation issues.",
- "name" : "Transportation Statistical Modeling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-1960",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ENVE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6860",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Galerkin's method and extremal principles, finite element approximations (Lagrange, hierarchical and 3-D approximations, interpolation errors), mesh generation and assembly, adaptivity (h-, p-, hp-refinement). Error analysis and convergence rates. Perturbations resulting from boundary approximation, numerical integration, etc. Time dependent problems including parabolic and hyperbolic PDEs. Applications will be selected from several areas including heat conduction, wave propagation, potential theory, and solid and fluid mechanics.",
- "name" : "Finite Element Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4240",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Tissue Biomaterial Interactions"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6900",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "Presentation of current developments in computer science. Reports by students.",
- "name" : "Computer Science Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6120",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Biopunk: Arts Lab Practice is a studio, lab and lecture class introducing students to bioart, and microbial life and resilient ecological practices. We use punk, queer and biological laboratory techniques to creatively produce science, design and art works. Students will be required to complete readings, experiment, and create their own visions of a speculative biofuture. Emphasis will be on the history and contemporary investigations of the microbiome and how to culturally explore these scenarios of how we live amongst multiple diverse communities and species.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Biopunk: Arts Lab Practice"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4962",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ERTH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6840",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Survey and engineering analysis of industrial processes and commercial polymers. Topics include introductory fluid mechanics, non-Newtonian fluids, molecular theory of viscoelasticity, analysis of extrusion, and other selected processes.",
- "name" : "Polymer Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6750",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Develops econometric models for causal inference using tools for big data. Machine learning and other resource-intensive modeling techniques are integrated into traditional economic approaches. Also covers procedures for the development, processing, and combination of novel data sources; methods to process extremely large datasets; data exploration and development tools; nonparametric methods. Economics applications are considered throughout.",
- "name" : "Economic Data Analytics and Modeling I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2130",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Contemporary Design Approaches"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6090",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is primarily concerned with learning how to build any interactive experience or artwork from concept to completion. It will introduce open-source, cross-platform programming libraries and tools used by artists and programmers to create interactive experiences and artworks for museum installations, festivals, VJ-ing, projection mapping, interactive experiences/artworks, and more. Then, the course\u00c2 starts to address the questions: Is code an art form? What is interactive art? Is software art?",
- "name" : "Art and Code and Interactivity"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6080",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Development and completion of individual creative projects\u00c2 with a focus on studio production, method, and process. Students are expected to foster an environment in which serious and sophisticated peer critique can take place.",
- "name" : "Graduate Studio Critique"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6963",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4966",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ECON"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6980",
- "credits" : "1-16",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6870",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) are used to determine 3-D structures of biological macromolecules at atomic resolution. The course will cover crystallographic and NMR methods, their theory and practice, along with thermodynamics of structure formation and molecular dynamics. Students will prepare an oral presentation on a protein of their choice. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and BCBP 4870 .)",
- "name" : "Protein Structure Determination"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4460",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course focuses on software development techniques in support of large-scale software projects and maintenance. Specific topics include various programming paradigms and techniques, approaches to testing and automation, debugging, refactoring, and inheriting code. Individual and team assignments are required, including programming assignments. Project topics include text processing, building a search engine, and the like.\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Large-Scale Programming and Testing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6610",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Phenomena peculiar to nonlinear systems. Linearization, iteration, and perturbation procedures. Describing function stability analysis. Phase plane methods. Relaxation oscillations and limit cycles. Stability analysis by Lyapunov's method. Popov's theorem. Adaptive control systems. Sensitivity analysis.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Nonlinear Control Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHIL-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A team-based, project-oriented, hands-on introduction to the great concepts and discoveries in logic and computability, including Turing Machines, first-order logic, the limitations of computing machines, Godel's incompleteness results, and so forth. A hands-on laboratory component is included.",
- "name" : "Computability and Logic"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4560",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "In a world of rapid technological change, this course aims to equip future architects with the ability to position, understand, and implement new materials and systems in meaningful ways. The working principles of selected advanced materials and systems are explained and issues of material development, applications, and integration into buildings systems are addressed. Emphasis is also placed on understanding the issues involved when combining and installing new materials or systems into buildings. Students are further introduced to detail development. Sustainability: New materials and systems are explored with the objective of formulating meaningful technological response to critical environmental and societal issues such as resource depletion, environmental degradation, and globalization.",
- "name" : "Materials and Enclosures"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-4100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Quantum mechanics beyond Schrodinger wave mechanics. The postulates of quantum mechanics. Second quantization, Dirac notation, Hilbert spaces, perturbation theory, and applications to simple systems.",
- "name" : "Introductory Quantum Mechanics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6390",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Energy and Systems Simulation provides students with an introduction to advanced simulation tools and procedures necessary for analyzing the performance of complex environmental building systems. The course utilizes parametric software for the simulation and analysis of multi-objective optimization workflow procedures. Areas of building performance assessment include thermal and daylight optimization.",
- "name" : "Energy and Systems Simulation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A technology-based performance ensemble, as well as a practice-based studio course, focused on the composition, design, and programming of new musical works and instruments. Students create and perform electronic music using laptops, microprocessors, digital networks and a range of new interfaces for musical expression. ARTS 4600/6600 combines studio and ensemble. The ensemble only section (ARTS 2600) may be taken multiple times as a 1-credit performance ensemble in partial satisfaction of the Music major or minor ensemble requirements, or once as a 4-credit seminar at either the 4000 or 6000 level.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Ensemble Nonlinear"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4430",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Digital gaming is one of the most rapidly developing fields. The effort required for developing games is not trivial. To make a game fun to play, the design of the game levels and/or the AI-driven opponents need to be intelligent and adaptive to the players' strategies and skills. In this course, students will learn and explore using machine learning techniques to automate the design process of digital games. The course will cover basic and advanced topics in Artificial Intelligence and Learning, such as Decision Trees, Neural Networks, Genetic Algorithms, and Reinforcement Learning. Students will gain hands-on experience in applying these techniques in computer games. The course will also introduce psychological theories and studies about people's decision-making and emotional processes and how they are related to the players' experience in games. This course will take the form of a combination of lectures, presentations by students, class discussions, and independent study. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Learning and Advanced Game AI"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-2010",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Development of the ability to apply and solve equations of balance for chemical-process systems, laying the foundation for subsequent chemical engineering courses in unit operations and process design. Topics include mass and mole balances for nonreactive and reactive systems, properties of fluids, and the first and second laws of thermodynamics.",
- "name" : "Material, Energy, and Entropy Balances"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6290",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Background and socio-economic aspects of freight transportation. Freight policy and planning objectives. Distribution system and participating agents. Behavior of freight agents. Short-medium term operational improvements: Land use and traffic related. Short-medium term operational improvements: System level strategies. System perspective of freight activity. Strategic freight transportation planning and freight demand modeling.",
- "name" : "Freight Transportation Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4870",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) are used to determine 3-D structures of biological macromolecules at atomic resolution. The course will cover crystallographic and NMR methods, their theory and practice, along with thermodynamics of structure formation and molecular dynamics. Students will prepare a poster presentation on a protein of their choice.\u00c2 (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and BCBP 6870 .)",
- "name" : "Protein Structure Determination"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6040",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Rethinking Documentary is a graduate level production course in film and video.\u00c2 Taking a broad look at what defines \"documentary\" media, this course incorporates criticism with production to examine key issues in the discipline, such as truth versus fiction, personal responsibility, community involvement, the efficacy of video intervention and the authority of mass media.\u00c2 Students are required to produce a range of video works questioning conventional documentary styles, using radical and interventionist techniques to tell compelling or poetic stories.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Rethinking Documentary: Video Production"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7730",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Main course objective is to introduce students to basic economics principles and establish economics as a managerial decision-making framework. The course will draw on economic analysis of such concepts as cost, demand, profit, competition, pricing strategy, and market protection and tie them to operational business decisions.",
- "name" : "Economics and Institutions"
- },
- {
- "code" : "DSES-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4580",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course covers the dynamics of fluid flow in human physiological system. Engineering principles and fluid dynamic concepts will be taught in the context of cardiovascular system. Topics include: pulsatile flow in arteries, vascular compliance and wave propagation, impedance, cardiac mechanics, dynamic coupling of ventricle and systemic circulation, blood flow in vein, coronary circulation, microcirculation, blood flow at complex geometries, imaging techniques in clinical hemodynamic assessment, fluid mechanics in designing and testing circulatory implants.",
- "name" : "Biomedical Fluid Mechanics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4100",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course presents how solutions to problems in transport phenomena can be obtained using the finite element method. The fundamentals of numerical simulation for coupled heat, mass, and momentum transport are presented. Finite difference methods in 1D and 2D are discussed too. Simulations are performed in multiphysics software for 1D, 2D and 3D systems. The course covers the fundamentals of numerical simulation, formulating user-inspired problems, writing user-defined functions and variables, processing results, and extraction and analysis of simulation data.",
- "name" : "Finite Element Modeling for Chemical Engineers"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6470",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Starting with the introduction of the probability distribution of one or two continuous random variables, basic concepts of mean, variance, covariance, and correlation coefficient are covered. Description techniques discussed include stem-and-leaf plots, histograms, box plots, and probability plots. Confidence intervals for a single sample and for two samples are constructed on means and variances. The procedure of hypothesis testing is introduced conceptually followed by solving real-life biomedical problems. The design and performance of engineering experiments involving a single factor are discussed.",
- "name" : "Biostatistics for Life Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4360",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Theory and applications of reliability and risk assessment.\u00c2 Boolean algebra, logic diagrams, redudancy and majority-vote configurations.\u00c2 System synthesis by reliability and fault tree techniques, quantitative evaluation, uncertainty analysis.\u00c2 Common cause events, failure data, and failure models.\u00c2 Allocation of risk to subsystems.\u00c2 Availability, repair policies, renewal theory.\u00c2 Operational reliability methods.",
- "name" : "Reactor Reliability and Safety"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-6100",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is an advanced introduction to the policy-relevant side of STS. We will examine three broad topics:\u00c2 1. How states shape scientific research and the development of technologies and infrastructures. 2. How legislators and regulatory bureaucracies use scientific knowledge and expert opinion in decision-making processes. 3. How publics, particularly social movements, engage in political processes that are dominated by scientific and technological experts.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Science and Technology Policy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4800",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Biophysics addresses the physical principles of biological function, which requires the application of physical methods. The focus of this course is on methods used to study the interactions and dynamics of biomolecules in vitro, primarily proteins and nucleic acids. Both the theoretical and methodological aspects of molecular biophysical methods will be covered. This course is designed as an interdisciplinary introduction to the field and is open to students in biology, chemistry, physics, or engineering.",
- "name" : "Methods in Biophysics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2060",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "2D Experimental Animation is an introduction to animation as an art form. Most of this course will be traditional assignments designed to encourage spontaneous creativity, explore animation concepts, and learn animation terminology. Assignments will build a solid foundation for entrance into 3D Animation. This course will also be a historical and theoretical investigation with screenings and readings followed with discussion.",
- "name" : "2D Experimental Animation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAF-2040",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "The AS 200,\u00c2 Team and Leadership Fundamentals,\" focuses on laying the foundation for teams and leadership. The topics include skills that will allow cadets to improve their leadership on a personal level and within a team. The courses will prepare cadets for their field training experience where they will be able to put the concepts learned into practice. The purpose is to instill a leadership mindset and to motivate sophomore students to transition from AFROTC cadet to AFROTC officer candidate. Leadership Laboratory\u00c2 ( USAF 0010 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
- "name" : "Air and Space Studies 200B (Team and Leadership Fundamentals)"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Methods of analysis for continuous and discrete-time linear systems. Convolution, classical solution of dynamic equations, transforms, and matrices are reviewed. Emphasis is on the concept of state space. Linear spaces, concept of state, modes, controllability, observability, state transition matrix. State variable feedback, compensation, decoupling.",
- "name" : "Systems Analysis Techniques"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6550",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course reviews the principles of ethical behavior and responsible conduct of research and discusses specific areas of biotechnology research, medical research, and societal issues in the context of these principles. Representative topics include genetic engineering, stem cell research, assisted reproduction, human subjects, animal research, and nanotechnology. Active student participation is expected.",
- "name" : "Ethical Issues in Biotechnology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHIL-4300",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "While concepts such as quality of life, environment, nature, global ecology, and the like figure heavily in contemporary discussions, they are seldom integrated into an environmental philosophy. The course tries to achieve this integration by understanding some of the religious, mythic-poetic, and scientific dimensions of the man-nature matrix. Some specific environmental problems are examined in order to illustrate the system of values implied by various solutions.",
- "name" : "Environmental Philosophy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4020",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A continuation of CHME 4010 .\u00c2 Course includes topics on multi-dimensional transport processes, potential, boundary layer and turbulent fluid flows, convective heat and mass transfer processes, friction factors and drag in and around solid objects, heat and mass exchangers, and radiation heat transfer.\u00c2 The course extends the use of numerical methods to apply to multidimensional problems, convective heat and mass transfer problems, and the simulation of more complicated fluid flows including turbulence approximations.\u00c2 Credit not allowed for both this course and ENGR 2250 .",
- "name" : "Transport Phenomena II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4050",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The design of equipment, processes, and systems of interest in chemical engineering through application of scientific, technological, and economic principles. The concepts of product design, design for the environment, and the ethical and safety issues of design are introduced. Emphasis is placed on problem formulation and the conceptual, analytical, and decision aspects of open-ended design situations. The work integrates knowledge and skills gained in previous and concurrent courses. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Chemical Process Design: Fundamentals"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATP-4960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MATP"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6550",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course provides a thorough survey of the basics of chemical thermodynamics and quantum mechanics at the graduate level, with advanced applications of these subjects to chemical systems. The basics of statistical thermodynamics, intermolecular interactions, group theory, and applications to spectroscopic methods are also covered. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Advanced Physical Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will examine the spectrum of architectural phenomena and ideas without a specific chronology using examples ranging from antiquity to the contemporary world in western and non-western civilizations and produced in both vernacular and disciplinary cultures. An essential part of this course is to stimulate students' curiosity about architecture and the larger world and introduce them to key issues of architecture regarding space, form, critique, technology, aesthetics, societal and cultural contexts, etc. Particular emphasis will be given to the emergence of modernism in architecture. Crucial to the goals of this course is to encourage students to pursue and develop their own unique vision and voice in architecture throughout their education and practice. Fundamental to this process is making students aware of the necessity to challenge their own subjectivities, biases, and presuppositions.",
- "name" : "History, Theory, Criticism 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6967",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6570",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Classical solution thermodynamics, equations of state, and topics in chemical reaction and phase equilibria. Emphasis is on the rigorous formulation of equilibrium problems, and on the measurement, reduction, correlation, and interpretation of experimental data.",
- "name" : "Chemical and Phase Equilibrium"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4560",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores the history, methods, and goals of hackers with special attention paid to their role in social movements. It broadly interprets the term \"hacktivism\" to include computer hacking, media hacking and \"reality hacking\" in the service of social change. Students will gain an understanding of how and why hackers have emerged as a major social force.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Hactivism"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4790",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Hardware and software for real-time microprocessor-based digital systems. Basic concepts and operations of on-chip components related to digital system functionality. Architectures, instructions sets, and interfacing with peripherals through serial or parallel ports. Introduction to 32-bit machines with in-depth treatment of 16- and 8-bit machines. Emphasis on C language cross-compilers. Laboratory exercises are included to demonstrate hardware and software development techniques practiced in industry.",
- "name" : "Microprocessor Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-4250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a required departmental course, but is also appropriate for biomedical engineers and other engineering disciplines as an elective. This course teaches the mechanical properties of metals, ceramics, and polymers from both the macroscopic and atomistic or micromechanical viewpoints. An introduction to three-dimensional stresses and strains. Elastic behavior, plastic behavior, strengthening mechanisms, fracture, creep, and fatigue are all addressed. Includes laboratory component.",
- "name" : "Mechanical Properties of Materials"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LANG-1210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Japanese I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Experimental Game Design is an upper level studio arts course focusing on the creation of innovative, workable game prototypes using a variety of interactive multimedia. Games are considered as a new genre and are analyzed as cultural artifacts. The aesthetics of game design including character development, level design, game play experience, and delivery systems are covered. Flow, game theory, and game play gestalt are considered. Alternate gaming paradigms and emerging forms are encouraged.",
- "name" : "Experimental Game Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6500",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Recent developments in systems, sensors, communications, and networking technologies enable the development of large-scale distributed systems incorporating many individual nodes. This course takes an algorithmic approach to distributed systems for sensor fusion, localization and tracking, distributed robotics and sensor-based control. It also presents the basic principles of sensor node architectures and wireless sensor networks. Applications include environmental monitoring, biomedical systems, and security-related tracking problems.",
- "name" : "Distributed Systems and Sensor Networks"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6160",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Analysis and computation of electrical transients in lumpy and distributed power circuits; switching surges, lightning surges, traveling waves. Impact of surges on terminal equipment. Insulation coordination; system protection; design of electric power apparatus and systems to operate reliably and economically in a transient environment.",
- "name" : "Surge Phenomena in Electric Power Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In this course, students will explore the molecular methods and applications of recombinant DNA technology and the issues regarding their use through case studies on the effect of genetic engineering in medicine, agriculture, biology, forensics, and various other areas of technology.\u00c2 The course has three major components:\u00c2 1) techniques used in the generation of recombinant molecules, 2) application of recombinant technology to diagnostics and therapeutics and 3) genetically modified organisms. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and BCBP 6310 .)",
- "name" : "Genetic Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4880",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The course covers interactive, multimedia interface design (for Web sites and apps) for data visualization or other forms of interactive information design. Innovative designs that explore new directions in interactive data design are highlighted. Topics include multisensory information design using graphics, sound, touch, and large-scale data projection. Interface design topics include user-centered design, information architecture, rapid prototyping, cross-cultural design, and intellectual property. Students may choose the applications they want to design for the class project.",
- "name" : "Interactive Data Visualization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4500",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course illuminates specific musical works and performances in depth, drawn from a range of periods, cultures, and genres by analyzing them in their historical, cultural, technological, and critical context. The emphasis is on music since 1900 and sample topics might include Remix in Digital Culture, Music in Protest and Social Justice, Gender and Sexuality in Music, Music and the Moving Image, and Sounding Identity, among others",
- "name" : "Topics in the History and Analysis of Music"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MTLE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6190",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This graduate level course will introduce two types of advanced models related to travel demand forecasting: the land use models and the activity-based models. This project-based course will allow students to obtain sound knowledge of advanced modeling techniques, and to have some preliminary experience with building, estimating, and applying advanced transportation models.",
- "name" : "Advanced Transportation Models"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-4730",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Positive Psychology is the scientific study of human happiness, well-being, and strength of character. This course takes an empirical approach to helping individuals use the science of flourishing to enhance their lives. Resiliency, the ability to adapt to stress and adversity, will be emphasized. Students will learn about coping techniques of resiliency to effectively navigate through life situations.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Positive Psychology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4710",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "Major principles of biochemistry are illustrated, as students purify and analyze specific proteins. Experience is obtained with various techniques including protein extraction from bacteria and tissues, chromatography, ultracentrifugation, spectrophotometric analysis, and electrophoresis. The course includes extensive hands-on laboratory work, as well as the writing of in-depth reports. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Biochemistry Laboratory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6310",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Supply Chain Capstone"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A painting course in opaque media such as oil or acrylic with emphasis on color interaction, composition, and pictorial design. Using sources from observation and the history of painting, students are taught to see and convey effects of color on/in 2D pictorial space and to develop critical skills in looking at paintings.",
- "name" : "Painting"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LANG-1940",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Chinese I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHIL-2140",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to first-order logic as a tool to be used in engineering, computer science, philosophy, etc., and as procedural knowledge helpful in puzzle-solving environments (e.g., standardized tests). A hands-on laboratory component is included.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Logic"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4600",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The basic processes of fabrication of silicon-based semiconductor devices with emphasis on the chemical principles and systems involved. Topics include materials preparation, oxide growth, lithography, diffusion, ion implantation, epitaxial growth, chemical-vapor deposition, vacuum deposition, reactive ion etching, and packaging technologies. Fabrication of both bipolar and FET devices is discussed with emphasis on manufacturing process flow and control. Process design methodology.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Semiconductor Processing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-2004",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Developmn Psyc (at Maria Coll)"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1985",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Sociology Of Inequality"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4535",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course provides students a venue to explore the different uses of Eastern and Western social media for socializing, entertaining, publicizing, and marketing. Students explore how media and mediated communication affect people and society, and develop critical perspectives of the diversity of mediated messages across cultures. The course also looks at the variability and cross-cultural encounters built on students' own everyday observations. The course is taught in English and requires no Chinese language proficiency.",
- "name" : "Social Media: East & West"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-6961",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An advanced studio course in sculpture for students who have taken Sculpture I. Students are encouraged to explore personal areas of interest and are required to develop a familiarity with the history of sculpture as well as mastering fabrication techniques.",
- "name" : "Sculpture II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6420",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Research, plan, create, and execute portfolio projects involving networked improvisation, composition, and performance via Internet and Internet 2.\u00c2 Study and use telematic technology such as Lola, JackTrip, SKYPE, mobile, and other devices in performances with others in distant locations.\u00c2 Participate in multimedia improvisation ensemble (Tintinnabulate) as a resource for implementing projects.",
- "name" : "Experimental Telepresence"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Advanced Drawing is designed to help students who have mastered basic drawing skills to enhance those skills and utilize them to explore visual ideas. Emphasis is placed on individual development of skills and subject matter to help students express themselves visually. Examples and studies are used from master drawings of the past to learn about the history of art and to stimulate ideas for the students' own work.",
- "name" : "Advanced Drawing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "WRIT-2110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to assist students in becoming more self-possessed and versatile writers. The course offers instruction in linguistic, rhetorical, and sociocultural concepts through its overarching focus on language: how it works, where it falls short, and how to harness it for specific purposes. Critical thinking and composing are conceptualized as processes, which includes the creation, development, organization, and revision of ideas and arguments. Students will complete a series of writing assignments in order to participate in contemporary debates occurring in both public and academic contexts.",
- "name" : "Strategic Writing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "DSES-4530",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Information Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4140",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Queer Ecologies is an undergraduate and graduate arts course that uses art to think about our eco-futures. We will look at the disruptive nature of Cartesian thinking and binary positioning in relation to sexuality and ecologies. The \"queering\" is a means to refuse this binary thinking and consider expansive interdisciplinary practices that have evolved from LGBTQ+ and feminist theory, decolonial thinking, extinction and death studies, environmental justice, critiques of science and big pharma, biopolitics, bioethics, biology, science fiction, aesthetics, art and play.",
- "name" : "Queer Ecologies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7860",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course is designed to introduce students to theories and principles in organizational behavior research. Students will investigate important theoretical perspectives, concepts, and research methods in behavioral research, with an emphasis on developing an understanding of how research in the field is conducted and how further contributions to this field might be made. Through in-depth discussions of selected research articles, students will gain some proficiency in framing meaningful research questions and deriving testable hypotheses.",
- "name" : "Organizational Behavior Theory and Research Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introductory course which will present basic concepts about composition, line, pictorial space, light, and color in the visual arts in order to help students develop the means for expressing visual ideas effectively. Weekly homework design projects, using both traditional and electronic media, will be complemented by in-class slide lectures, videos, and critiques.",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of 2D Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4630",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Optical physics and applications of lasers. Design of optical systems. Topics include: wave optics and beam propagation, Gaussian beams, resonators, optical properties of atoms and laser gain media, laser amplifiers, pulsed laser systems, applications of lasers, nonlinear optics.",
- "name" : "Lasers and Optical Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-4630",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Optical physics and applications of lasers. Design of optical systems. Topics include: wave optics and beam propagation, Gaussian beams, resonators, optical properties of atoms and laser gain media, laser amplifiers, pulsed laser systems, applications of lasers, nonlinear optics.",
- "name" : "Lasers and Optical Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A beginning sculpture course combining hands-on studio work sessions with lectures on the history and theory of sculpture practice. The studio component involves explorations of materials and techniques as tools for the enhancing of visual sensitivity and creative expression.",
- "name" : "Sculpture I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4260",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course provides students with a wide-ranging understanding of the environmental and social context of food, agriculture, and hunger. Drawing primarily on sociological concepts and research, the class will take a \"food systems\" approach, analyzing food as it travels from farm to table as part of an interconnected process. Students will examine why humans eat the way they do and how individuals' food choices affect other people and the environment.",
- "name" : "Food, Farms, and Famine"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2700",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introductory studio course covering the principles of critical listening, psychoacoustics, the art of music recording, and the basic use of digital equipment for music production and post-production. Hands-on assignments in a professional sound facility will be combined with readings and historical examples drawing on popular and experimental styles.",
- "name" : "Sound Recording and Production I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-2020",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This design studio introduces students to the first semester-long design project. We introduce students to more formal engineering design methods. This includes problem formulation, structured ideation, rapid prototyping, evaluation, functional modeling, and iteration. Studio III will also continue to draw on social science methods of ethnographic observation, background research, stakeholder analysis, and also a critical deconstruction of engineering design methods in a way that builds agility in ways more appropriate for those in DIS. Development of individual skills in design development, presentation, and portfolio building are also emphasized.",
- "name" : "Design and Innovation Studio III"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "Supervised reading and research.",
- "name" : "Independent Studies in Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6110",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Technological innovation is responsible for most economic growth and is crucial to deal with major societal concerns. This course examines the economics of innovation and new technologies. It shows how technologies are created and put to use, from basic science through invention and development to diffusion and practical use. Additional topics include R&D determinants, sources of innovation, product improvement, cost reduction, incentivizing and stimulating innovation, patents, evolution of innovation and technology, innovative competition in industry, and the national innovation environment.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Economics of Innovation and New Technologies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2550",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Building on techniques taught in Digital Constructs 3, this course will expand upon the role of technology in architecture by introducing advanced methods of design analysis and resolution. \u00c2 Students will learn to address issues of optimization, environmental surroundings, structure, and site by using various contemporary analytic software programs. This course is offered in the spring semester and is required of all second-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program. \u00c2 Coordination of the relationship of course content to Architectural Design Studio 4 will be between the Digital Constructs 4 faculty instructor and the second-year architectural design studio coordinator and faculty. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Digital Constructs 4"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6640",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Creativity is the starting point for technological entrepreneurship. Through interaction with faculty and guest speakers, students increase their understanding of the creative process and some of the tools that can be implemented to stimulate and/or manage individual and collective creativity. In addition, through application of these techniques in course activities, students explore and attempt to enhance their own creativity.",
- "name" : "Invention, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2962",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4550",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of the structural modeling of proteins and other biomolecules using informatics-driven and energy-based approaches. Topics include template-based comparative modeling, secondary structure prediction, tertiary structure prediction, protein classification, sidechain rotamers, docking, protein design, energy minimization, electrostatics, molecular dynamics, and molecular surfaces. Molecular modeling software will be provided. Laptop computers are required. BIOL 4550 , BIOL 6420 , BCBP 4550, and BCBP 6420 \u00c2 meet jointly; only one of these courses can be taken for credit.",
- "name" : "Molecular Modeling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-2940",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Studies in Games"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6850",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Covers topics such as the impact of foreign trade and investment on labor markets, job creation and destruction, income inequality, production location and agglomeration, international technology transfer, and regional economic development.",
- "name" : "International Economics and Development II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4660",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This graduate/advanced undergraduate hybrid course examines the structural and physiologic properties of muscle, as well as its force production and overall biomechanical function. Muscle structure and function will be explored at the protein, single fiber, and whole tissue levels. Discussions will focus primarily on skeletal muscle, and topics will include muscle morphology, cross-bridge theory, molecular motor and actomyosin interaction, Hill-type and Huxley-type models, electromyography, fatigue, muscle inhibition, history-dependent phenomena, in vitro and in vivo muscle function, and the response to injury. Each topic will be introduced and developed utilizing seminal articles in the literature as well as excerpts from texts and further discussion on current problems and state-of-the-art experimental techniques will draw on the current scientific literature.",
- "name" : "Muscle Mechanics and Modeling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-2940",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Ug Mentoring Intro Biology III"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6800",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Gaussian elimination, special linear systems (such as positive definite, banded, or sparse), introduction to parallel computing, iterative methods for linear systems (such as conjugate gradient and preconditioning), QR factorization and least squares problems, and eigenvalue problems.",
- "name" : "Computational Linear Algebra"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4050",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The course is designed to help students continue to develop as media-makers/filmmakers. Students will work on short video projects that are shot in the studio and in the field. Studio experimentations, including projection work, multi-camera production, generating ideas, and realizing a well-developed final project. Students write their own scripts, learn new technical skills and direct videos.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Advanced Video Media Studio"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4030",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Multimedia Performance Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4040",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a production course investigating non-traditional approaches to documentary or non-fiction film/video. Taking a broad look at what defines \"documentary\" media, this course will incorporate criticism with production. Students will produce a range of video works questioning conventional documentary styles, using radical and interventionist techniques. Students will study traditional documentary works including ethnographic films, cinema verit\u00c3\u00a9, propaganda films, \"home movies,\" reality TV, tabloid news, autobiographic and activist videos.",
- "name" : "Rethinking Documentary: Video Production"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2600",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "A technology-based performance ensemble, as well as a practice-based studio course, focused on the composition, design, and programming of new musical works and instruments. Students create and perform electronic music using laptops, microprocessors, digital networks and a range of new interfaces for musical expression. ARTS 4600/6600 combines studio and ensemble. The ensemble only section (ARTS 2600) may be taken multiple times as a 1-credit performance ensemble in partial satisfaction of the Music major or minor ensemble requirements or once as a 4-credit seminar at either the 4000 or 6000 level.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Ensemble Nonlinear"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-4500",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will provide the background and a set of examples of how computational methods can be applied to design of materials with desired structure and properties. The methods will span multi-length and time scales, including first-principles approaches, molecular dynamics simulations, stochastic methods for optimization and sampling, and computational thermodynamics. Lectures will be complemented by computer labs with hands-on exercises using publicly available or commercial software packages.",
- "name" : "Computational Materials Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4580",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Materials Systems & Production"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Readings In Engr"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6460",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will focus on 1) designing, engineering, and selecting proteins and other biomolecules with desired functional and biophysical properties (high thermal stability, high solubility, low propensity to aggregate), and 2) characterizing thermodynamic and kinetic properties (folding, oligomerization, and self-association) of these biomolecules. (Students may not receive credit for both this course and CHME 4460 .)",
- "name" : "Biomolecular Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces Linux kernel programming basics and starts by examining how Berkeley sockets bridge the user-kernel gap. The remainder of the course is spent looking into transport layer (e.g., TCP) and network layer (e.g., IP) implementations. Students do both individual and group programming projects. In addition to coding, there are detailed write-ups and peer reviews in this course.",
- "name" : "Networking in the Linux Kernel"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ECON"
- },
- {
- "code" : "DSES-6570",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "It And Systems For E-business"
- },
- {
- "code" : "WRIT-4410",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In this class,\u00c2 students will write on topics from\u00c2 their major discipline and investigate the kinds of texts that professionals in\u00c2 their field produce. They will\u00c2 identify and explore research questions, use discipline-specific library databases, and write research reports. In addition,\u00c2 they will develop effective note-taking and research skills and learn strategies for effective prose style.",
- "name" : "Research Writing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6640",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Analysis of ideal and nonideal chemical reactor operation with simple and multiple homogeneous, heterogeneous, and catalytic reactions. Interplay of chemical and mass and energy and momentum transport processes in model reactors and catalytic particles. Topics include transient and steady-state operation, residence time distribution, multiplicity, stability, selectivity control, and catalyst deactivation.",
- "name" : "Advanced Chemical Reactor Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4970",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4480",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A survey of the fundamental issues necessary for the design, analysis, control, and implementation of robotic systems. The mathematical description of robot manipulators in terms of kinematics and dynamics. Hardware components of a typical robot arm. Path following, control, and sensing. Examples of several currently available manipulators.",
- "name" : "Robotics I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6330",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course surveys the terminology, concepts, problems, and tools that support decision-making related to the effective design, operation, and control of operating systems that produce both tangible and intangible outputs. This course is designed to address key operations issues in both service and manufacturing firms.\u00c2 Operations can also be an effective competitive weapon and provide opportunities to win in markets worldwide. This course is designed to create an applied learning environment to introduce students to this topic. Students will learn analysis techniques, evaluate and analyze data using a variety of tools.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Operations and Supply Chain Management"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4460",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will focus on 1) designing, engineering, and selecting proteins and other biomolecules with desired functional and biophysical properties (high thermal stability, high solubility, low propensity to aggregate), and 2) characterizing thermodynamic and kinetic properties (folding, oligomerization, and self-association) of these biomolecules. (Students may not receive credit for both this course and CHME 6460 .)",
- "name" : "Biomolecular Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4190",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The widespread proliferation of IT-influenced economic activity leaves behind a rich trail of micro-level data, enabling organizations to use analytics and experimentation in both strategy and operations. This course provides a hands-on introduction to the concepts, methods, and processes for machine learning from data, the foundation of artificial intelligence. Students will learn how to manipulate data and apply machine learning models to business context. Students will learn how to obtain data and draw business inferences from data by asking the right questions and using the appropriate tools.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Machine Learning Applications"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-6710",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An introduction to the theory of solids. Theory of the free-electron metal, band theory, and phonons. Application to the electrical, optical, and thermal properties of solids. Qualitative discussion of cohesion.",
- "name" : "Theory of Solids I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Since its emergence over a century ago, the energy, vitality, and challenging nature of jazz have had a significant impact on music throughout the world. The question of \"what is jazz\" remains a lively and contentious discussion to this day. This course charts the emergence, evolution, and expanded influence of jazz and jazz-inspired music, as well as the many controversial musical, social, and philosophical questions it continues to provoke. Through listening, analysis, discussion, writing, and creative projects, students will develop a greater appreciation and understanding of improvised music in a great variety of contexts, and the crucial role American jazz played in revitalizing improvisational practice throughout the 20th and 21st Centuries. No musical background is required. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Histories of Jazz and Improvised Music"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-2050",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The physics and operation of semiconductor diodes, bipolar junction transistors, and field-effect transistors in elementary analog circuits. Non-ideal operational amplifier characteristics. Amplifier biasing, small-signal analysis, and frequency response. Elementary bipolar and MOSFET digital circuits.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Electronics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2340",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Intro To Afro-cuban Percussion"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6420",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of the structural modeling of proteins and other biomolecules using informatics-driven and energy-based approaches. Topics include template-based comparative modeling, secondary structure prediction, tertiary structure prediction, protein classification, sidechain rotamers, docking, protein design, energy minimization, electrostatics, molecular dynamics, and molecular surfaces.\u00c2 Molecular modeling software will be provided. Laptop computers are required. BIOL 4550 , BIOL 6420, BCBP 4550 , and BCBP 6420 \u00c2 meet jointly; only one of these courses can be taken for credit.",
- "name" : "Molecular Modeling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7750",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The course examines different responses of American, European, and Asian firms to a global economy, within an historic and evolving context. Models of economic, social, political, technological, and national development will be introduced. Various conflicting demands of national governments, interest groups, corporations, unions, NGOs and consumers are often expressed in terms of corporate, ethical, and social responsibility. Cases will be analyzed in terms of models of global business practices and conflicting claims will be critically evaluated.",
- "name" : "Global Business and Social Responsibility"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4910",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This seminar is the first required course of the two-semester, 5 th -year Final Project course sequence in the undergraduate program and as such serves as a prerequisite to the spring semester ARCH 4920 Final Project Design Studio. \u00c2 The Design Research Seminar provides a forum for readings and discussions as well as design and/or material experimentation as it relates to the respective Final Project instructor's thematic framework. \u00c2 The seminar also covers fundamentals related to standard methods of research and analysis. This 3-credit course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Final Project Design Research Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will offer an introduction to network science and a review of current research in this area. Classes will interchangeably present chapters from the textbook and related current research. The emphasis will be on the mathematical background of network science: graphs and networks; random networks and various types of scale-free networks; network properties such as assortativity, mobility, robustness, social networks, and communities; and dynamics of spreading in networks.",
- "name" : "Frontiers of Network Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LANG-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a continuation of Chinese II, a course for the standard modern Chinese language (Mandarin). Students learn more Chinese characters and words, reach a total of about 650 characters, 1000 words, and use more complicated grammatical structures, e.g., reduplication of adjectives and verbs, resultative and potential compliments. In sum, students learn more in all four aspects\u00e2\u0080\u0094listening, speaking, reading and writing\u00e2\u0080\u0094presented in Chinese II.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Chinese III"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-1380",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is a hands-on introduction to the primary building blocks of music and musicianship in a 21st Century context. No formal musical background is expected. The course will explore acoustics and psychoacoustics, rhythm, pitch, harmony, melody, timbre, improvisation, composition, and music notation through performance, listening, written exercises, and creative projects.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of Music and Sound"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6220",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Physical foundations underlying the operation of modern electronic and photonic solid-state devices. Quantum mechanical foundations are emphasized, including the postulates of quantum mechanics, wave-particle duality, uncertainty relation, the Kronig-Penney model, and perturbation theory. In addition, the course covers areas such as semiconductor statistics, doping, heterostructures, transport, and tunneling.",
- "name" : "Physical Foundations of Solid-State Devices"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4690",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Case Studies:arch Knowledge"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4790",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This is an upper division architectural design studio that explores topics of contemporary interest to the discipline. Students apply for this studio based on their personal interest and professional objectives. Three such studios: Architectural Design Studio 5, Architectural Design Studio 6, and Architectural Design Studio 7, are required for the degree. This course is offered in the fall semester and is required of all first-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 7"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ITWS-2961",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ITWS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1560",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A survey of the historical origins and cultural impact of several mass media, including television, film, radio, the Internet, and print media. The course aims to increase media literacy through analysis of specific media products as well as discussion of broad topics such as: advertising and commercialization; politics and censorship; gender, race, and social identity.",
- "name" : "Media and Society"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6980",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2540",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course introduces computational and procedural design approaches that are a logical extension to topics covered in Digital Constructs 2. Students will develop an understanding of computational logic through introductory design applications, both as advanced tooling and as generative design techniques. Methodological approaches will be contextualized by a presentation of historical and theoretical precedents. \u00c2 Techniques introduced will include scripting, Java, geospatial mapping. This course is offered in the fall semester and is required of all second-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program. \u00c2 Coordination of the relationship of course content to Architectural Design Studio 3 will be between the Digital Constructs 3 faculty instructor and the second-year architectural design studio coordinator and faculty. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Digital Constructs 3"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6180",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Modeling of power system components including HVDC systems, flexible AC transmission systems, and wind turbines. Analysis and control techniques such as reactive power control, coherency, and model reduction. Synchrophasor technology \u00e2\u0080\u0093 measurement, communication, and control.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Advanced Power System Modeling and Control"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-1961",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MANE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1610",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The first design studio in the Design, Innovation, and Society studio series introduces DIS majors to general design through a series of short projects. We learn the basic steps of design processes, from problem definition to concept ideation and selection, to quick low-resolution prototyping. The projects stress creative thinking and critical analysis, partnered with close discussions of how design and society intersect. This is a communication-intensive course. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Design and Innovation Studio I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4440",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "\"Sensibilities\"\u00e2\u0080\u0094a special ART_X@Rensselaer (Art Across the Curriculum) seminar\u00e2\u0080\u0094draws from the tremendous resource of EMPAC to inspire students to cultivate writing skills through the cross-disciplinary theme of the senses/perception. During the semester students will have opportunities to observe unique art/science presentations and performances in an intimate setting at EMPAC, providing rich experiences for discussions and writing. Classes include reading science and art texts, as well as writing workshops to develop authorial voice and experimentation. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Sensibilities"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6140",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Economics of the operation of power systems. Control of hydro and thermal generating units. Aspects of interconnected operation. Transmission losses and techniques for optimum economic generation. Hydrothermal coordination problems. Modern power markets. State estimation.",
- "name" : "Power Generation Operation and Control"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6310",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The study of mechanisms of organic reactions in biochemical processes on a molecular level. Enzyme active sites, mechanisms of enzymatic transformations, catalysis, cofactors, enzyme kinetics, environmental toxicology. Strong emphasis on the design and mechanism of action of pharmaceutical agents. Meets with CHEM 4310 ; both courses cannot be taken for credit.",
- "name" : "Bioorganic Mechanisms"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4430",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course teaches basic historical, anthropological, and sociological concepts that can be used to make sense of a wide variety of contemporary phenomena students encounter in everyday life. The focus is on analyzing how licit and illicit drugs serve as \"technologies\" within specific social contexts or subcultures; what drug policy reveals about social, political, and economic organization; and the impacts of biomedical knowledge and practice on specific population groups. The course focuses on the representation of drug use and drug users in popular culture, science and medicine, and history and the social sciences.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Drugs in History"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6170",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Advanced graduate course covering fundamental aspects of NMR common for application in a broad range of fields. Classical and quantum-mechanical descriptions are utilized to explore information content of NMR pulse sequences. The latter approach includes density matrix theory and proceeds with the product-operator formalism. Practical aspects and data analysis are also described. Subsequent focus is on liquid-state NMR of biological macromolecules, including resonance assignment and determination of molecular structure and dynamics. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and CHEM 6170 .)",
- "name" : "Advanced Topics in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6520",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Classical statistical decision theory, decision criteria, binary and composite hypothesis tests. Statistical models of signals and noise. Detection of known signals in Gaussian noise. Receiver operating characteristics and error probability. Applications to radar and communications. Detection of signals with unknown or random parameters, detection of stochastic signals, nonparametric detection techniques. Statistical estimation theory, performance measures. Cramer-Rao bounds, estimation of unknown signal parameters, optimum demodulation, signal design.",
- "name" : "Detection and Estimation Theory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6590",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course examines theory of national income determination, the role of monetary and nonmonetary factors in this economic system as described by various schools of macroeconomics. Alternative perspectives on monetary and fiscal policies are critically examined.",
- "name" : "Advanced Macroeconomic Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4010",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Theory and practice of biomedical measurements. An introduction to instrumentation and procedures for measurement of membrane transport, bioelectrical potentials, cell counting, biomechanical and biomaterial properties using invasive and noninvasive techniques. Transducers studied include strain gauge, differential transformer, spectrophometer, biopotential electrodes, microscope with camera, mechanical testing machine, piezoelectric transducer (or sensor). Also studied are instruments for determination of material properties.",
- "name" : "Biomedical Engineering Laboratory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BUSN-6103",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "In this three-credit, 15-week online graduate course, perform strategic analyses of an organization's market position relative to its competitors and customer needs.\u00c2 Analyze the present state of the market relative to its strategic vision, given the organization's competitive advantage.\u00c2 Articulate goals and tactics that move the organization from today to tomorrow's objectives.\u00c2 Develop highly effective teams to implement strategies and new products.",
- "name" : "Markets, Strategy, and People"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-4440",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course examines how music and sound is heard, experienced, and circulated on screens across diverse media formats in contemporary society. This interdisciplinary course introduces students to a variety of analytical, historical, and theoretical approaches to the understanding of music, sound and interactive and non-interactive narrative screen media, including film, television, music video, video games, apps and mobile media, Internet audiovisual & social media, VR/AR, and other screen formats of sound production, distribution, and consumption. This course is open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors only.",
- "name" : "Music, Sound & Screen Media"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4710",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Study of hydrologic, geologic, and other factors controlling groundwater flow, occurrence, development, chemistry, and contamination. Groundwater flow theory and aquifer test methods are introduced. Interactions between surface and subsurface hydrologic systems are covered. Some field trips are possible.",
- "name" : "Groundwater Hydrology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4550",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of the structural modeling of proteins and other biomolecules using informatics-driven and energy-based approaches. Topics include template-based comparative modeling, secondary structure prediction, tertiary structure prediction, protein classification, sidechain rotamers, docking, protein design, energy minimization, electrostatics, molecular dynamics, and molecular surfaces.\u00c2 Molecular modeling software will be provided. Laptop computers are required.\u00c2 BIOL 4550, BIOL 6420 , BCBP 4550 , and BCBP 6420 \u00c2 meet jointly.",
- "name" : "Molecular Modeling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-2930",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Credit to be given for an out-of-classroom experience related to biology having intellectual content relevant to the student's educational or career goals, subject to approval of a written proposal and a final report. The adviser (for biology majors) or, with permission, any Biology faculty member may serve as evaluator. For each out-of-classroom experience, a student may register only once for 1 to 4 credit hours. This course cannot be used as a biology elective.",
- "name" : "Out-of-Classroom Experience in Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-6400",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Analytical and computational methods for ordinary differential equations:\u00c2 existence and uniqueness of solutions, similarity methods, linear equations, regular singular points, hypergeometric equations, asymptotic expansions near irregular singular points, WKB theory, turning points, stability theory, stable and unstable manifolds, periodic solutions and Poincare maps, Floquet theory, stabilization and destabilization by periodic forcing, calculus of variations, Lagrangian and Hamiltonian systems, Poincare invariants, symplectic integrators, basic bifurcation theory, examples of chaotic dynamics, applications to physics, chemistry, and biology.",
- "name" : "Ordinary Differential Equations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHIL-4990",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Students conduct original scholarly projects: original research, theoretical or analytical reviews of the literature, or computer simulations. Working either alone or in groups, students prepare written reports relating to this project, under the supervision of a faculty member.",
- "name" : "Capstone Experience in Philosophy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAR-2020",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "The course focuses principally on officership, providing an extensive examination of the unique purpose, roles, and obligations of commissioned officers. It includes a detailed look at the origin of the Army's institutional values and their practical application in decision making and leadership.\u00c2 Students examine the challenges of leading teams in a complex, combat operational environment. The course highlights dimensions of terrain analysis, infantry patrols, and operation orders. Further study of the theoretical basis of the Army Leadership Requirements Model explores the dynamics of adaptive leadership in the context of military operations. This course, more than any before it, draws the various components of values, communications, decision making, and leadership together to focus on a career as a commissioned officer. Upon completion of this course, students should possess a fundamental understanding of both leadership and officership, and demonstrate the ability to apply this understanding in real-world situations.",
- "name" : "Applied Leadership II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LANG-1610",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Italian I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4141",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Generation of electric power from renewable sources and its integration into the power grid. Topics include fundamentals of photovoltaic and wind energy; power converters and their control for renewable energy conversion and grid integration; solar power plants, solar inverters, and their control; wind turbines based on synchronous generators, wind turbines based on doubly-fed induction generators (DFIG), wind power plants, and offshore wind; operation and control of power systems with renewables. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Renewable Power Generation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4150",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This seminar is an investigation of the successes and failures of the news media, set within historical and contemporary contexts.\u00c2 The title \"media watch\" is intended to evoke a watch-dog approach found in independent media sources and organizations like human rights watch.\u00c2 Assignments involve analyzing how issues are portrayed in the media, and students choose their topics according to their interests. The course can therefore enhance capstone, thesis, or dissertation work.",
- "name" : "Media Watch"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4480",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will focus on the connections between the behavior of single molecules and their interactions and macroscopic non-Newtonian behavior. It will discuss microscopic models of these systems, techniques for measuring and manipulating the microstructure, and the impact on macroscopic behavior.\u00c2 Students may not receive credit for both this course and CHME 6480 .",
- "name" : "Single Molecules Complex Fluid"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAR-2002",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Mil Leadership I (@ Suny Alb)"
- },
- {
- "code" : "EPOW-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Master's Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to create an applied learning environment to introduce students to large scale datasets in the environmental field and learn advanced techniques for analyzing them. Students will learn multivariate data exploration techniques, evaluate the quality of large datasets, and analyze the data using machine learning techniques. Specifically students will propose, develop, and finalize projects where they will apply machine learning approaches to datasets to understand complex environmental biology processes. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature relevant to their projects.",
- "name" : "Machine Learning for Environmental Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4979",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-4900",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Discussion of topics in the current astrophysical literature. Each student is required to give one oral presentation based on a paper or group of papers.",
- "name" : "Astrophysics Undergraduate Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-1960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ERTH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-4440",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The study of the link between engineering, and management. Students will gain an in-depth understanding of the foundations of engineering management.\u00c2 Topics covered include the concept of engineering management, its relationship to engineering, and its historical underpinnings, the traditional roles of management with particular emphasis on leadership skills to manage projects and processes, as well as the organizational and administrative abilities required to oversee the day-to-day operational performance of complex engineering. The ethical dimensions of the organization and the engineering community are also explored.",
- "name" : "Management of Engineering and Technology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4860",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This upper level studio and seminar explores individual visual arts projects contributing to thesis or dissertation development. Topics in creative personal expression in imaging, installation, digital/traditional mixed media and emerging genres will be studied drawing from issues raised in class projects. Advanced studies may include high resolution digital photography, montage, archival printing, gesture drawing, painting, assemblage, processing, stencil art, projection, and evolving genres which lead to an independent final project and web portfolio.",
- "name" : "Advanced Digital Imaging"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a graduate level course that introduces the student to computational cognitive modeling. Cognitive modeling is the simulation of human cognitive, perceptual, and motor processes based on a cognitive architecture. The benefit of cognitive modeling is that it facilitates the testing of ideas about human processes through comparison of model data with empirical data. This course covers ACT-R, a symbolic architecture and LEABRA, a neural-level architecture.",
- "name" : "Cognitive Modeling I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-6200",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Students frame questions and problems in forms that can be analyzed using data analytic tools. Students use data wrangling and preparation methods to prepare for analysis. Students use analytical tools to evaluate analytic models using linear/nonlinear multivariate methodologies. Students validate results and develop algorithms that can be used to make recommendations and forecasts. Students work with stakeholders to scope and frame questions and problems so that actionable results can be achieved.",
- "name" : "Data-driven Decision Making"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1235",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The Aristotelian dictum that we are rational animals is under severe attack these days. In fact, the previous sentence may seriously understate the situation: the dictum is perhaps outright rejected by many, if not most. From psychologists of reasoning and decision-making to behavioral economists to the \"new atheists\" (all groups whose message we will consider in this class), the onslaught is firmly underway, and fierce.",
- "name" : "Are Humans Rational?"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "From \"raves\" to symphony hall, Indian film music to Tibetan chant, monster truck rallies to a mother's lullaby, musical soundscapes surround us through all aspects of our daily lives. This course focuses on the study of music in or as culture. The exploration of music in human life will be comparative, using case studies from diverse world traditions and examining topics such as: ritual, media and technology, ethnicity/identity, music and dance, and musical transmission.",
- "name" : "World Music"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USNA-0030",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Drill/laboratory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1967",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4540",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "An introduction to architectural practice as related to accomplishing design projects. An overview of professional obligations, registration and conduct, architects' roles in project delivery, and office organization and management for delivering professional services. In-depth examination of architects' responsibilities for health, safety, and welfare in design; building code requirements for fire protection, life safety, and accessibility; economics of building systems and assemblies; design and construction contracts; and design documentation.",
- "name" : "Professional Practice 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2070",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A studio arts course exploring the fundamental concepts, techniques, styles, and mechanics used in the creation of graphic narrative. Contents to be covered include the fundamentals of sequential art, the purposes and formats of storyboards, basic terminology and concepts used in storyboarding, and the applications of storyboard techniques. Key visual storytelling structures are explored for the following industry applications: comics, animated films, graphic novels, commercials, documentaries, live action feature films, and video gaming.",
- "name" : "Graphic Storytelling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2800",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This course introduces students to design as a way of thinking, creating, and making through a series of short projects. The projects stress critical and creative thinking and invention, interdisciplinary collaboration, observation and perception, communication and visualization. Using sketching, photography, model making, and computing students pursue open-ended investigations of form, space, materials, and the ideas that both generate and are generated by them. This course is required of all first-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch.\u00c2 program.",
- "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "DSES-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in DSES"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6560",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores the history, methods, and goals of hackers with special attention paid to their role in social movements. It broadly interprets the term \"hacktivism\" to include computer hacking, media hacking, and \"reality hacking\" in the service of social change. Students will gain an understanding of how and why hackers have emerged as a major social force. Graduate students will produce an ethnographic record and analysis of a publicly recognized hacking event or figure.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Hactivism"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6390",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will develop understanding and integrate skills across the fields of fluid mechanics, meteorology, climatology, bluff-body aerodynamics, structural dynamics, code provisions for design, wind tunnel testing, and damage documentation.",
- "name" : "Wind Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-2400",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "First-order differential equations, second-order linear equations, eigenvalues and eigenvectors of matrices, systems of first-order equations, stability and qualitative properties of nonlinear autonomous systems in the plane, Fourier series, separation of variables for partial differential equations.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Differential Equations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4380",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Environment And Development"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4530",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This course offers the students the opportunity to demonstrate a comprehensive knowledge of issues and practices in an important subject within the building sciences through a self-initiated and faculty-directed independent design, research, or research/design project. This is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Building Sciences Capstone"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4150",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Reflecting on the knowledge and understandings acquired in all the previous courses in the history, theory, and criticism sequence, this course is a critical inquiry into the principal ideologies and premises of the most substantive architectural practices in the contemporary world. As such, the content of the course must necessarily evolve as the intellectual and cultural parameters of both theory and practice in the contemporary world change. The principal aim of the critique of various contemporary positions is to reinforce in students the importance of developing and critically maintaining their own values, vision, and voice in the design and making of architecture that was initiated in ARCH 2150, The Ethos of Architecture. Fundamental to this process is to encourage the students' awareness of the necessity to challenge their own subjectivities, biases, and presuppositions.",
- "name" : "Contemporary Design Approaches"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6880",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "The second semester of the Sonics Research Lab includes advanced acoustical measurement techniques. Another important part of the semester curriculum concerns noise sources, noise control, and vibration measurements. State-of-the-art, commercial software and school research-based software will be used for simulation/analysis/measurement of room acoustics in order to show the students how such technical tools assist in acoustics research and consulting practice for the design of performance and public spaces. The course will also give students a deeper theoretical understanding of architectural acoustics in order to assist them in room acoustics research. There will also be labs to reflect typical measurement procedures and (if time permits) site visits to acoustics research labs and different types of acoustical spaces. The Sonics Research Lab II emphasizes more training on independent hands-on and problem-solving skills (than the SRL I). \u00c2 B.S. and B.Arch., and other school students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S.Arch. students must register only for the 6000 level of this course. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Sonics Research Laboratory 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4990",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The purpose of this course is to demonstrate the student's capacity for independent work integrating concepts and media from the full range of their studio, history, and theory studies. It is a project-based class, culminating in a written thesis paper and a public presentation\u00c2 of work determined by the student. This course may be taken multiple times, but is a requirement in the student's final two semesters.\u00c2",
- "name" : "B.S. EARTS Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4520",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course continues the examination of the diverse and interconnected aspects of the construction industry as an essential context for realizing architecture. It surveys the history and current developments of the people, organizations, and professional and industry groups involved in design, construction, finance, insurance, and regulation of building. Current issues influencing design quality are identified by the class and are explored in a series of student-organized in-depth seminars with industry participants. This is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Construction Industry Seminar 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-2350",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Law, Values & Public Policy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATP-4700",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to deterministic models of operations research including linear programming formulations, the simplex algorithm, degeneracy, geometry of convex polyhedra, duality theory, and sensitivity analysis. Special linear programming models for assignment, transportation, and network problems. Integer programming formulations along with branch and bound solution. Dynamic programming.",
- "name" : "Mathematical Models of Operations Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4820",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This studio is a design-based studio that focuses on the integration of structural, technical, detail, zoning, and code-related issues with respect to the design of a moderate to large-scale building of civic importance. Such building types are (but not limited to) libraries, theaters, city halls, judicial buildings, educational buildings, etc. An important focus of the design project will be the relationship of the building to its urban context. An essential part of the design will involve programming of the building as well as responding to numerous of the learning outcomes defined by the NAAB (the accrediting agency for professional architecture programs) for a comprehensive design project. This course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Integrated Design Schematic"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-1140",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to modern physics with emphasis on special relativity; concepts in quantum mechanics; elementary particles and fundamental forces; and applications to nuclei and atoms. Registration is limited to first semester students or by permission of instructor.",
- "name" : "Introductory Modern Physics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4770",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This is an upper division architectural design studio that explores topics of contemporary interest to the discipline. Students apply for this studio based on their personal interest and professional objectives. Three such studios Architectural Design Studio 5, Architectural Design Studio 6, and Architectural Design Studio 7, are required for the degree.\u00c2 This course is offered in the fall and spring semesters and is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 5"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4510",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course introduces the construction industry as an essential context for realizing architecture. It is a survey of the people, organizations, and professional and industry groups involved in design, construction, finance, insurance, and regulation of building. Current issues influencing design quality are identified by the class and are explored in a series of student-organized in-depth seminars with industry participants. This is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program.",
- "name" : "Construction Industry Seminar 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2570",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course addresses relationships among society, culture, the more-than-human world, and the environment. We explore the diverse and interconnected ways in which contemporary composers, popular musicians, sound artists, and global music practices draw on natural and built environments to comment on current environmental and energy issues, articulate relationships among the arts, humanities, and science and technology studies, represent past, present and future environments, and engage in social activism. In this course, music is approached as artistic expression as well as a form of knowledge that can heighten our sensitivity and awareness of the environment, incorporating reading and writing assignments, and individual and group creative projects.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Music, Sound, & the Environment"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4120",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Biopunk: Arts Lab Practice is a studio, lab and lecture class introducing students to bioart, and microbial life and resilient ecological practices. We use punk, queer and biological laboratory techniques to creatively produce science, design and art works. Students will be required to complete readings, experiment, and create their own visions of a speculative biofuture. Emphasis will be on the history and contemporary investigations of the microbiome and how to culturally explore these scenarios of how we live amongst multiple diverse communities and species.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Biopunk: Arts Lab Practice"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4090",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is primarily concerned with learning how to build any interactive experience or artwork from concept to completion. It will introduce open-source, cross-platform programming libraries and tools used by artists and programmers to create interactive experiences and artworks for museum installations, festivals, VJ-ing, projection mapping, interactive experiences/artworks, and more. It will then start to address the questions: Is code an art form? What is interactive art? Is software art?",
- "name" : "Art and Code and Interactivity"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4390",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This seminar builds on skills acquired in the Music and Sound sequence. Through a series of exercises, students investigate sound as a medium for artistic expression while addressing the basics of orchestration, notation, and the development of musical and sonic ideas. Acoustic, electronic, and non-traditional contemporary approaches to composition will be explored, including performance, intermedia, and sound installation. The course culminates in a final composition project to be performed in an end of semester concert. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Composition Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-4280",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The objective of this course is to introduce students to systems engineering, especially from a decision-focused perspective. System concepts, methodologies, models, and analysis are covered in relation to a system's design, development, test, evaluation, and operation. Decisions concerning a system's reliability, maintainability, usability, disposability, and affordability are systematically considered. A range of systems, including service systems, is also considered.",
- "name" : "Decision Focused Systems Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-1520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course serves as an introduction to astronomy, focusing on understanding the physical nature of stars and galaxies, the vastness of the cosmos, and how astronomers have built up a comprehensive picture of the Universe in which we live through meticulous study.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Stars, Galaxies, and the Cosmos"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4350",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught.",
- "name" : "Data Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4050",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "An important ancillary concern throughout the previous eight courses of the history, theory, and criticism sequence has been the examination of architecture as a fundamental part of the forces of urbanization and humanity's interventions into the landscape and environment. This course highlights the perspective of that dimension of architectural understanding by examining in detail both historically and contemporarily many of the most significant ways that human habitation has engaged the world at the large scale of cities and geographies. This 2-credit course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Cities and Their Territories"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6981",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Situated within the context of the Master's Thesis (ARCH 6990) directed research studio sequence, this course addresses general methods of design research with an emphasis on studying the ways in which the discipline of architecture engages other fields of knowledge. Through a series of historical and contemporary writings as well as specific precedents in architectural design, students will look at how the discipline of architecture has absorbed external disciplinary, technological, and cultural influences as a means of advancing itself in the world.",
- "name" : "Methods Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6430",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Engineering aspects of microbial processes and of conversions with immobilized enzymes. Topics are mixed-culture processes, sterilization, aseptic techniques, mass transfer, bioprocess control, product isolation, enzyme technology, bioprocess development. There are heavy emphases on continuous fermentation and on chemicals from biomass.",
- "name" : "Biochemical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4970",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6860",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course covers the\u00c2 fundamentals of psychoacoustics with a focus on Architectural Acoustics.\u00c2 Topics include the functional overview of the auditory system, loudness, pitch, timbre perception, masking, binaural hearing, auditory scene analysis, multi-modal integration, and auditory perception in rooms.\u00c2 Required signal processing methods will be covered as well. The graduate-level course requires an extensive individual project and more advanced analysis.",
- "name" : "Applied Psychoacoustics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2530",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course builds upon topics covered in Digital Constructs 1 by focusing upon contemporary means of producing and communicating architectural ideas. \u00c2 Students will use digital methodologies through all phases of a project as well as advanced representation and digital fabrication techniques. \u00c2 The use of digital modeling as a sketch and iterative tool will be emphasized. \u00c2 Tools taught in Digital Constructs 2 will build upon those software programs taught in Digital Constructs 1. This course is required of all first-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program. \u00c2 Coordination of the relationship of course content to Architectural Design Studio 2 will be between the Digital Constructs 2 faculty instructor and the first-year architectural design studio coordinator and faculty.",
- "name" : "Digital Constructs 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2380",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The first in a two-course sequence combining music theory, musicianship, and engaged listening practices applicable to a broad range of traditional and contemporary musical styles, with an emphasis on creative practice. This course covers the fundamentals of tonal harmony including scales, chord symbols and figured bass notation, diatonic chord progressions, and counterpoint. Musicianship includes aural identification of intervals, scales, and chords, rhythm and exercises in sight-singing, dictation, and improvisation. Engaged listening practices include responsive listening, reading, and written exercises as well as in-class discussion. Weekly assignments include composition, analysis, and performance. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Music and Sound I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4370",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The goal of this course is to understand the effect of international trade on our natural environment. We will study the effect of trade on air pollution, the role of trade in shifting dirtier industries to countries with lax environmental regulations, the role of trade in a cleaner environment via efficient production, the role of trade in natural resource depletion, the environmental costs of transporting goods, and how trade and environmental policy interact. Course will first examine models of international trade and related data on trade flows. Then we will apply these tools to study the consequences of international trade on the negative environmental externalities. Finally, we will examine issues related to international trade and environmental policy",
- "name" : "International Trade and Environment"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4740",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "Students will learn a variety of modern cell biology techniques such as cell culture, genetic analysis, immunocytochemistry, fluorescence microscopy, and live cell imaging.\u00c2 Using these techniques, students will investigate the function of genetically manipulated proteins in cells.\u00c2 In the last third of the semester, students will develop independent experimental research plans to address questions of interest to the student. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Advanced Cell Biology Laboratory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ADMN-6800",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Ta Training Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-1150",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This lab focuses on geological processes in the interior of Earth and how they are manifested at the surface: age and origin of Earth, how rocks form, large-scale Earth processes, and energy sources. Review plate tectonics and the evolution of the main features of Earth's surface. Physical and chemical composition of Earth and the large-scale dynamics of the planet.",
- "name" : "Geology I: Earth's Interior Lab"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ESCI-6980",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4860",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Topics include the functional overview of the auditory system, loudness, pitch, and timbre perception, masking, binaural hearing, auditory scene analysis, multi-modal integration, and auditory perception in rooms. Required signal processing methods will be covered as well. Course taught with ARCH 6860.",
- "name" : "Applied Psychoacoustics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6380",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The physical metallurgy and associated physical chemistry of problems encountered in the application of materials in nuclear reactors is discussed. Specifically, the metallurgy and physical chemistry of ceramic fuels (e.g., oxygen potentials), the primary fuel densification and pellet-clad interaction mechanisms, irradiation-induced creep, hardening, and embrittlement mechanisms, and the properties of zircaloy are covered.",
- "name" : "Nuclear Reactor Materials"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4320",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "Microbiology Laboratory will provide hands-on experience for broad training in bacteriology and mycology with emphasis on: microscopy, bacterial growth, and biochemical assays. An investigative component will involve characterization of an unknown bacterium using the analytical tools learned. In addition to laboratory experience and good technique, the course will emphasize written communication with reports in the format of scientific papers. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Microbiology Lab"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6800",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Examination of the basic elements that are used to integrate the design and manufacture of capital and consumer products; manufacturing information systems, CAD/CAM systems, and manufacturability considerations when integrating unit process operations.",
- "name" : "Manufacturing Systems Integration"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6590",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This 3-credit course views potential breakthrough innovation from the perspective of the project manager, either in the firm or as a start up organization. The course offers methods and frameworks for commercializing nascent technologies that offer potentially breakthrough value to the market and, therefore, enormous reward for the firm. Additionally, legal and ethical consequences are considered.",
- "name" : "Commercializing Advanced Technologies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6590",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Principles Of Wireless Communications"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-2700",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Overview of methods used in the design and operation of production and service systems and basic cost accounting. Topics include forecasting, capacity planning, line balancing, production scheduling, staff scheduling, inventory control, just in time, time study, project planning, and discrete item cost accounting. Goal of course is to educate students in basic operations management principles and models and in discrete goods cost accounting. Students cannot receive credit for this course and ISYE 2210 .",
- "name" : "Production and Operations Management"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Readings in ERTH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATP-4400",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will center on applications of basic data analysis techniques such as data visualization, classification, clustering, and ridge regression. A case study approach will be used to provide immediate immersion into the problem of understanding high-dimensional data. The course will develop the necessary mathematics to understand and execute the techniques. Each student will execute a mini-data analysis project on a real-world data problem such as from engineering, medicine, and business.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Data Mathematics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4220",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to VLSI design. The fabrication, device, circuit, and system aspects of VLSI design are covered in an integrated fashion. Emphasis is placed on NMOS and CMOS technology. Laboratory experiments focus on layout analysis, computer-aided layout, and logic and timing simulation. Project on digital design with standard cells.",
- "name" : "VLSI Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4340",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course describes how individuals and firms make financial decisions, and how those decisions might deviate from those predicted by traditional financial or economic theory. The course examines how the insights of behavioral economics complement the traditional finance paradigm by introducing some of the main psychological biases in financial decision-making and examining the impacts of these biases in financial markets and other financial settings. It will also introduce students to behavioral and experimental methodologies in finance, economics, and other disciplines.",
- "name" : "Behavioral Financial Economics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-1100",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Age and origin of the Earth, internal constituents, and energy sources; how plates move, oceans develop, and mountains rise. The course aims to give a quantitative picture of the Earth's major processes and the ways in which they interact.",
- "name" : "Geology I: Earth's Interior"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6610",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Mechanical metallurgy and mechanics of the classical metal-working operations. Analytical techniques. Friction and lubrication. Workability. Effects on as-worked properties. Technological discussions of forging, rolling, extrusion, drawing, and other unit operations.",
- "name" : "Deformation Processing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6160",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Studies related to the evaluation of the impacts of major actions by state and federal agencies on the quality of human environment. Consideration is given to the preparation of impact statements. The impacts of various types of action are discussed; the adverse effects produced and alternatives to proposed action considered, and the tradeoffs between short-term uses and long-term productivity are evaluated. Case studies are presented and analyzed.",
- "name" : "Environmental Impact Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4590",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course addresses the range of economic issues related to the practice of architecture. Topics will include economic cycles and building construction, globalization of architectural practice, case studies of models of practice, setting and negotiation of fees for services, economic relationships of architects and consultants, cost estimation.",
- "name" : "Entrepreneurship and Architecture"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6550",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "General equations of compressible flow. Specialization to inviscid flows in two space dimensions. Linearized solutions in subsonic and supersonic flow. Characteristic equations for supersonic flow with applications in external and internal flow. One-dimensional nonsteady compressible flow. Introduction to transonic flow.",
- "name" : "Theory of Compressible Flow"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-1200",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "An introduction to the elements of computer aided design for civil and environmental engineers using AutoCAD Civil 3D. Students will be introduced to basic AutoCAD drafting techniques as well as learn the key features of Civil 3D that aid site development design and analysis. Topics covered will include general AutoCAD techniques, existing conditions development and analysis using field collected survey data and GIS information, pipe network design, grading design, and roadway corridor layout.",
- "name" : "Engineering Graphics for Civil Engineers"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4740",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Engineering techniques for parallel processing. Knowledge and hands-on experience in developing applications software for processors on inexpensive widely-available computers with massively parallel computing resources. Multi-thread shared memory programming with OpenMP and NVIDIA GPU multicore programming with CUDA and Thrust. The use of NVIDIA gaming and graphics cards on current laptops and desktops for general purpose parallel computing using Linux.",
- "name" : "Applied Parallel Computing for Engineers"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6810",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course expands on material covered in Behavioral Economics I by studying the latest and more advanced modeling and experimental approaches for individuals' decision-making and empirical applications. Specific advanced topics include the role of habit formation on intertemporal choice and limited attention models for complex decisions. The course will additionally cover recent literature and findings from cognitive and computational psychology.",
- "name" : "Behavioral and Experimental Economics II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2860",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This studio continues the work of the Building Performance Studio 2 to consider in greater depth and detail the design of architectural form and space from the perspective of how the many factors of environmental and ecological forces give shape to them. The studio will employ architectural design projects as a means to explore these issues qualitatively and quantitatively. This course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program.",
- "name" : "Building Performance Studio 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4380",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Discussion of the state of practice in modern database systems, with an emphasis on relational systems. Topics include database design, database system architecture, SQL, normalization techniques, storage structures, query processing, concurrency control, recovery, security, and new directions such as object-oriented and distributed database systems. Students gain hands-on experience with commercial database systems and interface building tools. Programming projects are required.",
- "name" : "Database Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-4120",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to astronomical observing techniques and instrumentation. Optical telescope design. Observatory site selection. Telescopes above the atmosphere. Imaging techniques: photography, charge-coupled devices. Optical photometry, spectroscopy, and polarimetry, and their applications. Infrared techniques and applications. Radio astronomy. Includes evening laboratory sessions.",
- "name" : "Observational Astronomy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-2110",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces the major components of today's power system such as transformers, electric machines, and transmission lines. Renewable energy sources and systems are discussed, including wind and solar energy. Integration of energy sources with the grid is addressed.",
- "name" : "Electrical Energy Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LANG-4940",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
- "name" : "Language Studies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHIL-4965",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PHIL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-6400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course explores how the health impacts of environmental problems are understood and responded to through medical, legal, and regulatory intervention. Case studies are used to highlight different strategies for dealing with environmental illness, comparing the perspectives of affected people, medical professionals, lawyers, government officials, industry representatives, and media. A core component of the course is devoted to problems related to exposure to toxic chemicals, including readings on popular epidemiology, mass torts, transboundary victimization, and medical rehabilitation models.",
- "name" : "Environment and Health"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4500",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will enable students to understand and apply theoretical foundations of programming concurrent, distributed, and mobile computing systems, namely process calculi, actors, join calculus, and mobile ambients. In the practical part, students will compare communication and synchronization aspects in concurrent programming languages following these theoretical models. Students will also review current research on distributed computing over the Internet, on topics including but not limited to coordination, mobility, heterogeneity, security, fault tolerance, scalability, programmability, and verification.",
- "name" : "Distributed Computing Over The Internet"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4410",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The primary objective of this course is to provide students with a basic understanding of the physics and engineering of light and lighting. It introduces the process and mechanics of vision, some of the important concepts in lighting metrics, calculations, and technologies including light sources, optics, sensors and controls, and luminaires needed to illuminate built environments. This is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program. B.Arch, MArch students can register for this course. Students from other majors will need permission of the instructor. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Lighting for Intelligent Spaces"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-6206",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Working with a faculty member, students develop a big data inquiry model for a production related issue, question, or problem of their choosing. Over the semester, the student frames the question to be analyzed, collects and prepares data for analysis, performs the analysis and presents actionable results and recommendations back to the organization. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6211 \u00c2 or ENGR 6216 .",
- "name" : "Modeling Production Decisions"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6080",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course considers the evolving new models of value creation and business growth being introduced across different industries and examines such critical issues as product and process technology strategy, operational innovation, IT strategies and infrastructures, networks and organization, and finance. Utilizing a series of case studies from across a range of industry networks, students will have a chance to learn how companies can participate in such networks and what unique business resources and capabilities they can employ to enhance their probability of commercial success.",
- "name" : "Networks and Value Creation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4270",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The goal of this course is to introduce students to the problems, challenges, and applications of computer vision from a computational perspective.\u00c2 Topics include camera modeling and image formation, feature extraction, object and face recognition, image mosaic construction, stereo and three-dimensional imaging, motion, and tracking.\u00c2 Machine learning methods, including deep convolutional neural networks, will be studied and applied throughout the course.",
- "name" : "Computational Vision"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6840",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Study classical models of international trade that consider factor endowments, comparative advantage, labor capabilities, strategic use of trade barriers, and multilateral trade agreements. Examine contemporary models which explore increasing returns, heterogeneity in firm productivity and products, product mix, firm size distributions, globalization, multinationals, and offshoring.",
- "name" : "International Economics and Development I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6860",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Evaluation provides structured information for policy-relevant decision making based on a purposeful analysis of the identified measures. Topics include test hypotheses, randomization/control schemes, measures framework, measurement methods, and pertinent analytic techniques. Emphasis is on the application of evaluation methods (including systems engineering and operations research techniques) to issues arising in criminal justice, education, health, housing, transportation, welfare, automated information systems, and military programs.",
- "name" : "Evaluation Methods for Decision Making"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6130",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Design Explorations 3"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6360",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A survey of fundamental issues in design of efficient programs for parallel computers. The topics discussed include models of parallel machines and programs, efficiency of parallel algorithms, programming styles for shared memory, message passing, data parallelism, and using MPI in scientific parallel programs. Parallel programming project required.",
- "name" : "Parallel Computing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2370",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course addresses fundamental principles relating the environmental context to human needs and comfort. Topics include the principles of thermodynamics at the architectural scale, optimization versus\u00c2 variability, principles of building sites and orientations, psychometrics, and human comfort, and an introduction to energy modeling. This course is required of all students in the B.Arch. degree program.",
- "name" : "Energy, Comfort, and Ecology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-1500",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Basic concepts in differential and integral calculus for functions of one variable. Topics will include functions, limits, continuity, derivatives, integration, exponential and logarithmic functions, and techniques of integration. Application areas will include topics in Management, Architecture, and Social Sciences with special emphasis on the role of calculus in introductory probability.\u00c2 Students cannot get credit for both MATH 1500 and MATH 1010 . \u00c2",
- "name" : "Calculus for Architecture, Management, and HASS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-1510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The field of Astrobiology considers the emergence and evolution of life on Earth, and the potential for life elsewhere. This course explores fundamental concepts in Astrobiology including the creation of the chemical elements, origin and evolution of the solar system, the definition and requirements for life, early Earth environments and life's emergence on this planet. Additionally, students explore habitability on other extraterrestrial bodies \u00e2\u0080\u0094 including Mars, Icy worlds and exoplanets, through self-directed research.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Astrobiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5300",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course centers on the development of a technical knowledge of, sensibility to, and intuition for the process by which an architectural design is realized in built form. The interdependence among building materials, acoustic qualities, enclosure systems, interior, finish, and other systems is investigated, with an emphasis on the broader architectural design endeavor. Drawing as a means of understanding forms the basis for a semester-long project to be done in small groups. Case studies will center on concepts and systems that have not yet found their way into mainstream practice. The course approach will involve in-class presentations, project work, field trips and case studies. WebCT will be used to expand the student's access to course materials and allow for a measure of distance learning. Sustainability: the notion that design intentions can be nullified through incorrect construction is stressed. The importance of proper detailing, construction, and maintenance to accomplish lasting and efficient enclosures is highlighted. Skills to diagnose and treat incorrect construction are developed. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Materials and Construction Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6570",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The primary objective of this course is to introduce the multifaceted role of data as a resource of the organization, in three ways. First, it examines the role of data at the operational, tactical, and strategic levels of the organization. Second, it provides students with knowledge and hands on training of technologies that manipulate data, including\u00c2 structured query language (SQL), extraction transformation and loading tools (ETL), data warehousing (DW), online analytical processing (OLAP), and data mining (DM). The course exposes students to big data management techniques. Finally, the course provides students the theory and hands on training to understand the transformation of data to information. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Advanced Data Resource Management"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2520",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course will examine and teach methods of representation and the communication of design concepts. \u00c2 Skills taught will enable students to produce two-dimensional and three-dimensional digital models, as well as drawings from multiple perspectives. \u00c2 Students will understand virtual environments as they pertain to model making, drawing, scale, and materiality. Students will be introduced to digital modeling and graphic design softwares. This course is offered in the fall semester and is required of all first-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program. \u00c2 Coordination of the relationship of course content to Architectural Design Studio 1 will be between the Digital Constructs 1 faculty instructor and the first-year architectural design studio coordinator and faculty. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Digital Constructs 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6840",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introductory materials of engineering acoustics for students with basic knowledge in mathematics (at least one level of first-year college). Much of the course material is taken from the textbook \"Acoustics for Engineers\" by Blauert and Xiang (2nd Ed.). The course includes mechanic and acoustic oscillations,\u00c2 the wave equations in fluids, governing equations for horns and ducts, spherical sound sources and arrays, piston membranes, diffraction and scattering, dissipation,\u00c2 reflection, refraction and absorption, isolation of air- and structure-borne sounds, noise propagation and noise control. B.S. and B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S.Arch. Acoustics students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
- "name" : "Engineering Acoustics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-6110",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course offers an overview of social science techniques and research design and logistics and approaches widely used in STS.",
- "name" : "Research Methods in STS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4900",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Weekly seminars on topics of concern to students who are about to embark on their professional careers in chemistry. Topics will include employment and career opportunities; graduate school; ethical requirements and expectations in the profession; patent considerations; new directions in research and other topical matters. Restricted to senior chemistry majors.",
- "name" : "Professional Development Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4972",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in STSO"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6972",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-2050",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Astronomy for students with a background of college mathematics and physics. Topics include: astrophysical concepts, solar system basics, stellar astronomy and the interstellar medium, the Milky Way system, galaxies, quasars, and cosmology.",
- "name" : "Introductory Astronomy and Astrophysics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-4941",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Nanosynthesis & Properties"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ENVE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6900",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Readings and discussion of topical materials that are selected to place graduate projects and theses in a comprehensive context.",
- "name" : "Graduate Thesis Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4840",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course provides an overview of the essentials for architectural acoustics design of performance and public spaces, including concert halls, theaters, museums, classrooms, sports arenas, courtrooms, and religious buildings. There are no prerequisites, but the course may be used as the starting point for a certificate in Architectural Acoustics, a concentration in an architecture student's professional electives, or the beginning of a master's degree in acoustics. The course covers basic principles of sound, room acoustics, sound absorption in rooms, sound isolation and privacy, acoustics of mechanical systems, and sound quality. After both Architectural Acoustics 1 and 2, the student should be prepared for a basic entry-level position in either acoustics in architecture or in acoustical consulting.",
- "name" : "Architectural Acoustics 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-1110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course examines science and technology in their social, cultural, and political context. Readings are drawn from social sciences, fiction, and contemporary journalism. Case studies will include genetic testing, automation, vaccines, engineering education, AIDS activism, mental health, surveillance, and climate change. The class is designed to give students the freedom to develop and express their own ideas. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Science, Technology, and Society"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4260",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Life Drawing and Anatomy for Artists is an advanced drawing class that will focus on drawing the human figure. Students will work from live models to refine their drawing skills; clay models from anatomical texts will be made to develop a working knowledge of anatomy for artists. Gesture, proportion, and expression of the human figure will be emphasized; general concepts of design and composition will also be presented.",
- "name" : "Life Drawing and Anatomy for Artists"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4840",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is for senior EMAC and EART majors and is the core creative forum for the development and presentation of the senior thesis.\u00c2 The course is the first part of a two-semester study provided in two seminar courses. The focus of the course is to develop a proposal for for a written thesis and a creative project that students will execute in the second seminar and exhibit in an exhibition.",
- "name" : "Creative Seminar I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4990",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Independent laboratory research, on or off campus, supervised by a faculty member, culminating in a written thesis; or literature research culminating in the writing of a review article. The thesis research must also be presented in the form of a poster presentation or a talk. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Senior Research Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4810",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course covers topics related to learning and inference with different types of Probabilistic Graphical Models (PGMs). It also demonstrates the application of PGMs to different fields. The course covers both directed and undirected graphical models, both parameter and structure learning, and both exact and approximated inference methods.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Probabilistic Graphical Models"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-1015",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "The goal of this laboratory course is to learn about biology through hands-on, project-based lab activities that engage students in actual biology experiments and procedures - learning biology by actually doing biology.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Biology Laboratory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-2100",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This is a course designed to supplement RPI's personal lab safety courses and covers the safety protocols and practices associated with chemical process plants.\u00c2 It is designed to provide information necessary for an ABET accredited degree and to assist students in finding an internship and a job. The course uses material offered on-line by the American Institute of Chemical Engineers.\u00c2 It is part of the Safety and Chemical Engineering (SAChE) Certificate program offered by the society and provides continuing education credits for working engineers.",
- "name" : "Chemical Process Safety"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4002",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Ind Study/ Research @ Sunya"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6320",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This studio course explores new directions in art and design that include visual poetry (visual expression in which the shape and arrangement of text, images, and symbols covey the message) and interactive narrative. Visual poetics and narrative appear in advertisement, music videos, and other forms of communication. Students will experiment with these forms of communication and learn how these concepts apply in artistic and commercial contexts. The class format includes lectures, discussions, and studio work.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Visual Poetics and Narrative"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2850",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This studio considers the design of architectural form and space from the perspective of how the many factors of environmental and ecological forces give shape to them. The studio will employ architectural design projects as a means to explore these issues qualitatively and quantitatively. This course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program.",
- "name" : "Building Performance Studio 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6470",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The course focuses on the concentration, recovery, and isolation of biological molecules relevant in biotechnology. The characteristics of biological molecules such as proteins and biological fluids such as blood, fermentation, and cell culture broth, are discussed. The principles, advantages, and limitations of centrifugation, membranes, cell-disruption, two-phase extraction, precipitation crystallization, and electrical processes are discussed. Integrated bioseparation schemes are presented and many specific applications are discussed in detail.",
- "name" : "Downstream Processing in Biochemical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2150",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will examine the spectrum of architectural phenomena and ideas without a specific chronology using examples ranging from antiquity to the contemporary world in western and non-western civilizations and produced in both vernacular and disciplinary cultures. An essential part of this course is to stimulate students' curiosity about architecture and the larger world and introduce them to key issues of architecture regarding space, form, critique, technology, aesthetics, societal and cultural contexts, etc. Particular emphasis will be given to the emergence of modernism in architecture. Crucial to the goals of this course is to encourage students to pursue and develop their own unique vision and voice in architecture throughout their education and practice. Fundamental to this process is making students aware of the necessity to challenge their own subjectivities, biases, and presuppositions. \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "The Ethos of Architecture"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-2120",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "A laboratory course dealing with wet and instrumental techniques of chemical analysis.",
- "name" : "Experimental Chemistry I: Analytical Techniques"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Experimental Telepresence"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-1200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introductory course in drawing designed to develop seeing ability and means of expressing visual ideas through graphic skills. The course consists of exercises in drawing from observation and studies from the history of art.",
- "name" : "Basic Drawing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6180",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Mechanics of elastic heterogeneous solids. Plasticity of composite materials. Thermoelastic and thermoplastic behavior. Mechanics of distributed damage. Mechanical behavior.",
- "name" : "Mechanics of Composite Materials"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6310",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Advanced analysis and design of reinforced concrete structures. Design of deep beams, slender columns, two-way floor systems. Deflection computations. Design for torsion. Prestressed concrete fundamentals.",
- "name" : "Advanced Concrete Structures"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6140",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Understanding technology-enabled changes in contemporary business environments, and how insightful executives leverage IT, is key to creating value and winning competitive advantage. This course develops an understanding of cutting-edge technological trends and their potential business impact. The course also explores the business drivers of technology-related decisions in firms and stimulates thought on new applications of technology for commerce, including new products, processes, and business models. Topics covered include: how different business models necessitate different kinds of IT investments; how IT coupled with big data analytics impacts different industries; whether and how IT hastens and aids the growth of disruptive innovations; and how organizations should adapt to the digital economy.",
- "name" : "Managing Digitization and Transformation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6850",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Deep learning fundamentals and applications in artificial intelligence. Topics include machine learning foundation, linear regression and classification, deep neural networks, convolutional neural networks, recurrent neural networks, generative adversary neural networks, Bayesian neural networks, deep Boltzmann machine, deep Bayesian networks, and deep reinforcement learning.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Deep Learning"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2040",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Intermediate Digital Imaging is a hands-on studio course exploring the use of computer technologies in making visual art. A study of contemporary issues in digital media and photography facilitates individual innovation and experimentation. Digital imaging and input/output techniques are employed in terms of giving visual form to ideas and personal expression in private and public settings.",
- "name" : "Intermediate Digital Imaging"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LANG-4430",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a continuation of Chinese III, a course for standard modern Chinese language (Mandarin). Students learn additional Chinese characters and words, reach a total of about 800 characters, 1350 words, and complicated grammatical structures, e.g., expression of approximation, comparison of structural and aspect particles, etc. In sum, students learn more in all four aspects\u00e2\u0080\u0094listening, speaking, reading, and writing\u00e2\u0080\u0094presented in Chinese III.",
- "name" : "Chinese IV"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4940",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "An individually arranged independent study course under the supervision of a member of the Cognitive Science Department. The topic is selected by consultation between student and faculty member.",
- "name" : "Readings in Cognitive Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-2980",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Senior Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-1200",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Two-week introduction to architecture for rising high school juniors and seniors includes morning programs and introductory lectures in history and theory of architecture, computing and simulation, freehand and extreme drawing, building ecologies, building conservation, and construction systems.\u00c2 There will be field trips and career counseling.\u00c2 Afternoons will have individually critiqued (tutored) design studios, group and individual projects, reviews, and public presentation.\u00c2 Acts as an opportunity for career discovery to decide whether a design education in architecture is appropriate.\u00c2 Summer term annually.\u00c2 Dates TBA. 9:00 am - 4:00 pm.",
- "name" : "Beginners Architecture Career Discovery Program"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-1961",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ECSE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the computational and algorithmic aspects of social processes. Topics covered will be selected to illustrate the diverse challenges in algorithmic social process analysis: social networks and their dynamics; information flow; hidden networks. Algorithms involving social and selfish agents, social choice theory, voting, and auctions. Ranking actors in networks, recommendation systems, peer-review, and aggregation of rankings/reviews. Students cannot receive credit for both CSCI 4110 \u00c2 and CSCI\u00c2 6110.",
- "name" : "Computational Social Processes"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISCI-6510",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Discussion of current issues and research relevant to astrobiology and the origins of life through the view of earth sciences, chemistry, biology, and astrophysics.",
- "name" : "Readings in Astrobiology and the Origins of Life"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6810",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "The principal objective of this introductory seminar is to provide stude\u00c2\u00ad\u00c2\u00ad\u00c2\u00adnts with the opportunity to learn the fundamentals of research design. Research design includes: (1) identifying and selecting focused research problems/opportunities/ideas; (2) documenting the state of the art in the selected research area; (3) identifying the critical resources and settings to carry out the research; (4) designing the research program including strategies and tactics for carrying out the research. It is hoped that the knowledge gained in the RD Seminar will assist students in the development of their own individual thesis proposals while they contribute to active research. B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.Arch. students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
- "name" : "Research Design Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6870",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The Sonics Research Lab is completely research based . The first part (the Fall semester) will be focused on hands-on research tools and techniques. First, students will learn the basics of digital signal processing, develop an understanding of measurement equipment and analysis methods for sound. The course will examine the ISO standards of room-acoustic measurements, develop students' research goals and a specific set of data to gather for their research. The course will also prepare the students with the fundamental knowledge on CATT Acoustic and/or EASE in geometrical modeling. Then the students and professors will visit a number of performance venues (e.g. EMPAC Concert Hall, and/ or other venues) and perform the room-acoustic measurements. Students will then work on analyzing and interpreting the research results. Practice measurements will be scheduled in the gallery or somewhere on campus before trips to performance halls. MATLAB will play a central role throughout all the classes (SRL I & II) and the thesis research projects. It will be used during the class exercises . Within one week from the semester start, every student is required to INSTALL a functioning MATLAB Software package onto her/his laptop computer. B.S. and B. ARCH, and other school students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S. in ARCS students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
- "name" : "Sonics Research Laboratory 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4010",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This seminar examines human perception from a designer's perspective. It draws on perspectives from the sciences, arts, and humanities in order to build an understanding of how people perceive and interact with the environments they create. One cannot only read about perception;\u00c2 the seminar will augment reading with a range of direct experiences as source material for discussion. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Seminar in Sensory Culture"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6830",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "The Graduate Thesis Seminar: Acoustics\u00c2 is designed to provide support to graduate students who are engaged in independent thesis research projects. It is a required course for all graduate students in the Architectural Acoustics programs. This seminar provides a formal opportunity for students and faculty from a range of concentrations to meet together and discuss thesis work in progress.",
- "name" : "Graduate Thesis Seminar: Acoustics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In this course, students will explore the molecular methods and applications of recombinant DNA technology and the issues regarding their use through case studies on the effect of genetic engineering on medicine, agriculture, biology, forensics, and various other areas of technology.\u00c2 The course has three major components:\u00c2 1) techniques used in the generation of recombinant molecules, 2) application of recombinant technology to diagnostics and therapeutics and 3) genetically modified organisms.",
- "name" : "Genetic Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-4720",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to theoretical and experimental solid-state physics. Wave mechanics in the perfect crystal. X-rays, electrons, and phonons. Electrical properties of metals and semiconductors. Qualitative treatment of lattice defects.",
- "name" : "Solid-State Physics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-4710",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Study of hydrologic, geologic, and other factors controlling groundwater flow, occurrence, development, chemistry, and contamination. Groundwater flow theory and aquifer test methods are introduced. Interactions between surface and subsurface hydrologic systems are covered. Some field trips are possible. Students cannot receive credit for both ENVE 4710 and ENVE 6110 . \u00c2",
- "name" : "Groundwater Hydrology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4976",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4620",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The exploration of movement often reveals sensitivities concerning the body, identity, gesture, culture, sensory awareness, perception, space, orientation, kinesthesia, time, relationships to people and objects, as well as cultural notions of embodiment and the senses.\u00c2 This course employs practice-based work, creative experimentation, and traditional forms of research (reading, viewing media, writing, discussions) as the primary methods to illuminate the issues concerning enactive (movement) knowledge. This is a Deep Listening-related course.",
- "name" : "Exploring Movement and Sound"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2810",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This course continues the processes of critical inquiry in relation to design and design creativity through a series of hands-on projects that incorporate fundamental issues of technology, materiality, abstraction, tectonics, and theory that consider the array of architectural issues in the design of built environments that consider architecture in a wider sense that includes its involvement with site, context, situation, and simple program. This course is required of all first-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course addresses the history of architectural and related developments in selected Western and non-Western civilizations in order to construct a conceptual and strategic understanding of the relationships between architecture, culture, civilization, technology, and thought. In doing so, it will focus on key constructed spatial phenomena of the pre-modern world and, where relevant, elucidate the connection of these works of architecture and their motivating ideals to those of the modern and contemporary world.",
- "name" : "History, Theory, Criticism 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6964",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4780",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces students to narrative theory and\u00c2 interactive narratives in a variety of genres such as oral story-telling, literature, poetry, film, artists' books, historical narrative, hypertext fiction, Net Art, social media narratives, and computer games. Students will have the opportunity to design and develop an original interactive narrative.",
- "name" : "Interactive Narrative"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4977",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6240",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Fabrication technology for silicon and gallium arsenide integrated circuits with emphasis on sub-micron structures. Topics include epitaxy, diffusion, binary and ternary phase diagrams, grown and deposited oxides and nitrides, polysilicon and silicide technology, single-and multi-metal systems, plasma and chemical etching, ion milling photo, e-beam and X-ray lithography.",
- "name" : "VLSI Fabrication Technology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6510",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Mechanical regulation of biological systems will be discussed. Topics include principles and concepts of mechanobiology; embryogenesis, and histogenesis of tissues with particular references to skeletal system; physical forces at cellular, tissue, and organ level; mechanical regulation of cellular behavior, tissue growth, and organ development; limits of mechanical regulation; biochemical influences; application of mechanobiology to tissue regeneration.",
- "name" : "Mechanobiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-2001",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Human Sexuality (at Hvcc)"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6450",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Nonlinear Laser Spectros"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-2330",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Overview of the chemical and physical properties of the material constituents of the Earth and terrestrial planets, including minerals, rocks, lavas, and supercritical water. Topics include mineral structure and composition, bonding, optical properties, phase transformations, stabilities and surface properties. Mineral resources and the role of minerals in the man-made environment is also discussed. Intended for students interested in learning about the constituents of planet Earth and the techniques used in their characterization (both traditional and modern) at various scales.",
- "name" : "Earth Materials"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6210",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "A continuation of ENVE 6200 . The principal topic discussed is the selection of remediation alternatives and waste minimization.",
- "name" : "Hazardous Waste Management II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-1100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Problem solving and analysis techniques focused on chemical engineering applications. Principles of steady state material balance calculations, introduction to chemical engineering design and process flowsheeting. The use of software packages to solve algebraic equation systems.",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of Chemical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1989",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Remixing In Digital Culture"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-1200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Programming concepts: functions, parameter passing, pointers, arrays, strings, structs, classes, templates. Mathematical tools: sets, functions, and relations, order notation, complexity of algorithms, proof by induction. Data structures and their representations: data abstraction and internal representation, sequences, trees, binary search trees, associative structures. Algorithms: searching and sorting, generic algorithms, iterative and recursive algorithms. Methods of testing correctness and measuring performance.",
- "name" : "Data Structures"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4020",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This interdisciplinary seminar consists of students from both the School of Architecture and Civil Engineering department. Presentation of a variety of structural typologies bears direct relation to practical experience and the necessity for constructive interdisciplinary discourse. Specific structural typologies are examined through historic and contemporary project examples that are critically deconstructed and critically analyzed with respect to their basic engineering principles and architectural concepts. Students will be exposed to the collaborative methods inherent within the architect/engineer relationship. The course consists of lectures concerning each topic, case studies, and presentations of relevant projects, an interdisciplinary design project and discussion of the projects and presentations with respect to interdisciplinary discourse. Content and delivery may vary by instructor. Taught with CIVL 4020.",
- "name" : "Bedford Architecture Engineering Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in GSAS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6910",
- "credits" : "2-4",
- "description" : "The student will perform hands on research in the lab of a BCBP faculty to learn basic research methods and techniques, accomplish a small research project and determine whether the lab is a good \u00ef\u00ac\u0081t for thesis research. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Research Rotation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6660",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This graduate/advanced undergraduate hybrid course examines the structural and physiologic properties of muscle, as well as its force production and overall biomechanical function. Muscle structure and function will be explored at the protein, single fiber and whole tissue levels. Discussions will focus primarily on skeletal muscle, and topics will include muscle morphology, cross-bridge theory, molecular motor and actomyosin interaction, Hill-type and Huxley-type models, electromyography, fatigue, muscle inhibition, history-dependent phenomena, in vitro and in vivo muscle function, and the response to injury. Each topic will be introduced and developed utilizing seminal articles in the literature as well as excerpts from texts, and further discussion on current problems and state-of-the-art experimental techniques will draw on the current scientific literature.",
- "name" : "Muscle Mechanics and Modeling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4340",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the observation and interpretation of igneous and metamorphic rocks in outcrop, hand sample, and thin sections. Processes of melting, solidification and migration of magmas; solid state recrystallization and pressure-temperature histories. Heat flow and regional crustal dynamics. Laboratory and field trips required.",
- "name" : "Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2230",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A foundational course in concepts and techniques in digital 3D, for animation, games, and digital art. This course focuses on methods and aesthetics in creating digital 3D objects, spaces, and characters, including modeling, texturing, and lighting, as preparation for further courses in the 3D Animation curriculum. \u00c2",
- "name" : "3D Digital Modeling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4400",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Music Theory II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6510",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Continuity, momentum, and energy equations for continuous fluids; constitutive relations. Kinematics of fluid motion; vorticity and circulation. Potential flow. Navier-Stokes equations. Boundary layer theory. Turbulence. Multicomponent reacting systems. Selected applications.",
- "name" : "Advanced Transport Phenomena I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-4960",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ASTR"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6200",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course concentrates on management issues and study of the fate and transport of hazardous materials in the environment. Management topics are broken down into three broad categories: regulatory issues, those necessary for daily operation of an industrial facility (industrial hygiene, storage, and transportation issues), and preliminary environmental site assessments. Fate and transport issues will be dealt with quantitatively.",
- "name" : "Hazardous Waste Management I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6970",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BMED"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4510",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Sampling, quantization, and reconstruction of signals. Mathematical tools used in the modeling, analysis, and synthesis of discrete-time control systems. Analysis tools include\u00c2 z-transforms, difference equation solutions, state variables, and transfer function techniques. Design tools digital PID controller, root locus, bilinear transformations, compensation techniques and full-state feedback. Applications to sampled-data control.",
- "name" : "Digital Control Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "WRIT-6940",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Studies in Writing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the computational and algorithmic aspects of social processes. Topics covered will be selected to illustrate the diverse challenges in algorithmic social process analysis: social networks and their dynamics; information flow; hidden networks. Algorithms involving social and selfish agents, social choice theory, voting, and auctions. Ranking actors in networks, recommendation systems, peer-review, and aggregation of rankings/reviews.",
- "name" : "Computational Social Processes"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6968",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-2620",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to the properties of light and its interactions with matter. Topics include wave, particle, and ray treatments of light; geometrical optics and imaging systems; interference and diffraction; polarization; and Fourier methods for imaging and pulses. A laboratory is included.",
- "name" : "Optics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-2520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to provide an overview of the art of effective story development. Students will come away with a heightened awareness of the structures and principles that master storytellers apply to their craft in games and other popular media. It is intended for all GSAS majors and other interested students, as well as the prerequisite for the GSAS concentration in Writing.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Game Storytelling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6910",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "Seminars by distinguished guest speakers and graduate students on current problems in environmental and energy engineering. A broad range of subjects is covered. All undergraduates and graduates are strongly encouraged to attend as many lectures as possible.",
- "name" : "Colloquium Series"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4980",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "B Arch Final Project 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4979",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6350",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course will examine alternative models of economic and non-economic decision-making. The course will cover models of rational decision-making under certainty and uncertainty, bounded rationality, preference-based approaches (e.g., loss aversion, ambiguity aversion, disappointment aversion), and heuristic decision-making. The emphasis throughout will be on the proper interpretation of more general models of decision-making as well as real-world applications.",
- "name" : "Microeconomics of Decision-Making"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4420",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The Building Sciences Vertical Studio is a thematically varied studio that has at its basis the use of design methodology to conceptualize, develop and evaluate a range of design projects within the Building Sciences. The Vertical Studio integrates the use of state-of-the-art and recent innovations in the materials, enclosure design, data collection methods, data visualization technologies, spatial mapping, investigative learning technologies and data storytelling methods using quantifiable metrics of performance, as well as through the translation of perceivable qualitative experience within physical environments. This studio is required for 2 nd and 3 rd year students in the Building Sciences Program.",
- "name" : "Building Sciences Vertical Studio"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4760",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Part I of a two-semester sequence focusing on the chemistry, structure, and function of biological molecules, macromolecules, and systems. Topics covered include protein and nucleic acid structure, enzymology, mechanisms of catalysis, regulation, lipids and membranes, carbohydrates, bioenergetics, and carbohydrate metabolism. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either BIOL 4760 \u00c2 or CHEM 4760 .)",
- "name" : "Molecular Biochemistry I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4210",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Aerodynamics and dynamics of lifting rotors in Vertical Take-Off and Landing (VTOL) applications. Design concepts by which rotor weight and stress are minimized and vehicle control is provided. Weight and engine power trends for configuration definition. Center of gravity and aerodynamic lift and moment for equilibrium and desired aircraft attitude. Methods for determining size, weight, and cost for a given payload, useful volume, and specified performance. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "VTOL Aircraft Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-6540",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Topical treatment of current problems and frontiers in igneous petrology, with emphasis on physical and chemical processes. Principles of fluid dynamics and chemical kinetics are applied to the formation and evolution of crust- and mantle-derived magmas.",
- "name" : "Advanced Igneous Petrology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-4963",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4770",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The second semester of the molecular biochemistry sequence. Topics include lipids and lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism and the coenzymes involved in this metabolism, nucleic acid synthesis and chemistry, protein synthesis and degradation, integration of metabolism, photobiology, and photosynthesis. This course is taught in studio mode. Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either BCBP 4770 \u00c2 or CHEM 4770 .",
- "name" : "Molecular Biochemistry II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4470",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Starting with the introduction of the probability distribution of one or two continuous random variables, basic concepts of mean, variance, covariance and correlation coefficient are covered. Description techniques discussed include stem-and-leaf plots, histograms, box plots, and probability plots. Confidence intervals for a single sample and for two samples are constructed on means and variances. The procedure of hypothesis testing is introduced conceptually followed by solving real-life biomedical problems. The design and performance of engineering experiments involving a single factor are discussed.",
- "name" : "Biostatistics for Life Science Applications"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6530",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In this course, there will be a survey of classic papers and current research in computer graphics. Topics include: advanced ray tracing, global illumination, photon mapping, subsurface scattering, mesh generation and simplification, subdivision surfaces, volumetric modeling, procedural modeling and texturing, weathering, physical simulation, appearance models. Course activities include programming assignments, oral presentations, and a term project.\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Advanced Computer Graphics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Criticism I introduces students to both historical and contemporary forms of discourse as it relates to the disciplines of architecture, landscape architecture, and urbanism. The course serves as an introduction to critical thinking and writing and provides students with the necessary analytical, verbal, and written skill sets to effectively participate in the discursive aspects of the disciplines of architecture, landscape architecture, and urbanism.",
- "name" : "Criticism I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6940",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Independent Study"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6050",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to Polymers is a first course on polymer science and structure-property relationships. Topics include chemical and molecular structure; morphology (structure) of amorphous and crystalline polymers; crystallization phenomena; polymer solutions and blends; physical properties of polymers in relation to structure, including rubber elasticity, viscoelasticity, and glass transition; and mechanical and rheological properties and testing.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Polymers"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-2900",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Hands-on research in a faculty member's research laboratory.",
- "name" : "Research in Biochemistry/Biophysics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "DSES-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Readings In Isye"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Microbiology is the study of \"microscopic organisms,\" including members of all the kingdoms of life. The course has two objectives: 1)\u00c2 Provide an overview of the diversity, genetics, and physiology of microorganisms. 2)\u00c2 Review current topics of investigation in Microbiology in detail. Microbes will be studied from a cellular and molecular perspective. This includes structure, nutrition, growth, control, classification, and genetics. This course will provide biology students the necessary background in bacterial genetics, pathogenic microbiology, prokaryotic physiology, eukaryotic microbiology, molecular biology, and microbial ecology.",
- "name" : "Microbiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2466",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The course is required as a foundation for the Building Sciences Program in the 21st century. It will examine a range of architectural projects from the global vernacular, significant historical projects, and contemporary case studies from a broader perspective of energy, climate, materials, resources, health, society and technology. This foundational course aims to contextualize significant built projects and work within the historical shifts in the discipline's roots in building physics originating from an 18th - century mechanical paradigm to a 21st century thermodynamic and eco-systemic view of building sciences. A critical part of this course intends to stimulate the capacity of students to recognize and develop their own insights, voice, and critical appreciation of architectural projects from a broader building sciences perspective. \u00c2",
- "name" : "History and Theory of Building Sciences"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6990",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7030",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course covers the fundamentals of business and corporate strategy, integrating these concepts into an environment of technological change, competition, and entrepreneurship. The course includes the following areas of emphasis: concepts of strategy, industry environment, resources and capabilities of the firm, organization and systems of the firm, the dynamics of competitive advantage, strategic alternative analysis, and strategies in different contexts. The course uses business cases and a project to enrich the theoretical concepts.",
- "name" : "Strategy, Technology, and Competition"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "ARTS 6200 focuses on advanced problem solving through a series of challenging observational drawing projects. Emphasis is placed on developing a sophisticated and convincing use of drawing language to approach traditional subject matter. As students gain greater fluency, they also gain a greater critical awareness and understanding of the artistic decision-making process.",
- "name" : "Advanced Drawing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-6780",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Convex sets and functions, optimality conditions in nonlinear programming, Lagrangian duality, quadratic programming algorithms for nonlinear programming including Newton's method, quasi-Newton methods, conjugate gradient methods, together with proofs of convergence.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Optimization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is the second in a two-semester sequence on research methods and statistics in the behavioral sciences. Students will learn how to analyze data using multiple regression, analysis of variance, factor analysis, principal component analysis, and multi-level linear modeling. Students will also gain proficiency with the R programming language and software environment for statistical computing. Each student will carry out a research project and prepare a formal report that comports with the guidelines from the American Psychological Association.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Research Methods and Statistics II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-6580",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "History and Ethnography is an introductory/intermediate graduate theory and methods seminar that outfits students to undertake original empirical and interpretive work in the humanities and social sciences. The course combines historical and ethnographic approaches with discourse analysis or other qualitative analytic approaches. Such methodologies may also be mixed with quantitative approaches. There are substantial fieldwork and archival components to the course. Both historical and ethnographic methodologies provide a basis for \"capturing\" the \"data\" that provides the evidence base for analysis.",
- "name" : "History and Ethnography"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5160",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course focuses upon contemporary means of producing and communicating architectural ideas.\u00c2 Students will use digital methodologies through all phases of a project as well as advanced representation and digital fabrication techniques.\u00c2 The use of digital modeling as a sketch and iterative tool will be emphasized. Tools taught in Digital Constructs 1 will support softwares taught in Digital Constructs 2. This course is required of all first-year architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.\u00c2 Coordination of the relationship of course content to Graduate Architecture Design 1 will be between the Digital Constructs 1 faculty instructor and the architectural design studio coordinator and faculty.",
- "name" : "Digital Constructs 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6240",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Circadian Biology. Students will read and critique recent primary literature, present current research articles, and lead discussions on new findings in the field.",
- "name" : "Topics in Circadian Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHIL-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PHIL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ESCI-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4590",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course serves as an in-depth overview to medical imaging modalities. First, individual modalities are introduced, including CT, MRI, PET, SPECT, and US. Then, multimodality systems are described. A balance is made among physical, mathematical, algorithmic and architectural contents. Contemporary research and insights to improve the current systems are introduced throughout the course to inspire students and provide an understanding of newer tools under development.\u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Medical Imaging"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-4100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Rigorous development of classical thermodynamics as applied to prediction of materials properties. Nonideal gases, solutions, phase equilibria, chemical equilibria, defects.",
- "name" : "Thermodynamics of Materials"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4100",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course addresses the history of architectural and related developments in selected Western and non-Western civilizations in order to construct a conceptual and strategic understanding of the relationships between architecture, culture, civilization, technology, and thought. In doing so, it will focus on key constructed spatial phenomena of the pre-modern world and, where relevant, elucidate the connection of these works of architecture and their motivating ideals to those of the modern and contemporary world.",
- "name" : "An Architectural Genealogy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6110",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "AC steady-state analysis, three-phase networks, and complex power (brief review). Per-unit system. Practical transformer equivalent circuits. AC power transmission-lines: parameters; equivalent circuits; and steady-state operation. Power flow with transfer limits in balanced three-phase systems. Network power flow problem with solution by numerical methods. Symmetrical components: analysis including sequence networks for three-phase systems. Fault analysis.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Power Engineering Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4967",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4540",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Examines biomechanics of human body movement through developing various models (e.g., lumped mass, planar rigid body, 3D) and exploring current techniques in Forward and Inverse Dynamic approaches.\u00c2 Topics are developed on a classical mechanics foundation, and simulations are constructed using software (e.g., OpenSIM) to describe normal movements, and investigate possible sources of abnormalities due to injury, disease, or dysfunction.",
- "name" : "Biomechanics II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5170",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Building on techniques taught in Digital Constructs 1, this course will expand upon the role of technology in architecture by introducing advanced methods of design analysis and resolution.\u00c2 Students will learn to address issues of optimization, environmental surroundings, structure, and site by using various contemporary analytic softwares. This course is required of all second-year architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.\u00c2 Coordination of the relationship of course content to Graduate Architecture Design 2 will be between the Digital Constructs 2 faculty instructor and the studio coordinator and faculty.",
- "name" : "Digital Constructs 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4490",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Examination of the requirements and approaches for the commercial application of nuclear fusion. Discussion of fusion basics including fusion reactions, competing processes, energy balances, the need for plasmas, plasma confinement, and heating concepts. Analyses of fusion reactor embodiments based on magnetic and inertial confinement concepts. Identification of key physics, engineering, and technology issues associated with fusion development. Consideration of economics, environmental, and resource implications of fusion energy systems.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Fusion Devices and Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Individual projects and readings adapted to the needs of individual students at the advanced level.",
- "name" : "Advanced Individual Projects in Architecture and Environmental Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2960",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4961",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4280",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Design of systems to consider foundations, structures, and constructability; foundation alternatives; structural design to simplify erection; prefabrication, modulation of structures; material handling on a construction site; crane selection and placement; temporary works.",
- "name" : "Design for Constructability"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4340",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An introductory course on physical principles behind the creation of diagnostic medical images. Medical imaging is one of the most exciting and technologically demanding fields of medicine. Topics include radiation interaction, radiation dosimetry, formation and quality of X-ray images, computed tomography (CT), nuclear medicine, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), ultrasound imaging, and radiation detection and safety. Current research on image quality optimization, image-guided radio-surgery, 3D/4D ultrasound imaging, and Monte Carlo simulations are reviewed.",
- "name" : "Physics of Radiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-1200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Sustainability Debates"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4971",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2010",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Intermediate Video is a hands-on intensive course that teaches the language, aesthetics, and techniques of video production. Working in groups and individually, students will develop and produce several short video projects. Emphasis will be on the acquisition of creative and technical production skills in visualizing, scripting, aesthetics, shooting, sound design, and editing.",
- "name" : "Intermediate Video"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6890",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "In this course, design processes in architectural acoustics will be studied from a psychoacoustical perspective. Different concepts to create physical and virtual acoustic spaces will be discussed based on perceptual design goals. Topics include ecological psychoacoustics, sound quality, auditory virtual environments, and auditory computational modeling. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Aural Architecture"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6550",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course reviews the principles of ethical behavior and responsible conduct of research and discusses specific areas of biotechnology research, medical research, and societal issues in the context of these principles. Representative topics include genetic engineering, stem cell research, assisted reproduction, human subjects, animal research, and nanotechnology. Active student participation is expected. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Ethical Issues in Biotechnology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6140",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Principles of limnology applied to the ecological conditions of streams and bodies of fresh water relative to capacity to stabilize organic materials. The economic aspects of water pollution; health aspects of bacterial pollution.",
- "name" : "Stream Pollution Control"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6964",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4960",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6840",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This is an experiential, project-based course where students work on projects for an actual business. Students work\u00c2 in a consulting role for a local company. Practicum in Management is designed and developed for\u00c2 students from all educational backgrounds who want to learn the\u00c2 fundamentals of\u00c2 business as they apply to satisfying a \"customer's need\". Students will work on a team or\u00c2 individually on projects and communicate to the class\u00c2 frequently to facilitate student\u00c2 learning from one another. We begin with some basic tenets of business and an overview\u00c2 of how to develop and oversee a project\u00c2 plan. The course will\u00c2 give you first-hand experience understanding the needs of a consulting client, articulating a\u00c2 plan and executing the plan\u00c2 to fill their needs.",
- "name" : "Practicum in Management"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4750",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to Interactive Computer Graphics, with an emphasis on applications programming. Objects and viewers, and the synthetic camera model. Graphics architectures, the graphics pipeline, clipping, rasterization, and programmable shaders. Input and interaction. Geometric objects, homogeneous coordinates, and transformations. Viewing, hidden surface removal, frame and depth buffers, compositing, and anti-aliasing. Shading, light and materials, texture mapping, ray tracing, and radiosity. Intellectual property concerns. Extensive programming with the OpenGL API and C++.",
- "name" : "Computer Graphics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6230",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A self-contained course that includes topics from number theory, basic cryptography, and protocol security.\u00c2 This is a hybrid course with sufficient depth in both theory and hands-on experience with network protocols. Topics include: Classical Cryptography, Block Ciphers (DES, AES), Information Theoretical Cryptography, Randomness, RNG and Stream Ciphers, Hash and MAC Algorithms, Public-Key Cryptography, Elliptic Curve Cryptography, Digital Signatures and Identification, Internet Attacks, Web Security, SSL and PGP.",
- "name" : "Cryptography and Network Security I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An intensive course designed to provide instruction and stimulate discussion on important topics relevant to biological research.\u00c2 It is loosely divided into three sections: 1) overview of major areas of faculty research; 2) professional development topics such as hypothesis testing and design of experiments, responsible use of statistics, and scientific funding; and 3) scientific writing. This course is required of and limited to first year students in the Biology and Biochemistry/Biophysics Ph.D. programs.",
- "name" : "Biology Core Course II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4770",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The second semester of the Molecular Biochemistry sequence. Topics include lipids and lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism and the coenzymes involved in this metabolism, nucleic acid synthesis and chemistry, protein synthesis and degradation, integration of metabolism, photobiology, and photosynthesis. This course is taught in studio mode. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either BIOL 4770 \u00c2 or BCBP 4770 .)",
- "name" : "Molecular Biochemistry II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4090",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The synergistic combination of mechanical engineering, electronics, control engineering, and computer science in the design process. The key areas of mechatronics studied in depth are control sensors and actuators, interfacing sensors and actuators to a microcomputer, discrete controller design, and real-time programming for control using the C programming language. The unifying theme for this heavily laboratory-based course is the integration of the key areas into a successful mechatronic design.",
- "name" : "Mechatronics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5340",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "In a world of rapid technological change, this course aims to equip future architects with the ability to position, understand, and implement new materials and systems in meaningful ways. The working principles of selected advanced materials and systems are explained and issues of material development, applications, and integration into buildings systems are addressed. Emphasis is also placed on understanding the issues involved when combining and installing new materials or systems into buildings. Students are further introduced to detail development. Sustainability: new materials and systems are explored with the objective of formulating meaningful technological response to critical environmental and societal issues such as resource depletion, environmental degradation, and globalization. This is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Materials and Enclosures"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COMM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6400",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Principles and practice of producing, measuring, and using pressures from atmospheric down to 10-15 atmospheres. Gas kinetics and flow of gases at low pressures. Basic vacuum system calculations. System design and leak detection. Physical and chemisorption of gases. Generation of clean surfaces and study of reactions on them.",
- "name" : "Vacuum Techniques"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6650",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to be a first course in the study of \"systems biology\", to introduce students to the field, the experimental and computational methods that are used within it, and the type of insights that the field can provide to biology. To fully appreciate the complexity of living systems, researchers gather systematic, quantitative measurements of a system's components using cutting-edge omics techniques. In addition, researchers also leverage computing power to describe, model, and predict dynamic behaviors that could otherwise not be perceived in such large-scale omics data. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature. A student cannot get credit for both this course and BIOL 4660 \u00c2 / BCBP 4660 \u00c2 and BCBP 6650 .",
- "name" : "The Biology of Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6340",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The goal of Material Systems and Production is threefold: to develop a fundamental understanding of materials through first principles, material classification, material production, and material impacts, to develop material models based on material properties and tests, and to develop criteria to make reasoned choices for the implementation of materials in the built environment. Students will engage in directed research projects through the lens of material with the intent of opportunistically identifying intrinsic material properties, exploiting production forming logics, and developing a prototype detail assembly for testing. B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.Arch. students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
- "name" : "Material Systems and Productions"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6968",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-2930",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Students may obtain credit for chemistry-related experience in nonclassroom situations. For credit to be awarded, a brief proposal outlining the nature of the experience to be undertaken must be given to the department in advance for approval of its suitability. A written report is required at the end of the experience. A maximum of 4 credits is allowed, but this may be made up in more than one experience.",
- "name" : "Out-of-Classroom Experience in Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4740",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Design analysis and performance characteristics of building environmental systems, emphasizing heating, cooling, ventilation, and lighting systems. In addition, building electrical systems, acoustics, water, waste, and drainage systems are covered in terms of fundamental theory, designs, and calculations. Case studies, field trips, and system design project work are required.",
- "name" : "Building Systems and Environment"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4540",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of biological sequence analysis, including algorithms for pairwise sequence alignment, multiple sequence alignment, phylogenetic analysis, and database searching. Concepts covered include homology, sequence similarity, parsimony, mechanisms and metrics of molecular evolution, biological data bases, database search algorithms (BLAST), and statistical significance. Selected topics include hidden Markov models, bootstrap analysis and gene finding.\u00c2 Modern sequence analysis software will be provided. Laptop computers and programming knowledge are required.\u00c2 Meets jointly with BIOL 6410 .",
- "name" : "Sequence Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-1200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Continued examination of the principles of chemistry in more depth, considering thermodynamics, advanced concepts in chemical equilibrium and acid-base chemistry, kinetics of chemical reactions, and electrochemistry. Students cannot get credit for this course and CHEM 1210 .",
- "name" : "Chemistry II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-4320",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Behavioral Neuroscience"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4430",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Description, fundamentals, and engineering features of processes using microbial, plant\u00c2 or animal cells or their enzymes. Topics include review of biochemistry, review of microbiology, computer simulation, growth, death, aseptic techniques, continuous culture, fermenter design, sterilization, mixed cultures, process scale up, immobilized cells and enzymes, recovery of products, and process economics. Weekly exercises requiring personal computers.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Biochemical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6990",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Readings in Economics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores the complex roles and relationships of art, education, and technology by giving students direct experience in the community. Students will develop a plan to work with a media arts center, community organization, or school; final teams will produce real-world arts and education projects that can become significant additions to their professional portfolio. The projects can include a range of practices including but not limited to traditional arts, creative writing, creative IT, community art, and activism. Graduate students who take this course will write a mid-term and final paper, plus offer an independent public presentation of their work.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Art, Community, and Technology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6490",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Stress invariants. Polyaxial stress-strain relation for strain-hardening materials. Ideal plasticity, various yield conditions, and associated flow rules. Variational principles. Limit analysis. Applications in elastic-plastic stress analysis, metal forming, plastic collapse, and plastic instability.",
- "name" : "Plasticity"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6360",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The studio addresses interdisciplinary exchange within research practice, understanding that buildings operate within complex dynamic systems.\u00c2 Buildings and their material systems are composed of interdependent systemic relationships at multiple scales \u00e2\u0080\u0093 'Built Ecologies' \u00e2\u0080\u0093 operating as metabolic systems within and upon existent natural and made systems. Design is a method of research, discovering and developing new systems and strategies transferable to many sites.\u00c2 Course taught in New York City.",
- "name" : "Interdisciplinary Research Studio"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6280",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course offers a comprehensive explanation of the technology and physics of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) such as infrared, visible-spectrum, ultraviolet, and white LEDs made from III\u00e2\u0080\u0093V semiconductors. The elementary properties of LEDs and material on device structure, packaging, reflectors, phosphor materials, light extraction, and junction temperature are discussed. Applications of the LED focus on illumination, fiber, and free-space communication.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Light Emitting Diodes"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6290",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will present the foundations of numerical (deterministic) and Monte Carlo methods that are widely used in the modeling and analysis of nuclear reactor design, radiation dosimetry, and radiation shielding.\u00c2 Emphasis will be placed on the three fundamental aspects of computation methods: (i) discretization methods for the transport and diffusion equations; (ii) iterative methods for solving the system of discretized equations; and (iii) Monte Carlo methods for solving general fixed-source and eigunvalue problems.",
- "name" : "Radiation Transport Methods"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6800",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Media And Memory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4230",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This class studies, creates, and publicly presents\u00c2 inflatable sculptures. The history of inflatables are examined, with special attention paid to how they have been used in political movements that imagine utopian social futures, and how those applications contrast with commercial uses (such as advertising) that have become commonplace in public spaces today. Throughout the class will explore, design, and build inflated structures that may include video and sound elements.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Inflatable Sculpture"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6970",
- "credits" : "0-4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6140",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Queer Ecologies is an undergraduate and graduate arts course that uses art to think about our eco-futures. We will look at the disruptive nature of Cartesian thinking and binary positioning in relation to sexuality and ecologies. The \"queering\" is a means to refuse this binary thinking and consider expansive interdisciplinary practices that have evolved from LGBTQ+ and feminist theory, decolonial thinking, extinction and death studies, environmental justice, critiques of science and big pharma, biopolitics, bioethics, biology, science fiction, aesthetics, art and play. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Queer Ecologies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-2120",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to stress and strain; observation, measurement, recording, and interpretation of rock structures including joints, faults, folds, and fabrics. Interpretation of structures from geologic maps. Structures and regional tectonics. Laboratory and field trips required.",
- "name" : "Structural Geology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LGHT-4770",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course provides students with an in-depth understanding of the components of advanced lighting systems and enables them to critically explore applications of those components. Through lectures, readings, assignments, and application projects, students acquire working knowledge of the relevant products and techniques for lighting application and develop solutions to lighting problems. Students will undertake practical applications of advanced lighting technologies and develop skills in the application of photometric data, use of manual and computer-based lighting calculations, and the development of lighting specifications.",
- "name" : "Lighting Technologies and Applications"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6530",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to groundwater hydrology, well hydraulics, permeability, seepage, flow nets, filter criteria, dewatering, slope stabilization, practical applications.",
- "name" : "Seepage, Drainage, and Groundwater"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6910",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The students take active part in research, under the supervision of a Biology faculty adviser by mutual agreement.",
- "name" : "Research Rotation l"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-4210",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of industrial wastes. Application of unit operations and processes to the treatment of waste streams. Consideration of recovery and/or recycling of useful products.",
- "name" : "Industrial Waste Treatment and Disposal"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4030",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to modeling and control of dynamic chemical processes. Topics include the development of first-principles models, linearization and state space form, input/output (transfer function) form, design and tuning of PID controllers, model-based control, frequency response for robustness analysis, case studies in multivariable control, numerical analysis, and simulation.",
- "name" : "Chemical Process Dynamics and Control"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6140",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An advanced analysis of current problems confronting major American industries, regulated and unregulated. Recent changes in growth patterns, market structures, and pricing policies are examined. Considerable emphasis is placed on emerging trends in technology and public policy, which are likely to affect significantly the future of these industries.",
- "name" : "Advanced Structure of Industry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USNA-2940",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "An individually arranged independent study course under supervision of a member of the Naval Science Department.",
- "name" : "Readings in Naval Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4590",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Covers advanced estimation and inference techniques for data analysis and policy evaluation. Topics will vary from year to year to introduce advanced statistical methods used in recent literature. Topics may include visualization techniques to summarize and display high dimensional data, selected topics in discrete choice models, spatial analysis, and analysis of panel data. Particularly, methods for panel data will be emphasized. This includes fixed, random, mixed, and multi-level effects models to control for or account for variation from individual characteristics. Dynamic panel data models consider lagged dependent variables as regressors. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Advanced Data Analytics & Policy Evaluation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6620",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This is a technology-based design studio emphasizing the materialization and making of architectural design projects. The integration of building code requirements for fire protection, life safety, accessibility, building environmental systems, structure, construction, and materiality is central to the effective achievement of design intent. Students become aware of how these issues affect and inform design decisions. They learn to integrate technology, systems, and materials in the comprehensive resolution of building design and gain exposure to construction documents and design documentation. Construction and site visits are an integral part of the studio as is an integrated electronic media seminar on CAD applications. Students must coregister for ARCH 5380, Professional Practice 1, a concurrent 2-credit course that introduces codes, the regulatory process, agreements, contract documents, building design cost control, and administration. This course is required of all architecture students in the M.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Graduate Architecture Design 4"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6920",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This seminar builds upon Doctoral Seminar 1 by cultivating a disciplinary-specific approach to the development of research problem definition and research methods. The topics considered will be drawn from and situated within the various fields of study that support doctoral study in architectural sciences, as well as from research activities in related fields in engineering, science, and the humanities. Case studies of prototypical architectural science research will evaluate current practice, identifying state of knowledge with the field and the resources and settings necessary to support the research activity.",
- "name" : "Doctoral Seminar 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6240",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Neural networks are program and memory at once, useful where traditional techniques fail, i.e., for artificial speech and image recognition. Emphasis on existing and emerging engineering applications. Parallel distributed processing, Hebb's rule, Hopfield net, back-propagation algorithm, perceptrons, unsupervised learning, Kohenen self-organizing map, genetic algorithms, neocognitron, adaline. Illustrated with computer programs and lectures.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Neural Networks"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4640",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces various computational approaches for creating intelligent conversational agents. This course will take the form of a combination of lectures, presentations by students, class discussions, and independent study.",
- "name" : "Intelligent Virtual Agents"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-1962",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6350",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The goal of this course is to develop a general familiarity with the structural design of masonry elements and structures.\u00c2 This includes exposure to the historical development of design specifications as well as specific design procedures unique to this material.",
- "name" : "Masonry Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-2630",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The application of the basic laws and phenomena of science to particulate matter, specifically soils. Basic physical and mechanical structural characteristics of soil. Equilibrium and movement of water. Flow through porous media. Effective stress. Stress-strain-time relations. Basic laboratory work as related to practice.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Geotechnical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-1200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to introduce a wide variety of concepts and applications in the broad subject of economics, economics being the study of people's choices. Traditionally, these choices have been framed as how to best employ scarce resources to produce goods and services and distribute them for consumption. To describe these choices the cause will introduce the concepts of opportunity cost, demand and supply theory, and market structures. It will consider the role of government in making resource allocation choices. Students will also study important macroeconomic data such as gross domestic product, economic growth rates, inflation, and unemployment. Additionally, studied will be the role of money and banking in the economy and short-run events such as recessions and expansions. Overall, the course will provide the student with an encompassing view of how economic principles and concepts relate to the broader economy and society. \u00c2 Credit cannot be obtained for both IHSS 1200 \u00c2 and ECON 1200 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Introductory Economics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LGHT-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Individual projects and readings adapted to the needs of individual students at the advanced level.",
- "name" : "Advanced Individual Projects in Lighting"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4960",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHME"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6830",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Review of fundamentals of thermodynamics, chemical kinetics, fluid mechanics, and modern diagnostics. Discussion of flame propagation, thermal and chain explosions, stirred reactors, detonations, droplet combustion, and turbulent jet flames. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Combustion"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4060",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to the technical techniques and principles of computer animation with a focus on rigging, skinning, character fx, particle simulations, compositioning and rendering. Lectures, discussion, and exposure to contemporary work enable students to develop skills in this rapidly evolving field.",
- "name" : "3D Visual Effects"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4020",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This studio/seminar consists of longer projects with attention to concept, process, and finish. The student will either work individually or as a member on a team and be expected to have a vision or concept they are driven to create. Some possible topics covered may include virtual environments, advanced shader networks, MEL, compositing, non photorealistic rendering, 3D graphics programming, game engines, or motion capture.",
- "name" : "Advanced Digital 3D Projects"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6969",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-4600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A course emphasizing advanced concepts and methods from calculus. Topics include: multivariable integral theorems (Green's, divergence, Stokes', Reynolds transport), extrema of multivariable functions (including Taylor's theorem and Lagrange multipliers), the calculus of variations (Euler\u00e2\u0080\u0093Lagrange equations, constraints, principle of least action), and Cartesian tensors (calculus, invariants, representations).",
- "name" : "Advanced Calculus"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-2930",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Credit to be given for an out-of-classroom experience related to biochemistry and/or biophysics (BCBP) having intellectual content relevant to the student's educational or career goals, subject to approval of a written proposal and a final written report. The adviser (for BCBP majors) or, with permission, any BCBP faculty member may serve as evaluator. For each out-of-classroom experience a student may register only once.",
- "name" : "Out-of-Classroom Experience in Biochemistry/Biophysics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-1040",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course combines an introduction to traditional visual arts and digital media and serves as a foundation for work in game design and interactive art. Using studio projects that incorporate physical media, digital imaging and computer code, students develop their formal vocabulary, observational skills, and their understanding of issues in visual and interactive arts.",
- "name" : "Art for Interactive Media"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4250",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Through direct experience in the community,\u00c2 this course explores the complex roles and relationships of art, education, and technology. Students will develop a plan to work with a media arts center, community organization, or school; final teams will produce real-world arts and education projects that ultimately will be realized as significant additions to their professional portfolio. The projects can include a range from traditional arts practice to creative writing, creative IT models, to community art and activism.",
- "name" : "Art, Community, and Technology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
- "name" : "Communication Studies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6230",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This class studies, creates, and publicly presents\u00c2 inflatable sculptures. The history of inflatables are examined, with special attention paid to how they have been used in political movements that imagine utopian social futures, and how those applications contrast with commercial uses (such as advertising) that have become commonplace in public spaces today. Throughout, the class will explore, design, and build inflated structures that may include video and sound elements. Graduate students will also be required to write a paper.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Inflatable Sculpture"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6140",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This is a course on introduction to computational fluid dynamics. This course provides knowledge necessary to model engineering applications consistent with energy and fluid-dynamic physical laws. Discretization models include: overview of finite difference, finite element, and finite volume discretization approaches, physical problem classification, discretization techniques, and numerical guidelines. Applications include: incompressible and compressible flows, laminar and turbulence flows, with introduction to computational fluid dynamics turbulence modeling, followed by boundary layer, and parabolized flow simplifications.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Introduction to CFD"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4410",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Review of atomic and nuclear physics and quantum mechanics; application to atomic, molecular and nuclear systems; particle and photon emissions; photon/particle interactions; quantum statistics; applications of nuclear physics to nuclear data, medical physics, accelerators, fusion systems, nuclear reactors; key measurements and databases; basic level of technical writing and presentation.",
- "name" : "Applied Atomic and Nuclear Physics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-1960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ASTR"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Model systems provide the experimental basis for understanding the conserved principles of developmental biology.\u00c2 This class will cover fundamental topics including axis specification, pattern formation, cell fate and determination, cell differentiation, senescence, and apoptosis. Emphasis will be placed on integrating gene function and cell behavior with development. Model systems include vertebrates (e.g. frog and chick) and genetically tractable invertebrates (e.g. fruit flies and roundworms).",
- "name" : "Developmental Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4170",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Environmental Parametrics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1974",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6750",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This seminar is the first required course of the two-semester, 3rd-year Final Project course sequence in the M.Arch program and as such serves as a prerequisite to the spring semester Final Project Design Studio (ARCH 6XXX).\u00c2 The Design Research Seminar provides a forum for readings and discussions as well as design and/or material experimentation as it relates to the respective Graduate Final Project instructor's thematic framework.\u00c2 The seminar also covers fundamentals related to standard methods of research and analysis.\u00c2 This course is required of all architecture graduate students\u00c2 in the M.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Final Project Design Research Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4970",
- "credits" : "2-4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ERTH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-2050",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Hydrostatics; Pressure Measurement; Fluid Properties; Application of Control Volume Analysis to Conservation of Mass, Energy and Momentum Principles; Bernoulli Equation for Ideal Flow; Dimensional Analysis; Pipe Flow and Pipe Networks; Pump Performance; Pipes in Pipelines. \u00c2 A laboratory component will illustrate the topics studied.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Fluid Mechanics for Civil and Environmental Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7050",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course immerses students in the practices and activities that lead to the creation of innovative new products and services. Through a team-based learning experience, students generate an idea for a new product or service and follow the development process from conception through planning for commercialization. Through lectures, cases, and practical exercises, students learn how to overcome hurdles inherent in new product and service development. Students apply this knowledge in all phases of product development, including concept testing, product design, production planning, and market strategy. The project undertaken in this course provides student teams with an opportunity to create a new venture that may then be carried forward utilizing Rensselaer's technological resources such as the Incubator Program and Rensselaer's Technology Park.",
- "name" : "Design, Manufacturing, and Marketing I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4460",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Animation Production is designed to give an animation industry experience by completing the entire process of creating an animated short. Learning long-term time management and finding the key time cost/benefits will be essential to success. The course schedule is setup to replicate the industry model of frequent updates and feedback \u00e2\u0080\u0093 dailies.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Animation Production"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4830",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This studio is a technology-based design studio emphasizing the materialization and making of architectural design projects. The integration of building code requirements for fire protection, life safety, accessibility, building environmental systems, structure, construction, and materiality is central to the effective achievement of design intent. Students become aware of how these issues affect and inform design decisions. They learn to integrate technology, systems, and materials in the comprehensive resolution of building design and gain exposure to construction documents and design documentation. Construction and site visits are an integral part of the studio as is an integrated electronic media seminar on CAD applications. Students must coregister for ARCH 4540 Professional Practice 1, a concurrent 2-credit course that introduces codes, the regulatory process, agreements, contract documents, building design cost control, and administration. This course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Integrated Design Development"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4760",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Part I of a two-semester sequence focusing on the chemistry, structure, and function of biological molecules, macromolecules, and systems. Topics covered include protein and nucleic acid structure, enzymology, mechanisms of catalysis, regulation, lipids and membranes, carbohydrates, bioenergetics, and carbohydrate metabolism.",
- "name" : "Molecular Biochemistry I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4120",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the computational and mathematical techniques for practical financial applications. The course will emphasize the algorithmic side of finance. Topics will be selected from pricing (options and derivatives), trading, risk-evaluation, selfish agents, sequential decisions, and portfolio optimization. Examples of the mathematical and algorithmic techniques covered are martingale measures, risk-neutral pricing and Monte Carlo, dynamic programing, and stochastic processes.",
- "name" : "Computational Finance"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Rotocraft Perf Stab Ctl"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6250",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This is an advanced graduate level course on carbohydrates covering their physicochemical properties, chemical and biochemical synthesis and analysis. \u00c2 The biological activity of polysaccharides, glycoproteins, proteoglycans, and glycolipids, and the role of glycomics in development and disease will be discussed. \u00c2 The application of glycotechnology and glycoengineering for the preparation of therapeutic glycans and glycan-coated materials will be covered.",
- "name" : "Glycochemistry, Glycobiology, and Glychotechnology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4990",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Independent research, supervised by a faculty member, culminating in a written thesis and oral presentation.",
- "name" : "Senior Research Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Individual projects and readings adapted to the needs of individual students.",
- "name" : "Projects in Architecture and Environmental Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4300",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Communication Internship"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6330",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will examine how bioinformatics, functional genomics, and other modern biotechnologies are used to speed the discovery of new drugs, especially those small organic molecules to treat human diseases with large unmet therapeutic need. Special emphasis will be placed on molecular target identification and validation as well as high-throughput screening to identify a lead. Topics to be discussed will include transgenic mice, RNA interference, DNA and protein microarrays, homogenous time-resolved fluorescence bioassays, phage-display, combinatorial chemistry, and parallel synthesis. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and CHEM 4330 .",
- "name" : "Drug Discovery"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4260",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A\u00c2 capstone design experience that engages students from biomedical, computer systems, electrical, industrial, materials, and mechanical engineering on teams in an open-ended engineering design problem in preparation for professional practice. With the guidance of a multidisciplinary team of faculty members and instructional support staff, students apply knowledge and skills from prior coursework. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Multidisciplinary Capstone Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4380",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This is the first of a two-semester sequence for seniors intended to be a \"capstone\" design project where students have the opportunity to utilize the broad range of their undergraduate experience in an interdisciplinary design project. Projects are selected to provide interaction between nuclear engineering and engineering physics majors to provide exposure to cross-fertilization of ideas and team interaction, which simulates anticipated future professional experience. The product of each design project is a comprehensive report or design proposal having both global and detail completeness. Under some circumstances, the project may involve development of cost information necessary to effect construction and may actually involve construction and commissioning of the designed apparatus.\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Nuclear Engineering Senior Design Project I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6350",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught.",
- "name" : "Data Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BUSN-6310",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "In this course, students use financial analysis to evaluate organizational performance.\u00c2 Students calculate and evaluate financial reports and ratios, drawing recommendations for improving performance from their intemporal and cross-competition analysis.\u00c2 Students use optimization and simulation techniques to model the impact of changes on the organization's financial performance.\u00c2 Students develop budgets for new products and ventures using sound principals and techniques, evaluating capital sourcing options and costs.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Leaders Making Financial Decisions"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6969",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-1960",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PHYS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4320",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In this course, students will explore how a very wide variety of data and media relate to our ever-evolving environment. We will build critical media literacy through encounters with media as both consumers and producers, learning along the way about how media literacy relates to other forms of literacy: ecological, political, scientific, historical, epistemological, etc.\u00c2 Simultaneously, we will question what \"the environment\" means, critique the limits of \"sustainability\" discourse, examine our assumptions around \"the media,\" question notions of \"data\" (big, little, quantitative, qualitative), etc. We will situate all of these terms in broader contexts and examine their histories, connotations, and connections.",
- "name" : "Environmental Media & Data"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4971",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2750",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Private applied music lessons provide weekly instruction in instrumental and vocal performance. The goal of this class is to develop the student's musical ability relative to capacity and interest. A supplementary lesson fee is charged.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Private Music Lessons"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6510",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "A seminar in research methods. This course will review the major considerations and tasks involved in conducting research in areas appropriate to the architectural sciences. It introduces the essential aspects of designing, supporting, and conducting a research project. Major areas that will be considered include: history and present status of the quantitative and qualitative methods, strengths and weaknesses of each method and approach, location of resources, information and data, sampling or selection of research materials and/or participants, data collection, measurement, data analysis, and research writing and style.",
- "name" : "Disciplinary Research Methods Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1320",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course examines the emergence of environmental consciousness in the United States throughout the 20th century. Students in this course will study the original writings of some of the most important thinkers and activists in the history of environmentalism, examine the social contexts in which their ideas formed, and consider their relevance to contemporary sustainability issues.",
- "name" : "A Century of Environmental Thought"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISCI-4610",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Students taking the Minor in Astrobiology are required to complete 3 credits of research in an Astrobiology-related discipline with a RARE-affiliated faculty member. Concurrent or in a later semester, students will enroll in ISCI 4610 with the same faculty member to prepare their research results for dissemination.",
- "name" : "Capstone in Astrobiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4180",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course continues the practice and study of Deep Listening beyond the foundational course \"Deep Listening.\" Topics include a wide range of investigations, research, and creativity in Deep Listening.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Topics in Deep Listening"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6520",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces quantitative analysis for financial markets and instruments. The course covers applications of mathematical tools and optimization modeling to portfolio selection and fund management, risk analysis, hedging and valuation of financial assets, and financial planning under uncertainty. The course introduces applications of calculus, differential equations, and introduces stochastic processes within a financial markets context to address arbitrage pricing and equilibrium asset pricing models.",
- "name" : "Financial Modeling and Optimization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6910",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This seminar introduces a disciplinary-specific approach to the development of research problem definition and research methods. The topics considered will be drawn from and situated within the various fields of study that support doctoral study in architectural sciences, as well as from research activities in related fields in engineering, science, and the humanities. Case studies of prototypical architectural science research will evaluate current practice, identifying state of knowledge with the field and the resources and settings necessary to support the research activity.",
- "name" : "Doctoral Seminar 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-6300",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In-depth analysis of metamorphic phase equilibria in pelites, amphibolites, carbonates, and ultramafic rocks. Schreinemakers' analysis, petrogenetic grids, P-T-X relations, reaction space, geothermometry, geobarometry, and analysis of zoned prophyroblasts. Heat flow, metamorphic, and tectonic evolution. Laboratory involves analysis of textural relations in thin section and computer exercises.",
- "name" : "Advanced Metamorphic Petrology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4890",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introductory materials of engineering acoustics for students with basic knowledge in mathematics (at least one level of first-year college). Much of the course material is taken from the textbook \"Acoustics for Engineers\" by Blauert and Xiang (2nd Ed.). The course includes mechanic and acoustic oscillations,\u00c2 the wave equations in fluids, \u00c2 governing equations for horns and ducts, spherical sound sources and arrays, piston membranes, diffraction and scattering, dissipation,\u00c2 reflection, refraction and absorption, isolation of air- and structure-borne sounds, noise propagation and noise control. B.S. and B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S.Arch. Acoustics students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
- "name" : "Engineering Acoustics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The phenomenological, mechanistic, and micro-structural aspects of the mechanical properties of materials are developed, with particular emphasis on the similarities and differences among various material systems including metals, ceramics, and polymers.\u00c2 Phenomenological aspects of the three-dimensional characteristics of stress and strain, various yield criteria, elastic behavior, viscoelastic behavior, plastic behavior, statistical aspects of brittle fracture and fracture mechanics are presented.\u00c2 Mechanistic and micro-structural topics include edge and screw dislocation behavior, slip systems, critical resolved shear stress, dislocation multiplication and interactions, barriers to motion, polymer chain conformation and entropy.",
- "name" : "Advanced Mechanical Properties of Materials"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4420",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A course dealing primarily with physicochemical properties of substances on a molecular basis. Chemical kinetics, quantum chemistry, spectroscopy, and statistical mechanics.",
- "name" : "Microscopic Physical Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-1030",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a hands-on introduction to film making. Students study a selection of great films; and learn how to make movies using lightweight field production equipment. Throughout the course students produce a variety of short videos in different genres, and develop their critical capacity for analyzing cinema and other forms of motion picture storytelling. The class ends with a mini film festival where everyone presents their work.",
- "name" : "Digital Filmmaking"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-2540",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Application of mechanics to the study of normal, diseased, and traumatized musculo-skeletal system. Areas covered include determination of joint and muscle forces, mechanical properties of biological tissues, and structural analysis of bone-implant systems. Case studies are discussed to illustrate the role of biomechanics and biomaterials in the design of implants.",
- "name" : "Biomechanics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-4941",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Path Integral Modeling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6820",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Research Methods In Acoustics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A survey course in modern astrophysics with an emphasis on stellar astrophysics and interstellar matter; topics include star formation, the structure and observable properties of normal and degenerate stars; and the composition, dynamics, and stability of the interstellar medium.",
- "name" : "Astrophysics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6850",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course is intended to give students a state-of-the-art understanding in multicomponent flow phenomena. Applications in the chemical process, petroleum recovery, and fossil/nuclear power industries will be given. Specific areas of coverage include two-phase: fluid mechanics, pressure drop, modeling and analysis, stability analysis, critical flow and dynamic waves, flow regime analysis, and phase separation and distribution phenomena.",
- "name" : "An Introduction to Multiphase Flow and Heat Transfer II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAR-0010",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course is an overview of leadership fundamentals such as setting direction, problem-solving, listening, presenting briefs, providing feedback, and using effective writing skills. Students explore dimensions of leadership values, attributes, skills, and actions in the context of practical, hands-on, and interactive exercises. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 1010 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of Military Science Lab I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2500",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course surveys multiple approaches to the\u00c2 Western art music traditions from a contemporary global, multicultural context. The inter-relationships between music, society and cultural forces is emphasized. Students learn to recognize and describe the basic components of music, like texture, tonality, rhythm, dynamics, and melody Lectures are supplemented by listening assignments and in-class demonstrations. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Histories of Western Music"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6730",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A basic course in tribology that covers both the fundamental and applied aspects of the subject. Content includes viscometry, the Reynolds equation, thrust and journal bearings (including design), thermal effects, dynamic loading and instability of bearings, rolling contact bearings, dry bearings, and theories of wear. This course includes design principles and data and is basic to other courses offered in tribology.",
- "name" : "Tribology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-6590",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Mathematical foundation and/or applications of partial differential equations. Possible topics include soliton theory and applications, wavelets and PDEs, scattering theory, hyperbolic conservation laws.",
- "name" : "Topics in Partial Differential Equations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4070",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An intermediate hands-on studio course in 3D computer animation, acting, dialog, cinematography, and story building.",
- "name" : "3D Animation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4840",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A broad introduction to statistical machine learning. Topics include supervised learning: generative/discriminative learning, parametric/non-parametric learning, neural networks, support vector machines; unsupervised learning: clustering, dimensionality reduction, kernel methods; learning theory: bias/variance tradeoffs, practical advice; online learning and reinforcement learning. Recent applications of machine learning, such as to data mining, robot navigation, speech recognition, image processing, and signal processing.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Machine Learning"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4440",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Application of linear feedback theory to the design of large-scale, integrated control systems. Derivation of complex mathematical models of physical systems. Synthesis of appropriate control laws to provide stability. Simulation of complex control systems on digital computers.",
- "name" : "Control Systems Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5360",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Design analysis and performance characteristics of building environmental systems, emphasizing heating, cooling, ventilation, and lighting systems. In addition, building electrical systems, acoustics, water, waste, and drainage systems are covered in terms of fundamental theory, designs, and calculations. Case studies, field trips, and system design project work are required. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Building Systems and the Environment"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6480",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Compiler Design Theory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6260",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Fundamentals of transportation network analysis, including graph representations of transportation networks, shortest path search algorithms, static traffic assignment and user equilibrium, and dynamic traffic assignment. Focus on how basic mathematical analysis tools such as linear and nonlinear programming can be used to analyze transportation network problems. The objective of this course is to introduce students to transportation network analysis fundamentals so that they are equipped with basic skills to analyze related problems in this area.",
- "name" : "Transportation Network Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6050",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Linear and non-linear applications of operational amplifiers, with an emphasis on circuit design. Non-ideal operational amplifier behavior, including both static and dynamic characteristics.\u00c2 Amplifier stability and frequency compensation techniques.\u00c2 Operational amplifier-based oscillators. Circuit noise.",
- "name" : "Advanced Electronic Circuits"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ADMN-1100",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Portfolio Development"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4280",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In 3D Animation, the technical director (or \"TD\") covers roles including character rigging, lighting setup, custom tools, and other parts of the pipeline that involve the technical work needed to support artistic creativity.\u00c2 In this course we will focus on rigging, covering basic and intermediate rigging techniques for characters in Maya including bipeds, facial rigs, motion capture and game engine pipelines and basic scripting in MEL and Python.\u00c2 We will emphasize an animator-friendly approach to rig design, utilizing both the technical capabilities of Maya and good UI and UX principles to produce rigs that are both powerful and easy to use. \u00c2",
- "name" : "3D Technical Direction"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-2960",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6290",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A continuation of ECSE 6230 . Physical operation and modeling of charge-coupled devices, junction field-effect transistors, bipolar junction transistors and heterojunction devices. Studies of heterojunction devices emphasize the exploitation of particular quantum-mechanical phenomena to achieve unique device behavior. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Semiconductor Devices and Models II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5390",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course covers topics that are essential to developing an effective professional architectural practice. The course will address professional obligations and ethics, contracts, registration, office organization, and management. The course will emphasize effective communication, negotiating, public speaking, and team development. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Professional Practice 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Independent study of selected readings in the fields of biochemistry and biophysics, supervised by a faculty member.",
- "name" : "Readings in Biochemistry/Biophysics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2230",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Architecture Design 3"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4150",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A two-term laboratory course on experimental analysis of the operations and processes of chemical engineering. Emphasis is placed on planning of experiments, data evaluation, and report writing.",
- "name" : "Chemical Engineering Laboratory I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4850",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A study of the fundamental principles of the ecology of plants and animals. Interrelationships between organisms and their environments are discussed as well as material and energy balances in the ecosystem. Emphasis on the biology of populations (producers, consumers, and decomposers).",
- "name" : "Principles of Ecology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-2140",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to the application of chemistry to problems in the Earth and Environmental Sciences. Topics include thermodynamics and phase equilibria as applied to mineral stability, rock evolution, and water chemistry; stable isotope systematics; radiogenic isotope systematics; trace element geochemistry, organic geochemistry, and geochemical cycles.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Geochemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6970",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BCBP"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CIVL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6970",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHME"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4900",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is an experiential, project-based course where students work on projects for an actual business. Students can\u00c2 work on their own startup idea, on RCOS projects that have\u00c2 commercial potential, or in a consulting role for a local company. Practicum in Management is designed and developed for students from all educational backgrounds who want to learn the\u00c2 fundamentals of\u00c2 business as they apply to satisfying a \"customer's need\". Students will work on a team or\u00c2 individually on projects and communicate to the class\u00c2 frequently to facilitate student\u00c2 learning from one another. We begin with some basic tenets of business and an overview\u00c2 of how to develop and oversee a project\u00c2 plan. The course will help you begin to\u00c2 understand the process by which an idea can be developed into a business or to\u00c2 recognize that there is no business case,\u00c2 quickly. Alternatively, if you are working for a\u00c2 \"customer\" it will give you first-hand experience understanding their needs, articulating a\u00c2 plan and executing the plan\u00c2 to fill the need of your client.",
- "name" : "Practicum in Management"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4880",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This 4-credit course will explore global environmental cycles, patterns, and changes. It will discuss elemental cycles of phosphorus, nitrogen, and carbon, and pollutants such as mercury, lead, and CFCs, and how changes in these cycles influence organisms and ecosystems.\u00c2 Also discussed will be\u00c2 large-scale biotic processes and theory about ecosystem dynamics. Major environmental issues such as acid rain,\u00c2 eutrophication, climate change, and land use conversation will also be discussed.",
- "name" : "Global Environmental Change"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4930",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Designed for first-semester senior Communication, Media, and Design majors, Pro-Seminar is the capstone course for the development of the Senior Project.\u00c2 Students will create a professional portfolio piece that showcases their work in the diverse disciplines of communication and media \u00c2",
- "name" : "Pro-Seminar in Communication, Media, and Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1140",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is an introduction to the philosophy of mind and cognitive science. Students meet in small sections to have class discussions and debates about questions like: What are minds? Are minds physical or non-physical? Do\u00c2 humans have free will? Does reliance on technology turn humans into cyborgs? How close are humans to building an intelligent robot or machine? Do we want this to be a goal? Students will learn how make a philosophical argument, and how to express them in writing or through an oral presentation.",
- "name" : "Minds and Machines"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6460",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Stochastic response of lumped parameter and continuous systems to random excitation, wave propagation, power spectral densities, covariance and cross covariance functions, transfer functions, application of procedure to wind and earthquake engineering. Review of current literature.",
- "name" : "Advanced Structural Dynamics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-2900",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This seminar course addresses a range of issues involving engineering and public policy, innovation systems and economic development, and the National Academy's Engineering Grand Challenges for the 21st Century.",
- "name" : "ECSE Enrichment Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6470",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Muscle & Cardiac Biology. Students will read and critique primary papers, present current research articles, and lead critical discussions of topics listed in the class schedule.",
- "name" : "Muscle & Cardiac Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-6222",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Working directly with a faculty member, students build machine learning systems that can be used as the foundation for decision-making intelligences, where learning systems transition from recommendations to decision capacities. Over the semester, the student proposes the model, develops the model, and trains the system to improve performance.",
- "name" : "Deep Learning in AI Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6550",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Visualizing data is a key step in understanding many problems. This course is designed to introduce students to methods of visualizing many different types of data, such as images, three-dimensional surfaces, flow fields, and medical data. Both existing visualization software and program custom visualizations using C++ and OpenGL will be used. Course activities include discussion of recent and classic research papers, weekly homework assignments, in-class critiques of visualization artifacts, and a final project to explore creative uses of these techniques. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Interactive Visualization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-6600",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Ecol, Econ, Values & Policy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-2230",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Programming In Perl"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-1010",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to biological systems. Discussion of problems associated with biological organization, scaling, and hierarchy. Major topics covered include evolution, genetics and medicine, and ecology. The course considers the biological components of various environmental, social, and individual problems. Course is taught using both traditional and research-based pedagogical methods.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4900",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Independent research by teams under the supervision of a faculty member, including literature search, brief proposal of project design, conduct of project to completion, and writing of a formal report in the form of a scientific paper and presentation of a seminar or poster on the project.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Team Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-1100",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Deals with the practice of civil and environmental engineering. Not a highly analytical course, as the course is primarily intended for first year students.\u00c2 Some topics include: history of civil engineering; present practice; typical employers; typical projects; design philosophy; professional topics including organizations, registrations, ethics.\u00c2 Discuss case histories, bring in outside speakers.\u00c2 Students attend CE Capstone presentations.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Civil and Environmental Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4320",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An exploration of models of decision-making under alternative assumptions, expanding on \"rational\" models of introductory economics. The course will discuss the assumptions of these standard models and their shortcomings. The shortcomings will be addressed through the exploration of limited attention and considerations of fairness, uncertainty, and strategic interaction. Applications in areas such as consumer and household finance, marketing, and public policy will be emphasized throughout. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Economic Models of Decision-Making"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-2120",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Structural and functional relationships of cells are discussed with regard to similarities among all living organisms. Introduction to cellular biochemistry, metabolism and energy flow, cellular and Mendelian genetics, and the chemical basis of heredity.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Cell and Molecular Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6710",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces the fundamentals of protein structure and function with an emphasis on chemical concepts as applied to biological problems. It provides an introduction to enzymatic reaction mechanisms and includes interactive hands-on computer-aided visualization exercises. The goal is to equip students with an understanding and appreciation for the diversity and versatility of protein function. This course is intended for graduate or upper-level undergraduate students in the School of Science and Engineering. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Chemical Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6460",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course focuses on software development techniques in support of large-scale software projects and maintenance. Specific topics include various programming paradigms and techniques, approaches to testing and automation, debugging, refactoring, and inheriting code. Individual and team assignments are required, including programming assignments. Project topics include text processing, building a search engine, and the like.",
- "name" : "Large-Scale Programming and Testing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-4720",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Student teams finalize manufacturing system plans from select ENGR 4710 \u00c2 projects, build a manufacturing system to complete several hundred units of a product, optimize the system, manage a project budget, modify manufacturing and packaging plans, and conform to a project schedule as proposed in the associated project Technical Data Packages produced by ENGR 4710 \u00c2 teams. In addition, students will learn new advanced manufacturing topics to increase their breath and depth of manufacturing.",
- "name" : "Manufacturing Processes and Systems Laboratory II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6961",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Readings in Mathematics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ADMN-6300",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Graduate Final Registration"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4965",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4460",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Survey of image analysis applications in biology and biotechnology; introduction to biological microscopy and selected biomedical imaging systems; image reconstruction and pre-processing; grayscale and geometric corrections; image segmentation; blob analysis, cell/colony counting, and cell morphometry; vessel and neuron tracing algorithms with applications to neurobiology and medicine; feature extraction, pattern analysis, cluster analysis and classification; image registration algorithms with applications to mosaicing, spatial referencing, motion estimation, and change detection.",
- "name" : "Biological Imaging Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Writing For Games II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4980",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "Independent research in health sciences, supervised by a faculty member, for the purpose of developing research skills. Such skills include defining a research project, both as a written and oral exercise for a scientific and general audience, and gathering preliminary research data enabling both a written and oral description of the project in the form of a research proposal and an oral defense. Open to students in the accelerated physician-scientist curriculum only. This course is\u00c2 the Culminating Experience for students in this program. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Biomedical Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LITR-6940",
- "credits" : "1-3",
- "description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
- "name" : "Literature Studies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6490",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Measurement and characterization of earthquake ground motion and structural response in time and frequency domains. Linear and nonlinear response history and response spectrum analysis of structures subject to earthquake loading. Seismic analysis and design of structural systems using building codes and design specifications.",
- "name" : "Earthquake Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "EMBA-6963",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in EMBA"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course covers reasoning, decision making, and behavioral game theory, which are major domains in human higher order cognition. Each topic begins with normative theories and continues through formal and mathematical models, and the introduction of empirical studies. The course emphasizes integrations of competing approaches within a domain, integration between reasoning and decision making, and integration between individual decision making and game-theoretic interactions. Each year, the course has a theme. The theme for this year is quantum cognition, which applies quantum theory in cognitive modeling. This course is designed as self-contained, and has no prerequisites. A middle term presentation and a final term paper are required for each student. Graduate students only.",
- "name" : "Cognition"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-6961",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ASTR"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4550",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This is an undergraduate/graduate course on the mechanics of biopolymers, cell cytoskeleton, cell membrane, the whole cell, and multicellular structures in the context of the modulation of cell function by mechanical stresses. Topics include state-of-the-art experimental techniques in cell biomechanics, and cutting-edge research in stem cell mechanobiology, cell motility, collective cell behavior, neurite growth, osteocyte sensing, cardiovascular diseases, and immunology.",
- "name" : "Cell Biomechanics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-4960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ENVE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6260",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Special problems of semiconductor devices operating at high voltage and high current levels. Devices include p-i-n and Schottky diodes, bipolar junction transistors, power MOSFETs and thyristors. Topics include space charge limited current flow, micro plasmas, avalanche breakdown, junction termination, high-level injection, emitter crowding, double injection, second breakdown, triggering mechanisms, plasma propagation, switching and recovery characteristics. Introduction to the Insulated-Gate Bipolar Transistor.",
- "name" : "Semiconductor Power Devices"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-4410",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Weld Process & Metallurg"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4400",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is a sociological and anthropological exploration of health and illness. By the end of the course, students will have an overall picture of health fields, problems faced by patients and caregivers, medicine and health in non-Western societies, and the social shaping of disease and therapeutic choices. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Medicine, Culture, and Society"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-2310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Microbiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6470",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Muscle & Cardiac Biology. Students will read and critique primary papers, present current research articles, and lead critical discussions of topics listed in the class schedule.",
- "name" : "Muscle & Cardiac Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course explores the fundamental principles that define the relationship between chemical structure and the biological action of drug molecules.\u00c2 A major focus of the course is the application of these chemical principles to molecular-targeted drug discovery, molecular mechanisms of pharmacological activity, and the biopharmaceutical properties of drugs.\u00c2 The relationships between drug structure, therapeutic properties, and physicochemical characteristics will be discussed. Structure activity relationships (SAR), structure-property relationships (SPR) and ADME (absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion) will be explored and presented through case studies.\u00c2 The roles of computational chemistry, molecular modeling, and biophysical methods in the understanding of the relationship between structure and biological activity will also be studied. Although an emphasis will be placed on orally bioavailable small molecules, alternative drug modalities will also be discussed.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Medicinal Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-4942",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Psychology And Law"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4330",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will examine a wide range of financial markets and institutions and the micro-and macroeconomic forces that relate to them. Topics include the use of derivative securities such as future, options, and swap agreements, and their roles in distributing financial risk. The course will be driven by textbook readings, supplemented by current news stories, articles from the financial press, and research articles.\u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Economics of Financial Institutions and Markets"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to create an applied learning environment to introduce students to large scale datasets in the environmental field and learn advanced techniques for analyzing them. Students will learn multivariate data exploration techniques, evaluate the quality of large datasets, and analyze the data using machine learning techniques. Specifically students will propose, develop, and finalize projects where they will apply machine learning approaches to datasets to understand complex environmental biology processes. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature relevant to their projects.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Machine Learning for Environmental Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-4270",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This project-based course introduces students to the tools and concepts used to create levels for games and simulations. It explores how various fields and theories (architecture, psychogeography, and theory of the D\u00c3\u00a9rive, player psychology), influence the level design and alter or enhance the ludic concepts (flow and critical path, risks-rewards, tutoring, balance of difficulty, and storytelling). Level analysis will help students to recall these concepts. Students will demonstrate their understanding by designing three \"paper\" maps (stealth, puzzle adventure, 3rd person) and implementing two developed levels (2D and 3D).\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Level Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6480",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction of multivariate statistical methods to model and analyze recorded data from physiological systems in biomedical engineering.\u00c2 Statistical approaches related to applied multivariate statistics, classification, and regression.\u00c2 Associated linear methods include principal component analysis, Fisher discriminant analysis, partial least squares, canonical correlation analysis and their nonlinear counterparts. Descriptive tools include scatter diagrams, Hotelling's T2 statistics and contribution plots.\u00c2 The course has a strong emphasis on biomedical applications.",
- "name" : "Biomedical Data Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4900",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Basic concepts in static and dynamic aeroelasticity. Structural vibrations, free and forced motion of discrete and continuous structures, introduction to modal analysis, and use of materials for dynamics tailoring. Aeroelastic behavior of complex structures, dynamic aeroelasticity. The phenomena of divergence, control surface effectiveness, and flutter and the use of composite materials for aeroelastic tailoring. The role of numerical methods will be emphasized.",
- "name" : "Aeroelasticity and Structural Vibrations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-2050",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A first course in engineering design which emphasizes creativity, teamwork, communication, and work across engineering disciplines. Students are introduced to the design process through a semester-long project which provides a design-build-test experience. Oral and written communication are important elements of the course. The course meets with ENGR 1010 .",
- "name" : "Introduction to Engineering Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAR-1010",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "The course introduces students to fundamental components of service as an officer in the United States Army. These initial lessons are the building blocks of progressive lessons in values, fitness, leadership, and officership. Students will learn how the personal development of life skills such as cultural understanding, goal setting, time management, mental/physical resiliency, and stress management relate to leadership, officership, and the Army profession. The focus is on developing basic knowledge and comprehension of Army leadership attributes and core leader competencies while gaining an understanding of the ROTC program, its purpose in the Army, and its advantages for the student.",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of Military Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4260",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "\u00c2 This course is designed to enable students to understand how an organism functions at the cellular and molecular level, and further, how this functioning is regulated so that cells can adapt to changes in their environment. Students will learn the fundamental components of the cell (from protein to organelle), their characteristics, and how these components function in both normal and diseased cells. Students will also learn biochemical, structural, and mechanical aspects of cell functioning and regulation in normal and diseased cells. In addition, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature.\u00c2 By reading current literature, students will gain knowledge of the practice and presentation of science, as well as learn about new techniques and findings.",
- "name" : "Advanced Cell Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-4710",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Manufacturing theory, laboratory experimentation, and manufacturing systems design and development comprised of selected modern manufacturing technologies. Technologies include robotics and automation, injection molding, computer numerically controlled (CNC) machining, metal forming, inspection, rapid prototyping, and advanced manufacturing topics. Student teams apply lessons to develop a proposal to produce a product requiring multiple coordinated manufacturing processes. Students prepare technical documentation for communicating key engineering and management aspects of the developed manufacturing system to a separate fabrication group. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Manufacturing Processes and Systems Laboratory I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2350",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "An instrumental class that will be coached and rehearsed and will perform regularly. The larger ensemble will break up into smaller ensembles such as string quartets, woodwind quintets, trios, etc., depending on the make-up of the group, as well as into more unusual combinations that might be required to prepare 20th century repertoire. For intermediate and advanced players, entrance into the course is by authorization form/permission of instructor.",
- "name" : "Chamber Music Ensemble"
- },
- {
- "code" : "LANG-2940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
- "name" : "Language Studies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-2100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The first course in Materials Science and Engineering. Structures of metals, ceramics, and polymers and experimental techniques for their determination are discussed. Laboratory experience is included.",
- "name" : "Structure of Engineering Materials"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6150",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Review of electromagnetic theory required to undertake analysis and design of power equipment. Experimental, analog, and digital field estimation techniques. Case studies in electric and magnetic fields such as cable and bushing design, problems of gas bus systems, electrostatic precipitation, magnetic flux penetration, eddy currents, losses, shielding, generation of torque.",
- "name" : "Electric and Magnetic Fields in Electric Power Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-2520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Introduction To Game Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4240",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Eco Chic: Living Art is an upper level production and theory class about art, biology, and the study of life covering topics such as environmentalism, land art, food art, sustainable practices with art, body art, bio-art. Part lecture, part hands-on workshop, Eco Chic encourages students to redefine and experimentally express their relationships with the varied aspects of everyday living systems and manipulating life.",
- "name" : "Eco Chic: Living Art"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6900",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Weekly discussion of selected topics in biology by graduate students and staff.",
- "name" : "Seminar in Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-4100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The theory underlying vector spaces, algebra of subspaces, bases; linear transformations, dual spaces; eigenvectors, eigenvalues, minimal polynomials, canonical forms of linear transformations; inner products, adjoints, orthogonal projections, and complements.",
- "name" : "Linear Algebra"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6770",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "User-experience Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-4110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Fundamentals of aqueous chemistry as applied to the evolution of natural waters. The course covers principles of chemical equilibrium, activity models for solutes, pH as a master variable, concentration and Eh-pH diagrams, mineral solubility, aqueous complexes, ion exchange, and stable isotopes. The carbonate system, weathering reactions, and acid rain are examined in detail. Emphasis is on the chemical reactions that control surface and groundwater evolution in natural and engineered (treatment process) settings. Students learn theory, computation methods, and the use of computer programs for calculation of speciation and mass balance.",
- "name" : "Aqueous Geochemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4270",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Fundamental physiological processes and their mechanism of action in human and higher mammalian organisms. Emphasis on the control and interaction of physiological systems. Introduction to the muscle, nervous, circulatory, renal, respiratory, digestive, reproductive, and hormonal systems. Limited to biology, biochemistry and biophysics, bioinformatics and molecular biology majors, and biology accelerated medical students.",
- "name" : "Human Physiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6450",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Analysis of elastic and inelastic single and multiple degree-of-freedom structural systems under time-dependent loads including harmonic, impulse, earthquake, and other general dynamic loads. Development of equations of motion. Analytical and numerical evaluation of free and forced vibration response. Identification of dynamic system properties. Modal analysis. Vibration isolation and force transmissibility. Dynamic measurement sensors. Shock loading spectrum. Frequency-domain analysis.",
- "name" : "Structural Dynamics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6700",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This discussion course reviews the principles of ethical behavior and responsible conduct of research and then discusses specific areas of biotechnology research, medical research, and societal issues in the context of these principles.\u00c2 Representative topics include genetic engineering, stem cell research, assisted reproduction, human subjects, animal research, and nanotechnology.\u00c2 Class performance is dependent on active participation and discussion, student presentations, and the submission of analytical essays.",
- "name" : "Ethical Issues in Biotechnology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6130",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Survey of modern techniques in and associated with mass spectrometry, including historical perspectives, strengths/weaknesses, detection/quantification of analytes, ionization source/mass analyzer design, and construction of associated technologies including vacuum systems, ion detection, and ion optics. Ion formation processes will also be discussed. Students cannot get credit for both CHEM 4130 \u00c2 and CHEM 6130.",
- "name" : "Mass Spectrometry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "State-of-the-art in contemporary algorithm design, randomized algorithms are algorithms that use randomness as part of their functioning. They are typically simple, often easy to analyze, and work well in practice. They have numerous applications in many fields of computer science and mathematics. Randomized algorithms represent an active and vibrant research area with many exciting new results contributed every year. Students cannot receive credit for both CSCI 4030 \u00c2 and CSCI 6220.",
- "name" : "Randomized Algorithms"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4560",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "We will study theoretical and practical solutions to computational geometry problems found in computer graphics, visualization, vision, robotics, engineering, manufacturing, and geographic information systems. \u00c2 Topics include convex hulls, half-planes, Voronoi diagrams, Delaunay triangulations, binary space partitions, motion planning, visibility, and meshes. Course activities include programming assignments, written homework with proofs of computational complexity, and a term project with presentation. \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Computational Geometry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces Linux kernel programming basics and starts by examining how Berkeley sockets bridge the user-kernel gap. The remainder of the course is spent looking into transport layer (e.g., TCP) and network layer (e.g., IP) implementations. Students do both individual and group programming projects. In addition to coding, there are detailed write-ups and peer reviews in this course.\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Networking in the Linux Kernel"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-9990",
- "credits" : "1-16",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-2941",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Fab. Of Nanocryst Cobalt"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "With an individual faculty member on an agreed-upon topic.",
- "name" : "Readings in Science and Technology Studies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2560",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "What makes play musical and music playful? How does game sound and music contribute to gameworld creation, gameplay, and virtual performance? Ludomusicology\u00e2\u0080\u0094the relation of music to play\u00e2\u0080\u0094addresses these questions and challenges us to take play seriously. This course considers the diverse relationships among music, play, media, and performance, including game sound, music-stylistic features of game consoles and systems, children's games, remixing and sampling, the role musical games play in cultural identity, and more. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Game Sound and Musical Play"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-4968",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in GSAS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7850",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The course focuses primarily on empirical issues in academic research. Students will learn to use theoretical and empirical skills acquired in previous courses and seminars in developing research in general, and academic papers in particular, in their respective fields.",
- "name" : "Management Research Workshop"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. Xinformatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines (e.g. X=astronomy, geology). Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing, and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments. Students cannot obtain credit for more than one of ERTH 4400 / ITWS 4400 \u00c2 / CSCI 4400 .",
- "name" : "Xinformatics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6290",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Biomech Of Hard Tissues"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4470",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Muscle & Cardiac Biology. Students will read and critique primary papers, present current research articles, and lead critical discussions of topics listed in the class schedule.",
- "name" : "Muscle & Cardiac Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6040",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Covers advanced estimation and inference techniques for data analysis and policy evaluation. Topics will vary from year to year to introduce advanced statistical methods used in recent literature. Topics may include visualization techniques to summarize and display high dimensional data, selected topics in discrete choice models, spatial analysis, and analysis of panel data. Particularly, methods for panel data will be emphasized. This includes fixed, random, mixed, and multi-level effects models to control for or account for variation from individual characteristics. Dynamic panel data models consider lagged dependent variables as regressors.....",
- "name" : "Advanced Data Analytics and Policy Evaluation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Readings in the current literature designed to supplement the background of the student and provide greater depth in the area of his or her specialty.",
- "name" : "Readings in Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-4820",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Derivation, analysis, and use of computational procedures for solving differential equations. Topics covered include ordinary differential equations (both initial value and boundary value problems) and partial differential equations. Runge-Kutta and multistep methods for initial value problems. Finite difference methods for partial differential equations including techniques for heat conduction, wave propagation, and potential problems. Basic convergence and stability theory.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Numerical Methods for Differential Equations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6966",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-2940",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Gsas Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. Xinformatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines, e.g. X=astro, geo. Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing, and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments.",
- "name" : "X-informatics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4963",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6420",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The application of theoretical and fundamental principles and pilot plant data to the design and operation of biochemical separation processes and advanced waste treatment systems. Topics covered include characterization and dispersion, coagulation and flocculation, sedimentation, filtration, adsorption, ion exchange, membrane processes, aeration and gas transfer, centrifugation, and related subjects.",
- "name" : "Separation and Recovery Processes"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4620",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Nucleotide biosynthesis; structure, replication, transcription, and translation of nucleic acids; reassociation of nucleic acids; molecular cloning, sequencing, and endonuclease mapping of DNA; control of gene expression in bacteria and higher organisms.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Molecular Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2350",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Construction Systems centers on the development of a technical knowledge of, sensibility to, and intuition for the process by which an architectural design is realized in built form. The interdependence among building materials, acoustic qualities, enclosure systems, interior, finish, and other systems is investigated, with an emphasis on the broader architectural design endeavor. Drawing as a means of understanding forms the basis for a semester-long project to be done in small groups. Case studies will center on concepts and systems that have not yet found their way into mainstream practice. The course approach will involve in-class presentations, project work, field trips, and case studies. WebCT will be used to expand the student's access to course materials and allow for a measure of distance learning. Sustainability: The notion that design intentions can be nullified through incorrect construction is stressed. The importance of proper detailing, construction, and maintenance to accomplish lasting and efficient enclosures is highlighted. Skills to diagnose and treat incorrect construction are developed.",
- "name" : "Construction Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-6231",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Building on the experience with DMAIC, students learn to identify the need for a new process, quantify its value and create it so that the quality of the results meet a predefined quality standard. To do so, the Define, Measure, Analyze, Design, Optimize, and Verify (DMADOV) is used. The first three phases of DMAIC lay the foundation, but new tools and skills are learned in the context of new process creation. These include: developing an elevator speech, data collection and statistical methods for design of experiments (DOE), root cause analysis, and developing key performance indicators (KPIs) and dashboards.",
- "name" : "Lean Six Sigma II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5200",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This studio focuses on the relationship between building and landscape in terms of conceptual, pragmatic, ideological, aesthetic, and functional issues. As such, it endeavors to examine critically the disciplinary boundary between building and landscape. It also critically assesses the connections and inherent complexities between an institutional situation, workplace activity, and residential inhabitation in order to explore questions of publicness and privacy. This studio also addresses the tectonic dimensions of construction and structure in architectural design.",
- "name" : "Graduate Architecture Design 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-4780",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "\u00c2 The biophysical mechanism of protein folding and the role of misfolding in human diseases is explored. The course will introduce principles of protein structure, protein folding in the cell, and thermodynamic and kinetic methods for studying protein folding in vitro. The course will also involve a literature-based discussion of human diseases related to protein folding defects, including Alzheimer's and other amyloid diseases, cystic fibrosis, and Prion-related syndromes.",
- "name" : "Protein Folding"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-6020",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Concepts In Sts"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6940",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
- "name" : "Studies in Biomedical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1720",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Music And Nature"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6430",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Principles and applications of current techniques for the chemical, structural, and morphological characterization of engineering materials, with an emphasis on materials used in the microelectronics industry. Techniques studied include various electron and ion spectroscopies, electron microscopies, and diffraction techniques.",
- "name" : "Materials Characterization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4860",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Phylogeny and the patterns of evolution in the fossil record, geography of evolution, biodiversity, origin of genetic variation, genetic drift, natural selection and adaptation, genetic theory of natural selection, evolution of phenotypic traits, conflict and cooperation, speciation, fitness, coevolution, genomic evolution, evolution and development, macroevolution, evolutionary science and society. Lectures, student presentations, and peer learning.",
- "name" : "Evolution"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-2210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course allows students to develop a critical understanding of the relationships between design, culture, and society. \"Design\" is defined broadly, touching on product/industrial design, urban design, and so-called alternative design approaches such as ecological and feminist design. The focus is on the role of design in contemporary culture with the goal of training students' emerging appreciation of design as cultural practice on their professional work as engineers, architects, or business managers. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Design, Culture, and Society"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6680",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Appl. & Environ. Microbiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Physical processes governing occurrence and distribution of precipitation, infiltration, evaporation, and surface water runoff.\u00c2 Statistical hydrology, unit hydrograph theory, and watershed modeling. Floodplain hydrology and open channel hydraulics. Urban hydrology, hydraulics and design of storm sewers, and design of detention structures for flood control. Design project using the Army Corps of Engineers Hydraulic Engineering Center HEC-1 flood hydrograph package.",
- "name" : "Applied Hydrology and Hydraulics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6350",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will provide an exploration of the essential aspects of virology. Introductory examination of viral structure, entry, and replication for each of the major classes of viruses serve as a foundation. Case studies will examine virus host interactions and strategies for prevention and intervention of viral infection. Additional topics include: emerging viruses, viral detection, viral extinction, beneficial use of viruses, modified viruses as research tools.",
- "name" : "Virology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-1700",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This seminar-based course introduces students to the roles the different engineering disciplines play in addressing modern engineering challenges. This course conveys that design is a principal aspect of engineering, often involving multiple disciplines simultaneously and that the associated engineering solutions often have ethical, cultural, social, economic, and environmental consequences. As such these issues must be considered in determining the appropriateness of an engineering solution.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Better World Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-2510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Quantum Physics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4170",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The principles of dynamics as applied to the analysis of the accelerations and dynamic forces in machines and machine components such as linkages, cams, and gears. The effect these dynamic forces have on the dynamic balance and operation of the machines and the attending stresses in the individual components of the machines.",
- "name" : "Machine Dynamics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-6440",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction into thin film deposition technologies that are essential in industry.\u00c2 Practical technical aspects and fundamental growth processes are discussed. The course covers: evaporation techniques, sputter deposition, plasma and ion-beam processing, chemical vapor deposition, molecular beam epitaxy, surface science, nucleation and growth, epitaxy, texture evolution, nanostructure formation, stress.",
- "name" : "Thin Films"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4440",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Principles of displacement-based structural analysis; development of element and structure stiffness matrices; direct stiffness method for matrix structural analysis of trusses, beams, and frames; computer analysis of structures; introduction to finite element method.",
- "name" : "Matrix Structural Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-6990",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A detailed survey of important topics in the neurosciences. Some of the topics to be covered in this class are: basic mechanisms of neural signaling (neurophysiology, synaptic transmission, and molecular signaling; understanding of sensation/movement and in particular how it relates to neuroanatomy; neurodevelopment and how the mature brain can change (plasticity);\u00c2 and\u00c2 complex brain functions and neurological disease. Students prepare analyses and make a presentation of a paper in the original literature. Since there is overlap associated with the 4100 course, both courses may not be taken for credit.",
- "name" : "From Neuron to Behavior"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-2160",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course focuses on the co-evolution of life with Earth's systems and targets students in Earth science, biology, chemistry, and physics. Topics include the emergence and early evolution of life on Earth, the environmental limits of life, microbial and metabolic evolution; the role of life in moderating global elemental cycles; earliest records of life; evolution of photosynthesis and the Great Oxidation Event; fossilization and evolution of complex life; mass radiations, mass extinctions, and global changes.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Geobiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6470",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A survey of the fundamental issues necessary for the design, analysis, control, and implementation of robotic systems. The mathematical description of robot manipulators in terms of kinematics and dynamics. Hardware components of a typical robot arm. Path following, control, and sensing. Examples of several currently available manipulators. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Robotics I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6680",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Examines the implementation of finite element methods. Consideration is first given to the techniques used in classic finite element programs. Attention then focuses on development of a general geometry-based code which effectively supports higher order adaptive technique. Technical areas covered include: effective construction of element matrices for p-version finite elements, ordering of unknowns, automatic mesh generation, adaptive mesh improvement, program and database structures. Implementation of automated adaptive techniques on parallel computers is also covered.",
- "name" : "Finite Element Programming"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6700",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Photography is the first modern visual technology that is reproducible yet still has an aura of \"objectivity,\" and its study addresses issues that are central to all forms of contemporary image-making, from art and architecture to politics, social media, and game design. Using the rhetorical triad of producer, photographer, and audience, the course introduces students across HASS to various methodologies of visual analysis through semiotics, phenomenology, neuropsychology, and psychodynamics of affect.",
- "name" : "Rhetoric of the Photograph"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2630",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Grad Arch Design 3"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2180",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Deep Listening is a practice developed by pioneering composer and humanitarian Pauline Oliveros to enhance and expand listening abilities and to encourage creativity. Students will develop a heightened awareness to sound and their sonic environment through experiential exercises, creative projects, collaborations, readings, lectures, and discussion. Musicians and non-musicians of all abilities and backgrounds are welcome! \u00c2",
- "name" : "Deep Listening"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4020",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The seminar will be interdisciplinary with students from both architecture and civil engineering departments.\u00c2 The content of the lectures bears direct relation to practical experience and is considered to be supplementary to the other courses in the respective engineering and architecture schools. Specific types of structures will be examined with the help of suitable existing project examples clarifying and critically analyzing the basic engineering principles behind them.\u00c2 Students will be exposed to the collaborative methods inherent within the architect/engineer relationship.",
- "name" : "Bedford Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-2941",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Out Of Classroom Exp In Bcbp"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6590",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course serves as an in-depth overview to medical imaging modalities. First, individual modalities are introduced, including CT, MRI, PET, SPECT, and US. Then, multimodality systems are described. A balance is made among physical, mathematical, algorithmic, and architectural contents. Contemporary research and insights to improve the current systems are introduced throughout the course to inspire students and provide an understanding of newer tools under development.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Medical Imaging"
- },
- {
- "code" : "DSES-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Masters Project"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-2962",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4780",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course introduces the chemical and physical principles of energy transformation in nature. It emphasizes the structure and function of proteins with a special focus on highly-efficient energy conversion in mitochondrial and photosynthetic systems. The course provides the basic physical and chemical concepts that are required for understanding energy conversion and offers design principles that can be applied to the improvement of man-made catalytic and other devices for energy conversion and storage. It is intended for graduate or upper-level undergraduate students in the School of Science and Engineering. There are no prerequisites for this course. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 6780 .",
- "name" : "Bioenergetics: The Art of Energy Conversion in Nature"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "Permission of instructor.",
- "name" : "Individual Projects in Mechanical Engineering, Aeronautical Engineering, Nuclear Engineering, or Engineering Physics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5150",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This is an intermediate course to structures that presents the load transfers of gravity and lateral forces in building systems. The course demonstrates the principles of analyses and design of steel and reinforced concrete elements. The course also outlines the concepts of compression and/or tension structures. Structural principles are reinforced by building physical models.",
- "name" : "Structures 2"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4770",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Digital design methodologies including timing chain and counter based \"hardwired\" microprogram design, modules, and modular design. The course bridges LSI and MSI design treating microprocessors, and I/O interfacing. Bus protocol standards, interrupts, direct memory access, priority arbitration, asynchronous timing, and overlap or double buffering. Specific examples of design include controllers for disks, cassettes, video systems, and stepping motors. Course includes a laboratory with access to FPGAs and microprocessors.",
- "name" : "Computer Hardware Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6250",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "\u00ef\u00bb\u00bf \u00ef\u00bb\u00bfThe analysis and planning of transportation systems. Study of the basic interaction between transportation supply and demand. Role of transportation systems analysis in social, environmental, and policy making. Trip generation. Trip distribution. Mode split. Traffic assignment. Computer applications.\u00c2 Students cannot\u00c2 obtain credit\u00c2 for this course and CIVL 4640 .\u00c2",
- "name" : "Transportation Systems Planning"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6320",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Advanced analysis and design of complex metal structures. Flexible, semi-rigid, and rigid connections. Plate girders, torsional design. Effects of semi-rigid connections on structural stability.",
- "name" : "Advanced Steel Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4750",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Sustainable Building Design Metrics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4370",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Environmntal Politics & Policy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4240",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Writing For Games I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6130",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course asks what is really new about New Media, and looks at creative practices, theoretical discourses, and social contexts to find answers.\u00c2 The course concentrates on cutting edge cultural expression using information and communication technologies. The objective is to equip students with multiple perspectives \u00e2\u0080\u0094 aesthetic, communications, historical \u00e2\u0080\u0094 with which to analyze, critique, and develop original concepts about the uses of new media in art and culture.",
- "name" : "New Media Theory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4430",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Dynamic models of national and international economic growth are introduced and analyzed.\u00c2 Technological innovation is central to growth, and models consider the endogenous determinants of technological innovation and diffusion.\u00c2 National institutions that affect growth, such as law, education, and infrastructure, are considered. Variation in intellectual property rights across countries are examined, together with their effects on economic growth and development. Theories of growth are compared to empirical fact. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Economics of Growth & Innovation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAF-1020",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "AS 100, Leadership Laboratory ( USAF 0010 ), is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
- "name" : "Air and Space Studies 100B (Heritage and Values of the United States Air Force)"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4440",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Software system design methodology emphasizing use of object oriented modeling of application domains and of software systems and emphasizing the roles of written and oral communication in software engineering. Project management and software testing. Individual and team projects include specification, software architecture, user interfaces, and documentation of the phases of a project. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Software Design and Documentation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6610",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This is a design-based studio that focuses on the integration of structural, technical, detail, zoning, and code-related issues with respect to the design of a moderate to large-scale building of civic importance. Such building types are (but not limited to) libraries, theaters, city halls, judicial buildings, educational buildings, etc. An important focus of the design project will be the relationship of the building to its urban context. An essential part of the design will involve programming of the building as well as responding to numerous learning outcomes defined by the NAAB (the accrediting agency for professional architecture programs) for a comprehensive design project. This course is required of all architecture students in the M.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Graduate Architecture Design 3"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6410",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of biological sequence analysis, including algorithms for pairwise sequence alignment, multiple sequence alignment, phylogenetic analysis, and database searching. Concepts covered include homology, sequence similarity, parsimony, mechanisms and metrics of molecular evolution, biological data bases, database search algorithms (BLAST), and statistical significance. Selected topics include hidden Markov models, bootstrap analysis, and gene finding.\u00c2 Modern sequence analysis software will be provided. Laptop computers are required. Knowledge of a programming language is strongly suggested. Meets jointly with BIOL 4540 ; both cannot be taken for credit.",
- "name" : "Sequence Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-2800",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Intro To Sports Psychology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHIL-1110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to the major areas of philosophy (ethics, theory of knowledge, philosophy of religion, etc.) and to some of the main problems treated within these fields. Selections from contemporary as well as classical authors are studied and discussed. Students are encouraged to develop a disciplined approach to intellectual problems. Emphasis varies with the instructor.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Philosophy"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-6960",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ASTR"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4610",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "DIS Studio C focuses on the co-production of products, organizations, and problem-solving strategies. Students will explore how to facilitate communication across multiple disciplinary and audience modalities, including stakeholders, designers, and users. Projects and course discussions will train students to translate social scientific and engineering problem-solving judgments and to evaluate how complex problems come to be defined. This course is required for DIS students who are dual-majoring with the School of Engineering. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Design and Innovation Studio C"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ASTR-4240",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the physics of gravitation and spacetime. Special relativity, tensor calculus, and relativistic electrodynamics. General relativity with selected applications of Einstein's field equations (gravitational time dilation; gravitational lensing; frame dragging; gravitational radiation). The physics of nonrotating and rotating black holes. Relativistic models for the large-scale structure of the Universe. Observational constraints on the cosmological parameters. Big Bang nucleosynthesis, the Cosmic Background Radiation.\u00c2 A culminating experience project is required. (Meets with PHYS\u00c2 4240.)",
- "name" : "Gravitation and Cosmology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6510",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An intensive study of the fundamentals of soil mechanics at the graduate level. Transmission of stresses between particles. Soils in which the pore water is either stationary or flowing under steady conditions. Soils in which pore pressures are influenced by applied loads, and hence the pore water is flowing under transient conditions.",
- "name" : "Advanced Geotechnical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An intensive course designed to provide instruction and stimulate discussion on important topics relevant to biological research.\u00c2 It is loosely divided into three sections: 1) overview of major areas of faculty research; 2) professional development topics such as research ethics and responsible conduct of research, scientific communication, career options, and software tools for science (i.e. structural biology toolkits, bioinformatics tools, graphics packages, etc.); and 3) scientific writing. This course is required of and limited to first year students in the Biology and Biochemistry/Biophysics Ph.D. programs.",
- "name" : "Biology Core Course I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6780",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces students to narrative theory and\u00c2 interactive narratives in a variety of genres such as oral story-telling, literature, poetry, film, artists' books, historical narrative, hypertext fiction, Net Art, social media narratives, and computer games. Students will have the opportunity to design and develop an original interactive narrative.",
- "name" : "Interactive Narrative"
- },
- {
- "code" : "EPOW-6940",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Advanced Design Of Ac Machines"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An in-depth review of the underlying science, engineering, medicine, and contemporary research related to the nation's highest priorities for musculoskeletal diseases and care.\u00c2 Musculoskeletal anatomy, pathophysiology, epidemiology, and contemporary treatments are covered.\u00c2 Special topics will be presented relating state-of-the-art biomedical research to clinical practice.\u00c2 The clinical perspective of each topic will be presented by practicing clinicians with case studies.\u00c2 Topics conclude with live webcasts or recorded surgery from Albany Medical Center or the Capital Region Bone and Joint Center.\u00c2 Students cannot get credit for both BMED 4420 and BMED 6420 .",
- "name" : "Clinical Orthopaedics and Contemporary Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-4100",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Investigates business-related considerations in successfully commercializing new technology in a new venture or within an existing enterprise: market and customer analysis, beating the competition, planning and managing for profitability, high-tech marketing and sales, and business partnerships and acquisitions. Not a general management course; focuses explicitly on what is relevant for engineers and scientists working in a commercial environment. For junior/senior undergraduate or graduate students.",
- "name" : "Business Issues for Engineers and Scientists"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-2960",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4880",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "In this course, design processes in architectural acoustics will be studied from a psychoacoustical perspective. Different concepts to create physical and virtual acoustic spaces will be discussed based on perceptual design goals. Topics include ecological psychoacoustics, sound quality, auditory virtual environments, and auditory computational modeling.",
- "name" : "Aural Architecture"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6660",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This graduate/advanced undergraduate hybrid course examines the structural and physiologic properties of muscle, as well as its force production and overall biomechanical function. Muscle structure and function will be explored at the protein, single fiber, and whole tissue levels. Discussions will focus primarily on skeletal muscle, and topics will include muscle morphology, cross-bridge theory, molecular motor and actomyosin interaction, Hill-type and Huxley-type models, electromyography, fatigue, muscle inhibition, history-dependent phenomena, in vitro and in vivo muscle function, and the response to injury. Each topic will be introduced and developed utilizing seminal articles in the literature as well as excerpts from texts, and further discussion on current problems and state-of-the-art experimental techniques will draw on the current scientific literature. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Muscle Mechanics and Modeling"
- },
- {
- "code" : "EPOW-6810",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Power Engr Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-6840",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Numerical methods and analysis for linear and nonlinear PDEs with applications from heat conduction, wave propagation, solid and fluid mechanics, and other areas. Basic concepts of stability and convergence (such as Lax equivalence theorem, CFL condition, GKS stability theory, energy methods). Methods for parabolic problems (finite differences, method of lines, ADI, operator splitting), methods for hyperbolic problems (vector systems and characteristics, dissipation and dispersion, shock capturing and tracking schemes), methods for elliptic problems (finite difference and finite volume methods).",
- "name" : "Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equations"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1986",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Tech & Soc Interact In Us Soci"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ECON"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2540",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will survey the history and theory of the diverse artistic practices of the twentieth century in relation to the development of the mass media and new technologies. Topics will include the Bauhaus, Surrealism, Pop Art, and Postmodernism and will span a spectrum of media from the more traditional, such as painting and photography, to electronic and new media, such as video and digital arts.\u00c2",
- "name" : "The Multimedia Century"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6880",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This 4-credit course will explore global environmental cycles, patterns, and changes. It will cover elemental cycles of phosphorus, nitrogen, and carbon, and pollutants such as mercury, lead, and CFCs, and how changes in these cycles influence organisms and ecosystems. Also discussed will be large-scale biotic processes and theory about ecosystem dynamics. Major environmental issues such as acid rain, eutrophication, climate change, and land use conversation will also be discussed.",
- "name" : "Global Environmental Change"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-2060",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course provides a foundational treatment of water resources engineering through theory, analysis and design. Hydrologic cycle, water resources sustainability, and water resources planning. Pipe flow and pipe networks, with\u00c2 application to distribution systems. Hydraulics of open-channel flow and control structures such as culverts, gates, weirs, spillways and stilling basins. Reservoir routing and design of storage. Contemporary issues including green infrastructure, storm surge and climate change. Experimental laboratory sessions reinforce lectures and provide hands\u00e2\u0080\u0090on learning opportunities.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Water Resources Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6960",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2468",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course will examine and teach methods for the representation and visual communication of measured data within the built environment with a strong focus on environmental datasets. Students will be introduced to digital modeling, environmental plug-ins and graphic design softwares that effectively translate and visualize information from building environmental surroundings, site, and building performance. Students will demonstrate the capacity to employ methods for data visualization as they pertain to a range of highly contextual case studies and spaces mapping daylight, temperature, humidity, air quality and other sensory information. Skills taught will enable students to produce two-dimensional and three-dimensional synthetic data visualizations in digital modeling environments. This course is offered in the fall semester and is required of all first-year undergraduates in the Building Sciences program. B.Arch and M.Arch students can register for this course. Students from other majors will need permission of the instructor. This is a data-intensive course. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Digital Constructs for Building Sciences"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6360",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The goal of this course is to develop a general familiarity with the structural design of wood elements and structures.\u00c2 This includes exposure to the historical development of design specifications as well as specific design procedures unique to this material.",
- "name" : "Timber Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6970",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "EMBA-6500",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Marketing For Mgmt"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-1060",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "A seminar based course providing an overview of the aerospace engineering field. Emerging and existing\u00c2 aerospace engineering technologies found in\u00c2 aircraft, rotorcraft, rockets, and spacecraft, and the engineering sciences relevant to aerospace engineering are introduced. This course is graded Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of Flight"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IENV-4700",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A course that focuses on the Hudson River Basin as an environmental microcosm and a vehicle through which to illustrate the natural science of river systems with particular attention to human influences. This interdisciplinary environmental science course is for environmentally oriented junior, senior, and graduate students.",
- "name" : "One Mile of the Hudson River"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4570",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is an introduction to econometric data analysis. The statistical methods covered enable analysis of relationships between variables in data, with special attention to identification of true casual effects. Topics covered include linear and simple nonlinear regression models, internal and external validity, methods for panel data and binary dependent variables, instrumental variable methods, use of experimental and quasi-experimental data, and basic time series methods. The course included hands-on data analysis and report writing.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Econometrics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6090",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Analysis of coupled rotor blade elastic deformations, support elastic deformations, rotor loads and vibrations, and aeroelastic and aeromechanical stability of VTOL aircraft. Methods to mitigate dynamic loads and aeroelastic/aeromechanical instability.",
- "name" : "VTOL Aircraft Dynamics and Aeroelasticity"
- },
- {
- "code" : "EPOW-6900",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Seminar Elect Power Engr"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6990",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USNA-1010",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The organization of the Department of Defense with emphasis on the Department of the Navy. This course provides a broad overview of all aspects of the operation and administration of today's Navy and Marine Corps. Additionally, the course will introduce naval topics such as rank structure, naval etiquette, naval history, naval warfare platforms and missions as well as basic naval leadership principles. The course will also cover basic military conduct and NROTC rules and regulations. Finally, the course will look at the role of the U.S. military in today's ever changing geopolitical climates and global conflicts.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Naval Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-9990",
- "credits" : "1-20",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Dissertation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6280",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Examine advanced econometric and statistical methods for the analysis of high-dimensional data, otherwise known as \"Big Data.\" In this setting, detailed information for each unit of observation informs machine learning techniques such as classification and regression trees; rECandom forests; penalized regressions; and boosted estimation. These prediction methods are then utilized to improve causal modeling, with applications in the study of healthcare demand and supply modeling, and behavior of consumers and businesses. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Econometric Methods for Big Data"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6480",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Use of radioisotopes and radiation in nuclear medicine, radiation chemistry, basis of dosimetry, ionizing and nonionizing energy transfer processes in living tissue and cells. Radiation effects on the structure of nucleic acids, proteins, and cell membranes with emphasis on mechanisms by which cell viability is lost. Background in radiation chemistry is developed in particular for engineering majors. Applications are given in nuclear medicine, cancer therapy, and radiation in the environment.",
- "name" : "Health Physics and Medical Aspects of Radiation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will encompass marine, freshwater, and terrestrial microfossils (with emphasis on foraminifera), including taxonomy, evolutionary history, ecology and paleoenvironments, and a broad spectrum of micropaleontological applications, such as sea-level and climate reconstructions, geochemical analyses, oil industry research and production, and forensic geology. This course will also cover concepts of biostratigraphy and micropaleontological applications to stratigraphic correlation and time scale construction. Extensive hands-on microscope and lab work will be required. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Applied Micropaleontology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-2210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Principles and methods of field work in Geological and Environmental Sciences, including geologic mapping of formations across spatial scales, basic orienteering, glacial geology, modern lake characterization, climate reconstruction using tree and sediment cores, drainage basin analysis, well-logging and water-well sampling, and basic pedology. Students are trained in the use of instruments to address selected field problems. Numerous all-day field trips every Wednesday throughout the semester (occasionally on weekends) required. Course culminates with an independent research project. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Field Methods"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6210",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The techniques necessary to appraise the economic desirability and private-sector impact of various public projects and policies are studied. Concepts such as discounting, capital rationing, project selection, shadow pricing, risk assessment, unpriced goods, and economic surplus are developed. Among the topics from which illustrative case studies are drawn are urban and transport planning, energy, water resources, government regulation, and the environment. Suitable for graduate students in professional programs.",
- "name" : "Advanced Cost-Benefit Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4990",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A two-semester spring-fall or fall-spring course dealing with an advanced level independent research project supervised by a faculty member and requiring the presentation of a thesis. First term registration is limited to second semester juniors and first semester seniors. The grade for the first semester will be listed as \"in progress.\"",
- "name" : "Senior Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-2050",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction of number systems \u00e2\u0080\u0093 decimal, binary and hexadecimal \u00e2\u0080\u0093; variable types including Boolean, integer, float, character and string; general overview of computer architecture and software, programming in \"C/C++\" including input/output, control statements, operators, functions, arrays, strings, classes, objects, inheritance, pointers, references, file processing, exceptions and operator overloading; overview of other programming languages including Matlab, R and Python; design of algorithms for applications that are relevant for biomedical engineering applications.",
- "name" : "Programming for BME"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ADMN-1030",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Arch Explore & Planning Exp"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-4200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Fundamental concepts of mathematical analysis will be covered including such topics as the real number system, metric spaces, limits, sequences, series, convergence, functions of one variable, uniform convergence, continuity, differentiability, Riemann integration, and the Stone-Weierstrass Theorem.",
- "name" : "Mathematical Analysis I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BCBP-6650",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to be a first course in the study of \"systems biology\", to introduce students to the field, the experimental and computational methods that are used within it, and the type of insights that the field can provide to biology. To fully appreciate the complexity of living systems, researchers gather systematic, quantitative measurements of a system's components using cutting-edge omics techniques. In addition, researchers also leverage computing power to describe, model, and predict dynamic behaviors that could otherwise not be perceived in such large-scale omics data. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature. A student cannot get credit for both BCBP 4660 \u00c2 / BIOL 4660 \u00c2 and BCBP 6650 / BIOL 6650 .",
- "name" : "The Biology of Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Individual and collaborative projects and assignments at the 4000 level adapted to the needs of individual students.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Studies in the Arts"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4020",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course presents fundamental ideas and techniques of modern algorithm design and analysis. After completing this course, students should be able to formally analyze and design efficient algorithms for a variety of computational problems. Topics covered include Greedy Algorithms, Dynamic Programming, Network Flow, NP-Completeness, Linear Programming, Network Algorithms, as well as probabilistic and approximate algorithms.",
- "name" : "Design and Analysis of Algorithms"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Selected readings in the biological literature to supplement the scientific background of undergraduate students. May be used as a biology elective with approval of Biology Department Curriculum Committee.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Readings in Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4961",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CIVL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-2100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Presents structure-property relationships of implant materials including metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites, with an emphasis on mechanical and surface properties in the broader context of implant design. Biological performance of biomaterials, case studies of traditional implants\u00e2\u0080\u0094as well as emerging, tissue-engineered materials\u00e2\u0080\u0094 are emphasized.",
- "name" : "Biomaterials Science and Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAR-0030",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course explores the dimensions of creative and innovative tactical leadership strategies and styles by examining team dynamics and two historical leadership theories that form the basis of the army leadership framework. Aspects of personal motivation and team building are practice planning, executing, and assessing team exercises. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 2010 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
- "name" : "Applied Leadership Lab I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6430",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Linear programming, nonlinear programming, iterative methods, and dynamic programming are presented, especially as they relate to optimal control problems. Discrete and continuous optimal regulators are derived from dynamic programming approach, which also leads to the Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman Equation and the Minimum Principle. Linear quadratic regulators, linear tracking problems, and output regulators are treated. Linear observer and the separation theorem are developed for feedback controller implementation.",
- "name" : "Optimization Methods"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-2710",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A classroom study of the basic theory and methods of traditional and nontraditional machining, metal joining, material working, and foundry processes, and the variety of functions performed by the primary machine tools employed by the modern manufacturing community. A basic first course or terminal course for all students who are interested in manufacturing processes.",
- "name" : "General Manufacturing Processes"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-2300",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course serves as an introduction to biomedical instrumentation and imaging with focus on the acquisition and monitoring of vital signals.\u00c2 Basic principles for the selection and appropriate use of instruments for solving bioengineering and medical problems such as microscopy, magnetic resonance imaging, and ultrasounds, among others are addressed.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Bioimaging and Bioinstrumentation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-1250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introductory physics for students seeking a more intensive experience. Electricity and magnetism is discussed making use of multivariable differentiation and integration. AC and DC circuits. Electromagnetic waves, optics, and selected topics in modern physics. Laboratory exercises are carried out emphasizing measurement uncertainty and clear, concise reporting. Recommended for students intending to major in physics.",
- "name" : "Introductory Electromagnetic Theory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4730",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Sustainable Building Design Strategies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4130",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "Independent research in health sciences, supervised by a faculty member, for the purpose of developing research skills. Such skills include defining a research project, both as a written and oral exercise for a scientific and general audience, and gathering preliminary research data enabling both a written and oral description of the project in the form of a research proposal and an oral defense. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Biomedical Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6962",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BMED"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction of mathematical and computational methods to model physiological systems in biomedical engineering. Mathematical methods include solution techniques for systems of algebraic equations, systems of partial and partial differential equations. Computational methods include finite difference, finite element, and lumped parameter methods. Computational methods are programmed using commercial programming software. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Modeling of Biomedical Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4010",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introductory course in transport phenomena covering fluid statics, and one-dimensional diffusive processes including laminar flow, heat conduction, and mass diffusion.\u00c2 Course focuses on developing the equations of change, introducing sum-of-resistance concepts and couple fluid flow, heat transfer, and mass transfer problems.\u00c2 The concept of extended surfaces as a means of enhancing transport process is included.\u00c2 The course introduces numerical simulation concepts for solving simple, one-dimensional transport problems.\u00c2 Credit not allowed for both this course and ENGR 2250 .",
- "name" : "Transport Phenomena I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4410",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course discusses state-of-the-art techniques in patterning biomolecules, biosensors, machining three-dimensional microstructures, and building microfluidic devices (Lab-on-a-Chip).\u00c2 Seminal and current literature will be used to discuss topics in BioMEMs ranging from device fabrication to applications in cell biology and medicine. Students cannot get credit for both BMED 4410 and BMED 6410 .",
- "name" : "BioMEMs"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6170",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This is an advanced course in systems analysis and design that presents conceptual material about both traditional approaches to systems development such as process oriented and data-oriented methodologies and evolving approaches such as object-oriented development methods. Key stages of the systems development life cycle including planning, analysis, and design are the focus of this course. Models and procedures for understanding and modeling an organization's existing and planned information systems are presented. Computer-aided software engineering tools are used to provide hands-on experience in designing information systems. A case-based approach is used to provide students an opportunity to apply the analytical and design techniques covered in the course. In addition, students are expected to do a real-life systems development project. The course also focuses on the issues and challenges in managing systems development.",
- "name" : "Advanced Systems Analysis and Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4690",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Fundamentals of aqueous chemistry as applied to the evolution of natural waters. The course covers principles of chemical equilibrium, activity models for solutes, pH as a master variable, concentration and Eh-pH diagrams, mineral solubility, aqueous complexes, ion exchange, and stable isotopes. The carbonate system, weathering reactions, and acid rain are examined in detail. Emphasis is on the chemical reactions that control surface and groundwater evolution in natural and engineered (treatment process) settings. Students learn theory, computation methods, and the use of computer programs for calculation of speciation and mass balance.",
- "name" : "Aqueous Geochemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4280",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "As the second course in the Intermediate Accounting sequence, this course is designed for both accounting and finance majors. This course combines a study of the theory, rationale, and objectives of corporate financial reporting with an examination of current reporting principles. The aim is to develop a realistic understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of corporate financial reporting, particularly from the viewpoint of the consumer of such financial information.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Intermediate Accounting II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4850",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Phelan Sem Democracy/ Internet"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4360",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Grad Arch Design 4"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6930",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "The student will perform hands-on research in the lab of a Biology faculty member to learn basic research methods and techniques, accomplish a small research project, and determine whether the lab is a good fit for thesis research.",
- "name" : "Research Rotation lll"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Quantitative analysis of transport phenomena in physiological systems, including fluid mechanics, thermodynamics, and mass transfer. Fluid statics, mass and energy conservation, laminar and turbulent flow, microscale and macroscale analytical methods, mass transport with biochemical reactions, applications to transport in tissue and organs will be introduced.",
- "name" : "Biomedical Transport Phenomena"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6490",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The principles of thermodynamics, with their applications to homogeneous and heterogeneous equilibria.",
- "name" : "Chemical Thermodynamics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAF-1010",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "AS 100,\u00c2 Heritage and Values of the U.S. Air Force, is a survey course designed to introduce students to the United States Air Force and provides an overview of the basic characteristics, missions, and organization of the Air Force. Leadership Laboratory ( USAF 0010 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
- "name" : "Air and Space Studies 100A (Heritage and Values of the U.S. Air Force)"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4970",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COMM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-1210",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Continued examination of the principles of chemistry in more depth, considering thermodynamics, advanced concepts in chemical equilibrium and acid-base chemistry, kinetics of chemical reactions, and electrochemistry. This course consists of the lecture portion of CHEM 1200 \u00c2 with no laboratory requirements. Students cannot get credit for this course and CHEM 1200 .",
- "name" : "Chemistry II (Without lab)"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4007",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Contract Law (at Alb Law Sch)"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6530",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Information measures, characterization of information sources, coding for discrete sources, the noiseless coding theorems, construction of Huffman codes. Discrete channel characterization, channel capacity, noisy-channel coding theorems, reliability exponents. Various error-control coding and decoding techniques, including block and convolutional codes. Introduction to waveform channels and rate distortion theory.",
- "name" : "Information Theory and Coding"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4940",
- "credits" : "1-8",
- "description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
- "name" : "Studies in Biomedical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4540",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Humans\u00c2 inhabit a culture of visual images.\u00c2 Images bombard\u00c2 them on television, the Internet, and in films; they surround\u00c2 everyone as architecture and fashion; they provide essential resource data in science, engineering, and business. This course will help students better understand how images communicate information, arouse\u00c2 emotions, and shape\u00c2 values. Students will primarily do readings in cultural history/theory with some viewing of films.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Visual Culture"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-1100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The first semester of a two-semester sequence of interactive courses. Topics include linear and angular kinematics and dynamics, work and energy, momentum and collisions, forces and fields, gravitation, oscillatory motion, waves, sound, and interference.",
- "name" : "Physics I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4460",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces the motivations and related factors that shape consumers' purchasing decisions. Also considered is the consumer perceptual process and how it affects purchasing behavior and consumer reaction to product designs. The relationship between perception and product design is extended to topics such as design for understanding, universal product design, aesthetics, and industrial design",
- "name" : "Consumer Behavior and Product Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4968",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BMED"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6450",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The course presents several aspects of drug and genes delivery including: 1) definitions of what drugs or gene are; 2) pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics; 3) biomaterial selection considerations; 4) bioactivity considerations;\u00c2 5) physiological and biochemical barriers to drug delivery; 6) diffusion controlled, dissolution controlled, and osmotic controlled drug delivery systems; 7) polymeric delivery systems; 8) ligand-based targeting and physical targeting; 9) viral mediated gene delivery; 10) non-viral gene delivery; 11) polymers in gene delivery. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Drug and Gene Delivery"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6460",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "\u00c2 Survey of image analysis applications in biology and biotechnology; introduction to biological microscopy and selected biomedical imaging systems; image reconstruction and pre-processing; grayscale and geometric corrections; image segmentation; blob analysis, cell/colony counting, and cell morphometry; vessel and neuron tracing algorithms with applications to neurobiology and medicine; feature extraction, pattern analysis, cluster analysis and classification; image registration algorithms with applications to mosaicing, spatial referencing, motion estimation, and change detection.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Biological Imaging Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "DSES-6940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Readings In Isye"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BUSN-6315",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "In this course, students set, evaluate, and improve achievement of key performance indicators.\u00c2 Students use benchmarking and analytic techniques to determine how operational performance can be optimized, and then plan and execute change to improve efficacy and efficiency.\u00c2 Students evaluate and purposefully transform operational paradigms to impact performance, planning and executing to ensure the organization performs on budget and to specification.",
- "name" : "Leaders Planning and Executing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6011",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An interdisciplinary course focusing on the fundamentals and applications of semiconductor electrochemistry, and will serve as a bridge between classical electrochemistry and solid state physics.\u00c2 Topics include fundamentals of semiconductor physics, principles of electrochemistry, nature of semiconductor/electrolyte interfaces, current flow, and the applications of above principles to environment remediation and renewable energy devices such as solar cells, photocatalysis, and battery technologies.",
- "name" : "Semiconductor Electrochemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-2009",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Anatomy & Phys I With Lab @ Rs"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-1400",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This is an undergraduate introductory course covering basic concepts and skills in engineering communication. Topics include technical writing, project planning and proposal writing, data visualization, system modeling and simulation, engineering graphics and CAD, and effective uses of software tools. Note: This course is recommended as an alternative to ENGR 1200 \u00c2 for the following disciplines only: biomedical, chemical, industrial and systems, materials, electrical and computer systems, and nuclear engineering.",
- "name" : "Engineering Communications"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ADMN-1961",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ADMN"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6330",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Cancer Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6550",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This is an undergraduate/graduate course on the mechanics of biopolymers, cell cytoskeleton, cell membrane, the whole cell, and multicellular structures in the context of the modulation of cell function by mechanical stresses. Topics include state-of-the-art experimental techniques in cell biomechanics, and cutting-edge research in stem cell mechanobiology, cell motility, collective cell behavior, neurite growth, osteocyte sensing, cardiovascular diseases, and immunology.",
- "name" : "Cell Biomechanics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-1010",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Age and origin of the Earth, internal constituents, and energy sources; how plates move, oceans develop, resources accumulate, and mountains rise. Gives nonspecialists a picture of the Earth's major processes and the ways in which they interact to provide the world's citizens with adequate material resources. Lectures and recitation. (Students cannot obtain credit for both ERTH 1010 and ERTH 1100 .)",
- "name" : "Planet Earth I: The Solid Earth"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ITWS-2110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course involves a study of the methods used to extract and deliver dynamic information on the World Wide Web. The course uses a hands-on approach in which students actively develop Web-based software systems. Additional topics include installation, configuration, and management of Web servers. Students are required to have access to a PC on which they can install software such as a Web server and various programming environments.",
- "name" : "Web Systems Development"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-2230",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Laboratory experiments dealing with basic techniques used in the synthesis and characterization of organic compounds.",
- "name" : "Organic Chemistry Laboratory I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISCI-0466",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Wnet: Ntti Institute"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6090",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Advanced power electronic circuits and systems, as well as their modeling and control. Topics include advanced dc-dc converters, modeling by averaging and sampled-data methods, discontinuous conduction modes, linear and nonlinear current control methods and design, spectral and dynamic characteristics of pulse-width modulation, ac-dc converters with active power factor correction, resonant and soft-switching converters, and EMI filter design, as well as autonomous and distributed power systems. Course assignments include laboratory projects involving simulation, hardware design, and measurement.",
- "name" : "Advanced Power Electronics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-6100",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "As foundational course in the practice of critical game design, this course introduces students to major theorists in the field of game studies and topics including theories of play, space, narratology, ludology, identity, representation, culture and society. Students make integrative connections between theory and practice with a semester-long iterative design project, including critical writing, paper prototyping and peer feedback. Students explore game studies concepts both in a traditional research paper format, and in design practice. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Game Studies Theory and Praxis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USNA-2050",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The principles and procedures of ship navigation, movements, and employment. Course includes piloting, mathematical analysis, spherical triangulation, navigational aids, tides and currents, electronic navigation, and rules of the nautical road.",
- "name" : "Navigation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-1110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Covers the same lecture material as CHEM 1100 , but laboratory experiments will be more technique-oriented to provide better preparation for students who plan to take future laboratory courses in chemistry. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 1100 .",
- "name" : "Chemistry I with Advanced Lab"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7800",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The objectives of this beginning doctoral course are to introduce students to social science theory development, expose students to a broad array of research techniques, and help students design research programs and write about them. The underpinnings of scientific theory are reviewed along with a range of quantitative and qualitative research methods. Drawing on their own interests, students write one research proposal and two research papers illustrating the application of two different research methodologies.",
- "name" : "Doctoral Research Methods I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-2440",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Phys Chem For Life Sci"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-2125",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "The goal of this course is to gain practical experience with cellular and molecular biology through hands-on experimental techniques. The laboratory exercises are designed to illustrate current concepts in cellular and molecular biology.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Cellular and Molecular Biology Laboratory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4130",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Survey of modern techniques in and associated with mass spectrometry, including historical perspectives, strengths/weaknesses, detection/quantification of analytes, ionization source/mass analyzer design, and construction of associated technologies including vacuum systems, ion detection, and ion optics. Ion formation processes will also be discussed. Students cannot get credit for both CHEM 4130 and CHEM 6130 . \u00c2",
- "name" : "Mass Spectrometry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6650",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Application of modern control theory to chemical processes. Introduction to on-line data acquisition and computer control. Real-time process optimization and optimal control theory. Estimation theory and adaptive control. Introduction to stochastic control and to the control of large-scale distribution systems. Case studies via computer-aided design programs.",
- "name" : "Advanced Process Control"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-1100",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "A survey of concepts applied to nuclear power production and non-power applications of nuclear science and technology.\u00c2 Topics include next generation nuclear power plants, nuclear reactor materials, waste management, environmental impacts of nuclear power, fusion power, medical applications, radiation protection, and other topics of current interest. Introduction to and tours of experimental facilities including an electron accelerator.\u00c2 Discussions of educational, research, and career opportunities in Nuclear Engineering. This course is graded Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Nuclear Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COMM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4550",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Visualizing data is a key step in understanding many problems. This course is designed to introduce students to methods of visualizing many different types of data, such as images, three-dimensional surfaces, flow fields, and medical data. Both existing visualization software and program custom visualizations using C++ and OpenGL will be used. Course activities include discussion of recent and classic research papers, weekly homework assignments, in-class critiques of visualization artifacts, and a final project to explore creative uses of these techniques. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Interactive Visualization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6810",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The purpose of this course is to enable the technically oriented manager to select projects of value to the organization, develop a project plan including staffing, perform a risk analysis on the project, and successfully execute the project. Students, working alone or in teams, practice the project management process by planning a current project in the area of new product development, process reengineering, information systems, or any other project with business implementation.",
- "name" : "Management of Technical Projects"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BUSN-6305",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "In this course, students analyze markets and clients using quantitative and qualitative analytic frameworks including original research.\u00c2 Students develop market strategies that best communicate value proposition to clients using best channels and messages.\u00c2 Students develop innovation strategies to enhance value to the end client, building budgets and sales forecasts that accurately reflect market conditions.\u00c2 Students align products, platforms, and people to optimally serve the client",
- "name" : "Leaders in Dynamic Markets"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4700",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will examine hormone and brain/behavior relationships across the lifespan.\u00c2 Hormones are molecules that are secreted by glands (the majority of which are located outside the brain) and have distal effects on their targets, such as the brain, throughout development.\u00c2 A focus will be on hormones' effects, mechanisms, and brain regions of interest for behavior and cognitive processes, such as perception, learning/memory, social cognition, motivation, and emotion. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Hormones, Brain, and Behavior"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-1040",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The sciences of the natural world, focusing primarily on the earth and life sciences. The course addresses the origin, evolution, and current state of the planet and examines the earth as a life-supporting system. Specific examples of developments in scientific thinking are used to illustrate connections among the various disciplines comprising the natural sciences. The course is designed for non-science majors, and cannot be used by students majoring in one of the bio- or geosciences to fulfill a distribution requirement. This restriction does not apply to students majoring in computer science, mathematics, chemistry, or physics.",
- "name" : "Natural Sciences II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-6700",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Freshwater ecology is the quantitative examination of major biological fresh water communities. Course discussions will delineate the physical and chemical regimes under which aquatic organisms exist.\u00c2 Basic limnological processes are studied to define aquatic systems of differing physical characteristics.\u00c2 Nutrient chemistry analyses of waters of varying acidity, alkalinity, and chemical loadings are related to their trophic status.\u00c2 Lecture and Laboratory are taught at the Darrin Fresh Water Institute at Lake George with field activities at various locations in the Adironacks. The course includes extensive hands-on laboratory work, as well as the writing of in-depth reports.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Freshwater Ecology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6200",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Spectra of various kinds are essential tools in modern chemistry. This course will deal with the interpretation of mass, infrared, NMR and UV-visible spectra as applied to the identification and structural characterization of organic compounds.",
- "name" : "Organic Spectra Interpretation"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BUSN-6325",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Leaders create an executable and fundable plan that optimizes people, platforms, products, projects, and resources for a specific organization in a specific market, in either an entrepreneurial or intrapreneurial context.\u00c2 The final plan is presented to a panel of evaluators for viability and fundability.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Leaders Charting the Course"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4960",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-4961",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in PHYS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-5140",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to Structures introduces the student of Architecture to the principles of structural mechanics and their application to basic architectural structures comprised primarily of wood. The fundamentals of statics are presented in order to gain an understanding of the way in which external forces produce internal stresses in individual members and, in essence, flow through the building system to be resolved at the foundation level. The principles of strength of materials are studied to understand how particular structural materials and configurations manage to resist these forces without unacceptable distortions, or even failure. Wood structural properties are studied in all their complexity as a means to internalize the more theoretical topics broached. Through in-class presentations, reading, homework and project work, computer lab, field trips, and case studies, the student will be aided in developing this intuitive (while practical) understanding. It is recognized that intuitions of building technologies are not acquired quickly but result from much study, observation, and practice. Introduction to Structures makes use of the several approaches above to ensure that the beginning student is provided with a broad, solid base for future structural investigations. WebCT will be used to expand the student's access to course materials and allow for a measure of distance learning. Sustainability: the following notions are introduced as important attributes of sustainable structures and construction: durability and service life and life cycle cost. This course is required of all architecture graduate students\u00c2 in the M.Arch. program.\u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Structures 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-4800",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Subsurface Imaging"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6966",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6900",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Chemistry Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-2962",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4530",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A lecture/laboratory course for Chemical Engineering students. Topics include the principles of chemical equilibria and their relation to modern analytical methods and the basis of instrumental techniques for characterizing the chemical structures and properties of compounds. The course provides laboratory experience in the use of modern instruments along with other chemical techniques. Aspects of analytical, organic, and physical chemistry will be illustrated throughout the course. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 2110 .",
- "name" : "Modern Techniques in Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4110",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will introduce advanced instrumental physicochemical methods of chemical analysis as well as instrument design and data capture/processing. Topics covered include atomic and molecular spectroscopy, chromatography, electroanalytical chemistry and measurement basics. This course is a prerequisite or corequisite for CHEM 4120 \u00c2 / CHEM 4130 .",
- "name" : "Instrumental Methods of Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ECON"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-1900",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course is intended to provide information about the chemistry major, including the role of chemistry in society, career opportunities, faculty research interests and opportunities for undergraduate research, as well as curriculum options, the Summer Arch experience, and extracurricular professional development opportunities. The course is graded S/U. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Chemistry for Life"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4110",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Students will be exposed to real time investigative biomedical research projects that are\u00c2 currently in development, taught the principles of research project development and\u00c2 exposed to clinical experiences at a level typically found in college graduates/post\u00c2 graduates who are entering medical school.",
- "name" : "Investigative Medicine I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4130",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Financial institutions, especially commercial banking and the Federal Reserve System, are considered from three perspectives: their monetary roles; trends in the economic, organizational, and technological aspects of their operations; and their other economic roles-a critical view. Also, the role of money in macroeconomic theory is considered along with the role of monetary policies in relation to the problems of inflation and unemployment.",
- "name" : "Money and Banking"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-2110",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course covers principles of equilibrium chemistry including acid-base and redox equilibria, ideal and nonideal treatments of equilibrium, complex simultaneous equilibria, and equilibrium as it relates to titrations and precipitation reactions in quantitative analysis. It also deals with basic electrochemistry and electro-analytical and spectroscopic methods of quantitative analysis and gravimetric methods. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 4530 . \u00c2",
- "name" : "Equilibrium Chemistry and Quantitative Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-4250",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An in-depth study of the major design issues in location and physical configuration of production and service facilities. The course emphasizes the use of mathematical models, computer modeling, and quantitative analysis as aids to the design process. Topics include plant layout and location, material handling, material flow analysis, and distribution systems. Major course concepts are developed through case studies and projects.",
- "name" : "Facilities Design and Industrial Logistics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6950",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A course for first semester chemistry graduate students that involves rotations of four weeks each through three research groups to become familiar with research in the department. Students will participate in various research-related activities, including group meetings, reading papers, exploring potential thesis projects, and shadowing or assisting graduate students working in the lab. The main goal of the course is to assist graduate students in their selection of a research adviser. \u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Introduction to Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-2940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
- "name" : "Studies in Biomedical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-6120",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course provides a foundation for professional-level research in science and technology studies. Through group research exercises, students explore the intersection between research issues (ethics, reliability, validity, quantification) and types of observation.",
- "name" : "Advanced Research Methods"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2820",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This studio focuses on the relationship between building and landscape in terms of conceptual, pragmatic, ideological, aesthetic, and functional issues. As such, it endeavors to examine critically the disciplinary boundary between building and landscape. It also critically assesses the connections and inherent complexities between an institutional situation, workplace activity, and residential inhabitation in order to explore questions of publicness and privacy. This studio also addresses the tectonic dimensions of construction and structure in architectural design. This course is required of all second-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 3"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6020",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Design And Analysis Of Algorithms"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-1020",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Techniques and applications of integration, polar coordinates, parametric equations, infinite sequences and series, vector functions and curves in space, functions of several variables, and partial derivatives.",
- "name" : "Calculus II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-2240",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "A continuation of CHEM 2230 , which is a prerequisite.",
- "name" : "Organic Chemistry Laboratory II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-4540",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Origin, transformation, and fate of organic matter on Earth. This course is chemistry-focused and incorporates concepts from biology, geology, and ecology. This course emphasizes reactivity, transport, and storage mechanisms which control the distribution of organic matter in terrestrial and marine systems. Analytical techniques for characterizing organic matter and applications to carbon cycling in natural and perturbed environments are also discussed.",
- "name" : "Organic Geochemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Game Development I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4020",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Laboratory exploration including synthesis and characterization of several types of inorganic compounds, with emphasis on the use of physical methods in inorganic chemistry. Communication of results in written and oral form is an integral part of the course. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Experimental Chemistry III: Inorganic and Physical Methods"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4700",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course approaches the modern digital studio as a compositional environment for the development of the student's original creative projects. Engineering techniques will be explored through musical examples and hands-on projects.",
- "name" : "Sound Recording and Production II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4140",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Modernity In Cult & Arch"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4030",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Laboratory exploration of physical methods used to characterize the structure and properties of compounds. Involves the experiments in CHEM 4020 \u00c2 that do not depend on the theoretical material of CHEM 4010 . Students can not get credit for both this course and CHEM 4020 .",
- "name" : "Experimental Chemistry III Abridged: Physical Methods"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-4160",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course assumes knowledge and experience in computer music programming, applications, and performance. It is directed to undergraduate students as an upper-level seminar guiding their progress through the composition of a significant musical work or the design and development of a significant research project. The class is divided between a group seminar, focusing on aesthetic, theoretical, and technical issues, and a workshop/lab in musical systems design, performance, computer music applications, and composition.",
- "name" : "Music and Technology II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4680",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Applied And Environmental Microbiology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4250",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces all elements of the spacecraft system design process from proposal preparation through detailed specification. Students are organized into design teams associated with different subsystems and tasks, to develop a solution to a space vehicle\u00c2 system problem of practical interest, by drawing on their background in aerospace engineering science and design. Topics include problem definition and requirement analysis, design specifications, concept development, reliability, materials considerations of alternative solutions, materials considerations, risk assessment and mitigation, manufacturability, mission analysis, and presentation skills. This is a communication-intensive course.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Space Vehicle Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces students to basic topics in communication theory and research. It includes topics in interpersonal, group, organizational, mediated, and mass communication. Students will study and apply theories to real world situations and events and explore the social and cultural impact of new media technology.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Communication Theory and Practice"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-7870",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This is a reading course designed to introduce first-year Ph.D. students in management to the theory families and empirical research in the field of Strategic Management. Strategic Management theories draw from parent disciplines of economics, psychology, sociology, anthropology, evolutionary biology, and political science. This puts the field at the nexus of all management studies.",
- "name" : "Strategic Management Theory Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6630",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This design studio will explore various concerns that relate architecture to environmental and ecological concerns. It will address human intervention at multiple and diverse scales within the natural world in order to understand their social, technical, aesthetic, conceptual, and philosophical implications for architectural design. Throughout the semester, the evolution of student design proposals will coordinate with the environmental and ecological issues that are presented in the supporting courses at CASE that are taken simultaneously with this studio. B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.Arch. students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
- "name" : "Graduate Architecture Design 5"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-2950",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Hands-on research in a faculty research laboratory.",
- "name" : "Undergraduate Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2940",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Individual and collaborative projects and assignments at the 2000 level adapted to the needs of individual students.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Studies in the Arts"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-6020",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Methods of designing experiments so that statistical analysis of the resulting data will yield the maximum useful information. Testing of hypotheses; analysis of variance and covariance. Various designs, including the factorial and its modifications, incomplete blocks, Latin squares, and response surface designs are covered. Also discussed are optimality properties of design.",
- "name" : "Design of Experiments"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-6520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Intrinsic spins, Pauli matrices, spinors. Addition of angular momenta, Clebsch-Gordon coefficients, Wigner-Eckart Theorems, applications. Approximate treatments: variation methods, overlap integrals, Block wavelength. WKB methods. Stationary perturbation, degeneracy. Fine structure and hyperfine structure in atoms. Approximations for time dependent problems: Fermi-Golden rules. Classical fields: Lagrangian density, variational principle, field equations, normal modes. Field quantization: quantization of continuous systems, EM radiation, photons, EM-atom coupling, spontaneous emission. Relativistic single particle: Dirac equation, free space solution, central force solution. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Quantum Mechanics II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6140",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will review modern techniques of multi-dimensional NMR spectroscopy, including the history of magnetic resonance, principles of NMR, 13C and 1H NMR, multinuclear NMR, 2D homonuclear and heteronuclear methods, nuclear Overhauser effect, relaxation, structure elucidation, solid-state NMR and the nuts and bolts of NMR spectrometers and probes. This course is intended for graduate and upper-level undergraduate students in the School of Science and Engineering. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 4140 .",
- "name" : "NMR Spectroscopy for Scientists and Engineers"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-2620",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This course provides the student with a formal participation in the weekly colloquium series of the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences. These colloquia involve lectures on a wide variety of topics in the geologic and environmental sciences, primarily by outside investigators who are currently active in those fields. (Students may take this course a maximum of two times for credit.)",
- "name" : "Current Topics in Earth Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6910",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Doctoral Research Mthds II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4780",
- "credits" : "5",
- "description" : "This is an upper division architectural design studio that explores topics of contemporary interest to the discipline. Students apply for this studio based on their personal interest and professional objectives. Three such studios Architectural Design Studio 5, Architectural Design Studio 6, and Architectural Design Studio 7, are required for the degree. This course is offered in the fall and spring semesters and is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
- "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 6"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
- "name" : "Communication Studies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-6190",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Big Data Analytics is the automated process for finding interesting, actionable information from large amounts of data. This course emphasizes the evolution from machine learning to big data analytics. Topics include data-driven science and engineering, basic data mining, machine learning approaches for big data, artificial neural networks, time series analysis and deep learning. There is a special emphasis on the use of scriptable code for Big Data Analytics.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Big Data Analytics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-4160",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Review of electronic properties of materials. Growth and structure of semiconductors. Diffusion, ion implantation, oxidation, microlithography, plasma etching, thin film deposition, metallization, with emphasis on Si technology. Introduction to compound semiconductors.",
- "name" : "Semiconducting Materials"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4963",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BMED"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-4250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is the third course in the central track of the Writing concentration for GSAS students. In this course, students gain exposure to elements of the bigger creative picture, including intellectual property (IP) development, world-building, and original character design. Students also continue to refine their competency in game writing essentials while exploring complex game narrative challenges such as branching, open-world, and other non-linear structures.",
- "name" : "Writing for Games II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2330",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to Structures introduces the student of Architecture to the principles of structural mechanics and their application to basic architectural structures comprised primarily of wood. The fundamentals of statics are presented in order to gain an understanding of the way in which external forces produce internal stresses in individual members and, in essence, flow through the building system to be resolved at the foundation level. The principles of strength of materials are studied to understand how particular structural materials and configurations manage to resist these forces without unacceptable distortions, or even failure. Wood structural properties are studied in all their complexity as a means to internalize the more theoretical topics broached. Through in-class presentations, reading, homework and project work, computer lab, field trips, and case studies, the student will be aided in developing this intuitive (while practical) understanding. It is recognized that intuitions of building technologies are not acquired quickly but result from much study, observation, and practice. Introduction to Structures makes use of the several approaches above to ensure that the beginning student is provided with a broad, solid base for future structural investigations. WebCT will be used to expand the student's access to course materials and allow for a measure of distance learning. Sustainability: The following notions are introduced as important attributes of sustainable structures and construction: durability and service life\u00c2 and life cycle cost.",
- "name" : "Structures 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4470",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to quantum mechanics and applications in chemical systems. Atomic and molecular spectra and structure. Statistical thermodynamics.",
- "name" : "Theoretical Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAR-0020",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course is an overview of leadership fundamentals such as setting direction, problem-solving, listening, presenting briefs, providing feedback, and using effective writing skills. Students continue to explore dimensions of leadership values, attributes, skills, and actions in the context of practical, hands-on, and interactive exercises. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 1020 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of Military Science Lab II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4330",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will examine how bioinformatics, functional genomics, and other modern biotechnologies are used to speed the discovery of new drugs, especially those small organic molecules to treat human diseases with large unmet therapeutic need. Special emphasis will be placed on molecular target identification and validation as well as high-throughput screening to identify a lead. Topics to be discussed will include transgenic mice, RNA interference, DNA and protein microarrays, homogenous time-resolved fluorescence bioassays, phage-display, combinatorial chemistry, and parallel synthesis. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and CHEM 6330 .",
- "name" : "Drug Discovery"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4410",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A course dealing with physicochemical properties of substances on a macroscopic scale. Chemical thermodynamics, electrochemistry, electric and magnetic phenomena, transport properties, and surface and colloid chemistry.",
- "name" : "Macroscopic Physical Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6030",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Multimedia Performance Systems explores the composition and programming of real-time performance systems. The course will examine the basics of MIDI, sound synthesis, digital signal processing, and image/video manipulation.\u00c2 Final projects will consist of a real-time performance system or interactive installation.",
- "name" : "Multimedia Performance Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4440",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Topics in physical chemistry that are important for understanding processes in biological systems. Included are: thermodynamics as applied to phase and chemical equilibria in chemical and biochemical systems; passive transport models for diffusion and electrical conductivity in electrolyte solutions; kinetic models for simple and complex chemical reactions, including enzyme mechanisms; quantum mechanical models used in spectroscopy.",
- "name" : "Physical Chemistry for Life Sciences"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-4560",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will explore the different strategies used by different languages to fulfill the same needs of human communication. A sampling of topics: quickly learning the basics of a new language using linguistic principles; cross-linguistic knowledge elicitation and engineering;\u00c2 principles of generative grammar; space, time, agency, and other linguistic phenomena viewed cross-linguistically.",
- "name" : "Cross-linguistic Perspectives"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4970",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in STSO"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2020",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Music technology-based research and composition taught in the context of modern computerized production methods. Technical topics include basic principles of music programming languages, digital sound synthesis and sampling, and the use of computer systems for musical control of electronic instruments. Musical topics include a study of important musical works and compositional techniques of the 21st century. Student projects involve hands-on work on a variety of computer programming languages, instruments, and software. This course is a prerequisite for further creative work with Rensselaer's computer music facilities. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Music and Technology I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "USAR-0050",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "The purpose of this course is to develop basic leadership skills. The course has three objectives: teach cadets those aspects of the art of leadership and the science of warfare they will use as junior officers in the U.S. Army; prepare cadets for the Leadership Development and Assessment Course (LDAC); instill in cadets the values and ethos required to become leaders of character. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 2060 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
- "name" : "Applied Military Leadership Lab I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4710",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces the fundamentals of protein structure and function with an emphasis on chemical concepts as applied to biological problems. It provides an introduction to enzymatic reaction mechanisms and includes interactive hands-on computer-aided visualization exercises. The goal is to equip students with an understanding and appreciation for the diversity and versatility of protein function. This course is intended for upper-level undergraduate students in the School of Science and Engineering. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 6710 . \u00c2",
- "name" : "Chemical Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-2900",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Independent study program for the purpose of developing research skills under the guidance of a faculty member. This course may be repeated, and it cannot count as a biology elective.",
- "name" : "Research in Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4610",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Building Conservation 1"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-2960",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MTLE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-2220",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Programming In Java"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-2960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BMED"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2510",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course establishes an understanding of the most common materials, their properties and resulting uses, and the implications of their uses in the larger context of material life cycles. The structural makeup of metals, ceramics, polymers, and composite materials is discovered and their resulting properties, costs, and life cycle consequences are clarified. An understanding of basic mechanical properties is established hands on by conducting tension, compression, and 3-point bending tests (mse-lab). Physical performance of material constructs as synergy between form and material properties is further illustrated. Experiments are conducted that introduce such major concepts as structural loading, properties of sections, and resulting system performance. Sustainability: The concept of life cycles is introduced; material and energy flows are tracked throughout the entire material life cycle. This will be accomplished alongside introducing major material groupings (metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites). Students come to realize that environmental concerns are directly related to structural composition and material availability. Consequences of resource extraction, distribution, manipulation, use, and disposal, reuse or recycle are addressed at both local and global scales. Selected field trips to materials extraction, processing, manufacturing, disposal, and recycling facilities are aimed to give physical meaning to the concept of life cycle.",
- "name" : "Materials and Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-6790",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This HASS graduate seminar examines major theories and approaches to studying the media from a broad cultural studies perspective. Analysis of foundational and contemporary readings will allow students to consider, from their own field's perspective, topics such as the politics of representation and the representation of politics; commercialization; surveillance; depictions of gender, race, and class; and the fictional, factual, and fake. Examples will be drawn mainly from the mass media, particularly television and film. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Media Studies"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-2960",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ENGR"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
- "description" : "Permission of instructor.",
- "name" : "Individual Projects in Mechanical Engineering, Aerospace Engineering or Nuclear Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6970",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ECON"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-4280",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Examine advanced econometric and statistical methods for the analysis of high-dimensional data, otherwise known as \"Big Data.\" In this setting, detailed information for each unit of observation informs machine learning techniques such as classification and regression trees; random forests; penalized regressions; and boosted estimation. These prediction methods are then utilized to improve causal modeling, with applications in the study of healthcare demand and supply modeling, and behavior of consumers and businesses. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Econometric Methods for Big Data"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4967",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4810",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Chemical processes important in the environment from naturally occurring and man-induced systems. Thermodynamic and chemical considerations of fuels; the thermodynamics of the atmosphere; atmospheric photochemistry; chemistry of natural water systems; chemistry of pesticides, fertilizers, and other important environmental contaminants; aspects of the carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur cycles.",
- "name" : "Chemistry of the Environment"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-4700",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In order to survive, corporations need to renew themselves. This requires instilling an entrepreneurial mindset which is often a challenge for large established corporations. Corporations caught up in the web of commoditization, stagnation, down-sizing, cost-cutting, re-engineering and the fast pace of globalization and technical change have come to realize that boosting their entrepreneurial capabilities, can improve their competitive positions through creating new markets and even transforming their industries. Yet overall, these efforts have produced uneven success. Although entrepreneurs in organizations can benefit from the knowledge resources, experience, and financial assets and networks of the large firm, they are constrained by the firm's inertial structure and entrenched management practices, as well as by the influence of current customers. This course helps students understand these challenges and how to cope with them through developing appropriate corporate competencies, structures, systems, and talent management practices.",
- "name" : "Corporate Entrepreneurship"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4140",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The application of geotechnical engineering to the environmental area. Deals with waste disposal, waste containment systems, waste stabilization, and landfills. Emphasis on design of such facilities. Includes related topics necessary for design, e.g., geosynthetics, groundwater, contaminant transport, and slurry walls. Some field trips are possible. (Students cannot receive credit for both this course and CIVL 6550 .)",
- "name" : "Geoenvironmental Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6910",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Discussions and seminars on how to deal with the various aspects of teaching and related problems encountered by teaching assistants in chemistry. Seminar topics will include: cognitive theories of learning; several models of teaching; educational psychology; attitude and motivational factors; communication and presentation skills; leadership; time management; how to write an exam; grading problems; ethics; group problem solving skills; and cultural diversity. Seminars will be led by a senior, experienced teaching assistant along with participating faculty.",
- "name" : "Chemistry Teaching Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHIL-4360",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Phil Prob Space & Time"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6780",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will serve as a seminar for advanced students of linguistics. The material to be covered will be selected collaboratively by the instructor and each cohort of students. Students, who ideally will have taken at least two linguistics-oriented courses previously, will be guided in pursuing topics that they have found particularly compelling in previous courses.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Advanced Topics in Linguistics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4950",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "As a confirmation of their ability to integrate their knowledge of chemistry to deal with a research problem, students will present a research-style paper and conference-style poster on a research-related topic. This is preferred to be on a prior or ongoing undergraduate research project, but may be a literature review on approval by the instructor.",
- "name" : "Senior Experience"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4974",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6020",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This advanced graduate level course will focus on the structure, bonding, and reactivity of transition metal coordination compounds. The course will cover group theory, ligand field theory, substitution reactions, photochemistry, catalysis, and redox reactions. Examples from the literature will be included to highlight the current research trends and applications of coordination compounds.",
- "name" : "Coordination Chemistry \u00e2\u0080\u0093 Fundamentals and Applications"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ITEC-2210",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Introduction To Hci"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6170",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Advanced graduate course covering fundamental aspects of NMR common for application in a broad range of fields. Classical and quantum-mechanical descriptions are utilized to explore information content of NMR pulse sequences. The latter approach includes density matrix theory and proceeds with the product-operator formalism. Practical aspects and data analysis are also described. Subsequent focus is on liquid-state NMR of biological macromolecules, including resonance assignment and determination of molecular structure and dynamics. Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and BCBP 6170 .",
- "name" : "Advanced Topics in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Communication Internship"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-4240",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An introductory course in use of the Finite Element Method (FEM) to solve one-and two-dimensional problems in fluid mechanics, heat transfer, and elasticity. The methods are developed using weighted residuals. Algorithms for the construction and solution of the governing equations are also covered. Students will be exposed to the use of commercial finite element software.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Finite Elements"
- },
- {
- "code" : "GSAS-6940",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Studies in Games"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4430",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Design For Global Society"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6510",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is designed to cover the history and application of modern computational chemistry techniques to chemical problems. It will provide familiarity with the various methods and tools presently in use and the assumptions and limitations inherent in each approach. The format involves both lecture and studio modes of instruction and meets in a classroom where each student has a modern workstation.",
- "name" : "Computational Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6530",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Postulates of quantum mechanics. Solution of the particle in a box, harmonic oscillator, and the hydrogen atom via series solutions and ladder operator techniques. Development of atomic and molecular orbital theories with applications to structure and spectra.",
- "name" : "Quantum Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ADMN-6150",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "External Fellowship Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ISYE-2960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-6410",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Deep Listening"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6610",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course provides an introduction to natural and biobased polymers that have a broad range of uses such as biodegradable plastics, hydrogels, coatings, polymeric drugs and bioresorbable polymers. Topics discussed include an introduction to polymer science, natural building blocks, integration of biocatalytic and chemical synthetic methods, principles of green chemistry and sustainability. A working knowledge of organic chemistry and biochemistry is required.",
- "name" : "Natural and Biobased Polymers and Materials"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHYS-2220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Applications of special relativity and quantum theory to topics in modern physics. Atomic and molecular physics. Quantum statistics, blackbody radiation, and lasers. Crystalline solids. Superconductivity. Nuclear and particle physics. Astrophysics and cosmology. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Quantum Physics II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6410",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course discusses state-of-the-art techniques in patterning biomolecules, biosensors, machining three-dimensional microstructures and building microfluidic devices (Lab-on-a-Chip).\u00c2 Seminal and current literature will be used to discuss topics in BioMEMs ranging from device fabrication to applications in cell biology and medicine.\u00c2 Students cannot get credit for both BMED 4410 \u00c2 and BMED 6410.",
- "name" : "BioMEMs"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This seminar surveys the history of medicine through discussion and analysis of secondary literature exploring central and key themes from the age of the Enlightenment up through recent history. Topics will include the history of the profession and practice of medicine, public health, disease, historical memory, education, the state, policy, institutions, and race, class, and gender in the history of medicine.",
- "name" : "History of Medicine"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6660",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The objective of this course is to provide the student with a broad survey of methods of analysis and characterization of polymers. Thermal analysis, molecular weight characterization, spectroscopy, and mechanical property determination will be reviewed with an emphasis on method of measurement, quantities measured, and quantities derived from the measurements. Select applications will be used to convey the usefulness of these methods for characterizing polymers and their properties.",
- "name" : "Polymer Analysis and Characterization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6780",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The biophysical mechanism of protein folding and the role of misfolding in human disease is explored. The course will introduce principles of protein structure, protein folding in the cell, and thermodynamic and kinetic methods for studying protein folding in vitro. The course will also involve a literature-based discussion of human diseases related to protein folding defects, including Alzheimer's and other amyloid diseases, cystic fibrosis, and Prion-related syndromes.",
- "name" : "Protein Folding"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-4760",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The objective is to help engineering students recognize and understand the importance of cost factors that are inherent in all engineering decisions. Development of ability to handle engineering problems that involve economic factors. The course includes economic environment, selections in present economy, value analysis, critical path economy, interest and money-time relationships, depreciation and valuation, capital financing and budgeting, basic methods for undertaking economic studies, risk, uncertainty and sensitivity, selections between alternatives, fixed, increment, and sunk costs, the effects of income taxes in economic studies, replacement studies, minimum cost formulas, economic studies of public projects, economic studies in public utilities. Effects of inflation are considered at each step. Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and ENGR 4750 .",
- "name" : "Engineering Economics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-4590",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This class studies the workings of major institutions and practices in American life during a period in which key parts of our society seem dysfunctional, having lost their integrity, ability to solve problems, and willingness to imagine any positive future. How did this happen? Why does it continue? What might be done about it? Through a careful reading of texts in political analysis and social criticism, students explore some significant issues in modern society.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "American Politics in Crisis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4140",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is an in-depth study of current research within the broad field of cytoskeletal biology. Students will read, interpret, and critique recent primary literature, present new findings, lead discussions, and identify rising questions in the field.\u00c2",
- "name" : "Cytoskeletal Biology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4963",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHME"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-4961",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-2020",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A continuation of CHME 2010 . Topics include process flowsheeting, solution thermodynamics, phase equilibria, chemical-reaction equilibria, and applications of thermodynamics to problems in chemical-process design. One credit hour of this course is devoted to Professional Development.",
- "name" : "Energy, Entropy, and Equilibrium"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-4040",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Algorithms with provable guarantees on the quality of their solutions are a powerful way of dealing with intractable problems. This course covers fundamental techniques for designing approximation algorithms. Possible topics include: semi-definite and linear programming, inapproximability and the PCP theorem, randomized rounding, metrics and cuts, primal-dual methods, and online algorithms.",
- "name" : "Approximation Algorithms"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECON-6830",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Study topics such as markets for pharmaceuticals, medical devices, medical technology, and health innovation; FDA and other types of regulations in pharmaceuticals and medical devices; models of hospital competition and provider incentives; health information technologies and their adoption and diffusion; advances in personalized healthcare; and externalities in health.",
- "name" : "Health Economics and Policy II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-4120",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Topics may be chosen from differential geometry of curves and surfaces, involutes and evolutes, order of contact, developable surfaces, Euler's and Meusnier's Theorem, mean and Gaussian curvatures, geodesics and parallel transport, The Theorem Egregium of Gauss, Gauss-Bonnet Theorem, computer-aided geometric design, computational geometry, tessellations, tiling and patterns, projective and non-Euclidean geometries, postulates and axiomatic systems, advanced Euclidean geometry, and the history of geometry.",
- "name" : "Fundamentals of Geometry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COGS-6962",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in COGS"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-6230",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Review of economic concepts and their application to transportation. Economic basis of transportation demand. Estimation of aggregate and disaggregate demand functions. Value of time. Supply functions. Cost functions, production functions. Transportation externalities. Valuation techniques. Cost/benefit analysis and multi-criteria approaches.",
- "name" : "Transportation Economics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-6970",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4011",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An interdisciplinary course focusing on the fundamentals and applications of semiconductor electrochemistry, and will serve as a bridge between classical electrochemistry and solid state physics.\u00c2 Topics include fundamentals of semiconductor physics, principles of electrochemistry, nature of semiconductor/electrolyte interfaces, current flow, and the applications of above principles to environment remediation and renewable energy devices such as solar cells, photocatalysis, and battery technologies. This course is cross listed with CHME 6011 . \u00c2",
- "name" : "Semiconductor Electrochemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4968",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6940",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Supervised reading and problems, by individual arrangement.",
- "name" : "Readings in Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-6400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. Xinformatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines (e.g. X=astronomy, geology). Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments. Students cannot obtain credit for more than one of ERTH 6400 / ITWS 6400 \u00c2 / CSCI 6400 .",
- "name" : "Xinformatics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6969",
- "credits" : "0-1",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-6620",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will introduce synthetic and kinetic aspects of various polymerization reactions that have been employed to produce commodity and specialty plastic materials.\u00c2 Control and prediction of the molecular weight distribution for different polymerization mechanisms will be discussed along with various characterization techniques of molecular weight distribution and its relation to properties. Thermal/solution properties, chemical/physical properties, and uses of polymers also will be discussed. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 4620 .",
- "name" : "Polymer Chemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4962",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Theory and practice of chromatographic separation processes.\u00c2 Topics include chromatographic dispersion, adsorption isotherms, solute movement analysis, chromatographic techniques (reversed-phase, HIC, ion exchange, affinity, and size exclusion), modes of operation (gradient, elution, displacement, and continuous systems), novel morphologies and chromatographic applications in biotechnology.\u00c2 Includes critical reviews of the current literature and computer simulations.\u00c2 Suitable for graduate students in chemical engineering, chemistry, biology, and biomedical engineering. Students cannot receive credit for both CHME 4400 and CHME 6440 .",
- "name" : "Chromatographic Separation Processes"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARTS-2090",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Radical Graphics/Screenprinting seeks to expand on the definition of print graphics from one that traditionally creates multiple images on paper to a practice that includes art-making activities as varied as mud-stenciling, t-shirt printing, \"fine art\" prints, animation, sculpture, and political protest graphics. Students will focus on the concept of the art \"matrix\": a template for image-making that can work across media. Students will create matrices that can be applied across multiple art-making platforms.\u00c2 \u00c2",
- "name" : "Radical Graphics/Screenprinting"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ITEC-4100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Itec Capstone Experience"
- },
- {
- "code" : "IHSS-1030",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Television is considered a defining social, political and cultural feature of consumer culture. Television is morphing into something more expansive and diverse. In this course, we will study the impact of television and learn to make it. Through hands-on experience, students produce and direct their own multi-camera projects. Students work on technical and creative aspects of production. Students learn to operate studio gear including green screen, live switcher, cameras, audio, teleprompter, lights, etc. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Behind the TV Screen"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4120",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "Students will be exposed to several clinical experiences at a level typically found in college\u00c2 graduates/post graduates who are entering medical school.",
- "name" : "Investigative Medicine II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4500",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Principles of kinetics, reactor design, and analysis for both homogeneous and heterogeneous (catalytic) systems. Topics include design for multiple reaction networks (optimum selectivity), analysis of simple reactor combinations, and design of isothermal, adiabatic, and optimum temperature profile reactor.",
- "name" : "Chemical Reactor Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-4350",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Creative Seminar II"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-2830",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A survey of atomic and nuclear phenomena and their application in various engineering disciplines. Systematics of atoms and nuclei; nuclear reactions and their characterization; radioactive decay; fission and fusion energy release; radiation effects on materials and biological systems; radiation production, detection, and protection. Applications include energy production, manufacturing, and\u00c2 medicine.",
- "name" : "Nuclear Phenomena for Engineering Applications"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4967",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in BMED"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-4170",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A one-term laboratory course covering the fundamentals of biotechnology and bioprocessing including molecular biology, fermentation, and protein purification.",
- "name" : "Bioprocessing Laboratory Course"
- },
- {
- "code" : "WRIT-2310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Creative Writing: Poetry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MGMT-6720",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Technology is a vital link in how modern corporations identify, acquire, transact with, and keep their customers. This course provides an introduction to both the technology infrastructure most relevant to the customer relationship as well as marketing issues that result from the application of computers and communication networks. Topics include issues related to social media, search, online advertising, blogging, customer relationship management, online market segmentation, and marketing of IT products. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
- "name" : "Internet Marketing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6480",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will focus on the connections between the behavior of single molecules and their interactions and macroscopic non-Newtonian behavior. Among the topics discussed are microscopic models of these systems, techniques for measuring and\u00c2 manipulating the microsctructure, and the impact on\u00c2 macroscopic behavior.\u00c2 Students may not receive credit for both this course and CHME 4480 .",
- "name" : "Single Molecules Complex Fluid"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ECSE-6130",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Basic relaying philosophy. Current and potential transformers. Operating principles of electromagnetic, electronic, and digital relays. Application of relays to protect generators, busses, transformers, and transmission lines.",
- "name" : "Protective Relaying"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6710",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces the theory and practical use of numerical design optimization methods. Topics include:\u00c2 gradient-based methods for unconstrained and constrained nonlinear optimization; numerical evaluation of derivatives; polynomialand- and kriging-based surrogate models; gradient-free optimization methods; optimization under uncertainty; multi-objective and multi-disciplinary optimization. Projects require the use of computer programs to generate numerical results; therefore, experience with programming is highly recommended.",
- "name" : "Numerical Design Optimization"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BIOL-4130",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "Independent research in health sciences, supervised by a faculty member, for the purpose of developing research skills. Such skills include defining a research project, both as a written and oral exercise for a scientific and general audience, and gathering preliminary research data enabling both a written and oral description of the project in the form of a research proposal and an oral defense. This is a communication-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Biomedical Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ERTH-6990",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
- "name" : "Master's Thesis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6610",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Development and application of mathematical methods for the solution of chemical engineering problems. Classical solution methods for ordinary and partial differential equations. Major emphasis is given to the mathematical implications of describing and solving representation of chemical reactors and other systems. Case studies relevant to other departmental graduate courses and ongoing research activities are discussed. The mathematical methods include series solutions, special function representations, boundary-value problems, and operational calculus.",
- "name" : "Mathematical Methods in Chemical Engineering I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-2050",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces common computational techniques that are used in Chemical Engineering. Topics include solving algebraic equations, data analysis, numerical differentiation and integration, and numerical solutions of differential equations applied to chemical engineering problems. Multiple numerical approaches will be used, including an introduction to computer programming.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Computational Chemical Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6410",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Review of atomic and nuclear physics and quantum mechanics; application to atomic, molecular and nuclear systems; particle and photon emissions; photon/particle interactions; quantum statistics; applications of nuclear physics to nuclear data, medical physics, accelerators, fusion systems, nuclear reactors; accelerators, fusion systems, nuclear reactors; key measurements and databases; advanced level of technical writing and presentation.",
- "name" : "Applied Atomic and Nuclear Physics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "WRIT-2940",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Studies in Writing"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BUSN-6106",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "In this three-credit, 15-week online graduate course, develop mastery as a change-agent leader who evaluates and implements change within complex and dynamic organizations.\u00c2 Perform an environmental evaluation to assess capacity for change that aligns wiht organization's vision and goals.\u00c2 Explore your personal leadership style and how you would develop and inspire others to participate fully in a change initiative.\u00c2 Learn to use the ADKAR change management model to lead a high-performing team, engage stakeholders, and communicate effectively with any audience type.",
- "name" : "Leaders as Change Agents"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MTLE-4520",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will review basic thermodynamic and kinetic concepts, which underpin how material behaves under extreme thermal, mechanical, chemical, electrical, and magnetic conditions as well as high-energy irradiations. Engineering materials that can withstand harsh environments and new materials with unique crystal structures and microstructures will be surveyed. \u00c2",
- "name" : "Materials under Extreme Conditions"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2600",
- "credits" : "6",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Graduate Design Studio"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PSYC-4260",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Psychol Tests & Measurement"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6670",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Process synthesis with applications to heat exchange networks, energy-integrated separation sequences, and reactor networks. Analysis, design, and optimization of large-scale systems.",
- "name" : "Advanced Process Design"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-4650",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "American Building- 20th C"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENVE-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Lecture course stresses multidisciplinary approaches to the use of microbial system for biotransformation and biodegradation of toxic and hazardous material. Topics include biodegradability, enzymatic transformations, microbial ecology, and properties of organic and inorganic compounds, in situ and ex situ engineering techniques. Real world design examples and projects are introduced. Permission of instructor is required.",
- "name" : "Bioremediation of Hazardous and Toxic Compounds"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-6211",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Working with a faculty member, students develop a big data health industry model for an issue, question, or problem of their choosing. Over the semester, the student frames the question to be analyzed, collects and prepares business data for analysis, performs the analysis, and presents actionable results and recommendations back to the organization. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6206 \u00c2 or ENGR 6216 .",
- "name" : "Modeling Health Decisions"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6900",
- "credits" : "0",
- "description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
- "name" : "Seminar"
- },
- {
- "code" : "PHIL-2100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course provides tools for the identification, analysis, and evaluation of the various patterns of reasoning as they occur in the real world. Patterns of reasoning include deductive reasoning, inductive reasoning, scientific reasoning, statistical reasoning, and causal reasoning. The course also covers some basic psychology and sociology of reasoning and belief and concludes with a critical discussion of science and the scientific method.",
- "name" : "Critical Thinking"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-4480",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction of multivariate statistical methods to model and analyze recorded data from physiological systems in biomedical engineering.\u00c2 Statistical approaches related to applied multivariate statistics, classification and regression.\u00c2 Associated linear methods include principal component analysis, Fisher discriminant analysis, partial least squares, canonical correlation analysis and their nonlinear counterparts.\u00c2 Descriptive tools include scatter diagrams, Hotelling's T2 statistics and contribution plots.\u00c2 The course has a strong emphasis on biomedical applications.",
- "name" : "Biomedical Data Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4130",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Aerodynamic analysis of multi-rotor aerial vehicles. Multi-rotor coordinates and controls for multicopters. Multicopter failure and recovery. Comparison of rotor speed and pitch control. Trim and performance analysis of different multirotor archetypes.",
- "name" : "Multirotor Aerial Vehicles"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4770",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The course focuses on design and analysis of energy systems from accessibility (cost), availability (security/reliability) and acceptability (Environmental, health impacts etc). The course discusses various forms of energy sources, various forms of energy consumption. The life cycle analyses build on first principles and thermo-economic considerations. Methods of life cycle analyses from net energy, economics, and impact will be studied.",
- "name" : "Design and Analysis of Energy Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-2520",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A study of the principles and concepts of sociology and their application to the study of society and self. Students are introduced to the scope, materials, and methods of sociology. The issues and problems to be studied come from basic social institutions such as the family, science, and religion. Other topics may include love, crime, political economy, power, population growth, social class, and minority and ethnic relations.",
- "name" : "Sociology"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHEM-2540",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to the application of chemistry to the understanding of problems in the earth and environmental sciences. Topics include thermodynamics and phase equilibria as applied to mineral stability, rock evolution, and water chemistry; stable isotope systematics; radiogenic isotope systematics, trace element geochemistry, organic geochemistry, and geochemical cycles.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Geochemistry"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
- "name" : "Topics in CHME"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CHME-6840",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is intended to give students a state-of-the-art understanding about single and multicomponent boiling and condensation heat transfer phenomena. Applications include the analysis of nuclear reactors, oil wells, and chemical process equipment. Students satisfactorily completing this course are expected to be able to thoroughly understand the current thermal-hydraulics literature on multiphase heat and mass transfer and be able to conduct independent research in this field.",
- "name" : "An Introduction to Multiphase Flow and Heat Transfer I"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-1600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the scientific principles that dictate the structure and properties of engineering materials, including metals, ceramics, semiconductors, and polymers. Physical properties of materials (mechanical, electrical, thermal, optical) are discussed in terms of the underlying bonding and structure, spanning multiple length scales from atomic packing to micron scale defects, in practical engineering materials. Throughout the course, the material behaviors are understood from the viewpoint of thermodynamics and kinetics.",
- "name" : "Materials Science"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MATH-4950",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Undergraduate mathematics projects that utilize students' mathematical knowledge will result in formal reports and final presentations. Examples are research projects or critical in-depth mathematical literature reviews. Information about projects will be exchanged in weekly meetings with the research supervisor. In order to take this course, students must make arrangements with a math faculty member to act as a research supervisor. This is a communication-intensive course. To be graded S/U.",
- "name" : "Research in Mathematics"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-1300",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This course teaches elementary programming concepts using the Python environment.\u00c2 Students are expected to have little or no prior programming experience.\u00c2 Topics include Python language syntax, variables, looping, function calls, manipulating arrays, performing statistical calculations, and plotting results.",
- "name" : "Beginning Programming in Civil and Environmental Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2200",
- "credits" : "4-5",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Design Studio"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2440",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Does documentary film depict reality or is it just another form of storytelling? This course takes a broad, historical look at documentary media, exposing students to a wide range of works that in some sense stand on claims to truth. Students are invited to develop a critical stance toward documentary modes of social representation, through viewing and analyzing colonial photography and cinema, ethnographic, propaganda, cinema verite, experimental, and even \"fake\" documentaries.",
- "name" : "Documentary Film"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ARCH-2469",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course focuses on the investigative methods of gathering and representing the physically measurable phenomena within the built environment as they pertain to material thermal and moisture performance, heat, daylight, air velocity, air quality and sound. Students will be introduced to both handheld instruments and investigative learning sensor kit networks for studying the built environment. Students will learn to visualize digitally information that is taken from \"investigative learning kits\". The course will also introduce students to open-source databases of physically measurable phenomena within the built environment. This course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program. B.Arch and M.Arch students can register for this course. Students from other majors will need permission of the instructor. \u00c2 This is a data-intensive course.",
- "name" : "Building Sciences Media"
- },
- {
- "code" : "ENGR-6215",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Students use visualization and cluster analysis tools to gain deeper insights into complex business relationships. Students apply data analytic process to real-world business problems and questions, including pricing decisions, customer analysis, competitive analysis, financial forecasts, customer decision models, organizational performance dashboards. Students tune models to represent current-state and adjust models as underlying assumptions change. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6205 \u00c2 or ENGR 6210 .",
- "name" : "Business Intelligence Analysis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4750",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Introduction to elementary theory of combustion and applications to energy sources, fires, and explosions. Discussion of internal and external combustion piston and turbine engines, solid-and liquid-propellant rockets, fire and explosion hazards of gaseous fuels, propellant and explosive performance.",
- "name" : "Combustion Systems"
- },
- {
- "code" : "BMED-6420",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An in-depth review of the underlying science, engineering, medicine, and contemporary research related to the nation's highest priorities for musculoskeletal diseases and care.\u00c2 Musculoskeletal anatomy, pathophysiology, epidemiology, and contemporary treatments are covered.\u00c2 Special topics will be presented relating state-of-the-art biomedical research to clinical practice.\u00c2 The clinical perspective of each topic will be presented by practicing clinicians with case studies.\u00c2 Topics conclude with live Webcasts or recorded surgery from Albany Medical Center or the Capital Region Bone and Joint Center.\u00c2 Students cannot get credit for both BMED 4420 \u00c2 and BMED 6420.",
- "name" : "Clinical Orthopaedics and Contemporary Research"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-2030",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to basic concepts in transportation engineering including planning, design, and operations. Introduces the challenges and issues in modeling transportation problems. Studies of various concepts related to the design of highway facilities, level of service, and demand for transportation services. Concepts related to signal optimization. Policy implications. Basics of transportation planning.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Transportation Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-6260",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Rhetoric, Culture & Comm Tech"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-2040",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Contract essentials; types of contracts for construction and for engineering services. Bidding procedure, surety bonds, insurance, litigation. Standard contract documents, the compilation of specifications. Engineering ethical principles and codes.",
- "name" : "Professional Practice"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-4430",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Linear Accelerator Laboratory will provide an introduction to measurements of experimental systems utilizing neutron sources.\u00c2 It will focus on measurements relating to the detection of neutrons through interactions in materials, neutron reaction cross-sections neutron diffusion and slowing down, Doppler broadening of cross-sections and how this applies to nuclear reactors, both neutron and photon activation analysis and its applications, and the fission process and measurement of delayed fission gammas.\u00c2 The course will utilize the unique abilities of the Gaerttner Linear Accelerator Center to provide real world neutron experiments to supplement the theory learned in previous courses at RPI.",
- "name" : "Linear Accelerator Laboratory"
- },
- {
- "code" : "STSO-2290",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "American Politics In Crisis"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-2670",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the elastic behavior of structural components. Analysis of statically determinate systems. Deflection calculations by virtual work and elastic load methods. Analysis of simple statically indeterminate structures. Influence lines. Interaction of structural components. Typical structural engineering loads.",
- "name" : "Introduction to Structural Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CSCI-6510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores the principles of distributed systems, emphasizing fundamental issues underlying the design of such systems: communication, coordination, synchronization, and fault-tolerance. Key algorithms and theoretical results will be studied and students will explore how these foundations play out in modern systems and applications.",
- "name" : "Distributed Systems and Algorithms"
- },
- {
- "code" : "CIVL-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
- "description" : "",
- "name" : "Readings in Civil Engineering"
- },
- {
- "code" : "MANE-6450",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Modeling and analysis of common manufacturing processes. Topics include bulk-forming, sheet-forming, and casting processes. Classical analysis techniques, upper bound analysis, slip-line field theory, asymptotic methods, and the finite element method are investigated.",
- "name" : "Mechanics of Materials Processing"
- },
{
"code" : "EMBA-6966",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EMBA"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-2560",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "What makes play musical and music playful? How does game sound and music contribute to gameworld creation, gameplay, and virtual performance? Ludomusicology\u00e2\u0080\u0094the relation of music to play\u00e2\u0080\u0094addresses these questions and challenges us to take play seriously. This course considers the diverse relationships among music, play, media, and performance, including game sound, music-stylistic features of game consoles and systems, children's games, remixing and sampling, the role musical games play in cultural identity, and more. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "What makes play musical and music playful? How does game sound and music contribute to gameworld creation, gameplay, and virtual performance? Ludomusicology\u2014the relation of music to play\u2014addresses these questions and challenges us to take play seriously. This course considers the diverse relationships among music, play, media, and performance, including game sound, music-stylistic features of game consoles and systems, children's games, remixing and sampling, the role musical games play in cultural identity, and more.",
"name" : "Game Sound and Musical Play"
},
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6840",
+ "description" : "Numerical methods and analysis for linear and nonlinear PDEs with applications from heat conduction, wave propagation, solid and fluid mechanics, and other areas. Basic concepts of stability and convergence (Lax equivalence theorem, CFL condition, energy methods). Methods for parabolic problems (finite differences, method of lines, ADI, operator splitting), methods for hyperbolic problems (vector systems and characteristics, dissipation and dispersion, shocks capturing and tracking schemes), methods for elliptic problems (finite difference and finite volume methods).",
+ "name" : "Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4600",
+ "description" : "Perception and thought are considered in terms of processes represented in the brain. The localization and lateralization of function are examined, drawing upon research on the behavioral effects of brain damage as well as brain-imaging studies and other approaches. Examples of topics include object recognition, memory, language, emotion, spatial ability, and motor processes.",
+ "name" : "Cognition and the Brain"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-1020",
+ "description" : "This course introduces students to digital photography, Web design, and interactive multimedia in making art. Students broaden their understanding of such topics as composition, effective use of images, color theory, typography, and narrative flow. Inquiry and experimentation are encouraged, leading towards the development of the skill and techniques needed to create visual art with electronic media.",
+ "name" : "Digital Imaging"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6500",
+ "description" : "This course will enable students to understand and apply theoretical foundations of programming concurrent, distributed, and mobile computing systems, namely process calculi, actors, join calculus, and mobile ambients. In the practical part, students will compare communication and synchronization aspects in concurrent programming languages following these theoretical models. Students will also review current research on distributed computing over the Internet, on topics including but not limited to coordination, mobility, heterogeneity, security, fault tolerance, scalability, programmability, and verification.",
+ "name" : "Distributed Computing Over The Internet"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4630",
+ "description" : "The course introduces students to the art of writing and directing short videos, with an emphasis on generating ideas, and realizing them in a well-developed final project. Major theories and principles are studied through a comparative analysis of scripts and films. Students learn to work with actors, write their own scripts, and direct videos. Two final projects \u2013 a script and a video \u2013 will integrate all of the elements covered in class. Lecture/Practicum.",
+ "name" : "Writing and Directing for Video"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6540",
+ "description" : "Basics of dynamic response of soil and soil-foundation systems, including applications to earthquake engineering and machine foundations. Systems studies include shallow and deep foundations, buried structures, earth structures, slopes, and earthquake site response.",
+ "name" : "Dynamics of Soil and Soil-Foundation Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4240",
+ "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Circadian Biology. Students will read and critique recent primary literature, present current research articles, and lead discussions on new findings in the field.",
+ "name" : "Topics in Circadian Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-4962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PHYS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6450",
+ "description" : "The goal of this course is to introduce students to program analysis and its many applications in software engineering, particularly in improving software quality and software productivity. Concretely, students who successfully complete this course should be able to: (1) understand and apply program analysis techniques, such as dataflow analysis and type-based analysis; (2) implement program analysis; (3) understand and apply software testing techniques, such as black-box testing and white-box testing; and (4) understand and apply refactoring techniques.",
+ "name" : "Principles of Program Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6965",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MTLE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6340",
+ "description" : "This course provides an introduction to ontologies, their uses, and an overview of their application in semantically enabled systems. Ontologies encode term meanings and are used to improve communication and enable computer programs to function more effectively. Class participants learn how to use ontologies in web-based applications and evaluate ontologies for reuse. Participants read relevant papers, learn how to critically review ontology papers and ontologies, and participate in group project(s) designing, using, and evaluating ontologies.",
+ "name" : "Ontologies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6270",
+ "description" : "The goal of this course is to introduce students to the problems, challenges, and applications of computer vision from a computational perspective. Topics include camera modeling and image formation, feature extraction, object and face recognition, image mosaic construction, stereo and three-dimensional imaging, motion, and tracking. Machine learning methods, including deep convolutional neural networks, will be studied and applied throughout the course.",
+ "name" : "Computational Vision"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2001",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "English Composition @ Hvcc"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6660",
+ "description" : "In-depth hands-on study of the technologies and protocols involved in building the Internet-of-Things (IoT), with specific focus on networking at the edge of the Internet. Topics include wireless communication and link layer technologies, multi-access and scheduling mechanisms, mobility models, routing in disconnected networks, energy-efficient edge networking, loss tolerant transport protocols, IoT security, data aggregation, and their applications to emerging areas such as vehicular networks, RFID systems and smart buildings.",
+ "name" : "Internetworking of Things"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6450",
+ "description" : "Selected topics beyond the scope of CHME 6430 . Particular emphasis on the current literature and the applications of computers and graphics. Extensive coverage is given to purification and separation technology, kinetic analysis, design of bioreactors, exploitation of genetic engineering, and bioprocess development. An individual project is required.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Biochemical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6530",
+ "description" : "Navier-Stokes equations, linear stability, vorticity and its origin, transition in wall-bounded and free-shear flows, statistics and Reynolds averaging, homogeneous turbulence, coherent structures, laboratory methods for study of turbulence, including turbulence measurements and turbulence modeling.",
+ "name" : "Turbulence"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6007",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Public Health Policy@ Alblaw"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ITWS-4969",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ITWS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6965",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ECON"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4080",
+ "description" : "The application of power semiconductor devices to the efficient conversion of electrical energy. Circuit analysis, signal analysis, and energy concepts are integrated to develop steady-state and dynamic models of generic power converters. Specific topics include AC/DC conversion, DC/DC conversion, DC/AC conversion, and AC/AC conversion. These generic converters are applied as controlled rectifiers, switching power supplies, motor drives, HVDC transmission, induction heating, and others. Ancillary circuits needed for the proper operation and control of power semiconductor devices are also discussed.",
+ "name" : "Semiconductor Power Electronics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4770",
+ "description" : "The second semester of the molecular biochemistry sequence. Topics include lipids and lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism and the coenzymes involved in this metabolism, nucleic acid synthesis and chemistry, protein synthesis and degradation, integration of metabolism, photobiology, and photosynthesis. This course is taught in studio mode. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either BIOL 4770 or CHEM 4770 .)",
+ "name" : "Molecular Biochemistry II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6010",
+ "description" : "This course provides an introduction to the \"heart and soul\" of managerial leadership, teamwork, and innovation by focusing on the behavior and characteristics of those exceptional individuals whose impact extends far beyond their own persona\u2014inside and outside of business. Leaders/innovators are those whose vision, creativity, and charisma allow them to transform their organizations and to change the lives of large numbers of people. Using a combination of case studies and simulations, the course offers a week-long immersion experience into the mindset, actions, and concerns of true business innovators.",
+ "name" : "Heroes, Leaders, and Innovators"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4965",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CIVL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6100",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the theory, algorithms, and applications of machine learning (supervised, reinforcement, and unsupervised) from data: What is learning? Is learning feasible? How can it be done? How can it be done well? The course offers a mix of theory, technique, and application with additional selected topics chosen from Pattern Recognition, Decision Trees, Neural Networks, RBF's, Bayesian Learning, PAC Learning, Support Vector Machines, Gaussian processes, and Hidden Markov Models.",
+ "name" : "Machine Learning from Data"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4470",
+ "description" : "A foundational course on the principles of radiation and radiation protection (health physics). Provides a fundamental understanding of natural and anthropogenic sources of radiation, radiation interactions in matter, the biological effects of radiation, internal and external dosimetry, and radiation shielding. The use of computational and simulation techniques is emphasized throughout the course. Studio-style case studies examine the medical, socio-political, and regulatory aspects of radiation utilization and protection.",
+ "name" : "Radiological Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Readings in Computer Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-2410",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Century Of The Gene"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presentend, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6900",
+ "description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
+ "name" : "Graduate Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAF-0080",
+ "description" : "The leadership laboratory courses (LLABs) include a study of Air Force customs and courtesies, drill and ceremonies, and military commands. LLAB also includes studying the environment of an Air Force officer and learning about opportunities available to commissioned officers. The AS 300 and AS 400 LLABs consist of activities classified as leadership and management experiences. They involve the planning and controlling of military activities of the cadet wing, and the preparation and presentation of briefings and other oral and written communications. LLABs also include interviews, guidance, and information which will increase the understanding, motivation, and performance of other cadets.",
+ "name" : "Air Force Leadership Laboratory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4820",
+ "description" : "Derivation, analysis, and use of computational procedures for solving differential equations. Topics covered include ordinary differential equations (both initial value and boundary value problems) and partial differential equations. Runge-Kutta and multistep methods for initial value problems. Finite difference methods for partial differential equations including techniques for heat conduction, wave propagation, and potential problems. Basic convergence and stability theory.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Numerical Methods for Differential Equations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4700",
+ "description" : "The course is intended to provide a computational perspective on one or more topics chosen from theory and algorithms; systems and software; artificial intelligence and data; or vision, graphics, robotics, and games. Students will read classic and recent research results in the field, write critical reviews of these publications, engage in in-class presentations and discussions, and/or write a publication-quality report on an innovative final project of their choice.",
+ "name" : "Technical Writing and Communication in Computer Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHIL-2600",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Moral Development"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-6970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ASTR"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6740",
+ "description" : "Statistical methods are developed for classic linear and non-linear regression analysis. Econometric tools such as instrumental variables, regression discontinuity, and difference-in-differences are emphasized for causal identification. Extensions are made to new topics such as simulation-based methods including bootstrap, nonparametric and semiparametricestimators, and quantileregression methods.",
+ "name" : "Econometrics II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-4610",
+ "description" : "DIS Studio C focuses on the co-production of products, organizations, and problem-solving strategies. Students will explore how to facilitate communication across multiple disciplinary and audience modalities, including stakeholders, designers, and users. Projects and course discussions will train students to translate social scientific and engineering problem-solving judgments and to evaluate how complex problems come to be defined. This course is required for DIS students who are dual-majoring with the School of Engineering.",
+ "name" : "Design and Innovation Studio C"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4510",
+ "description" : "Mechanical regulation of biological systems. Topics include principles and concepts of mechanobiology; evolution, embryogenesis, and histogenesis of tissues with particular references to skeletal system; mechanical regulation of cellular behavior, tissue growth and organ development; concept and application of strain energy regulation in biology; application of mechanobiology to tissue regeneration; limits of mechanical regulation.",
+ "name" : "Mechanobiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4600",
+ "description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics is an entire methodology rather than individual analyses or analysis steps.",
+ "name" : "Data Analytics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6370",
+ "description" : "Data and Society provides a broad overview of how society is leveraging and responding to the social, organizational, policy, and technical opportunities and challenges of a data-driven world. Course themes focus on various aspects of the data ecosystem, data and innovation, and data and the broader community. Assignments build writing, presentation, and critical thinking and assessment skills, all of which are important for professional success. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Data and Society"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6800",
+ "description" : "Biophysics addresses the physical principles of biological function, which requires the application of physical methods. The focus of this course is on methods used to study the interactions and dynamics of biomolecules in vitro, primarily proteins and nucleic acids. It will cover both the theoretical and methodological aspects of molecular biophysical methods. This course is designed as an interdisciplinary introduction to the field and is open to students in biology, chemistry, physics, or engineering.",
+ "name" : "Methods in Biophysics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4120",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Civil Engr & Instrum & Sensors"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-1600",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the scientific principles that dictate the structure and properties of engineering materials, including metals, ceramics, semiconductors, and polymers. Physical properties of materials (mechanical, electrical, thermal, optical) are discussed in terms of the underlying structure, spanning multiple length scales from atomic packing to micron scale defects, in practical engineering materials. Throughout the course, the material behaviors are understood from the viewpoint of thermodynamics and kinetics.",
+ "name" : "Materials Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4965",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4800",
+ "description" : "A survey of numerical methods for scientific and engineering problems. Topics include numerical solution of linear and nonlinear algebraic equations, interpolation and least squares approximations, numerical integration and differentiation, eigenvalue problems, and an introduction to the numerical solution of ordinary differential equations. Emphasis is placed on efficient computational procedures including the use of library and student written procedures using high-level software such as MATLAB.",
+ "name" : "Numerical Computing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATP-6600",
+ "description" : "Coverage of several areas of interest in optimization, with proofs of some major results. Convex sets and functions. Optimality conditions in nonlinear optimization. Lagrangian duality. Linear, quadratic, and conic optimization. Convex relaxations of integer optimization problems. Stochastic optimization.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Optimization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6250",
+ "description" : "The design and operation of different laboratory experiments to provide experience for the environmental engineer in the practical application of chemical and biological theory. Design parameters are developed via bench scale testing. Topics include biological treatment, ion exchange, test for total carbon in a solid waste and PARR bomb calorimeter, soil columns, and microbial respirometry.",
+ "name" : "Bench Scale Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4969",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BCBP"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4941",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Deep Learning Radar Imaging"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6141",
+ "description" : "Generation of electric power from renewable sources and its integration into the power grid. Topics include fundamentals of photovoltaic and wind energy; power converters and their control for renewable energy conversion and grid integration; solar power plants, solar inverters, and their control; wind turbines based on synchronous generators, wind turbines based on doubly-fed induction generators (DFIG), wind power plants, and offshore wind; operation and control of power systems with renewables.",
+ "name" : "Renewable Power Generation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4450",
+ "description" : "The goal of this course is to introduce students to program analysis and its many applications in software engineering, particularly in improving software quality and software productivity. Concretely, students who successfully complete this course should be able to: (1) understand and apply program analysis techniques, such as dataflow analysis and type-based analysis; (2) implement program analysis; (3) understand and apply software testing techniques, such as black-box testing and white-box testing; and (4) understand and apply refactoring techniques.",
+ "name" : "Principles of Program Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-4560",
+ "description" : "Fundamentals of Isotope geochemistry as applied to biogeochemical systems in modern and ancient environments. This course covers the principles of both radiogenic and stable isotope distribution, decay, and transfer through Earth's exchangeable reservoirs. The course will emphasize stable isotopes, equilibrium and kinetic isotope fractionation, distribution, isotope mass balance, and using these systems to track global biogeochemical cycles in the modern environment and in deep time.",
+ "name" : "Isotope Geochemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6760",
+ "description" : "Covers advanced topics in the theory and application of econometrics and data modeling. Topics emphasized include causal identification, advanced instrumental variable models, dynamic models, panel data models, model selection, simulation-based inference methods, survival analysis models, censoring, quantile regression, non-linear models, and discrete choice models.",
+ "name" : "Economic Data Analytics and Modeling II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-2130",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Intro To Phil Of Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4390",
+ "description" : "This course will provide an introductory survey of the main topics in data mining and knowledge discovery in databases (KDD), including: classification, clustering, association rules, sequence mining, similarity search, deviation detection, and so on. Emphasis will be on the algorithmic and system issues in KDD, as well as on applications such as Web mining, multimedia mining, bioinformatics, geographical information systems, etc.",
+ "name" : "Data Mining"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in STSO"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4340",
+ "description" : "This course provides an introduction to ontologies, their uses, and an overview of their application in semantically enabled systems. Ontologies encode term meanings and are used to improve communication and enable computer programs to function more effectively. Class participants learn how to use ontologies in Web-based applications and evaluate ontologies for reuse. Participants read relevant papers, learn how to critically review ontology papers and ontologies, and participate in group project(s) designing, using, and evaluating ontologies.",
+ "name" : "Ontologies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4650",
+ "description" : "The principles and practice of tissue engineering are taught in this course. The principles underlying strategies for employing selected cells, biomaterial scaffolds, soluble regulators or their genes, and biomechanical loading and culture conditions, for the regeneration of tissues and organs in vitro and in vivo are addressed. Bioreactors, enabling technology and biomimetic approach for fabricating tissue-engineered products and devices for implantation are taught.",
+ "name" : "Intro to Cell and Tissue Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-6002",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Politics Of Se Asia (at Sunya)"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-4030",
+ "description" : "Glasses are used in optical communications (optical fibers), electronics (insulator), and nuclear waste processing in addition to conventional use as windows, light bulbs, and containers. Subjects covered include: Formation and structure of inorganic glasses. The relationship between properties and cooling rate. Viscosity and structural relaxation. Phase separation and crystallization. Ionic diffusion and electrical properties. Mechanical strength and fatigue. Glass surface and chemical durability. Optical properties.",
+ "name" : "Glass Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-2002",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Intructional Theory @ Suny Alb"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-4450",
+ "description" : "The first half of this course is devoted to presentation of traditional theories of learning. Classical and operant conditioning and single-subject methodology are studied in depth. During the second half of the course, students apply their knowledge of operant conditioning principles in the context of a group-based field study.",
+ "name" : "Learning"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4320",
+ "description" : "Techniques and methods for parallel programming: models of parallel machines and programs, efficiency and complexity of parallel algorithms. Paradigms of parallel programming and corresponding extensions to sequential programming languages. Overview of parallel languages and coordination languages and models; programming on networks of workstations. Basic parallel algorithms: elementary computation, matrix multiplication, sorting; sample scientific application.",
+ "name" : "Parallel Programming"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7890",
+ "description" : "This doctoral seminar examines the major streams of theory and research in information management and information systems. The course will explore the major issues, theories, and research methods in information systems, research through classic readings, information management, and reference disciplines. Key areas in information systems research will be covered, such as strategic and economic perspectives of information management, adoption and diffusion theory, information technology and organizational design, and how research methods are employed in information systems research. Students will gain an understanding of what theory is and how to develop and evaluate theory in the area of information management and information systems.",
+ "name" : "Research Seminar in Management Information Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ENVE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-2020",
+ "description" : "This design studio introduces students to the first semester-long design project. We introduce students to more formal engineering design methods. This includes problem formulation, structured ideation, rapid prototyping, evaluation, functional modeling, and iteration. Studio III will also continue to draw on social science methods of ethnographic observation, background research, stakeholder analysis, and also a critical deconstruction of engineering design methods in a way that builds agility in ways more appropriate for those in DIS. Development of individual skills in design development, presentation, and portfolio building are also emphasized.",
+ "name" : "Design and Innovation Studio III"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-4350",
+ "description" : "The study of biochemical and biological processes common to environmental engineering. Introductory physiology, biochemistry and ecology of bacteria, yeasts, fungi. Laboratory work in microbial techniques. Development of reaction rate and mass balances on biological processes for pollution control. Includes experimental analysis of natural and engineered biological processes, emphasizing experimental design, data evaluation, and report writing.",
+ "name" : "Biological Processes in Environmental Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-4990",
+ "description" : "Senior capstone project course for GSAS majors. Students work individually or in teams, supervised by a faculty member, to complete a self-directed project in games that is innovative, experimental, or artistically engaged. The course emphasizes the complete development cycle, through continual iteration and critique towards completion and public release.",
+ "name" : "GSAS Capstone"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6660",
+ "description" : "Graduate-level course on the fundamental concepts and technologies underlying finite element methods for the numerical solution of continuum problems. The course emphasizes the construction of integral weak forms for elliptic partial differential equations and the construction of the elemental level matrices using multi-dimensional shape functions, element level mappings, and numerical integration. The basic convergence properties of the finite element method will be given. This course serves as preparation for students working on finite element methods.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of Finite Elements"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4230",
+ "description" : "A self-contained course that includes topics from number theory, basic cryptography, and protocol security. This is a hybrid course with sufficient depth in both theory and hands-on experience with network protocols. Topics include: Classical Cryptography, Block Ciphers (DES, AES), Information Theoretical Cryptography, Randomness, RNG and Stream Ciphers, Hash and MAC Algorithms, Public-Key Cryptography, Elliptic Curve Cryptography, Digital Signatures and Identification, Internet Attacks, Web Security, SSL and PGP. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Cryptography and Network Security I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4550",
+ "description" : "At a time when the resurgence of religious identities, public expression, and action is driving national politics, this course explores, through a media frame, \"the return of religion\" within the secular consensus of modernity. We examine how various religious groups use media to strategically articulate and institutionalize their political messages, and how media portray religion in relation to the secular world. A central problem is the logic of fundamentalism in relation to mainstream or liberal religion.",
+ "name" : "Religion, Politics, & Media"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6560",
+ "description" : "We will study theoretical and practical solutions to computational geometry problems found in computer graphics, visualization, vision, robotics, engineering, manufacturing, and geographic information systems. Topics include convex hulls, half-planes, Voronoi diagrams, Delaunay triangulations, binary space partitions, motion planning, visibility, and meshes. Course activities include programming assignments, written homework with proofs of computational complexity, and a term project with presentation.",
+ "name" : "Computational Geometry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-4270",
+ "description" : "A capstone design experience that engages students from biomedical, computer systems, electrical, industrial, materials, and mechanical engineering on teams in an open-ended engineering design problem in preparation for professional practice. With the guidance of a multidisciplinary team of faculty members and instructional support staff, students apply knowledge and skills from prior coursework. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Multidisciplinary Capstone Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4220",
+ "description" : "Programming with an overview of the principles of computer networks, including a detailed look at the OSI reference model and various popular network protocol suites. Concentration on Unix interprocess communication (IPC), network programming using TCP and UDP, as well as client-side and mobile programming. Programming projects are required.",
+ "name" : "Network Programming"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4100",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the theory, algorithms, and applications of machine learning (supervised, reinforcement, and unsupervised) from data: What is learning? Is learning feasible? How can we do it? How can we do it well? The course offers a mix of theory, technique, and application with additional selected topics chosen from Pattern Recognition, Decision Trees, Neural Networks, RBF's, Bayesian Learning, PAC Learning, Support Vector Machines, Gaussian processes, and Hidden Markov Models.",
+ "name" : "Machine Learning from Data"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BMED"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4030",
+ "description" : "State-of-the-art in contemporary algorithm design, randomized algorithms are algorithms that use randomness as part of their functioning. They are typically simple, often easy to analyze, and work well in practice. They have numerous applications in many fields of computer science and mathematics. Randomized algorithms represent an active and vibrant research area with many exciting new results contributed every year.",
+ "name" : "Randomized Algorithms"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1959",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Writing And Society"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4120",
+ "description" : "Application of mathematical techniques to economic modeling and analysis. Construction of models to describe aspects of the economy and to analyze potential policies. Solution methods for issues including optimal choice with and without constraints, equilibria among multiple actors, marginal effects of policies, and dynamic economic models. Some mathematical maturity is assumed, and mathematical skills are taught throughout the course.",
+ "name" : "Mathematical Methods in Economics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-2600",
+ "description" : "A study of important concepts in software design, implementation, and testing. Topics include specification, abstraction with classes, design principles and patterns, testing, refactoring, the software development process, GUI and event-driven programming, and cloud-based programming. The course also introduces implementation and testing tools, including IDEs, revision control systems, and other frameworks. The overarching goal of the course is for students to learn how to write correct and maintainable software.",
+ "name" : "Principles of Software"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-9990",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Research In Astronomy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-2500",
+ "description" : "Introduction to computer organization, assembler language, and operating systems. Computer systems organization: processors, memory, I/O. Digital logic: gates, Boolean algebra, digital logic circuits, memory, buses. Microprogramming. Machine level: instruction formats, addressing modes, instruction types, flow of control. Operating systems: virtual memory, virtual I/O instructions, processes, interprocess communication. Numeric representation. Assembler language: the assembly process, macros, linking, loading. Advanced architectures: RISC architectures, parallel architectures.",
+ "name" : "Computer Organization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4900",
+ "description" : "A capstone design experience that engages students from biomedical, computer and systems, electrical, industrial, materials, and mechanical engineering on teams in an open-ended engineering design problem in preparation for professional practice. With the guidance of a multidisciplinary team of faculty members and instructional support staff, students apply knowledge and skills from prior coursework. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Multidisciplinary Capstone Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-2200",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Modeling Of Biomedical Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-2200",
+ "description" : "This course introduces important mathematical and theoretical tools for computer science, including topics from set theory, combinatorics, and probability theory, and then proceeds to automata theory, the Turing Machine model of computation, and notions of computational complexity. The course will emphasize formal reasoning and proof techniques.",
+ "name" : "Foundations of Computer Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-1520",
+ "description" : "Functions of several variables, introductory linear algebra, and other analytical techniques needed for further study in probability, statistics, and operations research. Topics covered include improper integrals, probability density functions, partial derivatives and optimization techniques for functions of several variables, matrix algebra, linear systems, lines and planes in 3-space, linear inequalities, introductory linear programming, introductory combinatorics, and some probability.",
+ "name" : "Mathematical Methods in Management and Economics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-1190",
+ "description" : "This course teaches elementary programming concepts using the MATLAB environment for engineering students with little or no prior programming experience. Concepts include variables, looping, and function calls. Students cannot get credit for CSCI 1190 after earning credit for CSCI 1100 or any higher-level CSCI course.",
+ "name" : "Beginning Programming for Engineers"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-2940",
+ "description" : "Study and experimental work in various fields of chemistry to develop an interest in and ability for independent study and investigation.",
+ "name" : "Special Projects in Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-4967",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6980",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project In Comm"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-1100",
+ "description" : "An introduction to computer programming algorithm design and analysis. Additional topics include basic computer organization; internal representation of scalar and array data; use of top-down design and subprograms to tackle complex problems; abstract data types. Enrichment material as time allows. Interdisciplinary case studies, numerical and nonnumerical applications. Students who have passed CSCI 1200 cannot register for this course.",
+ "name" : "Computer Science I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4810",
+ "description" : "Chemical processes important in the environment from naturally occurring and man-induced systems. Thermodynamic and chemical considerations of fuels; the thermodynamics of the atmosphere; atmospheric photochemistry; chemistry of natural water systems; chemistry of pesticides, fertilizers, and other important environmental contaminants; aspects of the carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur cycles.",
+ "name" : "Chemistry of the Environment"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6430",
+ "description" : "A fundamental course in nonlinear vibrations and stability. Basic concepts about linear and nonlinear systems; Routh-Hurwitz and Liapunov's stability criteria; systems with periodic coefficients and Floquet theory; effects of nonlinearities; limit cycles, jump, saturation, nonlinear resonances, modal energy exchange, etc.; perturbation methods: straightforward perturbations, Lindstedt-Poincare, harmonic balancing, multiple time scales; steady-state and transient responses of nonlinear systems. Applications to discrete and structural systems. Use of symbolic manipulation to analyze problems.",
+ "name" : "Nonlinear Vibrations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-2961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6760",
+ "description" : "This course covers finite element-based approaches to solve problems in fluid mechanics including the Navier-Stokes equations and its variants. Emphasis is placed on variational multiscale and stabilized methods. Experience in numerical methods and programming is assumed. Different transport equations are considered starting from an advection-diffusion equation. Issues concerning implementation are also discussed pertaining to the numerical formulation, stabilizaton parameter, time integrator, nonlinear equation iterator, finite element assembly, boundary conditions, and linear solver.",
+ "name" : "Finite Element Methods for Fluid Dynamics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6880",
+ "description" : "This course covers interactive, multimedia interface design (for Web sites and apps) for data visualization or other forms of interactive information design. Innovative designs that explore new directions in interactive data design are highlighted. Topics include multisensory information design using graphics, sound, touch, and large-scale data projection. Interface design topics include user-centered design, information architecture, rapid prototyping, cross-cultural design, and intellectual property. Students may choose the applications they want to design for the class project.",
+ "name" : "Interactive Data Visualization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-2941",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Limnological Monitoring"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6730",
+ "description" : "A brand is more than just a cool logo design. \"A brand is a perception or set of associations consumers have of a business.\" -(Felicia C. Sullivan) These perceptions originate from a consistent verbal and visual story communicated through a multitude of media platforms. In this class, we'll define the brand story, create messaging, and design the logo, stationery, signage, packaging, advertising, schwag, motion graphics, etc. The course culminates with the design of an identity standards manual defining the rules and principles to effectively communicate a consistent brand image.",
+ "name" : "Brand Identity Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6220",
+ "description" : "To provide the students with a broad understanding of cutting edge methodologies in transportation modeling and economics not thoroughly covered in other courses and emerging issues pertaining to transportation research and practice.",
+ "name" : "Critical Issues in Transportation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7760",
+ "description" : "Overview of risk management, concepts and measurement of risk; types of risks (market, credit, liquidity, operational, business, strategic). Clustering, classification and optimization tools applied to risk management. Frameworks and instruments available for risk management. Specific issues related with managing specific risk types \u2014 credit, liquidity and operational risk, with emphasis on current challenges. Securitization, asset-liability management, and role of insurance for risk management.",
+ "name" : "Risk Analytics and Management"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6560",
+ "description" : "This course introduces students to the theoretical and practical use of graphics as a form of visual communication. Discussions include such topics as visual perception, design theory, formatted text, and graphics. Students have an opportunity to put theory into practice using computer graphics software.",
+ "name" : "Visual Design: Theory and Application"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6900",
+ "description" : "This seminar-based graduate level course provides a broad exposure to the chemical and biological engineering discipline. Attending and participating in seminars from recognized experts will form the core of the course. Topics include energy and the environment, nano and biotechnologies, computational molecular science, polymers and advanced materials, synthetic biology, metabolic engineering, and the future of our discipline. The course is required for chemical engineering Ph.D. students.",
+ "name" : "Chemical and Biological Engineering Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4380",
+ "description" : "This course examines the economics of statistical and taste-based discrimination associated with national origin, disability status, race, gender, and sexual orientation, focusing mainly on differences that arise in the labor market and their potential policy solutions. We will also consider disparities occurring in healthcare, crime, education, housing, and financial settings. In each case, we will apply economic theory and study how econometrics can be used to address empirical questions relating to discrimination. This course will help students to develop the ability to discuss controversial topics in a respectful, informed, and inclusive manner.",
+ "name" : "Economics of Discrimination"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6540",
+ "description" : "General principles and applications of equilibrium thermodynamics. Second law analysis of energy systems. Thermodynamic relations, equations of state, properties of single and multiphase systems. Elementary statistical thermodynamics. Fundamentals of nonequilibrium thermodynamics.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Thermodynamics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4370",
+ "description" : "The nature of optics, physics, and operation principles of optoelectronic devices and systems for communication, display, lighting, and computing. Topics include optics fundamentals, waveguide and fibers, LEDs, laser diode, photodetectors, solar cells, liquid crystal devices, modulators, optical display, and light detection and ranging (LiDAR) systems.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Optoelectronics Technology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4980",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Senior Design Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6730",
+ "description" : "Theoretical treatment of economic statistics. Topics include a rigorous treatment of set theory and fundamentals of probability theory, statistical estimation and hypothesis testing, analysis of variance, and regression. Also includes advanced topics such as maximum likelihood, generalized method of moments, empirical likelihood, and bootstrap, as well as finite-sample analysis and large-sample asymptotics.",
+ "name" : "Econometrics I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6530",
+ "description" : "This course considers the sociopolitical and ethical dimensions of post-factual media content, including the staged actuality of reality television. Topics include: fake news; disinformation; science denial; cognitive bias; political spin; reality TV performance and celebrity.",
+ "name" : "Post-Factual Media"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6180",
+ "description" : "This course continues the practice and study of Deep Listening beyond the foundational course \"Deep Listening.\" Topics include a wide range of investigations, research, and creativity in Deep Listening.",
+ "name" : "Topics in Deep Listening"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6570",
+ "description" : "This is a graduate level course. It aims to provide students with the familiarity of traditional and modern flow control techniques. It also introduces the students to the subject of laminar-to-turbulent transition and flow separation using hydrodynamic stability analysis, which is a crucial component in design and implementation of intelligent flow control strategies.",
+ "name" : "Aerodynamic Flow Control"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6510",
+ "description" : "Provides students an opportunity to enact communication practice from a strong foundation of textual and visual communication theory. Focuses on theories of text-making and distribution across media, qualitative and quantitative approaches to communication research, and applied rhetoric.",
+ "name" : "Communication Theory and Practice"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4188",
+ "description" : "The purpose of this course is to introduce the basics of strategic communication in digital and social media platforms, with a specific interest in the applications of digital and social media for communication professionals. In this course, students will learn key principles and techniques for digital content creation and promotion. Students will brainstorm, conceptualize, and develop an online presence and apply writing, research, and critical thinking to the practice of strategic communication.",
+ "name" : "Social Media & Strategic Communication"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4260",
+ "description" : "Introduces students to the basic analytical approaches to environmental issues and natural resource use. Emphasis is on economic valuation and public policy. Covers traditional approaches based on assumptions of economic rationality and market efficiency as well as current approaches from the fields of environmental science behavioral economics. Emphasis is on active student participation and examination of current environmental controversies.",
+ "name" : "Environmental and Resource Economics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-1090",
+ "description" : "A laboratory introduction to simulation and hardware programming with MATLAB and Simulink. Course covers: fundamental theory and programming tools for common sensors and actuators: gyroscopes, accelerometers, magnetometers, encoders, analog sensors, DC Motors, and motor drivers. Including: discretization, sampling, integration, differentiation, delays, saturation, and control. Material covered in a hands-on, observable, and application specific way. Weekly one-hour lab/lectures introduce basic topics. Labs reinforce covered topics and are performed at home with provided hardware kits.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Mechatronics Hardware and Software"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6680",
+ "description" : "Introduction to VLSI architecture design approaches and methodologies for digital signal processing systems, digital memory circuits and architectures, and computer VLSI arithmetic. Topics include: pipelining, parallel processing, timing and clocking, systolic architectures, digital filter architectures, Viterbi decoder architectures, SRAM, DRAM, flash memory, high-speed adder and multiplier architectures. Laboratory experiments involve the use of commercial EDA tools with hardware description language (HDL).",
+ "name" : "Advanced VLSI Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6070",
+ "description" : "Aerodynamic analysis of multi-rotor aerial vehicles. Multi-rotor coordinates and controls for multicopters. Multicopter failure and recovery. Comparison of rotor speed and pitch control. Trim and performance analysis of different multirotor archetypes.",
+ "name" : "Multirotor Aerial Vehicles"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2941",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Closed Worlds Book Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COMM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4530",
+ "description" : "his course considers the sociopolitical and ethical dimensions of post-factual media content, including the staged actuality of reality television. Topics include: fake news; disinformation; science denial; cognitive bias; political spin; reality TV performance and celebrity.",
+ "name" : "Post-Factual Media"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4060",
+ "description" : "A continuation of CHME 4050 . Topics include chemical plant design including full economic analysis, implementation of safety protocols, plant layout design, and complete feasibility study. Projects can be chosen from a wide variety of chemical and bioprocesses to study different aspects of chemical industry.",
+ "name" : "Chemical Process Design: Applications"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6310",
+ "description" : "Study of transmission lines, impedance matching, passive and active microwave systems. Work with S-parameters and experiment with the use of Smith chart. Introduction to microwave CAD tools for 2D electromagnetic (EM) simulations and microwave testing. Emphasis on physical understanding, quantitative performance evaluation using both hand calculations and EM simulations.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of RF/Microwave Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4470",
+ "description" : "This course examines the design of technical information systems and their output in useful and well-designed documents and interfaces. The course includes the history of data visualization, visual rhetoric, and information systems such as DITA.",
+ "name" : "Information Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ECSE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4460",
+ "description" : "This course introduces students to the theoretical and practical use of graphics as a form of visual communication. Discussions include topics such as the psychology of visual perception, design theory, creative process, formatted text, and graphics. Students have an opportunity to put theory into practice using computer graphics.",
+ "name" : "Visual Design: Theory and Application"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6380",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Writing And Response"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4320",
+ "description" : "This studio course explores new directions in art and design that include visual poetry (visual expression in which they shape an arrangement of text, images, symbols to convey the message) and interactive narrative. Visual poetics and narrative appear in advertisement, music videos, and other forms of communication. Students will experiment with these forms of communication and learn how these concepts apply in artistic and commercial contexts. The class format includes lectures, discussions, and studio work.",
+ "name" : "Visual Poetics and Narrative"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6980",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COMM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-2964",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1002",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Element Russian I (at Sunya)"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4380",
+ "description" : "The second in a two-course sequence combining music theory, aural skills, and engaged listening practices applicable to a broad range of musical styles, with an emphasis on creative practice. This course covers chromatic, extended, and contemporary tonal harmony and its interrelationship with form. Musicianship exercises include advanced chord identification, rhythm exercises, dictation, and improvisation. Engaged listening practices include responsive listening, reading, and written exercises as well as in-class discussion. Weekly assignments include composition, analysis, and performance.",
+ "name" : "Music and Sound II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-4200",
+ "description" : "A course exploring methods for 3D computer lighting, rendering, and camera authoring. We will discuss strong foundational theory from film in regards to lighting and cinematography. The course will focus on producing high fidelity rendered images and video for animation, games, and digital art.",
+ "name" : "Lighting, Rendering, & Cinematography"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-1150",
+ "description" : "Introductory physics for students seeking a more intensive experience. Newton's laws are introduced using differential calculus, with solutions based on integral calculus. Material on fluids and thermodynamics is included. Laboratory exercises are carried out emphasizing measurement uncertainty and clear, concise reporting. Recommended for students intending to major in physics.",
+ "name" : "Introductory Classical Dynamics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4936",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Res Investigations: Projbuilt"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2750",
+ "description" : "This course engages students in a critical examination of television and its historical and present status as a dominant popular culture medium. Television in this context is broadly understood as an evolving medium for motion pictures in the age of technological convergence. Using a variety of analytical and theoretical approaches, we'll consider the significant influence television has on individual, social, and cultural experiences\u2014addressing questions of representation, identity, economics, and ideology. The class uses a collaborative learning process, allowing students to influence the content and emphasis of the class and thereby reflecting the democratic nature of popular culture media.",
+ "name" : "Critical Television"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6490",
+ "description" : "This course introduces methods to develop numerical and algorithmic techniques needed to endow robots with the \"intelligence\" to devise strategies to solve problems they will encounter. Once these abilities are sufficiently well developed, robots will become safe and autonomous, thus paving the way for pervasive personal robots. Topics include: configuration space representation, cell decomposition, roadmap methods, rapidly-exploring random trees, simultaneous localization and mapping, contact modeling, grasping, and dexterous manipulation.",
+ "name" : "Robotics II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4420",
+ "description" : "In this course, students will consider methods of gathering users' requirements for product functions and information, ways to test products and information for usability and suitability, and procedures for incorporating the results learned through testing. Students will design and conduct usability tests on products, documents, and interfaces of interest.",
+ "name" : "Foundations of HCI Usability"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2660",
+ "description" : "This course introduces students to the practice of graphic design with a variety of hands-on projects. Studies include the principles and theories of 2D design and the integration of form, color, type, image, and content. Students will develop a heightened visual awareness and an understanding of how design influences meaning. The course emphasizes strategic and critical thinking in the solving of graphic design problems for the purposes of professional communication across a range of media platforms.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Graphic Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2616",
+ "description" : "This course engages students with the transmedial genre of superheroes, which has become one the most influential genres in film, television, video games, toys, and of course comics\u2014not to mention the cultural artifacts that are associated with its iconography. Through an examination of the genre's origins and history, its economic and aesthetic aspects, and the ideological issues that surround its narratives\u2014including representational dynamics of race, class, gender, sexuality and other vectors of identity\u2014students in this course will become more critically aware consumers of popular culture media.",
+ "name" : "Superheroes in the Classroom"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2570",
+ "description" : "Typography studies the form and function of alphabetic and pictographic systems in English-speaking society. The course aims to imbue in students a critical perspective on the role typography plays in the history and sustenance of civilization and the propagation of ideas throughout society. Students will read historical, theoretical, and evidence-based literature to glean principles for designing communicatively effective type. Verbal and visual assignments will enforce understanding of typographic principles and grammar for use in print and digital interfaces.",
+ "name" : "Typography"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-1300",
+ "description" : "The use of basic machine tools such as lathes, milling machines, drill presses, band saws, and grinders, including micrometers, vernier calipers, and other devices of use in a machine shop or laboratory. Welding techniques and tool making are also considered.",
+ "name" : "Engineering Processes"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presentend, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6940",
+ "description" : "An individually arranged independent study course under the supervision of a member of the Cognitive Science Department. The topic is selected by consultation between student and faculty member.",
+ "name" : "Readings in Cognitive Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4240",
+ "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Circadian Biology. Students will read and critique recent primary literature, present current research articles, and lead discussions on new findings in the field.",
+ "name" : "Topics in Circadian Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ERTH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4580",
+ "description" : "For students who are interested in empirical research in economic- and finance-oriented institutions, this course provides a wide range of econometric tools for the specification, estimation, prediction, and evaluation of economic and financial models. Methods to identify causal effects are emphasized. Mathematical methods of econometrics are developed for tools such as instrumental variables, regression discontinuity, and difference-in-differences. Advanced topics including time series, panel data, and quantile regression will also be addressed. In particular, we examine how the quantile regression can potentially improve the predictability of the stock market and relate it to the current development in this area.",
+ "name" : "Data Analysis in Economics and Finance"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "DSES-4200",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Desgn & Analys Work Sys"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-1510",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Communication Theory And Practice"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6880",
+ "description" : "This course will concentrate on the knowledge-based modeling of intelligent agents, with a special emphasis on semantically-oriented language processing. Theoretical and conceptual discussions will be balanced by practical work within the implemented OntoAgent cognitive architecture. The course will cover the modeling of decision-making, the various aspects of natural-language processing, and the art of knowledge engineering.",
+ "name" : "Language-Endowed Intelligent Agents"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4920",
+ "description" : "This design studio is the second required course of the two-semester, 5 th -year Final Project course sequence in the undergraduate program. The Final Project Design Studio provides a forum for the design and development of a comprehensive architectural proposal pertinent to the Final Project course sequence. This course is required of all fifth-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Final Project Design Studio"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4420",
+ "description" : "This course covers basic concepts and results in mathematical logic and computability theory, including decision procedures, automated theorem proving techniques for truth-functional and first-order logic, axiomatizations of set theory and arithmetic, Turing Machines, Abacus Machines, recursive functions, the Church-Turing Thesis, the halting problem, undecidability of first-order logic, undecidability of arithmetic, and Godel's incompleteness results.",
+ "name" : "Computability and Logic"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6540",
+ "description" : "A review of basic concepts of mass, momentum, and energy conservation as related to convective heat transfer. The analysis of laminar and turbulent forces and free convection problems in both internal and external flows. Also a study of the current state of the art in boiling and condensation heat transfer.",
+ "name" : "Convective Heat Transfer"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6690",
+ "description" : "An in-depth study of quasi-experimental and experimental design of behavioral research. Topics include test construction and development, factor analysis, meta-analysis, repeated measures, and MANOVA.",
+ "name" : "Seminar in Research Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6640",
+ "description" : "This course introduces various computational approaches for creating intelligent conversational agents. This course will take the form of a combination of lectures, presentations by students, class discussions, and independent study.",
+ "name" : "Intelligent Virtual Agent"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5380",
+ "description" : "This course covers topics that are essential to developing an effective professional architectural practice. The course will address professional obligations and ethics, contracts, registration, office organization, and management. The course will emphasize effective communication, negotiating, public speaking, and team development. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Professional Practice 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6030",
+ "description" : "For students who are interested in empirical research in economic- and finance-oriented institutions, this course provides a wide range of econometric tools for the specification, estimation, prediction, and evaluation of economic and financial models. Methods to identify causal effects are emphasized. Mathematical methods of econometrics are developed for tools such as instrumental variables, regression discontinuity, and difference-in-differences. Advanced topics including time series, panel data, and quantile regression will also be addressed. In particular, we examine how the quantile regression can potentially improve the predictability of the stock market and relate it to the current development in this area.",
+ "name" : "Data Analysis in Economics and Finance"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7430",
+ "description" : "Many of the tried and true investment strategies have failed of late to protect the wealth and capital of individuals and organizations. This course provides substantial background into how investment decisions are made in personal, business, and government settings, under the requirement that risk management and wealth preservation are governing factors. Short and long term investment strategies and instruments are examined, focusing on retirement and workplace benefits.",
+ "name" : "Investments II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-2500",
+ "description" : "Introduction to some experimental methods used to fabricate and measure the structure and properties of materials. Thermal and mechanical processing and properties are emphasized. Specimen preparation, examination by light optical microscopy, report writing, and measurement systems analysis are covered.",
+ "name" : "Materials Laboratory Skills"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-4010",
+ "description" : "Groups, rings, polynomial rings, fields, integral domains, with emphasis on group theory; homomorphisms and isomorphisms; normal subgroups, cosets, ideals, modules; quotient groups and quotient rings; other topics chosen from number theory, polynomials, and Galois Theory.",
+ "name" : "Abstract Algebra"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-4360",
+ "description" : "This course examines relationships between microorganisms and Earth processes. Topics include the origins of life on earth, surface metabolism theory, biological and biochemical benchmarks. Earth is considered as a microbial habitat with emphasis on the lithosphere and hydrosphere, including soils, seawater, lakes, rivers, and groundwater. Geomicrobial processes, including microbial conversion of inorganics and metals and mineralization of organics, are discussed. Molecular and non-molecular methods for detection, isolation, and identification of geo-microbially active organisms are introduced.",
+ "name" : "Geomicrobiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4170",
+ "description" : "This is a hands-on course where students will learn a mix of theoretical and practical tools. Using these tools, they will solve a variety of supply chain problems, both analytically and numerically. Students will examine data and use this to understand supply, demand, and inventory levels using R to model many of these problems. The course will also review the data and assess its suitability for modelling. Time series, Markov chain, optimal control, linear programming, statistical analysis, and other mathematical tools will be used to reveal the data's secrets. The bottom line is these insights will be used to make recommendations to firms and other decision makers. Students will also look at qualitative problems through the examination and discussions of cases in class. Not everything can be distilled to a number and so a holistic view of business problems will be taken to make more strategic recommendations. Teams of students will then solve and present these case results",
+ "name" : "Data Resource Management"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LITR-2150",
+ "description" : "Students explore the philosophical, political, and artistic grounds from which modern and contemporary literature arises and develop their own creative capacities in a project related to the course readings.",
+ "name" : "Modern and Contemporary Literature"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6430",
+ "description" : "Digital gaming is one of the most rapidly developing fields. The effort required for developing games is not trivial. To make a game fun to play, the design of the game levels and/or the AI-driven opponents need to be intelligent and adaptive to the players' strategies and skills. In this course, students will learn and explore using machine learning techniques to automate the design process of digital games. The course will cover basic and advanced topics in Artificial Intelligence and Learning, such as Decision Trees, Neural Networks, Genetic Algorithms, and Reinforcement Learning. Students will gain hands-on experience in applying these techniques in computer games. The course will also introduce psychological theories and studies about people's decision-making and emotional processes and how they are related to the players' experience in games. This course will take the form of a combination of lectures, presentations by students, class discussions, and independent study.",
+ "name" : "Learning and Advanced Game AI"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6410",
+ "description" : "This course is a graduate course that teaches Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence concepts by enabling the student to develop and understand computer programs that implement them. It covers data collection and analysis, task environments, natural language, cognitive architectures, and learning. Some previous programming experience is very beneficial but not required.",
+ "name" : "Programming for Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISCI-6980",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ERTH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6720",
+ "description" : "Topics include market power, adverse selection, moral hazard, signaling, screening, mechanism design, externalities, public goods, information economics, and principal-agent problems. Implications for economic policy are also considered.",
+ "name" : "Microeconomics II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6240",
+ "description" : "This course is about the connection between logic and artificial intelligence (AI). It may be partitioned into three general sections: 1) the straightforward application of first order logic (FOL) in AI; 2) the broadening of FOL to enable a robot to reason in a commonsense way (nonmonotonic reasoning, induction, etc.) and to formalize a robot agent's belief and knowledge system (modal logics, etc.); and 3) using a logical approach to the Frame Problem and to building a planner.",
+ "name" : "Logic and Artificial Intelligence"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4090",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Seminal Developments In Biomedical Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-6410",
+ "description" : "Electrostatics and magnetostatics. Relativistic kinematics. Relativistic dynamics. Relativistic theory of classical fields. Electromagnetic waves. Linear and nonlinear materials. EM waves in linear, dispersive media. EM waves in nonlinear materials. Diffraction. Radiation by relativistic particles.",
+ "name" : "Electrodynamics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6100",
+ "description" : "Integrated cognitive systems comprise human cognitive, perception, and motor subsystems in coordinated action with interactive devices. Examples may be as simple as a human using a VCR or as complex as the behavior exhibited by Air Force pilots. This course will introduce students to the cognitive theory behind integrated cognitive systems, the techniques for collecting and analyzing data such as eye movements and action protocols, as well as the software tools available for the representation of interactive behavior.",
+ "name" : "Seminar in Cognitive Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4070",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Sedimentology /stratigraphy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-7010",
+ "description" : "Review of the state of the art in optical fibers, light sources, and photodetectors. Topics include: propagation, coupling, dispersion, loss and cut-off characteristics of guided wave models in optical fibers, structural and operating parameters of various types of heterostructure lasers and light-emitting diodes and quantum efficiency, response time and noise characteristics of silicon PAD and PIN diodes. Also includes applications of optical fibers in optical communications, in data processing, and in control systems.",
+ "name" : "Optical Fiber Communications"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2080",
+ "description" : "This ensemble explores a variety of contemporary non-idiomatic group improvisational practices. Non-idiomatic improvisation is spontaneous music that does not attempt to replicate or realize a particular historical style (such as swing or bebop jazz), but rather emphasizes the unique creative input of the performers to create original music. Among the techniques explored will be conduction, musical games, graphic and text scores, and cell-structure improvisation. Students will also be coached in techniques to expand and develop musical ideas individually and as a framework for group improvisation. No prior experience with improvisation is required, and participants from any musical background, including electronic and computer music, are encouraged to join. Repertoire and practices will be tailored to the make-up of the group.",
+ "name" : "Contemporary Improvisation Ensemble"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4620",
+ "description" : "Covers cognitive theory from an applied perspective to understand and predict the interactions among human cognition, artifact (i.e., tools), and task. Cognitive task analysis techniques will be taught and used throughout the course, as will techniques for collecting and analyzing fine-grained behavioral data. Topics covered may include visual search and visual attention, cognitive skill and its acquisition, hard and soft constraints on interactive behavior, human error, soft constraints on judgment and decision-making, and experts and expertise.",
+ "name" : "Cognitive Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6540",
+ "description" : "Advanced study of the promotion management process including market situation analysis, media selection, spending plans, copy strategy, and advertising research methods. The focus is on integrating promotion strategies with buyer needs in terms of unifying brand strategies. Other brand elements include product conceptualization, distribution strategies, and new communication technologies.",
+ "name" : "Marketing Communication and Branding Strategies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4610",
+ "description" : "This seminar course is a detailed examination of the mind-brain relationship, through study of the stress response. Stress is simply defined as any challenge to an individual's homeostasis or balance. This course will explore the neurobiological underpinnings of the stress response, with particular focus on how stressors can alter perception, affective and cognitive processing in the individual, which can in turn feedback to alter the general health of the individual (body and mind/brain).",
+ "name" : "Stress and the Brain"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ITWS-4350",
+ "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught.",
+ "name" : "Data Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-1960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ENGR"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6640",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Proteomics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6420",
+ "description" : "This course is a graduate level introduction to the topic of perception and action, and will focus on the significance of perception, motor control, and perceptual-motor learning as they relate to the performance of routine and skilled tasks. It will explore perception and action from information processing, computational, dynamical systems, and ecological perspectives, review current empirical and computational research, and consider some applications, including training, rehabilitation, human-machine interaction, and robotics.",
+ "name" : "Perception and Action"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4410",
+ "description" : "Research in Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence (AI) is driven by data. Researchers in these fields collect, manipulate, model and analyze data generated by real-world processes. Since the amount of data available has grown exponentially, the ability to automate these tasks through computer programs is essential. Specifically, probabilistic and statistical computing are needed to learn from the data. The objectives of this course are for the student to perform exploratory data analysis and to acquire the basics of statistical and machine learning in order to model real-world datasets.",
+ "name" : "Programming for Cognitive Science and Artificial Intelligence"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4450",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Environmental Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USNA-2040",
+ "description" : "A familiarization course in naval engineering. Study of types, structure, and purpose of naval ships. Elements of ship design to achieve safe operations and ship stability characteristics are examined. Ship compartmentation, propulsion systems, auxiliary power systems, ship control systems, and elements of damage control are included.",
+ "name" : "Naval Ships Systems I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4530",
+ "description" : "This course will survey classic papers and current research in computer graphics. Topics include: advanced ray tracing, global illumination, photon mapping, subsurface scattering, mesh generation and simplification, subdivision surfaces, volumetric modeling, procedural modeling and texturing, weathering, physical simulation, appearance models. Course activities include programming assignments, oral presentations, and a term project.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Computer Graphics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6570",
+ "description" : "An accelerated course covering important behavioral statistical concepts including probability, sampling distributions, hypothesis resting, ANOVA, and multiple regression. Course requires usage of statistical software package and is taught using the general linear model framework.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Behavioral Statistics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4360",
+ "description" : "This course is an introduction to the role of physiological mechanisms in behavioral processes. There will be detailed examination and discussion of the involvement of biological systems in feeding and drinking, sexual behavior, sleep and arousal, learning and memory, psychopathology and psychopharmacology.",
+ "name" : "Behavioral Neuroscience"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6080",
+ "description" : "Theory and Application of VTOL vehicle dynamics, simulation, and control system design. Coordinate systems, nonlinear dynamics, inflow dynamics, eigenanalysis and linear control design. Control system design using model following and dynamic inverson.",
+ "name" : "VTOL Aircraft Flight Mechanics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4030",
+ "description" : "The modeling, analysis, and design of analog integrated circuits using CMOS technology. Topics include basic integrated circuit components, basic amplifier stages, operational amplifiers, frequency compensation and stability, and bandgap references. Emphasis is placed on the design of the fundamental circuits required for analog signal processing. Students undertake several design projects, including a sizeable project that comprises a significant percentage of the final grade.",
+ "name" : "Analog IC Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4340",
+ "description" : "This course will explore how linguistics, the scientific study of the properties of human language and languages, can be applied to the development of intelligent agents that can fluently and meaningfully communicate with people in natural language. It will focus on linguistic phenomena that have so far been particularly resistant to effective machine processing, such as lexical ambiguity resolution, reference resolution, ellipsis, indirect speech acts, implicature, and non-literal language (e.g., metaphor and irony).",
+ "name" : "The Linguistics of Computational Linguistics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4965",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4330",
+ "description" : "This survey course is intended as an introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience. The topics covered will focus on exploring the neural underpinnings for cognitive processes, such as sensation, language, attention, motor control, executive functions, social communication, emotions, consciousness, and learning/memory. Basic aspects of nervous system function and neuroanatomy, brain development/evolution, structural and functional imaging techniques, and other research methods used in Cognitive Neuroscience will be discussed.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4210",
+ "description" : "Recent advances in Cognitive Science, Computer Science and Mathematics, have resulted in the ability to develop computer programs that implement Probabilistic Cognitive Models (PCMs). The cognitive models that this course covers are based on approximate Bayesian Inference implemented by Markov Chain Monte Carlo and Variational techniques that have made this approach tractable. The objective of this course is to enable the student to develop models of cognition in a Bayesian framework.",
+ "name" : "Cognitive Modeling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4670",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the basic concepts of computer and communication networks, like flow control, congestion control, end-to-end reliability, routing, framing, error-recovery, multiple access, and statistical multiplexing. In-depth presentation of the different networking layers, with emphasis on the Internet reference model. Protocols and architectures such as TCP, IP, Ethernet, wireless networks, etc. are described in order to illustrate important networking concepts. Introduction to quantitative analysis and modeling of networks.",
+ "name" : "Computer Communication Networks"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-2120",
+ "description" : "This course is an introduction to the new and quickly growing field of cognitive science. Cognitive Science is a highly interdisciplinary field of study of mind at the intersection of philosophy, psychology, computer science, neuroscience, linguistics, and anthropology.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Cognitive Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-4510",
+ "description" : "To understand the origin of life is a fundamental goal of science. Discussions include evidence for important prebiotic molecules in the clouds from which new planetary systems are born, and compare cosmic and terrestrial sources of such molecules on the primitive Earth. The course is multidisciplinary, covering topics in physics, astronomy, chemistry, earth sciences, and biology.",
+ "name" : "Origin of Life: A Cosmic Perspective"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6964",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHME"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1979",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CIVL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CIVL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Readings in Civil Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ECSE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4170",
+ "description" : "Modeling and simulation of cyber-physical systems through object-oriented equation-based computer languages and software tools. Describes formalisms for continuous, discrete, timed-clocked synchronous systems and finite state machines; and applies simulation methods through numerical solution of differential-and-algebraic higher-and-varying index systems of equations with time and state event event handling. Composing reusable model architectures, templates, interfaces and data management for model variants. Applies model deployment in heterogeneous environments using model exchange, co-simulation and real-time simulation techniques.",
+ "name" : "Modeling and Simulation for Cyber-Physical Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHME"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6910",
+ "description" : "Seminars by distinguished guest speakers. All undergraduates and graduates are strongly encouraged to attend as many lectures as possible.",
+ "name" : "Colloquium Series"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-2350",
+ "description" : "Engineering laboratory introduction to the microprocessor as an embedded element of engineering systems. Students simultaneously develop the hardware and software of one or more target systems during the semester. Topics include concepts and practices of microcontroller hardware and software for command, sensing, control, and display. Specifically, this includes control of dynamic systems and sensor interfaces; analog-digital conversion; parallel input/output; driver circuits, modular programming, and subsystem integration.",
+ "name" : "Embedded Control"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2964",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6030",
+ "description" : "This course, built on Economic and Financial Analysis I, provides a conceptual framework whereby accounting, corporate finance, and investment decisions can be viewed and understood in a unified context of risk and return as it is applicable to all types of businesses and organizations. The course prepares students for future specialized courses in advanced accounting, corporate finance, financial institutions and markets, investment theory, and entrepreneurial finance. The contemporary issues covered in this course include risk and diversification; asset pricing models; capital structure and financing alternatives; dividend and stock repurchases; corporate governance; mergers, acquisitions, and takeovers; financial distress and reorganization; and different international financial topics.",
+ "name" : "Financial Management II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6900",
+ "description" : "Civil and environmental engineering graduate students present seminars about their research to an audience composed of students and faculty, and participate in discussions about the research of others. The course consists of one-hour weekly meetings. The faculty member in charge of the course helps the students develop their presentation and communication skills. M.S. and Ph.D. students are required to take this course once before completion of their terminal degree. This course is not required for M. Eng. students not doing a thesis or project.",
+ "name" : "Civil and Environmental Engineering Graduate Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "DSES-2940",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Readings In Isye"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6780",
+ "description" : "State-of-the-art in computational modeling of failure processes in materials. Topics include numerical modeling of discrete defects, distributed damage, and multiscale computational techniques including multiple scale perturbation techniques, boundary layer techniques, and various global-local approaches.",
+ "name" : "Numerical Modeling of Failure Processes in Materials"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Readings in Economics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6130",
+ "description" : "Treatment efficiency and design parameters for different methods of treatment of wastewaters by land application. Methods considered include irrigation, rapid infiltration, overland flow, septic-tank leach field systems, and deep well injection. Soil geology and groundwater flow maintenance, monitoring of systems, and public health considerations. Evaluation of sludge disposal.",
+ "name" : "Land Applications of Wastewater"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6150",
+ "description" : "Can government intervention improve the performance of private markets and if so, when and how? How is regulatory policy actually made, and what effects has it had? These questions are applied to the experience in the U.S. and elsewhere with telecommunications, electricity, transportation, financial services, job safety, health, and environmental regulation.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Economics of Government Regulation and Firm Strategy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6680",
+ "description" : "Examines the implementation of finite element methods. Consideration is first given to the techniques used in classic finite element programs. Attention then focuses on development of a general geometry-based code which effectively supports higher order adaptive technique. Technical areas covered include: effective construction of element matrices for p-version finite elements, ordering of unknowns, automatic mesh generation, adaptive mesh improvement, program and database structures. Implementation of automated adaptive techniques on parallel computers is also covered.",
+ "name" : "Finite Element Programming"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6550",
+ "description" : "An intensive study of the application of geotechnical engineering to the environmental area. Deals with waste disposal, waste containment systems, waste stabilization, and landfills. Emphasis on design of such facilities. Includes related topics necessary for design, e.g., geosynthetics, groundwater, contaminant transport, and slurry walls. Some field trips are possible. This course meets concurrently with CIVL 4140 . CIVL 6550 students are required to do a term paper and/or project, read additional professional papers and publications, and do additional laboratory experiments. (Students cannot receive credit for both this course and CIVL 4140 .)",
+ "name" : "Advanced Geoenvironmental Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4210",
+ "description" : "Discussion of various aspects of computer operating systems design and implementation. Topics include I/O programming, concurrent processes and synchronization problems, process management and scheduling of processes, virtual memory management, device management, file systems, deadlock problems, system calls, and interprocess communication. Programming projects are required.",
+ "name" : "Operating Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6160",
+ "description" : "Emphasis is placed on the analysis of efficient resource use in the public sector at the federal level. Expenditure theory and tax incidence are discussed. The effects of personal income, corporation, sales, payroll, and property taxes on resource allocation, equity, growth, and technological change are considered.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Public Finance"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6240",
+ "description" : "The major approaches to air pollution control are discussed from three viewpoints: equipment for particle and gaseous emissions control, control of specific processes and pollutants, control strategies. Emphasis is on control devices for particles, sulfur oxides, and nitrogen oxides; absorption with chemical reaction; wet scrubber technology. Combination with other approaches to develop control strategies.",
+ "name" : "Air Pollution Control"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6560",
+ "description" : "A broad introduction to modern communication systems, with applications to emerging wireless communication technologies. Fundamental principles of wireless channel modeling; performance limits of communication systems; analog and digital modulation techniques; source and channel coding; multi-antenna communication systems; multi-carrier modulation; multi-user communication systems. Emerging wireless technologies such as MIMO and OFDM, with applications to cellular and wireless LAN communication standards. Complemented with computational exercises.",
+ "name" : "Modern Communication Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4380",
+ "description" : "The design and operation of Solid State Lighting Systems including basic design and fabrication methods of light emitting diode (LED), LED thermal management, optical characterization of lighting, LED drivers, lighting sensors/control systems and selected emerging applications.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of Solid State Lighting Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4350",
+ "description" : "This course will provide an exploration of the essential aspects of virology. Introductory examination of viral structure, entry, and replication for each of the major classes of viruses serve as a foundation. Case studies will examine virus host interactions and strategies for prevention and intervention of viral infection. Additional topics include: emerging viruses, viral detection, viral extinction, beneficial use of viruses, modified viruses as research tools.",
+ "name" : "Virology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6240",
+ "description" : "The course discusses Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) technologies and their application areas. ITS technologies. ITS Architecture. ITS applications. A number of outside speakers will complement the lectures. The students are expected to give at least two technical presentations and write a final paper on an ITS topic of their choosing.",
+ "name" : "Intelligent Transportation Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-4910",
+ "description" : "Independent study to accompany designated capstone courses in Physics and Astronomy. Designated courses are: ASTR 4220 Astrophysics; ASTR 4240 Gravitation and Cosmology; ASTR 4510 Origins of Life: a Cosmic Perspective; PHYS 4810 Computational Physics; PHYS 4620 Elementary Particle Physics; PHYS 4240 General Relativity; ASTR 4120 Observational Astronomy; PHYS 4630 Lasers and Optical Systems; PHYS 4640 Optical Communications and Integrated Optics; PHYS 4720 Solid State Physics.",
+ "name" : "Culminating Experience Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4430",
+ "description" : "This course is a study of the important concepts found in current programming languages. Topics include language processing (lexical analysis, parsing, type-checking, interpretation and compilation, run-time environment), the role of abstraction (data abstraction and control abstraction), programming paradigms (procedural, functional, object-oriented, logic-oriented, generic), and formal language definition.",
+ "name" : "Programming Languages"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6210",
+ "description" : "Concepts of stability pertaining to structural and mechanical systems. Static and dynamic theories of stability. Configurations include bars, plates, shells, and structural complexes.",
+ "name" : "Structural Stability"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6800",
+ "description" : "This is a seminar based graduate level course that provides (a) a broad exposure to contemporary topics of research in biomedical engineering by recognized experts in the field and; (b) hands-on exposure on various aspects of professional development to Ph.D. students including conference/thesis presentations, writing scientific manuscripts and pre-doctoral and post-doctoral fellowship grant applications. Students are required to attend and participate in the departmental seminar and present their own research and grant proposals.",
+ "name" : "Discussions in Graduate Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1010",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Exploring Music @ Rensselaer"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6770",
+ "description" : "Core issues in the economics of technology and innovation are covered along with policy ramifications. Topics include models of strategic R&D and patenting, quality and price measures, drivers of innovation in firms and fields of knowledge, technology adoption and diffusion, and regional innovation.",
+ "name" : "Economics of Innovation I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4450",
+ "description" : "Sources of nuclear fuel. Mining, milling, and purification. Principles of isotope enrichment; specific methods with emphasis on gaseous diffusion. Fuel fabrication. Transport and reprocessing of spent fuel. In-core fuel management. Linear reactivity, batch, nodal, and pincell methods. Power shape and control management. Partial core reloading. Fuel depletion. Poison management and Haling strategy. Breeding and fast reactors. Economics of the fuel cycle. Computation of fuel cycle costs.",
+ "name" : "Nuclear Fuel Management"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6660",
+ "description" : "Graduate-level course on the fundamental concepts and technologies underlying finite element methods for the numerical solution of continuum problems. The course emphasizes the construction of integral weak forms for elliptic partial differential equations and the construction of the elemental level matrices using multi-dimensional shape functions, element level mappings, and numerical integration. The basic convergence properties of the finite element method will be given. This course serves as preparation for students working on finite element methods.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of Finite Elements"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6170",
+ "description" : "This course provides an introduction to the mechanics of solids from a continuum perspective. Topics covered in this course include: vector and tensor analysis, coordinate systems and calculus in curvilinear coordinate systems, kinematics (motion, deformation and strain), stress and momentum balance, energy principles and balance laws, linear isotropic and anisotropic elasticity, thermoelasticity, method of solutions for 2-D and 3-D linear elastic boundary value problems, applications to simple structures.",
+ "name" : "Mechanics of Solids"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4260",
+ "description" : "Fundamental concepts and methods of graph theory and its applications to computing and the social and natural sciences. Topics include graphs as models, representation of graphs, trees, distances, matchings, connectivity, flows in networks, graph colorings, Hamiltonian cycles, traveling salesman problem, planarity. All concepts, methods, and applications are presented through a sequence of exercises and problems, many of which are done with the help of novel software systems for combinatorial computing.",
+ "name" : "Graph Theory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Readings in Civil Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4520",
+ "description" : "An introductory course for initiating a new business venture and developing it into a self-sustaining and profitable enterprise. Provides understanding of the process whereby a person decides to become an entrepreneur, screens opportunities, selects an appropriate product/market target, and obtains the necessary resources. Also, provides the theoretical and practical knowledge for the preparation of formal business plans for the development of new products, processes, and services and for the financing of new enterprises. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Technological Entrepreneurship"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ITWS-6600",
+ "description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics is an entire methodology rather then individual analyses or analysis steps.",
+ "name" : "Data Analytics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-4961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ENVE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4110",
+ "description" : "AC steady-state analysis, three-phase networks, and complex power (brief review). Per-unit system. Practical transformer equivalent circuits. AC power transmission-lines: parameters; equivalent circuits; and steady-state operation. Power flow with transfer limits in balanced three-phase systems. Network power flow problem with solution by numerical methods. Symmetrical components: analysis including sequence networks for three-phase systems. Fault analysis.",
+ "name" : "Power Engineering Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-6580",
+ "description" : "General topics in advanced geophysics vary each time the seminar is offered. Previous subjects covered include crustal deformation, inverse theory, global positioning system, and seismic wave propagation.",
+ "name" : "Seminar in Geophysics: Selected Topics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4920",
+ "description" : "Open-ended design project in which students work in teams. Oral presentations and written reports cover alternates considered, design assumptions, cost, safety, and feasibility. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Civil Engineering Capstone Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-6410",
+ "description" : "This course focuses on methods, theories, and perspectives of ethnography, and on their applications to the various disciplines in which graduate students are working. Students will undertake original field research. Emphasis is given to foundational activities: defining a problem, research design, proposal writing, field methods, qualitative data analysis, writing ethnography, and protection of human subjects.",
+ "name" : "Ethnography"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "WRIT-2340",
+ "description" : "This course focuses on developing public speaking skills and critical listening abilities. Guided by rhetorical theory, theories of persuasion, and argumentation theory, students prepare several oral presentations, engage in extemporaneous speaking exercises, and criticize other performances.",
+ "name" : "Speech Communication"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4480",
+ "description" : "A survey of the fundamental issues necessary for the design, analysis, control, and implementation of robotic systems. The mathematical description of robot manipulators in terms of kinematics and dynamics. Hardware components of a typical robot arm. Path following, control, and sensing. Examples of several currently available manipulators.",
+ "name" : "Robotics I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4670",
+ "description" : "Principles of geometric design of highways, intersections, interchanges, and terminals. Practical issues of vertical and horizontal curvature, highway evaluation, driver and vehicle dynamics, and traffic safety are also addressed. Computer-aided design and modeling.",
+ "name" : "Highway Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4660",
+ "description" : "Basic characteristics of traffic flow, including driver, vehicle, volume, speed, delay, capacity, and accidents; traffic regulation and control, signs, markings, signals, and signal systems; basic traffic flow theory; study methods and analysis procedures to solve traffic engineering and control problems.",
+ "name" : "Traffic Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4510",
+ "description" : "This course explores the principles of distributed systems, emphasizing fundamental issues underlying the design of such systems: communication, coordination, synchronization, and fault-tolerance. Key algorithms and theoretical results will be studied and students will explore how these foundations play out in modern systems and applications.",
+ "name" : "Distributed Systems and Algorithms"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-2965",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2006",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Communication Acoustics Strose"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4620",
+ "description" : "The basic concepts of planning, design, and operation of urban mass transit systems. Topics include travel demand, network configurations, communication and control systems, power systems, vehicle technology, guideway and vehicle support, and guidance technology, routing, and scheduling, operating practice, marketing and financing of transit service, interface design, and implementation. These topics are discussed with relation to bus transit systems, guided transit systems, and several new systems. Several case studies examined.",
+ "name" : "Mass Transit Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-9990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6380",
+ "description" : "Mechanics of concrete failure under uniaxial and multiaxial stress states. Strain-softening behavior and damage localization in tension and compression. Nonlinear strain-hardening behavior under triaxial compression. Tensile fracture and size-effect. Constitutive modeling of concrete mechanical behavior. Cohesive crack model. Plasticity models, damage models, microplane models, and discrete models.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Concrete Mechanics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4570",
+ "description" : "This course is an applications-oriented course covering basic analytical tools for modeling and optimization of large-scale civil and environmental engineering systems. Application domains that will be discussed include: scheduling in large systems, construction management, multi-purpose reservoir operation, transportation and logistics planning, as well as other civil and environmental engineering systems. An overview of different optimization techniques, with a particular focus on network flow problems and introductory stochastic analysis will be provided. Software to solve these problems will be used throughout the course.",
+ "name" : "System Modeling for Civil and Environmental Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6964",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4968",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4450",
+ "description" : "This course covers concepts of structural systems. The course is aimed at understanding behavior of different structural systems and how they respond to various loading conditions. The concept of load transfer, shaping, and form finding is of particular interest. This concept is reinforced through analytical, digital, and physical modeling intended to foster intuitive thinking. The course includes the following: approximate analyses of statically indeterminate beams, rigid frames, and vierendeel frames; cable suspended structures, arch supported structures; masonry structures, space frame, and folded plate structures; spherical, cylindrical, and hyperbolic shells; net and tent structures; air-supported and air-inflated structures, and hybrid structural systems. The course includes guest lectures, project, computer simulation, and testing physical models.",
+ "name" : "Conceptual Structural Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2150",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Music And Sound II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4080",
+ "description" : "Analysis and design of reinforced concrete structures using ultimate strength methods. Design of beams, columns, slabs, and footings. Development and anchorage of reinforcing bars. Laboratory testing of hardened concrete mechanical properties.",
+ "name" : "Concrete Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4200",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the concepts and techniques of modern statistics. Computer-based, in-class sessions will emphasize hands-on application of statistical techniques using data and examples drawn from the biological and medical sciences. Pre-class, online exercises will prepare students for in-depth classroom explorations. Topics covered will include sampling, regression, analysis of variance, and factor analysis, MANOVA, maximum likelihood methods, discriminant analysis, time series analysis, and forecasting. The final project requires analysis of a major research-related data set and write-up of results in the format of a scientific paper.",
+ "name" : "Biostatistics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6360",
+ "description" : "This course explores human motivation and behavior across different settings and experimental paradigms. The course familiarizes students with previous work in selected topics in behavioral and experimental economics such as charitable giving, individual decision making and preferences, health, scarcity, and worker motivation. It also prepares students to design, implement and analyze their own economics experiments.",
+ "name" : "Experimental Economics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-6900",
+ "description" : "Selected topics.",
+ "name" : "Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Readings in Chemical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4310",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Energy Politics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ITEC-4300",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Business Issues For Engr"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-4750",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Prob Theory & Applications"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-1100",
+ "description" : "Principles of chemistry, with particular focus on atomic and molecular structure and bonding, periodicity, basic thermodynamic principles, introduction to acid-base chemistry and elementary chemical equilibrium, and introduction to organic chemistry. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 1110 .",
+ "name" : "Chemistry I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6110",
+ "description" : "This seminar will provide a historical context for understanding and analyzing practices and theories of contemporary electronic art. The curriculum is a mix of field surveys, readings of primary sources in aesthetic, media and critical theory, and examination of contemporary topics and controversies. The seminar is also intended to support the development and articulation of the student's creative practice. Open to graduate students across the Institute.",
+ "name" : "Electronic Arts Overview"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4440",
+ "description" : "This course examines how music and sound is heard, experienced, and circulated on screens across diverse media formats in contemporary society. This interdisciplinary course introduces students to a variety of analytical, historical, and theoretical approaches to the understanding of music, sound and interactive and non-interactive narrative screen media, including film, television, music video, video games, apps and mobile media, Internet audiovisual & social media, VR/AR, and other screen formats of sound production, distribution, and consumption. This course is open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors only.",
+ "name" : "Music, Sound & Screen Media"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6680",
+ "description" : "Works of architecture embody knowledge, ideas, and imagination that express formally, spatially, and materially the ways of living and values of the civilizations in which they occur. A select number of modern and contemporary buildings that represent a high degree of sophistication in the way their architects have approached the breadth of design issues both within and external to the programs of those works will be analyzed critically in order to ascertain the significance and relationships of the multiple systems of order inherent to a work of architecture. Reflecting on the knowledge and understandings acquired in all the previous courses in the history, theory, and criticism sequence, this course is a critical inquiry into the principal ideologies and premises of the most substantive architectural practices in the contemporary world. As such, the content of the course must necessarily evolve as the intellectual and cultural parameters of both theory and practice in the contemporary world change. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "History, Theory, Criticism 3"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4660",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to be a first course in the study of \"systems biology\", to introduce students to the field, the experimental and computational methods that are used within it, and the type of insights that the field can provide to biology. To fully appreciate the complexity of living systems, researchers gather systematic, quantitative measurements of a system's components using cutting-edge omics techniques. In addition, researchers also leverage computing power to describe, model, and predict dynamic behaviors that could otherwise not be perceived in such large-scale omics data. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature. A student cannot get credit for both BCBP 4660 / BIOL 4660 and BCBP 6650 / BIOL 6650 .",
+ "name" : "The Biology of Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4170",
+ "description" : "Examine various facets of the healthcare industry. Application of microeconomic theory and tools will be used to: analyze healthcare demand and supply; examine the impact of public policies; study market segments such as health insurance and pharmaceuticals; explore economic choices of healthcare professionals; identify potential socioeconomic and demographic determinants of health status and healthcare; and gain insights into issues related to the ongoing healthcare policy reform.",
+ "name" : "Health Economics and Policy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4040",
+ "description" : "The application of the fundamentals of chemistry, thermodynamics, mathematics, and transport phenomena to the design and evaluation of stage-wise and continuous contacting apparatus and systems for separating and purifying chemical materials. Steady-state and transient processes are studied.",
+ "name" : "Chemical Engineering Separations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-6965",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PHYS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4220",
+ "description" : "Students work in teams to continue innovation, design, and development work on approved projects that started in other courses such as Introduction to Engineering Design or Inventors Studio 1 or equivalent. New projects can also be proposed by students. Emphasis will be on innovating, completing the design, building an improved prototype, applying for patent protection, and licensing the design. Open to undergraduate and graduate students. Oral and written concept, midterm and final presentations are required. This is a communication-intensive course. This course meets with ENGR 4010 Professional Development III.",
+ "name" : "Inventors Studio 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-6250",
+ "description" : "Thermal structure and dynamics of the interstellar medium. Topics include diffuse nebulae, composition of interstellar dust and relation to extinction and polarization, molecules and interstellar chemistry, physics of star-forming regions.",
+ "name" : "Interstellar Medium"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ITWS-6300",
+ "description" : "Investigates business-related considerations in successfully commercializing new technology in a new venture or within an existing enterprise: market and customer analysis, beating the competition, planning and managing for profitability, high-tech marketing and sales, and business partnerships and acquisitions. Not a general management course; focuses explicitly on what is relevant for engineers and scientists working in a commercial environment. For junior/senior undergraduate or graduate students.",
+ "name" : "Business Issues for Engineers and Scientists"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6140",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Computer Operating Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6980",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-2610",
+ "description" : "Ocean basins and margins; origin, distribution, chemistry, and history of sediments; physical and chemical properties of seawater; global atmospheric and oceanic circulations and climatic interactions.",
+ "name" : "Oceanography"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2200",
+ "description" : "Intermediate Drawing focuses on the exploration of the possibilities of visual translation using a variety of media and techniques. Over the term, each successive project will provide the student the opportunity to develop and control a particular set of media, technique, and perspective, which reveals a unique and personal approach to image making. Participation in critiques, discussions, and lectures will enable the student to become fluent with the vocabulary and language of drawing, and focus their preferred methods and developed skill-sets into appropriate and actionable processes.",
+ "name" : "Intermediate Drawing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-4040",
+ "description" : "Topics include general topological spaces, connectedness, compactness, continuity, and product spaces. Additional topics may be chosen from identification spaces, homotopy, the fundamental group, covering maps, lifts, classification of surfaces, Baire category, dimension, and the Jordan curve theorem.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Topology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LITR-2963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in LITR"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4220",
+ "description" : "In this course, students will deepen their understanding of research principles and experimental practices in cognitive and behavioral science, and they will gain experience in applying concepts often discussed in human-oriented contexts (e.g., learning, theory of mind) to the animal world. In addition, they will be prepared to participate in revolutionizing our treatment of both the animals and the people with whom we share our lives.",
+ "name" : "Animal Cognition and Interaction with Humans"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-6964",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4660",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to be a first course in the study of \"systems biology\", to introduce students to the field, the experimental and computational methods that are used within it, and the type of insights that the field can provide to biology. To fully appreciate the complexity of living systems, researchers gather systematic, quantitative measurements of a system's components using cutting-edge omics techniques. In addition, researchers also leverage computing power to describe, model, and predict dynamic behaviors that could otherwise not be perceived in such large scale omics data. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature.",
+ "name" : "The Biology of Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-6300",
+ "description" : "This multidisciplinary course provides theoretical and methodological orientation to critical games research, and seeks to address both the broad and pragmatic implications of the question, \"What does it mean to conduct research via games?\" Through a hybrid lecture-workshop class format, students will engage with methodological research techniques in the various disciplines that game design draws upon--Visual Arts, Humanities and Media Studies, Social Science, and Computer Science--as well as experiment with independent research design and proposal writing.",
+ "name" : "Research Methods in Critical Game Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-6980",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-1900",
+ "description" : "A seminar for first-year math majors. The weekly student-faculty discussions will vary but examples of topics are: unsolved math problems, countability and the arithmetic of the infinite, topology and the concept of dimension, geometry and one-sided surfaces, and the theory underlying topics currently covered in calculus.",
+ "name" : "Art and Science of Mathematics I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2550",
+ "description" : "This topics-based course examines popular music in society, considering the ways it may express identities, motivate political movements, and function within various economic, mediated, and technological environments. This course explores popular music representing diverse genres (country, hip hop, EDM, Top 40) as it relates to social life, the intersections of race, gender, class, and sexuality, and media and technology.",
+ "name" : "Popular Music and Society"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6510",
+ "description" : "Deterministic signal representations and analysis, introduction to random processes and spectral analysis, correlation function and power spectral density of stationary processes, noise mechanisms, the Gaussian and Poisson processes. Markov processes, the analysis of linear and nonlinear systems with random inputs, stochastic signal representations, orthogonal expansions, the Karhunen-Loeve series, channel characterization, introduction to signal detection, linear mean-square filtering, the orthogonality principle, optimum Wiener and Kalman filtering, modulation theory, and systems analysis.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Stochastic Signals and Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4966",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6967",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2610",
+ "description" : "Students will explore the artistic role of music and sound in gaming by building their own interactive sound and music-rich games and 2D/3D rendered environments. Within the context of their own creative game projects, students will learn the basics of designing sound and composing music for interactive game spaces. Using workflow programming languages and software tools, students will program basic gaming interactions, link them to interactive audio software, and create musical gaming experiences.",
+ "name" : "Designing Musical Games"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4969",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in STSO"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4180",
+ "description" : "A critical examination in which comparisons are made and contrasts emphasized between different schools of economic thinking such as classicism, marginalism, socialism, institutionalism, neoclassicism, and Keynesianism. Special attention is given to historical theories and attitudes of economists toward technological change and its impact on human welfare.",
+ "name" : "Development of Economic Thought"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6210",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the organic chemical literature. A consideration of reactions of synthetic importance to the organic chemist with emphasis on the influence of structure on the behavior of organic molecules.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Organic Chemistry I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4440",
+ "description" : "Biophotonics, or biomedical optics, is a newly developing field, dealing with the application of optical science and technology to biomedical problems, including clinical applications. The course introduces students to the fundamentals in modern and classical optics, light-matter interaction and provides them with a broad overview of current topics and contemporary research in the area of optics and lasers in medicine and biology.",
+ "name" : "Biophotonics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6968",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ECSE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6940",
+ "description" : "Individual and collaborative projects and assignments adapted to the needs of individual students at the graduate level.",
+ "name" : "Studies in Electronic Arts"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6480",
+ "description" : "Civil Engineering applications of geosynthetics including geotextiles, geogrids, geonets, geomembranes, geosynthetic clay liners, geopipe, and geocomposites. Designing by function, including separation, reinforcement, filtration, drainage, liquid barrier, and combined functions. Applications in the areas of landfills, groundwater drains, geotextile reinforced walls and slopes, roadways, and other civil engineered type structures.",
+ "name" : "Designing with Geosynthetics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "EMBA-6968",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in EMBA"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4860",
+ "description" : "This course provides an overview of human resources principles and practices in business organizations. Students are given tools for understanding how people are managed on a day-to-day basis. Topics include: the recruiting and hiring process; self, peer, and managerial evaluations; training and development; and legal issues related to the work setting and the job-search process. Students come away with an understanding of the difficulties and challenges associated with workforce management. This course utilizes a combination of lecture, discussion, and experiential exercises.",
+ "name" : "Human Resources in High Performance Organizations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4952",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Systems Prototyping"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-1940",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Design & Prototyping For Engr"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Readings in Chemical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-5080",
+ "description" : "Representation of performance of turbomachines; mechanism of energy transfer; factors limiting design and performance including surge, choking, and cavitation; two-and three-dimensional flow phenomena; performance analysis including multistage effects and off-design performance.",
+ "name" : "Turbomachinery"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6640",
+ "description" : "Science Fictions is an advanced narrative video production and theory course. The class looks at thematic areas of science fiction, utopia and dystopia, paranormal, and speculative fiction. 'Speculative fiction' is a genre that looks at the real world and extends what we know about it, building on the 'real.' The class has two threads: to study narrative structure and create a series of sci-fi videos; to discuss and analyze mainstream and avant-garde science fictions film and themes from the early 1900s to the present.",
+ "name" : "Science Fictions"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4780",
+ "description" : "Design methodologies include register transfer modules and firmware microprogrammed design. \"Bit-slice\" philosophy of design. LSI microprocessors as design elements in larger digital systems such as high-speed channels and special purpose computers. Detailed discussion of the structure of several computers at the chip and board level. Specification of custom IC digital systems. FPGA based design implementation using VHDL. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ECSE 6700 .",
+ "name" : "Advanced Computer Hardware Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-1960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6620",
+ "description" : "Modern solution techniques including semi-analytical, approximation, and numerical methods are introduced and applied to linear and nonlinear transport phenomena problems and chemical engineering systems. Similarity theory and integral methods, perturbation techniques, and orthogonal collocation, indispensable to chemical engineering, are discussed.",
+ "name" : "Mathematical Methods in Chemical Engineering II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4870",
+ "description" : "The Sonics Research Lab is completely research based . The first part (the Fall semester) will be focused on hands-on research tools and techniques. First, students will learn the basics of digital signal processing, develop an understanding of measurement equipment and analysis methods for sound. The course will examine the ISO standards of room-acoustic measurements, develop students' research goals and a specific set of data to gather for their research. The course will also prepare the students with the fundamental knowledge on CATT Acoustic and/or EASE in geometrical modeling. Then the students and professors will visit a number of performance venues (e.g. EMPAC Concert Hall, and/ or other venues) and perform the room-acoustic measurements. Students will then work on analyzing and interpreting the research results. Practice measurements will be scheduled in the gallery or somewhere on campus before trips to performance halls. MATLAB will play a central role throughout all the classes (SRL I & II) and the thesis research projects. It will be used during the class exercises . Within one week from the semester start, every student is required to INSTALL a functioning MATLAB Software package onto her/his laptop computer. B.S. and B. ARCH, and other school students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S. in ARCS students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
+ "name" : "Sonics Research Lab 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4450",
+ "description" : "Technology is a vital link in how modern corporations identify, acquire, transact with, and keep their customers. This course provides an introduction to both the technology infrastructure most relevant to the customer relationship as well marketing issues that result from the application of computers and communication networks. Topics include issues related to social media, search, online advertising, blogging, customer relationship management, online market segmentation, and marketing of IT products. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
+ "name" : "Internet Marketing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BUSN-6300",
+ "description" : "In this course, students develop their capacity as leaders in a dynamic world, planning and executing strategy to achieve organizational objectives. Students develop frameworks for making decisions that enhance the value creation of their organization while demonstrating full commitment to ethical decisions and outcomes. Students learn to plan and execute to achieve goals fully and effectively. Students develop their mentorship capacities to manage and lead the human elements of their organizations. NOTE: Students must attend a Rensselaer Leadership Experience (RLE) as part of this course",
+ "name" : "Leaders and Strategy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ITWS-6963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ITWS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6520",
+ "description" : "The applications of the principles of soil mechanics to the design of foundations, at the graduate level. Subsurface investigation. Design of footings, retaining walls, pile foundations, flexible retaining structures, anchor tie-backs, bridge piers, abutments, embankments, and natural slopes. Slope stability analysis and landslide prevention. Earthquake effects. Case studies.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Foundations and Earth Structures"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6040",
+ "description" : "Algorithms with provable guarantees on the quality of their solutions are a powerful way of dealing with intractable problems. This course covers fundamental techniques for designing approximation algorithms. Possible topics include: semi-definite and linear programming, inapproximability and the PCP theorem, randomized rounding, metrics and cuts, primal-dual methods, and online algorithms.",
+ "name" : "Approximation Algorithms"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6340",
+ "description" : "This course will explore how linguistics, the scientific study of the properties of human language and languages, can be applied to the development of intelligent agents that can fluently and meaningfully communicate with people in natural language. It will focus on linguistic phenomena that have so far been particularly resistant to effective machine processing, such as lexical ambiguity resolution, reference resolution, ellipsis, indirect speech acts, implicature, and non-literal language (e.g., metaphor and irony).",
+ "name" : "The Linguistics of Computational Linguistics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "WRIT-2320",
+ "description" : "This is a workshop course in which novice and more experienced student writers produce creative nonfiction-prose that aims to be both factually accurate and compelling literature; students must have a good command of written English and grammar. Focus may vary by semester among memoir, lyric and personal essays, plotted narrative, oral history, and nature writing. For models, students study classic and contemporary accomplished writers who connect the self to the larger world. Class work centers on drafting and revising essays with regular peer workshops.",
+ "name" : "Creative Nonfiction Writing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-1200",
+ "description" : "The geological environment of humankind: the atmosphere, oceans, groundwater, rivers, glaciers, deserts, and soils. The course explores the processes by which these and other features develop and change, both naturally and as a result of human activity.",
+ "name" : "Geology II: Earth's Surface"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6240",
+ "description" : "Eco Chic: Living Art is an upper level production and theory class about art, biology, and the study of life covering topics such as environmentalism, land art, food art, sustainable practices with art, body art, bio-art. Part lecture, part hands-on workshop, Eco Chic encourages students to redefine and experimentally express their relationships with the varied aspects of everyday living systems and manipulating life.",
+ "name" : "Eco Chic: Living Art"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-2940",
+ "description" : "Study and research in various fields of astronomy to demonstrate interest in and ability for independent work.",
+ "name" : "Special Projects in Astronomy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4700",
+ "description" : "Freshwater ecology is the quantitative examination of major biological fresh water communities. Course discussions will delineate the physical and chemical regimes under which aquatic organisms exist. Basic limnological processes are studied to define aquatic systems of differing physical characteristics. Nutrient chemistry analyses of waters of varying acidity, alkalinity, and chemical loadings are related to their trophic status. Lecture and Laboratory are taught at the Darrin Fresh Water Institute at Lake George with field activities at various locations in the Adironacks. The course includes extensive hands-on laboratory work, as well as the writing of in-depth reports. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Freshwater Ecology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4120",
+ "description" : "Students will be exposed to several clinical experiences at a level typically found in college graduates/post graduates who are entering medical school.",
+ "name" : "Investigative Medicine II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4210",
+ "description" : "This course explores the ethical issues that engineers encounter in their professional practice. It also examines social values and law and policy issues that shape engineering and technological decision making. Using case studies, professional codes of conduct, and scholarly literature, the course examines the responsibilities of engineers in relation to their employers, clients, co-professionals, and their responsibility for public safety and welfare. Topics include the history of engineering, professionalism vs. the demands of business, engineering vs. management decision making, whistle-blowing, proprietary rights and trade secrecy, and conflicts of interest.",
+ "name" : "Engineering Ethics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-9990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6300",
+ "description" : "This graduate level course will introduce a number of econometric models to analyze transportation data, ranging from count of crash occurrence to household trip frequency. Students will learn to specify, estimate, and interpret models to study various transportation issues.",
+ "name" : "Transportation Statistical Modeling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-1960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ENVE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6860",
+ "description" : "Galerkin's method and extremal principles, finite element approximations (Lagrange, hierarchical and 3-D approximations, interpolation errors), mesh generation and assembly, adaptivity (h-, p-, hp-refinement). Error analysis and convergence rates. Perturbations resulting from boundary approximation, numerical integration, etc. Time dependent problems including parabolic and hyperbolic PDEs. Applications will be selected from several areas including heat conduction, wave propagation, potential theory, and solid and fluid mechanics.",
+ "name" : "Finite Element Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4240",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Tissue Biomaterial Interactions"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6900",
+ "description" : "Presentation of current developments in computer science. Reports by students.",
+ "name" : "Computer Science Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6120",
+ "description" : "Biopunk: Arts Lab Practice is a studio, lab and lecture class introducing students to bioart, and microbial life and resilient ecological practices. We use punk, queer and biological laboratory techniques to creatively produce science, design and art works. Students will be required to complete readings, experiment, and create their own visions of a speculative biofuture. Emphasis will be on the history and contemporary investigations of the microbiome and how to culturally explore these scenarios of how we live amongst multiple diverse communities and species.",
+ "name" : "Biopunk: Arts Lab Practice"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ERTH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6840",
+ "description" : "Survey and engineering analysis of industrial processes and commercial polymers. Topics include introductory fluid mechanics, non-Newtonian fluids, molecular theory of viscoelasticity, analysis of extrusion, and other selected processes.",
+ "name" : "Polymer Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6750",
+ "description" : "Develops econometric models for causal inference using tools for big data. Machine learning and other resource-intensive modeling techniques are integrated into traditional economic approaches. Also covers procedures for the development, processing, and combination of novel data sources; methods to process extremely large datasets; data exploration and development tools; nonparametric methods. Economics applications are considered throughout.",
+ "name" : "Economic Data Analytics and Modeling I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2130",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Contemporary Design Approaches"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6090",
+ "description" : "This course is primarily concerned with learning how to build any interactive experience or artwork from concept to completion. It will introduce open-source, cross-platform programming libraries and tools used by artists and programmers to create interactive experiences and artworks for museum installations, festivals, VJ-ing, projection mapping, interactive experiences/artworks, and more. Then, the course starts to address the questions: Is code an art form? What is interactive art? Is software art?",
+ "name" : "Art and Code and Interactivity"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6080",
+ "description" : "Development and completion of individual creative projects with a focus on studio production, method, and process. Students are expected to foster an environment in which serious and sophisticated peer critique can take place.",
+ "name" : "Graduate Studio Critique"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4966",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ECON"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6980",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6870",
+ "description" : "X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) are used to determine 3-D structures of biological macromolecules at atomic resolution. The course will cover crystallographic and NMR methods, their theory and practice, along with thermodynamics of structure formation and molecular dynamics. Students will prepare an oral presentation on a protein of their choice. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and BCBP 4870 .)",
+ "name" : "Protein Structure Determination"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4460",
+ "description" : "This course focuses on software development techniques in support of large-scale software projects and maintenance. Specific topics include various programming paradigms and techniques, approaches to testing and automation, debugging, refactoring, and inheriting code. Individual and team assignments are required, including programming assignments. Project topics include text processing, building a search engine, and the like. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Large-Scale Programming and Testing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6610",
+ "description" : "Phenomena peculiar to nonlinear systems. Linearization, iteration, and perturbation procedures. Describing function stability analysis. Phase plane methods. Relaxation oscillations and limit cycles. Stability analysis by Lyapunov's method. Popov's theorem. Adaptive control systems. Sensitivity analysis.",
+ "name" : "Nonlinear Control Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHIL-4420",
+ "description" : "A team-based, project-oriented, hands-on introduction to the great concepts and discoveries in logic and computability, including Turing Machines, first-order logic, the limitations of computing machines, Godel's incompleteness results, and so forth. A hands-on laboratory component is included.",
+ "name" : "Computability and Logic"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4560",
+ "description" : "In a world of rapid technological change, this course aims to equip future architects with the ability to position, understand, and implement new materials and systems in meaningful ways. The working principles of selected advanced materials and systems are explained and issues of material development, applications, and integration into buildings systems are addressed. Emphasis is also placed on understanding the issues involved when combining and installing new materials or systems into buildings. Students are further introduced to detail development. Sustainability: New materials and systems are explored with the objective of formulating meaningful technological response to critical environmental and societal issues such as resource depletion, environmental degradation, and globalization.",
+ "name" : "Materials and Enclosures"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-4100",
+ "description" : "Quantum mechanics beyond Schrodinger wave mechanics. The postulates of quantum mechanics. Second quantization, Dirac notation, Hilbert spaces, perturbation theory, and applications to simple systems.",
+ "name" : "Introductory Quantum Mechanics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6390",
+ "description" : "Energy and Systems Simulation provides students with an introduction to advanced simulation tools and procedures necessary for analyzing the performance of complex environmental building systems. The course utilizes parametric software for the simulation and analysis of multi-objective optimization workflow procedures. Areas of building performance assessment include thermal and daylight optimization.",
+ "name" : "Energy and Systems Simulation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6600",
+ "description" : "A technology-based performance ensemble, as well as a practice-based studio course, focused on the composition, design, and programming of new musical works and instruments. Students create and perform electronic music using laptops, microprocessors, digital networks and a range of new interfaces for musical expression. ARTS 4600/6600 combines studio and ensemble. The ensemble only section (ARTS 2600) may be taken multiple times as a 1-credit performance ensemble in partial satisfaction of the Music major or minor ensemble requirements, or once as a 4-credit seminar at either the 4000 or 6000 level.",
+ "name" : "Ensemble Nonlinear"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4430",
+ "description" : "Digital gaming is one of the most rapidly developing fields. The effort required for developing games is not trivial. To make a game fun to play, the design of the game levels and/or the AI-driven opponents need to be intelligent and adaptive to the players' strategies and skills. In this course, students will learn and explore using machine learning techniques to automate the design process of digital games. The course will cover basic and advanced topics in Artificial Intelligence and Learning, such as Decision Trees, Neural Networks, Genetic Algorithms, and Reinforcement Learning. Students will gain hands-on experience in applying these techniques in computer games. The course will also introduce psychological theories and studies about people's decision-making and emotional processes and how they are related to the players' experience in games. This course will take the form of a combination of lectures, presentations by students, class discussions, and independent study.",
+ "name" : "Learning and Advanced Game AI"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-2010",
+ "description" : "Development of the ability to apply and solve equations of balance for chemical-process systems, laying the foundation for subsequent chemical engineering courses in unit operations and process design. Topics include mass and mole balances for nonreactive and reactive systems, properties of fluids, and the first and second laws of thermodynamics.",
+ "name" : "Material, Energy, and Entropy Balances"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6290",
+ "description" : "Background and socio-economic aspects of freight transportation. Freight policy and planning objectives. Distribution system and participating agents. Behavior of freight agents. Short-medium term operational improvements: Land use and traffic related. Short-medium term operational improvements: System level strategies. System perspective of freight activity. Strategic freight transportation planning and freight demand modeling.",
+ "name" : "Freight Transportation Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4870",
+ "description" : "X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) are used to determine 3-D structures of biological macromolecules at atomic resolution. The course will cover crystallographic and NMR methods, their theory and practice, along with thermodynamics of structure formation and molecular dynamics. Students will prepare a poster presentation on a protein of their choice. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and BCBP 6870 .)",
+ "name" : "Protein Structure Determination"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6040",
+ "description" : "Rethinking Documentary is a graduate level production course in film and video. Taking a broad look at what defines \"documentary\" media, this course incorporates criticism with production to examine key issues in the discipline, such as truth versus fiction, personal responsibility, community involvement, the efficacy of video intervention and the authority of mass media. Students are required to produce a range of video works questioning conventional documentary styles, using radical and interventionist techniques to tell compelling or poetic stories.",
+ "name" : "Rethinking Documentary: Video Production"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7730",
+ "description" : "Main course objective is to introduce students to basic economics principles and establish economics as a managerial decision-making framework. The course will draw on economic analysis of such concepts as cost, demand, profit, competition, pricing strategy, and market protection and tie them to operational business decisions.",
+ "name" : "Economics and Institutions"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "DSES-9990",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4580",
+ "description" : "This course covers the dynamics of fluid flow in human physiological system. Engineering principles and fluid dynamic concepts will be taught in the context of cardiovascular system. Topics include: pulsatile flow in arteries, vascular compliance and wave propagation, impedance, cardiac mechanics, dynamic coupling of ventricle and systemic circulation, blood flow in vein, coronary circulation, microcirculation, blood flow at complex geometries, imaging techniques in clinical hemodynamic assessment, fluid mechanics in designing and testing circulatory implants.",
+ "name" : "Biomedical Fluid Mechanics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4100",
+ "description" : "This course presents how solutions to problems in transport phenomena can be obtained using the finite element method. The fundamentals of numerical simulation for coupled heat, mass, and momentum transport are presented. Finite difference methods in 1D and 2D are discussed too. Simulations are performed in multiphysics software for 1D, 2D and 3D systems. The course covers the fundamentals of numerical simulation, formulating user-inspired problems, writing user-defined functions and variables, processing results, and extraction and analysis of simulation data.",
+ "name" : "Finite Element Modeling for Chemical Engineers"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6470",
+ "description" : "Starting with the introduction of the probability distribution of one or two continuous random variables, basic concepts of mean, variance, covariance, and correlation coefficient are covered. Description techniques discussed include stem-and-leaf plots, histograms, box plots, and probability plots. Confidence intervals for a single sample and for two samples are constructed on means and variances. The procedure of hypothesis testing is introduced conceptually followed by solving real-life biomedical problems. The design and performance of engineering experiments involving a single factor are discussed.",
+ "name" : "Biostatistics for Life Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4360",
+ "description" : "Theory and applications of reliability and risk assessment. Boolean algebra, logic diagrams, redudancy and majority-vote configurations. System synthesis by reliability and fault tree techniques, quantitative evaluation, uncertainty analysis. Common cause events, failure data, and failure models. Allocation of risk to subsystems. Availability, repair policies, renewal theory. Operational reliability methods.",
+ "name" : "Reactor Reliability and Safety"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-6100",
+ "description" : "This course is an advanced introduction to the policy-relevant side of STS. We will examine three broad topics: 1. How states shape scientific research and the development of technologies and infrastructures. 2. How legislators and regulatory bureaucracies use scientific knowledge and expert opinion in decision-making processes. 3. How publics, particularly social movements, engage in political processes that are dominated by scientific and technological experts.",
+ "name" : "Science and Technology Policy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4800",
+ "description" : "Biophysics addresses the physical principles of biological function, which requires the application of physical methods. The focus of this course is on methods used to study the interactions and dynamics of biomolecules in vitro, primarily proteins and nucleic acids. Both the theoretical and methodological aspects of molecular biophysical methods will be covered. This course is designed as an interdisciplinary introduction to the field and is open to students in biology, chemistry, physics, or engineering.",
+ "name" : "Methods in Biophysics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2060",
+ "description" : "2D Experimental Animation is an introduction to animation as an art form. Most of this course will be traditional assignments designed to encourage spontaneous creativity, explore animation concepts, and learn animation terminology. Assignments will build a solid foundation for entrance into 3D Animation. This course will also be a historical and theoretical investigation with screenings and readings followed with discussion.",
+ "name" : "2D Experimental Animation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAF-2040",
+ "description" : "The AS 200, Team and Leadership Fundamentals,\" focuses on laying the foundation for teams and leadership. The topics include skills that will allow cadets to improve their leadership on a personal level and within a team. The courses will prepare cadets for their field training experience where they will be able to put the concepts learned into practice. The purpose is to instill a leadership mindset and to motivate sophomore students to transition from AFROTC cadet to AFROTC officer candidate. Leadership Laboratory ( USAF 0010 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
+ "name" : "Air and Space Studies 200B (Team and Leadership Fundamentals)"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6400",
+ "description" : "Methods of analysis for continuous and discrete-time linear systems. Convolution, classical solution of dynamic equations, transforms, and matrices are reviewed. Emphasis is on the concept of state space. Linear spaces, concept of state, modes, controllability, observability, state transition matrix. State variable feedback, compensation, decoupling.",
+ "name" : "Systems Analysis Techniques"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6550",
+ "description" : "This course reviews the principles of ethical behavior and responsible conduct of research and discusses specific areas of biotechnology research, medical research, and societal issues in the context of these principles. Representative topics include genetic engineering, stem cell research, assisted reproduction, human subjects, animal research, and nanotechnology. Active student participation is expected.",
+ "name" : "Ethical Issues in Biotechnology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHIL-4300",
+ "description" : "While concepts such as quality of life, environment, nature, global ecology, and the like figure heavily in contemporary discussions, they are seldom integrated into an environmental philosophy. The course tries to achieve this integration by understanding some of the religious, mythic-poetic, and scientific dimensions of the man-nature matrix. Some specific environmental problems are examined in order to illustrate the system of values implied by various solutions.",
+ "name" : "Environmental Philosophy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4020",
+ "description" : "A continuation of CHME 4010 . Course includes topics on multi-dimensional transport processes, potential, boundary layer and turbulent fluid flows, convective heat and mass transfer processes, friction factors and drag in and around solid objects, heat and mass exchangers, and radiation heat transfer. The course extends the use of numerical methods to apply to multidimensional problems, convective heat and mass transfer problems, and the simulation of more complicated fluid flows including turbulence approximations. Credit not allowed for both this course and ENGR 2250 .",
+ "name" : "Transport Phenomena II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4050",
+ "description" : "The design of equipment, processes, and systems of interest in chemical engineering through application of scientific, technological, and economic principles. The concepts of product design, design for the environment, and the ethical and safety issues of design are introduced. Emphasis is placed on problem formulation and the conceptual, analytical, and decision aspects of open-ended design situations. The work integrates knowledge and skills gained in previous and concurrent courses. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Chemical Process Design: Fundamentals"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATP-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MATP"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6550",
+ "description" : "This course provides a thorough survey of the basics of chemical thermodynamics and quantum mechanics at the graduate level, with advanced applications of these subjects to chemical systems. The basics of statistical thermodynamics, intermolecular interactions, group theory, and applications to spectroscopic methods are also covered.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Physical Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-9990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5100",
+ "description" : "This course will examine the spectrum of architectural phenomena and ideas without a specific chronology using examples ranging from antiquity to the contemporary world in western and non-western civilizations and produced in both vernacular and disciplinary cultures. An essential part of this course is to stimulate students' curiosity about architecture and the larger world and introduce them to key issues of architecture regarding space, form, critique, technology, aesthetics, societal and cultural contexts, etc. Particular emphasis will be given to the emergence of modernism in architecture. Crucial to the goals of this course is to encourage students to pursue and develop their own unique vision and voice in architecture throughout their education and practice. Fundamental to this process is making students aware of the necessity to challenge their own subjectivities, biases, and presuppositions.",
+ "name" : "History, Theory, Criticism 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6967",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6570",
+ "description" : "Classical solution thermodynamics, equations of state, and topics in chemical reaction and phase equilibria. Emphasis is on the rigorous formulation of equilibrium problems, and on the measurement, reduction, correlation, and interpretation of experimental data.",
+ "name" : "Chemical and Phase Equilibrium"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4560",
+ "description" : "This course explores the history, methods, and goals of hackers with special attention paid to their role in social movements. It broadly interprets the term \"hacktivism\" to include computer hacking, media hacking and \"reality hacking\" in the service of social change. Students will gain an understanding of how and why hackers have emerged as a major social force.",
+ "name" : "Hactivism"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4790",
+ "description" : "Hardware and software for real-time microprocessor-based digital systems. Basic concepts and operations of on-chip components related to digital system functionality. Architectures, instructions sets, and interfacing with peripherals through serial or parallel ports. Introduction to 32-bit machines with in-depth treatment of 16- and 8-bit machines. Emphasis on C language cross-compilers. Laboratory exercises are included to demonstrate hardware and software development techniques practiced in industry.",
+ "name" : "Microprocessor Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-4250",
+ "description" : "This is a required departmental course, but is also appropriate for biomedical engineers and other engineering disciplines as an elective. This course teaches the mechanical properties of metals, ceramics, and polymers from both the macroscopic and atomistic or micromechanical viewpoints. An introduction to three-dimensional stresses and strains. Elastic behavior, plastic behavior, strengthening mechanisms, fracture, creep, and fatigue are all addressed. Includes laboratory component.",
+ "name" : "Mechanical Properties of Materials"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LANG-1210",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Japanese I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4510",
+ "description" : "Experimental Game Design is an upper level studio arts course focusing on the creation of innovative, workable game prototypes using a variety of interactive multimedia. Games are considered as a new genre and are analyzed as cultural artifacts. The aesthetics of game design including character development, level design, game play experience, and delivery systems are covered. Flow, game theory, and game play gestalt are considered. Alternate gaming paradigms and emerging forms are encouraged.",
+ "name" : "Experimental Game Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6500",
+ "description" : "Recent developments in systems, sensors, communications, and networking technologies enable the development of large-scale distributed systems incorporating many individual nodes. This course takes an algorithmic approach to distributed systems for sensor fusion, localization and tracking, distributed robotics and sensor-based control. It also presents the basic principles of sensor node architectures and wireless sensor networks. Applications include environmental monitoring, biomedical systems, and security-related tracking problems.",
+ "name" : "Distributed Systems and Sensor Networks"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6160",
+ "description" : "Analysis and computation of electrical transients in lumpy and distributed power circuits; switching surges, lightning surges, traveling waves. Impact of surges on terminal equipment. Insulation coordination; system protection; design of electric power apparatus and systems to operate reliably and economically in a transient environment.",
+ "name" : "Surge Phenomena in Electric Power Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4310",
+ "description" : "In this course, students will explore the molecular methods and applications of recombinant DNA technology and the issues regarding their use through case studies on the effect of genetic engineering in medicine, agriculture, biology, forensics, and various other areas of technology. The course has three major components: 1) techniques used in the generation of recombinant molecules, 2) application of recombinant technology to diagnostics and therapeutics and 3) genetically modified organisms. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and BCBP 6310 .)",
+ "name" : "Genetic Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4880",
+ "description" : "The course covers interactive, multimedia interface design (for Web sites and apps) for data visualization or other forms of interactive information design. Innovative designs that explore new directions in interactive data design are highlighted. Topics include multisensory information design using graphics, sound, touch, and large-scale data projection. Interface design topics include user-centered design, information architecture, rapid prototyping, cross-cultural design, and intellectual property. Students may choose the applications they want to design for the class project.",
+ "name" : "Interactive Data Visualization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4500",
+ "description" : "This course illuminates specific musical works and performances in depth, drawn from a range of periods, cultures, and genres by analyzing them in their historical, cultural, technological, and critical context. The emphasis is on music since 1900 and sample topics might include Remix in Digital Culture, Music in Protest and Social Justice, Gender and Sexuality in Music, Music and the Moving Image, and Sounding Identity, among others",
+ "name" : "Topics in the History and Analysis of Music"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MTLE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6190",
+ "description" : "This graduate level course will introduce two types of advanced models related to travel demand forecasting: the land use models and the activity-based models. This project-based course will allow students to obtain sound knowledge of advanced modeling techniques, and to have some preliminary experience with building, estimating, and applying advanced transportation models.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Transportation Models"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-4730",
+ "description" : "Positive Psychology is the scientific study of human happiness, well-being, and strength of character. This course takes an empirical approach to helping individuals use the science of flourishing to enhance their lives. Resiliency, the ability to adapt to stress and adversity, will be emphasized. Students will learn about coping techniques of resiliency to effectively navigate through life situations.",
+ "name" : "Positive Psychology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4710",
+ "description" : "Major principles of biochemistry are illustrated, as students purify and analyze specific proteins. Experience is obtained with various techniques including protein extraction from bacteria and tissues, chromatography, ultracentrifugation, spectrophotometric analysis, and electrophoresis. The course includes extensive hands-on laboratory work, as well as the writing of in-depth reports. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Biochemistry Laboratory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6310",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Supply Chain Capstone"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4220",
+ "description" : "A painting course in opaque media such as oil or acrylic with emphasis on color interaction, composition, and pictorial design. Using sources from observation and the history of painting, students are taught to see and convey effects of color on/in 2D pictorial space and to develop critical skills in looking at paintings.",
+ "name" : "Painting"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LANG-1940",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Chinese I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHIL-2140",
+ "description" : "Introduction to first-order logic as a tool to be used in engineering, computer science, philosophy, etc., and as procedural knowledge helpful in puzzle-solving environments (e.g., standardized tests). A hands-on laboratory component is included.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Logic"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4600",
+ "description" : "The basic processes of fabrication of silicon-based semiconductor devices with emphasis on the chemical principles and systems involved. Topics include materials preparation, oxide growth, lithography, diffusion, ion implantation, epitaxial growth, chemical-vapor deposition, vacuum deposition, reactive ion etching, and packaging technologies. Fabrication of both bipolar and FET devices is discussed with emphasis on manufacturing process flow and control. Process design methodology.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Semiconductor Processing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-2004",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Developmn Psyc (at Maria Coll)"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1985",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Sociology Of Inequality"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4535",
+ "description" : "This course provides students a venue to explore the different uses of Eastern and Western social media for socializing, entertaining, publicizing, and marketing. Students explore how media and mediated communication affect people and society, and develop critical perspectives of the diversity of mediated messages across cultures. The course also looks at the variability and cross-cultural encounters built on students' own everyday observations. The course is taught in English and requires no Chinese language proficiency.",
+ "name" : "Social Media: East & West"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-6961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4210",
+ "description" : "An advanced studio course in sculpture for students who have taken Sculpture I. Students are encouraged to explore personal areas of interest and are required to develop a familiarity with the history of sculpture as well as mastering fabrication techniques.",
+ "name" : "Sculpture II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6420",
+ "description" : "Research, plan, create, and execute portfolio projects involving networked improvisation, composition, and performance via Internet and Internet 2. Study and use telematic technology such as Lola, JackTrip, SKYPE, mobile, and other devices in performances with others in distant locations. Participate in multimedia improvisation ensemble (Tintinnabulate) as a resource for implementing projects.",
+ "name" : "Experimental Telepresence"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4200",
+ "description" : "Advanced Drawing is designed to help students who have mastered basic drawing skills to enhance those skills and utilize them to explore visual ideas. Emphasis is placed on individual development of skills and subject matter to help students express themselves visually. Examples and studies are used from master drawings of the past to learn about the history of art and to stimulate ideas for the students' own work.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Drawing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "WRIT-2110",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to assist students in becoming more self-possessed and versatile writers. The course offers instruction in linguistic, rhetorical, and sociocultural concepts through its overarching focus on language: how it works, where it falls short, and how to harness it for specific purposes. Critical thinking and composing are conceptualized as processes, which includes the creation, development, organization, and revision of ideas and arguments. Students will complete a series of writing assignments in order to participate in contemporary debates occurring in both public and academic contexts.",
+ "name" : "Strategic Writing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "DSES-4530",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Information Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4140",
+ "description" : "Queer Ecologies is an undergraduate and graduate arts course that uses art to think about our eco-futures. We will look at the disruptive nature of Cartesian thinking and binary positioning in relation to sexuality and ecologies. The \"queering\" is a means to refuse this binary thinking and consider expansive interdisciplinary practices that have evolved from LGBTQ+ and feminist theory, decolonial thinking, extinction and death studies, environmental justice, critiques of science and big pharma, biopolitics, bioethics, biology, science fiction, aesthetics, art and play.",
+ "name" : "Queer Ecologies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7860",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to introduce students to theories and principles in organizational behavior research. Students will investigate important theoretical perspectives, concepts, and research methods in behavioral research, with an emphasis on developing an understanding of how research in the field is conducted and how further contributions to this field might be made. Through in-depth discussions of selected research articles, students will gain some proficiency in framing meaningful research questions and deriving testable hypotheses.",
+ "name" : "Organizational Behavior Theory and Research Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2220",
+ "description" : "An introductory course which will present basic concepts about composition, line, pictorial space, light, and color in the visual arts in order to help students develop the means for expressing visual ideas effectively. Weekly homework design projects, using both traditional and electronic media, will be complemented by in-class slide lectures, videos, and critiques.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of 2D Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4630",
+ "description" : "Optical physics and applications of lasers. Design of optical systems. Topics include: wave optics and beam propagation, Gaussian beams, resonators, optical properties of atoms and laser gain media, laser amplifiers, pulsed laser systems, applications of lasers, nonlinear optics.",
+ "name" : "Lasers and Optical Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-4630",
+ "description" : "Optical physics and applications of lasers. Design of optical systems. Topics include: wave optics and beam propagation, Gaussian beams, resonators, optical properties of atoms and laser gain media, laser amplifiers, pulsed laser systems, applications of lasers, nonlinear optics.",
+ "name" : "Lasers and Optical Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2210",
+ "description" : "A beginning sculpture course combining hands-on studio work sessions with lectures on the history and theory of sculpture practice. The studio component involves explorations of materials and techniques as tools for the enhancing of visual sensitivity and creative expression.",
+ "name" : "Sculpture I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4260",
+ "description" : "This course provides students with a wide-ranging understanding of the environmental and social context of food, agriculture, and hunger. Drawing primarily on sociological concepts and research, the class will take a \"food systems\" approach, analyzing food as it travels from farm to table as part of an interconnected process. Students will examine why humans eat the way they do and how individuals' food choices affect other people and the environment.",
+ "name" : "Food, Farms, and Famine"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2700",
+ "description" : "An introductory studio course covering the principles of critical listening, psychoacoustics, the art of music recording, and the basic use of digital equipment for music production and post-production. Hands-on assignments in a professional sound facility will be combined with readings and historical examples drawing on popular and experimental styles.",
+ "name" : "Sound Recording and Production I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-2020",
+ "description" : "This design studio introduces students to the first semester-long design project. We introduce students to more formal engineering design methods. This includes problem formulation, structured ideation, rapid prototyping, evaluation, functional modeling, and iteration. Studio III will also continue to draw on social science methods of ethnographic observation, background research, stakeholder analysis, and also a critical deconstruction of engineering design methods in a way that builds agility in ways more appropriate for those in DIS. Development of individual skills in design development, presentation, and portfolio building are also emphasized.",
+ "name" : "Design and Innovation Studio III"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4940",
+ "description" : "Supervised reading and research.",
+ "name" : "Independent Studies in Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6110",
+ "description" : "Technological innovation is responsible for most economic growth and is crucial to deal with major societal concerns. This course examines the economics of innovation and new technologies. It shows how technologies are created and put to use, from basic science through invention and development to diffusion and practical use. Additional topics include R&D determinants, sources of innovation, product improvement, cost reduction, incentivizing and stimulating innovation, patents, evolution of innovation and technology, innovative competition in industry, and the national innovation environment.",
+ "name" : "Economics of Innovation and New Technologies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2550",
+ "description" : "Building on techniques taught in Digital Constructs 3, this course will expand upon the role of technology in architecture by introducing advanced methods of design analysis and resolution. Students will learn to address issues of optimization, environmental surroundings, structure, and site by using various contemporary analytic software programs. This course is offered in the spring semester and is required of all second-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program. Coordination of the relationship of course content to Architectural Design Studio 4 will be between the Digital Constructs 4 faculty instructor and the second-year architectural design studio coordinator and faculty.",
+ "name" : "Digital Constructs 4"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6640",
+ "description" : "Creativity is the starting point for technological entrepreneurship. Through interaction with faculty and guest speakers, students increase their understanding of the creative process and some of the tools that can be implemented to stimulate and/or manage individual and collective creativity. In addition, through application of these techniques in course activities, students explore and attempt to enhance their own creativity.",
+ "name" : "Invention, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4550",
+ "description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of the structural modeling of proteins and other biomolecules using informatics-driven and energy-based approaches. Topics include template-based comparative modeling, secondary structure prediction, tertiary structure prediction, protein classification, sidechain rotamers, docking, protein design, energy minimization, electrostatics, molecular dynamics, and molecular surfaces. Molecular modeling software will be provided. Laptop computers are required. BIOL 4550 , BIOL 6420 , BCBP 4550, and BCBP 6420 meet jointly; only one of these courses can be taken for credit.",
+ "name" : "Molecular Modeling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-2940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Studies in Games"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6850",
+ "description" : "Covers topics such as the impact of foreign trade and investment on labor markets, job creation and destruction, income inequality, production location and agglomeration, international technology transfer, and regional economic development.",
+ "name" : "International Economics and Development II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4660",
+ "description" : "This graduate/advanced undergraduate hybrid course examines the structural and physiologic properties of muscle, as well as its force production and overall biomechanical function. Muscle structure and function will be explored at the protein, single fiber, and whole tissue levels. Discussions will focus primarily on skeletal muscle, and topics will include muscle morphology, cross-bridge theory, molecular motor and actomyosin interaction, Hill-type and Huxley-type models, electromyography, fatigue, muscle inhibition, history-dependent phenomena, in vitro and in vivo muscle function, and the response to injury. Each topic will be introduced and developed utilizing seminal articles in the literature as well as excerpts from texts and further discussion on current problems and state-of-the-art experimental techniques will draw on the current scientific literature.",
+ "name" : "Muscle Mechanics and Modeling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-2940",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Ug Mentoring Intro Biology III"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6800",
+ "description" : "Gaussian elimination, special linear systems (such as positive definite, banded, or sparse), introduction to parallel computing, iterative methods for linear systems (such as conjugate gradient and preconditioning), QR factorization and least squares problems, and eigenvalue problems.",
+ "name" : "Computational Linear Algebra"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4050",
+ "description" : "The course is designed to help students continue to develop as media-makers/filmmakers. Students will work on short video projects that are shot in the studio and in the field. Studio experimentations, including projection work, multi-camera production, generating ideas, and realizing a well-developed final project. Students write their own scripts, learn new technical skills and direct videos.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Video Media Studio"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4030",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Multimedia Performance Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4040",
+ "description" : "This is a production course investigating non-traditional approaches to documentary or non-fiction film/video. Taking a broad look at what defines \"documentary\" media, this course will incorporate criticism with production. Students will produce a range of video works questioning conventional documentary styles, using radical and interventionist techniques. Students will study traditional documentary works including ethnographic films, cinema verit\u00e9, propaganda films, \"home movies,\" reality TV, tabloid news, autobiographic and activist videos.",
+ "name" : "Rethinking Documentary: Video Production"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2600",
+ "description" : "A technology-based performance ensemble, as well as a practice-based studio course, focused on the composition, design, and programming of new musical works and instruments. Students create and perform electronic music using laptops, microprocessors, digital networks and a range of new interfaces for musical expression. ARTS 4600/6600 combines studio and ensemble. The ensemble only section (ARTS 2600) may be taken multiple times as a 1-credit performance ensemble in partial satisfaction of the Music major or minor ensemble requirements or once as a 4-credit seminar at either the 4000 or 6000 level.",
+ "name" : "Ensemble Nonlinear"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-4500",
+ "description" : "This course will provide the background and a set of examples of how computational methods can be applied to design of materials with desired structure and properties. The methods will span multi-length and time scales, including first-principles approaches, molecular dynamics simulations, stochastic methods for optimization and sampling, and computational thermodynamics. Lectures will be complemented by computer labs with hands-on exercises using publicly available or commercial software packages.",
+ "name" : "Computational Materials Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4580",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Materials Systems & Production"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-4940",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Readings In Engr"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6460",
+ "description" : "This course will focus on 1) designing, engineering, and selecting proteins and other biomolecules with desired functional and biophysical properties (high thermal stability, high solubility, low propensity to aggregate), and 2) characterizing thermodynamic and kinetic properties (folding, oligomerization, and self-association) of these biomolecules. (Students may not receive credit for both this course and CHME 4460 .)",
+ "name" : "Biomolecular Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6310",
+ "description" : "This course introduces Linux kernel programming basics and starts by examining how Berkeley sockets bridge the user-kernel gap. The remainder of the course is spent looking into transport layer (e.g., TCP) and network layer (e.g., IP) implementations. Students do both individual and group programming projects. In addition to coding, there are detailed write-ups and peer reviews in this course.",
+ "name" : "Networking in the Linux Kernel"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ECON"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "DSES-6570",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "It And Systems For E-business"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "WRIT-4410",
+ "description" : "In this class, students will write on topics from their major discipline and investigate the kinds of texts that professionals in their field produce. They will identify and explore research questions, use discipline-specific library databases, and write research reports. In addition, they will develop effective note-taking and research skills and learn strategies for effective prose style.",
+ "name" : "Research Writing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6640",
+ "description" : "Analysis of ideal and nonideal chemical reactor operation with simple and multiple homogeneous, heterogeneous, and catalytic reactions. Interplay of chemical and mass and energy and momentum transport processes in model reactors and catalytic particles. Topics include transient and steady-state operation, residence time distribution, multiplicity, stability, selectivity control, and catalyst deactivation.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Chemical Reactor Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4480",
+ "description" : "A survey of the fundamental issues necessary for the design, analysis, control, and implementation of robotic systems. The mathematical description of robot manipulators in terms of kinematics and dynamics. Hardware components of a typical robot arm. Path following, control, and sensing. Examples of several currently available manipulators.",
+ "name" : "Robotics I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6330",
+ "description" : "This course surveys the terminology, concepts, problems, and tools that support decision-making related to the effective design, operation, and control of operating systems that produce both tangible and intangible outputs. This course is designed to address key operations issues in both service and manufacturing firms. Operations can also be an effective competitive weapon and provide opportunities to win in markets worldwide. This course is designed to create an applied learning environment to introduce students to this topic. Students will learn analysis techniques, evaluate and analyze data using a variety of tools.",
+ "name" : "Operations and Supply Chain Management"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4460",
+ "description" : "This course will focus on 1) designing, engineering, and selecting proteins and other biomolecules with desired functional and biophysical properties (high thermal stability, high solubility, low propensity to aggregate), and 2) characterizing thermodynamic and kinetic properties (folding, oligomerization, and self-association) of these biomolecules. (Students may not receive credit for both this course and CHME 6460 .)",
+ "name" : "Biomolecular Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4190",
+ "description" : "The widespread proliferation of IT-influenced economic activity leaves behind a rich trail of micro-level data, enabling organizations to use analytics and experimentation in both strategy and operations. This course provides a hands-on introduction to the concepts, methods, and processes for machine learning from data, the foundation of artificial intelligence. Students will learn how to manipulate data and apply machine learning models to business context. Students will learn how to obtain data and draw business inferences from data by asking the right questions and using the appropriate tools.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Machine Learning Applications"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-6710",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the theory of solids. Theory of the free-electron metal, band theory, and phonons. Application to the electrical, optical, and thermal properties of solids. Qualitative discussion of cohesion.",
+ "name" : "Theory of Solids I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2510",
+ "description" : "Since its emergence over a century ago, the energy, vitality, and challenging nature of jazz have had a significant impact on music throughout the world. The question of \"what is jazz\" remains a lively and contentious discussion to this day. This course charts the emergence, evolution, and expanded influence of jazz and jazz-inspired music, as well as the many controversial musical, social, and philosophical questions it continues to provoke. Through listening, analysis, discussion, writing, and creative projects, students will develop a greater appreciation and understanding of improvised music in a great variety of contexts, and the crucial role American jazz played in revitalizing improvisational practice throughout the 20th and 21st Centuries. No musical background is required.",
+ "name" : "Histories of Jazz and Improvised Music"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-2050",
+ "description" : "The physics and operation of semiconductor diodes, bipolar junction transistors, and field-effect transistors in elementary analog circuits. Non-ideal operational amplifier characteristics. Amplifier biasing, small-signal analysis, and frequency response. Elementary bipolar and MOSFET digital circuits.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Electronics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2340",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Intro To Afro-cuban Percussion"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6420",
+ "description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of the structural modeling of proteins and other biomolecules using informatics-driven and energy-based approaches. Topics include template-based comparative modeling, secondary structure prediction, tertiary structure prediction, protein classification, sidechain rotamers, docking, protein design, energy minimization, electrostatics, molecular dynamics, and molecular surfaces. Molecular modeling software will be provided. Laptop computers are required. BIOL 4550 , BIOL 6420, BCBP 4550 , and BCBP 6420 meet jointly; only one of these courses can be taken for credit.",
+ "name" : "Molecular Modeling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7750",
+ "description" : "The course examines different responses of American, European, and Asian firms to a global economy, within an historic and evolving context. Models of economic, social, political, technological, and national development will be introduced. Various conflicting demands of national governments, interest groups, corporations, unions, NGOs and consumers are often expressed in terms of corporate, ethical, and social responsibility. Cases will be analyzed in terms of models of global business practices and conflicting claims will be critically evaluated.",
+ "name" : "Global Business and Social Responsibility"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4910",
+ "description" : "This seminar is the first required course of the two-semester, 5 th -year Final Project course sequence in the undergraduate program and as such serves as a prerequisite to the spring semester ARCH 4920 Final Project Design Studio. The Design Research Seminar provides a forum for readings and discussions as well as design and/or material experimentation as it relates to the respective Final Project instructor's thematic framework. The seminar also covers fundamentals related to standard methods of research and analysis. This 3-credit course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Final Project Design Research Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4250",
+ "description" : "This course will offer an introduction to network science and a review of current research in this area. Classes will interchangeably present chapters from the textbook and related current research. The emphasis will be on the mathematical background of network science: graphs and networks; random networks and various types of scale-free networks; network properties such as assortativity, mobility, robustness, social networks, and communities; and dynamics of spreading in networks.",
+ "name" : "Frontiers of Network Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LANG-4420",
+ "description" : "This is a continuation of Chinese II, a course for the standard modern Chinese language (Mandarin). Students learn more Chinese characters and words, reach a total of about 650 characters, 1000 words, and use more complicated grammatical structures, e.g., reduplication of adjectives and verbs, resultative and potential compliments. In sum, students learn more in all four aspects\u2014listening, speaking, reading and writing\u2014presented in Chinese II.",
+ "name" : "Chinese III"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-1380",
+ "description" : "This course is a hands-on introduction to the primary building blocks of music and musicianship in a 21st Century context. No formal musical background is expected. The course will explore acoustics and psychoacoustics, rhythm, pitch, harmony, melody, timbre, improvisation, composition, and music notation through performance, listening, written exercises, and creative projects.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of Music and Sound"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6220",
+ "description" : "Physical foundations underlying the operation of modern electronic and photonic solid-state devices. Quantum mechanical foundations are emphasized, including the postulates of quantum mechanics, wave-particle duality, uncertainty relation, the Kronig-Penney model, and perturbation theory. In addition, the course covers areas such as semiconductor statistics, doping, heterostructures, transport, and tunneling.",
+ "name" : "Physical Foundations of Solid-State Devices"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4690",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Case Studies:arch Knowledge"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4790",
+ "description" : "This is an upper division architectural design studio that explores topics of contemporary interest to the discipline. Students apply for this studio based on their personal interest and professional objectives. Three such studios: Architectural Design Studio 5, Architectural Design Studio 6, and Architectural Design Studio 7, are required for the degree. This course is offered in the fall semester and is required of all first-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 7"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ITWS-2961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ITWS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1560",
+ "description" : "A survey of the historical origins and cultural impact of several mass media, including television, film, radio, the Internet, and print media. The course aims to increase media literacy through analysis of specific media products as well as discussion of broad topics such as: advertising and commercialization; politics and censorship; gender, race, and social identity.",
+ "name" : "Media and Society"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6980",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2540",
+ "description" : "This course introduces computational and procedural design approaches that are a logical extension to topics covered in Digital Constructs 2. Students will develop an understanding of computational logic through introductory design applications, both as advanced tooling and as generative design techniques. Methodological approaches will be contextualized by a presentation of historical and theoretical precedents. Techniques introduced will include scripting, Java, geospatial mapping. This course is offered in the fall semester and is required of all second-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program. Coordination of the relationship of course content to Architectural Design Studio 3 will be between the Digital Constructs 3 faculty instructor and the second-year architectural design studio coordinator and faculty.",
+ "name" : "Digital Constructs 3"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6180",
+ "description" : "Modeling of power system components including HVDC systems, flexible AC transmission systems, and wind turbines. Analysis and control techniques such as reactive power control, coherency, and model reduction. Synchrophasor technology \u2013 measurement, communication, and control.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Power System Modeling and Control"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-1961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MANE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1610",
+ "description" : "The first design studio in the Design, Innovation, and Society studio series introduces DIS majors to general design through a series of short projects. We learn the basic steps of design processes, from problem definition to concept ideation and selection, to quick low-resolution prototyping. The projects stress creative thinking and critical analysis, partnered with close discussions of how design and society intersect. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Design and Innovation Studio I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4440",
+ "description" : "\"Sensibilities\"\u2014a special ART_X@Rensselaer (Art Across the Curriculum) seminar\u2014draws from the tremendous resource of EMPAC to inspire students to cultivate writing skills through the cross-disciplinary theme of the senses/perception. During the semester students will have opportunities to observe unique art/science presentations and performances in an intimate setting at EMPAC, providing rich experiences for discussions and writing. Classes include reading science and art texts, as well as writing workshops to develop authorial voice and experimentation.",
+ "name" : "Sensibilities"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6140",
+ "description" : "Economics of the operation of power systems. Control of hydro and thermal generating units. Aspects of interconnected operation. Transmission losses and techniques for optimum economic generation. Hydrothermal coordination problems. Modern power markets. State estimation.",
+ "name" : "Power Generation Operation and Control"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6310",
+ "description" : "The study of mechanisms of organic reactions in biochemical processes on a molecular level. Enzyme active sites, mechanisms of enzymatic transformations, catalysis, cofactors, enzyme kinetics, environmental toxicology. Strong emphasis on the design and mechanism of action of pharmaceutical agents. Meets with CHEM 4310 ; both courses cannot be taken for credit.",
+ "name" : "Bioorganic Mechanisms"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4430",
+ "description" : "This course teaches basic historical, anthropological, and sociological concepts that can be used to make sense of a wide variety of contemporary phenomena students encounter in everyday life. The focus is on analyzing how licit and illicit drugs serve as \"technologies\" within specific social contexts or subcultures; what drug policy reveals about social, political, and economic organization; and the impacts of biomedical knowledge and practice on specific population groups. The course focuses on the representation of drug use and drug users in popular culture, science and medicine, and history and the social sciences.",
+ "name" : "Drugs in History"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6170",
+ "description" : "Advanced graduate course covering fundamental aspects of NMR common for application in a broad range of fields. Classical and quantum-mechanical descriptions are utilized to explore information content of NMR pulse sequences. The latter approach includes density matrix theory and proceeds with the product-operator formalism. Practical aspects and data analysis are also described. Subsequent focus is on liquid-state NMR of biological macromolecules, including resonance assignment and determination of molecular structure and dynamics. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and CHEM 6170 .)",
+ "name" : "Advanced Topics in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6520",
+ "description" : "Classical statistical decision theory, decision criteria, binary and composite hypothesis tests. Statistical models of signals and noise. Detection of known signals in Gaussian noise. Receiver operating characteristics and error probability. Applications to radar and communications. Detection of signals with unknown or random parameters, detection of stochastic signals, nonparametric detection techniques. Statistical estimation theory, performance measures. Cramer-Rao bounds, estimation of unknown signal parameters, optimum demodulation, signal design.",
+ "name" : "Detection and Estimation Theory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6590",
+ "description" : "This course examines theory of national income determination, the role of monetary and nonmonetary factors in this economic system as described by various schools of macroeconomics. Alternative perspectives on monetary and fiscal policies are critically examined.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Macroeconomic Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4010",
+ "description" : "Theory and practice of biomedical measurements. An introduction to instrumentation and procedures for measurement of membrane transport, bioelectrical potentials, cell counting, biomechanical and biomaterial properties using invasive and noninvasive techniques. Transducers studied include strain gauge, differential transformer, spectrophometer, biopotential electrodes, microscope with camera, mechanical testing machine, piezoelectric transducer (or sensor). Also studied are instruments for determination of material properties.",
+ "name" : "Biomedical Engineering Laboratory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BUSN-6103",
+ "description" : "In this three-credit, 15-week online graduate course, perform strategic analyses of an organization's market position relative to its competitors and customer needs. Analyze the present state of the market relative to its strategic vision, given the organization's competitive advantage. Articulate goals and tactics that move the organization from today to tomorrow's objectives. Develop highly effective teams to implement strategies and new products.",
+ "name" : "Markets, Strategy, and People"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-4440",
+ "description" : "This course examines how music and sound is heard, experienced, and circulated on screens across diverse media formats in contemporary society. This interdisciplinary course introduces students to a variety of analytical, historical, and theoretical approaches to the understanding of music, sound and interactive and non-interactive narrative screen media, including film, television, music video, video games, apps and mobile media, Internet audiovisual & social media, VR/AR, and other screen formats of sound production, distribution, and consumption. This course is open to sophomores, juniors, and seniors only.",
+ "name" : "Music, Sound & Screen Media"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4710",
+ "description" : "Study of hydrologic, geologic, and other factors controlling groundwater flow, occurrence, development, chemistry, and contamination. Groundwater flow theory and aquifer test methods are introduced. Interactions between surface and subsurface hydrologic systems are covered. Some field trips are possible.",
+ "name" : "Groundwater Hydrology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4550",
+ "description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of the structural modeling of proteins and other biomolecules using informatics-driven and energy-based approaches. Topics include template-based comparative modeling, secondary structure prediction, tertiary structure prediction, protein classification, sidechain rotamers, docking, protein design, energy minimization, electrostatics, molecular dynamics, and molecular surfaces. Molecular modeling software will be provided. Laptop computers are required. BIOL 4550, BIOL 6420 , BCBP 4550 , and BCBP 6420 meet jointly.",
+ "name" : "Molecular Modeling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-2930",
+ "description" : "Credit to be given for an out-of-classroom experience related to biology having intellectual content relevant to the student's educational or career goals, subject to approval of a written proposal and a final report. The adviser (for biology majors) or, with permission, any Biology faculty member may serve as evaluator. For each out-of-classroom experience, a student may register only once for 1 to 4 credit hours. This course cannot be used as a biology elective.",
+ "name" : "Out-of-Classroom Experience in Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-6400",
+ "description" : "Analytical and computational methods for ordinary differential equations: existence and uniqueness of solutions, similarity methods, linear equations, regular singular points, hypergeometric equations, asymptotic expansions near irregular singular points, WKB theory, turning points, stability theory, stable and unstable manifolds, periodic solutions and Poincare maps, Floquet theory, stabilization and destabilization by periodic forcing, calculus of variations, Lagrangian and Hamiltonian systems, Poincare invariants, symplectic integrators, basic bifurcation theory, examples of chaotic dynamics, applications to physics, chemistry, and biology.",
+ "name" : "Ordinary Differential Equations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHIL-4990",
+ "description" : "Students conduct original scholarly projects: original research, theoretical or analytical reviews of the literature, or computer simulations. Working either alone or in groups, students prepare written reports relating to this project, under the supervision of a faculty member.",
+ "name" : "Capstone Experience in Philosophy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAR-2020",
+ "description" : "The course focuses principally on officership, providing an extensive examination of the unique purpose, roles, and obligations of commissioned officers. It includes a detailed look at the origin of the Army's institutional values and their practical application in decision making and leadership. Students examine the challenges of leading teams in a complex, combat operational environment. The course highlights dimensions of terrain analysis, infantry patrols, and operation orders. Further study of the theoretical basis of the Army Leadership Requirements Model explores the dynamics of adaptive leadership in the context of military operations. This course, more than any before it, draws the various components of values, communications, decision making, and leadership together to focus on a career as a commissioned officer. Upon completion of this course, students should possess a fundamental understanding of both leadership and officership, and demonstrate the ability to apply this understanding in real-world situations.",
+ "name" : "Applied Leadership II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LANG-1610",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Italian I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4141",
+ "description" : "Generation of electric power from renewable sources and its integration into the power grid. Topics include fundamentals of photovoltaic and wind energy; power converters and their control for renewable energy conversion and grid integration; solar power plants, solar inverters, and their control; wind turbines based on synchronous generators, wind turbines based on doubly-fed induction generators (DFIG), wind power plants, and offshore wind; operation and control of power systems with renewables.",
+ "name" : "Renewable Power Generation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4150",
+ "description" : "This seminar is an investigation of the successes and failures of the news media, set within historical and contemporary contexts. The title \"media watch\" is intended to evoke a watch-dog approach found in independent media sources and organizations like human rights watch. Assignments involve analyzing how issues are portrayed in the media, and students choose their topics according to their interests. The course can therefore enhance capstone, thesis, or dissertation work.",
+ "name" : "Media Watch"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4480",
+ "description" : "This course will focus on the connections between the behavior of single molecules and their interactions and macroscopic non-Newtonian behavior. It will discuss microscopic models of these systems, techniques for measuring and manipulating the microstructure, and the impact on macroscopic behavior. Students may not receive credit for both this course and CHME 6480 .",
+ "name" : "Single Molecules Complex Fluid"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAR-2002",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Mil Leadership I (@ Suny Alb)"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "EPOW-6980",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6220",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to create an applied learning environment to introduce students to large scale datasets in the environmental field and learn advanced techniques for analyzing them. Students will learn multivariate data exploration techniques, evaluate the quality of large datasets, and analyze the data using machine learning techniques. Specifically students will propose, develop, and finalize projects where they will apply machine learning approaches to datasets to understand complex environmental biology processes. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature relevant to their projects.",
+ "name" : "Machine Learning for Environmental Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4979",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-4900",
+ "description" : "Discussion of topics in the current astrophysical literature. Each student is required to give one oral presentation based on a paper or group of papers.",
+ "name" : "Astrophysics Undergraduate Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-1960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ERTH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-4440",
+ "description" : "The study of the link between engineering, and management. Students will gain an in-depth understanding of the foundations of engineering management. Topics covered include the concept of engineering management, its relationship to engineering, and its historical underpinnings, the traditional roles of management with particular emphasis on leadership skills to manage projects and processes, as well as the organizational and administrative abilities required to oversee the day-to-day operational performance of complex engineering. The ethical dimensions of the organization and the engineering community are also explored.",
+ "name" : "Management of Engineering and Technology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4860",
+ "description" : "This upper level studio and seminar explores individual visual arts projects contributing to thesis or dissertation development. Topics in creative personal expression in imaging, installation, digital/traditional mixed media and emerging genres will be studied drawing from issues raised in class projects. Advanced studies may include high resolution digital photography, montage, archival printing, gesture drawing, painting, assemblage, processing, stencil art, projection, and evolving genres which lead to an independent final project and web portfolio.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Digital Imaging"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6210",
+ "description" : "This is a graduate level course that introduces the student to computational cognitive modeling. Cognitive modeling is the simulation of human cognitive, perceptual, and motor processes based on a cognitive architecture. The benefit of cognitive modeling is that it facilitates the testing of ideas about human processes through comparison of model data with empirical data. This course covers ACT-R, a symbolic architecture and LEABRA, a neural-level architecture.",
+ "name" : "Cognitive Modeling I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-4963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-6200",
+ "description" : "Students frame questions and problems in forms that can be analyzed using data analytic tools. Students use data wrangling and preparation methods to prepare for analysis. Students use analytical tools to evaluate analytic models using linear/nonlinear multivariate methodologies. Students validate results and develop algorithms that can be used to make recommendations and forecasts. Students work with stakeholders to scope and frame questions and problems so that actionable results can be achieved.",
+ "name" : "Data-driven Decision Making"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1235",
+ "description" : "The Aristotelian dictum that we are rational animals is under severe attack these days. In fact, the previous sentence may seriously understate the situation: the dictum is perhaps outright rejected by many, if not most. From psychologists of reasoning and decision-making to behavioral economists to the \"new atheists\" (all groups whose message we will consider in this class), the onslaught is firmly underway, and fierce.",
+ "name" : "Are Humans Rational?"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2520",
+ "description" : "From \"raves\" to symphony hall, Indian film music to Tibetan chant, monster truck rallies to a mother's lullaby, musical soundscapes surround us through all aspects of our daily lives. This course focuses on the study of music in or as culture. The exploration of music in human life will be comparative, using case studies from diverse world traditions and examining topics such as: ritual, media and technology, ethnicity/identity, music and dance, and musical transmission.",
+ "name" : "World Music"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USNA-0030",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Drill/laboratory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1967",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4540",
+ "description" : "An introduction to architectural practice as related to accomplishing design projects. An overview of professional obligations, registration and conduct, architects' roles in project delivery, and office organization and management for delivering professional services. In-depth examination of architects' responsibilities for health, safety, and welfare in design; building code requirements for fire protection, life safety, and accessibility; economics of building systems and assemblies; design and construction contracts; and design documentation.",
+ "name" : "Professional Practice 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2070",
+ "description" : "A studio arts course exploring the fundamental concepts, techniques, styles, and mechanics used in the creation of graphic narrative. Contents to be covered include the fundamentals of sequential art, the purposes and formats of storyboards, basic terminology and concepts used in storyboarding, and the applications of storyboard techniques. Key visual storytelling structures are explored for the following industry applications: comics, animated films, graphic novels, commercials, documentaries, live action feature films, and video gaming.",
+ "name" : "Graphic Storytelling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2800",
+ "description" : "This course introduces students to design as a way of thinking, creating, and making through a series of short projects. The projects stress critical and creative thinking and invention, interdisciplinary collaboration, observation and perception, communication and visualization. Using sketching, photography, model making, and computing students pursue open-ended investigations of form, space, materials, and the ideas that both generate and are generated by them. This course is required of all first-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "DSES-6961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in DSES"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6560",
+ "description" : "This course explores the history, methods, and goals of hackers with special attention paid to their role in social movements. It broadly interprets the term \"hacktivism\" to include computer hacking, media hacking, and \"reality hacking\" in the service of social change. Students will gain an understanding of how and why hackers have emerged as a major social force. Graduate students will produce an ethnographic record and analysis of a publicly recognized hacking event or figure.",
+ "name" : "Hactivism"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6390",
+ "description" : "This course will develop understanding and integrate skills across the fields of fluid mechanics, meteorology, climatology, bluff-body aerodynamics, structural dynamics, code provisions for design, wind tunnel testing, and damage documentation.",
+ "name" : "Wind Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-2400",
+ "description" : "First-order differential equations, second-order linear equations, eigenvalues and eigenvectors of matrices, systems of first-order equations, stability and qualitative properties of nonlinear autonomous systems in the plane, Fourier series, separation of variables for partial differential equations.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Differential Equations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4380",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Environment And Development"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4530",
+ "description" : "This course offers the students the opportunity to demonstrate a comprehensive knowledge of issues and practices in an important subject within the building sciences through a self-initiated and faculty-directed independent design, research, or research/design project. This is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Building Sciences Capstone"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4150",
+ "description" : "Reflecting on the knowledge and understandings acquired in all the previous courses in the history, theory, and criticism sequence, this course is a critical inquiry into the principal ideologies and premises of the most substantive architectural practices in the contemporary world. As such, the content of the course must necessarily evolve as the intellectual and cultural parameters of both theory and practice in the contemporary world change. The principal aim of the critique of various contemporary positions is to reinforce in students the importance of developing and critically maintaining their own values, vision, and voice in the design and making of architecture that was initiated in ARCH 2150, The Ethos of Architecture. Fundamental to this process is to encourage the students' awareness of the necessity to challenge their own subjectivities, biases, and presuppositions.",
+ "name" : "Contemporary Design Approaches"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6880",
+ "description" : "The second semester of the Sonics Research Lab includes advanced acoustical measurement techniques. Another important part of the semester curriculum concerns noise sources, noise control, and vibration measurements. State-of-the-art, commercial software and school research-based software will be used for simulation/analysis/measurement of room acoustics in order to show the students how such technical tools assist in acoustics research and consulting practice for the design of performance and public spaces. The course will also give students a deeper theoretical understanding of architectural acoustics in order to assist them in room acoustics research. There will also be labs to reflect typical measurement procedures and (if time permits) site visits to acoustics research labs and different types of acoustical spaces. The Sonics Research Lab II emphasizes more training on independent hands-on and problem-solving skills (than the SRL I). B.S. and B.Arch., and other school students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S.Arch. students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
+ "name" : "Sonics Research Laboratory 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4990",
+ "description" : "The purpose of this course is to demonstrate the student's capacity for independent work integrating concepts and media from the full range of their studio, history, and theory studies. It is a project-based class, culminating in a written thesis paper and a public presentation of work determined by the student. This course may be taken multiple times, but is a requirement in the student's final two semesters.",
+ "name" : "B.S. EARTS Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4520",
+ "description" : "This course continues the examination of the diverse and interconnected aspects of the construction industry as an essential context for realizing architecture. It surveys the history and current developments of the people, organizations, and professional and industry groups involved in design, construction, finance, insurance, and regulation of building. Current issues influencing design quality are identified by the class and are explored in a series of student-organized in-depth seminars with industry participants. This is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program.",
+ "name" : "Construction Industry Seminar 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-2350",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Law, Values & Public Policy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATP-4700",
+ "description" : "Introduction to deterministic models of operations research including linear programming formulations, the simplex algorithm, degeneracy, geometry of convex polyhedra, duality theory, and sensitivity analysis. Special linear programming models for assignment, transportation, and network problems. Integer programming formulations along with branch and bound solution. Dynamic programming.",
+ "name" : "Mathematical Models of Operations Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4820",
+ "description" : "This studio is a design-based studio that focuses on the integration of structural, technical, detail, zoning, and code-related issues with respect to the design of a moderate to large-scale building of civic importance. Such building types are (but not limited to) libraries, theaters, city halls, judicial buildings, educational buildings, etc. An important focus of the design project will be the relationship of the building to its urban context. An essential part of the design will involve programming of the building as well as responding to numerous of the learning outcomes defined by the NAAB (the accrediting agency for professional architecture programs) for a comprehensive design project. This course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Integrated Design Schematic"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-1140",
+ "description" : "An introduction to modern physics with emphasis on special relativity; concepts in quantum mechanics; elementary particles and fundamental forces; and applications to nuclei and atoms. Registration is limited to first semester students or by permission of instructor.",
+ "name" : "Introductory Modern Physics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4770",
+ "description" : "This is an upper division architectural design studio that explores topics of contemporary interest to the discipline. Students apply for this studio based on their personal interest and professional objectives. Three such studios Architectural Design Studio 5, Architectural Design Studio 6, and Architectural Design Studio 7, are required for the degree. This course is offered in the fall and spring semesters and is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 5"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4510",
+ "description" : "This course introduces the construction industry as an essential context for realizing architecture. It is a survey of the people, organizations, and professional and industry groups involved in design, construction, finance, insurance, and regulation of building. Current issues influencing design quality are identified by the class and are explored in a series of student-organized in-depth seminars with industry participants. This is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program.",
+ "name" : "Construction Industry Seminar 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2570",
+ "description" : "This course addresses relationships among society, culture, the more-than-human world, and the environment. We explore the diverse and interconnected ways in which contemporary composers, popular musicians, sound artists, and global music practices draw on natural and built environments to comment on current environmental and energy issues, articulate relationships among the arts, humanities, and science and technology studies, represent past, present and future environments, and engage in social activism. In this course, music is approached as artistic expression as well as a form of knowledge that can heighten our sensitivity and awareness of the environment, incorporating reading and writing assignments, and individual and group creative projects.",
+ "name" : "Music, Sound, & the Environment"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4120",
+ "description" : "Biopunk: Arts Lab Practice is a studio, lab and lecture class introducing students to bioart, and microbial life and resilient ecological practices. We use punk, queer and biological laboratory techniques to creatively produce science, design and art works. Students will be required to complete readings, experiment, and create their own visions of a speculative biofuture. Emphasis will be on the history and contemporary investigations of the microbiome and how to culturally explore these scenarios of how we live amongst multiple diverse communities and species.",
+ "name" : "Biopunk: Arts Lab Practice"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4090",
+ "description" : "This course is primarily concerned with learning how to build any interactive experience or artwork from concept to completion. It will introduce open-source, cross-platform programming libraries and tools used by artists and programmers to create interactive experiences and artworks for museum installations, festivals, VJ-ing, projection mapping, interactive experiences/artworks, and more. It will then start to address the questions: Is code an art form? What is interactive art? Is software art?",
+ "name" : "Art and Code and Interactivity"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4390",
+ "description" : "This seminar builds on skills acquired in the Music and Sound sequence. Through a series of exercises, students investigate sound as a medium for artistic expression while addressing the basics of orchestration, notation, and the development of musical and sonic ideas. Acoustic, electronic, and non-traditional contemporary approaches to composition will be explored, including performance, intermedia, and sound installation. The course culminates in a final composition project to be performed in an end of semester concert.",
+ "name" : "Composition Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-4280",
+ "description" : "The objective of this course is to introduce students to systems engineering, especially from a decision-focused perspective. System concepts, methodologies, models, and analysis are covered in relation to a system's design, development, test, evaluation, and operation. Decisions concerning a system's reliability, maintainability, usability, disposability, and affordability are systematically considered. A range of systems, including service systems, is also considered.",
+ "name" : "Decision Focused Systems Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-1520",
+ "description" : "This course serves as an introduction to astronomy, focusing on understanding the physical nature of stars and galaxies, the vastness of the cosmos, and how astronomers have built up a comprehensive picture of the Universe in which we live through meticulous study.",
+ "name" : "Stars, Galaxies, and the Cosmos"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4350",
+ "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught.",
+ "name" : "Data Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4050",
+ "description" : "An important ancillary concern throughout the previous eight courses of the history, theory, and criticism sequence has been the examination of architecture as a fundamental part of the forces of urbanization and humanity's interventions into the landscape and environment. This course highlights the perspective of that dimension of architectural understanding by examining in detail both historically and contemporarily many of the most significant ways that human habitation has engaged the world at the large scale of cities and geographies. This 2-credit course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Cities and Their Territories"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6981",
+ "description" : "Situated within the context of the Master's Thesis (ARCH 6990) directed research studio sequence, this course addresses general methods of design research with an emphasis on studying the ways in which the discipline of architecture engages other fields of knowledge. Through a series of historical and contemporary writings as well as specific precedents in architectural design, students will look at how the discipline of architecture has absorbed external disciplinary, technological, and cultural influences as a means of advancing itself in the world.",
+ "name" : "Methods Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6430",
+ "description" : "Engineering aspects of microbial processes and of conversions with immobilized enzymes. Topics are mixed-culture processes, sterilization, aseptic techniques, mass transfer, bioprocess control, product isolation, enzyme technology, bioprocess development. There are heavy emphases on continuous fermentation and on chemicals from biomass.",
+ "name" : "Biochemical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6860",
+ "description" : "This course covers the fundamentals of psychoacoustics with a focus on Architectural Acoustics. Topics include the functional overview of the auditory system, loudness, pitch, timbre perception, masking, binaural hearing, auditory scene analysis, multi-modal integration, and auditory perception in rooms. Required signal processing methods will be covered as well. The graduate-level course requires an extensive individual project and more advanced analysis.",
+ "name" : "Applied Psychoacoustics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2530",
+ "description" : "This course builds upon topics covered in Digital Constructs 1 by focusing upon contemporary means of producing and communicating architectural ideas. Students will use digital methodologies through all phases of a project as well as advanced representation and digital fabrication techniques. The use of digital modeling as a sketch and iterative tool will be emphasized. Tools taught in Digital Constructs 2 will build upon those software programs taught in Digital Constructs 1. This course is required of all first-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program. Coordination of the relationship of course content to Architectural Design Studio 2 will be between the Digital Constructs 2 faculty instructor and the first-year architectural design studio coordinator and faculty.",
+ "name" : "Digital Constructs 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2380",
+ "description" : "The first in a two-course sequence combining music theory, musicianship, and engaged listening practices applicable to a broad range of traditional and contemporary musical styles, with an emphasis on creative practice. This course covers the fundamentals of tonal harmony including scales, chord symbols and figured bass notation, diatonic chord progressions, and counterpoint. Musicianship includes aural identification of intervals, scales, and chords, rhythm and exercises in sight-singing, dictation, and improvisation. Engaged listening practices include responsive listening, reading, and written exercises as well as in-class discussion. Weekly assignments include composition, analysis, and performance.",
+ "name" : "Music and Sound I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4370",
+ "description" : "The goal of this course is to understand the effect of international trade on our natural environment. We will study the effect of trade on air pollution, the role of trade in shifting dirtier industries to countries with lax environmental regulations, the role of trade in a cleaner environment via efficient production, the role of trade in natural resource depletion, the environmental costs of transporting goods, and how trade and environmental policy interact. Course will first examine models of international trade and related data on trade flows. Then we will apply these tools to study the consequences of international trade on the negative environmental externalities. Finally, we will examine issues related to international trade and environmental policy",
+ "name" : "International Trade and Environment"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4740",
+ "description" : "Students will learn a variety of modern cell biology techniques such as cell culture, genetic analysis, immunocytochemistry, fluorescence microscopy, and live cell imaging. Using these techniques, students will investigate the function of genetically manipulated proteins in cells. In the last third of the semester, students will develop independent experimental research plans to address questions of interest to the student. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Cell Biology Laboratory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ADMN-6800",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Ta Training Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-1150",
+ "description" : "This lab focuses on geological processes in the interior of Earth and how they are manifested at the surface: age and origin of Earth, how rocks form, large-scale Earth processes, and energy sources. Review plate tectonics and the evolution of the main features of Earth's surface. Physical and chemical composition of Earth and the large-scale dynamics of the planet.",
+ "name" : "Geology I: Earth's Interior Lab"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ESCI-6980",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4860",
+ "description" : "Topics include the functional overview of the auditory system, loudness, pitch, and timbre perception, masking, binaural hearing, auditory scene analysis, multi-modal integration, and auditory perception in rooms. Required signal processing methods will be covered as well. Course taught with ARCH 6860.",
+ "name" : "Applied Psychoacoustics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6380",
+ "description" : "The physical metallurgy and associated physical chemistry of problems encountered in the application of materials in nuclear reactors is discussed. Specifically, the metallurgy and physical chemistry of ceramic fuels (e.g., oxygen potentials), the primary fuel densification and pellet-clad interaction mechanisms, irradiation-induced creep, hardening, and embrittlement mechanisms, and the properties of zircaloy are covered.",
+ "name" : "Nuclear Reactor Materials"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4320",
+ "description" : "Microbiology Laboratory will provide hands-on experience for broad training in bacteriology and mycology with emphasis on: microscopy, bacterial growth, and biochemical assays. An investigative component will involve characterization of an unknown bacterium using the analytical tools learned. In addition to laboratory experience and good technique, the course will emphasize written communication with reports in the format of scientific papers. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Microbiology Lab"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6800",
+ "description" : "Examination of the basic elements that are used to integrate the design and manufacture of capital and consumer products; manufacturing information systems, CAD/CAM systems, and manufacturability considerations when integrating unit process operations.",
+ "name" : "Manufacturing Systems Integration"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6590",
+ "description" : "This 3-credit course views potential breakthrough innovation from the perspective of the project manager, either in the firm or as a start up organization. The course offers methods and frameworks for commercializing nascent technologies that offer potentially breakthrough value to the market and, therefore, enormous reward for the firm. Additionally, legal and ethical consequences are considered.",
+ "name" : "Commercializing Advanced Technologies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6590",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Principles Of Wireless Communications"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-2700",
+ "description" : "Overview of methods used in the design and operation of production and service systems and basic cost accounting. Topics include forecasting, capacity planning, line balancing, production scheduling, staff scheduling, inventory control, just in time, time study, project planning, and discrete item cost accounting. Goal of course is to educate students in basic operations management principles and models and in discrete goods cost accounting. Students cannot receive credit for this course and ISYE 2210 .",
+ "name" : "Production and Operations Management"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Readings in ERTH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATP-4400",
+ "description" : "This course will center on applications of basic data analysis techniques such as data visualization, classification, clustering, and ridge regression. A case study approach will be used to provide immediate immersion into the problem of understanding high-dimensional data. The course will develop the necessary mathematics to understand and execute the techniques. Each student will execute a mini-data analysis project on a real-world data problem such as from engineering, medicine, and business.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Data Mathematics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4220",
+ "description" : "Introduction to VLSI design. The fabrication, device, circuit, and system aspects of VLSI design are covered in an integrated fashion. Emphasis is placed on NMOS and CMOS technology. Laboratory experiments focus on layout analysis, computer-aided layout, and logic and timing simulation. Project on digital design with standard cells.",
+ "name" : "VLSI Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4340",
+ "description" : "This course describes how individuals and firms make financial decisions, and how those decisions might deviate from those predicted by traditional financial or economic theory. The course examines how the insights of behavioral economics complement the traditional finance paradigm by introducing some of the main psychological biases in financial decision-making and examining the impacts of these biases in financial markets and other financial settings. It will also introduce students to behavioral and experimental methodologies in finance, economics, and other disciplines.",
+ "name" : "Behavioral Financial Economics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-1100",
+ "description" : "Age and origin of the Earth, internal constituents, and energy sources; how plates move, oceans develop, and mountains rise. The course aims to give a quantitative picture of the Earth's major processes and the ways in which they interact.",
+ "name" : "Geology I: Earth's Interior"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6610",
+ "description" : "Mechanical metallurgy and mechanics of the classical metal-working operations. Analytical techniques. Friction and lubrication. Workability. Effects on as-worked properties. Technological discussions of forging, rolling, extrusion, drawing, and other unit operations.",
+ "name" : "Deformation Processing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6160",
+ "description" : "Studies related to the evaluation of the impacts of major actions by state and federal agencies on the quality of human environment. Consideration is given to the preparation of impact statements. The impacts of various types of action are discussed; the adverse effects produced and alternatives to proposed action considered, and the tradeoffs between short-term uses and long-term productivity are evaluated. Case studies are presented and analyzed.",
+ "name" : "Environmental Impact Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4590",
+ "description" : "This course addresses the range of economic issues related to the practice of architecture. Topics will include economic cycles and building construction, globalization of architectural practice, case studies of models of practice, setting and negotiation of fees for services, economic relationships of architects and consultants, cost estimation.",
+ "name" : "Entrepreneurship and Architecture"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6550",
+ "description" : "General equations of compressible flow. Specialization to inviscid flows in two space dimensions. Linearized solutions in subsonic and supersonic flow. Characteristic equations for supersonic flow with applications in external and internal flow. One-dimensional nonsteady compressible flow. Introduction to transonic flow.",
+ "name" : "Theory of Compressible Flow"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-1200",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the elements of computer aided design for civil and environmental engineers using AutoCAD Civil 3D. Students will be introduced to basic AutoCAD drafting techniques as well as learn the key features of Civil 3D that aid site development design and analysis. Topics covered will include general AutoCAD techniques, existing conditions development and analysis using field collected survey data and GIS information, pipe network design, grading design, and roadway corridor layout.",
+ "name" : "Engineering Graphics for Civil Engineers"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4740",
+ "description" : "Engineering techniques for parallel processing. Knowledge and hands-on experience in developing applications software for processors on inexpensive widely-available computers with massively parallel computing resources. Multi-thread shared memory programming with OpenMP and NVIDIA GPU multicore programming with CUDA and Thrust. The use of NVIDIA gaming and graphics cards on current laptops and desktops for general purpose parallel computing using Linux.",
+ "name" : "Applied Parallel Computing for Engineers"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6810",
+ "description" : "This course expands on material covered in Behavioral Economics I by studying the latest and more advanced modeling and experimental approaches for individuals' decision-making and empirical applications. Specific advanced topics include the role of habit formation on intertemporal choice and limited attention models for complex decisions. The course will additionally cover recent literature and findings from cognitive and computational psychology.",
+ "name" : "Behavioral and Experimental Economics II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2860",
+ "description" : "This studio continues the work of the Building Performance Studio 2 to consider in greater depth and detail the design of architectural form and space from the perspective of how the many factors of environmental and ecological forces give shape to them. The studio will employ architectural design projects as a means to explore these issues qualitatively and quantitatively. This course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program.",
+ "name" : "Building Performance Studio 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4380",
+ "description" : "Discussion of the state of practice in modern database systems, with an emphasis on relational systems. Topics include database design, database system architecture, SQL, normalization techniques, storage structures, query processing, concurrency control, recovery, security, and new directions such as object-oriented and distributed database systems. Students gain hands-on experience with commercial database systems and interface building tools. Programming projects are required.",
+ "name" : "Database Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-4120",
+ "description" : "An introduction to astronomical observing techniques and instrumentation. Optical telescope design. Observatory site selection. Telescopes above the atmosphere. Imaging techniques: photography, charge-coupled devices. Optical photometry, spectroscopy, and polarimetry, and their applications. Infrared techniques and applications. Radio astronomy. Includes evening laboratory sessions.",
+ "name" : "Observational Astronomy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-2110",
+ "description" : "This course introduces the major components of today's power system such as transformers, electric machines, and transmission lines. Renewable energy sources and systems are discussed, including wind and solar energy. Integration of energy sources with the grid is addressed.",
+ "name" : "Electrical Energy Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LANG-4940",
+ "description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
+ "name" : "Language Studies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHIL-4965",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PHIL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-6400",
+ "description" : "This course explores how the health impacts of environmental problems are understood and responded to through medical, legal, and regulatory intervention. Case studies are used to highlight different strategies for dealing with environmental illness, comparing the perspectives of affected people, medical professionals, lawyers, government officials, industry representatives, and media. A core component of the course is devoted to problems related to exposure to toxic chemicals, including readings on popular epidemiology, mass torts, transboundary victimization, and medical rehabilitation models.",
+ "name" : "Environment and Health"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4500",
+ "description" : "This course will enable students to understand and apply theoretical foundations of programming concurrent, distributed, and mobile computing systems, namely process calculi, actors, join calculus, and mobile ambients. In the practical part, students will compare communication and synchronization aspects in concurrent programming languages following these theoretical models. Students will also review current research on distributed computing over the Internet, on topics including but not limited to coordination, mobility, heterogeneity, security, fault tolerance, scalability, programmability, and verification.",
+ "name" : "Distributed Computing Over The Internet"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4410",
+ "description" : "The primary objective of this course is to provide students with a basic understanding of the physics and engineering of light and lighting. It introduces the process and mechanics of vision, some of the important concepts in lighting metrics, calculations, and technologies including light sources, optics, sensors and controls, and luminaires needed to illuminate built environments. This is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program. B.Arch, MArch students can register for this course. Students from other majors will need permission of the instructor.",
+ "name" : "Lighting for Intelligent Spaces"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-6206",
+ "description" : "Working with a faculty member, students develop a big data inquiry model for a production related issue, question, or problem of their choosing. Over the semester, the student frames the question to be analyzed, collects and prepares data for analysis, performs the analysis and presents actionable results and recommendations back to the organization. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6211 or ENGR 6216 .",
+ "name" : "Modeling Production Decisions"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6080",
+ "description" : "This course considers the evolving new models of value creation and business growth being introduced across different industries and examines such critical issues as product and process technology strategy, operational innovation, IT strategies and infrastructures, networks and organization, and finance. Utilizing a series of case studies from across a range of industry networks, students will have a chance to learn how companies can participate in such networks and what unique business resources and capabilities they can employ to enhance their probability of commercial success.",
+ "name" : "Networks and Value Creation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4270",
+ "description" : "The goal of this course is to introduce students to the problems, challenges, and applications of computer vision from a computational perspective. Topics include camera modeling and image formation, feature extraction, object and face recognition, image mosaic construction, stereo and three-dimensional imaging, motion, and tracking. Machine learning methods, including deep convolutional neural networks, will be studied and applied throughout the course.",
+ "name" : "Computational Vision"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6840",
+ "description" : "Study classical models of international trade that consider factor endowments, comparative advantage, labor capabilities, strategic use of trade barriers, and multilateral trade agreements. Examine contemporary models which explore increasing returns, heterogeneity in firm productivity and products, product mix, firm size distributions, globalization, multinationals, and offshoring.",
+ "name" : "International Economics and Development I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6860",
+ "description" : "Evaluation provides structured information for policy-relevant decision making based on a purposeful analysis of the identified measures. Topics include test hypotheses, randomization/control schemes, measures framework, measurement methods, and pertinent analytic techniques. Emphasis is on the application of evaluation methods (including systems engineering and operations research techniques) to issues arising in criminal justice, education, health, housing, transportation, welfare, automated information systems, and military programs.",
+ "name" : "Evaluation Methods for Decision Making"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6130",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Design Explorations 3"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6360",
+ "description" : "A survey of fundamental issues in design of efficient programs for parallel computers. The topics discussed include models of parallel machines and programs, efficiency of parallel algorithms, programming styles for shared memory, message passing, data parallelism, and using MPI in scientific parallel programs. Parallel programming project required.",
+ "name" : "Parallel Computing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2370",
+ "description" : "This course addresses fundamental principles relating the environmental context to human needs and comfort. Topics include the principles of thermodynamics at the architectural scale, optimization versus variability, principles of building sites and orientations, psychometrics, and human comfort, and an introduction to energy modeling. This course is required of all students in the B.Arch. degree program.",
+ "name" : "Energy, Comfort, and Ecology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-1500",
+ "description" : "Basic concepts in differential and integral calculus for functions of one variable. Topics will include functions, limits, continuity, derivatives, integration, exponential and logarithmic functions, and techniques of integration. Application areas will include topics in Management, Architecture, and Social Sciences with special emphasis on the role of calculus in introductory probability. Students cannot get credit for both MATH 1500 and MATH 1010 .",
+ "name" : "Calculus for Architecture, Management, and HASS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-1510",
+ "description" : "The field of Astrobiology considers the emergence and evolution of life on Earth, and the potential for life elsewhere. This course explores fundamental concepts in Astrobiology including the creation of the chemical elements, origin and evolution of the solar system, the definition and requirements for life, early Earth environments and life's emergence on this planet. Additionally, students explore habitability on other extraterrestrial bodies \u2014 including Mars, Icy worlds and exoplanets, through self-directed research.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Astrobiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5300",
+ "description" : "This course centers on the development of a technical knowledge of, sensibility to, and intuition for the process by which an architectural design is realized in built form. The interdependence among building materials, acoustic qualities, enclosure systems, interior, finish, and other systems is investigated, with an emphasis on the broader architectural design endeavor. Drawing as a means of understanding forms the basis for a semester-long project to be done in small groups. Case studies will center on concepts and systems that have not yet found their way into mainstream practice. The course approach will involve in-class presentations, project work, field trips and case studies. WebCT will be used to expand the student's access to course materials and allow for a measure of distance learning. Sustainability: the notion that design intentions can be nullified through incorrect construction is stressed. The importance of proper detailing, construction, and maintenance to accomplish lasting and efficient enclosures is highlighted. Skills to diagnose and treat incorrect construction are developed.",
+ "name" : "Materials and Construction Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6570",
+ "description" : "The primary objective of this course is to introduce the multifaceted role of data as a resource of the organization, in three ways. First, it examines the role of data at the operational, tactical, and strategic levels of the organization. Second, it provides students with knowledge and hands on training of technologies that manipulate data, including structured query language (SQL), extraction transformation and loading tools (ETL), data warehousing (DW), online analytical processing (OLAP), and data mining (DM). The course exposes students to big data management techniques. Finally, the course provides students the theory and hands on training to understand the transformation of data to information.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Data Resource Management"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2520",
+ "description" : "This course will examine and teach methods of representation and the communication of design concepts. Skills taught will enable students to produce two-dimensional and three-dimensional digital models, as well as drawings from multiple perspectives. Students will understand virtual environments as they pertain to model making, drawing, scale, and materiality. Students will be introduced to digital modeling and graphic design softwares. This course is offered in the fall semester and is required of all first-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program. Coordination of the relationship of course content to Architectural Design Studio 1 will be between the Digital Constructs 1 faculty instructor and the first-year architectural design studio coordinator and faculty.",
+ "name" : "Digital Constructs 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6840",
+ "description" : "Introductory materials of engineering acoustics for students with basic knowledge in mathematics (at least one level of first-year college). Much of the course material is taken from the textbook \"Acoustics for Engineers\" by Blauert and Xiang (2nd Ed.). The course includes mechanic and acoustic oscillations, the wave equations in fluids, governing equations for horns and ducts, spherical sound sources and arrays, piston membranes, diffraction and scattering, dissipation, reflection, refraction and absorption, isolation of air- and structure-borne sounds, noise propagation and noise control. B.S. and B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S.Arch. Acoustics students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
+ "name" : "Engineering Acoustics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-6110",
+ "description" : "This course offers an overview of social science techniques and research design and logistics and approaches widely used in STS.",
+ "name" : "Research Methods in STS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4900",
+ "description" : "Weekly seminars on topics of concern to students who are about to embark on their professional careers in chemistry. Topics will include employment and career opportunities; graduate school; ethical requirements and expectations in the profession; patent considerations; new directions in research and other topical matters. Restricted to senior chemistry majors.",
+ "name" : "Professional Development Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4972",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in STSO"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6972",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-9990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-2050",
+ "description" : "Astronomy for students with a background of college mathematics and physics. Topics include: astrophysical concepts, solar system basics, stellar astronomy and the interstellar medium, the Milky Way system, galaxies, quasars, and cosmology.",
+ "name" : "Introductory Astronomy and Astrophysics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-4941",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Nanosynthesis & Properties"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ENVE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6900",
+ "description" : "Readings and discussion of topical materials that are selected to place graduate projects and theses in a comprehensive context.",
+ "name" : "Graduate Thesis Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4840",
+ "description" : "This course provides an overview of the essentials for architectural acoustics design of performance and public spaces, including concert halls, theaters, museums, classrooms, sports arenas, courtrooms, and religious buildings. There are no prerequisites, but the course may be used as the starting point for a certificate in Architectural Acoustics, a concentration in an architecture student's professional electives, or the beginning of a master's degree in acoustics. The course covers basic principles of sound, room acoustics, sound absorption in rooms, sound isolation and privacy, acoustics of mechanical systems, and sound quality. After both Architectural Acoustics 1 and 2, the student should be prepared for a basic entry-level position in either acoustics in architecture or in acoustical consulting.",
+ "name" : "Architectural Acoustics 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-1110",
+ "description" : "This course examines science and technology in their social, cultural, and political context. Readings are drawn from social sciences, fiction, and contemporary journalism. Case studies will include genetic testing, automation, vaccines, engineering education, AIDS activism, mental health, surveillance, and climate change. The class is designed to give students the freedom to develop and express their own ideas.",
+ "name" : "Science, Technology, and Society"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4260",
+ "description" : "Life Drawing and Anatomy for Artists is an advanced drawing class that will focus on drawing the human figure. Students will work from live models to refine their drawing skills; clay models from anatomical texts will be made to develop a working knowledge of anatomy for artists. Gesture, proportion, and expression of the human figure will be emphasized; general concepts of design and composition will also be presented.",
+ "name" : "Life Drawing and Anatomy for Artists"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4840",
+ "description" : "This course is for senior EMAC and EART majors and is the core creative forum for the development and presentation of the senior thesis. The course is the first part of a two-semester study provided in two seminar courses. The focus of the course is to develop a proposal for for a written thesis and a creative project that students will execute in the second seminar and exhibit in an exhibition.",
+ "name" : "Creative Seminar I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4990",
+ "description" : "Independent laboratory research, on or off campus, supervised by a faculty member, culminating in a written thesis; or literature research culminating in the writing of a review article. The thesis research must also be presented in the form of a poster presentation or a talk. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Senior Research Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4810",
+ "description" : "This course covers topics related to learning and inference with different types of Probabilistic Graphical Models (PGMs). It also demonstrates the application of PGMs to different fields. The course covers both directed and undirected graphical models, both parameter and structure learning, and both exact and approximated inference methods.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Probabilistic Graphical Models"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-1015",
+ "description" : "The goal of this laboratory course is to learn about biology through hands-on, project-based lab activities that engage students in actual biology experiments and procedures - learning biology by actually doing biology.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Biology Laboratory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-2100",
+ "description" : "This is a course designed to supplement RPI's personal lab safety courses and covers the safety protocols and practices associated with chemical process plants. It is designed to provide information necessary for an ABET accredited degree and to assist students in finding an internship and a job. The course uses material offered on-line by the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. It is part of the Safety and Chemical Engineering (SAChE) Certificate program offered by the society and provides continuing education credits for working engineers.",
+ "name" : "Chemical Process Safety"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4002",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Ind Study/ Research @ Sunya"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6320",
+ "description" : "This studio course explores new directions in art and design that include visual poetry (visual expression in which the shape and arrangement of text, images, and symbols covey the message) and interactive narrative. Visual poetics and narrative appear in advertisement, music videos, and other forms of communication. Students will experiment with these forms of communication and learn how these concepts apply in artistic and commercial contexts. The class format includes lectures, discussions, and studio work.",
+ "name" : "Visual Poetics and Narrative"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2850",
+ "description" : "This studio considers the design of architectural form and space from the perspective of how the many factors of environmental and ecological forces give shape to them. The studio will employ architectural design projects as a means to explore these issues qualitatively and quantitatively. This course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program.",
+ "name" : "Building Performance Studio 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6470",
+ "description" : "The course focuses on the concentration, recovery, and isolation of biological molecules relevant in biotechnology. The characteristics of biological molecules such as proteins and biological fluids such as blood, fermentation, and cell culture broth, are discussed. The principles, advantages, and limitations of centrifugation, membranes, cell-disruption, two-phase extraction, precipitation crystallization, and electrical processes are discussed. Integrated bioseparation schemes are presented and many specific applications are discussed in detail.",
+ "name" : "Downstream Processing in Biochemical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2150",
+ "description" : "This course will examine the spectrum of architectural phenomena and ideas without a specific chronology using examples ranging from antiquity to the contemporary world in western and non-western civilizations and produced in both vernacular and disciplinary cultures. An essential part of this course is to stimulate students' curiosity about architecture and the larger world and introduce them to key issues of architecture regarding space, form, critique, technology, aesthetics, societal and cultural contexts, etc. Particular emphasis will be given to the emergence of modernism in architecture. Crucial to the goals of this course is to encourage students to pursue and develop their own unique vision and voice in architecture throughout their education and practice. Fundamental to this process is making students aware of the necessity to challenge their own subjectivities, biases, and presuppositions.",
+ "name" : "The Ethos of Architecture"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-2120",
+ "description" : "A laboratory course dealing with wet and instrumental techniques of chemical analysis.",
+ "name" : "Experimental Chemistry I: Analytical Techniques"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4420",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Experimental Telepresence"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-1200",
+ "description" : "An introductory course in drawing designed to develop seeing ability and means of expressing visual ideas through graphic skills. The course consists of exercises in drawing from observation and studies from the history of art.",
+ "name" : "Basic Drawing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6180",
+ "description" : "Mechanics of elastic heterogeneous solids. Plasticity of composite materials. Thermoelastic and thermoplastic behavior. Mechanics of distributed damage. Mechanical behavior.",
+ "name" : "Mechanics of Composite Materials"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6310",
+ "description" : "Advanced analysis and design of reinforced concrete structures. Design of deep beams, slender columns, two-way floor systems. Deflection computations. Design for torsion. Prestressed concrete fundamentals.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Concrete Structures"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6140",
+ "description" : "Understanding technology-enabled changes in contemporary business environments, and how insightful executives leverage IT, is key to creating value and winning competitive advantage. This course develops an understanding of cutting-edge technological trends and their potential business impact. The course also explores the business drivers of technology-related decisions in firms and stimulates thought on new applications of technology for commerce, including new products, processes, and business models. Topics covered include: how different business models necessitate different kinds of IT investments; how IT coupled with big data analytics impacts different industries; whether and how IT hastens and aids the growth of disruptive innovations; and how organizations should adapt to the digital economy.",
+ "name" : "Managing Digitization and Transformation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6850",
+ "description" : "Deep learning fundamentals and applications in artificial intelligence. Topics include machine learning foundation, linear regression and classification, deep neural networks, convolutional neural networks, recurrent neural networks, generative adversary neural networks, Bayesian neural networks, deep Boltzmann machine, deep Bayesian networks, and deep reinforcement learning.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Deep Learning"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2040",
+ "description" : "Intermediate Digital Imaging is a hands-on studio course exploring the use of computer technologies in making visual art. A study of contemporary issues in digital media and photography facilitates individual innovation and experimentation. Digital imaging and input/output techniques are employed in terms of giving visual form to ideas and personal expression in private and public settings.",
+ "name" : "Intermediate Digital Imaging"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LANG-4430",
+ "description" : "This is a continuation of Chinese III, a course for standard modern Chinese language (Mandarin). Students learn additional Chinese characters and words, reach a total of about 800 characters, 1350 words, and complicated grammatical structures, e.g., expression of approximation, comparison of structural and aspect particles, etc. In sum, students learn more in all four aspects\u2014listening, speaking, reading, and writing\u2014presented in Chinese III.",
+ "name" : "Chinese IV"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4940",
+ "description" : "An individually arranged independent study course under the supervision of a member of the Cognitive Science Department. The topic is selected by consultation between student and faculty member.",
+ "name" : "Readings in Cognitive Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-2980",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Senior Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-1200",
+ "description" : "Two-week introduction to architecture for rising high school juniors and seniors includes morning programs and introductory lectures in history and theory of architecture, computing and simulation, freehand and extreme drawing, building ecologies, building conservation, and construction systems. There will be field trips and career counseling. Afternoons will have individually critiqued (tutored) design studios, group and individual projects, reviews, and public presentation. Acts as an opportunity for career discovery to decide whether a design education in architecture is appropriate. Summer term annually. Dates TBA. 9:00 am - 4:00 pm.",
+ "name" : "Beginners Architecture Career Discovery Program"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-1961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ECSE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6110",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the computational and algorithmic aspects of social processes. Topics covered will be selected to illustrate the diverse challenges in algorithmic social process analysis: social networks and their dynamics; information flow; hidden networks. Algorithms involving social and selfish agents, social choice theory, voting, and auctions. Ranking actors in networks, recommendation systems, peer-review, and aggregation of rankings/reviews. Students cannot receive credit for both CSCI 4110 and CSCI 6110.",
+ "name" : "Computational Social Processes"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISCI-6510",
+ "description" : "Discussion of current issues and research relevant to astrobiology and the origins of life through the view of earth sciences, chemistry, biology, and astrophysics.",
+ "name" : "Readings in Astrobiology and the Origins of Life"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6810",
+ "description" : "The principal objective of this introductory seminar is to provide stude\u00ad\u00ad\u00adnts with the opportunity to learn the fundamentals of research design. Research design includes: (1) identifying and selecting focused research problems/opportunities/ideas; (2) documenting the state of the art in the selected research area; (3) identifying the critical resources and settings to carry out the research; (4) designing the research program including strategies and tactics for carrying out the research. It is hoped that the knowledge gained in the RD Seminar will assist students in the development of their own individual thesis proposals while they contribute to active research. B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.Arch. students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
+ "name" : "Research Design Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6870",
+ "description" : "The Sonics Research Lab is completely research based . The first part (the Fall semester) will be focused on hands-on research tools and techniques. First, students will learn the basics of digital signal processing, develop an understanding of measurement equipment and analysis methods for sound. The course will examine the ISO standards of room-acoustic measurements, develop students' research goals and a specific set of data to gather for their research. The course will also prepare the students with the fundamental knowledge on CATT Acoustic and/or EASE in geometrical modeling. Then the students and professors will visit a number of performance venues (e.g. EMPAC Concert Hall, and/ or other venues) and perform the room-acoustic measurements. Students will then work on analyzing and interpreting the research results. Practice measurements will be scheduled in the gallery or somewhere on campus before trips to performance halls. MATLAB will play a central role throughout all the classes (SRL I & II) and the thesis research projects. It will be used during the class exercises . Within one week from the semester start, every student is required to INSTALL a functioning MATLAB Software package onto her/his laptop computer. B.S. and B. ARCH, and other school students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S. in ARCS students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
+ "name" : "Sonics Research Laboratory 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4010",
+ "description" : "This seminar examines human perception from a designer's perspective. It draws on perspectives from the sciences, arts, and humanities in order to build an understanding of how people perceive and interact with the environments they create. One cannot only read about perception; the seminar will augment reading with a range of direct experiences as source material for discussion.",
+ "name" : "Seminar in Sensory Culture"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6830",
+ "description" : "The Graduate Thesis Seminar: Acoustics is designed to provide support to graduate students who are engaged in independent thesis research projects. It is a required course for all graduate students in the Architectural Acoustics programs. This seminar provides a formal opportunity for students and faculty from a range of concentrations to meet together and discuss thesis work in progress.",
+ "name" : "Graduate Thesis Seminar: Acoustics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6310",
+ "description" : "In this course, students will explore the molecular methods and applications of recombinant DNA technology and the issues regarding their use through case studies on the effect of genetic engineering on medicine, agriculture, biology, forensics, and various other areas of technology. The course has three major components: 1) techniques used in the generation of recombinant molecules, 2) application of recombinant technology to diagnostics and therapeutics and 3) genetically modified organisms.",
+ "name" : "Genetic Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-4720",
+ "description" : "An introduction to theoretical and experimental solid-state physics. Wave mechanics in the perfect crystal. X-rays, electrons, and phonons. Electrical properties of metals and semiconductors. Qualitative treatment of lattice defects.",
+ "name" : "Solid-State Physics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-4710",
+ "description" : "Study of hydrologic, geologic, and other factors controlling groundwater flow, occurrence, development, chemistry, and contamination. Groundwater flow theory and aquifer test methods are introduced. Interactions between surface and subsurface hydrologic systems are covered. Some field trips are possible. Students cannot receive credit for both ENVE 4710 and ENVE 6110 .",
+ "name" : "Groundwater Hydrology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4976",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4620",
+ "description" : "The exploration of movement often reveals sensitivities concerning the body, identity, gesture, culture, sensory awareness, perception, space, orientation, kinesthesia, time, relationships to people and objects, as well as cultural notions of embodiment and the senses. This course employs practice-based work, creative experimentation, and traditional forms of research (reading, viewing media, writing, discussions) as the primary methods to illuminate the issues concerning enactive (movement) knowledge. This is a Deep Listening-related course.",
+ "name" : "Exploring Movement and Sound"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2810",
+ "description" : "This course continues the processes of critical inquiry in relation to design and design creativity through a series of hands-on projects that incorporate fundamental issues of technology, materiality, abstraction, tectonics, and theory that consider the array of architectural issues in the design of built environments that consider architecture in a wider sense that includes its involvement with site, context, situation, and simple program. This course is required of all first-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5110",
+ "description" : "This course addresses the history of architectural and related developments in selected Western and non-Western civilizations in order to construct a conceptual and strategic understanding of the relationships between architecture, culture, civilization, technology, and thought. In doing so, it will focus on key constructed spatial phenomena of the pre-modern world and, where relevant, elucidate the connection of these works of architecture and their motivating ideals to those of the modern and contemporary world.",
+ "name" : "History, Theory, Criticism 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6964",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4780",
+ "description" : "This course introduces students to narrative theory and interactive narratives in a variety of genres such as oral story-telling, literature, poetry, film, artists' books, historical narrative, hypertext fiction, Net Art, social media narratives, and computer games. Students will have the opportunity to design and develop an original interactive narrative.",
+ "name" : "Interactive Narrative"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4977",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6240",
+ "description" : "Fabrication technology for silicon and gallium arsenide integrated circuits with emphasis on sub-micron structures. Topics include epitaxy, diffusion, binary and ternary phase diagrams, grown and deposited oxides and nitrides, polysilicon and silicide technology, single-and multi-metal systems, plasma and chemical etching, ion milling photo, e-beam and X-ray lithography.",
+ "name" : "VLSI Fabrication Technology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6510",
+ "description" : "Mechanical regulation of biological systems will be discussed. Topics include principles and concepts of mechanobiology; embryogenesis, and histogenesis of tissues with particular references to skeletal system; physical forces at cellular, tissue, and organ level; mechanical regulation of cellular behavior, tissue growth, and organ development; limits of mechanical regulation; biochemical influences; application of mechanobiology to tissue regeneration.",
+ "name" : "Mechanobiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-2001",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Human Sexuality (at Hvcc)"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6450",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Nonlinear Laser Spectros"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-2330",
+ "description" : "Overview of the chemical and physical properties of the material constituents of the Earth and terrestrial planets, including minerals, rocks, lavas, and supercritical water. Topics include mineral structure and composition, bonding, optical properties, phase transformations, stabilities and surface properties. Mineral resources and the role of minerals in the man-made environment is also discussed. Intended for students interested in learning about the constituents of planet Earth and the techniques used in their characterization (both traditional and modern) at various scales.",
+ "name" : "Earth Materials"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6210",
+ "description" : "A continuation of ENVE 6200 . The principal topic discussed is the selection of remediation alternatives and waste minimization.",
+ "name" : "Hazardous Waste Management II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-1100",
+ "description" : "Problem solving and analysis techniques focused on chemical engineering applications. Principles of steady state material balance calculations, introduction to chemical engineering design and process flowsheeting. The use of software packages to solve algebraic equation systems.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of Chemical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1989",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Remixing In Digital Culture"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-1200",
+ "description" : "Programming concepts: functions, parameter passing, pointers, arrays, strings, structs, classes, templates. Mathematical tools: sets, functions, and relations, order notation, complexity of algorithms, proof by induction. Data structures and their representations: data abstraction and internal representation, sequences, trees, binary search trees, associative structures. Algorithms: searching and sorting, generic algorithms, iterative and recursive algorithms. Methods of testing correctness and measuring performance.",
+ "name" : "Data Structures"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4020",
+ "description" : "This interdisciplinary seminar consists of students from both the School of Architecture and Civil Engineering department. Presentation of a variety of structural typologies bears direct relation to practical experience and the necessity for constructive interdisciplinary discourse. Specific structural typologies are examined through historic and contemporary project examples that are critically deconstructed and critically analyzed with respect to their basic engineering principles and architectural concepts. Students will be exposed to the collaborative methods inherent within the architect/engineer relationship. The course consists of lectures concerning each topic, case studies, and presentations of relevant projects, an interdisciplinary design project and discussion of the projects and presentations with respect to interdisciplinary discourse. Content and delivery may vary by instructor. Taught with CIVL 4020.",
+ "name" : "Bedford Architecture Engineering Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in GSAS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6910",
+ "description" : "The student will perform hands on research in the lab of a BCBP faculty to learn basic research methods and techniques, accomplish a small research project and determine whether the lab is a good \ufb01t for thesis research.",
+ "name" : "Research Rotation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6660",
+ "description" : "This graduate/advanced undergraduate hybrid course examines the structural and physiologic properties of muscle, as well as its force production and overall biomechanical function. Muscle structure and function will be explored at the protein, single fiber and whole tissue levels. Discussions will focus primarily on skeletal muscle, and topics will include muscle morphology, cross-bridge theory, molecular motor and actomyosin interaction, Hill-type and Huxley-type models, electromyography, fatigue, muscle inhibition, history-dependent phenomena, in vitro and in vivo muscle function, and the response to injury. Each topic will be introduced and developed utilizing seminal articles in the literature as well as excerpts from texts, and further discussion on current problems and state-of-the-art experimental techniques will draw on the current scientific literature.",
+ "name" : "Muscle Mechanics and Modeling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4340",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the observation and interpretation of igneous and metamorphic rocks in outcrop, hand sample, and thin sections. Processes of melting, solidification and migration of magmas; solid state recrystallization and pressure-temperature histories. Heat flow and regional crustal dynamics. Laboratory and field trips required.",
+ "name" : "Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2230",
+ "description" : "A foundational course in concepts and techniques in digital 3D, for animation, games, and digital art. This course focuses on methods and aesthetics in creating digital 3D objects, spaces, and characters, including modeling, texturing, and lighting, as preparation for further courses in the 3D Animation curriculum.",
+ "name" : "3D Digital Modeling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4400",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Music Theory II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6510",
+ "description" : "Continuity, momentum, and energy equations for continuous fluids; constitutive relations. Kinematics of fluid motion; vorticity and circulation. Potential flow. Navier-Stokes equations. Boundary layer theory. Turbulence. Multicomponent reacting systems. Selected applications.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Transport Phenomena I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ASTR"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6200",
+ "description" : "This course concentrates on management issues and study of the fate and transport of hazardous materials in the environment. Management topics are broken down into three broad categories: regulatory issues, those necessary for daily operation of an industrial facility (industrial hygiene, storage, and transportation issues), and preliminary environmental site assessments. Fate and transport issues will be dealt with quantitatively.",
+ "name" : "Hazardous Waste Management I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-9990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BMED"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4510",
+ "description" : "Sampling, quantization, and reconstruction of signals. Mathematical tools used in the modeling, analysis, and synthesis of discrete-time control systems. Analysis tools include z-transforms, difference equation solutions, state variables, and transfer function techniques. Design tools digital PID controller, root locus, bilinear transformations, compensation techniques and full-state feedback. Applications to sampled-data control.",
+ "name" : "Digital Control Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "WRIT-6940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Studies in Writing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4110",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the computational and algorithmic aspects of social processes. Topics covered will be selected to illustrate the diverse challenges in algorithmic social process analysis: social networks and their dynamics; information flow; hidden networks. Algorithms involving social and selfish agents, social choice theory, voting, and auctions. Ranking actors in networks, recommendation systems, peer-review, and aggregation of rankings/reviews.",
+ "name" : "Computational Social Processes"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6968",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-2620",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the properties of light and its interactions with matter. Topics include wave, particle, and ray treatments of light; geometrical optics and imaging systems; interference and diffraction; polarization; and Fourier methods for imaging and pulses. A laboratory is included.",
+ "name" : "Optics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-2520",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to provide an overview of the art of effective story development. Students will come away with a heightened awareness of the structures and principles that master storytellers apply to their craft in games and other popular media. It is intended for all GSAS majors and other interested students, as well as the prerequisite for the GSAS concentration in Writing.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Game Storytelling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6910",
+ "description" : "Seminars by distinguished guest speakers and graduate students on current problems in environmental and energy engineering. A broad range of subjects is covered. All undergraduates and graduates are strongly encouraged to attend as many lectures as possible.",
+ "name" : "Colloquium Series"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4980",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "B Arch Final Project 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4979",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6350",
+ "description" : "This course will examine alternative models of economic and non-economic decision-making. The course will cover models of rational decision-making under certainty and uncertainty, bounded rationality, preference-based approaches (e.g., loss aversion, ambiguity aversion, disappointment aversion), and heuristic decision-making. The emphasis throughout will be on the proper interpretation of more general models of decision-making as well as real-world applications.",
+ "name" : "Microeconomics of Decision-Making"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4420",
+ "description" : "The Building Sciences Vertical Studio is a thematically varied studio that has at its basis the use of design methodology to conceptualize, develop and evaluate a range of design projects within the Building Sciences. The Vertical Studio integrates the use of state-of-the-art and recent innovations in the materials, enclosure design, data collection methods, data visualization technologies, spatial mapping, investigative learning technologies and data storytelling methods using quantifiable metrics of performance, as well as through the translation of perceivable qualitative experience within physical environments. This studio is required for 2 nd and 3 rd year students in the Building Sciences Program.",
+ "name" : "Building Sciences Vertical Studio"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4760",
+ "description" : "Part I of a two-semester sequence focusing on the chemistry, structure, and function of biological molecules, macromolecules, and systems. Topics covered include protein and nucleic acid structure, enzymology, mechanisms of catalysis, regulation, lipids and membranes, carbohydrates, bioenergetics, and carbohydrate metabolism. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either BIOL 4760 or CHEM 4760 .)",
+ "name" : "Molecular Biochemistry I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4210",
+ "description" : "Aerodynamics and dynamics of lifting rotors in Vertical Take-Off and Landing (VTOL) applications. Design concepts by which rotor weight and stress are minimized and vehicle control is provided. Weight and engine power trends for configuration definition. Center of gravity and aerodynamic lift and moment for equilibrium and desired aircraft attitude. Methods for determining size, weight, and cost for a given payload, useful volume, and specified performance. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "VTOL Aircraft Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-6540",
+ "description" : "Topical treatment of current problems and frontiers in igneous petrology, with emphasis on physical and chemical processes. Principles of fluid dynamics and chemical kinetics are applied to the formation and evolution of crust- and mantle-derived magmas.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Igneous Petrology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-4963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4770",
+ "description" : "The second semester of the molecular biochemistry sequence. Topics include lipids and lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism and the coenzymes involved in this metabolism, nucleic acid synthesis and chemistry, protein synthesis and degradation, integration of metabolism, photobiology, and photosynthesis. This course is taught in studio mode. Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either BCBP 4770 or CHEM 4770 .",
+ "name" : "Molecular Biochemistry II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4470",
+ "description" : "Starting with the introduction of the probability distribution of one or two continuous random variables, basic concepts of mean, variance, covariance and correlation coefficient are covered. Description techniques discussed include stem-and-leaf plots, histograms, box plots, and probability plots. Confidence intervals for a single sample and for two samples are constructed on means and variances. The procedure of hypothesis testing is introduced conceptually followed by solving real-life biomedical problems. The design and performance of engineering experiments involving a single factor are discussed.",
+ "name" : "Biostatistics for Life Science Applications"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6530",
+ "description" : "In this course, there will be a survey of classic papers and current research in computer graphics. Topics include: advanced ray tracing, global illumination, photon mapping, subsurface scattering, mesh generation and simplification, subdivision surfaces, volumetric modeling, procedural modeling and texturing, weathering, physical simulation, appearance models. Course activities include programming assignments, oral presentations, and a term project. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Computer Graphics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6400",
+ "description" : "Criticism I introduces students to both historical and contemporary forms of discourse as it relates to the disciplines of architecture, landscape architecture, and urbanism. The course serves as an introduction to critical thinking and writing and provides students with the necessary analytical, verbal, and written skill sets to effectively participate in the discursive aspects of the disciplines of architecture, landscape architecture, and urbanism.",
+ "name" : "Criticism I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Independent Study"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6050",
+ "description" : "Introduction to Polymers is a first course on polymer science and structure-property relationships. Topics include chemical and molecular structure; morphology (structure) of amorphous and crystalline polymers; crystallization phenomena; polymer solutions and blends; physical properties of polymers in relation to structure, including rubber elasticity, viscoelasticity, and glass transition; and mechanical and rheological properties and testing.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Polymers"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-2900",
+ "description" : "Hands-on research in a faculty member's research laboratory.",
+ "name" : "Research in Biochemistry/Biophysics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "DSES-4940",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Readings In Isye"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4310",
+ "description" : "Microbiology is the study of \"microscopic organisms,\" including members of all the kingdoms of life. The course has two objectives: 1) Provide an overview of the diversity, genetics, and physiology of microorganisms. 2) Review current topics of investigation in Microbiology in detail. Microbes will be studied from a cellular and molecular perspective. This includes structure, nutrition, growth, control, classification, and genetics. This course will provide biology students the necessary background in bacterial genetics, pathogenic microbiology, prokaryotic physiology, eukaryotic microbiology, molecular biology, and microbial ecology.",
+ "name" : "Microbiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2466",
+ "description" : "The course is required as a foundation for the Building Sciences Program in the 21st century. It will examine a range of architectural projects from the global vernacular, significant historical projects, and contemporary case studies from a broader perspective of energy, climate, materials, resources, health, society and technology. This foundational course aims to contextualize significant built projects and work within the historical shifts in the discipline's roots in building physics originating from an 18th - century mechanical paradigm to a 21st century thermodynamic and eco-systemic view of building sciences. A critical part of this course intends to stimulate the capacity of students to recognize and develop their own insights, voice, and critical appreciation of architectural projects from a broader building sciences perspective.",
+ "name" : "History and Theory of Building Sciences"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7030",
+ "description" : "This course covers the fundamentals of business and corporate strategy, integrating these concepts into an environment of technological change, competition, and entrepreneurship. The course includes the following areas of emphasis: concepts of strategy, industry environment, resources and capabilities of the firm, organization and systems of the firm, the dynamics of competitive advantage, strategic alternative analysis, and strategies in different contexts. The course uses business cases and a project to enrich the theoretical concepts.",
+ "name" : "Strategy, Technology, and Competition"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6200",
+ "description" : "ARTS 6200 focuses on advanced problem solving through a series of challenging observational drawing projects. Emphasis is placed on developing a sophisticated and convincing use of drawing language to approach traditional subject matter. As students gain greater fluency, they also gain a greater critical awareness and understanding of the artistic decision-making process.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Drawing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-6780",
+ "description" : "Convex sets and functions, optimality conditions in nonlinear programming, Lagrangian duality, quadratic programming algorithms for nonlinear programming including Newton's method, quasi-Newton methods, conjugate gradient methods, together with proofs of convergence.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Optimization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-4310",
+ "description" : "This course is the second in a two-semester sequence on research methods and statistics in the behavioral sciences. Students will learn how to analyze data using multiple regression, analysis of variance, factor analysis, principal component analysis, and multi-level linear modeling. Students will also gain proficiency with the R programming language and software environment for statistical computing. Each student will carry out a research project and prepare a formal report that comports with the guidelines from the American Psychological Association.",
+ "name" : "Research Methods and Statistics II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-6580",
+ "description" : "History and Ethnography is an introductory/intermediate graduate theory and methods seminar that outfits students to undertake original empirical and interpretive work in the humanities and social sciences. The course combines historical and ethnographic approaches with discourse analysis or other qualitative analytic approaches. Such methodologies may also be mixed with quantitative approaches. There are substantial fieldwork and archival components to the course. Both historical and ethnographic methodologies provide a basis for \"capturing\" the \"data\" that provides the evidence base for analysis.",
+ "name" : "History and Ethnography"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5160",
+ "description" : "This course focuses upon contemporary means of producing and communicating architectural ideas. Students will use digital methodologies through all phases of a project as well as advanced representation and digital fabrication techniques. The use of digital modeling as a sketch and iterative tool will be emphasized. Tools taught in Digital Constructs 1 will support softwares taught in Digital Constructs 2. This course is required of all first-year architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program. Coordination of the relationship of course content to Graduate Architecture Design 1 will be between the Digital Constructs 1 faculty instructor and the architectural design studio coordinator and faculty.",
+ "name" : "Digital Constructs 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6240",
+ "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Circadian Biology. Students will read and critique recent primary literature, present current research articles, and lead discussions on new findings in the field.",
+ "name" : "Topics in Circadian Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHIL-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PHIL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ESCI-9990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4590",
+ "description" : "This course serves as an in-depth overview to medical imaging modalities. First, individual modalities are introduced, including CT, MRI, PET, SPECT, and US. Then, multimodality systems are described. A balance is made among physical, mathematical, algorithmic and architectural contents. Contemporary research and insights to improve the current systems are introduced throughout the course to inspire students and provide an understanding of newer tools under development.",
+ "name" : "Medical Imaging"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-4100",
+ "description" : "Rigorous development of classical thermodynamics as applied to prediction of materials properties. Nonideal gases, solutions, phase equilibria, chemical equilibria, defects.",
+ "name" : "Thermodynamics of Materials"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4100",
+ "description" : "This course addresses the history of architectural and related developments in selected Western and non-Western civilizations in order to construct a conceptual and strategic understanding of the relationships between architecture, culture, civilization, technology, and thought. In doing so, it will focus on key constructed spatial phenomena of the pre-modern world and, where relevant, elucidate the connection of these works of architecture and their motivating ideals to those of the modern and contemporary world.",
+ "name" : "An Architectural Genealogy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6110",
+ "description" : "AC steady-state analysis, three-phase networks, and complex power (brief review). Per-unit system. Practical transformer equivalent circuits. AC power transmission-lines: parameters; equivalent circuits; and steady-state operation. Power flow with transfer limits in balanced three-phase systems. Network power flow problem with solution by numerical methods. Symmetrical components: analysis including sequence networks for three-phase systems. Fault analysis.",
+ "name" : "Power Engineering Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4967",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4540",
+ "description" : "Examines biomechanics of human body movement through developing various models (e.g., lumped mass, planar rigid body, 3D) and exploring current techniques in Forward and Inverse Dynamic approaches. Topics are developed on a classical mechanics foundation, and simulations are constructed using software (e.g., OpenSIM) to describe normal movements, and investigate possible sources of abnormalities due to injury, disease, or dysfunction.",
+ "name" : "Biomechanics II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5170",
+ "description" : "Building on techniques taught in Digital Constructs 1, this course will expand upon the role of technology in architecture by introducing advanced methods of design analysis and resolution. Students will learn to address issues of optimization, environmental surroundings, structure, and site by using various contemporary analytic softwares. This course is required of all second-year architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program. Coordination of the relationship of course content to Graduate Architecture Design 2 will be between the Digital Constructs 2 faculty instructor and the studio coordinator and faculty.",
+ "name" : "Digital Constructs 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4490",
+ "description" : "Examination of the requirements and approaches for the commercial application of nuclear fusion. Discussion of fusion basics including fusion reactions, competing processes, energy balances, the need for plasmas, plasma confinement, and heating concepts. Analyses of fusion reactor embodiments based on magnetic and inertial confinement concepts. Identification of key physics, engineering, and technology issues associated with fusion development. Consideration of economics, environmental, and resource implications of fusion energy systems.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Fusion Devices and Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6940",
+ "description" : "Individual projects and readings adapted to the needs of individual students at the advanced level.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Individual Projects in Architecture and Environmental Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4280",
+ "description" : "Design of systems to consider foundations, structures, and constructability; foundation alternatives; structural design to simplify erection; prefabrication, modulation of structures; material handling on a construction site; crane selection and placement; temporary works.",
+ "name" : "Design for Constructability"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4340",
+ "description" : "An introductory course on physical principles behind the creation of diagnostic medical images. Medical imaging is one of the most exciting and technologically demanding fields of medicine. Topics include radiation interaction, radiation dosimetry, formation and quality of X-ray images, computed tomography (CT), nuclear medicine, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), ultrasound imaging, and radiation detection and safety. Current research on image quality optimization, image-guided radio-surgery, 3D/4D ultrasound imaging, and Monte Carlo simulations are reviewed.",
+ "name" : "Physics of Radiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-1200",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Sustainability Debates"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-6963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4971",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2010",
+ "description" : "Intermediate Video is a hands-on intensive course that teaches the language, aesthetics, and techniques of video production. Working in groups and individually, students will develop and produce several short video projects. Emphasis will be on the acquisition of creative and technical production skills in visualizing, scripting, aesthetics, shooting, sound design, and editing.",
+ "name" : "Intermediate Video"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6890",
+ "description" : "In this course, design processes in architectural acoustics will be studied from a psychoacoustical perspective. Different concepts to create physical and virtual acoustic spaces will be discussed based on perceptual design goals. Topics include ecological psychoacoustics, sound quality, auditory virtual environments, and auditory computational modeling.",
+ "name" : "Aural Architecture"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6550",
+ "description" : "This course reviews the principles of ethical behavior and responsible conduct of research and discusses specific areas of biotechnology research, medical research, and societal issues in the context of these principles. Representative topics include genetic engineering, stem cell research, assisted reproduction, human subjects, animal research, and nanotechnology. Active student participation is expected.",
+ "name" : "Ethical Issues in Biotechnology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6140",
+ "description" : "Principles of limnology applied to the ecological conditions of streams and bodies of fresh water relative to capacity to stabilize organic materials. The economic aspects of water pollution; health aspects of bacterial pollution.",
+ "name" : "Stream Pollution Control"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6964",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6840",
+ "description" : "This is an experiential, project-based course where students work on projects for an actual business. Students work in a consulting role for a local company. Practicum in Management is designed and developed for students from all educational backgrounds who want to learn the fundamentals of business as they apply to satisfying a \"customer's need\". Students will work on a team or individually on projects and communicate to the class frequently to facilitate student learning from one another. We begin with some basic tenets of business and an overview of how to develop and oversee a project plan. The course will give you first-hand experience understanding the needs of a consulting client, articulating a plan and executing the plan to fill their needs.",
+ "name" : "Practicum in Management"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4750",
+ "description" : "Introduction to Interactive Computer Graphics, with an emphasis on applications programming. Objects and viewers, and the synthetic camera model. Graphics architectures, the graphics pipeline, clipping, rasterization, and programmable shaders. Input and interaction. Geometric objects, homogeneous coordinates, and transformations. Viewing, hidden surface removal, frame and depth buffers, compositing, and anti-aliasing. Shading, light and materials, texture mapping, ray tracing, and radiosity. Intellectual property concerns. Extensive programming with the OpenGL API and C++.",
+ "name" : "Computer Graphics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6230",
+ "description" : "A self-contained course that includes topics from number theory, basic cryptography, and protocol security. This is a hybrid course with sufficient depth in both theory and hands-on experience with network protocols. Topics include: Classical Cryptography, Block Ciphers (DES, AES), Information Theoretical Cryptography, Randomness, RNG and Stream Ciphers, Hash and MAC Algorithms, Public-Key Cryptography, Elliptic Curve Cryptography, Digital Signatures and Identification, Internet Attacks, Web Security, SSL and PGP.",
+ "name" : "Cryptography and Network Security I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6520",
+ "description" : "An intensive course designed to provide instruction and stimulate discussion on important topics relevant to biological research. It is loosely divided into three sections: 1) overview of major areas of faculty research; 2) professional development topics such as hypothesis testing and design of experiments, responsible use of statistics, and scientific funding; and 3) scientific writing. This course is required of and limited to first year students in the Biology and Biochemistry/Biophysics Ph.D. programs.",
+ "name" : "Biology Core Course II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4770",
+ "description" : "The second semester of the Molecular Biochemistry sequence. Topics include lipids and lipid metabolism, amino acid metabolism and the coenzymes involved in this metabolism, nucleic acid synthesis and chemistry, protein synthesis and degradation, integration of metabolism, photobiology, and photosynthesis. This course is taught in studio mode. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either BIOL 4770 or BCBP 4770 .)",
+ "name" : "Molecular Biochemistry II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4090",
+ "description" : "The synergistic combination of mechanical engineering, electronics, control engineering, and computer science in the design process. The key areas of mechatronics studied in depth are control sensors and actuators, interfacing sensors and actuators to a microcomputer, discrete controller design, and real-time programming for control using the C programming language. The unifying theme for this heavily laboratory-based course is the integration of the key areas into a successful mechatronic design.",
+ "name" : "Mechatronics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5340",
+ "description" : "In a world of rapid technological change, this course aims to equip future architects with the ability to position, understand, and implement new materials and systems in meaningful ways. The working principles of selected advanced materials and systems are explained and issues of material development, applications, and integration into buildings systems are addressed. Emphasis is also placed on understanding the issues involved when combining and installing new materials or systems into buildings. Students are further introduced to detail development. Sustainability: new materials and systems are explored with the objective of formulating meaningful technological response to critical environmental and societal issues such as resource depletion, environmental degradation, and globalization. This is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Materials and Enclosures"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6964",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COMM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6400",
+ "description" : "Principles and practice of producing, measuring, and using pressures from atmospheric down to 10-15 atmospheres. Gas kinetics and flow of gases at low pressures. Basic vacuum system calculations. System design and leak detection. Physical and chemisorption of gases. Generation of clean surfaces and study of reactions on them.",
+ "name" : "Vacuum Techniques"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6650",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to be a first course in the study of \"systems biology\", to introduce students to the field, the experimental and computational methods that are used within it, and the type of insights that the field can provide to biology. To fully appreciate the complexity of living systems, researchers gather systematic, quantitative measurements of a system's components using cutting-edge omics techniques. In addition, researchers also leverage computing power to describe, model, and predict dynamic behaviors that could otherwise not be perceived in such large-scale omics data. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature. A student cannot get credit for both this course and BIOL 4660 / BCBP 4660 and BCBP 6650 .",
+ "name" : "The Biology of Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6340",
+ "description" : "The goal of Material Systems and Production is threefold: to develop a fundamental understanding of materials through first principles, material classification, material production, and material impacts, to develop material models based on material properties and tests, and to develop criteria to make reasoned choices for the implementation of materials in the built environment. Students will engage in directed research projects through the lens of material with the intent of opportunistically identifying intrinsic material properties, exploiting production forming logics, and developing a prototype detail assembly for testing. B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.Arch. students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
+ "name" : "Material Systems and Productions"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6968",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-2930",
+ "description" : "Students may obtain credit for chemistry-related experience in nonclassroom situations. For credit to be awarded, a brief proposal outlining the nature of the experience to be undertaken must be given to the department in advance for approval of its suitability. A written report is required at the end of the experience. A maximum of 4 credits is allowed, but this may be made up in more than one experience.",
+ "name" : "Out-of-Classroom Experience in Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4740",
+ "description" : "Design analysis and performance characteristics of building environmental systems, emphasizing heating, cooling, ventilation, and lighting systems. In addition, building electrical systems, acoustics, water, waste, and drainage systems are covered in terms of fundamental theory, designs, and calculations. Case studies, field trips, and system design project work are required.",
+ "name" : "Building Systems and Environment"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4540",
+ "description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of biological sequence analysis, including algorithms for pairwise sequence alignment, multiple sequence alignment, phylogenetic analysis, and database searching. Concepts covered include homology, sequence similarity, parsimony, mechanisms and metrics of molecular evolution, biological data bases, database search algorithms (BLAST), and statistical significance. Selected topics include hidden Markov models, bootstrap analysis and gene finding. Modern sequence analysis software will be provided. Laptop computers and programming knowledge are required. Meets jointly with BIOL 6410 .",
+ "name" : "Sequence Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-1200",
+ "description" : "Continued examination of the principles of chemistry in more depth, considering thermodynamics, advanced concepts in chemical equilibrium and acid-base chemistry, kinetics of chemical reactions, and electrochemistry. Students cannot get credit for this course and CHEM 1210 .",
+ "name" : "Chemistry II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-4320",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Behavioral Neuroscience"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4430",
+ "description" : "Description, fundamentals, and engineering features of processes using microbial, plant or animal cells or their enzymes. Topics include review of biochemistry, review of microbiology, computer simulation, growth, death, aseptic techniques, continuous culture, fermenter design, sterilization, mixed cultures, process scale up, immobilized cells and enzymes, recovery of products, and process economics. Weekly exercises requiring personal computers.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Biochemical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Readings in Economics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6250",
+ "description" : "This course explores the complex roles and relationships of art, education, and technology by giving students direct experience in the community. Students will develop a plan to work with a media arts center, community organization, or school; final teams will produce real-world arts and education projects that can become significant additions to their professional portfolio. The projects can include a range of practices including but not limited to traditional arts, creative writing, creative IT, community art, and activism. Graduate students who take this course will write a mid-term and final paper, plus offer an independent public presentation of their work.",
+ "name" : "Art, Community, and Technology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6490",
+ "description" : "Stress invariants. Polyaxial stress-strain relation for strain-hardening materials. Ideal plasticity, various yield conditions, and associated flow rules. Variational principles. Limit analysis. Applications in elastic-plastic stress analysis, metal forming, plastic collapse, and plastic instability.",
+ "name" : "Plasticity"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6360",
+ "description" : "The studio addresses interdisciplinary exchange within research practice, understanding that buildings operate within complex dynamic systems. Buildings and their material systems are composed of interdependent systemic relationships at multiple scales \u2013 'Built Ecologies' \u2013 operating as metabolic systems within and upon existent natural and made systems. Design is a method of research, discovering and developing new systems and strategies transferable to many sites. Course taught in New York City.",
+ "name" : "Interdisciplinary Research Studio"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6280",
+ "description" : "This course offers a comprehensive explanation of the technology and physics of light-emitting diodes (LEDs) such as infrared, visible-spectrum, ultraviolet, and white LEDs made from III\u2013V semiconductors. The elementary properties of LEDs and material on device structure, packaging, reflectors, phosphor materials, light extraction, and junction temperature are discussed. Applications of the LED focus on illumination, fiber, and free-space communication.",
+ "name" : "Light Emitting Diodes"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6290",
+ "description" : "This course will present the foundations of numerical (deterministic) and Monte Carlo methods that are widely used in the modeling and analysis of nuclear reactor design, radiation dosimetry, and radiation shielding. Emphasis will be placed on the three fundamental aspects of computation methods: (i) discretization methods for the transport and diffusion equations; (ii) iterative methods for solving the system of discretized equations; and (iii) Monte Carlo methods for solving general fixed-source and eigunvalue problems.",
+ "name" : "Radiation Transport Methods"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6800",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Media And Memory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4230",
+ "description" : "This class studies, creates, and publicly presents inflatable sculptures. The history of inflatables are examined, with special attention paid to how they have been used in political movements that imagine utopian social futures, and how those applications contrast with commercial uses (such as advertising) that have become commonplace in public spaces today. Throughout the class will explore, design, and build inflated structures that may include video and sound elements.",
+ "name" : "Inflatable Sculpture"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6140",
+ "description" : "Queer Ecologies is an undergraduate and graduate arts course that uses art to think about our eco-futures. We will look at the disruptive nature of Cartesian thinking and binary positioning in relation to sexuality and ecologies. The \"queering\" is a means to refuse this binary thinking and consider expansive interdisciplinary practices that have evolved from LGBTQ+ and feminist theory, decolonial thinking, extinction and death studies, environmental justice, critiques of science and big pharma, biopolitics, bioethics, biology, science fiction, aesthetics, art and play.",
+ "name" : "Queer Ecologies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-2120",
+ "description" : "Introduction to stress and strain; observation, measurement, recording, and interpretation of rock structures including joints, faults, folds, and fabrics. Interpretation of structures from geologic maps. Structures and regional tectonics. Laboratory and field trips required.",
+ "name" : "Structural Geology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LGHT-4770",
+ "description" : "This course provides students with an in-depth understanding of the components of advanced lighting systems and enables them to critically explore applications of those components. Through lectures, readings, assignments, and application projects, students acquire working knowledge of the relevant products and techniques for lighting application and develop solutions to lighting problems. Students will undertake practical applications of advanced lighting technologies and develop skills in the application of photometric data, use of manual and computer-based lighting calculations, and the development of lighting specifications.",
+ "name" : "Lighting Technologies and Applications"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6530",
+ "description" : "Introduction to groundwater hydrology, well hydraulics, permeability, seepage, flow nets, filter criteria, dewatering, slope stabilization, practical applications.",
+ "name" : "Seepage, Drainage, and Groundwater"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6910",
+ "description" : "The students take active part in research, under the supervision of a Biology faculty adviser by mutual agreement.",
+ "name" : "Research Rotation l"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-4210",
+ "description" : "Physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of industrial wastes. Application of unit operations and processes to the treatment of waste streams. Consideration of recovery and/or recycling of useful products.",
+ "name" : "Industrial Waste Treatment and Disposal"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4030",
+ "description" : "Introduction to modeling and control of dynamic chemical processes. Topics include the development of first-principles models, linearization and state space form, input/output (transfer function) form, design and tuning of PID controllers, model-based control, frequency response for robustness analysis, case studies in multivariable control, numerical analysis, and simulation.",
+ "name" : "Chemical Process Dynamics and Control"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6140",
+ "description" : "An advanced analysis of current problems confronting major American industries, regulated and unregulated. Recent changes in growth patterns, market structures, and pricing policies are examined. Considerable emphasis is placed on emerging trends in technology and public policy, which are likely to affect significantly the future of these industries.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Structure of Industry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USNA-2940",
+ "description" : "An individually arranged independent study course under supervision of a member of the Naval Science Department.",
+ "name" : "Readings in Naval Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4590",
+ "description" : "Covers advanced estimation and inference techniques for data analysis and policy evaluation. Topics will vary from year to year to introduce advanced statistical methods used in recent literature. Topics may include visualization techniques to summarize and display high dimensional data, selected topics in discrete choice models, spatial analysis, and analysis of panel data. Particularly, methods for panel data will be emphasized. This includes fixed, random, mixed, and multi-level effects models to control for or account for variation from individual characteristics. Dynamic panel data models consider lagged dependent variables as regressors.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Data Analytics & Policy Evaluation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6620",
+ "description" : "This is a technology-based design studio emphasizing the materialization and making of architectural design projects. The integration of building code requirements for fire protection, life safety, accessibility, building environmental systems, structure, construction, and materiality is central to the effective achievement of design intent. Students become aware of how these issues affect and inform design decisions. They learn to integrate technology, systems, and materials in the comprehensive resolution of building design and gain exposure to construction documents and design documentation. Construction and site visits are an integral part of the studio as is an integrated electronic media seminar on CAD applications. Students must coregister for ARCH 5380, Professional Practice 1, a concurrent 2-credit course that introduces codes, the regulatory process, agreements, contract documents, building design cost control, and administration. This course is required of all architecture students in the M.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Graduate Architecture Design 4"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6920",
+ "description" : "This seminar builds upon Doctoral Seminar 1 by cultivating a disciplinary-specific approach to the development of research problem definition and research methods. The topics considered will be drawn from and situated within the various fields of study that support doctoral study in architectural sciences, as well as from research activities in related fields in engineering, science, and the humanities. Case studies of prototypical architectural science research will evaluate current practice, identifying state of knowledge with the field and the resources and settings necessary to support the research activity.",
+ "name" : "Doctoral Seminar 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6240",
+ "description" : "Neural networks are program and memory at once, useful where traditional techniques fail, i.e., for artificial speech and image recognition. Emphasis on existing and emerging engineering applications. Parallel distributed processing, Hebb's rule, Hopfield net, back-propagation algorithm, perceptrons, unsupervised learning, Kohenen self-organizing map, genetic algorithms, neocognitron, adaline. Illustrated with computer programs and lectures.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Neural Networks"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4640",
+ "description" : "This course introduces various computational approaches for creating intelligent conversational agents. This course will take the form of a combination of lectures, presentations by students, class discussions, and independent study.",
+ "name" : "Intelligent Virtual Agents"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-1962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARTS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6350",
+ "description" : "The goal of this course is to develop a general familiarity with the structural design of masonry elements and structures. This includes exposure to the historical development of design specifications as well as specific design procedures unique to this material.",
+ "name" : "Masonry Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-2630",
+ "description" : "The application of the basic laws and phenomena of science to particulate matter, specifically soils. Basic physical and mechanical structural characteristics of soil. Equilibrium and movement of water. Flow through porous media. Effective stress. Stress-strain-time relations. Basic laboratory work as related to practice.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Geotechnical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4010",
+ "description" : "Subsurface investigation. The application of the principles of soil mechanics to the design of footings, retaining walls, pile foundations, bulkheads, cofferdams, bridge piers and abutments, and underpinnings.",
+ "name" : "Foundation Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-1200",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to introduce a wide variety of concepts and applications in the broad subject of economics, economics being the study of people's choices. Traditionally, these choices have been framed as how to best employ scarce resources to produce goods and services and distribute them for consumption. To describe these choices the cause will introduce the concepts of opportunity cost, demand and supply theory, and market structures. It will consider the role of government in making resource allocation choices. Students will also study important macroeconomic data such as gross domestic product, economic growth rates, inflation, and unemployment. Additionally, studied will be the role of money and banking in the economy and short-run events such as recessions and expansions. Overall, the course will provide the student with an encompassing view of how economic principles and concepts relate to the broader economy and society. Credit cannot be obtained for both IHSS 1200 and ECON 1200",
+ "name" : "Introductory Economics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LGHT-6940",
+ "description" : "Individual projects and readings adapted to the needs of individual students at the advanced level.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Individual Projects in Lighting"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHME"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6830",
+ "description" : "Review of fundamentals of thermodynamics, chemical kinetics, fluid mechanics, and modern diagnostics. Discussion of flame propagation, thermal and chain explosions, stirred reactors, detonations, droplet combustion, and turbulent jet flames.",
+ "name" : "Combustion"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4060",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the technical techniques and principles of computer animation with a focus on rigging, skinning, character fx, particle simulations, compositioning and rendering. Lectures, discussion, and exposure to contemporary work enable students to develop skills in this rapidly evolving field.",
+ "name" : "3D Visual Effects"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4020",
+ "description" : "This studio/seminar consists of longer projects with attention to concept, process, and finish. The student will either work individually or as a member on a team and be expected to have a vision or concept they are driven to create. Some possible topics covered may include virtual environments, advanced shader networks, MEL, compositing, non photorealistic rendering, 3D graphics programming, game engines, or motion capture.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Digital 3D Projects"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6969",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-4600",
+ "description" : "A course emphasizing advanced concepts and methods from calculus. Topics include: multivariable integral theorems (Green's, divergence, Stokes', Reynolds transport), extrema of multivariable functions (including Taylor's theorem and Lagrange multipliers), the calculus of variations (Euler\u2013Lagrange equations, constraints, principle of least action), and Cartesian tensors (calculus, invariants, representations).",
+ "name" : "Advanced Calculus"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-2930",
+ "description" : "Credit to be given for an out-of-classroom experience related to biochemistry and/or biophysics (BCBP) having intellectual content relevant to the student's educational or career goals, subject to approval of a written proposal and a final written report. The adviser (for BCBP majors) or, with permission, any BCBP faculty member may serve as evaluator. For each out-of-classroom experience a student may register only once.",
+ "name" : "Out-of-Classroom Experience in Biochemistry/Biophysics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-1040",
+ "description" : "This course combines an introduction to traditional visual arts and digital media and serves as a foundation for work in game design and interactive art. Using studio projects that incorporate physical media, digital imaging and computer code, students develop their formal vocabulary, observational skills, and their understanding of issues in visual and interactive arts.",
+ "name" : "Art for Interactive Media"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4250",
+ "description" : "Through direct experience in the community, this course explores the complex roles and relationships of art, education, and technology. Students will develop a plan to work with a media arts center, community organization, or school; final teams will produce real-world arts and education projects that ultimately will be realized as significant additions to their professional portfolio. The projects can include a range from traditional arts practice to creative writing, creative IT models, to community art and activism.",
+ "name" : "Art, Community, and Technology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2940",
+ "description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
+ "name" : "Communication Studies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6230",
+ "description" : "This class studies, creates, and publicly presents inflatable sculptures. The history of inflatables are examined, with special attention paid to how they have been used in political movements that imagine utopian social futures, and how those applications contrast with commercial uses (such as advertising) that have become commonplace in public spaces today. Throughout, the class will explore, design, and build inflated structures that may include video and sound elements. Graduate students will also be required to write a paper.",
+ "name" : "Inflatable Sculpture"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6140",
+ "description" : "This is a course on introduction to computational fluid dynamics. This course provides knowledge necessary to model engineering applications consistent with energy and fluid-dynamic physical laws. Discretization models include: overview of finite difference, finite element, and finite volume discretization approaches, physical problem classification, discretization techniques, and numerical guidelines. Applications include: incompressible and compressible flows, laminar and turbulence flows, with introduction to computational fluid dynamics turbulence modeling, followed by boundary layer, and parabolized flow simplifications.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to CFD"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4410",
+ "description" : "Review of atomic and nuclear physics and quantum mechanics; application to atomic, molecular and nuclear systems; particle and photon emissions; photon/particle interactions; quantum statistics; applications of nuclear physics to nuclear data, medical physics, accelerators, fusion systems, nuclear reactors; key measurements and databases; basic level of technical writing and presentation.",
+ "name" : "Applied Atomic and Nuclear Physics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-1960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ASTR"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4250",
+ "description" : "Model systems provide the experimental basis for understanding the conserved principles of developmental biology. This class will cover fundamental topics including axis specification, pattern formation, cell fate and determination, cell differentiation, senescence, and apoptosis. Emphasis will be placed on integrating gene function and cell behavior with development. Model systems include vertebrates (e.g. frog and chick) and genetically tractable invertebrates (e.g. fruit flies and roundworms).",
+ "name" : "Developmental Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4170",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Environmental Parametrics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1974",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6750",
+ "description" : "This seminar is the first required course of the two-semester, 3rd-year Final Project course sequence in the M.Arch program and as such serves as a prerequisite to the spring semester Final Project Design Studio (ARCH 6XXX). The Design Research Seminar provides a forum for readings and discussions as well as design and/or material experimentation as it relates to the respective Graduate Final Project instructor's thematic framework. The seminar also covers fundamentals related to standard methods of research and analysis. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Final Project Design Research Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ERTH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-2050",
+ "description" : "Hydrostatics; Pressure Measurement; Fluid Properties; Application of Control Volume Analysis to Conservation of Mass, Energy and Momentum Principles; Bernoulli Equation for Ideal Flow; Dimensional Analysis; Pipe Flow and Pipe Networks; Pump Performance; Pipes in Pipelines. A laboratory component will illustrate the topics studied.",
+ "name" : "Fluid Mechanics for Civil and Environmental Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7050",
+ "description" : "This course immerses students in the practices and activities that lead to the creation of innovative new products and services. Through a team-based learning experience, students generate an idea for a new product or service and follow the development process from conception through planning for commercialization. Through lectures, cases, and practical exercises, students learn how to overcome hurdles inherent in new product and service development. Students apply this knowledge in all phases of product development, including concept testing, product design, production planning, and market strategy. The project undertaken in this course provides student teams with an opportunity to create a new venture that may then be carried forward utilizing Rensselaer's technological resources such as the Incubator Program and Rensselaer's Technology Park.",
+ "name" : "Design, Manufacturing, and Marketing I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4460",
+ "description" : "Animation Production is designed to give an animation industry experience by completing the entire process of creating an animated short. Learning long-term time management and finding the key time cost/benefits will be essential to success. The course schedule is setup to replicate the industry model of frequent updates and feedback \u2013 dailies.",
+ "name" : "Animation Production"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4830",
+ "description" : "This studio is a technology-based design studio emphasizing the materialization and making of architectural design projects. The integration of building code requirements for fire protection, life safety, accessibility, building environmental systems, structure, construction, and materiality is central to the effective achievement of design intent. Students become aware of how these issues affect and inform design decisions. They learn to integrate technology, systems, and materials in the comprehensive resolution of building design and gain exposure to construction documents and design documentation. Construction and site visits are an integral part of the studio as is an integrated electronic media seminar on CAD applications. Students must coregister for ARCH 4540 Professional Practice 1, a concurrent 2-credit course that introduces codes, the regulatory process, agreements, contract documents, building design cost control, and administration. This course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Integrated Design Development"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4760",
+ "description" : "Part I of a two-semester sequence focusing on the chemistry, structure, and function of biological molecules, macromolecules, and systems. Topics covered include protein and nucleic acid structure, enzymology, mechanisms of catalysis, regulation, lipids and membranes, carbohydrates, bioenergetics, and carbohydrate metabolism.",
+ "name" : "Molecular Biochemistry I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4120",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the computational and mathematical techniques for practical financial applications. The course will emphasize the algorithmic side of finance. Topics will be selected from pricing (options and derivatives), trading, risk-evaluation, selfish agents, sequential decisions, and portfolio optimization. Examples of the mathematical and algorithmic techniques covered are martingale measures, risk-neutral pricing and Monte Carlo, dynamic programing, and stochastic processes.",
+ "name" : "Computational Finance"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4200",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Rotocraft Perf Stab Ctl"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6250",
+ "description" : "This is an advanced graduate level course on carbohydrates covering their physicochemical properties, chemical and biochemical synthesis and analysis. The biological activity of polysaccharides, glycoproteins, proteoglycans, and glycolipids, and the role of glycomics in development and disease will be discussed. The application of glycotechnology and glycoengineering for the preparation of therapeutic glycans and glycan-coated materials will be covered.",
+ "name" : "Glycochemistry, Glycobiology, and Glychotechnology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4990",
+ "description" : "Independent research, supervised by a faculty member, culminating in a written thesis and oral presentation.",
+ "name" : "Senior Research Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2940",
+ "description" : "Individual projects and readings adapted to the needs of individual students.",
+ "name" : "Projects in Architecture and Environmental Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4300",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Communication Internship"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6330",
+ "description" : "This course will examine how bioinformatics, functional genomics, and other modern biotechnologies are used to speed the discovery of new drugs, especially those small organic molecules to treat human diseases with large unmet therapeutic need. Special emphasis will be placed on molecular target identification and validation as well as high-throughput screening to identify a lead. Topics to be discussed will include transgenic mice, RNA interference, DNA and protein microarrays, homogenous time-resolved fluorescence bioassays, phage-display, combinatorial chemistry, and parallel synthesis. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and CHEM 4330 .",
+ "name" : "Drug Discovery"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-4962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4260",
+ "description" : "A capstone design experience that engages students from biomedical, computer systems, electrical, industrial, materials, and mechanical engineering on teams in an open-ended engineering design problem in preparation for professional practice. With the guidance of a multidisciplinary team of faculty members and instructional support staff, students apply knowledge and skills from prior coursework. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Multidisciplinary Capstone Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4380",
+ "description" : "This is the first of a two-semester sequence for seniors intended to be a \"capstone\" design project where students have the opportunity to utilize the broad range of their undergraduate experience in an interdisciplinary design project. Projects are selected to provide interaction between nuclear engineering and engineering physics majors to provide exposure to cross-fertilization of ideas and team interaction, which simulates anticipated future professional experience. The product of each design project is a comprehensive report or design proposal having both global and detail completeness. Under some circumstances, the project may involve development of cost information necessary to effect construction and may actually involve construction and commissioning of the designed apparatus. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Nuclear Engineering Senior Design Project I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6350",
+ "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught.",
+ "name" : "Data Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BUSN-6310",
+ "description" : "In this course, students use financial analysis to evaluate organizational performance. Students calculate and evaluate financial reports and ratios, drawing recommendations for improving performance from their intemporal and cross-competition analysis. Students use optimization and simulation techniques to model the impact of changes on the organization's financial performance. Students develop budgets for new products and ventures using sound principals and techniques, evaluating capital sourcing options and costs.",
+ "name" : "Leaders Making Financial Decisions"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6969",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-1960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PHYS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4320",
+ "description" : "In this course, students will explore how a very wide variety of data and media relate to our ever-evolving environment. We will build critical media literacy through encounters with media as both consumers and producers, learning along the way about how media literacy relates to other forms of literacy: ecological, political, scientific, historical, epistemological, etc. Simultaneously, we will question what \"the environment\" means, critique the limits of \"sustainability\" discourse, examine our assumptions around \"the media,\" question notions of \"data\" (big, little, quantitative, qualitative), etc. We will situate all of these terms in broader contexts and examine their histories, connotations, and connections.",
+ "name" : "Environmental Media & Data"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4971",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2750",
+ "description" : "Private applied music lessons provide weekly instruction in instrumental and vocal performance. The goal of this class is to develop the student's musical ability relative to capacity and interest. A supplementary lesson fee is charged.",
+ "name" : "Private Music Lessons"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6980",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6510",
+ "description" : "A seminar in research methods. This course will review the major considerations and tasks involved in conducting research in areas appropriate to the architectural sciences. It introduces the essential aspects of designing, supporting, and conducting a research project. Major areas that will be considered include: history and present status of the quantitative and qualitative methods, strengths and weaknesses of each method and approach, location of resources, information and data, sampling or selection of research materials and/or participants, data collection, measurement, data analysis, and research writing and style.",
+ "name" : "Disciplinary Research Methods Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1320",
+ "description" : "This course examines the emergence of environmental consciousness in the United States throughout the 20th century. Students in this course will study the original writings of some of the most important thinkers and activists in the history of environmentalism, examine the social contexts in which their ideas formed, and consider their relevance to contemporary sustainability issues.",
+ "name" : "A Century of Environmental Thought"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISCI-4610",
+ "description" : "Students taking the Minor in Astrobiology are required to complete 3 credits of research in an Astrobiology-related discipline with a RARE-affiliated faculty member. Concurrent or in a later semester, students will enroll in ISCI 4610 with the same faculty member to prepare their research results for dissemination.",
+ "name" : "Capstone in Astrobiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4180",
+ "description" : "This course continues the practice and study of Deep Listening beyond the foundational course \"Deep Listening.\" Topics include a wide range of investigations, research, and creativity in Deep Listening.",
+ "name" : "Topics in Deep Listening"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6520",
+ "description" : "This course introduces quantitative analysis for financial markets and instruments. The course covers applications of mathematical tools and optimization modeling to portfolio selection and fund management, risk analysis, hedging and valuation of financial assets, and financial planning under uncertainty. The course introduces applications of calculus, differential equations, and introduces stochastic processes within a financial markets context to address arbitrage pricing and equilibrium asset pricing models.",
+ "name" : "Financial Modeling and Optimization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6910",
+ "description" : "This seminar introduces a disciplinary-specific approach to the development of research problem definition and research methods. The topics considered will be drawn from and situated within the various fields of study that support doctoral study in architectural sciences, as well as from research activities in related fields in engineering, science, and the humanities. Case studies of prototypical architectural science research will evaluate current practice, identifying state of knowledge with the field and the resources and settings necessary to support the research activity.",
+ "name" : "Doctoral Seminar 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-6300",
+ "description" : "In-depth analysis of metamorphic phase equilibria in pelites, amphibolites, carbonates, and ultramafic rocks. Schreinemakers' analysis, petrogenetic grids, P-T-X relations, reaction space, geothermometry, geobarometry, and analysis of zoned prophyroblasts. Heat flow, metamorphic, and tectonic evolution. Laboratory involves analysis of textural relations in thin section and computer exercises.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Metamorphic Petrology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4890",
+ "description" : "Introductory materials of engineering acoustics for students with basic knowledge in mathematics (at least one level of first-year college). Much of the course material is taken from the textbook \"Acoustics for Engineers\" by Blauert and Xiang (2nd Ed.). The course includes mechanic and acoustic oscillations, the wave equations in fluids, governing equations for horns and ducts, spherical sound sources and arrays, piston membranes, diffraction and scattering, dissipation, reflection, refraction and absorption, isolation of air- and structure-borne sounds, noise propagation and noise control. B.S. and B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.S.Arch. Acoustics students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
+ "name" : "Engineering Acoustics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6250",
+ "description" : "The phenomenological, mechanistic, and micro-structural aspects of the mechanical properties of materials are developed, with particular emphasis on the similarities and differences among various material systems including metals, ceramics, and polymers. Phenomenological aspects of the three-dimensional characteristics of stress and strain, various yield criteria, elastic behavior, viscoelastic behavior, plastic behavior, statistical aspects of brittle fracture and fracture mechanics are presented. Mechanistic and micro-structural topics include edge and screw dislocation behavior, slip systems, critical resolved shear stress, dislocation multiplication and interactions, barriers to motion, polymer chain conformation and entropy.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Mechanical Properties of Materials"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4420",
+ "description" : "A course dealing primarily with physicochemical properties of substances on a molecular basis. Chemical kinetics, quantum chemistry, spectroscopy, and statistical mechanics.",
+ "name" : "Microscopic Physical Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-1030",
+ "description" : "This is a hands-on introduction to film making. Students study a selection of great films; and learn how to make movies using lightweight field production equipment. Throughout the course students produce a variety of short videos in different genres, and develop their critical capacity for analyzing cinema and other forms of motion picture storytelling. The class ends with a mini film festival where everyone presents their work.",
+ "name" : "Digital Filmmaking"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-2540",
+ "description" : "Application of mechanics to the study of normal, diseased, and traumatized musculo-skeletal system. Areas covered include determination of joint and muscle forces, mechanical properties of biological tissues, and structural analysis of bone-implant systems. Case studies are discussed to illustrate the role of biomechanics and biomaterials in the design of implants.",
+ "name" : "Biomechanics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-4941",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Path Integral Modeling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6820",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Research Methods In Acoustics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-4220",
+ "description" : "A survey course in modern astrophysics with an emphasis on stellar astrophysics and interstellar matter; topics include star formation, the structure and observable properties of normal and degenerate stars; and the composition, dynamics, and stability of the interstellar medium.",
+ "name" : "Astrophysics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6850",
+ "description" : "This course is intended to give students a state-of-the-art understanding in multicomponent flow phenomena. Applications in the chemical process, petroleum recovery, and fossil/nuclear power industries will be given. Specific areas of coverage include two-phase: fluid mechanics, pressure drop, modeling and analysis, stability analysis, critical flow and dynamic waves, flow regime analysis, and phase separation and distribution phenomena.",
+ "name" : "An Introduction to Multiphase Flow and Heat Transfer II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAR-0010",
+ "description" : "This course is an overview of leadership fundamentals such as setting direction, problem-solving, listening, presenting briefs, providing feedback, and using effective writing skills. Students explore dimensions of leadership values, attributes, skills, and actions in the context of practical, hands-on, and interactive exercises. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 1010 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of Military Science Lab I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2500",
+ "description" : "This course surveys multiple approaches to the Western art music traditions from a contemporary global, multicultural context. The inter-relationships between music, society and cultural forces is emphasized. Students learn to recognize and describe the basic components of music, like texture, tonality, rhythm, dynamics, and melody Lectures are supplemented by listening assignments and in-class demonstrations.",
+ "name" : "Histories of Western Music"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6980",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6730",
+ "description" : "A basic course in tribology that covers both the fundamental and applied aspects of the subject. Content includes viscometry, the Reynolds equation, thrust and journal bearings (including design), thermal effects, dynamic loading and instability of bearings, rolling contact bearings, dry bearings, and theories of wear. This course includes design principles and data and is basic to other courses offered in tribology.",
+ "name" : "Tribology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-6590",
+ "description" : "Mathematical foundation and/or applications of partial differential equations. Possible topics include soliton theory and applications, wavelets and PDEs, scattering theory, hyperbolic conservation laws.",
+ "name" : "Topics in Partial Differential Equations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4070",
+ "description" : "An intermediate hands-on studio course in 3D computer animation, acting, dialog, cinematography, and story building.",
+ "name" : "3D Animation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4840",
+ "description" : "A broad introduction to statistical machine learning. Topics include supervised learning: generative/discriminative learning, parametric/non-parametric learning, neural networks, support vector machines; unsupervised learning: clustering, dimensionality reduction, kernel methods; learning theory: bias/variance tradeoffs, practical advice; online learning and reinforcement learning. Recent applications of machine learning, such as to data mining, robot navigation, speech recognition, image processing, and signal processing.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Machine Learning"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4440",
+ "description" : "Application of linear feedback theory to the design of large-scale, integrated control systems. Derivation of complex mathematical models of physical systems. Synthesis of appropriate control laws to provide stability. Simulation of complex control systems on digital computers.",
+ "name" : "Control Systems Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5360",
+ "description" : "Design analysis and performance characteristics of building environmental systems, emphasizing heating, cooling, ventilation, and lighting systems. In addition, building electrical systems, acoustics, water, waste, and drainage systems are covered in terms of fundamental theory, designs, and calculations. Case studies, field trips, and system design project work are required. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Building Systems and the Environment"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6480",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Compiler Design Theory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6260",
+ "description" : "Fundamentals of transportation network analysis, including graph representations of transportation networks, shortest path search algorithms, static traffic assignment and user equilibrium, and dynamic traffic assignment. Focus on how basic mathematical analysis tools such as linear and nonlinear programming can be used to analyze transportation network problems. The objective of this course is to introduce students to transportation network analysis fundamentals so that they are equipped with basic skills to analyze related problems in this area.",
+ "name" : "Transportation Network Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6050",
+ "description" : "Linear and non-linear applications of operational amplifiers, with an emphasis on circuit design. Non-ideal operational amplifier behavior, including both static and dynamic characteristics. Amplifier stability and frequency compensation techniques. Operational amplifier-based oscillators. Circuit noise.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Electronic Circuits"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ADMN-1100",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Portfolio Development"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4280",
+ "description" : "In 3D Animation, the technical director (or \"TD\") covers roles including character rigging, lighting setup, custom tools, and other parts of the pipeline that involve the technical work needed to support artistic creativity. In this course we will focus on rigging, covering basic and intermediate rigging techniques for characters in Maya including bipeds, facial rigs, motion capture and game engine pipelines and basic scripting in MEL and Python. We will emphasize an animator-friendly approach to rig design, utilizing both the technical capabilities of Maya and good UI and UX principles to produce rigs that are both powerful and easy to use.",
+ "name" : "3D Technical Direction"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6290",
+ "description" : "A continuation of ECSE 6230 . Physical operation and modeling of charge-coupled devices, junction field-effect transistors, bipolar junction transistors and heterojunction devices. Studies of heterojunction devices emphasize the exploitation of particular quantum-mechanical phenomena to achieve unique device behavior.",
+ "name" : "Semiconductor Devices and Models II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5390",
+ "description" : "This course covers topics that are essential to developing an effective professional architectural practice. The course will address professional obligations and ethics, contracts, registration, office organization, and management. The course will emphasize effective communication, negotiating, public speaking, and team development. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Professional Practice 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6940",
+ "description" : "Independent study of selected readings in the fields of biochemistry and biophysics, supervised by a faculty member.",
+ "name" : "Readings in Biochemistry/Biophysics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2230",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Architecture Design 3"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4150",
+ "description" : "A two-term laboratory course on experimental analysis of the operations and processes of chemical engineering. Emphasis is placed on planning of experiments, data evaluation, and report writing.",
+ "name" : "Chemical Engineering Laboratory I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4850",
+ "description" : "A study of the fundamental principles of the ecology of plants and animals. Interrelationships between organisms and their environments are discussed as well as material and energy balances in the ecosystem. Emphasis on the biology of populations (producers, consumers, and decomposers).",
+ "name" : "Principles of Ecology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-2140",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the application of chemistry to problems in the Earth and Environmental Sciences. Topics include thermodynamics and phase equilibria as applied to mineral stability, rock evolution, and water chemistry; stable isotope systematics; radiogenic isotope systematics; trace element geochemistry, organic geochemistry, and geochemical cycles.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Geochemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BCBP"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CIVL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHME"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4900",
+ "description" : "This is an experiential, project-based course where students work on projects for an actual business. Students can work on their own startup idea, on RCOS projects that have commercial potential, or in a consulting role for a local company. Practicum in Management is designed and developed for students from all educational backgrounds who want to learn the fundamentals of business as they apply to satisfying a \"customer's need\". Students will work on a team or individually on projects and communicate to the class frequently to facilitate student learning from one another. We begin with some basic tenets of business and an overview of how to develop and oversee a project plan. The course will help you begin to understand the process by which an idea can be developed into a business or to recognize that there is no business case, quickly. Alternatively, if you are working for a \"customer\" it will give you first-hand experience understanding their needs, articulating a plan and executing the plan to fill the need of your client.",
+ "name" : "Practicum in Management"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4880",
+ "description" : "This 4-credit course will explore global environmental cycles, patterns, and changes. It will discuss elemental cycles of phosphorus, nitrogen, and carbon, and pollutants such as mercury, lead, and CFCs, and how changes in these cycles influence organisms and ecosystems. Also discussed will be large-scale biotic processes and theory about ecosystem dynamics. Major environmental issues such as acid rain, eutrophication, climate change, and land use conversation will also be discussed.",
+ "name" : "Global Environmental Change"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4930",
+ "description" : "Designed for first-semester senior Communication, Media, and Design majors, Pro-Seminar is the capstone course for the development of the Senior Project. Students will create a professional portfolio piece that showcases their work in the diverse disciplines of communication and media",
+ "name" : "Pro-Seminar in Communication, Media, and Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1140",
+ "description" : "This course is an introduction to the philosophy of mind and cognitive science. Students meet in small sections to have class discussions and debates about questions like: What are minds? Are minds physical or non-physical? Do humans have free will? Does reliance on technology turn humans into cyborgs? How close are humans to building an intelligent robot or machine? Do we want this to be a goal? Students will learn how make a philosophical argument, and how to express them in writing or through an oral presentation.",
+ "name" : "Minds and Machines"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6460",
+ "description" : "Stochastic response of lumped parameter and continuous systems to random excitation, wave propagation, power spectral densities, covariance and cross covariance functions, transfer functions, application of procedure to wind and earthquake engineering. Review of current literature.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Structural Dynamics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-2900",
+ "description" : "This seminar course addresses a range of issues involving engineering and public policy, innovation systems and economic development, and the National Academy's Engineering Grand Challenges for the 21st Century.",
+ "name" : "ECSE Enrichment Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6470",
+ "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Muscle & Cardiac Biology. Students will read and critique primary papers, present current research articles, and lead critical discussions of topics listed in the class schedule.",
+ "name" : "Muscle & Cardiac Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-9990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-6222",
+ "description" : "Working directly with a faculty member, students build machine learning systems that can be used as the foundation for decision-making intelligences, where learning systems transition from recommendations to decision capacities. Over the semester, the student proposes the model, develops the model, and trains the system to improve performance.",
+ "name" : "Deep Learning in AI Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6550",
+ "description" : "Visualizing data is a key step in understanding many problems. This course is designed to introduce students to methods of visualizing many different types of data, such as images, three-dimensional surfaces, flow fields, and medical data. Both existing visualization software and program custom visualizations using C++ and OpenGL will be used. Course activities include discussion of recent and classic research papers, weekly homework assignments, in-class critiques of visualization artifacts, and a final project to explore creative uses of these techniques. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Interactive Visualization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-6600",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Ecol, Econ, Values & Policy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-2230",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Programming In Perl"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-1010",
+ "description" : "Introduction to biological systems. Discussion of problems associated with biological organization, scaling, and hierarchy. Major topics covered include evolution, genetics and medicine, and ecology. The course considers the biological components of various environmental, social, and individual problems. Course is taught using both traditional and research-based pedagogical methods.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4900",
+ "description" : "Independent research by teams under the supervision of a faculty member, including literature search, brief proposal of project design, conduct of project to completion, and writing of a formal report in the form of a scientific paper and presentation of a seminar or poster on the project.",
+ "name" : "Team Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-1100",
+ "description" : "Deals with the practice of civil and environmental engineering. Not a highly analytical course, as the course is primarily intended for first year students. Some topics include: history of civil engineering; present practice; typical employers; typical projects; design philosophy; professional topics including organizations, registrations, ethics. Discuss case histories, bring in outside speakers. Students attend CE Capstone presentations.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Civil and Environmental Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4320",
+ "description" : "An exploration of models of decision-making under alternative assumptions, expanding on \"rational\" models of introductory economics. The course will discuss the assumptions of these standard models and their shortcomings. The shortcomings will be addressed through the exploration of limited attention and considerations of fairness, uncertainty, and strategic interaction. Applications in areas such as consumer and household finance, marketing, and public policy will be emphasized throughout.",
+ "name" : "Economic Models of Decision-Making"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-2120",
+ "description" : "Structural and functional relationships of cells are discussed with regard to similarities among all living organisms. Introduction to cellular biochemistry, metabolism and energy flow, cellular and Mendelian genetics, and the chemical basis of heredity.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Cell and Molecular Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6710",
+ "description" : "This course introduces the fundamentals of protein structure and function with an emphasis on chemical concepts as applied to biological problems. It provides an introduction to enzymatic reaction mechanisms and includes interactive hands-on computer-aided visualization exercises. The goal is to equip students with an understanding and appreciation for the diversity and versatility of protein function. This course is intended for graduate or upper-level undergraduate students in the School of Science and Engineering.",
+ "name" : "Chemical Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6460",
+ "description" : "This course focuses on software development techniques in support of large-scale software projects and maintenance. Specific topics include various programming paradigms and techniques, approaches to testing and automation, debugging, refactoring, and inheriting code. Individual and team assignments are required, including programming assignments. Project topics include text processing, building a search engine, and the like.",
+ "name" : "Large-Scale Programming and Testing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-4720",
+ "description" : "Student teams finalize manufacturing system plans from select ENGR 4710 projects, build a manufacturing system to complete several hundred units of a product, optimize the system, manage a project budget, modify manufacturing and packaging plans, and conform to a project schedule as proposed in the associated project Technical Data Packages produced by ENGR 4710 teams. In addition, students will learn new advanced manufacturing topics to increase their breath and depth of manufacturing.",
+ "name" : "Manufacturing Processes and Systems Laboratory II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-6940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Readings in Mathematics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ADMN-6300",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Graduate Final Registration"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4965",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4460",
+ "description" : "Survey of image analysis applications in biology and biotechnology; introduction to biological microscopy and selected biomedical imaging systems; image reconstruction and pre-processing; grayscale and geometric corrections; image segmentation; blob analysis, cell/colony counting, and cell morphometry; vessel and neuron tracing algorithms with applications to neurobiology and medicine; feature extraction, pattern analysis, cluster analysis and classification; image registration algorithms with applications to mosaicing, spatial referencing, motion estimation, and change detection.",
+ "name" : "Biological Imaging Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6490",
+ "description" : "Measurement and characterization of earthquake ground motion and structural response in time and frequency domains. Linear and nonlinear response history and response spectrum analysis of structures subject to earthquake loading. Seismic analysis and design of structural systems using building codes and design specifications.",
+ "name" : "Earthquake Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "EMBA-6963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in EMBA"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6200",
+ "description" : "This course covers reasoning, decision making, and behavioral game theory, which are major domains in human higher order cognition. Each topic begins with normative theories and continues through formal and mathematical models, and the introduction of empirical studies. The course emphasizes integrations of competing approaches within a domain, integration between reasoning and decision making, and integration between individual decision making and game-theoretic interactions. Each year, the course has a theme. The theme for this year is quantum cognition, which applies quantum theory in cognitive modeling. This course is designed as self-contained, and has no prerequisites. A middle term presentation and a final term paper are required for each student. Graduate students only.",
+ "name" : "Cognition"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-6961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ASTR"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4550",
+ "description" : "This is an undergraduate/graduate course on the mechanics of biopolymers, cell cytoskeleton, cell membrane, the whole cell, and multicellular structures in the context of the modulation of cell function by mechanical stresses. Topics include state-of-the-art experimental techniques in cell biomechanics, and cutting-edge research in stem cell mechanobiology, cell motility, collective cell behavior, neurite growth, osteocyte sensing, cardiovascular diseases, and immunology.",
+ "name" : "Cell Biomechanics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ENVE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6260",
+ "description" : "Special problems of semiconductor devices operating at high voltage and high current levels. Devices include p-i-n and Schottky diodes, bipolar junction transistors, power MOSFETs and thyristors. Topics include space charge limited current flow, micro plasmas, avalanche breakdown, junction termination, high-level injection, emitter crowding, double injection, second breakdown, triggering mechanisms, plasma propagation, switching and recovery characteristics. Introduction to the Insulated-Gate Bipolar Transistor.",
+ "name" : "Semiconductor Power Devices"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-4410",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Weld Process & Metallurg"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4400",
+ "description" : "This course is a sociological and anthropological exploration of health and illness. By the end of the course, students will have an overall picture of health fields, problems faced by patients and caregivers, medicine and health in non-Western societies, and the social shaping of disease and therapeutic choices.",
+ "name" : "Medicine, Culture, and Society"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-2310",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Microbiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6470",
+ "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Muscle & Cardiac Biology. Students will read and critique primary papers, present current research articles, and lead critical discussions of topics listed in the class schedule.",
+ "name" : "Muscle & Cardiac Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6300",
+ "description" : "This course explores the fundamental principles that define the relationship between chemical structure and the biological action of drug molecules. A major focus of the course is the application of these chemical principles to molecular-targeted drug discovery, molecular mechanisms of pharmacological activity, and the biopharmaceutical properties of drugs. The relationships between drug structure, therapeutic properties, and physicochemical characteristics will be discussed. Structure activity relationships (SAR), structure-property relationships (SPR) and ADME (absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion) will be explored and presented through case studies. The roles of computational chemistry, molecular modeling, and biophysical methods in the understanding of the relationship between structure and biological activity will also be studied. Although an emphasis will be placed on orally bioavailable small molecules, alternative drug modalities will also be discussed.",
+ "name" : "Medicinal Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-4942",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Psychology And Law"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4330",
+ "description" : "This course will examine a wide range of financial markets and institutions and the micro-and macroeconomic forces that relate to them. Topics include the use of derivative securities such as future, options, and swap agreements, and their roles in distributing financial risk. The course will be driven by textbook readings, supplemented by current news stories, articles from the financial press, and research articles.",
+ "name" : "Economics of Financial Institutions and Markets"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4220",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to create an applied learning environment to introduce students to large scale datasets in the environmental field and learn advanced techniques for analyzing them. Students will learn multivariate data exploration techniques, evaluate the quality of large datasets, and analyze the data using machine learning techniques. Specifically students will propose, develop, and finalize projects where they will apply machine learning approaches to datasets to understand complex environmental biology processes. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature relevant to their projects.",
+ "name" : "Machine Learning for Environmental Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-4270",
+ "description" : "This project-based course introduces students to the tools and concepts used to create levels for games and simulations. It explores how various fields and theories (architecture, psychogeography, and theory of the D\u00e9rive, player psychology), influence the level design and alter or enhance the ludic concepts (flow and critical path, risks-rewards, tutoring, balance of difficulty, and storytelling). Level analysis will help students to recall these concepts. Students will demonstrate their understanding by designing three \"paper\" maps (stealth, puzzle adventure, 3rd person) and implementing two developed levels (2D and 3D).",
+ "name" : "Level Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6480",
+ "description" : "Introduction of multivariate statistical methods to model and analyze recorded data from physiological systems in biomedical engineering. Statistical approaches related to applied multivariate statistics, classification, and regression. Associated linear methods include principal component analysis, Fisher discriminant analysis, partial least squares, canonical correlation analysis and their nonlinear counterparts. Descriptive tools include scatter diagrams, Hotelling's T2 statistics and contribution plots. The course has a strong emphasis on biomedical applications.",
+ "name" : "Biomedical Data Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4900",
+ "description" : "Basic concepts in static and dynamic aeroelasticity. Structural vibrations, free and forced motion of discrete and continuous structures, introduction to modal analysis, and use of materials for dynamics tailoring. Aeroelastic behavior of complex structures, dynamic aeroelasticity. The phenomena of divergence, control surface effectiveness, and flutter and the use of composite materials for aeroelastic tailoring. The role of numerical methods will be emphasized.",
+ "name" : "Aeroelasticity and Structural Vibrations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-2050",
+ "description" : "A first course in engineering design which emphasizes creativity, teamwork, communication, and work across engineering disciplines. Students are introduced to the design process through a semester-long project which provides a design-build-test experience. Oral and written communication are important elements of the course. The course meets with ENGR 1010 .",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Engineering Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAR-1010",
+ "description" : "The course introduces students to fundamental components of service as an officer in the United States Army. These initial lessons are the building blocks of progressive lessons in values, fitness, leadership, and officership. Students will learn how the personal development of life skills such as cultural understanding, goal setting, time management, mental/physical resiliency, and stress management relate to leadership, officership, and the Army profession. The focus is on developing basic knowledge and comprehension of Army leadership attributes and core leader competencies while gaining an understanding of the ROTC program, its purpose in the Army, and its advantages for the student.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of Military Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4260",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to enable students to understand how an organism functions at the cellular and molecular level, and further, how this functioning is regulated so that cells can adapt to changes in their environment. Students will learn the fundamental components of the cell (from protein to organelle), their characteristics, and how these components function in both normal and diseased cells. Students will also learn biochemical, structural, and mechanical aspects of cell functioning and regulation in normal and diseased cells. In addition, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature. By reading current literature, students will gain knowledge of the practice and presentation of science, as well as learn about new techniques and findings.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Cell Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-4710",
+ "description" : "Manufacturing theory, laboratory experimentation, and manufacturing systems design and development comprised of selected modern manufacturing technologies. Technologies include robotics and automation, injection molding, computer numerically controlled (CNC) machining, metal forming, inspection, rapid prototyping, and advanced manufacturing topics. Student teams apply lessons to develop a proposal to produce a product requiring multiple coordinated manufacturing processes. Students prepare technical documentation for communicating key engineering and management aspects of the developed manufacturing system to a separate fabrication group.",
+ "name" : "Manufacturing Processes and Systems Laboratory I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2350",
+ "description" : "An instrumental class that will be coached and rehearsed and will perform regularly. The larger ensemble will break up into smaller ensembles such as string quartets, woodwind quintets, trios, etc., depending on the make-up of the group, as well as into more unusual combinations that might be required to prepare 20th century repertoire. For intermediate and advanced players, entrance into the course is by authorization form/permission of instructor.",
+ "name" : "Chamber Music Ensemble"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "LANG-2940",
+ "description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
+ "name" : "Language Studies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-2100",
+ "description" : "The first course in Materials Science and Engineering. Structures of metals, ceramics, and polymers and experimental techniques for their determination are discussed. Laboratory experience is included.",
+ "name" : "Structure of Engineering Materials"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6150",
+ "description" : "Review of electromagnetic theory required to undertake analysis and design of power equipment. Experimental, analog, and digital field estimation techniques. Case studies in electric and magnetic fields such as cable and bushing design, problems of gas bus systems, electrostatic precipitation, magnetic flux penetration, eddy currents, losses, shielding, generation of torque.",
+ "name" : "Electric and Magnetic Fields in Electric Power Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-2520",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Introduction To Game Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4240",
+ "description" : "Eco Chic: Living Art is an upper level production and theory class about art, biology, and the study of life covering topics such as environmentalism, land art, food art, sustainable practices with art, body art, bio-art. Part lecture, part hands-on workshop, Eco Chic encourages students to redefine and experimentally express their relationships with the varied aspects of everyday living systems and manipulating life.",
+ "name" : "Eco Chic: Living Art"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6900",
+ "description" : "Weekly discussion of selected topics in biology by graduate students and staff.",
+ "name" : "Seminar in Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-4100",
+ "description" : "The theory underlying vector spaces, algebra of subspaces, bases; linear transformations, dual spaces; eigenvectors, eigenvalues, minimal polynomials, canonical forms of linear transformations; inner products, adjoints, orthogonal projections, and complements.",
+ "name" : "Linear Algebra"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6770",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "User-experience Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-4110",
+ "description" : "Fundamentals of aqueous chemistry as applied to the evolution of natural waters. The course covers principles of chemical equilibrium, activity models for solutes, pH as a master variable, concentration and Eh-pH diagrams, mineral solubility, aqueous complexes, ion exchange, and stable isotopes. The carbonate system, weathering reactions, and acid rain are examined in detail. Emphasis is on the chemical reactions that control surface and groundwater evolution in natural and engineered (treatment process) settings. Students learn theory, computation methods, and the use of computer programs for calculation of speciation and mass balance.",
+ "name" : "Aqueous Geochemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4270",
+ "description" : "Fundamental physiological processes and their mechanism of action in human and higher mammalian organisms. Emphasis on the control and interaction of physiological systems. Introduction to the muscle, nervous, circulatory, renal, respiratory, digestive, reproductive, and hormonal systems. Limited to biology, biochemistry and biophysics, bioinformatics and molecular biology majors, and biology accelerated medical students.",
+ "name" : "Human Physiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6450",
+ "description" : "Analysis of elastic and inelastic single and multiple degree-of-freedom structural systems under time-dependent loads including harmonic, impulse, earthquake, and other general dynamic loads. Development of equations of motion. Analytical and numerical evaluation of free and forced vibration response. Identification of dynamic system properties. Modal analysis. Vibration isolation and force transmissibility. Dynamic measurement sensors. Shock loading spectrum. Frequency-domain analysis.",
+ "name" : "Structural Dynamics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6700",
+ "description" : "This discussion course reviews the principles of ethical behavior and responsible conduct of research and then discusses specific areas of biotechnology research, medical research, and societal issues in the context of these principles. Representative topics include genetic engineering, stem cell research, assisted reproduction, human subjects, animal research, and nanotechnology. Class performance is dependent on active participation and discussion, student presentations, and the submission of analytical essays.",
+ "name" : "Ethical Issues in Biotechnology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6130",
+ "description" : "Survey of modern techniques in and associated with mass spectrometry, including historical perspectives, strengths/weaknesses, detection/quantification of analytes, ionization source/mass analyzer design, and construction of associated technologies including vacuum systems, ion detection, and ion optics. Ion formation processes will also be discussed. Students cannot get credit for both CHEM 4130 and CHEM 6130.",
+ "name" : "Mass Spectrometry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6220",
+ "description" : "State-of-the-art in contemporary algorithm design, randomized algorithms are algorithms that use randomness as part of their functioning. They are typically simple, often easy to analyze, and work well in practice. They have numerous applications in many fields of computer science and mathematics. Randomized algorithms represent an active and vibrant research area with many exciting new results contributed every year. Students cannot receive credit for both CSCI 4030 and CSCI 6220.",
+ "name" : "Randomized Algorithms"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4560",
+ "description" : "We will study theoretical and practical solutions to computational geometry problems found in computer graphics, visualization, vision, robotics, engineering, manufacturing, and geographic information systems. Topics include convex hulls, half-planes, Voronoi diagrams, Delaunay triangulations, binary space partitions, motion planning, visibility, and meshes. Course activities include programming assignments, written homework with proofs of computational complexity, and a term project with presentation.",
+ "name" : "Computational Geometry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4310",
+ "description" : "This course introduces Linux kernel programming basics and starts by examining how Berkeley sockets bridge the user-kernel gap. The remainder of the course is spent looking into transport layer (e.g., TCP) and network layer (e.g., IP) implementations. Students do both individual and group programming projects. In addition to coding, there are detailed write-ups and peer reviews in this course. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Networking in the Linux Kernel"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-9990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-2941",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Fab. Of Nanocryst Cobalt"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-2940",
+ "description" : "With an individual faculty member on an agreed-upon topic.",
+ "name" : "Readings in Science and Technology Studies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2560",
+ "description" : "What makes play musical and music playful? How does game sound and music contribute to gameworld creation, gameplay, and virtual performance? Ludomusicology\u2014the relation of music to play\u2014addresses these questions and challenges us to take play seriously. This course considers the diverse relationships among music, play, media, and performance, including game sound, music-stylistic features of game consoles and systems, children's games, remixing and sampling, the role musical games play in cultural identity, and more.",
+ "name" : "Game Sound and Musical Play"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-4968",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in GSAS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7850",
+ "description" : "The course focuses primarily on empirical issues in academic research. Students will learn to use theoretical and empirical skills acquired in previous courses and seminars in developing research in general, and academic papers in particular, in their respective fields.",
+ "name" : "Management Research Workshop"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4400",
+ "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. Xinformatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines (e.g. X=astronomy, geology). Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing, and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments. Students cannot obtain credit for more than one of ERTH 4400 / ITWS 4400 / CSCI 4400 .",
+ "name" : "Xinformatics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6290",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Biomech Of Hard Tissues"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4470",
+ "description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Muscle & Cardiac Biology. Students will read and critique primary papers, present current research articles, and lead critical discussions of topics listed in the class schedule.",
+ "name" : "Muscle & Cardiac Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6040",
+ "description" : "Covers advanced estimation and inference techniques for data analysis and policy evaluation. Topics will vary from year to year to introduce advanced statistical methods used in recent literature. Topics may include visualization techniques to summarize and display high dimensional data, selected topics in discrete choice models, spatial analysis, and analysis of panel data. Particularly, methods for panel data will be emphasized. This includes fixed, random, mixed, and multi-level effects models to control for or account for variation from individual characteristics. Dynamic panel data models consider lagged dependent variables as regressors.....",
+ "name" : "Advanced Data Analytics and Policy Evaluation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6940",
+ "description" : "Readings in the current literature designed to supplement the background of the student and provide greater depth in the area of his or her specialty.",
+ "name" : "Readings in Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-4820",
+ "description" : "Derivation, analysis, and use of computational procedures for solving differential equations. Topics covered include ordinary differential equations (both initial value and boundary value problems) and partial differential equations. Runge-Kutta and multistep methods for initial value problems. Finite difference methods for partial differential equations including techniques for heat conduction, wave propagation, and potential problems. Basic convergence and stability theory.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Numerical Methods for Differential Equations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6966",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-2940",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Gsas Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4400",
+ "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. Xinformatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines, e.g. X=astro, geo. Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing, and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments.",
+ "name" : "X-informatics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6420",
+ "description" : "The application of theoretical and fundamental principles and pilot plant data to the design and operation of biochemical separation processes and advanced waste treatment systems. Topics covered include characterization and dispersion, coagulation and flocculation, sedimentation, filtration, adsorption, ion exchange, membrane processes, aeration and gas transfer, centrifugation, and related subjects.",
+ "name" : "Separation and Recovery Processes"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4620",
+ "description" : "Nucleotide biosynthesis; structure, replication, transcription, and translation of nucleic acids; reassociation of nucleic acids; molecular cloning, sequencing, and endonuclease mapping of DNA; control of gene expression in bacteria and higher organisms.",
+ "name" : "Molecular Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2350",
+ "description" : "Construction Systems centers on the development of a technical knowledge of, sensibility to, and intuition for the process by which an architectural design is realized in built form. The interdependence among building materials, acoustic qualities, enclosure systems, interior, finish, and other systems is investigated, with an emphasis on the broader architectural design endeavor. Drawing as a means of understanding forms the basis for a semester-long project to be done in small groups. Case studies will center on concepts and systems that have not yet found their way into mainstream practice. The course approach will involve in-class presentations, project work, field trips, and case studies. WebCT will be used to expand the student's access to course materials and allow for a measure of distance learning. Sustainability: The notion that design intentions can be nullified through incorrect construction is stressed. The importance of proper detailing, construction, and maintenance to accomplish lasting and efficient enclosures is highlighted. Skills to diagnose and treat incorrect construction are developed.",
+ "name" : "Construction Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-6231",
+ "description" : "Building on the experience with DMAIC, students learn to identify the need for a new process, quantify its value and create it so that the quality of the results meet a predefined quality standard. To do so, the Define, Measure, Analyze, Design, Optimize, and Verify (DMADOV) is used. The first three phases of DMAIC lay the foundation, but new tools and skills are learned in the context of new process creation. These include: developing an elevator speech, data collection and statistical methods for design of experiments (DOE), root cause analysis, and developing key performance indicators (KPIs) and dashboards.",
+ "name" : "Lean Six Sigma II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5200",
+ "description" : "This studio focuses on the relationship between building and landscape in terms of conceptual, pragmatic, ideological, aesthetic, and functional issues. As such, it endeavors to examine critically the disciplinary boundary between building and landscape. It also critically assesses the connections and inherent complexities between an institutional situation, workplace activity, and residential inhabitation in order to explore questions of publicness and privacy. This studio also addresses the tectonic dimensions of construction and structure in architectural design.",
+ "name" : "Graduate Architecture Design 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-4780",
+ "description" : "The biophysical mechanism of protein folding and the role of misfolding in human diseases is explored. The course will introduce principles of protein structure, protein folding in the cell, and thermodynamic and kinetic methods for studying protein folding in vitro. The course will also involve a literature-based discussion of human diseases related to protein folding defects, including Alzheimer's and other amyloid diseases, cystic fibrosis, and Prion-related syndromes.",
+ "name" : "Protein Folding"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-6020",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Concepts In Sts"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6940",
+ "description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
+ "name" : "Studies in Biomedical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1720",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Music And Nature"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6430",
+ "description" : "Principles and applications of current techniques for the chemical, structural, and morphological characterization of engineering materials, with an emphasis on materials used in the microelectronics industry. Techniques studied include various electron and ion spectroscopies, electron microscopies, and diffraction techniques.",
+ "name" : "Materials Characterization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6980",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4860",
+ "description" : "Phylogeny and the patterns of evolution in the fossil record, geography of evolution, biodiversity, origin of genetic variation, genetic drift, natural selection and adaptation, genetic theory of natural selection, evolution of phenotypic traits, conflict and cooperation, speciation, fitness, coevolution, genomic evolution, evolution and development, macroevolution, evolutionary science and society. Lectures, student presentations, and peer learning.",
+ "name" : "Evolution"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-2210",
+ "description" : "This course allows students to develop a critical understanding of the relationships between design, culture, and society. \"Design\" is defined broadly, touching on product/industrial design, urban design, and so-called alternative design approaches such as ecological and feminist design. The focus is on the role of design in contemporary culture with the goal of training students' emerging appreciation of design as cultural practice on their professional work as engineers, architects, or business managers. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Design, Culture, and Society"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6680",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Appl. & Environ. Microbiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-4310",
+ "description" : "Physical processes governing occurrence and distribution of precipitation, infiltration, evaporation, and surface water runoff. Statistical hydrology, unit hydrograph theory, and watershed modeling. Floodplain hydrology and open channel hydraulics. Urban hydrology, hydraulics and design of storm sewers, and design of detention structures for flood control. Design project using the Army Corps of Engineers Hydraulic Engineering Center HEC-1 flood hydrograph package.",
+ "name" : "Applied Hydrology and Hydraulics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6350",
+ "description" : "This course will provide an exploration of the essential aspects of virology. Introductory examination of viral structure, entry, and replication for each of the major classes of viruses serve as a foundation. Case studies will examine virus host interactions and strategies for prevention and intervention of viral infection. Additional topics include: emerging viruses, viral detection, viral extinction, beneficial use of viruses, modified viruses as research tools.",
+ "name" : "Virology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-1700",
+ "description" : "This seminar-based course introduces students to the roles the different engineering disciplines play in addressing modern engineering challenges. This course conveys that design is a principal aspect of engineering, often involving multiple disciplines simultaneously and that the associated engineering solutions often have ethical, cultural, social, economic, and environmental consequences. As such these issues must be considered in determining the appropriateness of an engineering solution.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Better World Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-2510",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Quantum Physics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4170",
+ "description" : "The principles of dynamics as applied to the analysis of the accelerations and dynamic forces in machines and machine components such as linkages, cams, and gears. The effect these dynamic forces have on the dynamic balance and operation of the machines and the attending stresses in the individual components of the machines.",
+ "name" : "Machine Dynamics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-6440",
+ "description" : "Introduction into thin film deposition technologies that are essential in industry. Practical technical aspects and fundamental growth processes are discussed. The course covers: evaporation techniques, sputter deposition, plasma and ion-beam processing, chemical vapor deposition, molecular beam epitaxy, surface science, nucleation and growth, epitaxy, texture evolution, nanostructure formation, stress.",
+ "name" : "Thin Films"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4440",
+ "description" : "Principles of displacement-based structural analysis; development of element and structure stiffness matrices; direct stiffness method for matrix structural analysis of trusses, beams, and frames; computer analysis of structures; introduction to finite element method.",
+ "name" : "Matrix Structural Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6100",
+ "description" : "A detailed survey of important topics in the neurosciences. Some of the topics to be covered in this class are: basic mechanisms of neural signaling (neurophysiology, synaptic transmission, and molecular signaling; understanding of sensation/movement and in particular how it relates to neuroanatomy; neurodevelopment and how the mature brain can change (plasticity); and complex brain functions and neurological disease. Students prepare analyses and make a presentation of a paper in the original literature. Since there is overlap associated with the 4100 course, both courses may not be taken for credit.",
+ "name" : "From Neuron to Behavior"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-2160",
+ "description" : "This course focuses on the co-evolution of life with Earth's systems and targets students in Earth science, biology, chemistry, and physics. Topics include the emergence and early evolution of life on Earth, the environmental limits of life, microbial and metabolic evolution; the role of life in moderating global elemental cycles; earliest records of life; evolution of photosynthesis and the Great Oxidation Event; fossilization and evolution of complex life; mass radiations, mass extinctions, and global changes.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Geobiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6470",
+ "description" : "A survey of the fundamental issues necessary for the design, analysis, control, and implementation of robotic systems. The mathematical description of robot manipulators in terms of kinematics and dynamics. Hardware components of a typical robot arm. Path following, control, and sensing. Examples of several currently available manipulators.",
+ "name" : "Robotics I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6680",
+ "description" : "Examines the implementation of finite element methods. Consideration is first given to the techniques used in classic finite element programs. Attention then focuses on development of a general geometry-based code which effectively supports higher order adaptive technique. Technical areas covered include: effective construction of element matrices for p-version finite elements, ordering of unknowns, automatic mesh generation, adaptive mesh improvement, program and database structures. Implementation of automated adaptive techniques on parallel computers is also covered.",
+ "name" : "Finite Element Programming"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6700",
+ "description" : "Photography is the first modern visual technology that is reproducible yet still has an aura of \"objectivity,\" and its study addresses issues that are central to all forms of contemporary image-making, from art and architecture to politics, social media, and game design. Using the rhetorical triad of producer, photographer, and audience, the course introduces students across HASS to various methodologies of visual analysis through semiotics, phenomenology, neuropsychology, and psychodynamics of affect.",
+ "name" : "Rhetoric of the Photograph"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2630",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Grad Arch Design 3"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2180",
+ "description" : "Deep Listening is a practice developed by pioneering composer and humanitarian Pauline Oliveros to enhance and expand listening abilities and to encourage creativity. Students will develop a heightened awareness to sound and their sonic environment through experiential exercises, creative projects, collaborations, readings, lectures, and discussion. Musicians and non-musicians of all abilities and backgrounds are welcome!",
+ "name" : "Deep Listening"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4020",
+ "description" : "The seminar will be interdisciplinary with students from both architecture and civil engineering departments. The content of the lectures bears direct relation to practical experience and is considered to be supplementary to the other courses in the respective engineering and architecture schools. Specific types of structures will be examined with the help of suitable existing project examples clarifying and critically analyzing the basic engineering principles behind them. Students will be exposed to the collaborative methods inherent within the architect/engineer relationship.",
+ "name" : "Bedford Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-2941",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Out Of Classroom Exp In Bcbp"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6590",
+ "description" : "This course serves as an in-depth overview to medical imaging modalities. First, individual modalities are introduced, including CT, MRI, PET, SPECT, and US. Then, multimodality systems are described. A balance is made among physical, mathematical, algorithmic, and architectural contents. Contemporary research and insights to improve the current systems are introduced throughout the course to inspire students and provide an understanding of newer tools under development.",
+ "name" : "Medical Imaging"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "DSES-6980",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Masters Project"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-9990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-2962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4780",
+ "description" : "This course introduces the chemical and physical principles of energy transformation in nature. It emphasizes the structure and function of proteins with a special focus on highly-efficient energy conversion in mitochondrial and photosynthetic systems. The course provides the basic physical and chemical concepts that are required for understanding energy conversion and offers design principles that can be applied to the improvement of man-made catalytic and other devices for energy conversion and storage. It is intended for graduate or upper-level undergraduate students in the School of Science and Engineering. There are no prerequisites for this course. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 6780 .",
+ "name" : "Bioenergetics: The Art of Energy Conversion in Nature"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6940",
+ "description" : "Permission of instructor.",
+ "name" : "Individual Projects in Mechanical Engineering, Aeronautical Engineering, Nuclear Engineering, or Engineering Physics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5150",
+ "description" : "This is an intermediate course to structures that presents the load transfers of gravity and lateral forces in building systems. The course demonstrates the principles of analyses and design of steel and reinforced concrete elements. The course also outlines the concepts of compression and/or tension structures. Structural principles are reinforced by building physical models.",
+ "name" : "Structures 2"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4770",
+ "description" : "Digital design methodologies including timing chain and counter based \"hardwired\" microprogram design, modules, and modular design. The course bridges LSI and MSI design treating microprocessors, and I/O interfacing. Bus protocol standards, interrupts, direct memory access, priority arbitration, asynchronous timing, and overlap or double buffering. Specific examples of design include controllers for disks, cassettes, video systems, and stepping motors. Course includes a laboratory with access to FPGAs and microprocessors.",
+ "name" : "Computer Hardware Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6250",
+ "description" : "\ufeff \ufeffThe analysis and planning of transportation systems. Study of the basic interaction between transportation supply and demand. Role of transportation systems analysis in social, environmental, and policy making. Trip generation. Trip distribution. Mode split. Traffic assignment. Computer applications. Students cannot obtain credit for this course and CIVL 4640 .",
+ "name" : "Transportation Systems Planning"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6320",
+ "description" : "Advanced analysis and design of complex metal structures. Flexible, semi-rigid, and rigid connections. Plate girders, torsional design. Effects of semi-rigid connections on structural stability.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Steel Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4750",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Sustainable Building Design Metrics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4370",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Environmntal Politics & Policy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4240",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Writing For Games I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6130",
+ "description" : "This course asks what is really new about New Media, and looks at creative practices, theoretical discourses, and social contexts to find answers. The course concentrates on cutting edge cultural expression using information and communication technologies. The objective is to equip students with multiple perspectives \u2014 aesthetic, communications, historical \u2014 with which to analyze, critique, and develop original concepts about the uses of new media in art and culture.",
+ "name" : "New Media Theory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4430",
+ "description" : "Dynamic models of national and international economic growth are introduced and analyzed. Technological innovation is central to growth, and models consider the endogenous determinants of technological innovation and diffusion. National institutions that affect growth, such as law, education, and infrastructure, are considered. Variation in intellectual property rights across countries are examined, together with their effects on economic growth and development. Theories of growth are compared to empirical fact.",
+ "name" : "Economics of Growth & Innovation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAF-1020",
+ "description" : "AS 100, Leadership Laboratory ( USAF 0010 ), is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
+ "name" : "Air and Space Studies 100B (Heritage and Values of the United States Air Force)"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4440",
+ "description" : "Software system design methodology emphasizing use of object oriented modeling of application domains and of software systems and emphasizing the roles of written and oral communication in software engineering. Project management and software testing. Individual and team projects include specification, software architecture, user interfaces, and documentation of the phases of a project. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Software Design and Documentation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6610",
+ "description" : "This is a design-based studio that focuses on the integration of structural, technical, detail, zoning, and code-related issues with respect to the design of a moderate to large-scale building of civic importance. Such building types are (but not limited to) libraries, theaters, city halls, judicial buildings, educational buildings, etc. An important focus of the design project will be the relationship of the building to its urban context. An essential part of the design will involve programming of the building as well as responding to numerous learning outcomes defined by the NAAB (the accrediting agency for professional architecture programs) for a comprehensive design project. This course is required of all architecture students in the M.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Graduate Architecture Design 3"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6410",
+ "description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of biological sequence analysis, including algorithms for pairwise sequence alignment, multiple sequence alignment, phylogenetic analysis, and database searching. Concepts covered include homology, sequence similarity, parsimony, mechanisms and metrics of molecular evolution, biological data bases, database search algorithms (BLAST), and statistical significance. Selected topics include hidden Markov models, bootstrap analysis, and gene finding. Modern sequence analysis software will be provided. Laptop computers are required. Knowledge of a programming language is strongly suggested. Meets jointly with BIOL 4540 ; both cannot be taken for credit.",
+ "name" : "Sequence Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-2800",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Intro To Sports Psychology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHIL-1110",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the major areas of philosophy (ethics, theory of knowledge, philosophy of religion, etc.) and to some of the main problems treated within these fields. Selections from contemporary as well as classical authors are studied and discussed. Students are encouraged to develop a disciplined approach to intellectual problems. Emphasis varies with the instructor.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Philosophy"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ASTR"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4610",
+ "description" : "DIS Studio C focuses on the co-production of products, organizations, and problem-solving strategies. Students will explore how to facilitate communication across multiple disciplinary and audience modalities, including stakeholders, designers, and users. Projects and course discussions will train students to translate social scientific and engineering problem-solving judgments and to evaluate how complex problems come to be defined. This course is required for DIS students who are dual-majoring with the School of Engineering.",
+ "name" : "Design and Innovation Studio C"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ASTR-4240",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the physics of gravitation and spacetime. Special relativity, tensor calculus, and relativistic electrodynamics. General relativity with selected applications of Einstein's field equations (gravitational time dilation; gravitational lensing; frame dragging; gravitational radiation). The physics of nonrotating and rotating black holes. Relativistic models for the large-scale structure of the Universe. Observational constraints on the cosmological parameters. Big Bang nucleosynthesis, the Cosmic Background Radiation. A culminating experience project is required. (Meets with PHYS 4240.)",
+ "name" : "Gravitation and Cosmology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6510",
+ "description" : "An intensive study of the fundamentals of soil mechanics at the graduate level. Transmission of stresses between particles. Soils in which the pore water is either stationary or flowing under steady conditions. Soils in which pore pressures are influenced by applied loads, and hence the pore water is flowing under transient conditions.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Geotechnical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6510",
+ "description" : "An intensive course designed to provide instruction and stimulate discussion on important topics relevant to biological research. It is loosely divided into three sections: 1) overview of major areas of faculty research; 2) professional development topics such as research ethics and responsible conduct of research, scientific communication, career options, and software tools for science (i.e. structural biology toolkits, bioinformatics tools, graphics packages, etc.); and 3) scientific writing. This course is required of and limited to first year students in the Biology and Biochemistry/Biophysics Ph.D. programs.",
+ "name" : "Biology Core Course I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6780",
+ "description" : "This course introduces students to narrative theory and interactive narratives in a variety of genres such as oral story-telling, literature, poetry, film, artists' books, historical narrative, hypertext fiction, Net Art, social media narratives, and computer games. Students will have the opportunity to design and develop an original interactive narrative.",
+ "name" : "Interactive Narrative"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "EPOW-6940",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Design Of Ac Machines"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4420",
+ "description" : "An in-depth review of the underlying science, engineering, medicine, and contemporary research related to the nation's highest priorities for musculoskeletal diseases and care. Musculoskeletal anatomy, pathophysiology, epidemiology, and contemporary treatments are covered. Special topics will be presented relating state-of-the-art biomedical research to clinical practice. The clinical perspective of each topic will be presented by practicing clinicians with case studies. Topics conclude with live webcasts or recorded surgery from Albany Medical Center or the Capital Region Bone and Joint Center. Students cannot get credit for both BMED 4420 and BMED 6420 .",
+ "name" : "Clinical Orthopaedics and Contemporary Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-4100",
+ "description" : "Investigates business-related considerations in successfully commercializing new technology in a new venture or within an existing enterprise: market and customer analysis, beating the competition, planning and managing for profitability, high-tech marketing and sales, and business partnerships and acquisitions. Not a general management course; focuses explicitly on what is relevant for engineers and scientists working in a commercial environment. For junior/senior undergraduate or graduate students.",
+ "name" : "Business Issues for Engineers and Scientists"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PSYC"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4880",
+ "description" : "In this course, design processes in architectural acoustics will be studied from a psychoacoustical perspective. Different concepts to create physical and virtual acoustic spaces will be discussed based on perceptual design goals. Topics include ecological psychoacoustics, sound quality, auditory virtual environments, and auditory computational modeling.",
+ "name" : "Aural Architecture"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6660",
+ "description" : "This graduate/advanced undergraduate hybrid course examines the structural and physiologic properties of muscle, as well as its force production and overall biomechanical function. Muscle structure and function will be explored at the protein, single fiber, and whole tissue levels. Discussions will focus primarily on skeletal muscle, and topics will include muscle morphology, cross-bridge theory, molecular motor and actomyosin interaction, Hill-type and Huxley-type models, electromyography, fatigue, muscle inhibition, history-dependent phenomena, in vitro and in vivo muscle function, and the response to injury. Each topic will be introduced and developed utilizing seminal articles in the literature as well as excerpts from texts, and further discussion on current problems and state-of-the-art experimental techniques will draw on the current scientific literature.",
+ "name" : "Muscle Mechanics and Modeling"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "EPOW-6810",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Power Engr Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-6840",
+ "description" : "Numerical methods and analysis for linear and nonlinear PDEs with applications from heat conduction, wave propagation, solid and fluid mechanics, and other areas. Basic concepts of stability and convergence (such as Lax equivalence theorem, CFL condition, GKS stability theory, energy methods). Methods for parabolic problems (finite differences, method of lines, ADI, operator splitting), methods for hyperbolic problems (vector systems and characteristics, dissipation and dispersion, shock capturing and tracking schemes), methods for elliptic problems (finite difference and finite volume methods).",
+ "name" : "Numerical Solution of Partial Differential Equations"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1986",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Tech & Soc Interact In Us Soci"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ECON"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2540",
+ "description" : "This course will survey the history and theory of the diverse artistic practices of the twentieth century in relation to the development of the mass media and new technologies. Topics will include the Bauhaus, Surrealism, Pop Art, and Postmodernism and will span a spectrum of media from the more traditional, such as painting and photography, to electronic and new media, such as video and digital arts.",
+ "name" : "The Multimedia Century"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6880",
+ "description" : "This 4-credit course will explore global environmental cycles, patterns, and changes. It will cover elemental cycles of phosphorus, nitrogen, and carbon, and pollutants such as mercury, lead, and CFCs, and how changes in these cycles influence organisms and ecosystems. Also discussed will be large-scale biotic processes and theory about ecosystem dynamics. Major environmental issues such as acid rain, eutrophication, climate change, and land use conversation will also be discussed.",
+ "name" : "Global Environmental Change"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-2060",
+ "description" : "This course provides a foundational treatment of water resources engineering through theory, analysis and design. Hydrologic cycle, water resources sustainability, and water resources planning. Pipe flow and pipe networks, with application to distribution systems. Hydraulics of open-channel flow and control structures such as culverts, gates, weirs, spillways and stilling basins. Reservoir routing and design of storage. Contemporary issues including green infrastructure, storm surge and climate change. Experimental laboratory sessions reinforce lectures and provide hands\u2010on learning opportunities.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Water Resources Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2468",
+ "description" : "This course will examine and teach methods for the representation and visual communication of measured data within the built environment with a strong focus on environmental datasets. Students will be introduced to digital modeling, environmental plug-ins and graphic design softwares that effectively translate and visualize information from building environmental surroundings, site, and building performance. Students will demonstrate the capacity to employ methods for data visualization as they pertain to a range of highly contextual case studies and spaces mapping daylight, temperature, humidity, air quality and other sensory information. Skills taught will enable students to produce two-dimensional and three-dimensional synthetic data visualizations in digital modeling environments. This course is offered in the fall semester and is required of all first-year undergraduates in the Building Sciences program. B.Arch and M.Arch students can register for this course. Students from other majors will need permission of the instructor. This is a data-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Digital Constructs for Building Sciences"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6360",
+ "description" : "The goal of this course is to develop a general familiarity with the structural design of wood elements and structures. This includes exposure to the historical development of design specifications as well as specific design procedures unique to this material.",
+ "name" : "Timber Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "EMBA-6500",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Marketing For Mgmt"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-1060",
+ "description" : "A seminar based course providing an overview of the aerospace engineering field. Emerging and existing aerospace engineering technologies found in aircraft, rotorcraft, rockets, and spacecraft, and the engineering sciences relevant to aerospace engineering are introduced. This course is graded Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of Flight"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IENV-4700",
+ "description" : "A course that focuses on the Hudson River Basin as an environmental microcosm and a vehicle through which to illustrate the natural science of river systems with particular attention to human influences. This interdisciplinary environmental science course is for environmentally oriented junior, senior, and graduate students.",
+ "name" : "One Mile of the Hudson River"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4570",
+ "description" : "This course is an introduction to econometric data analysis. The statistical methods covered enable analysis of relationships between variables in data, with special attention to identification of true casual effects. Topics covered include linear and simple nonlinear regression models, internal and external validity, methods for panel data and binary dependent variables, instrumental variable methods, use of experimental and quasi-experimental data, and basic time series methods. The course included hands-on data analysis and report writing.",
+ "name" : "Econometrics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6090",
+ "description" : "Analysis of coupled rotor blade elastic deformations, support elastic deformations, rotor loads and vibrations, and aeroelastic and aeromechanical stability of VTOL aircraft. Methods to mitigate dynamic loads and aeroelastic/aeromechanical instability.",
+ "name" : "VTOL Aircraft Dynamics and Aeroelasticity"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "EPOW-6900",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Seminar Elect Power Engr"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USNA-1010",
+ "description" : "The organization of the Department of Defense with emphasis on the Department of the Navy. This course provides a broad overview of all aspects of the operation and administration of today's Navy and Marine Corps. Additionally, the course will introduce naval topics such as rank structure, naval etiquette, naval history, naval warfare platforms and missions as well as basic naval leadership principles. The course will also cover basic military conduct and NROTC rules and regulations. Finally, the course will look at the role of the U.S. military in today's ever changing geopolitical climates and global conflicts.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Naval Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-9990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Dissertation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6280",
+ "description" : "Examine advanced econometric and statistical methods for the analysis of high-dimensional data, otherwise known as \"Big Data.\" In this setting, detailed information for each unit of observation informs machine learning techniques such as classification and regression trees; rECandom forests; penalized regressions; and boosted estimation. These prediction methods are then utilized to improve causal modeling, with applications in the study of healthcare demand and supply modeling, and behavior of consumers and businesses.",
+ "name" : "Econometric Methods for Big Data"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6480",
+ "description" : "Use of radioisotopes and radiation in nuclear medicine, radiation chemistry, basis of dosimetry, ionizing and nonionizing energy transfer processes in living tissue and cells. Radiation effects on the structure of nucleic acids, proteins, and cell membranes with emphasis on mechanisms by which cell viability is lost. Background in radiation chemistry is developed in particular for engineering majors. Applications are given in nuclear medicine, cancer therapy, and radiation in the environment.",
+ "name" : "Health Physics and Medical Aspects of Radiation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4200",
+ "description" : "This course will encompass marine, freshwater, and terrestrial microfossils (with emphasis on foraminifera), including taxonomy, evolutionary history, ecology and paleoenvironments, and a broad spectrum of micropaleontological applications, such as sea-level and climate reconstructions, geochemical analyses, oil industry research and production, and forensic geology. This course will also cover concepts of biostratigraphy and micropaleontological applications to stratigraphic correlation and time scale construction. Extensive hands-on microscope and lab work will be required.",
+ "name" : "Applied Micropaleontology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-2210",
+ "description" : "Principles and methods of field work in Geological and Environmental Sciences, including geologic mapping of formations across spatial scales, basic orienteering, glacial geology, modern lake characterization, climate reconstruction using tree and sediment cores, drainage basin analysis, well-logging and water-well sampling, and basic pedology. Students are trained in the use of instruments to address selected field problems. Numerous all-day field trips every Wednesday throughout the semester (occasionally on weekends) required. Course culminates with an independent research project. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Field Methods"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6210",
+ "description" : "The techniques necessary to appraise the economic desirability and private-sector impact of various public projects and policies are studied. Concepts such as discounting, capital rationing, project selection, shadow pricing, risk assessment, unpriced goods, and economic surplus are developed. Among the topics from which illustrative case studies are drawn are urban and transport planning, energy, water resources, government regulation, and the environment. Suitable for graduate students in professional programs.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Cost-Benefit Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4990",
+ "description" : "A two-semester spring-fall or fall-spring course dealing with an advanced level independent research project supervised by a faculty member and requiring the presentation of a thesis. First term registration is limited to second semester juniors and first semester seniors. The grade for the first semester will be listed as \"in progress.\"",
+ "name" : "Senior Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-2050",
+ "description" : "Introduction of number systems \u2013 decimal, binary and hexadecimal \u2013; variable types including Boolean, integer, float, character and string; general overview of computer architecture and software, programming in \"C/C++\" including input/output, control statements, operators, functions, arrays, strings, classes, objects, inheritance, pointers, references, file processing, exceptions and operator overloading; overview of other programming languages including Matlab, R and Python; design of algorithms for applications that are relevant for biomedical engineering applications.",
+ "name" : "Programming for BME"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ADMN-1030",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Arch Explore & Planning Exp"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-4200",
+ "description" : "Fundamental concepts of mathematical analysis will be covered including such topics as the real number system, metric spaces, limits, sequences, series, convergence, functions of one variable, uniform convergence, continuity, differentiability, Riemann integration, and the Stone-Weierstrass Theorem.",
+ "name" : "Mathematical Analysis I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BCBP-6650",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to be a first course in the study of \"systems biology\", to introduce students to the field, the experimental and computational methods that are used within it, and the type of insights that the field can provide to biology. To fully appreciate the complexity of living systems, researchers gather systematic, quantitative measurements of a system's components using cutting-edge omics techniques. In addition, researchers also leverage computing power to describe, model, and predict dynamic behaviors that could otherwise not be perceived in such large-scale omics data. Along with these topics, students will learn to critically read current scientific literature. A student cannot get credit for both BCBP 4660 / BIOL 4660 and BCBP 6650 / BIOL 6650 .",
+ "name" : "The Biology of Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4940",
+ "description" : "Individual and collaborative projects and assignments at the 4000 level adapted to the needs of individual students.",
+ "name" : "Studies in the Arts"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4020",
+ "description" : "This course presents fundamental ideas and techniques of modern algorithm design and analysis. After completing this course, students should be able to formally analyze and design efficient algorithms for a variety of computational problems. Topics covered include Greedy Algorithms, Dynamic Programming, Network Flow, NP-Completeness, Linear Programming, Network Algorithms, as well as probabilistic and approximate algorithms.",
+ "name" : "Design and Analysis of Algorithms"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4940",
+ "description" : "Selected readings in the biological literature to supplement the scientific background of undergraduate students. May be used as a biology elective with approval of Biology Department Curriculum Committee.",
+ "name" : "Readings in Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CIVL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-2100",
+ "description" : "Presents structure-property relationships of implant materials including metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites, with an emphasis on mechanical and surface properties in the broader context of implant design. Biological performance of biomaterials, case studies of traditional implants\u2014as well as emerging, tissue-engineered materials\u2014 are emphasized.",
+ "name" : "Biomaterials Science and Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAR-0030",
+ "description" : "This course explores the dimensions of creative and innovative tactical leadership strategies and styles by examining team dynamics and two historical leadership theories that form the basis of the army leadership framework. Aspects of personal motivation and team building are practice planning, executing, and assessing team exercises. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 2010 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
+ "name" : "Applied Leadership Lab I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6430",
+ "description" : "Linear programming, nonlinear programming, iterative methods, and dynamic programming are presented, especially as they relate to optimal control problems. Discrete and continuous optimal regulators are derived from dynamic programming approach, which also leads to the Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman Equation and the Minimum Principle. Linear quadratic regulators, linear tracking problems, and output regulators are treated. Linear observer and the separation theorem are developed for feedback controller implementation.",
+ "name" : "Optimization Methods"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-2710",
+ "description" : "A classroom study of the basic theory and methods of traditional and nontraditional machining, metal joining, material working, and foundry processes, and the variety of functions performed by the primary machine tools employed by the modern manufacturing community. A basic first course or terminal course for all students who are interested in manufacturing processes.",
+ "name" : "General Manufacturing Processes"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-2300",
+ "description" : "This course serves as an introduction to biomedical instrumentation and imaging with focus on the acquisition and monitoring of vital signals. Basic principles for the selection and appropriate use of instruments for solving bioengineering and medical problems such as microscopy, magnetic resonance imaging, and ultrasounds, among others are addressed.",
+ "name" : "Bioimaging and Bioinstrumentation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-1250",
+ "description" : "Introductory physics for students seeking a more intensive experience. Electricity and magnetism is discussed making use of multivariable differentiation and integration. AC and DC circuits. Electromagnetic waves, optics, and selected topics in modern physics. Laboratory exercises are carried out emphasizing measurement uncertainty and clear, concise reporting. Recommended for students intending to major in physics.",
+ "name" : "Introductory Electromagnetic Theory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4730",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Sustainable Building Design Strategies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4130",
+ "description" : "Independent research in health sciences, supervised by a faculty member, for the purpose of developing research skills. Such skills include defining a research project, both as a written and oral exercise for a scientific and general audience, and gathering preliminary research data enabling both a written and oral description of the project in the form of a research proposal and an oral defense. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Biomedical Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BMED"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4200",
+ "description" : "Introduction of mathematical and computational methods to model physiological systems in biomedical engineering. Mathematical methods include solution techniques for systems of algebraic equations, systems of partial and partial differential equations. Computational methods include finite difference, finite element, and lumped parameter methods. Computational methods are programmed using commercial programming software.",
+ "name" : "Modeling of Biomedical Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4010",
+ "description" : "An introductory course in transport phenomena covering fluid statics, and one-dimensional diffusive processes including laminar flow, heat conduction, and mass diffusion. Course focuses on developing the equations of change, introducing sum-of-resistance concepts and couple fluid flow, heat transfer, and mass transfer problems. The concept of extended surfaces as a means of enhancing transport process is included. The course introduces numerical simulation concepts for solving simple, one-dimensional transport problems. Credit not allowed for both this course and ENGR 2250 .",
+ "name" : "Transport Phenomena I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4410",
+ "description" : "This course discusses state-of-the-art techniques in patterning biomolecules, biosensors, machining three-dimensional microstructures, and building microfluidic devices (Lab-on-a-Chip). Seminal and current literature will be used to discuss topics in BioMEMs ranging from device fabrication to applications in cell biology and medicine. Students cannot get credit for both BMED 4410 and BMED 6410 .",
+ "name" : "BioMEMs"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6170",
+ "description" : "This is an advanced course in systems analysis and design that presents conceptual material about both traditional approaches to systems development such as process oriented and data-oriented methodologies and evolving approaches such as object-oriented development methods. Key stages of the systems development life cycle including planning, analysis, and design are the focus of this course. Models and procedures for understanding and modeling an organization's existing and planned information systems are presented. Computer-aided software engineering tools are used to provide hands-on experience in designing information systems. A case-based approach is used to provide students an opportunity to apply the analytical and design techniques covered in the course. In addition, students are expected to do a real-life systems development project. The course also focuses on the issues and challenges in managing systems development.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Systems Analysis and Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4690",
+ "description" : "Fundamentals of aqueous chemistry as applied to the evolution of natural waters. The course covers principles of chemical equilibrium, activity models for solutes, pH as a master variable, concentration and Eh-pH diagrams, mineral solubility, aqueous complexes, ion exchange, and stable isotopes. The carbonate system, weathering reactions, and acid rain are examined in detail. Emphasis is on the chemical reactions that control surface and groundwater evolution in natural and engineered (treatment process) settings. Students learn theory, computation methods, and the use of computer programs for calculation of speciation and mass balance.",
+ "name" : "Aqueous Geochemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4280",
+ "description" : "As the second course in the Intermediate Accounting sequence, this course is designed for both accounting and finance majors. This course combines a study of the theory, rationale, and objectives of corporate financial reporting with an examination of current reporting principles. The aim is to develop a realistic understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of corporate financial reporting, particularly from the viewpoint of the consumer of such financial information.",
+ "name" : "Intermediate Accounting II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4850",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Phelan Sem Democracy/ Internet"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4360",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Grad Arch Design 4"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6930",
+ "description" : "The student will perform hands-on research in the lab of a Biology faculty member to learn basic research methods and techniques, accomplish a small research project, and determine whether the lab is a good fit for thesis research.",
+ "name" : "Research Rotation lll"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4250",
+ "description" : "Quantitative analysis of transport phenomena in physiological systems, including fluid mechanics, thermodynamics, and mass transfer. Fluid statics, mass and energy conservation, laminar and turbulent flow, microscale and macroscale analytical methods, mass transport with biochemical reactions, applications to transport in tissue and organs will be introduced.",
+ "name" : "Biomedical Transport Phenomena"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6490",
+ "description" : "The principles of thermodynamics, with their applications to homogeneous and heterogeneous equilibria.",
+ "name" : "Chemical Thermodynamics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAF-1010",
+ "description" : "AS 100, Heritage and Values of the U.S. Air Force, is a survey course designed to introduce students to the United States Air Force and provides an overview of the basic characteristics, missions, and organization of the Air Force. Leadership Laboratory ( USAF 0010 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
+ "name" : "Air and Space Studies 100A (Heritage and Values of the U.S. Air Force)"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COMM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-1210",
+ "description" : "Continued examination of the principles of chemistry in more depth, considering thermodynamics, advanced concepts in chemical equilibrium and acid-base chemistry, kinetics of chemical reactions, and electrochemistry. This course consists of the lecture portion of CHEM 1200 with no laboratory requirements. Students cannot get credit for this course and CHEM 1200 .",
+ "name" : "Chemistry II (Without lab)"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4007",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Contract Law (at Alb Law Sch)"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6530",
+ "description" : "Information measures, characterization of information sources, coding for discrete sources, the noiseless coding theorems, construction of Huffman codes. Discrete channel characterization, channel capacity, noisy-channel coding theorems, reliability exponents. Various error-control coding and decoding techniques, including block and convolutional codes. Introduction to waveform channels and rate distortion theory.",
+ "name" : "Information Theory and Coding"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4940",
+ "description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
+ "name" : "Studies in Biomedical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4540",
+ "description" : "Humans inhabit a culture of visual images. Images bombard them on television, the Internet, and in films; they surround everyone as architecture and fashion; they provide essential resource data in science, engineering, and business. This course will help students better understand how images communicate information, arouse emotions, and shape values. Students will primarily do readings in cultural history/theory with some viewing of films.",
+ "name" : "Visual Culture"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-1100",
+ "description" : "The first semester of a two-semester sequence of interactive courses. Topics include linear and angular kinematics and dynamics, work and energy, momentum and collisions, forces and fields, gravitation, oscillatory motion, waves, sound, and interference.",
+ "name" : "Physics I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4460",
+ "description" : "This course introduces the motivations and related factors that shape consumers' purchasing decisions. Also considered is the consumer perceptual process and how it affects purchasing behavior and consumer reaction to product designs. The relationship between perception and product design is extended to topics such as design for understanding, universal product design, aesthetics, and industrial design",
+ "name" : "Consumer Behavior and Product Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4968",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BMED"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6450",
+ "description" : "The course presents several aspects of drug and genes delivery including: 1) definitions of what drugs or gene are; 2) pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics; 3) biomaterial selection considerations; 4) bioactivity considerations; 5) physiological and biochemical barriers to drug delivery; 6) diffusion controlled, dissolution controlled, and osmotic controlled drug delivery systems; 7) polymeric delivery systems; 8) ligand-based targeting and physical targeting; 9) viral mediated gene delivery; 10) non-viral gene delivery; 11) polymers in gene delivery.",
+ "name" : "Drug and Gene Delivery"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6460",
+ "description" : "Survey of image analysis applications in biology and biotechnology; introduction to biological microscopy and selected biomedical imaging systems; image reconstruction and pre-processing; grayscale and geometric corrections; image segmentation; blob analysis, cell/colony counting, and cell morphometry; vessel and neuron tracing algorithms with applications to neurobiology and medicine; feature extraction, pattern analysis, cluster analysis and classification; image registration algorithms with applications to mosaicing, spatial referencing, motion estimation, and change detection.",
+ "name" : "Biological Imaging Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "DSES-6940",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Readings In Isye"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BUSN-6315",
+ "description" : "In this course, students set, evaluate, and improve achievement of key performance indicators. Students use benchmarking and analytic techniques to determine how operational performance can be optimized, and then plan and execute change to improve efficacy and efficiency. Students evaluate and purposefully transform operational paradigms to impact performance, planning and executing to ensure the organization performs on budget and to specification.",
+ "name" : "Leaders Planning and Executing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6011",
+ "description" : "An interdisciplinary course focusing on the fundamentals and applications of semiconductor electrochemistry, and will serve as a bridge between classical electrochemistry and solid state physics. Topics include fundamentals of semiconductor physics, principles of electrochemistry, nature of semiconductor/electrolyte interfaces, current flow, and the applications of above principles to environment remediation and renewable energy devices such as solar cells, photocatalysis, and battery technologies.",
+ "name" : "Semiconductor Electrochemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-2009",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Anatomy & Phys I With Lab @ Rs"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-1400",
+ "description" : "This is an undergraduate introductory course covering basic concepts and skills in engineering communication. Topics include technical writing, project planning and proposal writing, data visualization, system modeling and simulation, engineering graphics and CAD, and effective uses of software tools. Note: This course is recommended as an alternative to ENGR 1200 for the following disciplines only: biomedical, chemical, industrial and systems, materials, electrical and computer systems, and nuclear engineering.",
+ "name" : "Engineering Communications"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ADMN-1961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ADMN"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6330",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Cancer Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6550",
+ "description" : "This is an undergraduate/graduate course on the mechanics of biopolymers, cell cytoskeleton, cell membrane, the whole cell, and multicellular structures in the context of the modulation of cell function by mechanical stresses. Topics include state-of-the-art experimental techniques in cell biomechanics, and cutting-edge research in stem cell mechanobiology, cell motility, collective cell behavior, neurite growth, osteocyte sensing, cardiovascular diseases, and immunology.",
+ "name" : "Cell Biomechanics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-1010",
+ "description" : "Age and origin of the Earth, internal constituents, and energy sources; how plates move, oceans develop, resources accumulate, and mountains rise. Gives nonspecialists a picture of the Earth's major processes and the ways in which they interact to provide the world's citizens with adequate material resources. Lectures and recitation. (Students cannot obtain credit for both ERTH 1010 and ERTH 1100 .)",
+ "name" : "Planet Earth I: The Solid Earth"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ITWS-2110",
+ "description" : "This course involves a study of the methods used to extract and deliver dynamic information on the World Wide Web. The course uses a hands-on approach in which students actively develop Web-based software systems. Additional topics include installation, configuration, and management of Web servers. Students are required to have access to a PC on which they can install software such as a Web server and various programming environments.",
+ "name" : "Web Systems Development"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-2230",
+ "description" : "Laboratory experiments dealing with basic techniques used in the synthesis and characterization of organic compounds.",
+ "name" : "Organic Chemistry Laboratory I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISCI-0466",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Wnet: Ntti Institute"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6090",
+ "description" : "Advanced power electronic circuits and systems, as well as their modeling and control. Topics include advanced dc-dc converters, modeling by averaging and sampled-data methods, discontinuous conduction modes, linear and nonlinear current control methods and design, spectral and dynamic characteristics of pulse-width modulation, ac-dc converters with active power factor correction, resonant and soft-switching converters, and EMI filter design, as well as autonomous and distributed power systems. Course assignments include laboratory projects involving simulation, hardware design, and measurement.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Power Electronics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-6100",
+ "description" : "As foundational course in the practice of critical game design, this course introduces students to major theorists in the field of game studies and topics including theories of play, space, narratology, ludology, identity, representation, culture and society. Students make integrative connections between theory and practice with a semester-long iterative design project, including critical writing, paper prototyping and peer feedback. Students explore game studies concepts both in a traditional research paper format, and in design practice.",
+ "name" : "Game Studies Theory and Praxis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USNA-2050",
+ "description" : "The principles and procedures of ship navigation, movements, and employment. Course includes piloting, mathematical analysis, spherical triangulation, navigational aids, tides and currents, electronic navigation, and rules of the nautical road.",
+ "name" : "Navigation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-1110",
+ "description" : "Covers the same lecture material as CHEM 1100 , but laboratory experiments will be more technique-oriented to provide better preparation for students who plan to take future laboratory courses in chemistry. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 1100 .",
+ "name" : "Chemistry I with Advanced Lab"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7800",
+ "description" : "The objectives of this beginning doctoral course are to introduce students to social science theory development, expose students to a broad array of research techniques, and help students design research programs and write about them. The underpinnings of scientific theory are reviewed along with a range of quantitative and qualitative research methods. Drawing on their own interests, students write one research proposal and two research papers illustrating the application of two different research methodologies.",
+ "name" : "Doctoral Research Methods I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-2440",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Phys Chem For Life Sci"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-2125",
+ "description" : "The goal of this course is to gain practical experience with cellular and molecular biology through hands-on experimental techniques. The laboratory exercises are designed to illustrate current concepts in cellular and molecular biology.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Cellular and Molecular Biology Laboratory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4130",
+ "description" : "Survey of modern techniques in and associated with mass spectrometry, including historical perspectives, strengths/weaknesses, detection/quantification of analytes, ionization source/mass analyzer design, and construction of associated technologies including vacuum systems, ion detection, and ion optics. Ion formation processes will also be discussed. Students cannot get credit for both CHEM 4130 and CHEM 6130 .",
+ "name" : "Mass Spectrometry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6650",
+ "description" : "Application of modern control theory to chemical processes. Introduction to on-line data acquisition and computer control. Real-time process optimization and optimal control theory. Estimation theory and adaptive control. Introduction to stochastic control and to the control of large-scale distribution systems. Case studies via computer-aided design programs.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Process Control"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-1100",
+ "description" : "A survey of concepts applied to nuclear power production and non-power applications of nuclear science and technology. Topics include next generation nuclear power plants, nuclear reactor materials, waste management, environmental impacts of nuclear power, fusion power, medical applications, radiation protection, and other topics of current interest. Introduction to and tours of experimental facilities including an electron accelerator. Discussions of educational, research, and career opportunities in Nuclear Engineering. This course is graded Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Nuclear Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COMM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4550",
+ "description" : "Visualizing data is a key step in understanding many problems. This course is designed to introduce students to methods of visualizing many different types of data, such as images, three-dimensional surfaces, flow fields, and medical data. Both existing visualization software and program custom visualizations using C++ and OpenGL will be used. Course activities include discussion of recent and classic research papers, weekly homework assignments, in-class critiques of visualization artifacts, and a final project to explore creative uses of these techniques. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Interactive Visualization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6810",
+ "description" : "The purpose of this course is to enable the technically oriented manager to select projects of value to the organization, develop a project plan including staffing, perform a risk analysis on the project, and successfully execute the project. Students, working alone or in teams, practice the project management process by planning a current project in the area of new product development, process reengineering, information systems, or any other project with business implementation.",
+ "name" : "Management of Technical Projects"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BUSN-6305",
+ "description" : "In this course, students analyze markets and clients using quantitative and qualitative analytic frameworks including original research. Students develop market strategies that best communicate value proposition to clients using best channels and messages. Students develop innovation strategies to enhance value to the end client, building budgets and sales forecasts that accurately reflect market conditions. Students align products, platforms, and people to optimally serve the client",
+ "name" : "Leaders in Dynamic Markets"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4700",
+ "description" : "This course will examine hormone and brain/behavior relationships across the lifespan. Hormones are molecules that are secreted by glands (the majority of which are located outside the brain) and have distal effects on their targets, such as the brain, throughout development. A focus will be on hormones' effects, mechanisms, and brain regions of interest for behavior and cognitive processes, such as perception, learning/memory, social cognition, motivation, and emotion.",
+ "name" : "Hormones, Brain, and Behavior"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-1040",
+ "description" : "The sciences of the natural world, focusing primarily on the earth and life sciences. The course addresses the origin, evolution, and current state of the planet and examines the earth as a life-supporting system. Specific examples of developments in scientific thinking are used to illustrate connections among the various disciplines comprising the natural sciences. The course is designed for non-science majors, and cannot be used by students majoring in one of the bio- or geosciences to fulfill a distribution requirement. This restriction does not apply to students majoring in computer science, mathematics, chemistry, or physics.",
+ "name" : "Natural Sciences II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-6700",
+ "description" : "Freshwater ecology is the quantitative examination of major biological fresh water communities. Course discussions will delineate the physical and chemical regimes under which aquatic organisms exist. Basic limnological processes are studied to define aquatic systems of differing physical characteristics. Nutrient chemistry analyses of waters of varying acidity, alkalinity, and chemical loadings are related to their trophic status. Lecture and Laboratory are taught at the Darrin Fresh Water Institute at Lake George with field activities at various locations in the Adironacks. The course includes extensive hands-on laboratory work, as well as the writing of in-depth reports.",
+ "name" : "Freshwater Ecology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6200",
+ "description" : "Spectra of various kinds are essential tools in modern chemistry. This course will deal with the interpretation of mass, infrared, NMR and UV-visible spectra as applied to the identification and structural characterization of organic compounds.",
+ "name" : "Organic Spectra Interpretation"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BUSN-6325",
+ "description" : "Leaders create an executable and fundable plan that optimizes people, platforms, products, projects, and resources for a specific organization in a specific market, in either an entrepreneurial or intrapreneurial context. The final plan is presented to a panel of evaluators for viability and fundability.",
+ "name" : "Leaders Charting the Course"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-4961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in PHYS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-5140",
+ "description" : "Introduction to Structures introduces the student of Architecture to the principles of structural mechanics and their application to basic architectural structures comprised primarily of wood. The fundamentals of statics are presented in order to gain an understanding of the way in which external forces produce internal stresses in individual members and, in essence, flow through the building system to be resolved at the foundation level. The principles of strength of materials are studied to understand how particular structural materials and configurations manage to resist these forces without unacceptable distortions, or even failure. Wood structural properties are studied in all their complexity as a means to internalize the more theoretical topics broached. Through in-class presentations, reading, homework and project work, computer lab, field trips, and case studies, the student will be aided in developing this intuitive (while practical) understanding. It is recognized that intuitions of building technologies are not acquired quickly but result from much study, observation, and practice. Introduction to Structures makes use of the several approaches above to ensure that the beginning student is provided with a broad, solid base for future structural investigations. WebCT will be used to expand the student's access to course materials and allow for a measure of distance learning. Sustainability: the following notions are introduced as important attributes of sustainable structures and construction: durability and service life and life cycle cost. This course is required of all architecture graduate students in the M.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Structures 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-4800",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Subsurface Imaging"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6966",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6900",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Chemistry Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-2962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4530",
+ "description" : "A lecture/laboratory course for Chemical Engineering students. Topics include the principles of chemical equilibria and their relation to modern analytical methods and the basis of instrumental techniques for characterizing the chemical structures and properties of compounds. The course provides laboratory experience in the use of modern instruments along with other chemical techniques. Aspects of analytical, organic, and physical chemistry will be illustrated throughout the course. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 2110 .",
+ "name" : "Modern Techniques in Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4110",
+ "description" : "This course will introduce advanced instrumental physicochemical methods of chemical analysis as well as instrument design and data capture/processing. Topics covered include atomic and molecular spectroscopy, chromatography, electroanalytical chemistry and measurement basics. This course is a prerequisite or corequisite for CHEM 4120 / CHEM 4130 .",
+ "name" : "Instrumental Methods of Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ECON"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-1900",
+ "description" : "This course is intended to provide information about the chemistry major, including the role of chemistry in society, career opportunities, faculty research interests and opportunities for undergraduate research, as well as curriculum options, the Summer Arch experience, and extracurricular professional development opportunities. The course is graded S/U.",
+ "name" : "Chemistry for Life"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4110",
+ "description" : "Students will be exposed to real time investigative biomedical research projects that are currently in development, taught the principles of research project development and exposed to clinical experiences at a level typically found in college graduates/post graduates who are entering medical school.",
+ "name" : "Investigative Medicine I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4130",
+ "description" : "Financial institutions, especially commercial banking and the Federal Reserve System, are considered from three perspectives: their monetary roles; trends in the economic, organizational, and technological aspects of their operations; and their other economic roles-a critical view. Also, the role of money in macroeconomic theory is considered along with the role of monetary policies in relation to the problems of inflation and unemployment.",
+ "name" : "Money and Banking"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-2110",
+ "description" : "This course covers principles of equilibrium chemistry including acid-base and redox equilibria, ideal and nonideal treatments of equilibrium, complex simultaneous equilibria, and equilibrium as it relates to titrations and precipitation reactions in quantitative analysis. It also deals with basic electrochemistry and electro-analytical and spectroscopic methods of quantitative analysis and gravimetric methods. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 4530 .",
+ "name" : "Equilibrium Chemistry and Quantitative Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-4250",
+ "description" : "An in-depth study of the major design issues in location and physical configuration of production and service facilities. The course emphasizes the use of mathematical models, computer modeling, and quantitative analysis as aids to the design process. Topics include plant layout and location, material handling, material flow analysis, and distribution systems. Major course concepts are developed through case studies and projects.",
+ "name" : "Facilities Design and Industrial Logistics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6950",
+ "description" : "A course for first semester chemistry graduate students that involves rotations of four weeks each through three research groups to become familiar with research in the department. Students will participate in various research-related activities, including group meetings, reading papers, exploring potential thesis projects, and shadowing or assisting graduate students working in the lab. The main goal of the course is to assist graduate students in their selection of a research adviser.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-2940",
+ "description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
+ "name" : "Studies in Biomedical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-6120",
+ "description" : "This course provides a foundation for professional-level research in science and technology studies. Through group research exercises, students explore the intersection between research issues (ethics, reliability, validity, quantification) and types of observation.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Research Methods"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2820",
+ "description" : "This studio focuses on the relationship between building and landscape in terms of conceptual, pragmatic, ideological, aesthetic, and functional issues. As such, it endeavors to examine critically the disciplinary boundary between building and landscape. It also critically assesses the connections and inherent complexities between an institutional situation, workplace activity, and residential inhabitation in order to explore questions of publicness and privacy. This studio also addresses the tectonic dimensions of construction and structure in architectural design. This course is required of all second-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 3"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6020",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Design And Analysis Of Algorithms"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-1020",
+ "description" : "Techniques and applications of integration, polar coordinates, parametric equations, infinite sequences and series, vector functions and curves in space, functions of several variables, and partial derivatives.",
+ "name" : "Calculus II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-2240",
+ "description" : "A continuation of CHEM 2230 , which is a prerequisite.",
+ "name" : "Organic Chemistry Laboratory II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-4540",
+ "description" : "Origin, transformation, and fate of organic matter on Earth. This course is chemistry-focused and incorporates concepts from biology, geology, and ecology. This course emphasizes reactivity, transport, and storage mechanisms which control the distribution of organic matter in terrestrial and marine systems. Analytical techniques for characterizing organic matter and applications to carbon cycling in natural and perturbed environments are also discussed.",
+ "name" : "Organic Geochemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4520",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Game Development I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4020",
+ "description" : "Laboratory exploration including synthesis and characterization of several types of inorganic compounds, with emphasis on the use of physical methods in inorganic chemistry. Communication of results in written and oral form is an integral part of the course. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Experimental Chemistry III: Inorganic and Physical Methods"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4700",
+ "description" : "This course approaches the modern digital studio as a compositional environment for the development of the student's original creative projects. Engineering techniques will be explored through musical examples and hands-on projects.",
+ "name" : "Sound Recording and Production II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4140",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Modernity In Cult & Arch"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4030",
+ "description" : "Laboratory exploration of physical methods used to characterize the structure and properties of compounds. Involves the experiments in CHEM 4020 that do not depend on the theoretical material of CHEM 4010 . Students can not get credit for both this course and CHEM 4020 .",
+ "name" : "Experimental Chemistry III Abridged: Physical Methods"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-4160",
+ "description" : "This course assumes knowledge and experience in computer music programming, applications, and performance. It is directed to undergraduate students as an upper-level seminar guiding their progress through the composition of a significant musical work or the design and development of a significant research project. The class is divided between a group seminar, focusing on aesthetic, theoretical, and technical issues, and a workshop/lab in musical systems design, performance, computer music applications, and composition.",
+ "name" : "Music and Technology II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4680",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Applied And Environmental Microbiology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4250",
+ "description" : "This course introduces all elements of the spacecraft system design process from proposal preparation through detailed specification. Students are organized into design teams associated with different subsystems and tasks, to develop a solution to a space vehicle system problem of practical interest, by drawing on their background in aerospace engineering science and design. Topics include problem definition and requirement analysis, design specifications, concept development, reliability, materials considerations of alternative solutions, materials considerations, risk assessment and mitigation, manufacturability, mission analysis, and presentation skills. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Space Vehicle Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2520",
+ "description" : "This course introduces students to basic topics in communication theory and research. It includes topics in interpersonal, group, organizational, mediated, and mass communication. Students will study and apply theories to real world situations and events and explore the social and cultural impact of new media technology.",
+ "name" : "Communication Theory and Practice"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-7870",
+ "description" : "This is a reading course designed to introduce first-year Ph.D. students in management to the theory families and empirical research in the field of Strategic Management. Strategic Management theories draw from parent disciplines of economics, psychology, sociology, anthropology, evolutionary biology, and political science. This puts the field at the nexus of all management studies.",
+ "name" : "Strategic Management Theory Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6630",
+ "description" : "This design studio will explore various concerns that relate architecture to environmental and ecological concerns. It will address human intervention at multiple and diverse scales within the natural world in order to understand their social, technical, aesthetic, conceptual, and philosophical implications for architectural design. Throughout the semester, the evolution of student design proposals will coordinate with the environmental and ecological issues that are presented in the supporting courses at CASE that are taken simultaneously with this studio. B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.Arch. students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
+ "name" : "Graduate Architecture Design 5"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-2950",
+ "description" : "Hands-on research in a faculty research laboratory.",
+ "name" : "Undergraduate Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2940",
+ "description" : "Individual and collaborative projects and assignments at the 2000 level adapted to the needs of individual students.",
+ "name" : "Studies in the Arts"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-6020",
+ "description" : "Methods of designing experiments so that statistical analysis of the resulting data will yield the maximum useful information. Testing of hypotheses; analysis of variance and covariance. Various designs, including the factorial and its modifications, incomplete blocks, Latin squares, and response surface designs are covered. Also discussed are optimality properties of design.",
+ "name" : "Design of Experiments"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-6520",
+ "description" : "Intrinsic spins, Pauli matrices, spinors. Addition of angular momenta, Clebsch-Gordon coefficients, Wigner-Eckart Theorems, applications. Approximate treatments: variation methods, overlap integrals, Block wavelength. WKB methods. Stationary perturbation, degeneracy. Fine structure and hyperfine structure in atoms. Approximations for time dependent problems: Fermi-Golden rules. Classical fields: Lagrangian density, variational principle, field equations, normal modes. Field quantization: quantization of continuous systems, EM radiation, photons, EM-atom coupling, spontaneous emission. Relativistic single particle: Dirac equation, free space solution, central force solution.",
+ "name" : "Quantum Mechanics II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6140",
+ "description" : "This course will review modern techniques of multi-dimensional NMR spectroscopy, including the history of magnetic resonance, principles of NMR, 13C and 1H NMR, multinuclear NMR, 2D homonuclear and heteronuclear methods, nuclear Overhauser effect, relaxation, structure elucidation, solid-state NMR and the nuts and bolts of NMR spectrometers and probes. This course is intended for graduate and upper-level undergraduate students in the School of Science and Engineering. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 4140 .",
+ "name" : "NMR Spectroscopy for Scientists and Engineers"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-2620",
+ "description" : "This course provides the student with a formal participation in the weekly colloquium series of the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences. These colloquia involve lectures on a wide variety of topics in the geologic and environmental sciences, primarily by outside investigators who are currently active in those fields. (Students may take this course a maximum of two times for credit.)",
+ "name" : "Current Topics in Earth Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6910",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Doctoral Research Mthds II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4780",
+ "description" : "This is an upper division architectural design studio that explores topics of contemporary interest to the discipline. Students apply for this studio based on their personal interest and professional objectives. Three such studios Architectural Design Studio 5, Architectural Design Studio 6, and Architectural Design Studio 7, are required for the degree. This course is offered in the fall and spring semesters and is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
+ "name" : "Architectural Design Studio 6"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4940",
+ "description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
+ "name" : "Communication Studies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-6190",
+ "description" : "Big Data Analytics is the automated process for finding interesting, actionable information from large amounts of data. This course emphasizes the evolution from machine learning to big data analytics. Topics include data-driven science and engineering, basic data mining, machine learning approaches for big data, artificial neural networks, time series analysis and deep learning. There is a special emphasis on the use of scriptable code for Big Data Analytics.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Big Data Analytics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-4160",
+ "description" : "Review of electronic properties of materials. Growth and structure of semiconductors. Diffusion, ion implantation, oxidation, microlithography, plasma etching, thin film deposition, metallization, with emphasis on Si technology. Introduction to compound semiconductors.",
+ "name" : "Semiconducting Materials"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BMED"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-4250",
+ "description" : "This is the third course in the central track of the Writing concentration for GSAS students. In this course, students gain exposure to elements of the bigger creative picture, including intellectual property (IP) development, world-building, and original character design. Students also continue to refine their competency in game writing essentials while exploring complex game narrative challenges such as branching, open-world, and other non-linear structures.",
+ "name" : "Writing for Games II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2330",
+ "description" : "Introduction to Structures introduces the student of Architecture to the principles of structural mechanics and their application to basic architectural structures comprised primarily of wood. The fundamentals of statics are presented in order to gain an understanding of the way in which external forces produce internal stresses in individual members and, in essence, flow through the building system to be resolved at the foundation level. The principles of strength of materials are studied to understand how particular structural materials and configurations manage to resist these forces without unacceptable distortions, or even failure. Wood structural properties are studied in all their complexity as a means to internalize the more theoretical topics broached. Through in-class presentations, reading, homework and project work, computer lab, field trips, and case studies, the student will be aided in developing this intuitive (while practical) understanding. It is recognized that intuitions of building technologies are not acquired quickly but result from much study, observation, and practice. Introduction to Structures makes use of the several approaches above to ensure that the beginning student is provided with a broad, solid base for future structural investigations. WebCT will be used to expand the student's access to course materials and allow for a measure of distance learning. Sustainability: The following notions are introduced as important attributes of sustainable structures and construction: durability and service life and life cycle cost.",
+ "name" : "Structures 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-4961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in IHSS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4470",
+ "description" : "Introduction to quantum mechanics and applications in chemical systems. Atomic and molecular spectra and structure. Statistical thermodynamics.",
+ "name" : "Theoretical Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAR-0020",
+ "description" : "This course is an overview of leadership fundamentals such as setting direction, problem-solving, listening, presenting briefs, providing feedback, and using effective writing skills. Students continue to explore dimensions of leadership values, attributes, skills, and actions in the context of practical, hands-on, and interactive exercises. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 1020 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of Military Science Lab II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4330",
+ "description" : "This course will examine how bioinformatics, functional genomics, and other modern biotechnologies are used to speed the discovery of new drugs, especially those small organic molecules to treat human diseases with large unmet therapeutic need. Special emphasis will be placed on molecular target identification and validation as well as high-throughput screening to identify a lead. Topics to be discussed will include transgenic mice, RNA interference, DNA and protein microarrays, homogenous time-resolved fluorescence bioassays, phage-display, combinatorial chemistry, and parallel synthesis. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and CHEM 6330 .",
+ "name" : "Drug Discovery"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4410",
+ "description" : "A course dealing with physicochemical properties of substances on a macroscopic scale. Chemical thermodynamics, electrochemistry, electric and magnetic phenomena, transport properties, and surface and colloid chemistry.",
+ "name" : "Macroscopic Physical Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6030",
+ "description" : "Multimedia Performance Systems explores the composition and programming of real-time performance systems. The course will examine the basics of MIDI, sound synthesis, digital signal processing, and image/video manipulation. Final projects will consist of a real-time performance system or interactive installation.",
+ "name" : "Multimedia Performance Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4440",
+ "description" : "Topics in physical chemistry that are important for understanding processes in biological systems. Included are: thermodynamics as applied to phase and chemical equilibria in chemical and biochemical systems; passive transport models for diffusion and electrical conductivity in electrolyte solutions; kinetic models for simple and complex chemical reactions, including enzyme mechanisms; quantum mechanical models used in spectroscopy.",
+ "name" : "Physical Chemistry for Life Sciences"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-4560",
+ "description" : "This course will explore the different strategies used by different languages to fulfill the same needs of human communication. A sampling of topics: quickly learning the basics of a new language using linguistic principles; cross-linguistic knowledge elicitation and engineering; principles of generative grammar; space, time, agency, and other linguistic phenomena viewed cross-linguistically.",
+ "name" : "Cross-linguistic Perspectives"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in STSO"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2020",
+ "description" : "Music technology-based research and composition taught in the context of modern computerized production methods. Technical topics include basic principles of music programming languages, digital sound synthesis and sampling, and the use of computer systems for musical control of electronic instruments. Musical topics include a study of important musical works and compositional techniques of the 21st century. Student projects involve hands-on work on a variety of computer programming languages, instruments, and software. This course is a prerequisite for further creative work with Rensselaer's computer music facilities.",
+ "name" : "Music and Technology I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "USAR-0050",
+ "description" : "The purpose of this course is to develop basic leadership skills. The course has three objectives: teach cadets those aspects of the art of leadership and the science of warfare they will use as junior officers in the U.S. Army; prepare cadets for the Leadership Development and Assessment Course (LDAC); instill in cadets the values and ethos required to become leaders of character. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 2060 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
+ "name" : "Applied Military Leadership Lab I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4710",
+ "description" : "This course introduces the fundamentals of protein structure and function with an emphasis on chemical concepts as applied to biological problems. It provides an introduction to enzymatic reaction mechanisms and includes interactive hands-on computer-aided visualization exercises. The goal is to equip students with an understanding and appreciation for the diversity and versatility of protein function. This course is intended for upper-level undergraduate students in the School of Science and Engineering. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 6710 .",
+ "name" : "Chemical Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-2900",
+ "description" : "Independent study program for the purpose of developing research skills under the guidance of a faculty member. This course may be repeated, and it cannot count as a biology elective.",
+ "name" : "Research in Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4610",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Building Conservation 1"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MTLE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-2220",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Programming In Java"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BMED"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2510",
+ "description" : "This course establishes an understanding of the most common materials, their properties and resulting uses, and the implications of their uses in the larger context of material life cycles. The structural makeup of metals, ceramics, polymers, and composite materials is discovered and their resulting properties, costs, and life cycle consequences are clarified. An understanding of basic mechanical properties is established hands on by conducting tension, compression, and 3-point bending tests (mse-lab). Physical performance of material constructs as synergy between form and material properties is further illustrated. Experiments are conducted that introduce such major concepts as structural loading, properties of sections, and resulting system performance. Sustainability: The concept of life cycles is introduced; material and energy flows are tracked throughout the entire material life cycle. This will be accomplished alongside introducing major material groupings (metals, polymers, ceramics, and composites). Students come to realize that environmental concerns are directly related to structural composition and material availability. Consequences of resource extraction, distribution, manipulation, use, and disposal, reuse or recycle are addressed at both local and global scales. Selected field trips to materials extraction, processing, manufacturing, disposal, and recycling facilities are aimed to give physical meaning to the concept of life cycle.",
+ "name" : "Materials and Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-6790",
+ "description" : "This HASS graduate seminar examines major theories and approaches to studying the media from a broad cultural studies perspective. Analysis of foundational and contemporary readings will allow students to consider, from their own field's perspective, topics such as the politics of representation and the representation of politics; commercialization; surveillance; depictions of gender, race, and class; and the fictional, factual, and fake. Examples will be drawn mainly from the mass media, particularly television and film.",
+ "name" : "Media Studies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ENGR"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4940",
+ "description" : "Permission of instructor.",
+ "name" : "Individual Projects in Mechanical Engineering, Aerospace Engineering or Nuclear Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ECON"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-4280",
+ "description" : "Examine advanced econometric and statistical methods for the analysis of high-dimensional data, otherwise known as \"Big Data.\" In this setting, detailed information for each unit of observation informs machine learning techniques such as classification and regression trees; random forests; penalized regressions; and boosted estimation. These prediction methods are then utilized to improve causal modeling, with applications in the study of healthcare demand and supply modeling, and behavior of consumers and businesses.",
+ "name" : "Econometric Methods for Big Data"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4967",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4810",
+ "description" : "Chemical processes important in the environment from naturally occurring and man-induced systems. Thermodynamic and chemical considerations of fuels; the thermodynamics of the atmosphere; atmospheric photochemistry; chemistry of natural water systems; chemistry of pesticides, fertilizers, and other important environmental contaminants; aspects of the carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur cycles.",
+ "name" : "Chemistry of the Environment"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-4700",
+ "description" : "In order to survive, corporations need to renew themselves. This requires instilling an entrepreneurial mindset which is often a challenge for large established corporations. Corporations caught up in the web of commoditization, stagnation, down-sizing, cost-cutting, re-engineering and the fast pace of globalization and technical change have come to realize that boosting their entrepreneurial capabilities, can improve their competitive positions through creating new markets and even transforming their industries. Yet overall, these efforts have produced uneven success. Although entrepreneurs in organizations can benefit from the knowledge resources, experience, and financial assets and networks of the large firm, they are constrained by the firm's inertial structure and entrenched management practices, as well as by the influence of current customers. This course helps students understand these challenges and how to cope with them through developing appropriate corporate competencies, structures, systems, and talent management practices.",
+ "name" : "Corporate Entrepreneurship"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4140",
+ "description" : "The application of geotechnical engineering to the environmental area. Deals with waste disposal, waste containment systems, waste stabilization, and landfills. Emphasis on design of such facilities. Includes related topics necessary for design, e.g., geosynthetics, groundwater, contaminant transport, and slurry walls. Some field trips are possible. (Students cannot receive credit for both this course and CIVL 6550 .)",
+ "name" : "Geoenvironmental Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6910",
+ "description" : "Discussions and seminars on how to deal with the various aspects of teaching and related problems encountered by teaching assistants in chemistry. Seminar topics will include: cognitive theories of learning; several models of teaching; educational psychology; attitude and motivational factors; communication and presentation skills; leadership; time management; how to write an exam; grading problems; ethics; group problem solving skills; and cultural diversity. Seminars will be led by a senior, experienced teaching assistant along with participating faculty.",
+ "name" : "Chemistry Teaching Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHIL-4360",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Phil Prob Space & Time"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6780",
+ "description" : "This course will serve as a seminar for advanced students of linguistics. The material to be covered will be selected collaboratively by the instructor and each cohort of students. Students, who ideally will have taken at least two linguistics-oriented courses previously, will be guided in pursuing topics that they have found particularly compelling in previous courses.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Topics in Linguistics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4950",
+ "description" : "As a confirmation of their ability to integrate their knowledge of chemistry to deal with a research problem, students will present a research-style paper and conference-style poster on a research-related topic. This is preferred to be on a prior or ongoing undergraduate research project, but may be a literature review on approval by the instructor.",
+ "name" : "Senior Experience"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4974",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6020",
+ "description" : "This advanced graduate level course will focus on the structure, bonding, and reactivity of transition metal coordination compounds. The course will cover group theory, ligand field theory, substitution reactions, photochemistry, catalysis, and redox reactions. Examples from the literature will be included to highlight the current research trends and applications of coordination compounds.",
+ "name" : "Coordination Chemistry \u2013 Fundamentals and Applications"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ITEC-2210",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Introduction To Hci"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6170",
+ "description" : "Advanced graduate course covering fundamental aspects of NMR common for application in a broad range of fields. Classical and quantum-mechanical descriptions are utilized to explore information content of NMR pulse sequences. The latter approach includes density matrix theory and proceeds with the product-operator formalism. Practical aspects and data analysis are also described. Subsequent focus is on liquid-state NMR of biological macromolecules, including resonance assignment and determination of molecular structure and dynamics. Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and BCBP 6170 .",
+ "name" : "Advanced Topics in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6300",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Communication Internship"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-4240",
+ "description" : "An introductory course in use of the Finite Element Method (FEM) to solve one-and two-dimensional problems in fluid mechanics, heat transfer, and elasticity. The methods are developed using weighted residuals. Algorithms for the construction and solution of the governing equations are also covered. Students will be exposed to the use of commercial finite element software.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Finite Elements"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "GSAS-6940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Studies in Games"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4430",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Design For Global Society"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6510",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to cover the history and application of modern computational chemistry techniques to chemical problems. It will provide familiarity with the various methods and tools presently in use and the assumptions and limitations inherent in each approach. The format involves both lecture and studio modes of instruction and meets in a classroom where each student has a modern workstation.",
+ "name" : "Computational Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6530",
+ "description" : "Postulates of quantum mechanics. Solution of the particle in a box, harmonic oscillator, and the hydrogen atom via series solutions and ladder operator techniques. Development of atomic and molecular orbital theories with applications to structure and spectra.",
+ "name" : "Quantum Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ADMN-6150",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "External Fellowship Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ISYE-2960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ISYE"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-6410",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Deep Listening"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6610",
+ "description" : "This course provides an introduction to natural and biobased polymers that have a broad range of uses such as biodegradable plastics, hydrogels, coatings, polymeric drugs and bioresorbable polymers. Topics discussed include an introduction to polymer science, natural building blocks, integration of biocatalytic and chemical synthetic methods, principles of green chemistry and sustainability. A working knowledge of organic chemistry and biochemistry is required.",
+ "name" : "Natural and Biobased Polymers and Materials"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHYS-2220",
+ "description" : "Applications of special relativity and quantum theory to topics in modern physics. Atomic and molecular physics. Quantum statistics, blackbody radiation, and lasers. Crystalline solids. Superconductivity. Nuclear and particle physics. Astrophysics and cosmology.",
+ "name" : "Quantum Physics II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6410",
+ "description" : "This course discusses state-of-the-art techniques in patterning biomolecules, biosensors, machining three-dimensional microstructures and building microfluidic devices (Lab-on-a-Chip). Seminal and current literature will be used to discuss topics in BioMEMs ranging from device fabrication to applications in cell biology and medicine. Students cannot get credit for both BMED 4410 and BMED 6410.",
+ "name" : "BioMEMs"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4420",
+ "description" : "This seminar surveys the history of medicine through discussion and analysis of secondary literature exploring central and key themes from the age of the Enlightenment up through recent history. Topics will include the history of the profession and practice of medicine, public health, disease, historical memory, education, the state, policy, institutions, and race, class, and gender in the history of medicine.",
+ "name" : "History of Medicine"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6660",
+ "description" : "The objective of this course is to provide the student with a broad survey of methods of analysis and characterization of polymers. Thermal analysis, molecular weight characterization, spectroscopy, and mechanical property determination will be reviewed with an emphasis on method of measurement, quantities measured, and quantities derived from the measurements. Select applications will be used to convey the usefulness of these methods for characterizing polymers and their properties.",
+ "name" : "Polymer Analysis and Characterization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6780",
+ "description" : "The biophysical mechanism of protein folding and the role of misfolding in human disease is explored. The course will introduce principles of protein structure, protein folding in the cell, and thermodynamic and kinetic methods for studying protein folding in vitro. The course will also involve a literature-based discussion of human diseases related to protein folding defects, including Alzheimer's and other amyloid diseases, cystic fibrosis, and Prion-related syndromes.",
+ "name" : "Protein Folding"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-4760",
+ "description" : "The objective is to help engineering students recognize and understand the importance of cost factors that are inherent in all engineering decisions. Development of ability to handle engineering problems that involve economic factors. The course includes economic environment, selections in present economy, value analysis, critical path economy, interest and money-time relationships, depreciation and valuation, capital financing and budgeting, basic methods for undertaking economic studies, risk, uncertainty and sensitivity, selections between alternatives, fixed, increment, and sunk costs, the effects of income taxes in economic studies, replacement studies, minimum cost formulas, economic studies of public projects, economic studies in public utilities. Effects of inflation are considered at each step. Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and ENGR 4750 .",
+ "name" : "Engineering Economics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-4590",
+ "description" : "This class studies the workings of major institutions and practices in American life during a period in which key parts of our society seem dysfunctional, having lost their integrity, ability to solve problems, and willingness to imagine any positive future. How did this happen? Why does it continue? What might be done about it? Through a careful reading of texts in political analysis and social criticism, students explore some significant issues in modern society.",
+ "name" : "American Politics in Crisis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4140",
+ "description" : "This course is an in-depth study of current research within the broad field of cytoskeletal biology. Students will read, interpret, and critique recent primary literature, present new findings, lead discussions, and identify rising questions in the field.",
+ "name" : "Cytoskeletal Biology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6960",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in MGMT"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4963",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHME"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-4961",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHEM"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-2020",
+ "description" : "A continuation of CHME 2010 . Topics include process flowsheeting, solution thermodynamics, phase equilibria, chemical-reaction equilibria, and applications of thermodynamics to problems in chemical-process design. One credit hour of this course is devoted to Professional Development.",
+ "name" : "Energy, Entropy, and Equilibrium"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-4040",
+ "description" : "Algorithms with provable guarantees on the quality of their solutions are a powerful way of dealing with intractable problems. This course covers fundamental techniques for designing approximation algorithms. Possible topics include: semi-definite and linear programming, inapproximability and the PCP theorem, randomized rounding, metrics and cuts, primal-dual methods, and online algorithms.",
+ "name" : "Approximation Algorithms"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECON-6830",
+ "description" : "Study topics such as markets for pharmaceuticals, medical devices, medical technology, and health innovation; FDA and other types of regulations in pharmaceuticals and medical devices; models of hospital competition and provider incentives; health information technologies and their adoption and diffusion; advances in personalized healthcare; and externalities in health.",
+ "name" : "Health Economics and Policy II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-4120",
+ "description" : "Topics may be chosen from differential geometry of curves and surfaces, involutes and evolutes, order of contact, developable surfaces, Euler's and Meusnier's Theorem, mean and Gaussian curvatures, geodesics and parallel transport, The Theorem Egregium of Gauss, Gauss-Bonnet Theorem, computer-aided geometric design, computational geometry, tessellations, tiling and patterns, projective and non-Euclidean geometries, postulates and axiomatic systems, advanced Euclidean geometry, and the history of geometry.",
+ "name" : "Fundamentals of Geometry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COGS-6962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in COGS"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-6230",
+ "description" : "Review of economic concepts and their application to transportation. Economic basis of transportation demand. Estimation of aggregate and disaggregate demand functions. Value of time. Supply functions. Cost functions, production functions. Transportation externalities. Valuation techniques. Cost/benefit analysis and multi-criteria approaches.",
+ "name" : "Transportation Economics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-6970",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in ARCH"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4011",
+ "description" : "An interdisciplinary course focusing on the fundamentals and applications of semiconductor electrochemistry, and will serve as a bridge between classical electrochemistry and solid state physics. Topics include fundamentals of semiconductor physics, principles of electrochemistry, nature of semiconductor/electrolyte interfaces, current flow, and the applications of above principles to environment remediation and renewable energy devices such as solar cells, photocatalysis, and battery technologies. This course is cross listed with CHME 6011 .",
+ "name" : "Semiconductor Electrochemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4968",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6940",
+ "description" : "Supervised reading and problems, by individual arrangement.",
+ "name" : "Readings in Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-6400",
+ "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. Xinformatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines (e.g. X=astronomy, geology). Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments. Students cannot obtain credit for more than one of ERTH 6400 / ITWS 6400 / CSCI 6400 .",
+ "name" : "Xinformatics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6969",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CSCI"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-6620",
+ "description" : "This course will introduce synthetic and kinetic aspects of various polymerization reactions that have been employed to produce commodity and specialty plastic materials. Control and prediction of the molecular weight distribution for different polymerization mechanisms will be discussed along with various characterization techniques of molecular weight distribution and its relation to properties. Thermal/solution properties, chemical/physical properties, and uses of polymers also will be discussed. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 4620 .",
+ "name" : "Polymer Chemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4962",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BIOL"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4400",
+ "description" : "Theory and practice of chromatographic separation processes. Topics include chromatographic dispersion, adsorption isotherms, solute movement analysis, chromatographic techniques (reversed-phase, HIC, ion exchange, affinity, and size exclusion), modes of operation (gradient, elution, displacement, and continuous systems), novel morphologies and chromatographic applications in biotechnology. Includes critical reviews of the current literature and computer simulations. Suitable for graduate students in chemical engineering, chemistry, biology, and biomedical engineering. Students cannot receive credit for both CHME 4400 and CHME 6440 .",
+ "name" : "Chromatographic Separation Processes"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARTS-2090",
+ "description" : "Radical Graphics/Screenprinting seeks to expand on the definition of print graphics from one that traditionally creates multiple images on paper to a practice that includes art-making activities as varied as mud-stenciling, t-shirt printing, \"fine art\" prints, animation, sculpture, and political protest graphics. Students will focus on the concept of the art \"matrix\": a template for image-making that can work across media. Students will create matrices that can be applied across multiple art-making platforms.",
+ "name" : "Radical Graphics/Screenprinting"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ITEC-4100",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Itec Capstone Experience"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "IHSS-1030",
+ "description" : "Television is considered a defining social, political and cultural feature of consumer culture. Television is morphing into something more expansive and diverse. In this course, we will study the impact of television and learn to make it. Through hands-on experience, students produce and direct their own multi-camera projects. Students work on technical and creative aspects of production. Students learn to operate studio gear including green screen, live switcher, cameras, audio, teleprompter, lights, etc.",
+ "name" : "Behind the TV Screen"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4120",
+ "description" : "Students will be exposed to several clinical experiences at a level typically found in college graduates/post graduates who are entering medical school.",
+ "name" : "Investigative Medicine II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4500",
+ "description" : "Principles of kinetics, reactor design, and analysis for both homogeneous and heterogeneous (catalytic) systems. Topics include design for multiple reaction networks (optimum selectivity), analysis of simple reactor combinations, and design of isothermal, adiabatic, and optimum temperature profile reactor.",
+ "name" : "Chemical Reactor Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4350",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Creative Seminar II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-2830",
+ "description" : "A survey of atomic and nuclear phenomena and their application in various engineering disciplines. Systematics of atoms and nuclei; nuclear reactions and their characterization; radioactive decay; fission and fusion energy release; radiation effects on materials and biological systems; radiation production, detection, and protection. Applications include energy production, manufacturing, and medicine.",
+ "name" : "Nuclear Phenomena for Engineering Applications"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4967",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in BMED"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-4170",
+ "description" : "A one-term laboratory course covering the fundamentals of biotechnology and bioprocessing including molecular biology, fermentation, and protein purification.",
+ "name" : "Bioprocessing Laboratory Course"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "WRIT-2310",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Creative Writing: Poetry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MGMT-6720",
+ "description" : "Technology is a vital link in how modern corporations identify, acquire, transact with, and keep their customers. This course provides an introduction to both the technology infrastructure most relevant to the customer relationship as well as marketing issues that result from the application of computers and communication networks. Topics include issues related to social media, search, online advertising, blogging, customer relationship management, online market segmentation, and marketing of IT products. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
+ "name" : "Internet Marketing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6480",
+ "description" : "This course will focus on the connections between the behavior of single molecules and their interactions and macroscopic non-Newtonian behavior. Among the topics discussed are microscopic models of these systems, techniques for measuring and manipulating the microsctructure, and the impact on macroscopic behavior. Students may not receive credit for both this course and CHME 4480 .",
+ "name" : "Single Molecules Complex Fluid"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ECSE-6130",
+ "description" : "Basic relaying philosophy. Current and potential transformers. Operating principles of electromagnetic, electronic, and digital relays. Application of relays to protect generators, busses, transformers, and transmission lines.",
+ "name" : "Protective Relaying"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6710",
+ "description" : "This course introduces the theory and practical use of numerical design optimization methods. Topics include: gradient-based methods for unconstrained and constrained nonlinear optimization; numerical evaluation of derivatives; polynomialand- and kriging-based surrogate models; gradient-free optimization methods; optimization under uncertainty; multi-objective and multi-disciplinary optimization. Projects require the use of computer programs to generate numerical results; therefore, experience with programming is highly recommended.",
+ "name" : "Numerical Design Optimization"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4130",
+ "description" : "Independent research in health sciences, supervised by a faculty member, for the purpose of developing research skills. Such skills include defining a research project, both as a written and oral exercise for a scientific and general audience, and gathering preliminary research data enabling both a written and oral description of the project in the form of a research proposal and an oral defense. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Biomedical Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ERTH-6990",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
+ "name" : "Master's Thesis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6610",
+ "description" : "Development and application of mathematical methods for the solution of chemical engineering problems. Classical solution methods for ordinary and partial differential equations. Major emphasis is given to the mathematical implications of describing and solving representation of chemical reactors and other systems. Case studies relevant to other departmental graduate courses and ongoing research activities are discussed. The mathematical methods include series solutions, special function representations, boundary-value problems, and operational calculus.",
+ "name" : "Mathematical Methods in Chemical Engineering I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-2050",
+ "description" : "This course introduces common computational techniques that are used in Chemical Engineering. Topics include solving algebraic equations, data analysis, numerical differentiation and integration, and numerical solutions of differential equations applied to chemical engineering problems. Multiple numerical approaches will be used, including an introduction to computer programming.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Computational Chemical Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6410",
+ "description" : "Review of atomic and nuclear physics and quantum mechanics; application to atomic, molecular and nuclear systems; particle and photon emissions; photon/particle interactions; quantum statistics; applications of nuclear physics to nuclear data, medical physics, accelerators, fusion systems, nuclear reactors; accelerators, fusion systems, nuclear reactors; key measurements and databases; advanced level of technical writing and presentation.",
+ "name" : "Applied Atomic and Nuclear Physics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "WRIT-2940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Studies in Writing"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BUSN-6106",
+ "description" : "In this three-credit, 15-week online graduate course, develop mastery as a change-agent leader who evaluates and implements change within complex and dynamic organizations. Perform an environmental evaluation to assess capacity for change that aligns wiht organization's vision and goals. Explore your personal leadership style and how you would develop and inspire others to participate fully in a change initiative. Learn to use the ADKAR change management model to lead a high-performing team, engage stakeholders, and communicate effectively with any audience type.",
+ "name" : "Leaders as Change Agents"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MTLE-4520",
+ "description" : "This course will review basic thermodynamic and kinetic concepts, which underpin how material behaves under extreme thermal, mechanical, chemical, electrical, and magnetic conditions as well as high-energy irradiations. Engineering materials that can withstand harsh environments and new materials with unique crystal structures and microstructures will be surveyed.",
+ "name" : "Materials under Extreme Conditions"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2600",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Graduate Design Studio"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PSYC-4260",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Psychol Tests & Measurement"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6670",
+ "description" : "Process synthesis with applications to heat exchange networks, energy-integrated separation sequences, and reactor networks. Analysis, design, and optimization of large-scale systems.",
+ "name" : "Advanced Process Design"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-4650",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "American Building- 20th C"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENVE-6300",
+ "description" : "Lecture course stresses multidisciplinary approaches to the use of microbial system for biotransformation and biodegradation of toxic and hazardous material. Topics include biodegradability, enzymatic transformations, microbial ecology, and properties of organic and inorganic compounds, in situ and ex situ engineering techniques. Real world design examples and projects are introduced. Permission of instructor is required.",
+ "name" : "Bioremediation of Hazardous and Toxic Compounds"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-6211",
+ "description" : "Working with a faculty member, students develop a big data health industry model for an issue, question, or problem of their choosing. Over the semester, the student frames the question to be analyzed, collects and prepares business data for analysis, performs the analysis, and presents actionable results and recommendations back to the organization. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6206 or ENGR 6216 .",
+ "name" : "Modeling Health Decisions"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6900",
+ "description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
+ "name" : "Seminar"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "PHIL-2100",
+ "description" : "This course provides tools for the identification, analysis, and evaluation of the various patterns of reasoning as they occur in the real world. Patterns of reasoning include deductive reasoning, inductive reasoning, scientific reasoning, statistical reasoning, and causal reasoning. The course also covers some basic psychology and sociology of reasoning and belief and concludes with a critical discussion of science and the scientific method.",
+ "name" : "Critical Thinking"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-4480",
+ "description" : "Introduction of multivariate statistical methods to model and analyze recorded data from physiological systems in biomedical engineering. Statistical approaches related to applied multivariate statistics, classification and regression. Associated linear methods include principal component analysis, Fisher discriminant analysis, partial least squares, canonical correlation analysis and their nonlinear counterparts. Descriptive tools include scatter diagrams, Hotelling's T2 statistics and contribution plots. The course has a strong emphasis on biomedical applications.",
+ "name" : "Biomedical Data Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4130",
+ "description" : "Aerodynamic analysis of multi-rotor aerial vehicles. Multi-rotor coordinates and controls for multicopters. Multicopter failure and recovery. Comparison of rotor speed and pitch control. Trim and performance analysis of different multirotor archetypes.",
+ "name" : "Multirotor Aerial Vehicles"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4770",
+ "description" : "The course focuses on design and analysis of energy systems from accessibility (cost), availability (security/reliability) and acceptability (Environmental, health impacts etc). The course discusses various forms of energy sources, various forms of energy consumption. The life cycle analyses build on first principles and thermo-economic considerations. Methods of life cycle analyses from net energy, economics, and impact will be studied.",
+ "name" : "Design and Analysis of Energy Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-2520",
+ "description" : "A study of the principles and concepts of sociology and their application to the study of society and self. Students are introduced to the scope, materials, and methods of sociology. The issues and problems to be studied come from basic social institutions such as the family, science, and religion. Other topics may include love, crime, political economy, power, population growth, social class, and minority and ethnic relations.",
+ "name" : "Sociology"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHEM-2540",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the application of chemistry to the understanding of problems in the earth and environmental sciences. Topics include thermodynamics and phase equilibria as applied to mineral stability, rock evolution, and water chemistry; stable isotope systematics; radiogenic isotope systematics, trace element geochemistry, organic geochemistry, and geochemical cycles.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Geochemistry"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6964",
+ "description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
+ "name" : "Topics in CHME"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CHME-6840",
+ "description" : "This course is intended to give students a state-of-the-art understanding about single and multicomponent boiling and condensation heat transfer phenomena. Applications include the analysis of nuclear reactors, oil wells, and chemical process equipment. Students satisfactorily completing this course are expected to be able to thoroughly understand the current thermal-hydraulics literature on multiphase heat and mass transfer and be able to conduct independent research in this field.",
+ "name" : "An Introduction to Multiphase Flow and Heat Transfer I"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-1600",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the scientific principles that dictate the structure and properties of engineering materials, including metals, ceramics, semiconductors, and polymers. Physical properties of materials (mechanical, electrical, thermal, optical) are discussed in terms of the underlying bonding and structure, spanning multiple length scales from atomic packing to micron scale defects, in practical engineering materials. Throughout the course, the material behaviors are understood from the viewpoint of thermodynamics and kinetics.",
+ "name" : "Materials Science"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MATH-4950",
+ "description" : "Undergraduate mathematics projects that utilize students' mathematical knowledge will result in formal reports and final presentations. Examples are research projects or critical in-depth mathematical literature reviews. Information about projects will be exchanged in weekly meetings with the research supervisor. In order to take this course, students must make arrangements with a math faculty member to act as a research supervisor. This is a communication-intensive course. To be graded S/U.",
+ "name" : "Research in Mathematics"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-1300",
+ "description" : "This course teaches elementary programming concepts using the Python environment. Students are expected to have little or no prior programming experience. Topics include Python language syntax, variables, looping, function calls, manipulating arrays, performing statistical calculations, and plotting results.",
+ "name" : "Beginning Programming in Civil and Environmental Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2200",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Design Studio"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-2440",
+ "description" : "Does documentary film depict reality or is it just another form of storytelling? This course takes a broad, historical look at documentary media, exposing students to a wide range of works that in some sense stand on claims to truth. Students are invited to develop a critical stance toward documentary modes of social representation, through viewing and analyzing colonial photography and cinema, ethnographic, propaganda, cinema verite, experimental, and even \"fake\" documentaries.",
+ "name" : "Documentary Film"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ARCH-2469",
+ "description" : "This course focuses on the investigative methods of gathering and representing the physically measurable phenomena within the built environment as they pertain to material thermal and moisture performance, heat, daylight, air velocity, air quality and sound. Students will be introduced to both handheld instruments and investigative learning sensor kit networks for studying the built environment. Students will learn to visualize digitally information that is taken from \"investigative learning kits\". The course will also introduce students to open-source databases of physically measurable phenomena within the built environment. This course is required of all architecture undergraduates in the B.S. in Building Sciences program. B.Arch and M.Arch students can register for this course. Students from other majors will need permission of the instructor. This is a data-intensive course.",
+ "name" : "Building Sciences Media"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "ENGR-6215",
+ "description" : "Students use visualization and cluster analysis tools to gain deeper insights into complex business relationships. Students apply data analytic process to real-world business problems and questions, including pricing decisions, customer analysis, competitive analysis, financial forecasts, customer decision models, organizational performance dashboards. Students tune models to represent current-state and adjust models as underlying assumptions change. Students cannot receive credit for both this course and ENGR 6205 or ENGR 6210 .",
+ "name" : "Business Intelligence Analysis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4750",
+ "description" : "Introduction to elementary theory of combustion and applications to energy sources, fires, and explosions. Discussion of internal and external combustion piston and turbine engines, solid-and liquid-propellant rockets, fire and explosion hazards of gaseous fuels, propellant and explosive performance.",
+ "name" : "Combustion Systems"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BMED-6420",
+ "description" : "An in-depth review of the underlying science, engineering, medicine, and contemporary research related to the nation's highest priorities for musculoskeletal diseases and care. Musculoskeletal anatomy, pathophysiology, epidemiology, and contemporary treatments are covered. Special topics will be presented relating state-of-the-art biomedical research to clinical practice. The clinical perspective of each topic will be presented by practicing clinicians with case studies. Topics conclude with live Webcasts or recorded surgery from Albany Medical Center or the Capital Region Bone and Joint Center. Students cannot get credit for both BMED 4420 and BMED 6420.",
+ "name" : "Clinical Orthopaedics and Contemporary Research"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-2030",
+ "description" : "Introduction to basic concepts in transportation engineering including planning, design, and operations. Introduces the challenges and issues in modeling transportation problems. Studies of various concepts related to the design of highway facilities, level of service, and demand for transportation services. Concepts related to signal optimization. Policy implications. Basics of transportation planning.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Transportation Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-6260",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Rhetoric, Culture & Comm Tech"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-2040",
+ "description" : "Contract essentials; types of contracts for construction and for engineering services. Bidding procedure, surety bonds, insurance, litigation. Standard contract documents, the compilation of specifications. Engineering ethical principles and codes.",
+ "name" : "Professional Practice"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-4430",
+ "description" : "Linear Accelerator Laboratory will provide an introduction to measurements of experimental systems utilizing neutron sources. It will focus on measurements relating to the detection of neutrons through interactions in materials, neutron reaction cross-sections neutron diffusion and slowing down, Doppler broadening of cross-sections and how this applies to nuclear reactors, both neutron and photon activation analysis and its applications, and the fission process and measurement of delayed fission gammas. The course will utilize the unique abilities of the Gaerttner Linear Accelerator Center to provide real world neutron experiments to supplement the theory learned in previous courses at RPI.",
+ "name" : "Linear Accelerator Laboratory"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "STSO-2290",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "American Politics In Crisis"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-2670",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the elastic behavior of structural components. Analysis of statically determinate systems. Deflection calculations by virtual work and elastic load methods. Analysis of simple statically indeterminate structures. Influence lines. Interaction of structural components. Typical structural engineering loads.",
+ "name" : "Introduction to Structural Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CSCI-6510",
+ "description" : "This course explores the principles of distributed systems, emphasizing fundamental issues underlying the design of such systems: communication, coordination, synchronization, and fault-tolerance. Key algorithms and theoretical results will be studied and students will explore how these foundations play out in modern systems and applications.",
+ "name" : "Distributed Systems and Algorithms"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "CIVL-2940",
+ "description" : "",
+ "name" : "Readings in Civil Engineering"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "MANE-6450",
+ "description" : "Modeling and analysis of common manufacturing processes. Topics include bulk-forming, sheet-forming, and casting processes. Classical analysis techniques, upper bound analysis, slip-line field theory, asymptotic methods, and the finite element method are investigated.",
+ "name" : "Mechanics of Materials Processing"
+ },
{
"code" : "COMM-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6200",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This graduate-level course is designed to give students a hands-on experience in the characterization of basic semiconductor devices (diffused resistors, pn junction diodes, Schottky diodes, MOS capacitors, bipolar junction transistors, MOSFETs) in wafer and/or packaged forms. The final project involves the students in a detailed characterization of devices in a specific application (e.g. high-voltage power electronics, submicron ULSI, microwave and wireless).",
"name" : "Semiconductor Device Characterization"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-1100",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "An introduction to industrial and systems engineering (ISE). Major elements of the ISE disciplines are overviewed in the context of operations engineering problems. Topics include deterministic and stochastic applications of operations research methods, soft computing, applications of probability and statistics, engineering economics, discrete event simulation, and decision analysis.",
"name" : "Introduction to Industrial and Systems Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-2610",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Students will explore the artistic role of music and sound in gaming by building their own interactive sound and music-rich games and 2D/3D rendered environments. Within the context of their own creative game projects, students will learn the basics of designing sound and composing music for interactive game spaces. Using workflow programming languages and software tools, students will program basic gaming interactions, link them to interactive audio software, and create musical gaming experiences. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Students will explore the artistic role of music and sound in gaming by building their own interactive sound and music-rich games and 2D/3D rendered environments. Within the context of their own creative game projects, students will learn the basics of designing sound and composing music for interactive game spaces. Using workflow programming languages and software tools, students will program basic gaming interactions, link them to interactive audio software, and create musical gaming experiences.",
"name" : "Designing Musical Games"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4967",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4510",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Cognitive modeling investigates human cognition by developing computational systems that simulate cognitive processes. Cognitive modeling grew out of Cognitive Psychology and Artificial Intelligence. Cognitive models are used in a number of basic and applied domains including Human-Computer Interaction, Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Computer-Generated Forces, and Synthetic Characters. In this course, students will develop models in ACT-R (a unified theory of cognition) that simulate recent findings in cognitive psychology.",
"name" : "Cognitive Modeling"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-1530",
- "credits" : "1-2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Tour Of The Solar System"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4230",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "A course building on the fundamentals of animation and focusing on implementing these fundamentals in the process of making games for 3D engines like Unreal, which involves hand-keyed cycle animation as well as utilizing motion capture data. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "A course building on the fundamentals of animation and focusing on implementing these fundamentals in the process of making games for 3D engines like Unreal, which involves hand-keyed cycle animation as well as utilizing motion capture data.",
"name" : "Game Animation"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4240",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This is the second course in the central track of the Writing concentration for GSAS students. In this project-intensive course, students will learn and practice basic, in-the-trenches writing and narrative development for games, including story outlines, cutscenes, scripted dialogue, systemic dialogue, and mission writing and design, across multiple game types and narrative genres.",
"name" : "Writing for Games I"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4260",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Game Narrative Design moves the focus more squarely onto the design elements of game writing \u00e2\u0080\u0093 most especially integration with gameplay design structure \u00e2\u0080\u0093 and away from line-by-line writing.\u00e2\u0080\u008b",
+ "description" : "Game Narrative Design moves the focus more squarely onto the design elements of game writing \u2013 most especially integration with gameplay design structure \u2013 and away from line-by-line writing.\u200b",
"name" : "Game Narrative Design"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-1010",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "This is an elective course suitable for first-year students interested in chemical engineering.\u00c2 It introduces students to the profession, including the technical content, career opportunities, and societal impact.",
+ "description" : "This is an elective course suitable for first-year students interested in chemical engineering. It introduces students to the profession, including the technical content, career opportunities, and societal impact.",
"name" : "Introduction to Chemical Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4640",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "American Buildings 17-19th C"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4510",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Experimental Game Design is an upper level studio arts course focusing on the creation of innovative, workable game prototypes using a variety of interactive multimedia. Games are considered as a new genre and are analyzed as cultural artifacts. The aesthetics of game design including character development, level design, game play experience, and delivery systems are covered. Flow, game theory, and game play gestalt are considered. Alternate gaming paradigms and emerging forms are encouraged.",
"name" : "Experimental Game Design"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4730",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A brand is more than just a cool logo design. \"A brand is a perception or set of associations consumers have of a business.\" - (Felicia C. Sullivan) These perceptions originate from a consistent verbal and visual story communicated through a multitude of media platforms. In this class we'll define the brand story, create messaging, and design the logo, stationery, signage, packaging, advertising, schwag, motion graphics etc. The course culminates with the design of an identity standards manual defining the rules and principles to effectively communicate a consistent brand image.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "A brand is more than just a cool logo design. \"A brand is a perception or set of associations consumers have of a business.\" - (Felicia C. Sullivan) These perceptions originate from a consistent verbal and visual story communicated through a multitude of media platforms. In this class we'll define the brand story, create messaging, and design the logo, stationery, signage, packaging, advertising, schwag, motion graphics etc. The course culminates with the design of an identity standards manual defining the rules and principles to effectively communicate a consistent brand image.",
"name" : "Brand Identity Design"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4540",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course follows Game Development I. Students work in interdisciplinary teams to create one large-scale 3D game, working from concept to public release. Projects may include games, educational games, serious games and simulations, and interactive artworks, and will focus on creative design, technical execution, and use of game design principles. The course builds on skills and knowledge in previous courses in the GSAS core, including game design, game mechanics, game programming, art, and narrative. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course follows Game Development I. Students work in interdisciplinary teams to create one large-scale 3D game, working from concept to public release. Projects may include games, educational games, serious games and simulations, and interactive artworks, and will focus on creative design, technical execution, and use of game design principles. The course builds on skills and knowledge in previous courses in the GSAS core, including game design, game mechanics, game programming, art, and narrative.",
"name" : "Game Development II"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4550",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a class on the composition of game engines, the substrate between hardware and scripting. Topics include entity/component systems, multithreading, event management, graphics and shader programming, rigid body dynamics, collision detection, multiplayer networking, audio, and other elements of modern game engines. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This is a class on the composition of game engines, the substrate between hardware and scripting. Topics include entity/component systems, multithreading, event management, graphics and shader programming, rigid body dynamics, collision detection, multiplayer networking, audio, and other elements of modern game engines.",
"name" : "Game Architecture"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4940",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Fall and spring terms annually.",
"name" : "GSAS Research Project"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6980",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course provides the background for understanding how the accounting system works and also how the accounting system fits into the overall information system of the firm.",
"name" : "Accounting Information Systems"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-2940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Readings In Csci"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-6400",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Grad Final Administrative Reg"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in GSAS"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6840",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is intended to give students a state-of-the-art understanding about single and multicomponent boiling and condensation heat transfer phenomena. Applications include the analysis of nuclear reactors, oil wells, and chemical process equipment. Students satisfactorily completing this course are expected to thoroughly understand the current thermal-hydraulics literature on multiphase heat and mass transfer and be able to conduct independent research in this field.",
"name" : "An Introduction to Multiphase Flow and Heat Transfer I"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-6200",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Topics in Games Research is a special topics course for the Critical Game Design MS and PhD program in which students are exposed to cutting-edge research being conducted by faculty, learn advanced scholarly research methods, and experience a research-infused pedagogy. The content of this course will shift each semester, reflecting the research focus of the faculty member who offers it. This course may also be used to develop new curriculum.\u00c2 May be taken multiple times for credit. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Topics in Games Research is a special topics course for the Critical Game Design MS and PhD program in which students are exposed to cutting-edge research being conducted by faculty, learn advanced scholarly research methods, and experience a research-infused pedagogy. The content of this course will shift each semester, reflecting the research focus of the faculty member who offers it. This course may also be used to develop new curriculum. May be taken multiple times for credit.",
"name" : "Topics in Game Research"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6930",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "A special course assignment open to graduate students working toward a master's degree. Applicable where a student cannot reasonably arrange to submit a thesis. A written report on the study must be submitted and defended before a committee of the faculty.",
"name" : "Literature Study"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in GSAS"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4490",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Development of branding strategies to accomplish marketing objectives. The development of media plans and schedules to deliver advertising promotions element in the marketing mix. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
"name" : "Advertising Strategy and Promotions"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6580",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is designed to help students develop an understanding of the strategies and practices involved in marketing technologically oriented products and services. Students will learn where these strategies differ from marketing of non-technical products/services, and appreciate how and why they vary.",
"name" : "Marketing High Technology Products"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. The Critical Game Design dissertation is expected to include both traditional scholarly methods in writing and/or experimental design as engagement with the game studies field, as well as a research-as-practice component, meaning the student is expected to also design and build an interactive project component as part of the dissertation work. This combination of scholarship and practice could take many forms. For example, a written portion might focus on analysis of philosophical perspectives on game design, while the accompanying project portion might be a game that embodies a particular philosophical point of view.",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. The Critical Game Design dissertation is expected to include both traditional scholarly methods in writing and/or experimental design as engagement with the game studies field, as well as a research-as-practice component, meaning the student is expected to also design and build an interactive project component as part of the dissertation work. This combination of scholarship and practice could take many forms. For example, a written portion might focus on analysis of philosophical perspectives on game design, while the accompanying project portion might be a game that embodies a particular philosophical point of view.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LITR"
},
{
"code" : "HCDE-6310",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Concepts, theories, and histories of Human-Centered Design, including perspectives on human engagement with technology, communication, and information systems. Focus on iterative and participatory design processes, prototyping, assessment, and continuous improvement of the user experience, especially through usability testing and accessibility.",
"name" : "Introduction to Human-Centered Design"
},
{
"code" : "HCDE-6320",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This course introduces students to core principles of system development and theories of design, social/behavioral science research methods and statistics, and human factors task-analytic methods. Students will gain hands-on experience in developing appropriate research questions, collecting and analyzing data and communicating findings.",
"name" : "Human-Centered Design Research Methods"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4150",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Env Eng Lab I"
},
{
"code" : "HCDE-6330",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Theories and practice of designing effective documents and data displays. Includes development of practical skills and critical approaches to data visualization.",
"name" : "Information Design"
},
{
"code" : "HCDE-6340",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Designing an effective and enjoyable user experience involves more than just responding to specification requirements; it requires designers to understand user needs and expectations, the work that users do, and the environment in which they do their work. Students will learn and practice how to design a user experience and evaluate how effective they have been.",
"name" : "User-Experience Design"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4370",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Data and Society provides a broad overview of how society is leveraging and responding to the social, organizational, policy, and technical opportunities and challenges of a data-driven world. Course themes focus on various aspects of the data ecosystem, data and innovation, and data and the broader community. Assignments build writing, presentation, and critical thinking, and assessment skills, all of which are important for professional success.\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "description" : "Data and Society provides a broad overview of how society is leveraging and responding to the social, organizational, policy, and technical opportunities and challenges of a data-driven world. Course themes focus on various aspects of the data ecosystem, data and innovation, and data and the broader community. Assignments build writing, presentation, and critical thinking, and assessment skills, all of which are important for professional success. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Data and Society"
},
{
"code" : "HCDE-6350",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Approaches to technical communication through genre theory, stakeholder theory, and participatory design, with application through structured authoring of information systems, using technologies such as DITA and XML to deliver the right information at the right time. Students will engage in projects that provide information for different user groups",
"name" : "Technical Communication Systems Design"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Computer Science"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6700",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course teaches students about the roles and infrastructure of IT departments in modern organizations, IT software engineering technologies and methodologies for software development life cycle through hands-on experience. The course is for students with software development background to enhance their knowledge of software development and management, the software development industry, open source community, etc.",
"name" : "Software Development"
},
{
"code" : "HCDE-6360",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This course guides students in crafting the HCDE portfolio or preparing for the STC's CTC-F certification.",
"name" : "HCDE Capstone"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4210",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Design& Analysis Supply Chains"
},
{
"code" : "IENV-1910",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Topical issues in environmental sciences covered in a seminar and discussion format, with field trips.\u00c2 Seminar includes guest speakers from academics, industry, non-profits, and government who are experts in an array of environment-related fields. Each class includes weekly reading and short writing assignments. A short, final research paper is required (~10 pgs.).",
+ "description" : "Topical issues in environmental sciences covered in a seminar and discussion format, with field trips. Seminar includes guest speakers from academics, industry, non-profits, and government who are experts in an array of environment-related fields. Each class includes weekly reading and short writing assignments. A short, final research paper is required (~10 pgs.).",
"name" : "Environmental Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1110",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course focuses on the social and ecological aspects of humans in the natural world. It emphasizes critical thinking about where humans come from and where they are going as a species. The course draws on historical perspectives and addresses contemporary issues such as climate change, national energy resources, and the local foods movement. The course includes readings as well as student projects, field trips, guest lectures, and \"ethnographic\" assignments about this consumer society.",
"name" : "Nature/Society"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1130",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores the philosophical and ethical implications of technological developments that promise to shape \u00e2\u0080\u0092 and perhaps to jeopardize \u00e2\u0080\u0092 human life and society in the 21st Century: Artificial Intelligence. Robots as social companions.\u00c2 Robots in military and medical settings. Cloning. Genetic modification and technological implants for superhuman abilities. Students will improve their insight as well as their critical reasoning skills as we examine, analyze, and evaluate such controversial topics through the lens of philosophical reasoning. Throughout the course we will ask what sort of beings do we want to be and what sort of society do we want to have.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course explores the philosophical and ethical implications of technological developments that promise to shape \u2012 and perhaps to jeopardize \u2012 human life and society in the 21st Century: Artificial Intelligence. Robots as social companions. Robots in military and medical settings. Cloning. Genetic modification and technological implants for superhuman abilities. Students will improve their insight as well as their critical reasoning skills as we examine, analyze, and evaluate such controversial topics through the lens of philosophical reasoning. Throughout the course we will ask what sort of beings do we want to be and what sort of society do we want to have.",
"name" : "Philosophy, Technology, & the Human Future"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6390",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course will provide an introductory survey of the main topics in data mining and knowledge discovery in databases (KDD), including: classification, clustering, association rules, sequence mining, similarity search, deviation detection, and so on. Emphasis will be on the algorithmic and system issues in KDD, as well as on applications such as Web mining, multimedia mining, bioinformatics, geographical information systems, etc.",
"name" : "Data Mining"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2210",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Introduction to the formalism of Special Relativity, Schrodinger wave mechanics, and spin-1/2 particles. Solutions to Schrodinger's Equation in one, two, and three dimensions. One-electron atoms and quantum mechanical magnetic dipole moments.",
"name" : "Quantum Physics I"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4580",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An examination of the cultural impact of advertising in various media: TV, radio, print, and the Web. How does advertising inform human experience and identity? How has it shaped the culture? Who pays for it and why? Note: This is not a How-To course. The focus is critical analysis, not acquiring skills for producing advertising.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "An examination of the cultural impact of advertising in various media: TV, radio, print, and the Web. How does advertising inform human experience and identity? How has it shaped the culture? Who pays for it and why? Note: This is not a How-To course. The focus is critical analysis, not acquiring skills for producing advertising.",
"name" : "Advertising and Culture"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1150",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The ability to sequence complete genomes has had a revolutionary impact on medicine, agriculture, our environment and the very idea of what it means to be \"human\". Genomic medicine will impact virtually everyone in the United States in the coming decades. As informed citizens, it is important that we have a working understanding of genomics and its implications for individuals and for society at large. These conversations are critical to ensure the ethical and accessible use of genomics and to allow us to make informed decisions on both personal and public-policy levels. This course will explore the science,\u00c2 ethics, and history of genetic research and genomics, using case studies to illustrate and personalize the issues at hand.",
+ "description" : "The ability to sequence complete genomes has had a revolutionary impact on medicine, agriculture, our environment and the very idea of what it means to be \"human\". Genomic medicine will impact virtually everyone in the United States in the coming decades. As informed citizens, it is important that we have a working understanding of genomics and its implications for individuals and for society at large. These conversations are critical to ensure the ethical and accessible use of genomics and to allow us to make informed decisions on both personal and public-policy levels. This course will explore the science, ethics, and history of genetic research and genomics, using case studies to illustrate and personalize the issues at hand.",
"name" : "The Genome and You"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6500",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Info & Dec Tech For Is Sy"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1160",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will provide a comprehensive introduction to the field of ethics of scientific research. \u00c2 Why do seemingly good people do bad things? \u00c2 What is science? \u00c2 What is \"bad\" science? What constitutes scientific misconduct? \u00c2 We will explore the answers to these questions through fields such as Sociology, History, Philosophy, Psychology etc. \u00c2 Using evidence from contemporary and historical scientific experiments we will try to understand why researchers might commit scientific misconduct such as fabrication of results, plagiarism, and falsification of data. \u00c2 A brief overview some philosophical theories of ethics and several professional/scientific codes of ethics will be covered.",
+ "description" : "This course will provide a comprehensive introduction to the field of ethics of scientific research. Why do seemingly good people do bad things? What is science? What is \"bad\" science? What constitutes scientific misconduct? We will explore the answers to these questions through fields such as Sociology, History, Philosophy, Psychology etc. Using evidence from contemporary and historical scientific experiments we will try to understand why researchers might commit scientific misconduct such as fabrication of results, plagiarism, and falsification of data. A brief overview some philosophical theories of ethics and several professional/scientific codes of ethics will be covered.",
"name" : "Science and Scientific Misconduct"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4150",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Kinetic processes in materials. Overview of kinetics in relation to equilibrium thermodynamics, atomistics and mathematics of diffusion, phase transformations, and microstructural evolution. All materials classes, including metals and alloys, ionic and intermetallic compounds, glasses, semiconductors, and polymers will be considered in terms of similarities and differences. Includes laboratory component.",
"name" : "Kinetics in Materials Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-6700",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Orientation Sem For Grads"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1165",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course invites you into the world of philosophical ideas and reasoning --to join a great conversation that has unfolded since Socrates exhorted people to lead an examined life 2,400 years ago in Ancient Greece. We will explore such issues as whether some ways of acting and living are morally better than others, the relationship that exists between mind and body, and whether philosophy has anything to contribute to ongoing discussions about the existence and nature of God. This course will include both frequent discussion and written assignments and will aim to help you develop your skills in each of these modes of communication. This course is communication intensive.",
"name" : "Great Ideas in Philosophy"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4720",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to mathematics used in biology, biophysics, biomedical engineering, and medicine. The mathematical topics covered are selected from calculus, linear algebra, differential equations, numerical methods, and Fourier analysis. The biological applications covered are selected from human physiology (heart, lung, brain), population models (microorganisms, cells, animals), and the diagnosis and treatment of disease (heart, cancer).",
"name" : "Mathematics in Medicine and Biology"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1170",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is an exploration of the history of animation. We will begin with a look at precursors to the medium, its formation, and development, trace its development through both mainstream and experimental animation, to the current state of the medium across film, interactive media and other forms. The course will be based around screenings, readings, discussions and response and research papers. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course is an exploration of the history of animation. We will begin with a look at precursors to the medium, its formation, and development, trace its development through both mainstream and experimental animation, to the current state of the medium across film, interactive media and other forms. The course will be based around screenings, readings, discussions and response and research papers.",
"name" : "History of Animation"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1175",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "How do people maintain a sense of well-being in their lives? Each person's path to well-being in body and mind is unique\u00e2\u0080\u0094arising from an awareness of our needs, goals and what each finds fulfilling. The theme of curiosity will be used to explore what makes people tick, what makes them feel balanced, stressed, or calm. This interdisciplinary course uses practice-based learning, in-class writing, lectures, creative play, and reading.",
+ "description" : "How do people maintain a sense of well-being in their lives? Each person's path to well-being in body and mind is unique\u2014arising from an awareness of our needs, goals and what each finds fulfilling. The theme of curiosity will be used to explore what makes people tick, what makes them feel balanced, stressed, or calm. This interdisciplinary course uses practice-based learning, in-class writing, lectures, creative play, and reading.",
"name" : "Well-being: Cultivating Curiosity"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1180",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Listening to each other, ourselves, and our surroundings can be a transformative experience that enhances well-being. In this course, a heightened awareness to sound will be developed through experiential exercises, creative projects, collaborations, readings, lectures, and discussion. The course introduces \"Deep Listening,\" a practice developed by pioneer composer and humanitarian Pauline Oliveros to enhance and expand listening abilities and to encourage creative work.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Listening to each other, ourselves, and our surroundings can be a transformative experience that enhances well-being. In this course, a heightened awareness to sound will be developed through experiential exercises, creative projects, collaborations, readings, lectures, and discussion. The course introduces \"Deep Listening,\" a practice developed by pioneer composer and humanitarian Pauline Oliveros to enhance and expand listening abilities and to encourage creative work.",
"name" : "The Art of Listening"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to introduce a wide variety of concepts and applications in the broad subject of economics, economics being the study of people's choices. Traditionally, these choices have been framed as how to best employ scarce resources to produce goods and services and distribute them for consumption. To describe these choices\u00c2 the cause\u00c2 will introduce the concepts of opportunity cost, demand and supply theory, and market structures.\u00c2 It will consider the role of government in making resource allocation choices.\u00c2 Students will also study important macroeconomic data such as gross domestic product, economic growth rates, inflation, and unemployment. Additionally, studied will be the role of money and banking in the economy and short-run events such as recessions and expansions. Overall, the course will provide the student with an encompassing view of how economic principles and concepts relate to the broader economy and society. \u00c2 Credit cannot be obtained for both IHSS 1200 and ECON 1200 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to introduce a wide variety of concepts and applications in the broad subject of economics, economics being the study of people's choices. Traditionally, these choices have been framed as how to best employ scarce resources to produce goods and services and distribute them for consumption. To describe these choices the cause will introduce the concepts of opportunity cost, demand and supply theory, and market structures. It will consider the role of government in making resource allocation choices. Students will also study important macroeconomic data such as gross domestic product, economic growth rates, inflation, and unemployment. Additionally, studied will be the role of money and banking in the economy and short-run events such as recessions and expansions. Overall, the course will provide the student with an encompassing view of how economic principles and concepts relate to the broader economy and society. Credit cannot be obtained for both IHSS 1200 and ECON 1200",
"name" : "Principles of Economics"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course investigates the relationship between Information Technology (IT) and the individuals and groups who use it -- which is to say, virtually everyone. The course has two main goals. First, it seeks to define and explain core concepts in the field of IT in a fashion that is not overly technical. Second, it examines the historical, social, cultural, political and economic factors that have helped to shape, and have been shaped by, the dimensions of IT that we will study.",
"name" : "IT and Society"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-6970",
- "credits" : "1-3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENVE"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4090",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The course provides an opportunity for the development of theorem-proving skills in the field of mathematical analysis.\u00c2 Expansion of a knowledge base comes as a by-product of energy expended in theorem proving and subsequent exposition.\u00c2 Analysis topics included are: sets, functions, the real numbers, cardinality, induction, decimal representations of real numbers, Euclidean spaces, abstract vector spaces, and metric spaces. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "description" : "The course provides an opportunity for the development of theorem-proving skills in the field of mathematical analysis. Expansion of a knowledge base comes as a by-product of energy expended in theorem proving and subsequent exposition. Analysis topics included are: sets, functions, the real numbers, cardinality, induction, decimal representations of real numbers, Euclidean spaces, abstract vector spaces, and metric spaces. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Foundation of Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1240",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Students in this course participate in a series of class debates, presenting and cross-examining the arguments of those who have a stake in various environmental controversies (about energy, toxic chemicals, consumption, etc.). Students also work in groups to design a proposal for a project to help solve an environmental problem. Throughout the course, students are encouraged to develop their own environmental values and ideas. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Sustainability Debates"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1300",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course will investigate the emergence and transformations of the concept of race in the history and culture of the United States by analyzing films. Hollywood classics will be featured, and will also be contrasted with documentary and independent films. The course will focus on social and political contexts, as well as the film's critical reception and film form.",
"name" : "Race and Film in U.S. Culture and History"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1350",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course examines the interconnections between values and law, seeking to understand how these affect and are affected by science and technology by examining such topics as computers and privacy, medical malpractice, abortion, and other legal conflicts surrounding new reproductive technologies, problems of expert witnesses, sexual harassment, patent infringement, auto safety litigation, and siting of hazardous facilities, among others.",
"name" : "Law, Values, and Public Policy: Perspectives on Science and Technology"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1492",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Language is one of the most powerful forces in the human experience and shapes the production of social identities and cultural assumptions about the world.\u00c2 This course examines the role that language plays in articulating, maintaining, and subverting power relations in society.\u00c2 Topics include language ideology, politics, gender, race/ethnicity, linguistic engineering, language death and revitalization, and disinformation. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Language is one of the most powerful forces in the human experience and shapes the production of social identities and cultural assumptions about the world. This course examines the role that language plays in articulating, maintaining, and subverting power relations in society. Topics include language ideology, politics, gender, race/ethnicity, linguistic engineering, language death and revitalization, and disinformation.",
"name" : "Language and Power"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4360",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This engineering course is an introduction to the fundamental concepts of machine learning in a lab-like environment. The course is structured in three main parts that mimic the daily workflow of a data scientist in a real organization: (i) data preparation; (ii) machine learning algorithms; and (iii) data visualization and decision making.",
"name" : "Applied Data Science"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4300",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course introduces simulation-based modeling methods for complex systems frequently encountered and used by industrial and systems engineers. Examples include production systems, queuing networks, communication systems, healthcare systems, supply chains, social networks, transportation systems, and financial markets. This course introduces techniques including discrete-event simulation and agent-based simulation for modeling and analyzing interdependent, interacting, and coupling variables, agents, components, and related subsystems.",
"name" : "Complex Systems Models for Industrial and Systems Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Application of thermodynamics, heat transfer, and fluid flow principles to nuclear energy generation systems, including nuclear reactors, nuclear fusion devices and systems, and radiation technology. Engineering aspects of 1st and 2nd Laws of Thermodynamics will be emphasized. Characteristics and safety aspects of nuclear power equipment will be discussed.",
"name" : "Nuclear Power Systems Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4968",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Classical mechanics: from Lagrangian to Hamiltonian, single particle formalism, small oscillations, normal modes, Hamilton-Jacobi theory, Hamilton's equation, review of wave mechanics: Schroedinger equation, barrier tunneling, quantum wells, mathematical foundation of quantum mechanics: ket space, representations, observables, eigenstates and diagonization, quantum postulates, application of quantum postulates to two-level systems, harmonic oscillators, creation and annihilation operators. Quantization of angular momentum, spherical harmonics, rotation operators, Landau levels, central force: hydrogen atom. Path integral formalism for quantum theory.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Classical mechanics: from Lagrangian to Hamiltonian, single particle formalism, small oscillations, normal modes, Hamilton-Jacobi theory, Hamilton's equation, review of wave mechanics: Schroedinger equation, barrier tunneling, quantum wells, mathematical foundation of quantum mechanics: ket space, representations, observables, eigenstates and diagonization, quantum postulates, application of quantum postulates to two-level systems, harmonic oscillators, creation and annihilation operators. Quantization of angular momentum, spherical harmonics, rotation operators, Landau levels, central force: hydrogen atom. Path integral formalism for quantum theory.",
"name" : "Quantum Mechanics I"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1550",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A study of novels and short stories exploring the cultural contexts, social impacts, and ethical implications of film, television, robotics, simulations, info/bio technologies, the World Wide Web, Internet privacy, social media, mass advertising and entertainment, and fake news. Discussions, reading quizzes, written essays, and oral presentations based on the readings. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "A study of novels and short stories exploring the cultural contexts, social impacts, and ethical implications of film, television, robotics, simulations, info/bio technologies, the World Wide Web, Internet privacy, social media, mass advertising and entertainment, and fake news. Discussions, reading quizzes, written essays, and oral presentations based on the readings.",
"name" : "Fiction: From Film to the Internet"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1570",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course investigates the relationship between warfare and technology in historical and present-day settings. It will also cover how military technology might evolve in the future. In addition to considering the ways in which technology has changed the practices of warfare, the course will examine the ethical, political, social and economic problems and developments that have arisen from the intersection of military and technological change. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course investigates the relationship between warfare and technology in historical and present-day settings. It will also cover how military technology might evolve in the future. In addition to considering the ways in which technology has changed the practices of warfare, the course will examine the ethical, political, social and economic problems and developments that have arisen from the intersection of military and technological change.",
"name" : "War and Technology: Past, Present, and Future"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-1260",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course focuses on legal and ethical considerations in management. Topics include torts, contracts, criminal and property law, constitutional and administrative law, dispute resolution, business formation, and equal opportunity. Students will also develop an awareness of ethics in managerial decision making, including recognizing and analyzing ethical issues in the workplace, promoting ethical behavior in corporations, and recognizing social responsibilities of business.",
"name" : "Business Law and Ethics"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1666",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores the role of religion in different cultures and in the everyday lives of people around the world. It will introduce students to key concepts, themes, and debates in social science. The role of religion and rituals will be examined through classic texts in anthropology, sociology, political science, and in ethnographic cases relating to different types of societies, from traditional to modern American cultures.\u00c2 It will begin with some basic theoretical issues before discussing contemporary issues such as the relations between nation and religion, violence and religion, climate change and religion, and \"magical thinking\" in technology and science.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course explores the role of religion in different cultures and in the everyday lives of people around the world. It will introduce students to key concepts, themes, and debates in social science. The role of religion and rituals will be examined through classic texts in anthropology, sociology, political science, and in ethnographic cases relating to different types of societies, from traditional to modern American cultures. It will begin with some basic theoretical issues before discussing contemporary issues such as the relations between nation and religion, violence and religion, climate change and religion, and \"magical thinking\" in technology and science.",
"name" : "Religion in a Global World"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1700",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A course designed for students to develop their own voice as a songwriter. The course surveys the methods of successful songwriters, highlighting aspects of melody, lyrics, harmonic progression, story-telling, audience, and social context. Students develop a portfolio of their own original songs and lyrics, presented weekly and performed in a studio or live setting at the end of the term.",
"name" : "Songwriting Workshop"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1776",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The term \"American Dream\" is familiar, but what role, specifically, does the imaginative play in American literature and culture, past and present? This course focuses on the power of imagination to shape a nation through the analysis of fiction, poetry, film, essays, comics, advertising, and historical documents. We will use diverse social histories as a means to explore contemporary experience, focusing on the tension between American dreams and American realities.\u00c2 Requirements include reading/viewing responses, student presentations, and a semester capstone assignment that allows students to choose between a textual or multimedia\u00c2 project.",
+ "description" : "The term \"American Dream\" is familiar, but what role, specifically, does the imaginative play in American literature and culture, past and present? This course focuses on the power of imagination to shape a nation through the analysis of fiction, poetry, film, essays, comics, advertising, and historical documents. We will use diverse social histories as a means to explore contemporary experience, focusing on the tension between American dreams and American realities. Requirements include reading/viewing responses, student presentations, and a semester capstone assignment that allows students to choose between a textual or multimedia project.",
"name" : "The American Dream"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-4800",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This is an individually tailored reading course in which the student does readings and also completes an internship-type field project. The goal is to provide students with immersion in a multicultural milieu involving science and technology issues. Projects include student exchange programs, co-op placement, public service internships, community service, and other individually tailored projects subject to adviser approval. Students are expected to write up a description of their field project that integrates their field experience with the readings.",
"name" : "Experiential Learning Project"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-2300",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Data structures and algorithms, and the mathematical techniques necessary to design and analyze them. Basic data structures: lists, associative structures, trees. Mathematical techniques for designing algorithms and analyzing worst-case and expected-case algorithm efficiency. Advanced data structures: balanced trees, tries, heaps, priority queues, graphs. Searching, sorting. Algorithm design techniques: dynamic programming, greedy algorithms, divide-and-conquer, backtracking. Example graph, string, geometric, and numeric algorithms.",
"name" : "Introduction to Algorithms"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-6570",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This seminar is an investigation of creative, theoretical, and historical research methods in the interdisciplinary arts.\u00c2 Students will be introduced to arts practice-based research discourses and will gain competence in writing and research techniques, conventions, and methods.\u00c2 This course is a requirement for all\u00c2 Arts Department doctoral students.",
+ "description" : "This seminar is an investigation of creative, theoretical, and historical research methods in the interdisciplinary arts. Students will be introduced to arts practice-based research discourses and will gain competence in writing and research techniques, conventions, and methods. This course is a requirement for all Arts Department doctoral students.",
"name" : "Research Methods"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-1510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The field of Astrobiology considers the emergence and evolution of life on Earth, and the potential for life elsewhere.\u00c2 This course explores fundamental concepts in Astrobiology including the creation of the chemical elements, origin and evolution of the solar system, the definition and requirements for life, early Earth environments and life's emergence on this planet. Additionally, students explore habitability on other extraterrestrial bodies, including, Mars, icy worlds, and exoplanets, through self-directed research.",
+ "description" : "The field of Astrobiology considers the emergence and evolution of life on Earth, and the potential for life elsewhere. This course explores fundamental concepts in Astrobiology including the creation of the chemical elements, origin and evolution of the solar system, the definition and requirements for life, early Earth environments and life's emergence on this planet. Additionally, students explore habitability on other extraterrestrial bodies, including, Mars, icy worlds, and exoplanets, through self-directed research.",
"name" : "Introduction to Astrobiology"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6360",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Geomicrobiology"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-4510",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Discussion of current issues relevant to the origins of life in astrophysics, biology, chemistry, and earth sciences.",
"name" : "Readings in Astrobiology and the Origins of Life"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1430",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Health Of Contemp Africa"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4780",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will serve as a seminar for advanced students of linguistics. The material to be covered will be selected collaboratively by the instructor and each cohort of students. Students, who ideally will have taken at least two linguistics-oriented courses previously, will be guided in pursuing topics that they have found particularly compelling in previous courses.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course will serve as a seminar for advanced students of linguistics. The material to be covered will be selected collaboratively by the instructor and each cohort of students. Students, who ideally will have taken at least two linguistics-oriented courses previously, will be guided in pursuing topics that they have found particularly compelling in previous courses.",
"name" : "Advanced Topics in Linguistics"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-4950",
- "credits" : "2-4",
- "description" : "\u00c2 Students will contact several faculty members prior to the start of the semester.\u00c2 They and the participating faculty will mutually agree about the general area of the research and the time commitment for the rotation.\u00c2 Expectations for the research experience will be specified, and mutually agreed to, by the start of the semester.",
+ "description" : "Students will contact several faculty members prior to the start of the semester. They and the participating faculty will mutually agree about the general area of the research and the time commitment for the rotation. Expectations for the research experience will be specified, and mutually agreed to, by the start of the semester.",
"name" : "Research Rotation"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-2210",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Overview of methods used in the design and operation of production and service systems and basic cost accounting. Topics include forecasting, capacity planning, line balancing, production scheduling, staff scheduling, inventory control, just in time, time study, project planning, and discrete item cost accounting. Goal of course is to educate students in basic operations management principles and models and in discrete goods cost accounting. Students cannot receive credit for this course and ENGR 2700 .",
"name" : "Production and Operations Management"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6969",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-6500",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Advanced Game Design/User-Experience Methods is a blended theory and production studio course where students apply critical theory towards the design of games. The course provides students with the opportunity to design and develop their own game concepts, and also gives students foundational design principles ranging from user experience design, human-computer interaction, co- design, and product testing.\u00c2 The goal of the course is for students to acquire critical design and evaluation skills for the understanding and creating digital artifacts that will remain valid over a long period of technological innovation, equipping them to design for the post-VR landscape and beyond. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Advanced Game Design/User-Experience Methods is a blended theory and production studio course where students apply critical theory towards the design of games. The course provides students with the opportunity to design and develop their own game concepts, and also gives students foundational design principles ranging from user experience design, human-computer interaction, co- design, and product testing. The goal of the course is for students to acquire critical design and evaluation skills for the understanding and creating digital artifacts that will remain valid over a long period of technological innovation, equipping them to design for the post-VR landscape and beyond.",
"name" : "Advanced Game Design/User-Experience Methods"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-2160",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course continues the inquiry begun in ARCH 2150 The Ethos of Architecture and focuses especially on the implications that various media and means of representation have on the breadth of concerns within the history, theory, and critical practices of architecture and especially the generation of architecture.",
"name" : "Architectural Media"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-2530",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course covers the design and implementation of computer-based systems to support the collection, organization and analysis of data and information. Topics include theory and techniques for transforming raw data from various sources into structured and usable information; the role of information and data systems in the engineering enterprise; and approaches to interacting with computer-based information systems to support decision making.",
"name" : "Information and Data Systems"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-2940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in ISYE"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2120",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Language In Real Time"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4140",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Review of simple and multiple regression, selection procedures, regression diagnostics, residual analysis, stepwise regression, analysis of variance, design of experiments including factorial experiments, analysis of ordinal data and nonparametric inference, basic time series models. Extensive use of statistical software. Emphasis on statistical applications to industrial engineering.",
"name" : "Statistical Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4200",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Analysis and design of work and workplace. Topics covered include human-machine systems, ergonomics, work measurement systems, methods and standards, process design, direct time study, standard time data, predetermined time systems, work sampling, work load balancing, and workplace layout. Computer-based analysis of problems in work systems.",
"name" : "Design and Analysis of Work Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4620",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course describes the computer vision problems that underlie modern visual effects in movies, in which original video footage is transformed or augmented to create fantastic, yet plausible environments. The course provides a critical overview of the important literature for several problem categories, describing \"under-the-hood\" concepts and algorithms in mathematical detail. In many cases, the relevant academic research is only a few years old and has only recently been applied to movies, TV shows, and commercials.",
"name" : "Computer Vision for Visual Effects"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-4770",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Women Writers examines creative works of literature produced by women of different times, such as novels, poetry, performance art, and graphic novels. These diverse works explore such topics as personal identity, love and sexuality, trauma and memory, and cultural difference, which are complicated by different historical attitudes towards gender, race, class, and religion. Discussion and viewing of films and visual art, as well as critical readings, will deepen the course's focus on literature.\u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Women Writers examines creative works of literature produced by women of different times, such as novels, poetry, performance art, and graphic novels. These diverse works explore such topics as personal identity, love and sexuality, trauma and memory, and cultural difference, which are complicated by different historical attitudes towards gender, race, class, and religion. Discussion and viewing of films and visual art, as well as critical readings, will deepen the course's focus on literature.",
"name" : "Women Writers"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6650",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Ecol,econ,values & Policy Proj"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6650",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Image formation and visual perception. Images, line structures, and line drawings. Preprocessing, boundary detection, texture, and region growing. Image representation in terms of boundaries, regions, and shape. Three-dimensional structures and their projections. Analysis, manipulation, and classification of image data. Knowledge-based approaches to image understanding. Applications from fields of robot vision, biomedical-image analysis, and satellite and aerial image interpretation.",
"name" : "Computer Vision"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-1001",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro To Theater Arts @ Hvcc"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4220",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Design, analysis, and implementation of algorithms for combinatorial optimization problems. Introduction to theoretical analysis of algorithms and applications that can be formulated as combinatorial optimization problems. Specific topics include complexity analysis, network flow problems, traveling salesperson problems, matching problems, knapsack problems, and greedy algorithms. Implementation of combinatorial algorithms in a commercial software language. An introduction to this software language will be given at the beginning of the course.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Design, analysis, and implementation of algorithms for combinatorial optimization problems. Introduction to theoretical analysis of algorithms and applications that can be formulated as combinatorial optimization problems. Specific topics include complexity analysis, network flow problems, traveling salesperson problems, matching problems, knapsack problems, and greedy algorithms. Implementation of combinatorial algorithms in a commercial software language. An introduction to this software language will be given at the beginning of the course.",
"name" : "Optimization Algorithms and Applications"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4410",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Applied Microeconomics"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6140",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This course is an in-depth study of current research within the broad field of cytoskeletal biology. Students will read, interpret, and critique recent primary literature, present new findings, lead discussions, and identify rising questions in the field.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course is an in-depth study of current research within the broad field of cytoskeletal biology. Students will read, interpret, and critique recent primary literature, present new findings, lead discussions, and identify rising questions in the field.",
"name" : "Cytoskeletal Biology"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4050",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Literature Search Strategies In Biology"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4230",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The statistical approach to manufacturing quality control is emphasized. Consideration is given to the managerial implications and responsibilities in implementing the statistical approach. Topical coverage includes construction and interpretation of various control charts; special control charts (e.g., CUSUM, EWMA); graphical methods; specifications, tolerance limits, process capability indices; acceptance sampling; discussion of experimental design; and Taguchi methods of quality improvement.",
"name" : "Quality Control"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4640",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Science Fictions is an advanced narrative video production and theory course. The class looks at thematic areas of science fiction, utopia and dystopia, paranormal, and speculative fiction. 'Speculative fiction' is a genre that looks at the real world and extends what is known about it, building on the 'real.' The class has two threads: to study narrative structure and create a series of sci-fi videos; to discuss and analyze mainstream and avant-garde science fiction\u00c2 films and themes from the early 1900s to the\u00c2 present.",
+ "description" : "Science Fictions is an advanced narrative video production and theory course. The class looks at thematic areas of science fiction, utopia and dystopia, paranormal, and speculative fiction. 'Speculative fiction' is a genre that looks at the real world and extends what is known about it, building on the 'real.' The class has two threads: to study narrative structure and create a series of sci-fi videos; to discuss and analyze mainstream and avant-garde science fiction films and themes from the early 1900s to the present.",
"name" : "Science Fictions"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6320",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Advanced graduate level course focusing on the collection, analysis, and application of data for the generation of criteria within the design process.\u00c2 Multiple scales will be investigated, from the material and product scale, to the building/architectural scale, and finally to the urban, regional, and global scales.\u00c2 Course taught in New York City.",
+ "description" : "Advanced graduate level course focusing on the collection, analysis, and application of data for the generation of criteria within the design process. Multiple scales will be investigated, from the material and product scale, to the building/architectural scale, and finally to the urban, regional, and global scales. Course taught in New York City.",
"name" : "Built Ecologies 1"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4240",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Planning, controlling, and evaluating engineering projects. Use of network analysis techniques, PERT/CPM, budget control, time/cost tradeoff, time estimation, resource allocation, and resource leveling. Extensions include probabilistic models, multiple resource models, project organization, risk analysis, technical forecasting, and network theory. Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and ENGR 4750 .",
"name" : "Engineering Project Management"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-1510",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Spanish I"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4260",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course introduces methods, tools, and technologies for describing human performance via various types of models, and supporting this performance via tools and advanced technologies. The course is hands-on, involving student projects that investigate human performance in challenging domains as well as direct engagement with technologies for decision support.",
"name" : "Human Performance Modeling and Support"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4310",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course introduces students to past, current, and future issues in the ethics of information technology, and encourages students to develop their own standpoint from which to address the diverse range of ethical challenges faced in the information age. During the course, students will learn about a wide range of ethical theories, and then will apply these theories to address ethical dilemmas in creating models for decision support using an educational computer simulation.",
"name" : "Ethics of Modeling for Industrial and System Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Microbiology is the study of \"microscopic organisms,\" including members of all the kingdoms of life. The course has two objectives: 1)\u00c2 Provide an overview of the diversity, genetics, and physiology of microorganisms. 2)\u00c2 Review current topics of investigation in Microbiology in detail. Microbes will be studied from a cellular and molecular perspective. This includes structure, nutrition, growth, control, classification, and genetics. This course will provide biology students the necessary background in bacterial genetics, pathogenic microbiology, prokaryotic physiology, eukaryotic microbiology, molecular biology and microbial ecology.",
+ "description" : "Microbiology is the study of \"microscopic organisms,\" including members of all the kingdoms of life. The course has two objectives: 1) Provide an overview of the diversity, genetics, and physiology of microorganisms. 2) Review current topics of investigation in Microbiology in detail. Microbes will be studied from a cellular and molecular perspective. This includes structure, nutrition, growth, control, classification, and genetics. This course will provide biology students the necessary background in bacterial genetics, pathogenic microbiology, prokaryotic physiology, eukaryotic microbiology, molecular biology and microbial ecology.",
"name" : "Microbiology"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4320",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Problems of scheduling several tasks over time. Topics include measures of performance, single machine sequencing, flowshop scheduling, the job shop problem, and priority dispatching. Integer programming, dynamic programming, and heuristic approaches to various problems are also presented.",
"name" : "Theory of Production Scheduling"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4330",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Methods of designing experiments so that statistical analysis of the resulting data will yield the maximum useful information. Testing of hypotheses; analysis of variance and covariance. Various designs, including the factorial and its modifications, incomplete blocks, Latin squares, and response surface designs are covered. Also discussed are optimality properties of design.",
"name" : "Design of Experiments"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4340",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "An introduction to Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) focuses on mechanisms that are controlled or monitored by computer-based algorithms, tightly integrated with the physical environment or a biological system. This course provides a step-by-step approach to one of those systems (e.g., brain-machine interfaces) to emphasize the importance of interdisciplinary work and understanding of the system as a whole.",
"name" : "Cyber-Physical Systems"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2700",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "There ought to be a law. . .\" \u00c2 Law shapes people's lives in countless ways; it is everywhere. Law permits, prohibits, enables, legitimizes, protects, and prosecutes. Law is more than the written word, the \"black letter law.\" People make the law\u00e2\u0080\u0094judges, attorneys, police officers, legislators, defendants, and plaintiffs. This course will explore the law's social, political, cultural, and historical aspects. Using an interdisciplinary approach, the course will examine how social theorists conceptualize and explain the relationship between law and society. Students will be exposed to the theoretical frameworks that are used to examine how the law shapes society, and society shapes the law, and develop an understanding of the social processes that affect the legal system. The course will advance students' capacity to think critically and communicate effectively about themes, concepts, and arguments surrounding the law and learn what law is; where it comes from; who creates it; and what roles it plays in shaping society.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "There ought to be a law. . .\" Law shapes people's lives in countless ways; it is everywhere. Law permits, prohibits, enables, legitimizes, protects, and prosecutes. Law is more than the written word, the \"black letter law.\" People make the law\u2014judges, attorneys, police officers, legislators, defendants, and plaintiffs. This course will explore the law's social, political, cultural, and historical aspects. Using an interdisciplinary approach, the course will examine how social theorists conceptualize and explain the relationship between law and society. Students will be exposed to the theoretical frameworks that are used to examine how the law shapes society, and society shapes the law, and develop an understanding of the social processes that affect the legal system. The course will advance students' capacity to think critically and communicate effectively about themes, concepts, and arguments surrounding the law and learn what law is; where it comes from; who creates it; and what roles it plays in shaping society.",
"name" : "Law & Society"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4400",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The study of the link between engineering, and management. Students will gain an in-depth understanding of the foundations of engineering management.\u00c2 Topics covered include the concept of engineering management, its relationship to engineering, and its historical underpinnings, the traditional roles of management with particular emphasis on leadership skills to manage projects and processes, as well as the organizational and administrative abilities required to oversee the day-to-day operational performance of complex engineering. The ethical dimensions of the organization and the engineering community are also explored.",
+ "description" : "The study of the link between engineering, and management. Students will gain an in-depth understanding of the foundations of engineering management. Topics covered include the concept of engineering management, its relationship to engineering, and its historical underpinnings, the traditional roles of management with particular emphasis on leadership skills to manage projects and processes, as well as the organizational and administrative abilities required to oversee the day-to-day operational performance of complex engineering. The ethical dimensions of the organization and the engineering community are also explored.",
"name" : "Management of Engineering and Technology"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-5210",
- "credits" : "5",
"description" : "This design studio builds on prior studios emphasizing projects of greater scale and complexity. Typically, the studio designs large-scale housing developments but other projects of similar complexity may be used. The studio requires the analysis and critique of precedent and the writing of an architectural program.",
"name" : "Graduate Architecture Design 2"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4600",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to commonly used methods of deterministic and stochastic operations research. Topics include linear programming, simplex algorithms, duality, linear networks, integer programming, dynamic programming, goa1 programming, location models, exact and heuristic solution procedures for integer and sequencing problems, queuing theory, Markov chains, multi-criteria decision making, and decision analysis. Students cannot get credit for both ISYE 4600 and ISYE 6610 .",
"name" : "Operations Research Methods"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4760",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A course in the theory of statistics which will provide students with a basic foundation for more specialized statistical methodology courses. Topics include sampling and sampling distributions; point estimation including method of moments, maximum likelihood estimation, uniform minimum variance estimation and properties of the associated estimators; confidence intervals; hypothesis testing including uniformly most powerful, likelihood ratio approaches, chi-square tests for goodness-of-fit and independence. The course will conclude with an introduction to linear statistical models.",
"name" : "Mathematical Statistics"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4810",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "With ever-increasing computer power readily available, new engineering methods based on \"soft computing\" are emerging at a rapid rate. This course provides students a working knowledge in computational intelligence covering the basics of fuzzy logic, neural networks, genetic algorithms, simulated annealing, wavelet analysis, fractal structures, and chaotic time series analysis. Applications in control, optimization, data mining, fractal image compression, and time series analysis are illustrated with engineering case studies.",
"name" : "Computational Intelligence"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4410",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Deep Listening"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-2210",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Organic Compounds And React"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in ISYE"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-4964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2610",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "DIS Studio II introduces students to general principles of user-experience design and industrial design as a set of approaches for attending to matters of aesthetics and form, usability, and meaning-making. It considers industrial designers as a community of practice. Assignments require students to synthesize social, technical, and formal concerns in the design of innovative objects. Students also gain competencies in CAD, real-time rendering, and project presentation. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "DIS Studio II introduces students to general principles of user-experience design and industrial design as a set of approaches for attending to matters of aesthetics and form, usability, and meaning-making. It considers industrial designers as a community of practice. Assignments require students to synthesize social, technical, and formal concerns in the design of innovative objects. Students also gain competencies in CAD, real-time rendering, and project presentation.",
"name" : "Design and Innovation Studio II"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6010",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Emphasis is on empirical model building and evaluation for both multiple linear and nonlinear regression models. Topics specifically addressed are simultaneous estimation, diagnostics and remedial measures, selection procedures, locally weighted least squares classification variables, binary response variables, time series data, nonlinear estimation, software packages.",
"name" : "Applied Regression Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4967",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6180",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Data mining is the computationally intelligent extraction of information from large databases. It is the process of automated presentation of patterns, rules, and functions from large data bases to make crucial business decisions. This course takes a multi-disciplinary approach to data mining and knowledge discovery involving statistics, rule and tree induction, neural networks, genetic algorithms, visualization and fuzzy logic. The course is project driven and puts a special emphasis on the use of computational intelligence for scientific data mining related to drug design and bioinformatics.",
"name" : "Knowledge Discovery with Data Mining"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6340",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "An introduction to Cyber-Physical Systems (CPS) focuses on mechanisms that are controlled or monitored by computer-based algorithms, tightly integrated with the physical environment or a biological system. This course provides a step-by-step approach to one of those systems (e.g., brain-machine interfaces) to emphasize the importance of interdisciplinary work and understanding of the system as a whole.",
"name" : "Cyber-Physical Systems"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-2540",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This hands-on class introduces many fundamental concepts in game development. Students will learn to program multiple video\u00c2 games. Topics include render loops, rigid body dynamics, interfaces, event and messaging systems, and co-routines. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This hands-on class introduces many fundamental concepts in game development. Students will learn to program multiple video games. Topics include render loops, rigid body dynamics, interfaces, event and messaging systems, and co-routines.",
"name" : "Introduction to Game Programming"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4400",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course covers materials processing in the area of metals, polymers, ceramics, and electronic materials.\u00c2 Some processes covered include casting, molding, deformation processing, additive processing, and joining methods.\u00c2 Design and analysis of experiments and process modeling are emphasized.\u00c2 Includes laboratories.",
+ "description" : "This course covers materials processing in the area of metals, polymers, ceramics, and electronic materials. Some processes covered include casting, molding, deformation processing, additive processing, and joining methods. Design and analysis of experiments and process modeling are emphasized. Includes laboratories.",
"name" : "Materials Synthesis and Processing"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-2290",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Laboratory experiments dealing with the synthesis and characterization of chemical compounds and practical experience in accessing the chemistry literature. Primary emphasis is organic chemistry. Intended for chemistry majors.",
"name" : "Experimental Chemistry II: Synthesis and Characterization"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-1824",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Student Success Labs"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6340",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Open-ended design project in which students work in teams of four (two engineers and two architects) to replicate the Architecture/Structural Engineering integrated design of buildings.\u00c2 Oral presentations and written reports and studio critics cover alternatives considered, design assumptions, and cost estimates. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "description" : "Open-ended design project in which students work in teams of four (two engineers and two architects) to replicate the Architecture/Structural Engineering integrated design of buildings. Oral presentations and written reports and studio critics cover alternatives considered, design assumptions, and cost estimates. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Bedford Design Studio"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6600",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Dynamics of manufacturing systems and supply chains, lean manufacturing, lead time reduction in manufacturing and service operations, advanced pull systems, concurrent design of products and supply chains, rapid new product introduction, remanufacturing and reverse supply chains, and integration of information technology in supply chain operations. Analysis of models and their application to design and planning problems in manufacturing as well as service systems is emphasized.",
"name" : "Design of Manufacturing System Supply Chains"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6040",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The seminar examines interactions between technology and society from the vantage point of the various disciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives that have contributed to technology studies. The texts, theories, and arguments that were important for the historical development of the field are covered, as well as contemporary issues. The seminar provides the resources and develops the skill needed for understanding, criticizing, constructing, and developing research in the field.",
"name" : "Technology Studies"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6810",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course covers topics related to learning and inference with different types of Probabilistic Graphical Models (PGMs). It also demonstrates the application of PGMs to different fields. The course covers both directed and undirected graphical models, both parameter and structure learning, and both exact and approximated inference methods.",
"name" : "Introduction to Probabilistic Graphical Models"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6610",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Survey of decision science methodologies in the context of technical and economic decision problems. The course seeks to develop a conceptual understanding of these methods and basic implementation skills. Students will learn how to apply decision science methods from problem recognition and data development through problem formulation and computer solution. Students cannot get credit for both ISYE 4600 \u00c2 and ISYE 6610.",
+ "description" : "Survey of decision science methodologies in the context of technical and economic decision problems. The course seeks to develop a conceptual understanding of these methods and basic implementation skills. Students will learn how to apply decision science methods from problem recognition and data development through problem formulation and computer solution. Students cannot get credit for both ISYE 4600 and ISYE 6610.",
"name" : "Systems Modeling in Decision Sciences"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6620",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A thorough development of a simulation language is stressed in order to progress through a series of increasingly sophisticated applications of computer simulation. Projects cover a wide range of topics: production systems, inventory, finance, transportation, and public systems. The course includes model development, statistical analysis of simulation input/output data, validation planning, and managing simulation projects.",
"name" : "Discrete-Event Simulation"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6760",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Review of exact and heuristic methods for solving discrete problems, including the traveling salesman problem, the knapsack problem, packing and covering problems. Algorithm complexity and NP-completeness, cutting plane methods and polyhedral theory, branch and bound, simulated annealing, tabu search, Lagrangian duality.",
"name" : "Integer and Combinatorial Optimization"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-2100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course provides an introduction to economic data and analysis. There will be an emphasis on applications using data that pertain to various areas of economics, such as labor market, technology-related markets, economics of climate change, and healthcare sector. Students will learn basic statistical methods to analyze data and interpret current economic and policy issues.",
"name" : "Economic Data Analysis and Applications"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6770",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A unified development of linear systems and linear programming, polyhedral theory, the simplex method, interior point methods, decomposition methods for large scale linear programming problems, the ellipsoid method, column generation algorithms for stochastic programming and other problems.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "A unified development of linear systems and linear programming, polyhedral theory, the simplex method, interior point methods, decomposition methods for large scale linear programming problems, the ellipsoid method, column generation algorithms for stochastic programming and other problems.",
"name" : "Linear and Conic Optimization"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-4270",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Application of engineering principles to planning construction operations. Network scheduling (CPM, PERT), resource allocation. Cost engineering and control.",
"name" : "Construction Management"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6820",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A course on fundamentals of stochastic processes and queuing theory emphasizing applications. Poisson processes, renewal processes, Markov chains, general methods in the study of Markovian and non-Markovian systems, tandem queues, networks of queues, priority and bulk queues, computational methods and simulation. Focus of the course is the application of these tools in the performance evaluation and design of computer systems, communication networks, manufacturing systems, and service systems.",
"name" : "Queuing Systems and Applications"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "The CGD Master's Project is an independent, individual student project undertaken throughout the student's Master's education. Master's Projects include a production aspect, such as a deliverable game, interactive installation, or tech demo, as well as a written document that firmly establishes the project's methods and grounding as research-driven through an academic literature review and design document. The design document and literature review may pull from disciplines that contribute to game design, including, but not limited to, Visual Arts, Humanities and Media Studies, Social Science, Psychology, and Computer Science. The student will be advised by a member of the GSAS faculty. A committee of the student's advisor, a second GSAS faculty member, and a third faculty member from outside the program or Institution will approve the student's Master's Proposal document, which contains the literature review and design proposal, and is to be completed no later than the end of the first Master's semester. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "The CGD Master's Project is an independent, individual student project undertaken throughout the student's Master's education. Master's Projects include a production aspect, such as a deliverable game, interactive installation, or tech demo, as well as a written document that firmly establishes the project's methods and grounding as research-driven through an academic literature review and design document. The design document and literature review may pull from disciplines that contribute to game design, including, but not limited to, Visual Arts, Humanities and Media Studies, Social Science, Psychology, and Computer Science. The student will be advised by a member of the GSAS faculty. A committee of the student's advisor, a second GSAS faculty member, and a third faculty member from outside the program or Institution will approve the student's Master's Proposal document, which contains the literature review and design proposal, and is to be completed no later than the end of the first Master's semester.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6840",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Applications of operations research and systems analysis techniques to mathematical modeling of complex systems, especially large-scale public systems. Discussion of model-building approaches, emphasizing the role of creativity, rationality, and mathematics. Introduction of important quantitative techniques (e.g., geometrical probability, optimization theory, and stochastic processes) and their application to modeling emergency service systems, spatial distribution of public service facilities, congestion, land-use patterns, transportation systems, demographics, and energy.",
"name" : "Modeling Large-Scale Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6969",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6900",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A review of active ISYE doctoral research projects and activities. Students develop a research paper or proposal under the guidance of a selected faculty adviser and present research findings in class. It is anticipated that the research paper will lead to identification of the broad area of dissertation research. The proposal should be of a quality that can be submitted to an external funding agency.",
"name" : "Seminar in ISYE Research"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in ISYE"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6970",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ISYE"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4170",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course examines the major theories of leadership, as well as provides the opportunity to apply these theories to actual or symbolic leaders. Students wishing to become effective managers or leaders will benefit from this course, since the focus is on providing students with information about the traits, behaviors, power and influence, and charisma of effective leaders.",
"name" : "Professional Development II: Leadership Theories"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-1220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course investigates the relationship between Information Technology (IT) and the individuals and groups who use it -- which is to say, virtually everyone. The course has two main goals. First, it seeks to define and explain core concepts in the field of IT in a fashion that is not overly technical. Second, it examines the historical, social, cultural, political and economic factors that have helped to shape, and have been shaped by, the dimensions of IT that we will study. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course investigates the relationship between Information Technology (IT) and the individuals and groups who use it -- which is to say, virtually everyone. The course has two main goals. First, it seeks to define and explain core concepts in the field of IT in a fashion that is not overly technical. Second, it examines the historical, social, cultural, political and economic factors that have helped to shape, and have been shaped by, the dimensions of IT that we will study.",
"name" : "IT and Society"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-2210",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to the current theories, methods, and issues in human-computer interaction. Theory and research along with practical application are discussed within the context of organizational impact. The course provides the knowledge of HCI systems and research used for the implementation of safe, quick, and useable interactive technologies.",
"name" : "Introduction to Human Computer Interaction"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6480",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The course introduces students to the building blocks of nanostructured materials, material behavior when they are assembled, and the technological implications of these materials, with emphasis on new developments in this field and future perspectives.\u00c2 Lectures by the instructor and other faculty experts on various aspects of nanomaterials are followed by student lectures in areas of their own particular interest.\u00c2 These lectures then become the basis for students to create video presentations for broader dissemination.",
+ "description" : "The course introduces students to the building blocks of nanostructured materials, material behavior when they are assembled, and the technological implications of these materials, with emphasis on new developments in this field and future perspectives. Lectures by the instructor and other faculty experts on various aspects of nanomaterials are followed by student lectures in areas of their own particular interest. These lectures then become the basis for students to create video presentations for broader dissemination.",
"name" : "Nanostructured Materials"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Students work on collaborative projects to design innovative ITWS solutions which address a specific problem or area of need in the student's field. Students work to identify a problem and research viable solutions. They go on to propose, design, and prototype their ITWS solution learning best practices for ITWS project management, communication, and user-center design. This course serves as the culminating experience for the undergraduate ITWS program. Restricted to ITWS majors. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Information Technology and Web Science Capstone"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4250",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This advanced course in database applications and database systems provides students with a strong\u00c2 foundation in modern database design, data modeling, data normalization, SQL, NoSQL, query optimization,\u00c2 database security, and how databases fit into larger software architectures. \u00c2 Substantial programming and\u00c2 design projects are required.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This advanced course in database applications and database systems provides students with a strong foundation in modern database design, data modeling, data normalization, SQL, NoSQL, query optimization, database security, and how databases fit into larger software architectures. Substantial programming and design projects are required.",
"name" : "Database Applications and Systems (DBAS)"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course provides an introduction to fundamental concepts of management and applies them to IT. It examines the use of IT in business processes and the management issues of integrating IT into organizational processes to gain competitive advantage. Topics include: management, organizations, and information systems; development life cycle; project management and systems engineering; process reengineering; and organizational learning. This course includes the planning, development, and implementation of an IT project for a real client.",
"name" : "Managing IT Resources"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7980",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Capstone Project"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-2961",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "IENV-2100",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "An introduction to a variety of ways to study the environment, especially science and technology studies, environmental science, and environmental engineering. Case studies and projects emphasize the cooperation of disciplines in addressing local and global environmental issues such as PCBs in the Hudson River, acid rain in the Adirondacks, and population growth.",
"name" : "Introduction to Environmental Studies"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4370",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course covers foundational models for information security, policies, authentication, access control, database security, assurance, auditing, and intrusion detection. It also devotes substantial time to secure coding practices. Students will be expected to complete projects that explore an aspect of information security in detail. Cryptography is not covered since it is a focus of other courses.",
"name" : "Information System Security"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-1008",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Medical Terminology (at Sccc)"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. X-informatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines, e.g. X=astro, geo. Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing, and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. X-informatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines, e.g. X=astro, geo. Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing, and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments.",
"name" : "X-Informatics"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-6220",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This is a graduate level course that extends the objectives of Cognitive Modeling I to additional cognitive architectures. The first part of the course is a survey of cognitive modeling paradigms. The second part will be a more in-depth coverage of\u00c2 two or three architectures and will be done by teams of students. Each team will study one architecture including the development of a model.",
+ "description" : "This is a graduate level course that extends the objectives of Cognitive Modeling I to additional cognitive architectures. The first part of the course is a survey of cognitive modeling paradigms. The second part will be a more in-depth coverage of two or three architectures and will be done by teams of students. Each team will study one architecture including the development of a model.",
"name" : "Cognitive Modeling II"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4350",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Nuclear instrumentation and radiation detector systems for the collection, processing and displaying of signals related to photons, electrons, alpha particles, and neutrons. Topics include: radiation interactions, counting statistics, ionization chambers, proportional counters, Geiger counters, scintillators, gamma-ray spectroscopy, semiconductor detectors, slow and fast neutron detection, liquid scintillation and TLD, and background and shielding. Students will tour a 100-MeV electron accelerator facility and learn to use MCNP code to simulate an HPGe gamma spectrometer.",
"name" : "Nuclear Instrumentation and Measurement"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4420",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introductory course on the generation, distribution, and interaction of ionizing radiation. Radiation sources such as radioisotopes, accelerators, focused ion beams, and cosmic rays are studied. Applications to semiconductor electronic devices, chemical polymerization, food preservation, sterilization, material modification, industrial and medical radiography, and radiation damage are presented.",
"name" : "Radiation Technology"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2410",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course helps students understand the meaning and emotional complexity of visual images in their culture. Students examine photographic imagery through three perspectives. The first\u00e2\u0080\u0094formal\u00e2\u0080\u0094addresses the design components of the image, such as vantage point and contrast. The second\u00e2\u0080\u0094psychodynamic\u00e2\u0080\u0094concerns the emotional dynamics of viewing. The third\u00e2\u0080\u0094social political\u00e2\u0080\u0094 explores photographs as instruments for preserving or challenging cultural values. No technical knowledge of photography is needed.",
+ "description" : "This course helps students understand the meaning and emotional complexity of visual images in their culture. Students examine photographic imagery through three perspectives. The first\u2014formal\u2014addresses the design components of the image, such as vantage point and contrast. The second\u2014psychodynamic\u2014concerns the emotional dynamics of viewing. The third\u2014social political\u2014 explores photographs as instruments for preserving or challenging cultural values. No technical knowledge of photography is needed.",
"name" : "Perspectives on Photography"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4500",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Building\u00c2 on the technology covered in Web Systems Development, students will be exposed to current technologies, frameworks, and practices in the area of Web development. Types of topics included will be HTML5/CSS3, API's for data, node.js, MongoDB, and Angular. Methodology to be explored will be application design, software versioning, and team development. Lab intensive, this course is intended to complete a foundation for the advanced courses in Data Science and Advanced Web Science.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Building on the technology covered in Web Systems Development, students will be exposed to current technologies, frameworks, and practices in the area of Web development. Types of topics included will be HTML5/CSS3, API's for data, node.js, MongoDB, and Angular. Methodology to be explored will be application design, software versioning, and team development. Lab intensive, this course is intended to complete a foundation for the advanced courses in Data Science and Advanced Web Science.",
"name" : "Web Science Systems Development"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4941",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Blockchain Sustainability"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6320",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Key design principles and techniques of modern computer hardware, including instruction-level, data-level, and thread-level parallelism in CPU and GPU, cache and memory hierarchy, DRAM and non-volatile memory technologies and solid-state drive, and heterogeneous and disaggregated computing architecture. Advanced infrastructure software design techniques and algorithms, including indexing data structure, transaction, storage model, and consistency and consensus. Course projects to gain advanced programming skills and deepen the understanding of modern computer hardware and software.",
"name" : "Advanced Computer Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4600",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics is an entire methodology rather than individual analyses or analysis steps.",
"name" : "Data Analytics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4830",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Solutions of acoustic wave and diffusion equations; stationary and moving monopole, dipole, quadrapole sources; geometrical acoustics; acoustical impedance, energy density, source strength, intensity flux; near and far field approximations; stationary and moving boundary interaction (viscous, dilational boundary layers, streaming, scattering). Applications include propeller, turbulent noise; total- and semi-anechoic chambers; loudspeakers; microphones, straight, tapered fluidic transmission lines; water hammer; musical instruments; room acoustics; sound absorbing, transmitting, and reflecting solid, liquid, gaseous media property determination.",
"name" : "Acoustics Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Mathematics"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4700",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course teaches students about the roles and infrastructure of IT departments in modern organizations, IT software engineering technologies and methodologies for software development life cycle through hands-on experience. The course is for students with software development background to enhance their knowledge of software development and management, the software development industry, open source community, etc.",
"name" : "Software Development"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4980",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "Active participation in a senior-level project supervised by a faculty member and requiring a presentation and project report. Grades of \"in-progress\" are assigned until the special project has been approved by the faculty member.",
"name" : "Special Projects"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4990",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A two-semester spring-fall or fall-spring course dealing with an advanced level independent research project supervised by a faculty member and requiring the presentation of a thesis. First term registration is limited to second semester juniors and first semester seniors. The grade for the first semester will be listed as \"In progress.\" \u00c2",
+ "description" : "A two-semester spring-fall or fall-spring course dealing with an advanced level independent research project supervised by a faculty member and requiring the presentation of a thesis. First term registration is limited to second semester juniors and first semester seniors. The grade for the first semester will be listed as \"In progress.\"",
"name" : "Senior Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6965",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6350",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught.",
"name" : "Data Science"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1562",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Color is used every day to help us decode information, inform communications, influence our buying decisions, distinguish scientific properties, and impact our emotions and health. In this course, we'll study the impact of color and learn how to use it effectively. Through a series of creative hands-on graphic design projects, we will investigate color memory, relativity, and subjectivity, communicating with color, physiological and psychological responses to color, and color across cultures. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Color is used every day to help us decode information, inform communications, influence our buying decisions, distinguish scientific properties, and impact our emotions and health. In this course, we'll study the impact of color and learn how to use it effectively. Through a series of creative hands-on graphic design projects, we will investigate color memory, relativity, and subjectivity, communicating with color, physiological and psychological responses to color, and color across cultures.",
"name" : "Life in Color"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4555",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Topics Covered: Climatology, Solar vs. Wind Energy, Earth's rotational and Coriolis effects, Wind Speed Statistics: Histograms, Weibull, Available Energy, Aerodynamics, Wake effects, Thrust and Power with objects in Wind flow, Betz Limit, Wind Shear and Ground Effects; Blade aero/structural design, and manufacture; OEM Wind Turbine Designs/Architectures, and capturing Wind Energy via Direct Drive-Generators/Gearbox-driven; Pitch/Yaw Controls, Tower designs.\u00c2 The back-end interface with the Grid, Wind Farm development and Supervisory Controls; Cost of Energy: Wind vs. Fossil Fuel technologies.",
+ "description" : "Topics Covered: Climatology, Solar vs. Wind Energy, Earth's rotational and Coriolis effects, Wind Speed Statistics: Histograms, Weibull, Available Energy, Aerodynamics, Wake effects, Thrust and Power with objects in Wind flow, Betz Limit, Wind Shear and Ground Effects; Blade aero/structural design, and manufacture; OEM Wind Turbine Designs/Architectures, and capturing Wind Energy via Direct Drive-Generators/Gearbox-driven; Pitch/Yaw Controls, Tower designs. The back-end interface with the Grid, Wind Farm development and Supervisory Controls; Cost of Energy: Wind vs. Fossil Fuel technologies.",
"name" : "Wind Energy Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6360",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Data and Society provides a broad overview of how society is leveraging and responding to the social, organizational, policy, and technical opportunities and challenges of a data-driven world. Course themes focus on various aspects of the data ecosystem, data and innovation, and data and the broader community. Assignments build writing, presentation, and critical thinking, and assessment skills, all of which are important for professional success.\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "description" : "Data and Society provides a broad overview of how society is leveraging and responding to the social, organizational, policy, and technical opportunities and challenges of a data-driven world. Course themes focus on various aspects of the data ecosystem, data and innovation, and data and the broader community. Assignments build writing, presentation, and critical thinking, and assessment skills, all of which are important for professional success. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Data and Society"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6860",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This upper level studio and seminar explores individual visual arts projects contributing to thesis or dissertation development. Topics in creative personal expression in imaging, installation, digital/traditional mixed media and emerging genres will be studied drawing from issues raised in class projects. Advanced studies may include high resolution digital photography, montage, archival printing, gesture drawing, painting, assemblage, processing, stencil art, projection, and evolving genres which lead to an independent final project and web portfolio.",
"name" : "Advanced Digital Imaging"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. X-informatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines, e.g. X=astro, geo. Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. X-informatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines, e.g. X=astro, geo. Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments.",
"name" : "X-Informatics"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course introduces students to basic concepts and methods of artificial intelligence and their applications in computer games. The topics include decision making, movement, path finding, and AI for human-like characters. This course will take the form of a combination of lectures, presentations by students, class discussions, and independent study.",
"name" : "Game AI"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6280",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biomech Of Soft Tissues"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6800",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Integration of the knowledge and professional practice of the Master's in IT core and concentration courses. Topics in database systems, networking, software design, human computer interaction, management of technology, and ethics are applied within a framework of global e-business strategy. The course utilizes a Team Project with a real organization to practice major IT concepts. Team members select, develop, and present a significant technology implementation project, incorporating strategy, systems development, and business planning.",
"name" : "Information Technology Master's Capstone"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6970",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
"description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6980",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6990",
- "credits" : "3-6",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4470",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Muscle & Cardiac Biology. Students will read and critique primary papers, present current research articles, and lead critical discussions of topics listed in the class schedule.",
"name" : "Muscle & Cardiac Biology"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-1410",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course assumes no previous knowledge of the subject. The course is designed to provide students with fundamental skills in listening, speaking, reading, and writing Mandarin Chinese. Oral and aural skills will be emphasized. Background on Chinese culture will be introduced as an element of the course. For entry level, non-native speakers only.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course assumes no previous knowledge of the subject. The course is designed to provide students with fundamental skills in listening, speaking, reading, and writing Mandarin Chinese. Oral and aural skills will be emphasized. Background on Chinese culture will be introduced as an element of the course. For entry level, non-native speakers only.",
"name" : "Chinese I"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2410",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a continuation of Chinese I, a course for the standard modern Chinese language (Mandarin). Students learn more Chinese characters and words, reach a total of nearly 500 characters and 650 words, and use more complicated grammatical structures, including some compliment phrases and topic-comment sentences. In sum, students will learn more in all four aspects\u00e2\u0080\u0094listening, speaking, reading, and writing\u00e2\u0080\u0094presented in Chinese I.",
+ "description" : "This is a continuation of Chinese I, a course for the standard modern Chinese language (Mandarin). Students learn more Chinese characters and words, reach a total of nearly 500 characters and 650 words, and use more complicated grammatical structures, including some compliment phrases and topic-comment sentences. In sum, students will learn more in all four aspects\u2014listening, speaking, reading, and writing\u2014presented in Chinese I.",
"name" : "Chinese II"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2960",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LANG"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6120",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Power quality examines the causes of and solutions to electric power quality problems. Topics range from utility issues such as voltage sags, swells, and outages to consumer issues, such as harmonic distortion, and bus reliability at the equipment level. Solution methods such as implementing surge suppressors, the UPS, active filtering, and proper grounding techniques will be discussed.",
"name" : "Power Quality"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6008",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Immunology @amc"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-4470",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Chinese V is a continuation of Chinese IV, a course for standard modern Chinese language (Mandarin). Students learn additional Chinese characters and words, reach a total of about 950 characters, 1700 words, and complicated grammatical structures, e.g., idiomatic expressions, expressions of comparison, concession, and subjection, etc. In sum, students learn more in all four aspects \u00e2\u0080\u0093 listening, speaking, reading and writing \u00e2\u0080\u0093 presented in Chinese IV.",
+ "description" : "Chinese V is a continuation of Chinese IV, a course for standard modern Chinese language (Mandarin). Students learn additional Chinese characters and words, reach a total of about 950 characters, 1700 words, and complicated grammatical structures, e.g., idiomatic expressions, expressions of comparison, concession, and subjection, etc. In sum, students learn more in all four aspects \u2013 listening, speaking, reading and writing \u2013 presented in Chinese IV.",
"name" : "Chinese V"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LANG"
},
{
"code" : "BUSN-6104",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "In this three credit, 15-week project-based course, explore how organizations are structured (both formally and informally), how they do what they do, and how they measure and optimize performance.\u00c2 Using your own experience combined with industry case studies and materials, analyze the climate in which you currently operate and apply methods to understand and optimize performance of your team.",
+ "description" : "In this three credit, 15-week project-based course, explore how organizations are structured (both formally and informally), how they do what they do, and how they measure and optimize performance. Using your own experience combined with industry case studies and materials, analyze the climate in which you currently operate and apply methods to understand and optimize performance of your team.",
"name" : "Evaluating Organizational Performance"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-6940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
"name" : "Language Studies"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-6960",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LANG"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6760",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Human Resource Mgmt"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-4230",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A design studio that explores the roles of light in architecture and its application by design. Students conceive, evaluate, and synthesize solutions that contribute to successful lighting and architectural design.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "A design studio that explores the roles of light in architecture and its application by design. Students conceive, evaluate, and synthesize solutions that contribute to successful lighting and architectural design.",
"name" : "Lighting Design"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6520",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "A continuation of CHME 6510 . Treats irrotational flow, flow around bubbles, and other free surface problems, turbulent flow, jets, and wakes. Presumes an understanding of continuum mechanics, viscous flow, and boundary layer flow.",
"name" : "Advanced Transport Phenomena II"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6210",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Problems of scheduling several tasks over time. Topics include measures of performance, single machine sequencing, flowshop scheduling, the job shop problem, and priority dispatching. Integer programming, dynamic programming, and heuristic approaches to various problems are also presented.",
"name" : "Theory of Production Scheduling"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-4760",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The Lighting Workshop is a research and design studio integrating scholarship, technology, design, policy, and communication in an intensive, project specific context. The course includes a number of topics, selected each year by faculty. These topics are selected to emphasize scholarship; require a variety of written and verbal presentation techniques; increase synthesizing skills in design, applications, and visualization software; and require teamwork and individual efforts. The Lighting Workshop emphasizes studio and seminar work supplemented with lecture, class discussions, and individual and group research, design, writing, and reading assignments.",
"name" : "Lighting Workshop"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-4840",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introduction to lighting and human factors, including classical literature and contemporary studies and development of skills needed to conduct and evaluate human factors research.",
"name" : "Human Factors in Lighting"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-4870",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course will explore the effects of light and lighting on people's physical and psychological health and well-being. Lectures will focus on the physiology of the visual and circadian systems, the relationship between lighting and visual performance and circadian photobiology, including the relationship between lighting and Alzheimer's disease, sleep disorder, alertness, seasonal affective disorder (SAD), and breast cancer. The course will conclude with a research project studying the interaction of light and human health in the built environment. Students will learn to apply their newly acquired knowledge of the health effects of light to lighting design and application.",
"name" : "Light and Health"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-7100",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A presentation of the most common physical and mathematical modes used in the description of the mechanical behavior of materials. The course covers the microstructural and thermodynamic foundations of constitutive material behavior of interest in mechanical engineering applications; overview of elasticity and plasticity and their relationship to microstructural features; principles of rheology; viscoelasticity and creep; failure mechanisms including fracture crack propagation and fatigue crack growth. Particular attention throughout is given to the development of the ability to utilize the mathematical models to assess the reliability and life of mechanical engineering components at the design state.",
"name" : "Mechanical Engineering Foundations II"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "Individual projects and readings adapted to the needs of individual students at the advanced level.",
"name" : "Advanced Individual Projects in Lighting"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-6970",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENGR"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-6750",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to the philosophy of research and different approaches to it. Emphasis is placed on planning, executing, analyzing, and describing experiments. Each student is required to keep a laboratory notebook and to perform statistical tests in concert with assigned research projects.",
"name" : "Lighting Research Design"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6650",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "A capstone sequence in policy and strategy aimed at developing students' understanding of the relationship between business strategy and technology. The process of converting technological opportunity into competitive advantage is viewed from the perspective of both large, established companies and new ventures.",
"name" : "Technology and Competitive Advantage"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-6760",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The Lighting Workshop is a research and design studio integrating scholarship, technology, design, policy, and communication in an intensive, project specific context. The course includes a number of topics, selected each year by faculty. These topics are selected to emphasize scholarship; require a variety of written and verbal presentation techniques; increase synthesizing skills in design, applications, and visualization software; and require teamwork and individual efforts. The Lighting Workshop emphasizes studio and seminar work supplemented with lecture, class discussions, and individual and group research, design, writing, and reading assignments.",
"name" : "Lighting Workshop"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-6770",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course will explore the effects of light and lighting on people's physical and psychological health and well-being. Lectures will focus on the physiology of the visual and circadian systems, the relationship between lighting and visual performance and circadian photobiology, including the relationship between lighting and Alzheimer's disease, sleep disorder, alertness, seasonal affective disorder (SAD), and breast cancer. The course will conclude with a research project studying the interaction of light and human health in the built environment. Students will learn to apply their newly acquired knowledge of the health effects of light to lighting design and application.",
"name" : "Light and Health"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-2030",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Comprehensive study of organization, leadership, and management with emphasis on the naval organization. Survey of the management process. Introduction to individual and small group behavior, decision making, responsibility, authority, and accountability. Extensive study of motivation, leadership, and communication. Application explored by case study and seminar discussions.",
"name" : "Leadership and Management"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-6780",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A series of topics and case studies to prepare students for leadership roles in the lighting industry. Topics relate to product innovation and factors influencing changes of policy and processes in the lighting industry and involve lecture and discussion sessions and reading assignments. Case studies examine selected topics in greater depth, using actual situations to illustrate interactions of technology and business forces.",
"name" : "Lighting Leadership Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-6830",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A comprehensive overview of the physics of light and its applications for lighting. The course uses a variety of instructional methodologies, including lectures, laboratory sessions, hands-on experimentation, and individual student projects and presentations to cover various areas of lighting study. Topics include geometric optics, physical optics, lighting calculations and measures, spectroradiometry, measurement techniques for advanced light sources, radiometry, and photometry.",
"name" : "The Physics of Light"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-6850",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Elec&magn Fields In Epe"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4020",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Stem Cell Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6600",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Dsn Of Mfg Sys & Supply Chains"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
- "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester.\u00c2 If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
+ "description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4240",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course presents conceptual material on the analysis and design of business information systems. The focus is on understanding business information processing requirements and developing information systems solutions to meet these requirements. Key stages of the systems development life cycle including planning, analysis, and design are the focus of this course. Models and procedures for understanding and modeling an organization's existing and planned information systems are presented. Computer-aided software engineering tools are used to provide hands-on experience in designing information systems.",
"name" : "Systems Analysis and Design"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-6990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2009",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Development Sci (at Sage Coll)"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4870",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The goal of this interdisciplinary course is to teach students about limnology and freshwater ecology using Lake George as a model system. Chemical, physical, and biological characteristics that are critical for understanding the functioning of an aquatic ecosystem will be examined, as will the utilization of traditional and modern instrumentation and sampling and the analysis of big environmental data sets.",
"name" : "Lake George Limnology and Underwater Ecology (BLUE)"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-4400",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Ug Final Admn. Registration"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Game theory has been emerging as a branch of mathematical economics and applied to analyze situations where each decision-maker needs to think strategically about others' perspectives and actions in order to determine ones' own optimal choice. This course provides an introduction and presents selected topics in game theory. It will look into basic definitions and equilibrium concepts and develop a wide range of applications in Economics, Biology, sports, health care, and various fields. The goal of the lecture is to improve understanding of strategic interaction in economic, business, and social situations.",
"name" : "Applied Game Theory"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2410",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will engage you with film and motion pictures from a variety of reflexive, critical, and historical perspectives. While serving as an overview of analytical approaches to film, the course will be shaped to reflect your interests as a learning community, with the aim of transforming your relationship to motion pictures and developing within you a critical, thoughtful, and informed approach to the medium. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course will engage you with film and motion pictures from a variety of reflexive, critical, and historical perspectives. While serving as an overview of analytical approaches to film, the course will be shaped to reflect your interests as a learning community, with the aim of transforming your relationship to motion pictures and developing within you a critical, thoughtful, and informed approach to the medium.",
"name" : "The Film Experience"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Development and application of Maxwell's equations in free space and within materials. Introduction to vector calculus and computer-aided analysis and design methods in electromagnetics. Applications include calculation of lumped circuit elements from field theory, plane wave propagation in various materials, and reflection from boundaries. Transmission line concepts, Smith charts, and other design tools for distributed circuits.",
"name" : "Fields and Waves I"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2940",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
"name" : "Literature Studies"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4280",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course examines needs for and challenges of delivering environmental education in different settings. Students critically review existing environmental education curricula then design and deliver their own to K-12 students. The history of public education in the United States, factors shaping contemporary education, various approaches to environmental education, and the complex challenge of interdisciplinary curriculum design are examined. Students in the course develop and demonstrate their own educational and environmental values.",
"name" : "Sustainability Education"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4350",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introduction to social media analytics. Topics include obtaining and processing social media data, social network analysis, content analysis, descriptive, predictive, and prescriptive analytics using social media, ethical aspects of social media analytics.",
"name" : "Systems Engineering and Social Media"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LITR"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ERTH"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-4150",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An exploration of the ongoing dialogue between science/technology and literature through the reading of landmark works about science and fictional works that describe scientific ideas and methods. Topics include artificial intelligence, genetic engineering, and cyborgs.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "An exploration of the ongoing dialogue between science/technology and literature through the reading of landmark works about science and fictional works that describe scientific ideas and methods. Topics include artificial intelligence, genetic engineering, and cyborgs.",
"name" : "Science and Fiction"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "Independent study of selected readings in the fields of biochemistry and biophysics, supervised by a faculty member.",
"name" : "Readings in Biochemistry/Biophysics"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-4230",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A survey of major works by Irish authors writing in English, with a particular focus on the fiction and drama of the twentieth century. Authors will include: Oscar Wilde, Samuel Beckett, James Joyce, and W.B. Yeats.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "A survey of major works by Irish authors writing in English, with a particular focus on the fiction and drama of the twentieth century. Authors will include: Oscar Wilde, Samuel Beckett, James Joyce, and W.B. Yeats.",
"name" : "Irish Literature"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-4410",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The purpose of this course is to study significant theories of representation that analyze the visual codifications generically called \"film.\" The course will examine theories of visual rhetoric and of narrativity; look at the way economic and technological factors have affected the construction of cinematic codes, styles, and trends; examine influential psychoanalytic theories and feminist theories; and consider the ways in which popular films participate in the cultural narratives specific to their moment of production.",
"name" : "Film Theory"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LITR"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro Immunology"
},
+ {
+ "code" : "LITR-6940",
+ "description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
+ "name" : "Literature Studies"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "COMM-4250",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Writing For Games II"
+ },
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-4980",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Biomedical Research"
+ },
{
"code" : "ARCH-4330",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course builds on the material presented in Structures 1, with an emphasis on the analysis and design of structures compressed primarily of steel and site cast and pre-cast concrete, with an overview of load-bearing masonry and advanced systems. The theoretical concepts covered in the introduction course form the conceptual basis for work in Structures 2, with relevant new concepts/techniques covered. Innovative, non-normative structural systems are investigated and discussed. Analysis and design will proceed using primarily computer-aided techniques. The course approach will involve in-class presentations, homework and project work, computer lab, field trips, and case studies. WebCT will be used to expand the student's access to course materials and allow for a measure of distance learning. Sustainability: The following notions are introduced as important attributes of sustainable structures and construction: structural robustness, and programmatic flexibility. (Design optimization approaches are introduced and explored as avenues to accomplish more optimum design conditions under increasingly strict design constraints.)",
"name" : "Structures 2"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-6960",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LITR"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-1960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4550",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Analy. Of Manuf. Process."
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4360",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The objective of this course is to provide a conceptual understanding of the international financial markets and instruments and how corporations and investors use them in their financial decision-making process. The course coverage includes the international financial environment, foreign exchange markets, offshore financial markets, derivative securities markets, and international capital markets. Class sessions will be devoted to lectures and case discussions on topics outlined in the class schedule. Equipped with the background provided in the classroom, students solve problems and analyze cases representing real-life situations. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
"name" : "International Financial Management"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-2220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A first course in enhancing critical skills\u00c2 for leaders of technological innovation. The course emphasizes creativity, teamwork, communication and work across engineering disciplines. Students learn how to build on personal and innate talents through critical thinking skills, design-oriented mindsets, and an understanding of appropriate tool and process selection. Students will utilize tools and processes for ideation and innovation, develop ideas from concepts to minimum viable products via the ideate - build - learn cycle, and recognize and understand\u00c2 prototyping methods.",
+ "description" : "A first course in enhancing critical skills for leaders of technological innovation. The course emphasizes creativity, teamwork, communication and work across engineering disciplines. Students learn how to build on personal and innate talents through critical thinking skills, design-oriented mindsets, and an understanding of appropriate tool and process selection. Students will utilize tools and processes for ideation and innovation, develop ideas from concepts to minimum viable products via the ideate - build - learn cycle, and recognize and understand prototyping methods.",
"name" : "Inventor's Studio 1"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4080",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Increasingly the competitive landscape in many industries is shaped not only by individual firm competencies but more by those of the extended value networks that organizations are part of. The course focuses on how value networks for demand fulfillment can be designed and managed. Key concepts related to how inter-enterprise integration and value chain constellations can be deployed to effectively detect and fulfill customer needs in a cost-efficient manner. The course will also examine several sourcing strategies and their suitability and economics for different types of products and services.",
"name" : "Networks and Value Creation"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6610",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The course helps develop an understanding of and the method for managing technology as a strategic resource of the firm. In doing so, an understanding of the process, roles, and rewards of technological innovation are developed. Integrating the strategic relationship of technology with strategic planning, marketing, finance, engineering, and manufacturing are covered. Governmental, societal, and international issues are briefly covered. The course uses a variety of cases, readings, reports, and lectures.",
"name" : "Global Strategic Management of Technological Innovation"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-2400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Nuclear reactor systems and types; basic reactor physics, criticality calculations; fuel cycles; reactivity changes; reactor kinetics. Instrumentation and control; radiation protection. Reactor materials; shielding; energy removal. Reactor safety; economics. Waste management. Reactor design.",
"name" : "Fundamentals of Nuclear Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-6780",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "The biophysical mechanism of protein folding and the role of misfolding in human diseases is explored. The course will introduce principles of protein structure, protein folding in the cell, and thermodynamic and kinetic methods for studying protein folding in vitro. The course will also involve a literature-based discussion of human diseases related to protein folding defects, including Alzheimer's and other amyloid diseases, cystic fibrosis, and Prion-related syndromes. (Students may not receive credit for both this course and BCBP 4780 , CHEM 4780 , or CHEM 6780 .)",
"name" : "Protein Folding"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-2300",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to the basic concepts and standards underlying financial accounting systems. Several important concepts will be studied in detail, including: revenue recognition, inventory, long-lived assets, long term liabilities, and equity. The course emphasizes the construction of the basic financial accounting statements - the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement - as well as their interpretation. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the basic concepts and standards underlying financial accounting systems. Several important concepts will be studied in detail, including: revenue recognition, inventory, long-lived assets, long term liabilities, and equity. The course emphasizes the construction of the basic financial accounting statements - the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement - as well as their interpretation.",
"name" : "Financial Accounting in the Digital Age"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-2940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Mechanical Engineering, Aerospace Engineering, or Nuclear Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-2960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6440",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Biophotonics, or biomedical optics, is a newly developing field, dealing with the application of optical science and technology to biomedical problems, including clinical applications. The course introduces students to the fundamentals in modern and classical optics, light-matter interaction and provides them with a broad overview of current topics and contemporary research in the area of optics and lasers in medicine and biology.",
"name" : "Biophotonics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4030",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Introduction to the design of mechanical components and integrated assemblies. Loads, stresses, and strains. Failure phenomena and material selection. Mechanical components including shafts, couplings, bearings, gears, springs, clutches, brakes, screws and fasteners, and bonded joints.",
"name" : "Elements of Mechanical Design"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-4960",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4040",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Laboratory experience to complement MANE 4030 \u00c2 Elements of Mechanical Design. Tolerancing; gear kinematics and torque transfer; stress-strain behavior; beam bending; contact, friction, and wear; snap fasteners; fatigue; mechanical component design and analysis.",
+ "description" : "Laboratory experience to complement MANE 4030 Elements of Mechanical Design. Tolerancing; gear kinematics and torque transfer; stress-strain behavior; beam bending; contact, friction, and wear; snap fasteners; fatigue; mechanical component design and analysis.",
"name" : "Mechanical Systems Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4070",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to fixed-wing flight mechanics.\u00c2 Lift generation, thin-airfoil, and wing theories.\u00c2 Boundary layers and applications to wings.\u00c2 One and two-dimensional compressible flow and applications to aircraft and rocket engines.",
+ "description" : "Introduction to fixed-wing flight mechanics. Lift generation, thin-airfoil, and wing theories. Boundary layers and applications to wings. One and two-dimensional compressible flow and applications to aircraft and rocket engines.",
"name" : "Aerodynamics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4080",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Analysis of thrust generation from rockets, gas turbines, and propellers. Applications of one- and two-dimensional compressible flow to analysis of propulsion systems. Gas turbine component performance including diffusers and nozzles, turbomachinery, and combustors.",
"name" : "Propulsion Systems"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4090",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Performance, stability, and control of airplanes. General equations of motion for rigid aircraft, aerodynamic forces and moments, quasi-steady and nonsteady flight paths. Generalized performance methods, flight envelope. Small disturbance theory, stability derivatives, longitudinal and lateral static stability. Basic airplane motion, response to control actions and to atmospheric disturbances. Automatic flight control. Simulation of aircraft performance and dynamics.",
"name" : "Flight Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4969",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4973",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Review of basic dynamics. Analysis of spacecraft trajectories, target rendezvous, and interception. Hohmann transfer, escape trajectories, interplanetary missions, the restricted three-body problem. Rigid body dynamics with application to gyrodynamics, stabilized platforms, gravity-gradient and spin stabilization of satellites, gyrostats. Selected topics such as drag-free satellites, vehicle launch and reentry, deployment dynamics (time permitting). MATLAB/Simulink is used as a simulation-visualization aid.",
"name" : "Spaceflight Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4120",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Aerodynamic analysis of rotocraft in hover, axial, and edgewise flight. Rotor blade flapping, and response to rotor pitch controls. Rotor hub loads and aircraft equilibrium procedures. Helicopter performance calculations. Effect of rotor design on rotor aerodynamic performance.",
"name" : "Helicopter Aerodynamics and Performance"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6450",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An overview of how product and service requirements are translated into manufacturing facilities, procedures, and organizations. The control systems considered include demand forecasting, inventory planning, production scheduling, quality control, MRP, and project control. In addition, a management perspective is used to examine decisions having a long\u00e2\u0080\u0093term manufacturing impact: capacity planning, location, and distribution, manufacturing processes, factory layout, and factory focus. The course concludes with an introduction to manufacturing policy. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
+ "description" : "An overview of how product and service requirements are translated into manufacturing facilities, procedures, and organizations. The control systems considered include demand forecasting, inventory planning, production scheduling, quality control, MRP, and project control. In addition, a management perspective is used to examine decisions having a long\u2013term manufacturing impact: capacity planning, location, and distribution, manufacturing processes, factory layout, and factory focus. The course concludes with an introduction to manufacturing policy. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
"name" : "Manufacturing Systems Management"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4140",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This is a course on introduction to computational fluid dynamics.\u00c2 This course provides knowledge necessary to model engineering applications consistent with energy and fluid dynamic physical laws.\u00c2 Discretization models include: overview of finite difference, finite element, and finite volume discretization approaches, physical problem classification, discretization techniques, and numerical guidelines.\u00c2 Applications include:\u00c2 incompressible and compressible flows, laminar and turbulence flows, with introduction to computational fluid dynamics turbulence modeling, followed by boundary layer, and parabolized flow simplifications.",
+ "description" : "This is a course on introduction to computational fluid dynamics. This course provides knowledge necessary to model engineering applications consistent with energy and fluid dynamic physical laws. Discretization models include: overview of finite difference, finite element, and finite volume discretization approaches, physical problem classification, discretization techniques, and numerical guidelines. Applications include: incompressible and compressible flows, laminar and turbulence flows, with introduction to computational fluid dynamics turbulence modeling, followed by boundary layer, and parabolized flow simplifications.",
"name" : "Introduction to Computational Fluid Dynamics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4180",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The displacement, velocity, and acceleration analysis of planar mechanisms, four bar linkages, slider, cranks, cams, and gear systems. Some synthesis techniques. Explore the use of existing large and small computer graphics programs.",
"name" : "Mechanisms"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4190",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces the fundamental circulatory bio-fluid mechanics, blood rheology, and governing laws of physiological blood flows. The course emphasizes theoretical and numerical modeling, analysis and simulation, and demonstrates these methods through application of study cases and research in clinical applications. The topics will cover fundamentals of fluid mechanics and physical principles of circulation, blood rheology:\u00c2 properties of flowing blood, blood flow in vessels, veins, coronary arteries, microcirculation, models of biofluids, computational biofluid mechanics, and fluid in the lung.",
+ "description" : "This course introduces the fundamental circulatory bio-fluid mechanics, blood rheology, and governing laws of physiological blood flows. The course emphasizes theoretical and numerical modeling, analysis and simulation, and demonstrates these methods through application of study cases and research in clinical applications. The topics will cover fundamentals of fluid mechanics and physical principles of circulation, blood rheology: properties of flowing blood, blood flow in vessels, veins, coronary arteries, microcirculation, models of biofluids, computational biofluid mechanics, and fluid in the lung.",
"name" : "Bio-Fluid Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6445",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course provides students with an opportunity to work on real business problems with a company. Students work in small consultant teams with a client and advisor(s) to develop solutions that will be put to use by the client to achieve significant business benefits.\u00c2 Student teams develop their analysis and recommendations and complete the project with the delivery of a final report and presentation to the client organizations. The course encompasses domain knowledge as well as knowledge of business strategy and communications skills.",
+ "description" : "This course provides students with an opportunity to work on real business problems with a company. Students work in small consultant teams with a client and advisor(s) to develop solutions that will be put to use by the client to achieve significant business benefits. Student teams develop their analysis and recommendations and complete the project with the delivery of a final report and presentation to the client organizations. The course encompasses domain knowledge as well as knowledge of business strategy and communications skills.",
"name" : "Business Capstone"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4230",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Conceptual and preliminary design of manned and unmanned air vehicles to satisfy given mission requirements and aircraft specifications. Includes elements of initial sizing and weights, geometry selection, aerodynamic design, propulsion integration, stability and control, loads, structural design, materials, manufacturability, and cost analysis. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Air Vehicle Design"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4470",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course will cover the basic principles of biology in the context of materials science as well as emerging and cutting applications of biomaterials science. Topics will include: fundamentals of biological self assembly and hierarchical structures; examination of structure-property relationships in naturally occurring biopolymers, foams, and ceramic composites; biomimetic design and synthesis of novel materials at the molecular and nanoscale levels. Students will gain a deeper appreciation of the impact of biological principles on current topics in materials science.",
"name" : "Biology in Materials Science"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6969",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-2962",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ASTR"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4240",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An introductory course in the use of finite element methods for the solution of practical problems in engineering.\u00c2 The course focuses on the concepts of model generation, finite element discretization, numerical integration, computational solution, and verification.\u00c2 Students will be exposed to the use of commercial finite element software.",
+ "description" : "An introductory course in the use of finite element methods for the solution of practical problems in engineering. The course focuses on the concepts of model generation, finite element discretization, numerical integration, computational solution, and verification. Students will be exposed to the use of commercial finite element software.",
"name" : "Introduction to Finite Elements"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4290",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course will present the foundations of numerical (deterministic) and Monte Carlo methods that are widely used in the modeling and analysis of nuclear reactor design, radiation dosimetry, and radiation shielding.\u00c2 Emphasis will be placed on the three fundamental aspects of computation methods: (i) discretization methods for the transport and diffusion equations; (ii) iterative methods for solving the system of discretized equations; and (iii) Monte Carlo methods for solving general fixed-source and eigenvalue problems.",
+ "description" : "This course will present the foundations of numerical (deterministic) and Monte Carlo methods that are widely used in the modeling and analysis of nuclear reactor design, radiation dosimetry, and radiation shielding. Emphasis will be placed on the three fundamental aspects of computation methods: (i) discretization methods for the transport and diffusion equations; (ii) iterative methods for solving the system of discretized equations; and (iii) Monte Carlo methods for solving general fixed-source and eigenvalue problems.",
"name" : "Radiation Transport Methods"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6630",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Digital Image & Video Process"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4969",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4390",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "This is a required continuation of MANE 4380 .\u00c2 This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "description" : "This is a required continuation of MANE 4380 . This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Nuclear Engineering Senior Design Project II"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4300",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores the fundamental principles that define the relationship between chemical structure and the biological action of drug molecules.\u00c2 A major focus of the course is the application of these chemical principles to molecular-targeted drug discovery, molecular mechanisms of pharmacological activity, and the biopharmaceutical properties of drugs.\u00c2 The relationships between drug structure, therapeutic properties, and physicochemical characteristics will be discussed. Structure activity relationships (SAR), structure-property relationships (SPR) and ADME (absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion) will be explored and presented through case studies.\u00c2 The roles of computational chemistry, molecular modeling, and biophysical methods in the understanding of the relationship between structure and biological activity will also be studied. Although an emphasis will be placed on orally bioavailable small molecules, alternative drug modalities will also be discussed.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course explores the fundamental principles that define the relationship between chemical structure and the biological action of drug molecules. A major focus of the course is the application of these chemical principles to molecular-targeted drug discovery, molecular mechanisms of pharmacological activity, and the biopharmaceutical properties of drugs. The relationships between drug structure, therapeutic properties, and physicochemical characteristics will be discussed. Structure activity relationships (SAR), structure-property relationships (SPR) and ADME (absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion) will be explored and presented through case studies. The roles of computational chemistry, molecular modeling, and biophysical methods in the understanding of the relationship between structure and biological activity will also be studied. Although an emphasis will be placed on orally bioavailable small molecules, alternative drug modalities will also be discussed.",
"name" : "Medicinal Chemistry"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4440",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Theory and operation of a low-power critical reactor facility: reactor layout, instrumentation, shielding, controls, hazards, problems of start-up and shutdown, and operating parameters. Approach to criticality, operating procedures, kinetics. Measurements are made of neutron flux, fuel rod worth, radiation, and various reactivity effects.",
"name" : "Critical Reactor Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-2001",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Structured Query Lang(at Hvcc)"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-2960",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4480",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Basic nuclear reactor theory; fuel cycles. Neutron diffusion and slowing down; criticality analyses for homogeneous and heterogeneous systems; reactor kinetics and control; reactivity coefficients; fuel management. Reactor systems and types; reactor design. Power plant safety.",
"name" : "Physics of Nuclear Reactors"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-1001",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Diesel Engines (at Hvcc)"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4500",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Introduction to modeling, analysis, and control of dynamic systems. Modeling of mechanical, electrical, and electromechanical systems. Time-domain and Laplace-Transform solutions. Block diagrams and transfer functions. Analysis and design of feedback control systems. Control system representation and characteristics. System performance specifications. Absolute stability criteria. Root-Locus and frequency response analysis and design methods. Systems compensation and controller design.",
"name" : "Modeling and Control of Dynamic Systems"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4510",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Laboratory introduction to the design, analysis and interpretation of key components of an intelligent physical system: sensing, communication, computation, simulation, programming, and control. Modeling and simulation of physical phenomena. Design of control algorithms (e.g., PID, state feedback) applied to a variety of physical systems. Modeling systems from data. Analysis of data, algorithm development, and implementation in hardware, including nonlinear and hardware effects of discretization, delays, saturation, and sampling. Extensive use of METLAB and Simulink.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Laboratory introduction to the design, analysis and interpretation of key components of an intelligent physical system: sensing, communication, computation, simulation, programming, and control. Modeling and simulation of physical phenomena. Design of control algorithms (e.g., PID, state feedback) applied to a variety of physical systems. Modeling systems from data. Analysis of data, algorithm development, and implementation in hardware, including nonlinear and hardware effects of discretization, delays, saturation, and sampling. Extensive use of METLAB and Simulink.",
"name" : "Control Systems Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4520",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The synergistic combination of mechanical engineering, electronics, control engineering, and computer science in the design process. The key areas of mechatronics studied in depth are control sensors and actuators, interfacing sensors and actuators to a microcomputer, discrete controller design, and real-time programming for control using the C programming language. The unifying theme for this heavily laboratory-based course is the integration of the key areas into a successful mechatronic design.",
"name" : "Mechatronics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4540",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Sampling, quantization, and reconstruction of signals. Mathematical tools used in the modeling, analysis, and synthesis of discrete-time control systems. Analysis tools include z-transforms, difference equation solutions, state variables, and transfer function techniques. Design tools digital PID controller, root locus, bilinear transformations, compensation techniques and full-state feedback. Applications to sampled-data control.",
"name" : "Digital Control Systems"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4440",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This seminar surveys the history of mental health through discussion and analysis of secondary literature that explores central and key themes from the late eighteenth century up through recent history. Topics will include the history of mental health institutions and professions, the classification, diagnosis and treatment of mental illness, public health and policy, historical memory, the I.Q. controversy, the state, and race, class, and gender in the history of mental health.",
"name" : "History of Mental Health"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A painting course in opaque media such as oil or acrylic with emphasis on color interaction, composition, and pictorial design. Using sources from observation and the history of painting, students are taught to see and convey effects of color on/in 2-D pictorial space and to develop critical skills in looking at paintings.",
"name" : "Painting"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4510",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Discusses the growth of American technology and its place within the framework of American history as well as the interrelationship of American and foreign technological developments. This course stresses the cultural contexts of technological change. Topics covered include the Erie Canal, the American system of manufacturing, railroads, emergence of engineering professions, corporate R&D, household technology, the technology of modern warfare, and the electronics revolution.",
"name" : "History of American Technology"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4560",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A survey of the fundamental issues necessary for the design, analysis, control, and implementation of robotic systems.\u00c2 The mathematical description of robot manipulators in terms of kinematics and dynamics.\u00c2 Hardware components of a typical robot arm.\u00c2 Path following, control, and sensing. Examples of several currently available manipulators.",
+ "description" : "A survey of the fundamental issues necessary for the design, analysis, control, and implementation of robotic systems. The mathematical description of robot manipulators in terms of kinematics and dynamics. Hardware components of a typical robot arm. Path following, control, and sensing. Examples of several currently available manipulators.",
"name" : "Robotics I"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4610",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Manufacturing theory, laboratory experimentation, and manufacturing systems design and development comprised of select modern manufacturing technologies. Technologies include robotics and automation, injection molding, computer numerically controlled (CNC) machining, metal forming, inspection, rapid prototyping, and advanced manufacturing topics. Student teams apply lessons to develop a proposal to produce a product requiring multiple coordinated manufacturing processes. Students prepare technical documentation for communicating key engineering and management aspects of the developed manufacturing system to a separate fabrication group.",
"name" : "Manufacturing Processes and Systems Lab I"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4620",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Student teams finalize manufacturing system plans from select ENGR 4710 \u00c2 projects, build a manufacturing system to complete several hundred units of a product, optimize the system, manage a project budget, modify manufacturing packaging plans, and conform to a project schedule as proposed in the associated project Technical Data Packages produced by ENGR 4710 \u00c2 teams. In addition, students will learn new advanced manufacturing topics to increase their breath and depth of manufacturing.",
+ "description" : "Student teams finalize manufacturing system plans from select ENGR 4710 projects, build a manufacturing system to complete several hundred units of a product, optimize the system, manage a project budget, modify manufacturing packaging plans, and conform to a project schedule as proposed in the associated project Technical Data Packages produced by ENGR 4710 teams. In addition, students will learn new advanced manufacturing topics to increase their breath and depth of manufacturing.",
"name" : "Manufacturing Processes and Systems Lab II"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ENGR"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4640",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Review of basic aspects of manufacturing engineering including driving forces, quality attributes, tolerances, etc. Examination of basic principles of mechanics, engineering materials, analysis of both bulk-forming (forging, extrusion, rolling, etc.) and sheet-forming processes, metal cutting, and other related manufacturing processes. Discussion and role of computer-aided manufacturing in these areas.",
"name" : "Analysis of Manufacturing Processes"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "DIS Studio A introduces students to the principles and practices of design for environmental sustainability. It is open to majors in Design, Innovation, and Society (DIS), Sustainability Studies, and Science, Technology, and Society (STS). This is an intensive studio/seminar hybrid that will advance students' understanding, through practice, of iterative design processes and the multiple dimensions of sustainability. The specific methodologies, concepts, and topics will vary according to the expertise and research specialization of the faculty member teaching the course and may include themes such as disability, feminism, critical race theory, or other approaches as they intersect with environmental sustainability.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "DIS Studio A introduces students to the principles and practices of design for environmental sustainability. It is open to majors in Design, Innovation, and Society (DIS), Sustainability Studies, and Science, Technology, and Society (STS). This is an intensive studio/seminar hybrid that will advance students' understanding, through practice, of iterative design processes and the multiple dimensions of sustainability. The specific methodologies, concepts, and topics will vary according to the expertise and research specialization of the faculty member teaching the course and may include themes such as disability, feminism, critical race theory, or other approaches as they intersect with environmental sustainability.",
"name" : "Design and Innovation Studio A"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Character And Story For Games"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4660",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Climatology, Solar vs. Wind Energy,\u00c2 Earth's rotational and Coriolis effects,\u00c2 Wind Speed Statistics: Histograms,\u00c2 Weibull, Available Energy,\u00c2 Aerodynamics, Wake effects,\u00c2 Thrust and Power with objects in\u00c2 Wind\u00c2 flow, Betz Limit, Wind Shear and Ground Effects;\u00c2 Blade aero/structural design, and manufacture;\u00c2 OEM Wind Turbine Designs/Architectures, and\u00c2 \u00c2 capturing Wind\u00c2 Energy via Direct Drive-Generators/Gearbox-driven; Pitch/Yaw Controls, Tower designs. The back-end\u00c2 \u00c2 interface with the\u00c2 Grid, Wind Farm development and Supervisory Controls; Cost Of Energy: Wind vs. Fossil Fuel\u00c2 technologies.",
+ "description" : "Climatology, Solar vs. Wind Energy, Earth's rotational and Coriolis effects, Wind Speed Statistics: Histograms, Weibull, Available Energy, Aerodynamics, Wake effects, Thrust and Power with objects in Wind flow, Betz Limit, Wind Shear and Ground Effects; Blade aero/structural design, and manufacture; OEM Wind Turbine Designs/Architectures, and capturing Wind Energy via Direct Drive-Generators/Gearbox-driven; Pitch/Yaw Controls, Tower designs. The back-end interface with the Grid, Wind Farm development and Supervisory Controls; Cost Of Energy: Wind vs. Fossil Fuel technologies.",
"name" : "Wind Energy Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "BUSN-6105",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "In this three-credit, 15-week online graduate course, apply contemporary change management and project management models to plan and execute sustainable change.\u00c2 Through three projects, develop a better understanding of effective change and how to implement in throughout your organization.\u00c2 Approach projects with a focus on the people impacted by new initiatives and explore ways to gain buy-in while reducing resistance to change.",
+ "description" : "In this three-credit, 15-week online graduate course, apply contemporary change management and project management models to plan and execute sustainable change. Through three projects, develop a better understanding of effective change and how to implement in throughout your organization. Approach projects with a focus on the people impacted by new initiatives and explore ways to gain buy-in while reducing resistance to change.",
"name" : "Agile Planning and Execution"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4175",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This is a hands-on course where we will learn a mix of theoretical and practical tools. Using these tools, we will solve a variety of supply chain problems, both analytically and numerically. We will examine data and use this to understand supply, demand, and inventory levels using R to model many of these problems. We will also look at the data and assess its suitability for modelling. We plan on using time series, Markov chain, optimal control, linear programming, statistical analysis, and other mathematical tools to have the data tell us its secrets. The bottom line is we will use these insights to make recommendations to firms and other decision makers. We will also look at qualitative problems through the examination and discussions of cases in class. Not everything can be distilled to a number and so we need to be able to take a holistic view of business problems and make more strategic recommendations. We will then have teams of students solve and present these case results.",
"name" : "Supply Chain Analytics"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6180",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Knowldge Discovry W/datamining"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6870",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Neural networks are program and memory at once, useful where traditional techniques fail, i.e., for artificial speech and image recognition. Emphasis on existing and emerging engineering applications. Parallel distributed processing, Hebb\u00e2\u0080\u0099s rule, Hopfield net, back-propagation algorithm, perceptrons, unsupervised learning, Kohenen self-organizing map, genetic algorithms, neocognitron, adaline. Illustrated with computer programs and lectures.",
+ "description" : "Neural networks are program and memory at once, useful where traditional techniques fail, i.e., for artificial speech and image recognition. Emphasis on existing and emerging engineering applications. Parallel distributed processing, Hebb\u2019s rule, Hopfield net, back-propagation algorithm, perceptrons, unsupervised learning, Kohenen self-organizing map, genetic algorithms, neocognitron, adaline. Illustrated with computer programs and lectures.",
"name" : "Introduction to Neural Networks"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4710",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "Major principles of biochemistry are illustrated as students purify and analyze specific proteins. Experience is obtained with various techniques including protein extraction from bacteria and tissues, chromatography, ultracentrifugation, spectrophotometric analysis, and electrophoresis. The course includes extensive hands-on laboratory work, as well as the writing of in-depth reports. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and BIOL 4710 .) This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Biochemistry Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-2030",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Descriptive chemistry of the elements. Properties, structures, and typical reactions of the elements of the periodic table and their compounds; basic principles of inorganic chemistry.",
"name" : "Inorganic Chemistry I"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4670",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Stress, strain, balance equations, elementary constitutive models. Elements of plasticity. Effect of temperature and deformation rate on mechanical behavior of engineering materials. Theory of dislocations. Deformation of metals and strengthening mechanisms. Creep behavior and viscoelastic models of material behavior.",
"name" : "Mechanical Behavior of Materials"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4740",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Laboratory experience to complement MANE Thermal-Fluids sequence. Demonstration of principles of thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, and heat transfer\u00c2 for mechanical engineering applications through a number of structured experiments. Technical communication skills and decision-making in the face of uncertainty are strongly emphasized.",
+ "description" : "Laboratory experience to complement MANE Thermal-Fluids sequence. Demonstration of principles of thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, and heat transfer for mechanical engineering applications through a number of structured experiments. Technical communication skills and decision-making in the face of uncertainty are strongly emphasized.",
"name" : "Thermal and Fluids Engineering Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4600",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Perception and thought are considered in terms of processes represented in the brain. The localization and lateralization of function are examined, drawing upon research on the behavioral effects of brain damage as well as brain-imaging studies and other approaches. Examples of topics include object recognition, memory, language, emotion, spatial ability, and motor processes.",
"name" : "Cognition and the Brain"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Astronomy and Astrophysics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4760",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Principles for the control of air properties to meet comfort and industrial requirements, load determination, psychrometry, cycles, transmission, distribution, and automatic control.",
"name" : "Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4790",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Comprehensive treatment of conduction and convection heat transfer.\u00c2 Emphasis is on physical and mathematical modeling of heat transfer phenomena with applications in engineering systems.\u00c2 Analytical and computational solution methods are discussed.\u00c2 The class is centered around a semester long project.",
+ "description" : "Comprehensive treatment of conduction and convection heat transfer. Emphasis is on physical and mathematical modeling of heat transfer phenomena with applications in engineering systems. Analytical and computational solution methods are discussed. The class is centered around a semester long project.",
"name" : "Advanced Heat Transfer"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4910",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Wind tunnel experiments in fluid mechanics and the aerodynamics of airplane models with emphasis on lift, drag, separation and stall, transition and turbulence, longitudinal and lateral stability, and data acquisition and analysis. This includes pressure and velocity measurement techniques, hot wire anemometry, demonstrations of Particle Imaging Velocimetry, flow visualizations, tunnel characterization, laboratory instrumentation, errors and noise in measurements, digital sampling, and comparison of measured data with theoretical and computational predictions. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Wind tunnel experiments in fluid mechanics and the aerodynamics of airplane models with emphasis on lift, drag, separation and stall, transition and turbulence, longitudinal and lateral stability, and data acquisition and analysis. This includes pressure and velocity measurement techniques, hot wire anemometry, demonstrations of Particle Imaging Velocimetry, flow visualizations, tunnel characterization, laboratory instrumentation, errors and noise in measurements, digital sampling, and comparison of measured data with theoretical and computational predictions.",
"name" : "Fluid Dynamics Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4920",
- "credits" : "2",
- "description" : "Laboratory experiments with emphasis on the static and dynamic response of light-weight and flexible structures, that are used in aircraft, spacecraft, and rotorcraft.\u00c2 Experiments include tensile testing, buckling characterization, free and forced vibration testing, damping measurement, and high strain-rate impact loading of fiber-reinforced composite materials.",
+ "description" : "Laboratory experiments with emphasis on the static and dynamic response of light-weight and flexible structures, that are used in aircraft, spacecraft, and rotorcraft. Experiments include tensile testing, buckling characterization, free and forced vibration testing, damping measurement, and high strain-rate impact loading of fiber-reinforced composite materials.",
"name" : "Aerospace Structures Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-5000",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A presentation of mathematical methods useful in engineering practice. The course covers analytical and numerical techniques used in linear algebra, the numerical solution of nonlinear equations, the foundations of vector and tensor algebra and an introduction to vector operators. Also covered are methods of polynomial and trigonometric interpolation and approximation, numerical solution methods for initial and boundary value problems for ordinary differential equations and an overview of the fundamentals of probability and statistics including random variables, density and distribution functions and hypothesis testing. Symbolic manipulation and scientific computation software used extensively. Emphasis on reliable computing is made throughout.",
"name" : "Advanced Engineering Mathematics I"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4961",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-5100",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "A presentation of the principles of macroscopic transport useful in the analysis of mechanical engineering systems. The course covers the formulation energy mass and momentum balances in continua; the development of mathematical models of heat conduction and mass diffusion in solids and of flow in ideal and Newtonian fluids. Models are illustrated using examples from mechanical engineering. Particular attention throughout is devoted to the development of the ability to create realistic and reliable models.",
"name" : "Mechanical Engineering Foundations I"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Studies in Environmental Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6060",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Aerodynamic analysis of rotocraft in hover, axial, and edgewise flight. Rotor blade flapping, and response to rotor pitch controls. Rotor hub loads and aircraft equilibrium procedures. Helicopter performance calculations. Effect of rotor design on rotor aerodynamic performance.",
"name" : "Helicopter Aerodynamics and Performance"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6130",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Dynamic models of national and international economic growth are introduced and analyzed. Technological innovation is central to growth, and models consider the endogenous determinants of technological innovation and diffusion. National institutions that affect growth, such as law, education, and infrastructure, are considered. Variation in intellectual property rights across countries are examined, together with their effects on economic growth and development. Theories of growth are compared to empirical fact. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Dynamic models of national and international economic growth are introduced and analyzed. Technological innovation is central to growth, and models consider the endogenous determinants of technological innovation and diffusion. National institutions that affect growth, such as law, education, and infrastructure, are considered. Variation in intellectual property rights across countries are examined, together with their effects on economic growth and development. Theories of growth are compared to empirical fact.",
"name" : "Economics of Growth and Innovation"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6120",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A survey of the fundamental issues necessary for the design, analysis, control, and implementation of robotic systems.\u00c2 The mathematical description of robot manipulators in terms of kinematics and dynamics.\u00c2 Hardware components of a typical robot arm.\u00c2 Path following, control, and sensing.\u00c2 Examples of several currently available manipulators.",
+ "description" : "A survey of the fundamental issues necessary for the design, analysis, control, and implementation of robotic systems. The mathematical description of robot manipulators in terms of kinematics and dynamics. Hardware components of a typical robot arm. Path following, control, and sensing. Examples of several currently available manipulators.",
"name" : "Robotics I"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6250",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "General curvilinear coordinates, determinants, diagonalization of symmetric matrices, polar decomposition theorem. Description of finite deformation and motion, convected coordinates. Conservation equations, Cauchy and Piola-Kirchhoff stress tensors and equations of motion. Boundary conditions. Thermodynamics of continua, invariance principles, objective tensors. Constitutive equations, nonlinear elasticity, thermoelasticity, heat conducting fluids. Linearizations. Variational derivation of the equations of nonlinear elasticity.",
"name" : "Continuum Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4500",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An intermediate course serving to introduce both the qualitative properties of solutions of partial\u00c2 differential equations and methods of solution, including separation of variables. Topics include first-order equations, derivation of the classical equations of mathematical physics (wave, potential, and heat equations), method of characteristics, construction and behavior of solutions, maximum principles, energy integrals.",
+ "description" : "An intermediate course serving to introduce both the qualitative properties of solutions of partial differential equations and methods of solution, including separation of variables. Topics include first-order equations, derivation of the classical equations of mathematical physics (wave, potential, and heat equations), method of characteristics, construction and behavior of solutions, maximum principles, energy integrals.",
"name" : "Methods of Partial Differential Equations of Mathematical Physics"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6964",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EMBA"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6260",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introductory course on the generation, distribution, and interaction of ionizing radiation. Radiation sources such as radioisotopes, accelerators, focused ion beams, and cosmic rays are studied. Applications to semiconductor electronic devices, chemical polymerization, food preservation, sterilization, material modification, industrial and medical radiography, and radiation damage are presented.",
"name" : "Radiation Technology and Applications"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-2140",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Bldg & Thinking Arch 3"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-6620",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Discrete Event Simulation"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-6200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will encompass marine, freshwater, and terrestrial microfossils (with emphasis on foraminifera), including taxonomy, evolutionary history, ecology and paleoenvironments, and a broad spectrum of micropaleontological applications, such as sea-level and climate reconstructions, geochemical analyses, oil industry research and production, and forensic geology. This course will also cover concepts of biostratigraphy and micropaleontological applications to stratigraphic correlation and time scale construction. Extensive hands-on microscope and lab work will be required. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course will encompass marine, freshwater, and terrestrial microfossils (with emphasis on foraminifera), including taxonomy, evolutionary history, ecology and paleoenvironments, and a broad spectrum of micropaleontological applications, such as sea-level and climate reconstructions, geochemical analyses, oil industry research and production, and forensic geology. This course will also cover concepts of biostratigraphy and micropaleontological applications to stratigraphic correlation and time scale construction. Extensive hands-on microscope and lab work will be required.",
"name" : "Advanced Applied Micropaleontology"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6180",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Micromechanics of elastic heterogeneous solids. Plasticity of composite materials. Thermoelastic and thermoplastic behavior. Mechanics of distributed damage. Mechanical behavior.",
"name" : "Mechanics of Composite Materials"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6280",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Reactor kinetics, stability, and control. Perturbation methods, reactivity coefficients; feedback mechanisms, long-term reactivity changes. Fission product effects on reactor startup and spatial stability. Fuel depletion. Theory of control and burnable poisons.",
"name" : "Nuclear Reactor Analysis II"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6270",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Topics on traffic control systems such as signals and ramp metering; sensor-aided and data-oriented traffic modeling; fundamentals and applications of microscopic traffic simulation. State of the art signal design and traffic simulation tools will be used throughout the class.",
"name" : "Traffic Control and Simulation"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6310",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The reactor design problem is studied using current methods. Emphasis is placed on thermal and hydraulic analyses of power reactors, neutronics, fuel cycles, economics, nuclear analysis, control, siting, and safety. Complete reactor systems are analyzed. Standard reactor design codes are utilized.",
"name" : "Reactor Design"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "With an individual faculty member on an agreed-upon topic.",
"name" : "Readings in Science and Technology Studies"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6320",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Fundamental knowledge with a broad view on radioactive waste. Generation of sources, classification, management including treatment, conditioning, storage, transportation, and disposal. Environmental impact of nuclear waste management activities, risk and safety assessment, and regulatory aspects. Use of modern software (such as GoldSim) for risk and safety assessment through homework, project, and/or exams.",
"name" : "Radioactive Waste Management"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2160",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course focuses on the co-evolution of life with Earth's systems and targets students in earth science, biology, chemistry, and physics. Topics include the emergence and early evolution of life on Earth, the environmental limits of life, microbial and metabolic evolution; the role of life in moderating global elemental cycles; earliest records of life; evolution of photosynthesis and the Great Oxidation Event; fossilization and evolution of complex life; mass radiations, mass extinctions, and global change.",
"name" : "Introduction to Geobiology"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-1600",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Introduction to the scientific principles that dictate the structure and properties of engineering materials, including metals, ceramics, semiconductors, and polymers. Physical properties of materials (mechanical, electrical, thermal, optical) are discussed in terms of the underlying structure, spanning multiple length scales from atomic packing to micron scale defects, in practical engineering materials. Throughout the course, the material behaviors are understood from the viewpoint of thermodynamics and kinetics.",
"name" : "Materials Science"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6370",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introduction to the principles underlying the thermal-hydraulic design of nuclear power reactors. Topics include plant thermal limits, sub-channel analysis, thermal-hydraulic stability analysis, and reactor system response during both normal and postulated accident conditions.",
"name" : "Thermal-Hydraulic Design of Nuclear Reactors"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6940",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Independent Study"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6420",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Analytical and numerical analysis of dynamic behavior of multibody mechanical systems. Emphasis on understanding all aspects of modeling and analysis process associated with real (spacecraft, automotive, biomechanical, etc.) systems. Review of traditional dynamic analysis methods (Newtonian-Euler, Lagrange, etc.), presentation of more efficient, powerful, recently developed methods (including Kane's method). Comparison of the different formulations and their applicability to computer simulation. Treatment of constraints, extraction of data from equations of motion, and computational issues.",
"name" : "Multibody Dynamics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6500",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Flow of non-Newtonian fluids such as polymeric liquids, granular mixtures, etc. Flow phenomena and material functions. Integral and differential constitutive equations for generalized Newtonian, linear viscoelastic, and ordered fluids.",
"name" : "Non-Newtonian Fluid Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4973",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6520",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introductory graduate course in fluid mechanics. Topics include: continuum hypothesis; perfect gas and departures from perfect gas; vectors and tensors; conservation laws for a continuum: mass momentum and energy; constitutive theory for fluids; viscosity and molecular transport; compressible Navier-Stokes equations; kinematics of the flow field: vorticity, streamlines; incompressible Navier-Stokes equations and their applications: Poiseuille flow, low Reynolds number flows, flows at large Reynolds number, boundary layers, external flows: flow stability and introduction to the theory of turbulence.",
"name" : "Fluid Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6560",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Graduate fluid mechanics course on classical and modern approaches to hydrodynamics. Topics cover three areas, (1) surface waves, (2) flow instability, and (3) vortex dynamics. Wave topics include linear dispersive and nondispersive waves, weakly nonlinear waves, and viscous effects, with special attention to surface tension phenomena. Flow instabilities include gravitational, capillary, thermal, centrifugal, and viscous instabilities. Topics in vortex dynamics include vortex laws and flow invariants, generation and decay of vorticity, and vortex-boundary interaction.",
"name" : "Incompressible Flow"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6580",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Applications of advanced econometric techniques such as two-and three-stage least squares, maximum likelihood, seemingly unrelated regression, full information likelihood, distributed lags, and autocorrelation correction to a variety of business and economic problems, including the capital asset pricing model, learning curve, economies of scale, hedonic price indexes, investment, production, and limited dependent variable models.",
"name" : "Topics in Applied Econometrics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4280",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course introduces the theory and practical use of numerical design optimization methods. Topics include: gradient-based methods for unconstrained and constrained nonlinear optimization; numerical evaluation of derivatives; polynomial- and kriging-based surrogate models; gradient-free optimization methods; optimization under uncertainty; multi-objective and multi-disciplinary optimization. Projects require the use of computer programs to generate numerical results; therefore, experience with programming is highly recommended.",
"name" : "Numerical Design Optimization"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6600",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Methods of analysis for continuous and discrete-time linear systems. Convolution, classical solution of dynamic equations, transforms and matrices are reviewed. Emphasis is on the concept of state space. Linear spaces, concept of state, modes, controllability, observability, state transition matrix. State variable feedback, compensation, decoupling.",
"name" : "Systems Analysis Techniques"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6630",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introduction to the mathematics of conduction heat transfer. Applications of results illustrated by examples from furnace design, cooling of electric components, building design, heat exchanger design.",
"name" : "Conduction Heat Transfer"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-1050",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A one semester calculus-based overview of physics fundamentals with an emphasis on applications. Mechanics, including equilibrium and statics, fluids, oscillations, and waves. Basics of thermodynamics and heat flow. Electrical circuits. Electromagnetic radiation and optics. Recommended for all students who intend to take only one semester of physics. Credit cannot be obtained for both PHYS 1050 and PHYS 1100 . \u00c2",
+ "description" : "A one semester calculus-based overview of physics fundamentals with an emphasis on applications. Mechanics, including equilibrium and statics, fluids, oscillations, and waves. Basics of thermodynamics and heat flow. Electrical circuits. Electromagnetic radiation and optics. Recommended for all students who intend to take only one semester of physics. Credit cannot be obtained for both PHYS 1050 and PHYS 1100 .",
"name" : "General Physics"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6670",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Struct & Mechan Systems"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6640",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introduction to radiation heat transfer in diathermanous media and participating media. Selected applications from spacecraft design, furnace design, meteorology, temperature measurement, environmental control.",
"name" : "Radiation Heat Transfer"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6210",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Strategic Manifesto"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6460",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Fracture mechanics: linear elastic fracture, elastic crack boundary value problems, path independent integrals, stress concentration and crack nucleation, statistical approach to brittle fracture, toughening mechanisms, elastic-plastic fracture mechanics, elements of dynamic fracture. Fatigue of materials: response of materials under cyclic stress, micromechanical aspects of fatigue, phenomenological approach to fatigue life prediction, fracture mechanics approaches, fatigue crack initiation and propagation, variable amplitude, and overstress effects.",
"name" : "Fracture Mechanics and Fatigue of Materials"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6650",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Fundamental study of convection heat transfer in laminar and turbulent internal and external flows. Unsteady flows, combined heat and mass transfer, conjugated unsteady heat transfer, and buoyancy induced convection. Selected applications from aeronautics and heat exchanger design.",
"name" : "Convective Heat Transfer"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4160",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-2330",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A workshop course in reading and writing the literary short story and literary flash fiction; students must have a good command of written English and grammar. This course will focus on reading and analyzing exemplary short fiction and writing and revising original work. Students learn to develop plot, character, setting, point of view, style, and structure, and use revision strategies to re-invent and shape narratives. Peer reading and writing groups offer opportunities for shared response and critique.\u00c2 .",
+ "description" : "A workshop course in reading and writing the literary short story and literary flash fiction; students must have a good command of written English and grammar. This course will focus on reading and analyzing exemplary short fiction and writing and revising original work. Students learn to develop plot, character, setting, point of view, style, and structure, and use revision strategies to re-invent and shape narratives. Peer reading and writing groups offer opportunities for shared response and critique. .",
"name" : "Creative Writing: Short Story"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6700",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Solutions to the free vibration and transient dynamic responses of two-and three-dimensional structures by the finite element method are considered. The governing finite element matrix equations are derived and numerical aspects of solving these time-dependent equations considered. Topics include the formulation of the eigenvalue problem, algorithms for eigenvalue extraction, time integration methods including stability and accuracy analysis, and finite elements in time. Modal analysis and direct time integration techniques are compared for a variety of two-and three-dimensional problems.",
"name" : "Finite Element Methods in Structural Dynamics"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-1600",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Introduction to the scientific principles that dictate the structure and properties of engineering materials, including metals, ceramics, semiconductors, and polymers. Physical properties of materials (mechanical, electrical, thermal, optical) are discussed in terms of the underlying structure, spanning multiple length scales from atomic packing to micron scale defects in practical engineering materials. Throughout the course, the material behaviors are understood from the viewpoint of thermodynamics and kinetics.",
"name" : "Materials Science"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ASTR"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6961",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EMBA"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The study of mechanisms of organic reactions in biochemical processes on a molecular level. Enzyme active sites, mechanisms of enzymatic transformations, catalysis, cofactors, enzyme kinetics, environmental toxicology. Strong emphasis on the design and mechanism of action of pharmaceutical agents. Meets with CHEM 6310 ; both courses cannot be taken for credit.",
"name" : "Bioorganic Mechanisms"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6720",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course focuses on computational approaches to solve the Navier-Stokes equations. Course assumes knowledge of numerical methods and therefore directly attacks the obstacles to applying these methods to the Navier-Stokes equations. Issues concerning implementation of finite difference methods (FDM), finite volume methods (FVM) and finite element methods (FEM) will be discussed. These issues include: the discrete formulation, nonlinear equation iterator (steady)/marcher (time-accurate), linear equation formation, boundary condition prescription, and linear equation solution.",
"name" : "Computational Fluid Dynamics"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-2600",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Appreciation and understanding of uncertainties and the conditions under which they occur, within the context of the engineering problem-solving pedagogy of measurements, models, validation, and analysis. Problems and concerns in obtaining measurements; tabular and graphical organization of data to minimize misinformation and maximize information; and development and evaluation of models. Concepts will be supported with computer demonstration. Applications to problems in engineering are emphasized.",
"name" : "Modeling and Analysis of Uncertainty"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6660",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course provides an introduction to methods and concepts to model and analyze the dynamics of system with uncertain inputs or too many variables to track explicitly. Topics may include Markov processes, point processes, renewal processes, and/or stochastic differential equations. Applications will be developed and illustrated on examples drawn from physics, biology, chemistry, industry, and finance.",
"name" : "Stochastic Processes and Modeling"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4850",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course provides an overview of basic processes in human behavior that influence the effectiveness of individuals, groups and organizations. Its focus is on understanding what happens during interpersonal interactions in work situations, and what can be done to make employees more effective. Topics covered include organizational socialization, motivation, decision-making, team dynamics, virtual teams, influence, and conflict management. Numerous exercises and case analyses are used in class to help provide students with insights into these processes.",
"name" : "Organizational Behavior in High Performance Organizations"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4962",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6750",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Fundamentals of modern numerical techniques (e.g., partition of unity methods) which overcome longstanding difficulties associated with traditional FEM (e.g., mesh generation and resolution of singularities). Topics include scattered data interpolation, weighted residual methods, integral equation methods for exterior problems (applications to MEMS modeling), multiscale solution techniques using wavelets.",
"name" : "Generalized Finite Element Methods"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-1240",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "The course is the first in a two-part series of Professional Development Workshops that teach practical skills to enhance business students' readiness to enter the professional world and achieve workplace success and a high degree of professionalism. The course emphasizes the following themes: personal values and self-awareness, leadership and followership, ethics, basic oral presentation skills.",
"name" : "Management Professional Development 1"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4960",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-2540",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro To Game Programming"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6770",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This course will introduce a unified approach of modeling in science and engineering across spatial and temporal scales using particles as well as continuum fields, specifically focusing on methods and algorithms that will facilitate this bridging. Topics include two categories of multiscale approaches: information-passing and concurrent-bridging approaches. The goal is to algorithmically develop these methods, and in the process teach the underlying simulation techniques. Applications to realistic problems will highlight the strengths of these approaches, while stressing the challenges that still need to be surmounted.",
"name" : "Multiscale Computational Modeling"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6790",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Comprehensive treatment of conduction and convection heat transfer.\u00c2 Emphasis is on physical and mathematical modeling of heat transfer phenomena with applications in engineering systems.\u00c2 Analytical and computational solution methods are discussed.\u00c2 The class is centered around a semester long project.",
+ "description" : "Comprehensive treatment of conduction and convection heat transfer. Emphasis is on physical and mathematical modeling of heat transfer phenomena with applications in engineering systems. Analytical and computational solution methods are discussed. The class is centered around a semester long project.",
"name" : "Advanced heat Transfer"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4972",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6850",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is intended to give students a state-of-the-art understanding in multicomponent flow phenomena. Applications in the chemical process, petroleum recovery, and fossil/nuclear power industries are given. Specific areas of coverage include two-phase: fluid mechanics, pressure drop, modeling and analysis, stability analysis, critical flow and dynamic waves, flow regime analysis, and phase separation and distribution phenomena.",
"name" : "An Introduction to Multiphase Flow and Heat Transfer II"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6830",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Review of fundamentals of thermodynamics, chemical kinetics, fluid mechanics, and modern diagnostics. Discussion of flame propagation, thermal and chain explosions, stirred reactors, detonations, droplet combustion, and turbulent jet flames. Introduction to computational tools for complex equilibrium and kinetic calculations. Application to problems such as pollutant formation.",
"name" : "Combustion"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6970",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MANE"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4640",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Proteomics"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4180",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The objective of this course is to apply a systematic and analytical approach to marketing decision-making, and to build skills and confidence in undertaking such analyses on your own. We will study tools for generating marketing insights from empirical data in such areas as segmentation, targeting, positioning, customer choice, new product design, and forecasting. This will be a hands-on course in which you apply the tools studied to actual business cases. We will cover analytical techniques typically bundled under \"marketing analytics\" such as regression, cluster analysis, discriminant analysis, logit model, conjoint analysis, bass model, etc. We will NOT be approaching these topics theoretically, that is, via equations or proofs. Instead, we'll learn how and when to apply each model and what they tell marketers.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "The objective of this course is to apply a systematic and analytical approach to marketing decision-making, and to build skills and confidence in undertaking such analyses on your own. We will study tools for generating marketing insights from empirical data in such areas as segmentation, targeting, positioning, customer choice, new product design, and forecasting. This will be a hands-on course in which you apply the tools studied to actual business cases. We will cover analytical techniques typically bundled under \"marketing analytics\" such as regression, cluster analysis, discriminant analysis, logit model, conjoint analysis, bass model, etc. We will NOT be approaching these topics theoretically, that is, via equations or proofs. Instead, we'll learn how and when to apply each model and what they tell marketers.",
"name" : "Marketing Analytics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
"description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades S or U are assigned at the end of the semester. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MTLE"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Bioterrorism,biowarfare And Biodefense: A Clear And Present Danger"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6490",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "The course examines the basic concepts and techniques of economic analysis and their applications to economics problems at the level of the firm, industry, and economy as a whole. Topics include theory of product and factor pricing, national income and employment theory, monetary and fiscal theories, economic growth and fluctuations.",
"name" : "Introduction to Economic Theory"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-9990",
- "credits" : "1-16",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-1620",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An application-oriented course introducing contemporary mathematical concepts that pertain to areas of Architecture and Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences. The course will cover growth and form, symmetry, patterns, tilings, linear programming, information coding, voting systems, game theory, logic, probability, and statistics.",
"name" : "Contemporary Mathematical Ideas in Society"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-1910",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "A seminar for first-year math majors. The weekly student-faculty discussions will vary but examples of topics are: unsolved math problems, countability and the arithmetic of the infinite, topology and the concept of dimension, geometry and one-sided surfaces, and the theory underlying topics currently covered in calculus.",
"name" : "Art and Science of Mathematics II"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-2010",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Directional derivatives, maxima and minima, double integrals, line integrals, div and curl, and Green's Theorem; matrix algebra and systems of linear equations, vectors and linear transformations in R^n, eigenvectors and eigenvalues, applications in engineering and science.",
"name" : "Multivariable Calculus and Matrix Algebra"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4020",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Topics include the history of number representation systems, divisibility, greatest common divisor and prime factorization, linear Diophantine equations, congruences, and condition congruences. Additional topics may be chosen from cryptology, the perpetual calendar, hashing functions, computer operations and complexity, continued fractions, multiplicative functions, primitive roots, pseudo-random numbers, nonlinear Diophantine equations, Fermat's last theorem, algebraic numbers, and approximation of numbers by rationals.",
"name" : "Introduction to Number Theory"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4030",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course covers basic concepts and results in mathematical logic and computability theory, including decision procedures, automated theorem proving techniques for truth-functional and first-order logic, axiomatizations of set theory and arithmetic, Turing Machines, Abacus Machines, recursive functions, the Church-Turing Thesis, the halting problem, undecidability of first-order logic, undecidability of arithmetic, and Godel's incompleteness results.",
"name" : "Computability and Logic"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4150",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Fundamental concepts and methods of graph theory and its applications to various areas of computing and the social and natural sciences. Topics include graphs as models, representation of graphs, trees, distances, matchings, connectivity, flows in networks, graph colorings, Hamiltonian cycles, traveling salesman problem, planarity. All concepts, methods, and applications are presented through a sequence of exercises and problems, many of which are done with the help of novel software systems for combinatorial computing.",
"name" : "Graph Theory"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4300",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to the theory and applications of complex variables. Topics include analytic functions, Riemann surfaces, complex integration, Taylor and Laurent series, residues, conformal mapping, harmonic functions, and Laplace transforms. Applications will be to problems in science and engineering such as fluid and heat flow, dynamical systems, and electrostatics.",
"name" : "Introduction to Complex Variables: Theory and Applications"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4400",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An intermediate course emphasizing a modern\u00c2 geometric approach\u00c2 and applications in science and engineering. Topics include\u00c2 first-order equations, linear\u00c2 systems, phase plane, linearization and stability,\u00c2 calculus of variations, Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics, oscillations, basic bifurcation theory, chaotic dynamics, and existence\u00c2 and uniqueness.",
+ "description" : "An intermediate course emphasizing a modern geometric approach and applications in science and engineering. Topics include first-order equations, linear systems, phase plane, linearization and stability, calculus of variations, Lagrangian and Hamiltonian mechanics, oscillations, basic bifurcation theory, chaotic dynamics, and existence and uniqueness.",
"name" : "Ordinary Differential Equations and Dynamical Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4959",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Geographic Simulacra"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4700",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Mathematical formulation of models for various processes. Derivation of relevant differential equations from conservation laws and constitutive relations. Use of dimensional analysis, scaling, and elementary perturbation methods. Description of basic wave motion. Examples from areas including biology, elasticity, fluid dynamics, particle mechanics, chemistry, geophysics, and finance.",
"name" : "Foundations of Applied Mathematics"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4740",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is designed to introduce students to mathematical and computational finance. Topics include a mathematical approach to risk analysis, portfolio selection theory, futures, options, and other derivative investment instruments. Finite difference and finite element methods for computing American option prices are discussed. A working knowledge of MAPLE or MATLAB is required to compute optimal portfolios.",
"name" : "Introduction to Financial Mathematics and Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-4150",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Second course in geotechnical engineering, emphasizing the use of Laboratory obtained soil properties (consolidation, compressibility, and shear strength) in the design of geotechnical systems such as slope stability, soil structure systems, foundation settlement, etc.",
"name" : "Geotechnical Design"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4470",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A course on identifying and solving marketing problems through the systematic gathering and analysis of market information. Course focuses on careful definition of marketing problems, specification of information needs, sampling theory, research design, statistical methods, and marketing management implications. A major project involving marketing research for an off-campus \"client\" is a key part of the final grade.",
"name" : "Marketing Research"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4800",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A survey of numerical methods for scientific and engineering problems. Topics include numerical solution of linear and nonlinear algebraic equations, interpolation and least squares approximations, numerical integration and differentiation, eigenvalue problems, and an introduction to the numerical solution of ordinary differential equations. Emphasis placed on efficient computational procedures including the use of library and student written procedures using high-level software such as MATLAB.",
"name" : "Numerical Computing"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4840",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The focus of the course is on fundamental algorithms in computational linear algebra and their applications in science and engineering. These algorithms involve QR and SVD factorizations, the computation of eigenvalues and eigenvectors, basic optimization methods, and iterative methods for sparse systems. Applications will be considered in areas such as data analysis and compression, principal component and spectral analysis, solutions of large sparse systems, among others.",
"name" : "Numerical Linear Algebra with Applications"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4350",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught. This course meets with CSCI 4350 \u00c2 / ITWS 4350 \u00c2 and CSCI 6350 \u00c2 / ITWS 6350 . A student can get credit for only one of these courses. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Data science is advancing the inductive conduct of science and is driven by the greater volumes, complexity, and heterogeneity of data being made available over the Internet. It combines aspects of data management, library science, computer science, and physical science. It is changing the way all of these disciplines do both their individual and collaborative work. Key methodologies in application areas based on real research experience are taught. This course meets with CSCI 4350 / ITWS 4350 and CSCI 6350 / ITWS 6350 . A student can get credit for only one of these courses.",
"name" : "Data Science"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4410",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "What are the processes that allow humans to detect information about their surroundings, recognize people and objects, and perceive depth and motion? This course will focus on the physiological and neural mechanisms underlying sensation (sight, hearing, and touch), the qualitative aspects of human perceptual experience, and how perception and action are interconnected. Color perception, object recognition, space and motion perception, and perception and action are all examined.",
"name" : "Sensation and Perception"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4980",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Undergraduate Project in Mathematics"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-0070",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Drill/laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4370",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "An in-depth study of papers addressing key aspects of both ancient and modern carbon cycles. Students will read and critique primary papers, present current research articles, and lead critical discussions.",
"name" : "The Global Carbon Cycle"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4961",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4002",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Independent Study/research Nns"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6440",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Matrix formulation of nonlinear structural analysis problems; analysis of structures with geometric and material nonlinearities; elastic and inelastic buckling; plastic analysis of beams and frames; computer analysis of nonlinear structure.",
"name" : "Nonlinear Structural Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-4910",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course focuses on applied data analytics research on real-world open problems. Students will conduct a semester long, team based, hands-on data analytics project. A data set will be selected at the start of the semester. Students will also be instructed in the process of project objective setting, planning, execution, and management. Students will be guided via classroom demonstrations and individualized team coaching by the instructors in the employment of visualization, analytics, and modeling methods.",
"name" : "Data Analytics Research"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6511",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This is a graduate level class for those in the Life Sciences Entrepreneurship MBA program, and it serves as a practical, project-based, and culminating experience where students work on real-life projects associated with the life sciences industry. Students will work directly in a consultant-type or developmental role for a life sciences company where they will tackle issues facing the client company, either working individually or preferably in small teams.",
"name" : "Practicum for Life Science Entrepreneurship"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-4300",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Investigates business-related considerations in successfully commercializing new technology in a new venture or within an existing enterprise: market and customer analysis, beating the competition, planning and managing for profitability, high-tech marketing and sales, and business partnerships and acquisitions. Not a general management course; focuses explicitly on what is relevant for engineers and scientists working in a commercial environment. For junior/senior undergraduate or graduate students.",
"name" : "Business Issues for Engineers and Scientists"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6200",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A careful study of measure theory, including abstract and Lebesgue measures and integration, absolute continuity and differentiation, L^p spaces, Fourier transforms and Fourier series, Hilbert spaces and normed linear spaces.",
"name" : "Real Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cross Cultural Design: Analysis And Application"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4850",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "In the spring semester, students will have the opportunity to design their own performance hall. This process will include continued studies of acoustics measurements, simulated sound fields, community noise issues, and professional practice in acoustics consulting. The course will also have detailed lectures on concert hall acoustics, sound quality, and synthesized sound fields. Students will be introduced to a variety of simulation software and measurement equipment in the Acoustics Research Laboratory. After both Architectural Acoustics 1 and 2, the student should be prepared for a basic entry-level position in either acoustics in architecture or in acoustical consulting.",
"name" : "Architectural Acoustics 2"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6220",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A basic course in the concepts of linear functional analysis, including such topics as Banach and Hilbert spaces, L^p and l^p (sequence) spaces; weak, strong and weak* convergence; linear functionals; linear bounded, unbounded, closed, and compact operators; spectrum, resolvent, the spectral theorem for compact operators, Fredholm alternative; applications are to differential equations, integral equations and optimization.",
"name" : "Applied Functional Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6500",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A course dealing with the basic theory of partial differential equations. It includes such topics as properties of solutions of hyperbolic, parabolic, and elliptic equations in two or more independent variables; linear and nonlinear first order equations; existence and uniqueness theory for general higher order equations; potential theory and integral equations.",
"name" : "Partial Differential Equations"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6600",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Linear vector spaces; eigenvalues and eigenvectors in discrete systems; eigenvalues and eigenvectors in continuous systems including Sturm-Liouville theory, orthogonal expansions and Fourier series, Green's functions; elementary theory of nonlinear ODEs including phase plane, stability and bifurcation; calculus of variations. Applications will be drawn from equilibrium and dynamic phenomena in science and engineering.",
"name" : "Methods of Applied Mathematics"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-6965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COGS"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6620",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is devoted to advanced methods rather than theory. Content includes such topics as matched asymptotic expansions, multiple scales, WKB, and homogenization. Applications are made to ODEs, PDEs, difference equations, and integral equations. The methods are illustrated using currently interesting scientific and engineering problems that involve such phenomena as boundary or shock layers, nonlinear wave propagation, bifurcation and stability, and resonance.",
"name" : "Perturbation Methods"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6640",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Review of basic complex variables theory; power series, analytic functions, singularities, and integration in the complex plane. Integral transforms (Laplace, Fourier, etc.) in the complex plane, with application to solution of PDEs and integral equations. Asymptotic expansions of integrals (Laplace method, methods of steepest descent and stationary phase), with emphasis on extraction of useful information from inversion integrals of transforms. Problems to be drawn from linear models in science and engineering.",
"name" : "Complex Variables and Integral Transforms with Applications"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6790",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Advanced methods and/or applications of mathematics. Possible topics include: nonlinear continuum mechanics, nonlinear waves, inverse problems, nonlinear optics, combustion, acoustic wave propagation, similarity methods for differential equations, quantum field theory and statistical mechanics, stability of fluid flows, biomathematics, and finance.",
"name" : "Topics in Applied Mathematics"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-1400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Music Fundamentals"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6800",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Computational methods for linear systems, Gaussian elimination, conditioning and stability, pivoting strategies, special linear systems (such as positive definite, banded, or sparse), QR factorization and least squares problem. Computational methods for eigenvalue problems and singular value decompositions. Iterative methods for linear systems (such as GMRES, conjugate gradient and preconditioning).",
"name" : "Computational Linear Algebra"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-6965",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ISCI"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6740",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Hypermedia Desgn & Development"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6400",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "A fundamental course in dynamics of rigid and flexible bodies. Review of kinematics and Newtonian dynamics; virtual variations and fundamentals of calculus of variations; generalized coordinates, velocities and momenta; constraints; generalized Hamilton's principle and Lagrangean dynamics; rotational dynamics, orientation angles and Euler parameters; brief introduction to the analysis of nonlinear systems and stability of motion. Applications to the motion of rigid and flexible bodies. The role of symbolic manipulation in dynamics is introduced.",
"name" : "Analytical Dynamics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4330",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An advanced course in technology innovation. Students learn Lean six sigma methodologies to set up a TQM (Total Quality Management) structure for their pilot operation, to scale up their product or technology innovation. Utilizing systems thinking, students design a lean manufacturing or technology service (e.g. software), operation. Tools and techniques will be learned, to conduct customer discovery, development, and interviews etc. Students develop new suppliers and design a lean supply chain. Regular seminars will be given by external speakers.",
"name" : "Inventor's Studio 3"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6820",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Numerical methods and analysis for ODEs with applications from mechanics, optics, and chaotic dynamics. Numerical methods for dynamical systems include Runge-Kutta, multistep and extrapolation techniques, methods for conservative and Hamiltonian systems, methods for stiff differential equations and for differential-algebraic systems. Methods for boundary value problems include shooting and orthogonalization, finite difference and collocation techniques, and special methods for problems with boundary or shock layers.",
"name" : "Numerical Solution of Ordinary Differential Equations"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6560",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biomaterial Applications In Medicine"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4530",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course covers the history and practice of traditional computer graphics but emphasizes modern techniques for modeling, viewing, and rendering techniques in 3D computer graphics systems, including modern shader pipeline programming in OpenGL using C++. Topics include raster graphics techniques as well as the mathematical foundations and matrix transformations relevant to 3D graphics; clipping and projection; hidden surface removal; managing 3D graphics data structures; hierarchical systems; rasterization; culling; 2D and 3D texture mapping; methods for building and using 3D models; lighting and material models and implementation; shadows, shadow mapping, and generating soft shadows; skyboxes, skydomes, and environment mapping; normal, bump, and height mapping; parametric surface representation; introduction to animation; tessellation and geometry shaders; compositing; terrain generation; atmospheric effects such as fog and clouds; generating and applying 3D noise; performance issues such as minimizing dynamic allocation and controlling the level of detail; special effects. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course covers the history and practice of traditional computer graphics but emphasizes modern techniques for modeling, viewing, and rendering techniques in 3D computer graphics systems, including modern shader pipeline programming in OpenGL using C++. Topics include raster graphics techniques as well as the mathematical foundations and matrix transformations relevant to 3D graphics; clipping and projection; hidden surface removal; managing 3D graphics data structures; hierarchical systems; rasterization; culling; 2D and 3D texture mapping; methods for building and using 3D models; lighting and material models and implementation; shadows, shadow mapping, and generating soft shadows; skyboxes, skydomes, and environment mapping; normal, bump, and height mapping; parametric surface representation; introduction to animation; tessellation and geometry shaders; compositing; terrain generation; atmospheric effects such as fog and clouds; generating and applying 3D noise; performance issues such as minimizing dynamic allocation and controlling the level of detail; special effects.",
"name" : "Computer Graphics for Games"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6860",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Galerkin's method and extremal principles, finite element approximations (Lagrange, hierarchical and 3D approximations, interpolation errors), mesh generation and assembly, adaptivity (h-, p-, hp-refinement). Error analysis and convergence rates. Perturbations resulting from boundary approximation, numerical integration, etc. Time dependent problems including parabolic and hyperbolic PDEs. Applications will be selected from several areas including heat conduction, wave propagation, potential theory, and solid and fluid mechanics.",
"name" : "Finite Element Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECSE"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6890",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Advanced methods and/or applications in scientific computing. Possible topics include computational fluid dynamics, parallel computing, computational acoustics, and computer applications in medicine and biology.",
"name" : "Topics in Computational Mathematics"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6950",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "A seminar required for first-year TAs in mathematics.",
"name" : "Teaching Seminar for Teaching Assistants"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6951",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This seminar introduces first-year graduate students in mathematics to the faculty and their research. Each week a different faculty member from math will give introductory presentations of their current research areas in a setting that is conducive for significant student-faculty discussions of the material.",
"name" : "Introduction to Research in Mathematics"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6630",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An understanding of the critical issues related to starting up a new business is gained through team-based experiential learning. Small teams of students develop a comprehensive business plan that can be used to raise money for a new or relatively new venture. The experiential learning process is enhanced through team meetings with faculty and/or course advisers and through oral presentations to the entire class. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
"name" : "Starting Up A New Venture"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-6420",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of the structural modeling of proteins and other biomolecules using informatics-driven and energy-based approaches. Topics include template-based comparative modeling, secondary structure prediction, tertiary structure prediction, protein classification, sidechain rotamers, docking, protein design, energy minimization, electrostatics, molecular dynamics, and molecular surfaces. Molecular modeling software will be provided. Laptop computers are required. BIOL 4550 , BIOL 6420 , BCBP 4550 , and BCBP 6420 meet jointly; only one of these courses can be taken for credit.",
"name" : "Molecular Modeling"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6970",
- "credits" : "0-6",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-2250",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Structure and chemical behavior of organic molecules with particular emphasis on reaction mechanisms as pathways for understanding their reactions. Stereochemistry, synthesis, and spectroscopic methods for the identification of organic functional groups are among the topics included. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Structure and chemical behavior of organic molecules with particular emphasis on reaction mechanisms as pathways for understanding their reactions. Stereochemistry, synthesis, and spectroscopic methods for the identification of organic functional groups are among the topics included.",
"name" : "Organic Chemistry I"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-4450",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics in an entire methodology rather than individual analyses or analysis steps.",
"name" : "Data Analytics"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-4600",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Axioms of probability, joint and conditional probability, random variables, probability density and distribution functions, expectation, functions of random variables, and limit theorems. Applications of probability to models in operations research, including queuing theory and Markov chains.",
"name" : "Probability Theory and Applications"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7120",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Theoretical and practical overview of International Marketing; discussion and analysis of International Marketing issues, problems, and solutions using text, case studies, and examples. This course is designed for professionals involved in corporate strategic planning, export sales, marketing, and international management.",
"name" : "International Marketing"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4180",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The design of processes and systems to protect public and ecosystem health using scientific, technological, and economic principles. Students formulate problems, develop requirements, and evaluate solutions against specifications, constraints, risks, and trade-offs. Students integrate background from previous courses and resources from the technical literature. The role of ethics and codes in professional practice is discussed. In this communication-intensive course, students write engineering proposals and reports, and present work orally.",
"name" : "Environmental Process Design"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-4940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Mathematical Programming, Probability, and Mathematical Statistics"
},
{
"code" : "LGHT-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in LGHT"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4965",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-4980",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Undergraduate Project in Mathematical Programming, Probability, and Mathematical Statistics"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6570",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Research Methods"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-6610",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to nonlinear programming. Models, methods, algorithms, and computer techniques for nonlinear optimization are studied. Students investigate contemporary optimization methods both by implementing these methods and through experimentation with commercial software. Nonmajors wishing to gain practical optimization skills are welcomed in this course. A course project will allow students to explore optimization methods and practical problems directly related to their interests. A computer implementation and a research presentation will be required. Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and MATP 4820 .",
"name" : "Computational Optimization"
},
{
"code" : "EMBA-6970",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EMBA"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-6640",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A unified development of linear systems and linear optimization, polyhedral theory, the simplex method, interior point methods, decomposition methods for large-scale linear optimization problems, the ellipsoid method, column generation algorithms for stochastic optimization, and other problems. Semidefinite optimization, conic optimization.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "A unified development of linear systems and linear optimization, polyhedral theory, the simplex method, interior point methods, decomposition methods for large-scale linear optimization problems, the ellipsoid method, column generation algorithms for stochastic optimization, and other problems. Semidefinite optimization, conic optimization.",
"name" : "Linear and Conic Optimization"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-2220",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Architectural Design 2"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6973",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-6980",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades of IP are assigned until the master's project has been approved by the faculty adviser. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the Library.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-1100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This is a required first course for management majors and minors. In a case-based format, it emphasizes broad, basic principles of managerial functions and processes using an interdisciplinary approach to goal-oriented situations of private and public organizations.",
"name" : "Management in the Digital Age"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-2100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course develops an understanding of concepts in business statistics and focuses on application of concepts in problem-solving situations. In particular, students learn to present and describe data, analyze probability distributions, make statistical inferences based on data samples, and develop models for prediction and forecasting.",
"name" : "Statistical Methods"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-2150",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course develops an understanding of concepts in business statistics and the application of concepts in problem-solving situations. Students learn to present and describe data, make statistical inferences, and develop models for prediction and forecasting. Work is accompanied by use of software (Excel) and a course project ensures that concepts are properly applied. This fast-paced course assumes students have a good understanding of foundational mathematics and the ability to quickly grasp quantitative content. Students cannot earn credit for both MGMT 2100 \u00c2 and MGMT 2150.",
+ "description" : "This course develops an understanding of concepts in business statistics and the application of concepts in problem-solving situations. Students learn to present and describe data, make statistical inferences, and develop models for prediction and forecasting. Work is accompanied by use of software (Excel) and a course project ensures that concepts are properly applied. This fast-paced course assumes students have a good understanding of foundational mathematics and the ability to quickly grasp quantitative content. Students cannot earn credit for both MGMT 2100 and MGMT 2150.",
"name" : "Accelerated Business Statistics"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-2320",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to corporate financial analysis and decision making. This course covers the following topics: financial statement analysis, valuation principles, risk and return analysis, working capital management, capital budgeting, cost of capital, capital structure, and dividend policy.",
"name" : "Managerial Finance"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4009",
- "credits" : "0-6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Music At Sage"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COGS"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6966",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-2600",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "The course provides an introduction and an overview of international business. Topics in the course include (1) globalization of markets and firms, (2) political, economic, and cultural differences across countries, (3) theories and trends in international trade and investment, (4) strategies and operations of firms in international markets, and (5) global aspects of marketing, R&D, human resource management, accounting, and finance.",
"name" : "International Business"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-6380",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course explores effective strategies for talking with others about oral presentations and written texts. Practice in consulting is grounded in theory and research in composition studies, reader-response, and tutoring. Students also study their own writing and reading processes through reflection and discussion. Those who complete the course with a grade of A- or A may apply to work as writing consultants in the Center for Communication Practices.",
"name" : "Writing and Response"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6700",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Solutions to the free vibration and transient dynamic responses of two-and three-dimensional structures by the finite element method are considered. The governing finite element matrix equations are derived and numerical aspects of solving these time-dependent equations considered. Topics include the formulation of the eigenvalue problem, algorithms for eigenvalue extraction, time integration methods including stability and accuracy analysis, and finite elements in time. Modal analysis and direct time integration techniques are compared for a variety of two-and three-dimensional problems.",
"name" : "Finite Element Methods in Structural Dynamics"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-2940",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Student plans a course of selected topics in management theory or practice not listed in this catalog. The instructor who will supervise and grade the student must approve the plan. Lectures, discussions, conferences, or seminars may be used in conjunction with the independent study.",
"name" : "Studies in Management"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4980",
- "credits" : "2-4",
"description" : "Independent field experience for undergraduates. Requires a written proposal and final report.",
"name" : "Undergraduate Research Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course introduces the student to the business management of production and operations systems. The concepts are related to inventory control, forecasting, scheduling, man-powers, and facilities planning. Computer usage includes Excel and specialized packages.",
"name" : "Quantitative Methods for Business"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2660",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Quantitative basis of modern computer architecture, processor design, memory hierarchy, and input/output methods. Layered operating system structures, process and storage management. Layered network organization, network protocols, switching, local and wide area networks. Examples from Unix and the Internet.",
"name" : "Computer Architecture, Networks, and Operating Systems"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4600",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A technology-based performance ensemble, as well as a practice-based studio course, focused on the composition, design, and programming of new musical works and instruments. Students create and perform electronic music using laptops, microprocessors, digital networks and a range of new interfaces for musical expression. ARTS 4600/6600 combines studio and ensemble. The ensemble only section (ARTS 2600) may be taken multiple times as a 1-credit performance ensemble in partial satisfaction of the Music major or minor ensemble requirements, or once as a 4-credit seminar at either the 4000 or 6000 level.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "A technology-based performance ensemble, as well as a practice-based studio course, focused on the composition, design, and programming of new musical works and instruments. Students create and perform electronic music using laptops, microprocessors, digital networks and a range of new interfaces for musical expression. ARTS 4600/6600 combines studio and ensemble. The ensemble only section (ARTS 2600) may be taken multiple times as a 1-credit performance ensemble in partial satisfaction of the Music major or minor ensemble requirements, or once as a 4-credit seminar at either the 4000 or 6000 level.",
"name" : "Ensemble Nonlinear"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4140",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course provides the undergraduate management student with an introduction to the concept and components of computer-based \"management information systems\" (MIS) and their integration into organizational processes to gain competitive advantage. This course will examine approaches for developing and using information systems in support of business processes. Topics include: the impact of computer-based information systems on organizations; the basic technology components of modern information systems; the process by which information systems are created and changed; and selected management and technology issues.",
"name" : "Computer Information Systems"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-1510",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro Cultural Anthropology"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4150",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This capstone concentration course provides the student with conceptual and applied material focusing on the effective implementation of information. A central theme underlying this course is that information system implementation is best thought of as a bridge between systems design and utilization and that it must be understood in the context of the development process as a whole. The course examines a wide array of interrelated issues not generally covered in a systems analysis and design course including: process development life cycle; project management and systems engineering; process reengineering and maturity; organizational learning and evaluation.",
"name" : "IT Project Management"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4160",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Business analytics enables organizations to leverage large volumes of data in order to make more informed decisions. It encompasses a range of approaches to integrating, organizing, and applying data in various settings. This course develops an understanding of concepts in business analytics and data manipulation. In particular, through hands-on experience with a range of techniques students will learn to work with large data sets, analyze trends and segmentations, and develop models for prediction and forecasting.",
"name" : "Applied Analytics and Predictive Modeling"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4920",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "A\u00c2 capstone design experience that engages students from biomedical, computer systems, electrical, industrial, materials, and mechanical engineering on teams in an open-ended engineering design problem in preparation for professional practice. With the guidance of a multidisciplinary team of faculty members and instructional support staff, students apply knowledge and skills from prior coursework. This is a communication-intensive course.",
+ "description" : "A capstone design experience that engages students from biomedical, computer systems, electrical, industrial, materials, and mechanical engineering on teams in an open-ended engineering design problem in preparation for professional practice. With the guidance of a multidisciplinary team of faculty members and instructional support staff, students apply knowledge and skills from prior coursework. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Multidisciplinary Capstone Design"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4230",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is the upper level of managerial accounting course. Cost accounting provides information for both managerial accounting and financial accounting. It is useful for managers for planning and controlling, as well as costing products, services, and customers.",
"name" : "Cost Accounting"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6230",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Advanced Manufacturing Processes and Systems (AMP) is a project-based lecture/laboratory course that teaches graduate engineering students how to develop new manufacturing processes and systems.",
"name" : "Advanced Manufacturing Processes and Systems"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4260",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is designed to strengthen students' ability to correctly analyze, interpret, and evaluate financial statements and their accompanying disclosures.\u00c2 The course is aimed at anyone whose career might involve working with accounting data, and should be especially useful for those interested in consulting and financial analysis.\u00c2 Throughout the semester the course will cover how to use financial accounting information for evaluating past performance and predicting future performance of a company or division. The course revolves around a number of topics of recent interest to the business community including accounting and financial analysis, performance forecasting, the quality of earnings, mergers and acquisitions, purchased R&D, post-employment benefits, executive compensation, and intangible assets.\u00c2 This course assumes that students have a basic knowledge of accounting, finance, economics, and business strategy. The focus is on integrating key concepts from each of these areas and applying them to financial decision-making. Half of the course time will be devoted to case analysis. Students are responsible for reading each case thoroughly and familiarizing themselves with the relevant accounting issues before the class.",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to strengthen students' ability to correctly analyze, interpret, and evaluate financial statements and their accompanying disclosures. The course is aimed at anyone whose career might involve working with accounting data, and should be especially useful for those interested in consulting and financial analysis. Throughout the semester the course will cover how to use financial accounting information for evaluating past performance and predicting future performance of a company or division. The course revolves around a number of topics of recent interest to the business community including accounting and financial analysis, performance forecasting, the quality of earnings, mergers and acquisitions, purchased R&D, post-employment benefits, executive compensation, and intangible assets. This course assumes that students have a basic knowledge of accounting, finance, economics, and business strategy. The focus is on integrating key concepts from each of these areas and applying them to financial decision-making. Half of the course time will be devoted to case analysis. Students are responsible for reading each case thoroughly and familiarizing themselves with the relevant accounting issues before the class.",
"name" : "Financial Statement Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6380",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Environmental Parametrics is an intensive introductory course on visual scripting theory and methodology intended to give incoming students a foundational base in computational and parametric design modeling in order to supplement fall semester courses for new and incoming students into the Built Ecologies and Geofutures post professional programs without prior experience. The techniques presented in this course allow designers to integrate environmental data and simulations fluidly into 3D models and the design process. A new and progressively more complex topic is introduced each week, and each topic is presented with an associated design exercise. This course is taught in a seminar format with some instructor led tutorials and workshop content linked to dedicated breakout time for completing assignments and modeling. A devoted archive folder for downloading and uploading course material and completed exercises will be used for the course. B.Arch. students can only register for the 4000 level of this course and M.Arch. students must register only for the 6000 level of this course.",
"name" : "Graduate Environmental Parametrics"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4470",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Open source communities are proven development engines for creating large diverse user-focused software; however, these communities are not easily supported by traditional models of software development. Expected behaviors, tools, and licensing are uniquely adapted to the needs of an often volunteer workforce, distributed and asynchronous development, and meritocracy. In this course, students use and develop open source software, create open source repositories, and participate in open source communities.",
"name" : "Open Source Software"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4270",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is the first intermediate course on the theory and practice of accounting and financial reporting. Designed for both accounting and finance majors, this course combines a study of the theory, rationale, and objectives of corporate financial reporting with an examination of current reporting principles. The aim is to develop a realistic understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of corporate financial reporting, particularly from the viewpoint of the consumer of such financial information.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This is the first intermediate course on the theory and practice of accounting and financial reporting. Designed for both accounting and finance majors, this course combines a study of the theory, rationale, and objectives of corporate financial reporting with an examination of current reporting principles. The aim is to develop a realistic understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of corporate financial reporting, particularly from the viewpoint of the consumer of such financial information.",
"name" : "Intermediate Accounting I"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7880",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This is an introductory course of theoretical research in corporate finance. The course will examine the fundamentals of corporate finance theory (e.g., capital structure choice, dividend policy, etc.), as well as various tool areas (e. g, moral hazard and agency problems, and adverse selection and signaling). Knowledge of corporate finance at the MBA level, or its equivalent, is required.",
"name" : "Financial Theory"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4380",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Writing And Response"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course introduces interactive trading in financial instruments. Students learn the principles of asset price discovery through real-time trading in a variety of markets, including equities, bonds, options, derivatives. Topics addressed include asset valuation, portfolio management, and risk management in the context of real-time trading of financial instruments. The course uses the facilities of the Lally School's Virtual Trading Room.",
"name" : "Financial Trading and Investing"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4510",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Quantum Mechanics I"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4210",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "An overview of the principles involved in the design and operation of supply chains with applications to manufacturing and service industries. Topics include dynamics of manufacturing systems and supply chains, lean manufacturing, lead time reduction in manufacturing and office operations, advanced pull systems, concurrent design of products and supply chains, rapid new product introduction, remanufacturing and reverse supply chains, and integration of information technology in supply chain operations. The goal of the course is to enable students to synthesize models and tools and to understand how these could be applied to address emerging challenges in manufacturing and service systems and their supply chains.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "An overview of the principles involved in the design and operation of supply chains with applications to manufacturing and service industries. Topics include dynamics of manufacturing systems and supply chains, lean manufacturing, lead time reduction in manufacturing and office operations, advanced pull systems, concurrent design of products and supply chains, rapid new product introduction, remanufacturing and reverse supply chains, and integration of information technology in supply chain operations. The goal of the course is to enable students to synthesize models and tools and to understand how these could be applied to address emerging challenges in manufacturing and service systems and their supply chains.",
"name" : "Design and Analysis of Supply Chains"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4320",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Introduction to financial markets, financial instruments, and basic investment principles. The course provides students with an understanding of how to value securities, how to assess risk and return tradeoffs, how to make investment decisions, and how to measure investment performance. Topics include market microstructure and impact of technology on securities markets, principles of investment banking, valuation of stocks and bonds and hybrid instruments, portfolio theory, asset pricing models, bond portfolio management, and derivative securities.",
"name" : "Investments I"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4330",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Advanced course in investment decision making. Analysis of investment strategies in national and international equity markets including emerging markets. Other topics include arbitrage pricing principles, portfolio insurance, study of the term structure of interest rates and interest rate forecasts, duration analysis, and bond portfolio management, including immunization and active strategies. Principles of option and futures pricing and strategies in options and futures markets.",
"name" : "Investments II"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6620",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Information Architecture"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4260",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Students are introduced to the major biomedical industries, markets, and stakeholders, with an emphasis on biomedical devices. Market drivers and hurdles are covered including regulatory, intellectual property, and reimbursement. The interactive class format includes case studies and industry experts providing a practical perspective. Students select topic areas for design projects and begin work toward the goal of developing functional design solutions to practical biomedical problems.",
"name" : "Biomedical Product Development and Commercialization"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6350",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introduction to social media analytics. Topics include obtaining and processing social media data, social network analysis, content analysis, descriptive, predictive, and prescriptive analytics using social media, ethical aspects of social media analytics.",
"name" : "Systems Engineering and Social Media"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4370",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Overview of risk management, and the concept and measurement of risk; types of risks (market, credit, liquidity, operational, business, strategic). Concepts, tools, and instruments available for risk management. Specific issues related with managing specific risk types \u00e2\u0080\u0094 market, credit, interest-rate, liquidity risk, and operational risk. Securitization, asset-liability management. Concepts underlying insurance and role of insurance for risk management.",
+ "description" : "Overview of risk management, and the concept and measurement of risk; types of risks (market, credit, liquidity, operational, business, strategic). Concepts, tools, and instruments available for risk management. Specific issues related with managing specific risk types \u2014 market, credit, interest-rate, liquidity risk, and operational risk. Securitization, asset-liability management. Concepts underlying insurance and role of insurance for risk management.",
"name" : "Risk Management"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The Student Managed Fund course will actively invest real capital using financial market principles. The goal of the fund is to produce excess returns consistent with the performance of long/short hedge funds through use of fundamental, technical, and quantitative strategies driven by economic analysis. The goal of the course is to directly apply the analytical financial skills developed within other Lally courses and provide students with both instructor and peer real-time feedback for their work.",
"name" : "Student Managed Investment Fund"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4510",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course focuses on three key goals: providing increased insight into the cognitive foundations of entrepreneurship, offering practice in applying creative thinking to the task of formulating ideas for new products or services, and presenting basic information about the organizational process of commercializing such innovations. These goals will be achieved through a combination of assigned readings, in-class exercises, and individual and team projects. In addition, the course will include contributions from guest speakers who will share with the class their own experiences and expertise.",
"name" : "Invention, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4530",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An understanding of the critical issues related to starting up a new business is gained through team-based experiential learning. Small teams of students develop a comprehensive business plan that can be used to raise money for a new or relatively new venture. The business plans are eligible for submission to the Rensselaer Business Plan Competition. The experiential learning process is enhanced through team meetings with faculty and/or course advisers and through oral presentations to the entire class.",
"name" : "Starting Up a New Venture"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6380",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The overall objective of this course is to study advanced corporate finance issues and test empirically the stock market reaction to financing decisions and the issuance of securities. Corporate finance topics include shareholder value and economic value-added concepts, as well as corporate governance issues. Financing decisions include venture capital and initial public offerings, seasoned equity offerings, stock splits, corporate bonds and bank loans, stock listings on foreign exchanges. Other topics are mergers and acquisitions, pension fund management, financial analysis, and planning. Real stock prices and case studies are used to apply the theoretical concepts.",
"name" : "Advanced Corporate Finance"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6650",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The principles and practice of tissue engineering are taught in this course.\u00c2 The principles underlying strategies for employing selected cells, biomaterial scaffolds, soluble regulators or their genes, and biomechanical loading and culture conditions, for the regeneration of tissues and organs in vitro and in vivo are addressed.\u00c2 Bioreactor, enabling technology, and biomimetic approach for fabricating tissue-engineered products and devices for implantation are taught.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "The principles and practice of tissue engineering are taught in this course. The principles underlying strategies for employing selected cells, biomaterial scaffolds, soluble regulators or their genes, and biomechanical loading and culture conditions, for the regeneration of tissues and organs in vitro and in vivo are addressed. Bioreactor, enabling technology, and biomimetic approach for fabricating tissue-engineered products and devices for implantation are taught.",
"name" : "Introduction to Cell and Tissue Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4540",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course covers the theory and practice of venture capital financing of entrepreneurial firms. Topics to be discussed include the structure and governance of venture capital funds, venture capital financial contracting, valuation of entrepreneurial firms, staging, syndication, capital structure, and exits (IPOs, acquisitions, secondary sales, buybacks, and liquidations). International differences in venture capital markets will also be studied. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course",
"name" : "Entrepreneurial Finance"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4870",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This is a course that integrates the functional fields of management. The first part of the course focuses on the tools and discipline commonly used in strategy formulation. The second part focuses on the implementation of strategy in a variety of contexts.",
"name" : "Strategy and Policy"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Studies in Management"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6020",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The purpose of this course is to develop a working understanding of the major investment and financial decisions of the firm. Emphasis will be placed upon identifying and solving the problems commonly faced by financial managers. The course presents the needed theory and develops financial problem solving skills through individualized problem solving, structured case analysis, and industry and company analysis using Internet sources.",
"name" : "Financial Management I"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4330",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "What is environmental justice? Why are some people exposed to environmental hazards while others are not? In this class, we will explore the intersection of environmental concerns and social justice. We will read the works of activists and scholars working across a range of disciplines, engage in discussion, analysis, research, and mapping. We will learn about global historical processes that structure contemporary inequity and contemporary cases including environmental justice work in our own community.\u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "What is environmental justice? Why are some people exposed to environmental hazards while others are not? In this class, we will explore the intersection of environmental concerns and social justice. We will read the works of activists and scholars working across a range of disciplines, engage in discussion, analysis, research, and mapping. We will learn about global historical processes that structure contemporary inequity and contemporary cases including environmental justice work in our own community.",
"name" : "Environmental Justice"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-2400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course addresses such issues as: Are species real entities in the world or just human constructs? Are biological phenomena reducible to physical processes or do irreducible biological features exist? What is the relationship between microevolution and macroevolution? Does sociobiology have something to contribute to understanding of ethics? To what extent are the structures of the human mind products of evolution?",
"name" : "Philosophy of Biology"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6060",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course investigates the business dimensions of major technological advances, highlighting how industry structures an organization, the dynamics of competition, patterns of innovation, operational decisions, and financial investment are all influenced by various types of technical breakthrough. Students also get to explore the interplay between emerging technology development and commercialization. The challenges associated with intellectual property protection and utilization, as well as the socio-economic and ethical dimensions of new technology adoption, are explored. Each year, a different set of key technologies will be examined and analyzed.",
"name" : "Business Implications of Emerging Technologies"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4200",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Portfolio Development"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6070",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The course takes a comprehensive look at financial planning at the individual level. As such, it provides guidelines and principles for credit management, debt management, investment management, risk management. Taxes, insurance, and retirement strategies also receive prominent attention. Financial planning will be couched in terms of the current state of markets and economies and potential changes in them. The course will be useful across the spectrum of the tactical to the strategic; across that of the short-term to the long-term; that of accumulation of wealth to ultimate disposition of assets and wealth; that of investment to lifestyle; and that of good deals to scams.",
"name" : "Personal Finance"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4430",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Marketing Principles"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-2430",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course provides students with an understanding of marketing principles and the role of the marketing discipline. The course is intended to help students learn the basic concepts and practices of marketing and to familiarize them with the terminology and techniques for properly framing and analyzing marketing problems. In addition to marketing concepts, processes, and strategy, issues such as the social consequences of marketing are discussed.",
"name" : "Marketing Principles"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6090",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course explores a multitude of approaches to IT integration among the various departments of a corporation as well as between the corporation and entities in its external environment. It explores multiple integration methods at the data level, the process level, and the application level. Once the student acquires a strong understanding of these basic methods then the course continues with advanced methods of IT integration. Such methods include Service Oriented Architectures (SOA), Fast Business to Business methods, Middleware methods, Cloud Computing, Supply Chain, and Portal based integration. The course is case study taught using the latest case studies from various consulting companies as they have actually implemented solutions for their corporate customers. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
"name" : "Enterprise IT Integration"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6100",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Every dataset tells a unique story, and in this course, students learn to elicit these stories from data. The course develops students' ability to ask critical questions about their data in order to better understand it. Students will run tests to identify data problems and will learn how to take corrective actions. In addition, the course covers important parametric and non-parametric tests, and discusses their benefits and limitations in a big data world.",
"name" : "Foundations of Data Science"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-6550",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course provides strategies for how to find funding, write persuasive narratives, develop budgets, and leverage academic or professional networks to craft competitive proposals. Here you will learn how to seek opportunities for developing proposals to support projects in your field of interest.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course provides strategies for how to find funding, write persuasive narratives, develop budgets, and leverage academic or professional networks to craft competitive proposals. Here you will learn how to seek opportunities for developing proposals to support projects in your field of interest.",
"name" : "Proposing and Persuading"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6160",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Business analytics enables organizations to leverage large volumes of data in order to make more informed decisions. It encompasses a range of approaches to integrating, organizing, and applying data in various settings. This course develops an understanding of concepts in business analytics and data manipulation. In particular, through hands-on experience with a range of techniques students will learn to work with large data sets, analyze trends and segments, and develop models for prediction and forecasting. This course is part of the Master's program in Business Analytics and builds on foundations learned in the fall semester.",
"name" : "Applied Analytics and Predictive Modeling"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6190",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course introduces accounting and financial management to first-semester M.S. students. The interpretation and preparation of basic financial statements such as the balance sheet and income statement are introduced along with relevant regulation and practice. In addition, the course introduces the student to basic financial concepts and techniques such as time value, risk, equilibrium asset pricing models, capital budgeting, cost of capital, and capital structure and discusses their applications in practice.",
"name" : "Introduction to Accounting and Financial Management"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6350",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This initial studio segment will explore variable phases of data collection, processing, and synthesis through explorative visualization methods. These methods will bear the complexity of mapping dynamic forces present in nature juxtaposed to cultural and economical factors.\u00c2 Course taught in New York City. \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This initial studio segment will explore variable phases of data collection, processing, and synthesis through explorative visualization methods. These methods will bear the complexity of mapping dynamic forces present in nature juxtaposed to cultural and economical factors. Course taught in New York City.",
"name" : "Design Research Studio"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6210",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course focuses on the principles of managerial accounting, in three major areas: 1) how managerial behavior influences costs; 2) how managers use accounting information to make strategic decisions; and 3) how to evaluate and control managerial actions. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
"name" : "Managerial Accounting"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6240",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course introduces interactive trading in financial instruments. Students learn the principles of asset price discovery through real-time trading in a variety of markets, including equities, bonds, options, derivatives. Topics addressed include asset valuation, portfolio management and risk management in the context of real-time trading of financial instruments. The course uses the facilities of the Lally School's Virtual Trading Room. Students will work in teams of two in many trading assignments.",
"name" : "Financial Trading and Investing"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4941",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Structural Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6230",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Sourcing is an important function that has a significant impact on the profitability of firms. This course examines sourcing from a strategic and operational perspective and presents best practices and frameworks for effective sourcing in large and small firms. Topics covered include factors influencing sourcing strategies of firms and the importance of sourcing in supply chain management, procurement strategies for commodities, differentiated products and services, electronic procurement and cost containment strategies, supplier evaluation and selection, negotiation and contracting, and global sourcing strategies.",
"name" : "Global Sourcing and Procurement"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6250",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course develops the concepts and tools that will provide students with an understanding of the forces driving the valuation, risk and return of fixed income securities. These include instruments such as futures, options, callable bonds, credit default swaps, and mortgage-backed securities. The size of these markets makes their pricing, hedging, and risk management invaluable to traders, risk managers, regulators or anyone interested in the functioning of the modern financial system.",
"name" : "Fixed Income Securities"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1973",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4090",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Works of architecture embody knowledge, ideas, and imagination that express formally, spatially, and materially the ways of living and values of the civilizations in which they occur. In continuing the inquiry begun in The Ethos of Architecture and employing the skills and values acquired in that course and Architectural Media, the intent of this course is to teach students the means for investigating buildings coherently, rationally, and interpretively to understand the technical and cultural knowledge embedded within works of architecture. A select number of modern and contemporary buildings that represent a high degree of sophistication in the way their architects have approached the breadth of design issues both within and external to the programs of those works will be analyzed critically in order to ascertain the significance and relationships of the multiple systems of order inherent to a work of architecture.",
"name" : "Architectural Case Studies"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4968",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6270",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This doctoral-level course introduces microeconomics to first-semester doctoral students in management. Rather than provide formal training for professional research economists, this course seeks to provide a theoretical introduction to microeconomic methods for academics and researchers in business, management, and finance. Topics covered in the course include consumer theory; theory of production, markets, and equilibrium; decision-making under uncertainty; theory of information; agency theory; and game theory.",
"name" : "Microeconomic Theory for Management"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6420",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The Student Managed Fund course will actively invest real capital using financial market principles. The goal of the fund is to produce excess returns consistent with the performance of long/short hedge funds through use of fundamental, technical, and quantitative strategies driven by economic analysis. The goal of the course is to directly apply the analytical financial skills developed within other Lally courses and provide students with both instructor and peer real-time feedback for their work.",
"name" : "Student Managed Investment Fund"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6280",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course covers the tools and concepts used in microeconomic analysis and will study the behavior of the basic building blocks of a market \u00e2\u0080\u0093 consumers and firms and different market structures and their welfare properties. These models help with understanding the functioning of a capitalist market system and provide a useful framework to analyze various policy interventions. This course also provides a foundation for studying public finance, game theory, labor economics, etc.",
+ "description" : "This course covers the tools and concepts used in microeconomic analysis and will study the behavior of the basic building blocks of a market \u2013 consumers and firms and different market structures and their welfare properties. These models help with understanding the functioning of a capitalist market system and provide a useful framework to analyze various policy interventions. This course also provides a foundation for studying public finance, game theory, labor economics, etc.",
"name" : "Seminar in Economic Theory"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-4010",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Power Engineering Fundamentals"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6290",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course identifies major forces acting on the enterprise from the macroeconomic and international environment. Key factors include national income and output, interest rates, economic growth and business cycles, international trade and balance of payment, exchange rates, monetary and fiscal policy. Factors are analyzed in terms of their impact on the economic and technological decisions of the enterprise.",
"name" : "Macroeconomics and International Environments of Business"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6320",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Introduction to investment instruments and modern methods of pricing them. Basic components of viable investment programs are outlined. Topics include expected utility theory and risk aversion, modern portfolio theory, equilibrium in capital markets (CAPM, APT), index models, futures and options, theory of active portfolio management.",
"name" : "Investment Analysis I"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4350",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A research seminar exploring the meaning of design in engineering, architecture, political theory, and other fields. How do social ideals and motives inspire design choices? To what extent does the design of human-made things shape the quality of public life? A variety of objects are studied: buildings, machines, artifacts in everyday use, computer programs, political constitutions, etc.",
"name" : "Politics of Design"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6340",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Focus on financial markets, new instruments and techniques for financing, risk management and its application to financial institutions. Overview of U.S. financial system, the Federal Reserve system, and monetary policy. Emphasis on impact of technology on securities markets and banks. Discussion of current issues in securities markets and banking, such as securitization, financial derivatives, junk bonds, bank failures, mergers and acquisitions, and international banking.",
"name" : "Financial Markets and Institutions"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6390",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course provides a foundation in the facts and ideas underlying the globalization of production and delivery of goods and services. Topics include: designing global supply chains, managing risks of cross border business relationships, international logistics, establishing world class manufacturing service and R&D in developing countries, integrating superior operating practices and technologies from across the world in diverse national environments, and political and societal issues associated with global operations.",
"name" : "International Operations"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6360",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course analyzes trends and themes in international financial management, especially how financial management and corporate strategies are carried out in international environments. Topics include foreign exchange markets and risk management, analysis of operating and transaction exposure, international financial markets and banking, international financing and investment. Working capital management and capital budgeting of multinational corporations. Case studies are used. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
"name" : "International Finance"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Readings In Ecse"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6370",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The purpose of this course is to provide an introduction to second generation financial instruments including forward and futures contracts, options, futures options, and swaps on a variety of underlying instruments including fixed income securities. The fixed income markets will be integrated with the discussion of IRDs (interest rate derivatives).",
"name" : "Options, Futures, and Derivatives Markets"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6410",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The course begins by providing students with a theoretical and practical background in the field of investments. This includes comparison of asset classes characteristics and returns as well as discussion of relevant models, financial institutions, and behavioral issues facing investors. These principles are then quantitatively applied in areas including portfolio construction, index-linked strategies, smart beta/factor portfolios, portfolio risk management, and dynamic portfolio management",
"name" : "Quantitative Asset Management"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-6600",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Summer Administ Registration"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-6990",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presentend, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2100",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In this course students receive practical hands-on experience in conducting ethical and theoretically-informed research in the fields of STS and sustainability studies. Throughout the semester students practice a variety of social science research methods through a series of exercises.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "In this course students receive practical hands-on experience in conducting ethical and theoretically-informed research in the fields of STS and sustainability studies. Throughout the semester students practice a variety of social science research methods through a series of exercises.",
"name" : "Investigating Society"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6430",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is designed to strengthen students' ability to correctly analyze, interpret, and evaluate financial statements and their accompanying disclosures.\u00c2 The course is aimed at anyone whose career might involve working with accounting data, and should be especially useful for those interested in consulting and financial analysis. Discussed throughout the semester will be how to use financial accounting information for evaluating past performance and predicting future performance of a company or division. Also discussed will be the key disclosure rules in the United States, the communication methods available to managers, managers' incentives and ability to exert discretion over reported earnings, and the interplay between a company's corporate strategy and its financial reporting policies and practices.\u00c2 The course revolves around a number of topics of recent interest to the business community including accounting and financial analysis, performance forecasting, the quality of earnings, mergers and acquisitions, purchased R&D, post-employment benefits, executive compensation, and intangible assets.\u00c2 This course assumes that students have a basic knowledge of accounting, finance, economics, and business strategy. The focus is on integrating key concepts from each of these areas and applying them to financial decision-making. Half of the course time will be devoted to case analysis. Students are responsible for reading each case thoroughly and familiarizing themselves with the relevant accounting issues before the class.",
+ "description" : "This course is designed to strengthen students' ability to correctly analyze, interpret, and evaluate financial statements and their accompanying disclosures. The course is aimed at anyone whose career might involve working with accounting data, and should be especially useful for those interested in consulting and financial analysis. Discussed throughout the semester will be how to use financial accounting information for evaluating past performance and predicting future performance of a company or division. Also discussed will be the key disclosure rules in the United States, the communication methods available to managers, managers' incentives and ability to exert discretion over reported earnings, and the interplay between a company's corporate strategy and its financial reporting policies and practices. The course revolves around a number of topics of recent interest to the business community including accounting and financial analysis, performance forecasting, the quality of earnings, mergers and acquisitions, purchased R&D, post-employment benefits, executive compensation, and intangible assets. This course assumes that students have a basic knowledge of accounting, finance, economics, and business strategy. The focus is on integrating key concepts from each of these areas and applying them to financial decision-making. Half of the course time will be devoted to case analysis. Students are responsible for reading each case thoroughly and familiarizing themselves with the relevant accounting issues before the class.",
"name" : "Financial Statement Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in DSES"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4010",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "IAP will examine theoretical concepts of interactive media as well as develop the practical skills needed to implement these concepts using the facilities of the iEAR studios. Topics include high- and low-level computer programming and electronics. Students will build installations and projects, which control live performance interactions with graphics, video, and sound.",
"name" : "Interactive Arts Programming"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6460",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This graduate level course is designed to provide the student with an understanding of the applications of quantitative models, methods, algorithms, and computational techniques across business functions. You will investigate how to apply optimization methods using a hands-on implementation approach.",
"name" : "Modeling and Optimization"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2300",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Readings, rehearsals, and performances of works from the standard repertoire for orchestra from the Baroque through the 20th century.",
"name" : "Rensselaer Orchestra"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4750",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cell Extracelllular Matrix Interactions"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6480",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This course discusses the role of services in an economy, managing services for competitive advantage, structuring the service enterprise, managing service operations, service productivity, quality, and growth.",
"name" : "Service Operations Management"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6490",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course includes topics such as manufacturing as a competitive weapon; management of quality; manufacturing technology implementation; strategic impact of advanced manufacturing technologies; and manufacturing's role in new product development.",
"name" : "Competitive Advantage and Operations Strategy"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6120",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the computational and mathematical techniques for practical financial applications. The course will emphasize the algorithmic side of finance. Topics will be selected from pricing (options and derivatives), trading, risk-evaluation, selfish agents, sequential decisions, and portfolio optimization. Examples of the mathematical and algorithmic techniques covered are martingale measures, risk-neutral pricing and Monte Carlo, dynamic programing, and stochastic processes. Students cannot receive credit for both CSCI 4120 \u00c2 and CSCI 6120.",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the computational and mathematical techniques for practical financial applications. The course will emphasize the algorithmic side of finance. Topics will be selected from pricing (options and derivatives), trading, risk-evaluation, selfish agents, sequential decisions, and portfolio optimization. Examples of the mathematical and algorithmic techniques covered are martingale measures, risk-neutral pricing and Monte Carlo, dynamic programing, and stochastic processes. Students cannot receive credit for both CSCI 4120 and CSCI 6120.",
"name" : "Computational Finance"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2960",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4420",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The principles and physical applications of classical thermodynamics are developed. Basic concepts in classical and quantum statistical mechanics are introduced and their relations to thermodynamics are developed.",
"name" : "Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4610",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Rhetorical Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "Readings and projects adapted to the needs of individual students.",
"name" : "Communication Studies"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6510",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The primary objective of this course is to provide the first or second semester financial engineering student with basic quantitative and analytical tools necessary for sound financial decision making, particularly in quantitative finance and risk analytics contexts. The course emphasizes financial computation techniques, whereby students learn standard methodologies to obtain numerical solutions to financial problems. Topics include solving linear and nonlinear systems of equations, optimization, lattices, Monte Carlo simulation, and finite difference methods as applied to common financial problems.R is the primary computing language used in this course.",
"name" : "Financial Computation and Simulation"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-2940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Engineering Project"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-2940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Materials"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4941",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Non W. Narrative Structures"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4630",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Students will use a variety of tools (textbooks, scientific journals, and Internet resources including molecular databases and data mining tools) to increase understanding of genes, their expression, their products, and their inter-relatedness. Meets together with\u00c2 BIOL 6690 . \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Students will use a variety of tools (textbooks, scientific journals, and Internet resources including molecular databases and data mining tools) to increase understanding of genes, their expression, their products, and their inter-relatedness. Meets together with BIOL 6690 .",
"name" : "Molecular Biology II"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6530",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Analyze the process of identifying prospective markets and customers, developing channels, defining the value proposition, selling products and services, and managing a sales force. Learn about tools ranging from customized consultative sales to commodity brokering, customer relationship management systems to trade press articles. Develop the skills to effectively listen, recognize opportunity, verbally persuade, handle objections, and prospect. Develop an understanding of customer needs, approach strategies, and effective presentations.",
"name" : "Making Business Happen"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-4500",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Overview of physical components of Earth's climate system; builds on this foundation by examining the roles of both natural Earth system processes and anthropogenic influences in determining Earth's climate and climate changes in the past,\u00c2 present, and future. Initial focus is on recent and future climate change.\u00c2 Remainder of course will emphasize the study and reconstruction of climates and climate change through geologic history.",
+ "description" : "Overview of physical components of Earth's climate system; builds on this foundation by examining the roles of both natural Earth system processes and anthropogenic influences in determining Earth's climate and climate changes in the past, present, and future. Initial focus is on recent and future climate change. Remainder of course will emphasize the study and reconstruction of climates and climate change through geologic history.",
"name" : "Earth's Climate: Past, Present, and Future"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6560",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "\"The widespread proliferation of IT-influenced economic activity leaves behind a rich trail of micro-level data, enabling organizations to use analytics and experimentation in both strategy and operations. This course provides a hands-on introduction to the concepts, methods, and processes for machine learning from data, the foundation of artificial intelligence. Students will learn how to manipulate data and apply machine learning models to business context.\" They will also learn how to obtain data and draw business inferences from data by asking the right questions and using the appropriate tools.",
"name" : "Introduction to Machine Learning Applications"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4060",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cancer Cell Research"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1982",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Songwrit To Reflect Times"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-2710",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Introduction to the First and Second Laws of Thermodynamics for open and closed systems. Thermodynamic properties of solids, liquids, and gases. Elementary power and refrigeration cycles.",
"name" : "Thermodynamics"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6620",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introductory graduate course in initiating new technology-based business ventures and developing them into self-sustaining and profitable enterprises. Examines the process whereby a person decides to become an entrepreneur, screens opportunities, selects an appropriate product/market target, and obtains the necessary resources. Provides the theoretical and practical knowledge for the preparation of formal business plans. Students enrolled in the full-time MBA program cannot use this course on the Plan of Study. This course is intended for students enrolled in the part-time MBA, M.S. in Management, or those seeking degrees in other schools at Rensselaer.",
"name" : "Principles of Technological Entrepreneurship"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6660",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This is part two of the two-course sequence that begins with MGMT 6650 . This course is about strategy implementation and fundamental concepts in implementing strategy both at the corporate level and the business unit level.",
"name" : "Strategy, Technology, and Entrepreneurship"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6670",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Provides students with opportunities to learn by text, discussion, and practical fieldwork, how successful new technological ventures are created, developed, and financed. Students work alone or in small teams with guidance from experienced entrepreneurs. Students wishing to take this course are required do so in their first year of study.",
"name" : "Practicum in Technological Entrepreneurship"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6680",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course emphasizes the linkage between technology, strategy, and achieving global competitive advantage. This course develops the concept and practical tools of strategy, strategic planning, and implementation both at the business unit and at corporate levels. The strategies of technology intensive international companies such as Intel, Microsoft, Netscape, Apple, Rhone-Poulenc, Toshiba, Xerox, MCI, ABB, and MapInfo are investigated and compared. The study of the evolution of General Electric's strategies from 1970 to 2000 completes the course. Students work in teams to develop a five-year strategic plan for a company or business unit of their choice, with a minimum of three strategic alternatives, and recommend the chosen alternative.",
"name" : "Strategy, Technology, and Global Competitive Advantage"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4966",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6690",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is designed to help develop essential expertise in managing negotiations that occur in a broad array of settings. Students will learn to recognize types of negotiation, and gain proficiency in helping to shape beneficial outcomes. Students will develop negotiation skills experientially using a variety of exercises and case studies while implementing useful analytical frameworks.",
"name" : "Negotiations"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6700",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Organizations that increase their capacity for entrepreneurship build a foundation for long term competitiveness. This course examines how organizations can build management systems to enable entrepreneurial activities while simultaneously addressing current operational concerns. This tension differentiates the corporate entrepreneurial challenge from the start-up venture. The course focuses on both the organizational and project levels, studying how organizations can build an entrepreneurial capacity, and how project champions can ensure their projects are effectively evaluated, supported, and managed.",
"name" : "Corporate Entrepreneurship"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6730",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Analysis of the differences among technical systems and interactions with industrial growth is undertaken with regard to nation states, industrial sectors, and companies. To develop tools of analysis regarding technological change, industrial policy, and corporate performance. The impact of technological change on industrial growth and competitiveness is viewed from three perspectives: the general manager, the technical professional, and the public official.",
"name" : "Technological Change and International Competitiveness"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-6980",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-4380",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course explores effective strategies for talking with others about oral presentations and written texts. Practice in consulting is grounded in theory and research in composition studies, reader-response, and tutoring. Students also study their own writing and reading processes through reflection and discussion. Those who complete the course with a grade of A- or A may apply to work as writing consultants in the Center for Global\u00c2 Communication + Design.",
+ "description" : "This course explores effective strategies for talking with others about oral presentations and written texts. Practice in consulting is grounded in theory and research in composition studies, reader-response, and tutoring. Students also study their own writing and reading processes through reflection and discussion. Those who complete the course with a grade of A- or A may apply to work as writing consultants in the Center for Global Communication + Design.",
"name" : "Writing and Response"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-2060",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Fundamentals Of Flight"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4880",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a course introducing music majors to advanced research topics of the Rensselaer music faculty.\u00c2 Each semester a member of the music faculty will focus the seminar on a research topic or paradigm related to their own body of artistic and technological research. Sample topics might include Spatial music and sound, New Instrument Design, Network Music, Music Information Retrieval, Ethnomusicology, Sonification Art and Science, Music and Logic, Spectralism and Beyond, Music Herstory (feminist music composition), Experimental music and sound history. Through hands-on creative research, students will explore questions of both musical and technological significance while engaging that same topic through their own hands-on creative practice.",
+ "description" : "This is a course introducing music majors to advanced research topics of the Rensselaer music faculty. Each semester a member of the music faculty will focus the seminar on a research topic or paradigm related to their own body of artistic and technological research. Sample topics might include Spatial music and sound, New Instrument Design, Network Music, Music Information Retrieval, Ethnomusicology, Sonification Art and Science, Music and Logic, Spectralism and Beyond, Music Herstory (feminist music composition), Experimental music and sound history. Through hands-on creative research, students will explore questions of both musical and technological significance while engaging that same topic through their own hands-on creative practice.",
"name" : "Interdisciplinary Research Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6750",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Legal, regulatory, and public policy issues related to e-commerce/e-business, the Internet, and information technology are explored through an analytic, critical thinking approach. Topics include: e-contracts, digital signatures, B2B and B2C agreements; ownership, protection, and exploitation of intellectual capital including patents, trademarks, copyrights and trade secrets; regulatory issues; ISP and Web site liability including defamation; copyright infringement, securities regulation, and criminal acts; policy issues including privacy, security and encryption, and obscene materials. Global e-commerce will be explored.",
"name" : "Legal Aspects of E-Business and Information Technology"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6800",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course introduces the motivations and related factors that shape consumers' purchasing decisions. Also considered is the\u00c2 consumer\u00c2 perceptual process and how it affects purchasing behavior and\u00c2 consumer\u00c2 reaction to product designs. The relationship between perception and product design is extended to topics such as design for understanding, universal product design, aesthetics, and industrial design.",
+ "description" : "This course introduces the motivations and related factors that shape consumers' purchasing decisions. Also considered is the consumer perceptual process and how it affects purchasing behavior and consumer reaction to product designs. The relationship between perception and product design is extended to topics such as design for understanding, universal product design, aesthetics, and industrial design.",
"name" : "Consumer Behavior and Product Design"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-1960",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-4820",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to nonlinear programming. Models, methods, algorithms, and computer techniques for nonlinear optimization are studied. Students investigate contemporary optimization methods both by implementing these methods and through experimentation with commercial software. Nonmajors wishing to gain practical optimization skills are welcomed in this course. A course project will allow students to explore optimization methods and practical problems directly related to their interests.",
"name" : "Computational Optimization"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7060",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course immerses students in the practices and activities that lead to the creation of innovative new products and services. Through a team-based learning experience, students generate an idea for a new product or service and follow the development process from conception through planning for commercialization. Through lectures, cases, and practical exercises, students learn how to overcome hurdles inherent in new product and service development. Students apply this knowledge in all phases of product development, including concept testing, product design, production planning, and market strategy. The project undertaken in this course provides student teams with an opportunity to create a new venture that may then be carried forward utilizing Rensselaer's technological resources such as the Incubator Program and Rensselaer's Technology Park.",
"name" : "Design, Manufacturing, and Marketing II"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7070",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course investigates the challenges of managing and leading organizations in situations characterized by their non-linear, unpredictable nature. Students will be challenged to develop innovative responses and solutions, drawing upon the full array of knowledge, skills, and insights they have gained from their two years of MBA study. Along with learning to deal with risk and uncertainty, the soon-to-be MBA graduates will be prepared for addressing the increasing degrees of fluidity and turbulence found in today's business, economic, and competitive environments.",
"name" : "Managing on the Edge: Corporate Innovation for the Coming Years"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7210",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Recent years have seen an accelerated commitment to growth and asset reallocation through acquisitions and corporate restructurings. Indeed the accounting profession is taking a fresh look at how these deals are accounted for in the firms' financial statements. The rate of deals is exponential and covers the full spectrum from established industries to high technology, computer, biotechnology, and Internet firms. Topics covered in this course are reasons for acquisitions, valuing, and structuring a transaction. Determining the currency to be used, achieving strategic and organizational alignment, takeover defenses, and post-deal integration. Students study a recent transaction of their own choosing and prepare an oral and written report focusing on those aspects that made the deal successful.",
"name" : "Acquisition and Venture Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6940",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Semantic Geoinformatics"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7230",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is the first in a three part series of Professional Development Workshops that teach practical skills in laboratory settings. Over the first three semesters, the MBA cohort student will be exposed to professional skills training, distinguished speakers, and leadership development. This first part will concentrate on building writing and presentation skills, and practicing those skills in the conceptual environment of Leadership, Followership, and Membership.",
"name" : "Professional Development Workshop I"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-4960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in EPOW"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7240",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is the second in a three-part series of Professional Development Workshops that teach practical skills in laboratory settings, in the context of Leadership, Followership, and Membership. Over the first three semesters, the MBA cohort student will be exposed to professional skills training, distinguished speakers, and critical leadership development. This second workshop will concentrate on building leadership skills through exercises, corporate site visits, and audiences with distinguished speakers.",
"name" : "Professional Development Workshop II"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7500",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "An overview of the key concepts related to the flow of information, goods, and services, from product or service design, through production to end-use customer. Focuses on the planning, data, analysis, evaluation, and decision-making processes used to manage supply networks in order to gain competitive advantage and improve customer satisfaction. Compares and contrasts supply strategies and methods based on batch-and-queue and Lean principles and practices. Emphasis is on business-to-business relationships, the application of practices that eliminate waste, and inter-organizational capability building.",
"name" : "Managing Supply Networks"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1500",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Human Rights In History"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-1030",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The sciences of the natural world, focusing primarily upon physics and chemistry but including some discussion of relevant topics in astronomy and planetary science. Both classical and modern concepts are treated, at scales ranging from the atom to the universe, and an effort is made to instill an appreciation for the nature of science and the scientific method. Examples are used as appropriate to illustrate the value of science in our everyday lives. The course is designed for students in non-technical fields; engineering and science majors will not be allowed to register. (Note: Natural Sciences II does qualify as a science distribution requirement for some science majors.)",
"name" : "Natural Sciences I"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2961",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7700",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Examines international negotiation techniques, practice, and styles. Students are given an in-depth profile questionnaire to assess individual strengths and weaknesses in international negotiations. Profiles of international negotiations are examined. Negotiations and group presentations are video taped and analyzed.",
"name" : "International Negotiations"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7710",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "The emerging role of the international manager, cultural impact of international management, managing culture shock, organizational responsibilities, and cultural differences. Foreign deployment, cultural specifics for managerial effectiveness, cultural themes and patterns, American macro- and micro-cultures, working with the global market environment.",
"name" : "Cultural Environment of International Business"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7770",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "The PDW sequence is designed to develop the professional skills of students in the M.S. programs that are needed to be a successful contributor in a business setting. PDW I follows a framework of Leadership, Followership, and Membership in a professional community. Students will gain practical experience through exposure to experts in specific skill areas, role play and practice sessions, and exercise completions. The fall semester concentrates on individual skills development in presentation, communication, and networking. Additionally, membership in one's professional community will be emphasized through engagement in two activities specific to the student's M.S. program. Building on the skills and abilities obtained earlier in your career, this PDW is geared toward a higher level of professionalism inherent in a successful business environment.",
"name" : "Professional Development Workshop I-M.S."
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2360",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Roots Of Africa Music Ensemble"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7780",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "The PDW sequence is designed to develop the professional skills of students in the M.S. Programs that are needed to be a successful contributor in a business setting. The PDW II will continue to follow a framework of Leadership, Followership, and Membership in a professional community. Students will gain practical experience through exposure to experts in specific skill areas, role play and practice sessions, and exercise completions. The second semester emphasizes developing influence skills, understanding and shaping group dynamics, and navigating organizational politics. Additionally, membership in one's professional community will be emphasized through engagement in four hours of activities specific to the student's M.S. program.",
"name" : "Professional Development Workshop II-M.S."
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7810",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course develops empirical tools and their applications to key areas of business analysis, including finance, human resource analysis, marketing, organizational behavior, and production appropriate theories. Empirical techniques emphasized include advanced regression and structural equations methods. Specialized statistical tools will be used.",
"name" : "Doctoral Research Methods II"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7740",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course introduces theories and practices of financial as well as managerial accounting. The financial accounting sessions provide an overview of external financial statements. The managerial accounting sessions focus on how accounting information is used in the internal managerial decision making process within a firm as well as cover cost accounting, budgeting, and performance evaluation tools.",
"name" : "Accounting for Reporting and Control"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7820",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This seminar introduces Ph.D. students to the world of research in the scholarly domains associated with Business. Philosophy of research, theory, and empirical foundations used in the research process are discussed. Students are exposed to classic scholarly papers that have influenced the field across multiple business disciplines, as well as research programs of various Lally faculty. The course also introduces students to the norms of behavior and expectations of an academic career.",
"name" : "Foundations of Management Thought: Theoretical and Empirical Foundations of Business Research"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7840",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The course focuses on the empirical issues of academic research in different business disciplines. It broadly encompasses a number of key research topics emphasizing the theoretical underpinnings and the empirical frontiers. The course will concentrate on the use of statistical approaches relevant for engaging in empirical research. Overall, the course attempts to develop skills such as synthesizing research, developing research designs, building theories, and using appropriate empirical methodology and techniques.",
"name" : "Empirical Issues in Management Research"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-1200",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "A 1-credit course comprising class lectures, laboratory visits, and group projects.\u00c2 The course will provide an overview of the field of materials science and engineering, highlighting how understanding the structures, properties and processing of materials provides scientific and engineering advances that sustain the progress of technology. \u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "A 1-credit course comprising class lectures, laboratory visits, and group projects. The course will provide an overview of the field of materials science and engineering, highlighting how understanding the structures, properties and processing of materials provides scientific and engineering advances that sustain the progress of technology.",
"name" : "Introduction to Materials Engineering"
},
{
"code" : "LITR-2110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "A study of major literary works that introduces students to basic ideas and terminology in literary criticism. Students learn to read and interpret a selection of novels, plays, poetry, or other forms of writing to be determined each semester by the instructor.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "A study of major literary works that introduces students to basic ideas and terminology in literary criticism. Students learn to read and interpret a selection of novels, plays, poetry, or other forms of writing to be determined each semester by the instructor.",
"name" : "Introduction to Literature"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-2020",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Structure and properties of crystalline ceramic materials. Atomic bonding, crystal structure, structural imperfections, nonstoichiometry, surfaces, and interfaces. Reactions in ceramic systems in terms of phase equilibria, nucleation and crystal growth, diffusion, grain growth, and sintering. Ceramic microstructures and various properties.",
"name" : "Introduction to Ceramic Materials"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-1010",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro To Computer Programming"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4330",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This survey course is intended as an introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience. The topics covered will focus on exploring the neural underpinnings for cognitive processes, such as sensation, language, attention, motor control, executive functions, social communication, emotions, consciousness, and learning/memory. Basic aspects of nervous system function and neuroanatomy, brain development/evolution, structural and functional imaging techniques, and other research methods used in Cognitive Neuroscience will be discussed. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This survey course is intended as an introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience. The topics covered will focus on exploring the neural underpinnings for cognitive processes, such as sensation, language, attention, motor control, executive functions, social communication, emotions, consciousness, and learning/memory. Basic aspects of nervous system function and neuroanatomy, brain development/evolution, structural and functional imaging techniques, and other research methods used in Cognitive Neuroscience will be discussed.",
"name" : "Introduction to Cognitive Neuroscience"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-2980",
- "credits" : "1-3",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Senior Project"
},
{
"code" : "ITWS-6440",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Although the term 'big data' is relatively new on the scene, the idea of collecting, protecting, and sharing large data sets has been around since before computers were a major player. Similarly, the concept of a 'policy,' high-level guidelines providing a general course of action (or inaction) in a given area, is not new. Putting those two concepts together, however, is a recent phenomenon which has created a set of intriguing challenges. What is 'open data?' What does it mean to 'share' data? Who makes such policies and how are they implemented? Do data policies look the same all over the world? What are the economic, cultural, and technological implications/impacts of/on a given data policy? How would one even go about understanding and evaluating a data policy? This course takes the basics of policy design and analysis, blends in critical thinking skills, ethics, group dynamics, national perspectives, and international perspectives, and applies it all to the world of big data.",
"name" : "Big Data Policy"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4050",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Introduction to Polymers is a first course on polymer science and structure-property relationships. Topics include chemical and molecular structure; morphology (structure) of amorphous and crystalline polymers; crystallization phenomena; polymer solutions and blends; physical properties of polymers in relation to structure, including rubber elasticity, viscoelasticity, and glass transition; and mechanical and rheological properties and testing.",
"name" : "Introduction to Polymers"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-6500",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Ewp Parttime Degree Clearance"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4200",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Electronic and optical properties of metals, dielectrics, semiconductors, and organic molecular solids. Introduction to quantum mechanics. Lattice vibrations, magnetism, energy bands in solids. Free and nearly free electron models. Effect of electronic structure on interatomic bonding. Semiconductors and their devices.",
"name" : "Electrical and Optical Properties of Materials"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4310",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Mechanisms, characteristics, and types of corrosion. Methods for testing, combating, and evaluating corrosion resistance. Suitability of metals, ceramics, and organic materials in corrosive environments. Oxidation and other high-temperature gas-metal reactions.",
"name" : "Corrosion"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4430",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course explores principles of chemical and physical metallurgy of the common alloy systems, including mild and low alloy steels, copper, aluminum, and aluminum alloys.\u00c2 Applications include alloys designed for corrosion resistance and elevated temperature applications.\u00c2 Alloy design and development for extreme or exotic environments also will be discussed.\u00c2 In each case, alloy development concepts will be related to the appropriate engineering applications.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course explores principles of chemical and physical metallurgy of the common alloy systems, including mild and low alloy steels, copper, aluminum, and aluminum alloys. Applications include alloys designed for corrosion resistance and elevated temperature applications. Alloy design and development for extreme or exotic environments also will be discussed. In each case, alloy development concepts will be related to the appropriate engineering applications.",
"name" : "Fundamentals of Metallurgical Alloy Systems"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4720",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Students apply mathematical and numerical techniques to understand materials engineering topics such as materials structure, symmetry, diffusion, mechanics, and physics of solids. Class uses examples from materials science and engineering core courses to introduce mathematical concepts and materials-related problem-solving skills. Topics include linear algebra, eigenvalues and eigenvectors, quadratic forms, tensor operations, symmetry operations, calculus of several variables, ordinary and partial differential equations, Fourier analysis, integral transformations, numerical methods, and calculus of variations.",
"name" : "Applied Mathematical Methods in Materials"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-0960",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6150",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This seminar is an investigation of the successes and failures of the news media, set within historical and contemporary contexts. The title \"media watch\" is intended to evoke a watch-dog approach found in independent media sources and organizations like human rights watch. Assignments involve analyzing how issues are portrayed in the media and students choose their topics according to their interests. The course can therefore enhance capstone, thesis, or dissertation work.",
"name" : "Media Watch"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4910",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This class covers basic materials selection concepts and the underlying structure-property-process-performance interaction. Engineering materials, structures and properties, principles and process of materials selection, generation of materials performances indices, assessment and optimization of performance, processing routes and manufacturing issues, role of reverse engineering and failure analysis in design are covered.\u00c2 Materials selection against yielding, fracture, flexure, buckling, fatigue, creep, corrosion, and wear are addressed.\u00c2 Decomposition of engineering problems into functional, geometric, and materials constraints are emphasized.\u00c2 Materials selection based on simple and complex or conflicting constraints will be developed.\u00c2 Students will perform written assignments and oral presentations to develop communication skills.\u00c2 Enrollment for Materials Science and Engineering majors is restricted to juniors, seniors, or graduates.",
+ "description" : "This class covers basic materials selection concepts and the underlying structure-property-process-performance interaction. Engineering materials, structures and properties, principles and process of materials selection, generation of materials performances indices, assessment and optimization of performance, processing routes and manufacturing issues, role of reverse engineering and failure analysis in design are covered. Materials selection against yielding, fracture, flexure, buckling, fatigue, creep, corrosion, and wear are addressed. Decomposition of engineering problems into functional, geometric, and materials constraints are emphasized. Materials selection based on simple and complex or conflicting constraints will be developed. Students will perform written assignments and oral presentations to develop communication skills. Enrollment for Materials Science and Engineering majors is restricted to juniors, seniors, or graduates.",
"name" : "Materials Selection"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6010",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Point defects, nonstoichiometry, diffusion and defects, electronic defects, elastic properties of dislocations, dislocation-point defect interactions, dislocation arrays, grain boundaries, stacking faults, phase stability, twin boundaries, epitaxial interfaces.",
"name" : "Defects in Solids"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-4962",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6030",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Review of classical thermodynamics. Development of basic concepts of statistical thermodynamics. Application of both classical and statistical techniques to the determination of phase and chemical equilibrium in real systems.",
"name" : "Advanced Thermodynamics"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6040",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Symmetry operations, point groups and space groups, x-ray and electron diffraction techniques, reciprocal lattice, Ewald sphere, mathematics of diffraction, crystal chemistry, crystal structure-property relationships.",
"name" : "Principles of Crystallography and X-Ray Diffraction"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-2340",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course offers a survey of scientific and applied approaches to the study of human language, highlighting the endlessly surprising nature of this sophisticated mode of communication. A sampling of the topics to be covered: phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, lexicography, psycholinguistics, and historical linguistics. Lecture course. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course offers a survey of scientific and applied approaches to the study of human language, highlighting the endlessly surprising nature of this sophisticated mode of communication. A sampling of the topics to be covered: phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, lexicography, psycholinguistics, and historical linguistics. Lecture course.",
"name" : "Introduction to Linguistics"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4600",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A guided approach to development of design skills. Students work individually and in teams to tackle a biomedical design problem using methods drawn as necessary from engineering and from the physical and mathematical sciences. Discussion sessions involve students in presentations of work. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Biomedical Engineering Design"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6060",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Diffusion and phase transformations: solutions to the diffusion equation, moving boundaries, concentration-dependent diffusion coefficient, interdiffusion, nucleation, crystal growth from the vapor and solution, solidification. Precipitation: general, cellular, and G-P zones. Allotropic and martensitic transformations. Grain growth. Sintering.",
"name" : "Advanced Kinetics of Materials Reactions"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4140",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course will review modern techniques of multi-dimensional NMR spectroscopy, including the history of magnetic resonance, principles of NMR, 13C and 1H NMR, multinuclear NMR, 2D homonuclear and heteronuclear methods, nuclear Overhauser effect, relaxation, structure elucidation, solid-state NMR and the nuts and bolts of NMR spectrometers and probes. This course is intended for graduate and upper-level undergraduate students in the School of Science and Engineering. Students cannot get credit for both this course and CHEM 6140 .",
"name" : "NMR Spectroscopy for Scientists and Engineers"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6120",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Review of essential electromagnetic theory and quantum mechanics, including exact models and approximate methods.\u00c2 Application to behavior of electrons in solids including electronic band structure, charge carrier statistics and charge transport in metals, semiconductors, and insulators. Dielectric, optical, and magnetic properties. Solid-vacuum, solid-liquid, and solid-solid interfaces. Applications to semiconductor, optoelectronic, and magnetic devices.",
+ "description" : "Review of essential electromagnetic theory and quantum mechanics, including exact models and approximate methods. Application to behavior of electrons in solids including electronic band structure, charge carrier statistics and charge transport in metals, semiconductors, and insulators. Dielectric, optical, and magnetic properties. Solid-vacuum, solid-liquid, and solid-solid interfaces. Applications to semiconductor, optoelectronic, and magnetic devices.",
"name" : "Advanced Electronic Properties of Materials"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6150",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Review of elasticity and plasticity theory. Calculation of theoretical cohesive strength of crystalline solids; influence of stress concentrations on fracture strength. Fractography. Theory and applications of linear elastic fracture mechanics. Fracture testing. Elastic-plastic fracture mechanics. Dislocation theories of cleavage fracture. Phenomenology and theories of stress corrosion cracking, creep rupture, fatigue.",
"name" : "Fracture of Solids"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6220",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Discussion of selected advanced and emerging topics in microelectronics materials and fabrication. These may include metallization, thin film deposition, interconnection technology, microlithography, plasma etching and processing.",
"name" : "Advanced Semiconducting Materials and Processing"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Theory and practice of IC fabrication in a research laboratory environment. Test chips are fabricated and the resulting devices and circuits evaluated. Processes and fabrication equipment studied and used include oxidation/diffusion, CVD reactors, photolithography, plasma etching, vacuum evaporator, ion implantation, etc. Instruments used in process monitoring and final testing include thin film profilometer, ellipsometer, resistivity probe, scanning electron microscope, capacitance-voltage system, etc. The fundamentals of hazardous material handling and clean room procedures are studied.",
"name" : "Integrated Circuit Fabrication Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6450",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Thermodynamics, kinetics, and morphologies of solid-liquid interfaces. Heat flow phenomena in casting and crystal growth. Structure of molten systems. Physical chemistry of vacuum processing. Mechanics of solidification of metals under equilibrium and nonequilibrium conditions. Nucleation and growth phenomena. Solute redistribution during freezing. Metal transport during freezing. Grain size control. Application of theory to production of engineering alloys.",
"name" : "Melting and Solidification"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6460",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Phenomenological and quantitative descriptions of crystal symmetry and structure. Theories of primary and secondary bonding in crystals. Theory and application of diffraction techniques for structure determination. Models of cohesive forces in solids. Emphasis is placed on the intimate connection between crystal structure, bonding, electronic structure, and properties of solids.",
"name" : "Advanced Structure and Bonding in Materials"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6500",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course introduces basic concepts used in the modeling of material properties. The course will include quantum mechanics, molecular dynamics, Monte Carlo and continuum level analysis, and multiscale methods as applied to the modeling of soft and hard matter. The methods are introduced in a computer laboratory environment. Open to graduates and qualified undergraduates.",
"name" : "Modeling of Materials"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6520",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course will review basic thermodynamic and kinetic concepts, which underpin how material behaves under extreme thermal, mechanical, chemical, electrical, and magnetic conditions as well as high-energy irradiations. Engineering materials that can withstand harsh environments and new materials with unique crystal structures and microstructures will be surveyed.",
"name" : "Materials under Extreme Conditions"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6690",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Students will use a variety of tools (textbooks, scientific journals, and Internet resources including molecular databases and data mining tools) to increase understanding of genes, their expression, their products, and their inter-relatedness. (Meets together with BIOL 4630 .)",
"name" : "Advanced Molecular Biology"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6750",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "A course in physical ceramics, the content of which will be modified in accordance with current interests and technology.",
"name" : "Special Topics in Ceramics"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4450",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The course presents several aspects of drug and gene delivery including: 1) definitions of what drugs or genes are; 2) pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics; 3) biomaterial selection considerations; 4) bioactivity considerations;\u00c2 5) physiological and biochemical barriers to drug delivery; 6) diffusion controlled, dissolution controlled, and osmotic controlled drug delivery systems; 7) polymeric delivery systems; 8) ligand-based targeting and physical targeting; 9) viral mediated gene delivery; 10) non-viral gene delivery; 11) polymers in gene delivery.",
+ "description" : "The course presents several aspects of drug and gene delivery including: 1) definitions of what drugs or genes are; 2) pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics; 3) biomaterial selection considerations; 4) bioactivity considerations; 5) physiological and biochemical barriers to drug delivery; 6) diffusion controlled, dissolution controlled, and osmotic controlled drug delivery systems; 7) polymeric delivery systems; 8) ligand-based targeting and physical targeting; 9) viral mediated gene delivery; 10) non-viral gene delivery; 11) polymers in gene delivery.",
"name" : "Drug and Gene Delivery"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Materials Engineering Project"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6970",
- "credits" : "1-9",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MTLE"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4150",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Neurons are uniquely organized to facilitate signal transmission and information processing in the brain. This course will examine the mechanisms that develop and maintain neurons, the unusual cell-biological problems these cells solve, and the experimental tools that drive modern neuroscience research. Students will read current scientific literature, evaluate it critically, and develop a research project.",
"name" : "Cellular Neuroscience"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4120",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Building on the knowledge, critical perspectives, and abilities that students have acquired in the previous courses in the history, theory, and criticism sequence, this course begins a study of the ideas, values, theories, and practices that contributed to the rise of modernity in the western world and eventually on a global scale. This course explores the ideal of modernity as both a cultural phenomenon and as a technological enframing of the world, scientific rationality, historical consciousness, etc.",
"name" : "Cloud Atlas: 20th Century Architecture, Culture and Civilization"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4967",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-2830",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Central to philosophy is a careful examination of human reasons for holding their beliefs.\u00c2 Given the complexity/ineffability of religious experience, philosophy of religion's examination of reasons is especially difficult.\u00c2 This course will analyze and evaluate Western monotheism both generally and as it relates to the traditional questions of faith and reason, the problem of evil, fate, and free will and the existence of miracles.\u00c2 Time permitting, non-Western as well as Western religions will be considered.",
+ "description" : "Central to philosophy is a careful examination of human reasons for holding their beliefs. Given the complexity/ineffability of religious experience, philosophy of religion's examination of reasons is especially difficult. This course will analyze and evaluate Western monotheism both generally and as it relates to the traditional questions of faith and reason, the problem of evil, fate, and free will and the existence of miracles. Time permitting, non-Western as well as Western religions will be considered.",
"name" : "Introduction to Philosophy of Religion"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-2004",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Int Russian II (at Skidmore)"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-2940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "Independent study of a particular topic.",
"name" : "Philosophy Studies"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4130",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "How does science stimulate philosophical thinking and how has philosophy influenced science? This broad range of interaction is studied with special attention given to the concepts of theory, observation, and scientific method. Special attention is given to issues basic to psychology, in particular, reductionism, behaviorism, functionalism, and cognitivism.",
"name" : "Philosophy of Science"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-2962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4140",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is a continuation of PHIL 2140 , covering basic metatheory of logic (including formal syntax and semantics, model theory, and soundness and completeness of proof systems), applications of logic (including automated theorem proving, deductive problem solving, and the axiomatization of various branches of mathematics), and alternative systems of logic (including sequent systems, diagrammatic logic, and modal logic).",
"name" : "Intermediate Logic"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4350",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will provide students with a systematic overview of practical and important mathematical tools and skills used in modern psychological sciences. Students completing the course will gain experience using mathematical tools drawn from diverse fields including calculus, linear algebra, probability theory,\u00c2 nonlinear optimization, and other closely related disciplines. Rather than providing complete coverage of each field or focusing on formal proofs, the goal will be to provide students with the essential elements necessary to understand and use these tools to solve current and outstanding problems in the field today. This class will be hands-on, using examples drawn from across the cognitive sciences. Students will also gain experience implementing mathematical models in the R programming language.",
+ "description" : "This course will provide students with a systematic overview of practical and important mathematical tools and skills used in modern psychological sciences. Students completing the course will gain experience using mathematical tools drawn from diverse fields including calculus, linear algebra, probability theory, nonlinear optimization, and other closely related disciplines. Rather than providing complete coverage of each field or focusing on formal proofs, the goal will be to provide students with the essential elements necessary to understand and use these tools to solve current and outstanding problems in the field today. This class will be hands-on, using examples drawn from across the cognitive sciences. Students will also gain experience implementing mathematical models in the R programming language.",
"name" : "Mathematical Methods in Psychological Science"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4260",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course may be roughly divided into two general areas: philosophical problems in AI and philosophical issues that arise because of AI. An example from the first area is the Knower Paradox, a paradox in which an apparently desirable formalism for handling an agent's knowledge leads to inconsistency; an example from the second area is John Searle's attack on so-called \"Strong\" AI by way of his Chinese Room argument, wherein he claims that because a computer at bottom just manipulates symbols it cannot genuinely understand.",
"name" : "Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-2300",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A survey, application-oriented course for engineering and science majors. Transducers and measurement devices. DC and AC analog circuits including impedance, power, frequency response, and resonance. Diodes, transistors, and operational amplifiers. Signal conditioning, noise, and shielding. Digital electronics, A/D and D/A conversation. Power supplies, rectifiers, and electromagnetic devices.",
"name" : "Electronic Instrumentation"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "What is progress in science? How has the concept of progress been influenced by science? Are there significant differences between scientific and technological revolutions? These questions are explored in order to shed light on the complex dynamics of academic and industrial research.",
"name" : "Scientific Revolutions"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4480",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Daydreams about some tropical paradise ... the smell of freshly baked bread ... the flash of anger experienced when one person cuts another off ... the vision of an albino squirrel on the campus green ... Humans take all of these to involve activities or states of consciousness. But what is this consciousness with which they claim to be so intimately familiar? What are its metaphysical implications, and can people reconcile those implications with current scientific understanding of the world?\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Daydreams about some tropical paradise ... the smell of freshly baked bread ... the flash of anger experienced when one person cuts another off ... the vision of an albino squirrel on the campus green ... Humans take all of these to involve activities or states of consciousness. But what is this consciousness with which they claim to be so intimately familiar? What are its metaphysical implications, and can people reconcile those implications with current scientific understanding of the world?",
"name" : "Metaphysics and Consciousness"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4500",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course involves a philosophical analysis of some of the basic moral issues raised by recent and anticipated developments in the areas of biology and medicine. The general question \"What are moral problems, and how does one resolve them?\" is examined in the context of concrete cases involving issues such as abortion, euthanasia, organ transplants, experimentation on human patients, cloning, genetic engineering, and behavior control and modification.",
"name" : "Bioethics"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-4940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "Experimental courses on subjects to be announced in advance.",
"name" : "Topics in Philosophy"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-1010",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "A weekly one-hour seminar by physics department faculty members, in which they describe their scientific and research interests, at a level suitable for first-year college students. This course is graded satisfactory/unsatisfactory.",
"name" : "A Passion for Physics"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6160",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course assumes knowledge and experience in computer music applications and performance. It is directed to undergraduate students as an upper-level seminar guiding their progress through the composition of a significant musical work. The class is divided between a group seminar, focusing on aesthetic, theoretical, and technical issues, and a workshop/lab in performance, computer applications, and composition.",
"name" : "Advanced Computer Music Composition and Performance"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4970",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-1200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "The second semester of the two-semester sequence of interactive courses. Topics include electric and magnetic forces and fields, Gauss's Law,\u00c2 dc and ac circuits, Ampere's Law and Faraday's Law, electromagnetic radiation, physical optics, and quantum physics.",
+ "description" : "The second semester of the two-semester sequence of interactive courses. Topics include electric and magnetic forces and fields, Gauss's Law, dc and ac circuits, Ampere's Law and Faraday's Law, electromagnetic radiation, physical optics, and quantum physics.",
"name" : "Physics II"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2350",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Experiments in mechanics, optics, electricity and electromagnetics, oscillations and waves, atomic, nuclear, and solid-state physics. Experimental methods, quantitative observations, and interpretation of data. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Experimental Physics"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4600",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics is an entire methodology rather than individual analyses or analysis steps.",
"name" : "Data Analytics"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6150",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Neurons are uniquely organized to facilitate signal transmission and information processing in the brain. This course will examine the mechanisms that develop and maintain neurons, the unusual cell-biological problems these cells solve, and the experimental tools that drive modern neuroscience research. Students will read current scientific literature, evaluate it critically, and develop a research project.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Neurons are uniquely organized to facilitate signal transmission and information processing in the brain. This course will examine the mechanisms that develop and maintain neurons, the unusual cell-biological problems these cells solve, and the experimental tools that drive modern neuroscience research. Students will read current scientific literature, evaluate it critically, and develop a research project.",
"name" : "Cellular Neuroscience"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "Reading and study in various fields of physics to develop interest in and ability for independent study.",
"name" : "Special Projects in Physics"
},
{
"code" : "ITEC-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ITEC"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6310",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course has been conceived together with Material Systems and Productions and the Design Research Studio, such that each student will develop a complementary written analysis that critically situates the new material system that the student is developing in design studio within historical, socio-political, and economic flows. The written analysis will directly reference key themes contained within the required readings, lectures, and seminar discussions. Course taught in New York City.",
"name" : "Environmental History and Theory"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2990",
- "credits" : "3-4",
"description" : "An independent investigation.",
"name" : "Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-2110",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Bldg & Thinking Arch 1"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4210",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Field theory of electricity and magnetism with emphasis on solving boundary value problems. Dielectric and magnetic materials. Maxwell's equations and wave propagation with applications to optics. Relativistic electrodynamics.",
"name" : "Electromagnetic Theory"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6270",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Integrates theory from psychology, neuroscience, and other social sciences into traditional economic models of human behavior. By relaxing the standard assumptions of perfect rationality and selfishness, more realistic modeling features such as loss aversion, present-bias, social norms, and habit formation improve economic analyses. These techniques are used to analyze individuals' health behaviors, health insurance markets, and healthcare policy. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Integrates theory from psychology, neuroscience, and other social sciences into traditional economic models of human behavior. By relaxing the standard assumptions of perfect rationality and selfishness, more realistic modeling features such as loss aversion, present-bias, social norms, and habit formation improve economic analyses. These techniques are used to analyze individuals' health behaviors, health insurance markets, and healthcare policy.",
"name" : "Behavioral Economics"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4330",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Particle and rigid body dynamics using Newtonian, Lagrangian, and Hamiltonian methods. Motion of particle systems. Central force motion. Rotating coordinate systems. Rigid body motion using the inertia tensor and Euler angles. Coupled systems and normal coordinates. Introduction to continuum mechanics and the mechanics of deformable media. Introduction to Hamiltonian Mechanics, including proof and applications of Liouville's Theorem. Formalism of Special Relativity. Introduction to nonlinear dynamics and chaotic behavior.",
"name" : "Theoretical Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4640",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Phenomena, materials, and devices for optical communications and computing. Topics include: guided wave and fiber optics, integrated optics, electro-optic and nonlinear optical switching, pulse and soliton propagation, sources and detectors.",
"name" : "Optical Communications and Integrated Optics"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4490",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course introduces methods that leverage the basic analysis techniques learned in Robotics I to develop numerical and algorithmic techniques needed to endow robots with the \"intelligence\" to devise strategies to solve problems they will encounter. Once these abilities are sufficiently well developed, robots will become safe and autonomous, thus paving the way for pervasive personal robots. Topics include: configuration space representation, cell decomposition, roadmap methods, rapidly-exploring random trees, simultaneous localization and mapping, contact modeling, grasping, and dexterous manipulation.",
"name" : "Robotics II"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4810",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Computational physics studies the implementation of numerical algorithms to solve problems of physics which do not have analytical solutions. Upon completion of this course, students will be able to solve physics problems from a variety of fields under realistic conditions, using modern architectures such as graphical processing units and supercomputers. This course makes extensive use of computers but remains a physics course where students enrich their understanding of physical phenomena. A culminating experience project is required.",
"name" : "Computational Physics"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4967",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4960",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6530",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Relativistic wave equations. Commutation relations and the quantization of free fields. Spin and statistics of Bose and Fermi fields. Interacting fields and commutation relations. Interaction representation and S-matrix perturbation theory. Renormalization theory and applications in quantum electrodynamics. Many-body description of condensed matter systems. Functional integral formulation and methods for quantum field theory and many-body physics.",
"name" : "Quantum Mechanics III"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4931",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "The Man Next Door: Hitchcock"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6330",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "In this seminar, students develop and analyze an ecologically sensitive built system related to their thesis topic with particular attention to the architectural, social, and political implications of the work and their inter-relationships. An awareness of the political and economic forces that are instrumental in the development of contemporary built ecologies creates opportunities for innovation in the cultures of making.\u00c2 Course taught in New York City.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "In this seminar, students develop and analyze an ecologically sensitive built system related to their thesis topic with particular attention to the architectural, social, and political implications of the work and their inter-relationships. An awareness of the political and economic forces that are instrumental in the development of contemporary built ecologies creates opportunities for innovation in the cultures of making. Course taught in New York City.",
"name" : "Built Ecologies 2"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-7000",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "A continuation of the advanced presentation of mathematical methods useful in engineering practice. The course covers the Frobenius method for the solution of boundary value problems; the representation of arbitrary functions by characteristic functions; calculus of functions of more than one variable including the study of extreme; overview of calculus of variations; principles of vector and tensor analysis; analytical and numerical techniques for the solution of initial and boundary value problems in partial differential equations. Symbolic manipulation and scientific computation software used extensively. Emphasis on reliable computing is made throughout.",
"name" : "Advanced Engineering Mathematics II"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6590",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Review of thermodynamics, probability, and statistics. Statistical basis of thermodynamics, various ensembles, quantum statistics. Ideal Fermi and Bose gases and applications to solids and the black-body radiation. Interacting systems, phase transitions, and critical phenomena. Phase transition in the Van der Waals gas and in the Ising ferromagnet. Mean-field approximation and Landau theory of continuous phase transitions. Random walk, diffusion, Brownian motion, and Langevin equation. Stochastic processes.",
"name" : "Statistical Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-4966",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6080",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Introduction to electron optics, electron diffraction contrast mechanisms, specimen preparation, and microanalysis. Theory and operating fundamentals of the SEM, TEM, STEM, and the electron microprobe. Analysis of images from crystalline materials using kinematical and dynamical theories of electron diffraction. Includes laboratory component.",
"name" : "Electron Microscopy of Materials"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6720",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "More detailed application of solid-state theory to electrical, magnetic, and optical properties of matter. Consideration of particular materials; semiconductors, ferrites, ferroelectrics, and superconductors.",
"name" : "Theory of Solids II"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6810",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Theoretical framework for analysis of wave propagation in nonlinear media. Classical and quantum theory of nonlinear response. Multi-wave mixing, including second-harmonic generation, optical phase conjugation and optical bistability. Quantization of the electromagnetic field and quantum stochastic processes in atom-field interactions. Applications to amplifiers, lasers, resonance fluorescence, and squeezed state generation. Quantum theory of measurements.",
"name" : "Nonlinear and Quantum Optics"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "Supervised reading and study in various fields of physics.",
"name" : "Readings in Physics"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6190",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The course is intended to provide a mathematical perspective on one or more topics chosen from algebra, geometry, and/or topology. Topics may include combinatorial matrix theory, classification of surfaces, Lie groups, Galois theory, geometric analysis, computational geometry, homology, and/or fixed point theorems.",
"name" : "Topics in Mathematics"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6970",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-6990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-1200",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course embraces the science of psychology.\u00c2 The aim is for students to learn how using the scientific method provides important insights about mind, brain, and behavior.\u00c2 This course integrates research on neuroscience throughout all the standard topics in an introductory course in psychology.\u00c2 The course presents advances across all subfields of psychology.\u00c2 In addition to standard exams, there are online assignments for each chapter and online laboratory experiences. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course embraces the science of psychology. The aim is for students to learn how using the scientific method provides important insights about mind, brain, and behavior. This course integrates research on neuroscience throughout all the standard topics in an introductory course in psychology. The course presents advances across all subfields of psychology. In addition to standard exams, there are online assignments for each chapter and online laboratory experiences.",
"name" : "Introduction to Psychological Science"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course provides tools for the identification, analysis, and evaluation of the various patterns of reasoning as they occur in the real world. Patterns of reasoning include deductive reasoning, inductive reasoning, scientific reasoning, statistical reasoning, and causal reasoning. The course also covers some basic psychology and sociology of reasoning and belief and concludes with a critical discussion of science and the scientific method.",
"name" : "Critical Thinking"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-4960",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ISCI"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
- "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation.\u00c2 Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester.\u00c2 Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library. \u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Doctoral Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2310",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course, the first in a two-course sequence, provides an introduction to basic methods of behavioral and social science research, including experimental, quasi-experimental, and non-experimental research designs, psychometric considerations (e.g., reliability, validity, control, importance, levels of measurement), approaches to data collection and analysis, and communication of results. Students will demonstrate their understanding of the topics covered by writing a detailed research proposal formatted according to American Psychological Association (APA) guidelines.\u00c2 Students will also gain experience in using a selection of parametric (e.g., correlation, simple and multiple regression, ANOVA) and non-parametric (e.g., Chi-square, Mann-Whitney U, Wilcoxon T, Kruskal-Wallis, Friedman's ANOVA) statistical procedures. Data analysis will be carried out using R, an open-source programming language for statistical calculation and graphics, and R-Studio, an open-source integrated development environment for R.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course, the first in a two-course sequence, provides an introduction to basic methods of behavioral and social science research, including experimental, quasi-experimental, and non-experimental research designs, psychometric considerations (e.g., reliability, validity, control, importance, levels of measurement), approaches to data collection and analysis, and communication of results. Students will demonstrate their understanding of the topics covered by writing a detailed research proposal formatted according to American Psychological Association (APA) guidelines. Students will also gain experience in using a selection of parametric (e.g., correlation, simple and multiple regression, ANOVA) and non-parametric (e.g., Chi-square, Mann-Whitney U, Wilcoxon T, Kruskal-Wallis, Friedman's ANOVA) statistical procedures. Data analysis will be carried out using R, an open-source programming language for statistical calculation and graphics, and R-Studio, an open-source integrated development environment for R.",
"name" : "Research Methods and Statistics I"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-6967",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2001",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "General Nutrition (at Hvcc)"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2730",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is a survey course covering theories, methods, and empirical research on personal and situational factors influencing social behavior. Topics covered include social perception, the construction of social reality, decision making, group influences on behavior, and attitudes.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This is a survey course covering theories, methods, and empirical research on personal and situational factors influencing social behavior. Topics covered include social perception, the construction of social reality, decision making, group influences on behavior, and attitudes.",
"name" : "Social Psychology"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4200",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "A broad introduction to the field of Industrial and Organizational Psychology. Topics covered include personnel selection, job analysis, training, performance appraisal, work-related attitudes, employee motivation, leadership, decision making, and organizational theory.",
"name" : "Industrial and Organizational Psychology"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4220",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In this course, students will deepen their understanding of research principles and experimental practices in cognitive and behavioral science, and they will gain experience in applying concepts often discussed in human-oriented contexts (e.g., learning, theory of mind) to the animal world. In addition, they will be prepared to participate in revolutionizing our treatment of both the animals and the people with whom we share our lives. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "In this course, students will deepen their understanding of research principles and experimental practices in cognitive and behavioral science, and they will gain experience in applying concepts often discussed in human-oriented contexts (e.g., learning, theory of mind) to the animal world. In addition, they will be prepared to participate in revolutionizing our treatment of both the animals and the people with whom we share our lives.",
"name" : "Animal Cognition and Interaction with Humans"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4360",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is an introduction to the role of physiological mechanisms in behavioral processes. There will be detailed examination and discussion of the involvement of biological systems in feeding and drinking, sexual behavior, sleep and arousal, learning and memory, psychopathology and psychopharmacology.",
"name" : "Behavioral Neuroscience"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6010",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The objective of this course is to prepare graduate students for research in chemistry. Topics will include general and universal aspects of research in science, such as the written and oral presentation of scientific findings and the ethical considerations involved in the publication of these findings, and a survey of the current research topics of the department including emphasis on the fundamental science that underlies these topics.",
"name" : "Perspectives in Chemistry"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4370",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "The focus of this course is on the flow of information from sensory input to retrieval from long-term memory. Within this framework, topics such as mnemonics, pattern recognition, attention, computer simulation, reasoning, and the relationship between culture and thought are discussed.",
"name" : "Cognitive Psychology"
},
{
"code" : "ENVE-4980",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Senior Project"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-4965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4430",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Mindfulness involves giving particular attention to our moment-to-moment experiences in a way that emphasizes observing, rather than judging or evaluating. There is empirical evidence of the many health benefits of mindfulness meditation, including the potential to produce fundamental changes in brain structure and epigenetic change. In this class, participants will discuss the historical and psychological foundations of mindfulness and empirical findings supporting its positive effects. Students will participate in structured exercises. This course is a very hands-on approach to mindfulness. Students will be required to practice mindfulness and meditation and develop their mindful skills.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Mindfulness involves giving particular attention to our moment-to-moment experiences in a way that emphasizes observing, rather than judging or evaluating. There is empirical evidence of the many health benefits of mindfulness meditation, including the potential to produce fundamental changes in brain structure and epigenetic change. In this class, participants will discuss the historical and psychological foundations of mindfulness and empirical findings supporting its positive effects. Students will participate in structured exercises. This course is a very hands-on approach to mindfulness. Students will be required to practice mindfulness and meditation and develop their mindful skills.",
"name" : "Psychology of Mindfulness"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6968",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4080",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Principles Of Research"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6750",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cell Extracellular Matrix Interactions"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4440",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "\"Sensibilities\"\u00e2\u0080\u0094a special ART_X@Rensselaer (Art Across the Curriculum) seminar\u00e2\u0080\u0094draws from the tremendous resource of EMPAC to inspire students to cultivate writing skills through the cross-disciplinary theme of the senses/perception. During the semester students will have opportunities to observe unique art/science presentations and performances in an intimate setting at EMPAC, providing rich experiences for discussions and writing. Classes include reading science and art texts, as well as writing workshops to develop authorial voice and experimentation. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "\"Sensibilities\"\u2014a special ART_X@Rensselaer (Art Across the Curriculum) seminar\u2014draws from the tremendous resource of EMPAC to inspire students to cultivate writing skills through the cross-disciplinary theme of the senses/perception. During the semester students will have opportunities to observe unique art/science presentations and performances in an intimate setting at EMPAC, providing rich experiences for discussions and writing. Classes include reading science and art texts, as well as writing workshops to develop authorial voice and experimentation.",
"name" : "Sensibilities"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4380",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course introduces the institutional structure of the financial markets for derivatives. It also covers hedging and basis risk, interest rate, and stock-index derivatives with financial management applications. Other topics covered include an introduction to options, rational option pricing restrictions, binomial option pricing model, and put and call option strategies.",
"name" : "Derivatives Markets"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4500",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is an exploration of the social and psychological effects of extensive use of pharmacological agents that are salient to daily behavior. There is an emphasis on the effects of addictive drugs such as alcohol, heroin, and cocaine.",
"name" : "Drugs, Society, and Behavior"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4610",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This seminar course is a detailed examination of the mind-brain relationship, through study of the stress response. Stress is simply defined as any challenge to an individual's homeostasis, or balance. This course will explore the neurobiological underpinnings of the stress response, with particular focus on how stressors can alter perception, affective and cognitive processing in the individual, which can in turn feedback to alter the general health of the individual (body and mind/brain).\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This seminar course is a detailed examination of the mind-brain relationship, through study of the stress response. Stress is simply defined as any challenge to an individual's homeostasis, or balance. This course will explore the neurobiological underpinnings of the stress response, with particular focus on how stressors can alter perception, affective and cognitive processing in the individual, which can in turn feedback to alter the general health of the individual (body and mind/brain).",
"name" : "Stress and the Brain"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2530",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Art History I:from Paleolithic To Renaissance"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4700",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course will examine hormone and brain/behavior relationships across the lifespan.\u00c2 Hormones are molecules that are secreted by glands (the majority of which are located outside the brain) and have distal effects on their targets, such as the brain, throughout development.\u00c2 A focus will be on hormones' effects, mechanisms, and brain regions of interest for behavior and cognitive processes, such as perception, learning/memory, social cognition, motivation, and emotion.",
+ "description" : "This course will examine hormone and brain/behavior relationships across the lifespan. Hormones are molecules that are secreted by glands (the majority of which are located outside the brain) and have distal effects on their targets, such as the brain, throughout development. A focus will be on hormones' effects, mechanisms, and brain regions of interest for behavior and cognitive processes, such as perception, learning/memory, social cognition, motivation, and emotion.",
"name" : "Hormones, Brain, and Behavior"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4800",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course expands on topics covered in Introduction to Sport Psychology. Students in the course will work in small groups to identify and read literature in a course-relevant area of their choice. In addition to weekly written progress reports, students will prepare a final report that must be presented orally in class.",
"name" : "Sport Psychology Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "An individually arranged independent study course under the supervision of a member of the Psychology Department. The topic is selected by consultation between student and faculty member.",
"name" : "Readings in Psychology"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-6620",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Exact and heuristic methods for solving discrete problems, including the traveling salesman problem, the knapsack problem, packing and covering problems. Algorithm complexity and NP-completeness, cutting plane methods and polyhedral theory, branch and bound, Lagrangian duality, liftings, metaheuristics.",
"name" : "Integer and Combinatorial Optimization"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4990",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "Students conduct original scholarly projects: original research, theoretical or analytical reviews of the literature, or computer simulations. Working either alone or in groups, students prepare written reports relating to this project, under the supervision of a faculty member.",
"name" : "Undergraduate Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4600",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Operations Research Method"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4340",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "While concepts such as quality of life, environment, nature, global ecology, and the like figure heavily in contemporary discussions, they are seldom integrated into an environmental philosophy. The course tries to achieve this integration by understanding some of the religious, mythic-poetic, and scientific dimensions of the human-nature matrix. Some specific environmental problems are examined to illustrate the system of values implied by various solutions.",
"name" : "Environmental Philosophy"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ISYE"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-1960",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2300",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Society and the natural environment are crucially linked in a number of ways. Environmental problems such as pollution and natural resource depletion are not only problems for society, affecting the way\u00c2 people live\u00c2 their lives; they are also problems of society\u00e2\u0080\u0094the result of patterns of social organization and social practices. In this course,\u00c2 students will explore these society/environment interactions at various levels, from the local to the global, using the concepts and insights of environmental sociology. Environmental sociologists aim to understand the social origins of environmental problems and propose workable solutions to them. By showing how social interaction, institutions, and beliefs shape human behavior, environmental sociology provides a useful complement to the natural sciences in the analysis of the environmental problems faced today.",
+ "description" : "Society and the natural environment are crucially linked in a number of ways. Environmental problems such as pollution and natural resource depletion are not only problems for society, affecting the way people live their lives; they are also problems of society\u2014the result of patterns of social organization and social practices. In this course, students will explore these society/environment interactions at various levels, from the local to the global, using the concepts and insights of environmental sociology. Environmental sociologists aim to understand the social origins of environmental problems and propose workable solutions to them. By showing how social interaction, institutions, and beliefs shape human behavior, environmental sociology provides a useful complement to the natural sciences in the analysis of the environmental problems faced today.",
"name" : "Environment and Society"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2500",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course surveys the history of the United States from the colonial era through the present. The course introduces major themes and tensions in United States politics, society, and culture with a focus on environmental factors. Topics will include encounters between American Indians and colonial peoples, independence, \u00c2 the formation of the American government, slavery, immigration, citizenship, rights, social movements, colonialism, war, and the changing identity of the United States in the world.",
+ "description" : "This course surveys the history of the United States from the colonial era through the present. The course introduces major themes and tensions in United States politics, society, and culture with a focus on environmental factors. Topics will include encounters between American Indians and colonial peoples, independence, the formation of the American government, slavery, immigration, citizenship, rights, social movements, colonialism, war, and the changing identity of the United States in the world.",
"name" : "American History"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-0050",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Drill/laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4250",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course involves a philosophical analysis of some of the basic moral issues raised by recent and anticipated developments in the areas of biology and medicine. The general question \"What are moral problems, and how does one resolve them?\" is examined in the context of concrete cases involving issues such as abortion, euthanasia, organ transplants, experimentation on human patients, cloning, genetic engineering, and behavior control and modification. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course involves a philosophical analysis of some of the basic moral issues raised by recent and anticipated developments in the areas of biology and medicine. The general question \"What are moral problems, and how does one resolve them?\" is examined in the context of concrete cases involving issues such as abortion, euthanasia, organ transplants, experimentation on human patients, cloning, genetic engineering, and behavior control and modification.",
"name" : "Bioethics"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-1210",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "Similar structure as the Beginners program.\u00c2 The Advanced program will continue to cultivate design foundations explored in the Beginners course.\u00c2 Dates: TBA. 9:00 am - 4:00 pm.",
+ "description" : "Similar structure as the Beginners program. The Advanced program will continue to cultivate design foundations explored in the Beginners course. Dates: TBA. 9:00 am - 4:00 pm.",
"name" : "Advanced Architecture Career Discovery Program"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4300",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is required for students majoring in STS or Sustainability Studies. Students should take it in their sophomore year to best prepare for Arch internships and leverage the expertise they are developing through their undergraduate studies. Students will investigate the evolving terrain of career pathways at the intersection of science, technology, sustainability, and social change, learn job search strategies, and network with career role models. Note: course is restricted to SUST and STS majors only. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course is required for students majoring in STS or Sustainability Studies. Students should take it in their sophomore year to best prepare for Arch internships and leverage the expertise they are developing through their undergraduate studies. Students will investigate the evolving terrain of career pathways at the intersection of science, technology, sustainability, and social change, learn job search strategies, and network with career role models. Note: course is restricted to SUST and STS majors only.",
"name" : "Sustainability and STS Careers"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4500",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course surveys the actors, processes, and proposed solutions to the problems of environment and development. The theory and practice of three main themes are explored: the background and context of environment in North and South; politics and economic development in the south; and the problems and prospects for sustainable societies in North and South.",
"name" : "Globalization and Development"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6420",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The thermodynamics and reactivity of surfaces. Classical thermodynamics of surfaces. Atomistic models of the crystal surfaces. Electron diffraction from surface layers. Surface diffusion. Physical and chemisorption of gases, chemical reactions at surfaces. Nucleation of surface and bulk phases.",
"name" : "Surface Phenomena"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4530",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "What is science, what is technology, and how have these two fields of inquiry evolved over time? This course examines these questions by studying the history of various scientific fields and technologies. In addition to tracing the historical evolution of the topics studied, the course will consider how social, political, economic and cultural factors helped to shape -- and were in turn shaped by -- advances in science and technology. The course will also reflect upon the relationship between science and technology on the one hand, and \"progress\" on the other.",
"name" : "History of Science and Technology"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4560",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "In this course, students will engage with a variety of perspectives in science and technology studies, feminist theory, queer and transgender theory, cultural studies, science fiction, and other fields that explore how science and technology reciprocally contribute to and are shaped by cultural norms around gender. Students reflect on their own experiences with gender expectations and formulate their own questions and develop a research project over the course of the semester. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "In this course, students will engage with a variety of perspectives in science and technology studies, feminist theory, queer and transgender theory, cultural studies, science fiction, and other fields that explore how science and technology reciprocally contribute to and are shaped by cultural norms around gender. Students reflect on their own experiences with gender expectations and formulate their own questions and develop a research project over the course of the semester.",
"name" : "Gender, Science, and Technology"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4580",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Self-organization has become increasingly important in science and engineering. Self-assembly of molecular structures are critical to nanotechnology; self-organizing swarms of insects are modeled in biology and robotics, and so on. But recursive loops in which things govern themselves are also foundational to society. Indigenous societies are renowned for their ecological self-stabilization. Wikipedia, Open Sources Software, and other means of \"crowdsourcing\" offer new visions for a more democratic civil society.",
"name" : "Self-Organization in Science and Society"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4130",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course explores a multitude of approaches to IT integration among the various departments of a corporation as well as between the corporation and entities in its external environment. It explores multiple integration methods at the data level, the process level, and the application level. Once the student acquires a strong understanding of these basic methods then the course continues with advanced methods of IT integration. Such methods include Service Oriented Architectures (SOA), Fast Business to Business methods, Middleware methods, Cloud Computing, Supply Chain, and Portal based integration. The course is case study taught using the latest case studies from various consulting companies as they have actually implemented solutions for their corporate customers. A student cannot receive credit for both the graduate and undergraduate versions of this course.",
"name" : "Enterprise IT Integration"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4605",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Design for the Future: This course introduces students to design for the future by connecting critical readings to applied practices. Students are expected to participate in both individual and group research, including hands-on explorations of design ideas and problem spaces for re-thinking objects of the future. The specific methodologies, concepts, and topics will vary according to the expertise and research specialization of the faculty member teaching the course and may include themes such as the future of cities, climate futures, and designing for peace.\u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Design for the Future: This course introduces students to design for the future by connecting critical readings to applied practices. Students are expected to participate in both individual and group research, including hands-on explorations of design ideas and problem spaces for re-thinking objects of the future. The specific methodologies, concepts, and topics will vary according to the expertise and research specialization of the faculty member teaching the course and may include themes such as the future of cities, climate futures, and designing for peace.",
"name" : "Design and Innovation Studio B"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4720",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "What is consumer culture? What are its roots, its consequences, and alternatives? Documentaries and the research of anthropologists, historians, and religious scholars examine consumer culture in the U.S. and UK including recognition of the global locations in which consumer goods are made. Topics include buying and selling, shopping, retail, manufacture, material culture, pricing, consumer goods, disposal, kinship, identity, exchange, and advertising, with attention paid to differences in race, class, and gender.",
"name" : "Consumer Culture"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4977",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4980",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This is the first part of a two-semester senior project sequence for majors in Sustainability Studies (SUST) and Science, Technology, and Society (STSO). The course focuses on qualitative research design and research proposal development. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This is the first part of a two-semester senior project sequence for majors in Sustainability Studies (SUST) and Science, Technology, and Society (STSO). The course focuses on qualitative research design and research proposal development.",
"name" : "Research Design"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6969",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4966",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4990",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Senior Project serves as a capstone course for all STS and Sustainability Studies majors. Students work individually, supervised by a faculty member, to produce a written thesis. Class time largely operates as structured research and writing assistance, where students support one another with peer-review as well as receive one-on-one guidance from the instructor.",
"name" : "STS and Sustainability Senior Project"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-6900",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Astrophysics Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6010",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is required for the M.S. in STS. Students are introduced to the literature and current issues in the interdisciplinary field of Science and Technology Studies.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course is required for the M.S. in STS. Students are introduced to the literature and current issues in the interdisciplinary field of Science and Technology Studies.",
"name" : "Concepts in Science and Technology Studies"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6200",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A broad survey of the field of science studies from the vantage point of various disciplinary and interdisciplinary perspectives that have contributed to the development of science studies. The texts, theories, and arguments that were important for the historical development of the field are covered, as well as contemporary issues. The seminar provides the resources and develops the skills needed for understanding, criticizing, constructing, and developing research in the field.",
"name" : "Science Studies"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-1960",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MTLE"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6300",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course focuses on contemporary social theory to understand the historical origins, institutional structures, and dominant trajectories of environmental-social change. Three main questions structure inquiry into the links among science, technology, environment, and social theory: 1) why do modern societies degrade their environments? 2) why do environmental movements arise, or what are the social structural, cultural, and political origins of environmentalism? and 3) can some particular politics curtail environmental degradation?",
"name" : "Environment and Social Theory"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4120",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A laboratory course emphasizing the hands-on use of modern instrumental methods in analytical and physical chemistry applications, and the interpretation and discussion of the results obtained from them. This is a communication-intensive course.",
"name" : "Experimental Chemistry IV: Physical and Instrumental Methods"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "With an individual faculty member on an agreed-upon topic.",
"name" : "Readings in Science and Technology Studies"
},
{
"code" : "ISCI-6970",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ISCI"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4290",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Students will learn about markets related to healthcare, insurance, biopharmaceuticals, and medical devices. Examine economic issues, models and quantitative analysis related to firms' activities in areas such as innovation, R&D expenditures, patenting, pricing, mergers and acquisitions, and competition in markets. Examine the role played by health insurance systems. Study the economic implications of regulations, such as those by the U.S. FDA. Economic and policy aspects will be examined within the context of the U.S. healthcare sector, along with selected comparisons to European national healthcare systems.",
"name" : "Economics of Biotech and Medical Innovations"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-2120",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to astronomy from an observational perspective. Students will learn the basics of observing the night-time sky, both with the unaided eye and through telescopic observation. Observations of Earth from orbiting satellites will also be discussed. The course is suitable for nonphysics and nonscience majors as well as those committed to specialization in astronomy. Includes evening laboratory sessions.",
"name" : "Earth and Sky"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4060",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Surface As Structures As Form"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2030",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Net Art"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6970",
- "credits" : "3-6",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in STSO"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-6910",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This course focuses on applied data analytics research on real-world open problems. Students will conduct a semester long, team based, hands-on data analytics project. A data set will be selected at the start of the semester. Students will also be instructed in the process of project objective setting, planning, execution, and management. Students will be guided via classroom demonstrations and individualized team coaching by the instructors in the employment of visualization, analytics, and modeling methods.",
"name" : "Data Analytics Research"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6980",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Active participation in a semester-long project, under the supervision of a faculty adviser. A Professional Project often serves as a culminating experience for a Professional Master's program but, with departmental or school approval, can be used to fulfill other program requirements. With approval, students may register for more than one Professional Project. Professional Projects must result in documentation established by each department or school, but are not submitted to the Office of Graduate Education and are not archived in the library. Grades of A, B, C, or F are assigned by the faculty adviser at the end of the semester. If not completed on time, a formal Incomplete grade may be assigned by the faculty adviser, listing the work remaining to be completed and the time limit for completing this work.",
"name" : "Professional Project"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-6990",
- "credits" : "1-9",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-2963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6968",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-0010",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "The leadership laboratory courses (LLABs) include a study of Air Force customs and courtesies, drill and ceremonies, and military commands. LLAB also includes studying the environment of an Air Force officer and learning about opportunities available to commissioned officers. The AS 300 and AS 400 LLABs consist of activities classified as leadership and management experiences. They involve the planning and controlling of military activities of the cadet wing, and the preparation and presentation of briefings and other oral and written communications. LLABs also include interviews, guidance, and information which will increase the understanding, motivation, and performance of other cadets.",
"name" : "Air Force Leadership Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4660",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "In-depth hands-on study of the technologies and protocols involved in building the Internet-of-Things (IoT), with specific focus on networking at the edge of the Internet. Topics include wireless communication and link layer technologies, multi-access and scheduling mechanisms, mobility models, routing in disconnected networks, energy-efficient edge networking, loss tolerant transport protocols, IoT security, data aggregation, and their applications to emerging areas such as vehicular networks, RFID systems and smart buildings.",
"name" : "Internetworking of Things"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-2030",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "The AS 200, Team and Leadership Fundamentals, focuses on laying the foundation for teams and leadership. The topics include skills that will allow cadets to improve their leadership on a personal level and within a team. The courses will prepare cadets for their field training experience where they will be able to put the concepts learned into practice. The purpose is to instill a leadership mindset and to motivate sophomore students to transition from AFROTC cadet to AFROTC officer candidate. Leadership Laboratory\u00c2 ( USAF 0010 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
+ "description" : "The AS 200, Team and Leadership Fundamentals, focuses on laying the foundation for teams and leadership. The topics include skills that will allow cadets to improve their leadership on a personal level and within a team. The courses will prepare cadets for their field training experience where they will be able to put the concepts learned into practice. The purpose is to instill a leadership mindset and to motivate sophomore students to transition from AFROTC cadet to AFROTC officer candidate. Leadership Laboratory ( USAF 0010 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
"name" : "Air and Space Studies 200A (Team and Leadership Fundamentals)"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-4160",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A two-term laboratory course on experimental analysis of the operations and processes of chemical engineering. Emphasis is placed on planning of experiments, data evaluation, and report writing.",
"name" : "Chemical Engineering Laboratory II"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-4961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4950",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Class2go Technology"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-2060",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "AS 300, Leading People and Effective Communication, teaches cadets advanced skills and knowledge in management and leadership. Special emphasis is placed on enhancing leadership skills and communication. Cadets have an opportunity to try out these leadership and management techniques in a supervised environment as juniors and seniors. Laboratory ( USAF 0080 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "AS 300, Leading People and Effective Communication, teaches cadets advanced skills and knowledge in management and leadership. Special emphasis is placed on enhancing leadership skills and communication. Cadets have an opportunity to try out these leadership and management techniques in a supervised environment as juniors and seniors. Laboratory ( USAF 0080 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
"name" : "Air and Space Studies 300B (Leading People and Effective Communication)"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-2070",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "AS 400, National Security Affairs/Preparation for Active Duty, is designed for college seniors and gives them the foundation to understand their role as military officers in American society. It is an overview of the complex social and political issues facing the military profession and requires a measure of sophistication commensurate with the senior college level. The final semester provides information that will prepare the cadets for Active Duty. Leadership Laboratory ( USAF 0080 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.",
"name" : "Air and Space Studies 400A (National Security Affairs/Preparation for Active Duty)"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6750",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course provides an introduction to the field of biocatalysis that includes both free enzyme and whole cell processes.\u00c2 Lectures on free enzymes will discuss their catalytic mechanism(s), immobilization and use in aqueous and organic media.\u00c2 Lectures on biocatalytic transformations by whole cells will discuss metabolic pathways to products, fermentation processes, and whole cell immobilization.\u00c2 Integrated within the course will be discussions of the relative merits of biocatalysis vs. chemical catalysis for chemical conversions as well as examples of current uses of biocatalytic processes by industry.\u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course provides an introduction to the field of biocatalysis that includes both free enzyme and whole cell processes. Lectures on free enzymes will discuss their catalytic mechanism(s), immobilization and use in aqueous and organic media. Lectures on biocatalytic transformations by whole cells will discuss metabolic pathways to products, fermentation processes, and whole cell immobilization. Integrated within the course will be discussions of the relative merits of biocatalysis vs. chemical catalysis for chemical conversions as well as examples of current uses of biocatalytic processes by industry.",
"name" : "Biocatalysis: Fundamentals and Applications"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2004",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Marine Biol (at Empire State)"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4250",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course explores the relationships between the economy and the material world. It identifies the most critical challenges to sustainable economic development on local to global scales and ways of addressing them. The course examines options surrounding material and energy flows, technological alternatives, livelihoods, consumption behavior, public policy, civil society institutions, and social movements as avenues for meeting the major challenges to sustainability.",
"name" : "Economy, Technology, and Sustainability"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-0060",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "The purpose of this course is to continue development of the basic leadership skills. The course has three objectives: to teach cadets those aspects of the art of leadership and the science of warfare they will use as junior officers in the U.S. Army; to prepare cadets for the Leadership Development and Assessment Course (LDAC); to instill in cadets the values and ethos required to become leaders of character. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 2070 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
"name" : "Applied Military Leadership Lab II"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6002",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Intro Research Prob I(atsunya)"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6290",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Students will learn about markets related to healthcare, insurance, biopharmaceuticals, and medical devices. Examine economic issues, models and quantitative analysis related to firms' activities in areas such as innovation, R&D expenditures, patenting, pricing, mergers and acquisitions, and competition in markets. Examine the role played by health insurance systems. Study the economic implications of regulations, such as those by the U.S. FDA. Economic and policy aspects will be examined within the context of the U.S. healthcare sector, along with selected comparisons to European national healthcare systems.",
"name" : "Economics of Biotech and Medical Innovations"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-0070",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course explores the dynamics of leading in the complex situations of current military operations in the Contemporary Operating Environment (COE). Students will examine differences in customs and courtesies, military law, principles of war, and rules of engagement in the face of international terrorism. Also explored are aspects of interacting with non-government organizations, civilians on the battlefield, and host nation support. The course places significant emphasis on preparing students for Basic Officer Leadership Course II and III, and for the first unit of assignment. It uses case studies, scenarios, and \"What now, Lieutenant?\" exercises to prepare students to face the complex ethical and practical demands of leading as a commissioned officer in the United States Army. Cadets are responsible for planning, rehearsing, and executing all ROTC events by performing duties similar to that of officers assigned to a battalion staff. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 4010 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
"name" : "Advanced Military Management and Leadership Lab I"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-0080",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course concentrates on leadership, management, and ethics. The course begins with a series of lessons designed to enable cadets/students to make informed decisions as they prepare for accessions into the Army. The remainder of the course concentrates on Army Operations, training management, communications, and leadership skills. Cadets are responsible for planning, rehearsing, and executing all ROTC events by performing duties similar to that of officers assigned to a battalion staff. Contents of the course are linked to USAR 4020 . Labs are mandatory for contracted and enrolled Cadets.",
"name" : "Advanced Military Management and Leadership Lab II"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-2830",
- "credits" : "5",
"description" : "This design studio builds on prior studios emphasizing projects of greater scale and complexity. Typically, the studio designs large-scale housing developments but other projects of similar complexity may be used. The studio requires the analysis and critique of precedent and the writing of an architectural program. This course is offered in the spring semester and is required of all second-year architecture undergraduates in the B.Arch. program.",
"name" : "Architectural Design Studio 4"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-2010",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "The course contains the principal leadership instruction of the Basic Course. The instruction delves into several aspects of communication and leadership theory. The use of practical exercise is emphasized, as students are increasingly required to apply communications and leadership concepts.\u00c2 The focus continues to build on developing knowledge of the leadership attributes and core leader competencies through the understanding of Army rank, structure, and duties as well as broadening knowledge of land navigation and infantry squad tactics. Case studies will provide a tangible context for learning and understanding the Soldier's Creed and Warrior Ethos. Upon completion of this semester, students should be well grounded in the fundamental principals of leadership and be prepared to intensify the practical application of their studies during the Advanced Course. Schedule will be posted in syllabus.",
+ "description" : "The course contains the principal leadership instruction of the Basic Course. The instruction delves into several aspects of communication and leadership theory. The use of practical exercise is emphasized, as students are increasingly required to apply communications and leadership concepts. The focus continues to build on developing knowledge of the leadership attributes and core leader competencies through the understanding of Army rank, structure, and duties as well as broadening knowledge of land navigation and infantry squad tactics. Case studies will provide a tangible context for learning and understanding the Soldier's Creed and Warrior Ethos. Upon completion of this semester, students should be well grounded in the fundamental principals of leadership and be prepared to intensify the practical application of their studies during the Advanced Course. Schedule will be posted in syllabus.",
"name" : "Applied Leadership I"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Social Demo: Society By Number"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1970",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-6963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COGS"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-2060",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "In this course students will study, practice, and apply the fundamentals of Army leadership, Officership, Army values and ethics, personal development, and small unit tactics at the team and squad level. At the conclusion of this course, students will be capable of planning, coordinating, navigating, motivating, and leading a team or squad in the execution of a tactical mission during a classroom PE, a Leadership Lab, or during a Situational Training Exercise (STX) in a field environment. Successful completion of this course will help prepare students for success at the ROTC Leader Development and Assessment Course (LDAC) during the summer following the junior year. This course includes reading assignments, homework assignments, small group assignments, briefings, case studies, and practical exercises, a mid-term exam, and a final exam. Students will receive systematic and specific feedback on leader attributes values and core leader competencies from instructor and other ROTC cadre and MSL IV Cadets who will evaluate students using the ROTC Leader Development Program (LDP) model. The course closes with instruction in small unit battle drills to facilitate practical application and further leader development during labs and Situational Training Exercises.",
"name" : "Applied Military Leadership I"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6969",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-2070",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "The course continues to focus on doctrinal leadership and tactical operations at the small unit level. It includes opportunities to plan and conduct individual and collective skill training for military operations to gain leadership and tactical experience. The course synthesizes the various components of training, leadership, and team building. Students are required to incorporate previous military science instruction for their practical application in a performance-oriented environment. Upon completion of the course, students will possess the fundamental confidence and competence of leadership in a small unit setting and are prepared to attend the Leadership Development and Assessment Course.",
"name" : "Applied Military Leadership II"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-4010",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "The course concentrates on leadership, management, and ethics. The course focuses students, early in the year, on attaining knowledge and proficiency in several critical areas they will need to operate effectively as Army officers. These areas include: Coordinate Activities with Staffs, Counseling Theory and Practice within the \"Army Context,\" Training Management, and Ethics. While proficiency attained in each of these areas will initially be at the apprentice level, students will continue to sharpen these skills as they perform their roles as cadet officers within the ROTC program and after commissioning. At the end of the course, students should possess the fundamental skills, attributes, and abilities to operate as competent leaders.",
"name" : "Advanced Military Management and Leadership I"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-4020",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "The course focuses on completing the transition from cadet to lieutenant. As a follow-up to the ethics instruction in USAR 4010 , the course starts with a foundation in the legal aspects of decision making and leadership. The curriculum reinforces previous instruction on the organization of the Army and introduces how the Army organizes for operations from the tactical to the strategic level. This is followed by instruction on administrative and logistical management that will focus on the fundamentals of soldier and unit level support. At the core of the semester is the Advanced Course Capstone Exercise. This 12-lesson exercise incorporates learning objectives from the entire military science curriculum. The capstone exercise will require students, both individually and collectively, to apply their knowledge to solve problems and confront situations commonly faced by junior officers. Upon completion of the course, students will be prepared for the responsibility of being a commissioned officer in the United States Army.",
"name" : "Advanced Military Management and Leadership II"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4160",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Fields And Waves II"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-0010",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Consists of one period each week lasting approximately two hours. The periods are spent conducting various activities, including military drill, athletics, lectures, and discussions on various topics of naval interest. Operating within a battalion organizational structure, students are given additional opportunities for leadership training and hands-on experience.",
"name" : "Drill/Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6880",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "Concepts and tools that enable engineers and business leaders to jointly make sound business/technology decisions in moving from ideas and designs to real products will be taught using lectures, cases, and a major project that will enhance the change of success of a new venture business. Topics: disciplined toll-gate processes, customer contract, technical risk management, design decisions, quality management, sourcing, product launch.",
"name" : "Product Realization"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-0080",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Consists of one period each week lasting approximately two hours. The periods are spent conducting various activities, including military drill, athletics, lectures, and discussions on various topics of naval interest. Operating within a battalion organizational structure, students are given additional opportunities for leadership training and hands-on experience.",
"name" : "Drill/Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-2020",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "\u00c2 A study in the development of the United States Navy and Marine Corps throughout the history of the United States. This course treats the broad principles, concepts, and elements of sea power with historical and modern applications to the United States and other world powers.",
+ "description" : "A study in the development of the United States Navy and Marine Corps throughout the history of the United States. This course treats the broad principles, concepts, and elements of sea power with historical and modern applications to the United States and other world powers.",
"name" : "Sea Power and Maritime Affairs"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6690",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This course focuses on generalized weighted residual methods and multifield variational principles for constructing approximate solutions to sets of governing differential equations and associated boundary conditions. Topics include hybrid and mixed methods, boundary element formulations, p-version finite elements, global/local procedures, and penalty methods. Problem areas include solid mechanics (nearly incompressible solids, plates, and shells), fluid mechanics including compressible flows, and heat transfer.",
"name" : "Advanced Finite Element Formulations"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-2070",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The study of weapons systems and the theoretical concepts underlying the design and operation of those systems. Includes sensor and detection subsystems, tracking systems, propulsion and guidance systems, launching systems, fire control problem solutions, and systems integration. In-depth analysis of representative, state-of the- art weapons systems in use today.",
"name" : "Naval Ships Systems II"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-2150",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A study of the forms of warfare practiced throughout history with the emphasis on those of the Middle East and Western Europe. Selected battles, strategy, formations, and commanders are studied from the times of the pharaohs to the present. The moral, ethical, and cultural attitudes of the times are brought into the course so that the student may understand how they influenced warfare and in turn were influenced by warfare.",
"name" : "Evolution of Warfare"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-4190",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The capstone course of the NROTC academic syllabus, providing a study of personal and professional military ethics and Navy/Marine Corps junior officer leadership and administration. Presents leadership and ethical dilemmas in case study and small group discussion format. The course also exposes the student to a study of counseling methods, military justice administration, human resources management, directives and correspondence, personnel management, and career development.",
"name" : "Naval Leadership and Ethics"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4550",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course covers topics that are essential to developing an effective professional architectural practice. The course will address professional obligations and ethics, contracts, registration, office organization, and management. The course will emphasize effective communication, negotiating, public speaking, and team development.",
"name" : "Professional Practice 2"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4460",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This course covers all aspects of the role materials play in energy.\u00c2 The course takes a fundamental perspective and these materials can range from neutrons to photons to energetic biomolecules.\u00c2 The five forms of energy (thermal, electromagnetic, mechanical, chemical, and nuclear) are stressed in every lecture as are the appropriate thermodynamic laws and governing cycles.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course covers all aspects of the role materials play in energy. The course takes a fundamental perspective and these materials can range from neutrons to photons to energetic biomolecules. The five forms of energy (thermal, electromagnetic, mechanical, chemical, and nuclear) are stressed in every lecture as are the appropriate thermodynamic laws and governing cycles.",
"name" : "Materials for Energy Applications"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-1110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "\u00c2 This course will help you experience the power of language and learn how to develop that power as you become more aware of your communicative choices. You will write for several genres, both formal and informal, creating each piece for a specific audience and purpose. You will learn to communicate effectively\u00e2\u0080\u0094orally, visually, and in writing\u00e2\u0080\u0094in a wide range of situations that will be crucial to success in your academic and professional careers.\u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course will help you experience the power of language and learn how to develop that power as you become more aware of your communicative choices. You will write for several genres, both formal and informal, creating each piece for a specific audience and purpose. You will learn to communicate effectively\u2014orally, visually, and in writing\u2014in a wide range of situations that will be crucial to success in your academic and professional careers.",
"name" : "Writing in Context"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-1960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-4940",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Studies in Writing"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-4960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-6410",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "In this class, students will write on topics from their major discipline and investigate the kinds of texts that professionals in the field produce. They will identify and explore research questions, use discipline-specific library databases, and write research reports. In addition, students will develop effective note-taking and research skills and learn strategies for effective prose style.",
"name" : "Research Writing"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-1010",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Eff Comm For Class Pedagogy"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-1960",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ADMN"
},
{
"code" : "EPOW-4850",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Electric Power Design"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6990",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-1962",
- "credits" : "0-4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ADMN"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-4050",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Professional Leadership Prog."
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-6020",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Registration In Absentia"
},
{
"code" : "ADMN-6960",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ADMN"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6260",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Life Drawing and Anatomy for Artists is an advanced drawing class that will focus on drawing the human figure. Students will work from live models to refine their drawing skills; clay models from anatomical texts will be made to develop a working knowledge of anatomy for artists. Gesture, proportion, and expression of the human figure will be emphasized; general concepts of design and composition will also be presented.",
"name" : "Life Drawing and Anatomy for Artists"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-1960",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-1961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-1974",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-2120",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Bldg & Thinking Arch 2"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-2210",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Architectural Design 1"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-2620",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Grad Arch Design 2"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4040",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cities/lands"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4130",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Modernity In Culture, Civilization And Architecture 2"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4240",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Architecture Design 4"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4250",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Architecture Design 5"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-2610",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Grad. Arch Design 1"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4430",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Elect Media: Phys Des Proc"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4260",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Architecture Design 6"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4300",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : " Design Development"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4340",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Structural Morphology"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4630",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Building Conservation 2"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4990",
- "credits" : "6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "B Arch Final Project 2"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4670",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Industrial Archaeology"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4930",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Structural Morphology"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4932",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Env History & Theory"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6650",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Synthesis High Polymers II"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4934",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Mod Thinking: Ceramics & Arch"
},
{
"code" : "LANG-4410",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Business French II"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4935",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Boom And Bloom 2.0"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4941",
- "credits" : "1-2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Undergraduate Research Project"
},
{
"code" : "USAR-1020",
- "credits" : "1",
- "description" : "The course builds upon the fundamentals introduced in USAR 1010 \u00c2 by focusing on leadership theory and decision making. \"Life skills\" lessons in the semester include: problem solving, critical thinking, leadership theory, followership, group interaction, goal setting, and feedback mechanisms. Upon completion, students should be prepared to advance to more complex leadership instruction concerning the dynamics of organization.",
+ "description" : "The course builds upon the fundamentals introduced in USAR 1010 by focusing on leadership theory and decision making. \"Life skills\" lessons in the semester include: problem solving, critical thinking, leadership theory, followership, group interaction, goal setting, and feedback mechanisms. Upon completion, students should be prepared to advance to more complex leadership instruction concerning the dynamics of organization.",
"name" : "Fundamentals of Military Science II"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4956",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Research Design Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4240",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Introduction to the physics of gravitation and spacetime. Special relativity, tensor calculus, and relativistic electrodynamics. General relativity with selected\u00c2 applications of Einstein's field equations (gravitational time dilation; gravitational lensing; frame dragging; gravitational radiation). The physics of nonrotating and rotating black holes. Relativistic models for the large-scale structure of the\u00c2 Universe. Observational constraints on the\u00c2 cosmological parameters.\u00c2 Big Bang nucleosynthesis, the Cosmic Background Radiation. A culminating experience project is required. (Meets with ASTR 4240 ).",
+ "description" : "Introduction to the physics of gravitation and spacetime. Special relativity, tensor calculus, and relativistic electrodynamics. General relativity with selected applications of Einstein's field equations (gravitational time dilation; gravitational lensing; frame dragging; gravitational radiation). The physics of nonrotating and rotating black holes. Relativistic models for the large-scale structure of the Universe. Observational constraints on the cosmological parameters. Big Bang nucleosynthesis, the Cosmic Background Radiation. A culminating experience project is required. (Meets with ASTR 4240 ).",
"name" : "General Relativity"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4958",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Research Investigations"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4962",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4964",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "GSAS-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in GSAS"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4010",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "A course dealing with more advanced topics of inorganic chemistry, including molecular symmetry, application of symmetry concepts to molecular orbital descriptions of polyatomic molecules, solid state and non-stoichiometric compounds, coordination chemistry, spectral and magnetic properties, organometallic chemistry, and bioinorganic chemistry.",
"name" : "Inorganic Chemistry II"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-4620",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Survey of the elementary particles and their interactions. Historical introduction and discussion of experimental apparatus and particle accelerators. Relativistic kinematics and incorporation into quantum field theory, including Feynman diagrams. Bound states and the quark model. Symmetries and their manifestation. Neutrino oscillations and gauge theories. Quantum electrodynamics, the electroweak interaction, quantum chromodynamics, and prospects for grand unification. A culminating experience project is required.",
"name" : "Elementary Particle Physics"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6961",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in DSES"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4968",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4974",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4975",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-1961",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MATH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4981",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Methods Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-2360",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An exploration of the fundamental principles of human physiology, thermal and luminous comfort, and indoor quality. Emphasis is on bioclimatic and psychrometric climate analysis and its relationship to architectural design, understanding the energy exchange between body in space, the natural meaning of enclosures, and nonstructural materials and systems. The focus is on passive heating, cooling, and daylighting systems and their design. Exercises include vital sign analysis of existing spaces (thermal, air, luminous), forming hypotheses of building performance, using scientific instrumentation, tenant survey techniques, and physical modeling and simulation techniques related to daylighting and shading techniques.",
"name" : "Environmental and Ecological Systems"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-2720",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "The fundamentals of fluid statics and dynamics. Hydrostatics, fluid flow fields, control-volume analysis, and the Navier-Stokes equations. Inviscid, viscous, and turbulent flows. Similitude, boundary layers, internal and external flows.",
"name" : "Fluid Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6780",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "State of the art in computational modeling of failure processes in materials. Topics include numerical modeling of discrete defects, distributed damage and multiscale computational techniques including multiple scale perturbation techniques, boundary layer techniques, and various global-local approaches.",
"name" : "Numerical Modeling of Failure Processes in Materials"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6110",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Design Explorations 1"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-6570",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Digital Signal Compression"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6120",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Design Explorations 2"
},
{
"code" : "USAF-2080",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "AS 400,\u00c2 National Security Affairs/Preparation for Active Duty, is designed for college seniors and gives them the foundation to understand their role as military officers in American society. It is an overview of the complex social and political issues facing the military profession and requires a measure of sophistication commensurate with the senior college level. The final semester provides information that will prepare the cadets for Active Duty. Leadership Laboratory ( USAF 0080 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences.\u00c2 USAF 2040 \u00c2 USAF 2070 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "AS 400, National Security Affairs/Preparation for Active Duty, is designed for college seniors and gives them the foundation to understand their role as military officers in American society. It is an overview of the complex social and political issues facing the military profession and requires a measure of sophistication commensurate with the senior college level. The final semester provides information that will prepare the cadets for Active Duty. Leadership Laboratory ( USAF 0080 ) is mandatory for AFROTC cadets and complements this course by providing cadets with leadership/followership experiences. USAF 2040 USAF 2070",
"name" : "Air and Space Studies 400B (National Security Affairs/Preparation for Active Duty)"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6370",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Environmental Parametrics Workshop"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4972",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6460",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Stagecraft And Theatre Design"
},
{
"code" : "STSO-4100",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course focuses on increasing students' knowledge concerning the impact of non-technical issues on the viability of technical (engineering) designs and solutions. The non-technical issues to be considered include the cognitive and physical strengths and limitations of people in the chain spanning from product/equipment designers/manufacturers to end users, as well as economic, environmental, cultural, political, ethical, health and safety, and societal influences. During the course, students will read and discuss articles and case studies in which the technical solution pursued did not have the desired effect, or led to disaster. Possible explanations include a failure to take into account the environmental, economic, socio-cultural, and/or political issues associated with the technology's ultimate usage.",
- "name" : "Professional Development 2 \u00e2\u0080\u0093Technical Issues and Solutions"
+ "name" : "Professional Development 2 \u2013Technical Issues and Solutions"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6650",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Arch Materials Testing"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6710",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Preservation Dsgn Studio"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6941",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Doctoral Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6963",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6967",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6968",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6971",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-1008",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Elements Of Baking (at Sccc)"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6400",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. Xinformatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines, e.g. X=astro, geo. Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing, and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "Informatics covers a broad range of disciplines addressing challenges in the explosion of data and information resources. Xinformatics provides commonality for implementations in specific disciplines, e.g. X=astro, geo. Informatics' theoretical bases are information and computer science, cognitive science, social science, library science, aggregating these studies and adding the practice of information processing, and the engineering of information systems. This course grounds the material that students will learn in discipline areas by coursework and project assignments.",
"name" : "X-informatics"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's thesis. Grades of S or U are assigned by the adviser each term to reflect the student's research progress for the given semester. Once the thesis has been presented, approved by the adviser, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education, it will be archived in a standard format in the library.",
"name" : "Master's Thesis"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-1010",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : " Intro To Music And Sound"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6100",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Study of time series data for both description and prediction. Main emphasis on the classical Box-Jenkins approach to model identification, estimation, and diagnosis. Includes an introduction to spectral analysis. Applications to real data series, including forecasting problems and empirical comparison of alternative approaches. Use of computer packages for time series analysis.",
"name" : "Time Series Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-1440",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Music And Sound I"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-1961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4340",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Advanced topics in financial theory and corporate policy as they are applied to the modern corporation. Emphasis in blending theory with application. Case studies are used to illustrate relevance of theoretical concepts. Topics include corporate financial decision making under uncertainty, financial forecasting, application of option pricing principles to capital budgeting decision making, mergers and acquisitions, leveraged buyouts and takeovers, leasing, financial engineering.",
"name" : "Advanced Corporate Finance"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2009",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Applied Instrumental @ Sage"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4050",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Modeling And Contrl Of Dyn Sys"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2320",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Percussion Ensemble"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2330",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Jazz Ensemble"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2400",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Music And Sound I"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6520",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This is a seminar course restricted to students in their second year of doctoral study. It provides a critical forum for the discussion of issues from methods to sources confronting the students on the dissertation. This course will form the core of the interdisciplinary experience of the Doctor of Philosophy in Architectural Sciences. It supports the position that advanced work in architecture frequently builds on knowledge from several disciplines, and as such provides a model for encouraging cross disciplinary work in the Institute. It will involve a combination of senior faculty and visitors and regular presentation of dissertation work in progress.",
"name" : "Interdisciplinary Ph.D. Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2963",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-2967",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4080",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Art, Community And Technology"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Electronic Arts Theory"
},
{
"code" : "BUSN-6102",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "In this three-credit, 15-week online graduate course, refine your management, approach, set performance criteria, and make recommendations for change to improve your area of responsibility. \u00c2 Over the course of four projects, you will refine your management capabilities, set performance criteria, \u00c2 and make recommendations for change that will advance your unit's impact within the organization.",
+ "description" : "In this three-credit, 15-week online graduate course, refine your management, approach, set performance criteria, and make recommendations for change to improve your area of responsibility. Over the course of four projects, you will refine your management capabilities, set performance criteria, and make recommendations for change that will advance your unit's impact within the organization.",
"name" : "Managing Dynamic Organizations"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4540",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Game Development II"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4110",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course introduces the student to the operations function in services and manufacturing-oriented firms. Students develop an appreciation of the concepts, principles, and techniques used for decision making in the operations function. The course takes a managerial perspective.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course introduces the student to the operations function in services and manufacturing-oriented firms. Students develop an appreciation of the concepts, principles, and techniques used for decision making in the operations function. The course takes a managerial perspective.",
"name" : "Operations Management"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4160",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Research Investigations"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4968",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4973",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4974",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6050",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Rethinking Documentary: Video Production"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-4964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in IHSS"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-1940",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Mentor Csci 1100"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6971",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ENGR-4941",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Stability Of In-space Cyrognc"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4760",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Part I of a two-semester sequence focusing on the chemistry, structure, and function of biological molecules, macromolecules, and systems. Topics covered include protein and nucleic acid structure, enzymology, mechanisms of catalysis, regulation, lipids and membranes, carbohydrates, bioenergetics, and carbohydrate metabolism. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either BIOL 4760 \u00c2 or BCBP 4760 .)",
+ "description" : "Part I of a two-semester sequence focusing on the chemistry, structure, and function of biological molecules, macromolecules, and systems. Topics covered include protein and nucleic acid structure, enzymology, mechanisms of catalysis, regulation, lipids and membranes, carbohydrates, bioenergetics, and carbohydrate metabolism. (Students cannot obtain credit for both this course and either BIOL 4760 or BCBP 4760 .)",
"name" : "Molecular Biochemistry I"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4320",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Game Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2320",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Creative Writing: Non-fiction"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6974",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARTS"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-1510",
- "credits" : "1-2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Quasars & Cosmology"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-4963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MTLE"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ASTR"
},
{
"code" : "WRIT-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in WRIT"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-2170",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Broad aspects of warfare and their interactions with maneuver warfare doctrine. Focus on the United States Marine Corps as the premier maneuver warfare fighting institution. Historical influences on current tactical, operational, and strategic implications of maneuver warfare practices. Case studies. Enrollment preference to NROTC students.",
"name" : "Fundamentals of Maneuver Warfare"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-2961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ASTR"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4640",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Proteomics"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4800",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Bound Lay & Heat Trans"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4710",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Nano- And Bio- Actuatable Materials"
},
{
"code" : "PSYC-4961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PSYC"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4962",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-4980",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biochemistry Research"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ECON"
},
{
"code" : "DSES-4770",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Math Models Of Operations"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6963",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-6640",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Proteomics"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-6961",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-6240",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This is an in-depth study of current papers within the broad field of Circadian Biology. Students will read and critique recent primary literature, present current research articles, and lead discussions on new findings in the field.",
"name" : "Topics in Circadian Biology"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-6962",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-4964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "BCBP-6968",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BCBP"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Game Development I"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-2960",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in PHYS"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-1008",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Pharm Of Psyc Drugs (at Sccc)"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Creative Writing: Poetry"
},
+ {
+ "code" : "BIOL-1016",
+ "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
+ "name" : "Intro Biol Computatinal Lab"
+ },
{
"code" : "ITWS-1100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course introduces students to the field of information technology and Web science, the types of problems encountered in the field, and the solution approaches used to solve them. Through a series of activities and projects, students are introduced to topics such as Web systems design, emerging Web standards, database systems, security, and computer networking. Guest speakers highlight information technology practices in industry. Students work in groups on a team project and presentation at the end of the course.",
"name" : "Introduction to Information Technology and Web Science"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-1940",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Synthetic Meat"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-1960",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2002",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Research (at Sunya Nanotech)"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-7900",
- "credits" : "?",
"description" : "This course focuses on empirical financial accounting research related to capital market issues. The course involves the discussion of research papers that will help Ph.D. students to understand the evolution, theoretical foundations, and research methods of the capital markets literature.",
"name" : "Seminar in Capital Markets"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2003",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biological Chemistry @ Ua"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2005",
- "credits" : "1-3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Anat & Phys II (at Maria)"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2007",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Anatomy & Phys II @ Sage"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2008",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Bio II, Bio Lab II @ Sccc"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-6880",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "This is a course introducing upper-year undergraduates and graduate students to advanced research topics of the Rensselaer music faculty.\u00c2 Each semester a member of the music faculty will focus the seminar on a research topic or paradigm related to their own body of artistic and technological research. Sample topics might include Spatial music and sound, New Instrument Design, Network Music, Music Information Retrieval, Ethnomusicology, Sonification Art and Science, Music and Logic, Spectralism and Beyond, Music Herstory (feminist music composition), Experimental music, and sound history. Through hands-on creative research, students will explore questions of both musical and technological significance while engaging that same topic through their own hands-on creative practice. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This is a course introducing upper-year undergraduates and graduate students to advanced research topics of the Rensselaer music faculty. Each semester a member of the music faculty will focus the seminar on a research topic or paradigm related to their own body of artistic and technological research. Sample topics might include Spatial music and sound, New Instrument Design, Network Music, Music Information Retrieval, Ethnomusicology, Sonification Art and Science, Music and Logic, Spectralism and Beyond, Music Herstory (feminist music composition), Experimental music, and sound history. Through hands-on creative research, students will explore questions of both musical and technological significance while engaging that same topic through their own hands-on creative practice.",
"name" : "Interdisciplinary Research Seminar"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2200",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biostatistics"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2980",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biomedical Research"
},
{
"code" : "MTLE-6470",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course will cover the basic principles of biology in the context of materials science as well as emerging and cutting applications of biomaterials science. Topics will include: fundamentals of biological self-assembly and hierarchical structures; examination of structure-property relationships in naturally occurring biopolymers, foams, and ceramic composites; biomimetic design and synthesis of novel materials at the molecular and nanoscale levels. Students will gain a deeper appreciation of the impact of biological principles on current topics in materials science.",
"name" : "Biology in Materials Science"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4290",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Human Physio Systems"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4330",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cancer Biology"
},
{
"code" : "USNA-2060",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "An introduction to the complexities of modern naval operations. Course emphasis includes fleet communications and communication security, naval tactics, relative motion, maneuvering board, and ship operations and control.",
"name" : "Naval Operations"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6350",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This is a hands on course where students learn a mix of theoretical and practical tools and use them to solve a variety of supply chain problems, both analytically and numerically. Time series, Markov chain, optimal control, linear programming, statistical analysis, and other mathematical tools are used to examine data to understand supply, demand, and inventory levels and develop insights for managerial recommendations.",
"name" : "Supply Chain Analytics"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course examines how culture and society shape war, and inversely, how war shapes culture and society. It views war through the lens of social sciences with case studies ranging from the role of war in non-western societies to the ways in which war has affected American culture. Some of the issues covered in the course include the study of different types of war, the relations between war and the nation-state, between weapons technology and culture, the notions of pacification and nation-building, and the role of rituals in the military institution. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course examines how culture and society shape war, and inversely, how war shapes culture and society. It views war through the lens of social sciences with case studies ranging from the role of war in non-western societies to the ways in which war has affected American culture. Some of the issues covered in the course include the study of different types of war, the relations between war and the nation-state, between weapons technology and culture, the notions of pacification and nation-building, and the role of rituals in the military institution.",
"name" : "War and Society"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4360",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Geomicrobiology"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4520",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Human Population"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4963",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-4969",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6007",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Cardiovasc Disease (at Amc)"
},
{
"code" : "PHIL-6940",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Philosophy Of Biology And Sex"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-2360",
- "credits" : "1-3",
"description" : "A selection of experiments taken primarily from other chemistry laboratory courses. Intended to permit an individualized laboratory course to be set up to enable transfer students to make up deficiencies in their laboratory background, to allow students from other departments to obtain experience in areas of interest to them, and to provide a course that students from other schools can use to fulfill laboratory requirements of their home institution on a transfer basis. Selection of experiments and credits determined by individual consultation with the academic adviser and instructor.",
"name" : "Chemistry Laboratory: Selected Experiments"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6360",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Theory and applications of reliability and risk assessment. Boolean algebra, logic diagrams, redundancy, and majority-vote configurations. System synthesis by reliability and fault tree techniques, quantitative evaluation, uncertainty analysis. Common cause events, failure data, and failure models. Allocation of risk to subsystems. Availability, repair policies, renewal theory. Operational reliability methods.",
"name" : "Reactor Reliability and Safety"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6540",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Responsible Conduct Of Research"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6962",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6966",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6968",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6971",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-2800",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Sensing And Imaging"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6540",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "The chief objectives of this course are to build knowledge and practical understanding of electrochemistry. The course will cover the basics of electrode processes and how thermodynamics, electron-transfer kinetics and mass transport control electrochemical reactions. It will also cover how to design electrochemical experiments to solve problems in chemical analysis. Students will learn about ways in which electrochemical methods are used to solve problems in energy and the environment, and how to evaluate the resulting data. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "The chief objectives of this course are to build knowledge and practical understanding of electrochemistry. The course will cover the basics of electrode processes and how thermodynamics, electron-transfer kinetics and mass transport control electrochemical reactions. It will also cover how to design electrochemical experiments to solve problems in chemical analysis. Students will learn about ways in which electrochemical methods are used to solve problems in energy and the environment, and how to evaluate the resulting data.",
"name" : "Electrochemistry"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4280",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Biomechanics Of Soft Tissues"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4800",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Subsurface Imaging"
},
{
"code" : "MATP-6940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Mathematical Programming, Probability, and Mathematical Statistics"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "CSCI-6973",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CSCI"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4962",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-6490",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Mathematical foundations and/or applications of ordinary differential equations. Possible topics include: stability and chaos in dynamics, mathematical methods of classical mechanics, stochastic differential equations, and soliton equations.",
"name" : "Topics in Ordinary Differential Equations"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-6965",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BIOL"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-4966",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1005",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Basic Japanese I (at Union)"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-4270",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Integrates theory from psychology, neuroscience, and other social sciences into traditional economic models of human behavior. By relaxing the standard assumptions of perfect rationality and selfishness, more realistic modeling features such as loss aversion, present-bias, social norms, and habit formation improve economic analyses. These techniques are used to analyze individuals' health behaviors, health insurance markets, and healthcare policy. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Integrates theory from psychology, neuroscience, and other social sciences into traditional economic models of human behavior. By relaxing the standard assumptions of perfect rationality and selfishness, more realistic modeling features such as loss aversion, present-bias, social norms, and habit formation improve economic analyses. These techniques are used to analyze individuals' health behaviors, health insurance markets, and healthcare policy.",
"name" : "Behavioral Economics"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-4290",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Introduction to discrete-event simulation modeling and analysis techniques including; graphical simulation modeling approaches, animation techniques, modeling large-scale and complex systems, pseudo-random number and random variate generation, stochastic processes, input modeling (data collection, analysis, and fitting distribution), output analysis (initial bias and termination bias, variance reduction techniques), sensitivity analysis, design of experiments, interactive simulation-based decision-support systems.",
"name" : "Discrete Event Simulation Modeling and Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6500",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Mechanobiology"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6710",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Nano- & Bio- Actuatable Mtls"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6870",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Empirical Issues In Management Research"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "ECSE-4760",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Experiments and lectures demonstrate the design and use of microcomputers as both decision tools and on-line real-time system components in control and communications. Topics include the basic operations of microcomputers, data I/O, analog and digital process control, voice processing, digital filter design, digital communication, and optimal LQR control.",
"name" : "Real-Time Applications in Control and Communications"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-6340",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Techniques For Verbal Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-2510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "An introduction to the fundamentals of data management and analysis with applications in business and information systems. Through hands-on exercises students will develop\u00c2 competencies in working with\u00c2 data\u00c2 through\u00c2 spreadsheets applications and\u00c2 relational\u00c2 databases. Topics include foundational concepts in information systems, spreadsheets, and basic data modeling and\u00c2 database\u00c2 design.",
+ "description" : "An introduction to the fundamentals of data management and analysis with applications in business and information systems. Through hands-on exercises students will develop competencies in working with data through spreadsheets applications and relational databases. Topics include foundational concepts in information systems, spreadsheets, and basic data modeling and database design.",
"name" : "Introduction to Data Management and Analytics"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6966",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-4060",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Beam structures under combined shear, bending, and torsional loads. Semi-monocoque structures: idealizations involving wings, ribs, and fuselage bulkheads. Effects of taper and cutouts in stiffened shell structures, shear deformations and warping, location of elastic axis in open and closed sections, torsion of multicell sections. Stability of beam and membrane elements. Introduction to materials used in aerospace vehicles including metals, ceramics, and composites with special emphasis on fiber-reinforced composite materials. Methods for material analysis and selection for various aerospace components.\u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2 \u00c2",
+ "description" : "Beam structures under combined shear, bending, and torsional loads. Semi-monocoque structures: idealizations involving wings, ribs, and fuselage bulkheads. Effects of taper and cutouts in stiffened shell structures, shear deformations and warping, location of elastic axis in open and closed sections, torsion of multicell sections. Stability of beam and membrane elements. Introduction to materials used in aerospace vehicles including metals, ceramics, and composites with special emphasis on fiber-reinforced composite materials. Methods for material analysis and selection for various aerospace components.",
"name" : "Aerospace Structures and Materials"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6967",
- "credits" : "0",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in BMED"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-1960",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-2941",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Undergraduate Research Project"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-2960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-1020",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An overview of the Earth's surface processes and environment. Nature and interactions between the major oceanic, atmospheric, and terrestrial systems. Interrelations between geology, the environment, and human activities. Geologic and environmental implications, constraints, and opportunities for past, present, and future human populations and cultures. Short- and long-term benefits and consequences of actions or inaction.",
"name" : "Planet Earth II: Oceans and Atmosphere"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4340",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Drug Discovery Laboratory"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-6310",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Adv Exp Methods & Statistics"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4600",
- "credits" : "?",
- "description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics is an entire methodology rather than individual analyses or analysis steps. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "The world at-large is confronted with increasingly larger and complex sets of structured/unstructured information; from cyber and human sources. Traditional enterprises are moving toward analytics-driven approaches for core business functions. Data and information analytics extends analysis (descriptive models of data) by using data mining and machine learning methods, with optimization and validation, to recommend action or guide and communicate decision-making. Thus, analytics is an entire methodology rather than individual analyses or analysis steps.",
"name" : "Data Analytics"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4460",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Microscopic Physical Chemistry"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4978",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4940",
- "credits" : "1-8",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Spec Proj: Chem Lab Mentor"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4957",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Latin America Arch /urbanism"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4933",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Sartorial Tectonics"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4966",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-4940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "Study and research in various fields of astronomy to demonstrate interest in and ability for independent work.",
"name" : "Special Projects in Astronomy"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4980",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Senior Project"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6160",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6800",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Chemical Information Sources"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-6960",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in ARCH"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-4964",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "MANE-6170",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course provides an introduction to the mechanics of solids from a continuum perspective.\u00c2 Topics covered in this course include:\u00c2 vector and tensor analysis, coordinate systems and calculus in curvilinear coordinate systems, kinematics (motion, deformation and strain), stress and momentum balance, energy principles and balance laws, linear isotropic and anisotropic elasticity, thermoelasticity, method of solutions for 2D and 3D linear elastic boundary value problems, applications to simple structures.",
+ "description" : "This course provides an introduction to the mechanics of solids from a continuum perspective. Topics covered in this course include: vector and tensor analysis, coordinate systems and calculus in curvilinear coordinate systems, kinematics (motion, deformation and strain), stress and momentum balance, energy principles and balance laws, linear isotropic and anisotropic elasticity, thermoelasticity, method of solutions for 2D and 3D linear elastic boundary value problems, applications to simple structures.",
"name" : "Mechanics of Solids"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-4969",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in MGMT"
},
{
"code" : "BIOL-2500",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Mechanisms of inheritance in eukaryotes and prokaryotes; genetic mapping, gene expression, cloning and sequencing; quantitative and population genetics, and synthetic theory of evolution.",
"name" : "Genetics and Evolution"
},
{
"code" : "MATH-4940",
- "credits" : "1-6",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Mathematics"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-4960",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHEM"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-2100",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "An introduction to various aspects of the study of the physics of the Earth. Stress and strain, deformation, isostasy, seismic waves, earthquakes, Earth structure, resource exploration, Earth dynamics, plate tectonics, mountain building, gravity and geodesy, magnetic field, and heat flow.",
"name" : "Introduction to Geophysics"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-2961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-4200",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course is designed for students in chemistry and chemical engineering to provide an understanding of the economics and various driving forces for large scale production of chemicals.\u00c2 Students will learn about processes from the refining of raw materials to the manufacturing of common chemicals, polymers, metallurgy, and some pharmaceuticals.\u00c2 In addition, students will be exposed to the patenting process, environmental and safety regulations, project management, ISO9000 and other quality management methodologies. \u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course is designed for students in chemistry and chemical engineering to provide an understanding of the economics and various driving forces for large scale production of chemicals. Students will learn about processes from the refining of raw materials to the manufacturing of common chemicals, polymers, metallurgy, and some pharmaceuticals. In addition, students will be exposed to the patenting process, environmental and safety regulations, project management, ISO9000 and other quality management methodologies.",
"name" : "Industrial Chemistry"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-4967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-4968",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "ASTR-4941",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Undergraduate Research Project"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-4980",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Chem & Envr Engineering Proj"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6440",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Theory and practice of chromatographic separation processes. Topics include chromatographic dispersion, adsorption isotherms, solute movement analysis, chromatographic techniques (reversed-phase, HIC, ion exchange, affinity, and size exclusion),\u00c2 modes of operation (gradient, elution, displacement, and continuous systems), novel morphologies and chromatographic applications in biotechnology.\u00c2 Includes critical reviews of the current literature and computer simulations.\u00c2 Suitable for graduate students in chemical engineering, chemistry, biology, and biomedical engineering. Students cannot receive credit for both CHME 4400 \u00c2 and CHME 6440.",
+ "description" : "Theory and practice of chromatographic separation processes. Topics include chromatographic dispersion, adsorption isotherms, solute movement analysis, chromatographic techniques (reversed-phase, HIC, ion exchange, affinity, and size exclusion), modes of operation (gradient, elution, displacement, and continuous systems), novel morphologies and chromatographic applications in biotechnology. Includes critical reviews of the current literature and computer simulations. Suitable for graduate students in chemical engineering, chemistry, biology, and biomedical engineering. Students cannot receive credit for both CHME 4400 and CHME 6440.",
"name" : "Chromatographic Separations"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "PHYS-9990",
- "credits" : "1-15",
"description" : "Active participation in research, under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a doctoral dissertation. Grades of IP are assigned until the dissertation has been publicly defended, approved by the doctoral committee, and accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in a standard format in the library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Dissertation"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6968",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6980",
- "credits" : "1-16",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Masters Project"
},
{
"code" : "ERTH-2200",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is designed to introduce students to the basic data analysis and statistical methods necessary to conduct and understand environmental research. Topics and methods covered in this course include experimental design, graphing and data presentation, descriptive statistics, comparison tests, correlation and regression, and other parametric and non-parametric statistical methods. There is a strong emphasis on the application of these methods to datasets that describe current environmental problems and issues.",
"name" : "Environmental Data Analysis"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-1960",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-6560",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "This course will explore the different strategies used by different languages to fulfill the same needs of human communication. A sampling of topics: quickly learning the basics of a new language using linguistic principles; cross-linguistic knowledge elicitation and engineering; principles of generative grammar; space, time, agency, and other linguistic phenomena viewed cross-linguistically.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course will explore the different strategies used by different languages to fulfill the same needs of human communication. A sampling of topics: quickly learning the basics of a new language using linguistic principles; cross-linguistic knowledge elicitation and engineering; principles of generative grammar; space, time, agency, and other linguistic phenomena viewed cross-linguistically.",
"name" : "Cross-linguistic Perspectives"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-1961",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-2962",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "ARTS-4130",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course asks what is really new about New Media, and looks at creative practices, theoretical discourses, and social contexts to find answers. The course concentrates on cutting edge cultural expression using information and communication technologies. The objective to equip students with multiple perspectives - aesthetic, communications, historical - with which to analyze, critique, and develop original concepts about the uses of new media in art and culture.\u00c2",
+ "description" : "This course asks what is really new about New Media, and looks at creative practices, theoretical discourses, and social contexts to find answers. The course concentrates on cutting edge cultural expression using information and communication technologies. The objective to equip students with multiple perspectives - aesthetic, communications, historical - with which to analyze, critique, and develop original concepts about the uses of new media in art and culture.",
"name" : "New Media Theory"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-4962",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "ECON-6240",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Addresses the allocation of natural resources through applied study of fisheries, forestry, oil, minerals, water, and biodiversity resources. Mathematical analysis will be done using Microsoft Excel with Solver. Social and policy dynamics of allocation decisions will be explored through case studies. Field trips will address ecological and physical aspects of resource management. The intent is to develop a balanced perspective and tools to address resource management decisions across their diverse economic, social, and environmental dimensions.",
"name" : "Advanced Natural Resource Economics"
},
{
"code" : "ISYE-6980",
- "credits" : "1-9",
"description" : "Active participation in a master's-level project under the supervision of a faculty adviser, leading to a master's project report. Grades of IP are assigned until the master's project has been approved by the faculty adviser. If recommended by the adviser, the master's project may be accepted by the Office of Graduate Education to be archived in the Library. Grades will then be listed as S.",
"name" : "Master's Project"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-4963",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6670",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Nonlin Finite Elem Meth"
},
{
"code" : "BUSN-6107",
- "credits" : "3",
- "description" : "Change happens through people.\u00c2 In this 3-credit, 15-week online course, master the use of mentoring and coaching tools to evoke the greatest potential from employees.\u00c2 With the support of a Rensselaer at Work Master Mentor who leads the course, refine your personal capacity to use mentorship as a conduit for change.\u00c2 Completion of the course empowers a leadership practice that sustains an organizational culture ready for change and innovation.",
+ "description" : "Change happens through people. In this 3-credit, 15-week online course, master the use of mentoring and coaching tools to evoke the greatest potential from employees. With the support of a Rensselaer at Work Master Mentor who leads the course, refine your personal capacity to use mentorship as a conduit for change. Completion of the course empowers a leadership practice that sustains an organizational culture ready for change and innovation.",
"name" : "Changing and Innovating"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-2220",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Organic Synthesis"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6961",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "CHEM-6940",
- "credits" : "1-12",
"description" : "",
"name" : "Readings in Chemistry"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1040",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "Documentary in the 21st Century: Identity Production is a production course investigating the course of documentary history leading to a focus on digital media representations today. This course will incorporate critical thinking with production.\u00c2 With focus on aesthetic and formal considerations, students will be asked to produce a series of multimedia projects investigating their vision of themselves in the world.",
+ "description" : "Documentary in the 21st Century: Identity Production is a production course investigating the course of documentary history leading to a focus on digital media representations today. This course will incorporate critical thinking with production. With focus on aesthetic and formal considerations, students will be asked to produce a series of multimedia projects investigating their vision of themselves in the world.",
"name" : "Documentary in the 21st Century: Identity Production"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6962",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "BMED-6580",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course covers the dynamics of fluid flow in the human physiological system. Engineering principles and fluid dynamic concepts will be taught in the context of cardiovascular system. Topics include: pulsatile flow in arteries, vascular compliance and wave propagation, impedance, cardiac mechanics, dynamic coupling of ventricle and systemic circulation, blood flow in vein, coronary circulation, microcirculation, blood flow at complex geometries, imaging techniques in clinical hemodynamic assessment, fluid mechanics in designing and testing circulatory implants.",
"name" : "Biomedical Fluid Mechanics"
},
{
"code" : "CIVL-6964",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CIVL"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-2940",
- "credits" : "1-4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Game Ai Interface"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-2960",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COGS"
},
{
"code" : "CHME-6965",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in CHME"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4540",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Game Development II"
},
{
"code" : "ARCH-4660",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Historical Archaeology"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4550",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Game Architecture"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4941",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Linguistics Ug Research"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4964",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COGS"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-4967",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COGS"
},
{
"code" : "MGMT-6040",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is designed to develop skills in understanding human behavior in organizations and how to effectively manage the talent that resides within employees. Students will learn about essential aspects of managing and developing talent, including individual differences, employee hiring, motivation, team dynamics, leadership, and influencing others. Through a discussion of concepts in human behavior students will learn useful analytical frameworks for understanding the complexities of managing talent in order to best achieve organizational success.",
"name" : "Talent Management"
},
{
"code" : "COGS-6968",
- "credits" : "2",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COGS"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-1001",
- "credits" : "3",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Public Speaking (at Hvcc)"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-1600",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "History And Culture Of Games"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-1960",
- "credits" : "1",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-1961",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "Course codes between X960 and X979 are for topics courses. They are often recycled and used for new or experimental courses.",
"name" : "Topics in COMM"
},
{
"code" : "IHSS-1410",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Century Of The Gene"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2210",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Web And Database Programming"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2110",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Writing For The Screen"
},
{
"code" : "COMM-2330",
- "credits" : "4",
"description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
"name" : "Creative Writing: The Short Story"
- },
- {
- "code" : "COMM-2510",
- "credits" : "4",
- "description" : "This course is not in the most recent catalog. It may have been discontinued, had its course code changed, or just not be in the catalog for some other reason.",
- "name" : "Cultural Anthropology"
}
]
\ No newline at end of file