Interdisciplinary Scientific Visualization

SYLLABUS


Brown Instructor
Teaching Assistant
Writing Fellow

Prof. David Laidlaw
Daniel Acevedo
Mark Mayer

dhl@cs.brown.edu
daf@cs.brown.edu
Mark_Mayer@brown.edu
Office:
Brown CIT 449
Brown CIT 357

Phone:
863-7647
863-7698



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previous years:  2004* 2003 2002* 2000 1999
* VR Design for Science. Brown/RISD class. Now CS137

Brown          Brown CS          Brown CS Visualization

Course Description

In this class we will learn about solving scientific problems using computer graphics and visualization. Students will work in small multi-disciplinary groups to identify scientific problems, propose solutions involving computational modeling and visualization, design and implement the solutions, apply them to the problems, and evaluate their success. Solutions may be, for example, interactive software systems, immersive CAVE applications, or new applications of existing visualization methods.

Aims

At the end of CS237, students will have experience with:

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Objectives and Course Content Overview

The course will be organized around ``funding'' and implementing a small interdisciplinary research project. As references, we'll study some funded grant proposals produced by faculty at Brown and elsewhere. We'll start with a program announcement (PA) or request for proposal (RFP), read the proposal, see the reviews that it received, and look at the work that has resulted from the grant. Some of the proposal authors will guest lecture to describe their proposals, work, and philosophy.

Each member of class will create a short proposal on which they are the principal investigator. The proposals should be multi-disciplinary - so each should have 2 or 3 authors, one of them the principal investigator. The class will review the proposals, emulating the NSF review process, and recommend some of the proposals for ``funding.'' The ``funded'' proposals will then be implemented in small groups. Each group will finish with an extended abstract and presentation describing their accomplishments.

Class time will be used for project related tasks, discussion of literature and open problems, lectures on research directions and tools, and guest lectures from application areas.

During the semester we will also cover several topics motivated by the project topics. Examples might include modeling of medical images, using user studies for evaluation of interfaces or visualization methods, or numerical optimization. Each student will also be responsible for presenting 2-3 papers on topics related to their project.

See the calendar for more details.

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Assessment

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Readings

Readings will be copied and handed out or made available via the course calendar web page.

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Class Meetings

The class will meet in:

Classes will be Tuesdays and Thursdays from 1pm to 2:20pm.
The first class will be on Tuesday, September 6th at 1:20pm at CIT Room #345.

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