Computer Science
The Practice of Artificial Intelligence
COMPSCI 367 S2C
Mid-Semester Test |
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Assignment 1 Marks can be viewed here | |||
TUTORIALS |
10am-11am Tuesday and 1pm-2pm Thursday in the CS seminar room 279 (level 2 of the CS building). The first tutorial will be on 5 August. |
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Prerequisites | COMPSCI 220, COMPSCI 225 | LINKS | |
Restrictions | Lectures | ||
Assessment | 30% assignments, 10% test, 60% examination. Note: You need to pass the practical and the theory component to pass this course! |
Resources | |
Lecturers
Tutor |
Assoc. Prof Ian Watson (course supervisor) ian @ cs.auckland.ac.nz Dr. Patricia Riddle pat @ cs.auckland.ac.nz Dr. Mike Barley barley @ cs.auckland.ac.nz Carl Schultz csch050@aucklanduni.ac.nz |
Assignment 1 briefing
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Class Rep. | Bryce Van Dyk. bvan036@aucklanduni.ac.nz | Assignment 2 | |
Texts required | Stuart J. Russell and Peter Norvig. Artificial Intelligence : A Modern Approach. Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, New Jersey, 1995. | ||
Texts recommended | Joseph C. Giarratano. Expert Systems : Principles and Programming.
Brooks/Cole Pub. Co., 1998. |
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Description | Students will become familiar with the foundations of artificial intelligence and modern techniques, from symbolic reasoning, rule-based reasoning and techniques based on knowledge engineering and representation, through machine learning to planning and agent technology. | Assignment 3 | |
Policy on Cheating and Plagiarism | The Department of Computer Science's policy on cheating and plagiarism can be found at: http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/CheatingPolicy.html | Test | |
Seeking Assistance | For assistance with course material and course work you should visit the course lecturer during their published office hours. The Department of Computer Science also has a team of support staff (see the posters around the labs for support contacts) who are happy to provide guidance on more general issues to do with your study in computer science. | ||
Catching up on missed lectures | If you miss a lecture, you should catch up as soon as possible by reading the corresponding lecture notes that are available online. If you miss the deadline for an assignment and have a valid reason, you should see the course supervisor. If you miss the test/exam for any valid reason, or you sit the test/exam but believe that your performance was impaired for some reason, then you may be able to apply for an aegrotat, compassionate or special pass consideration. For more detailed information, refer to the University of Auckland's Calendar. |
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